Question:
– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – Hey Nicki…do you believe in the rapture, with Jesus appearing out of the clouds? I don’t converse with name callers. If you were a seeker, or even a Christian, name calling would never grace your lips. KERPLUNK welcome to my KILLFILE I feel badly for you, remnant. Have you ever thought about what it might be like when you reach the end of your life and look back? Then you may finally realize you’ve wasted your time in living the life of an obsessed crackpot, always unable to stop thinking about the Roman Church. Why not wake up out of your trance now? Here, have a cup of coffee!
Poor Nicki must still have nightmares from those months ago when the humiliation I dealt him has left him in this state of denial. I would suggest the twit cleans his own theological backyard out before he starts condemning others religious scores. PeterT
Response:
Hey Nicki…do you believe in the rapture, with Jesus appearing out of the clouds? I don’t converse with name callers. If you were a seeker, or even a Christian, name calling would never grace your lips. KERPLUNK welcome to my KILLFILE
I feel badly for you, remnant. Have you ever thought about what it might be like when you reach the end of your life and look back? Then you may finally realize you’ve wasted your time in living the life of an obsessed crackpot, always unable to stop thinking about the Roman Church. Why not wake up out of your trance now? Here, have a cup of coffee!
Response:
Hey Nicki…do you believe in the rapture, with Jesus appearing out of the clouds? PeterT
I don’t converse with name callers. If you were a seeker, or even a Christian, name calling would never grace your lips. KERPLUNK welcome to my KILLFILE
Response:
– Hide quoted text — Show quoted text – YOUR GOD – THE pope "The Pope is of so great dignity, and so exalted that he is not a mere man, but as it were God. and the vicar of God." -Ferraris Ecclesiastical dictionary "All names which in the Scriptures are applied to Christ, by virtue of which it is established that He is over the church, all the same names are applied to the Pope." – On the Authority of the Councils, book 2, chapter 17 "The Pope and God are the same, so he has all power in Heaven and earth." Pope Pius V, quoted in Barclay, Chapter XXVII, p. 218, "Cities Petrus Bertanous". "…the Pope is as it were God on earth, sole sovereign of the faithful of Christ, chief of kings, having plenitude of power." Lucius Ferraris, in "Prompta Bibliotheca Canonica, Juridica, Moralis, Theologica, Ascetica, Polemica, Rubristica, Historica", Volume V, article on "Papa, Article II", titled "Concerning the extent of Papal dignity, authority, or dominion and infallibility", #1, 5, 13-15, 18, published in Petit-Montrouge (Paris) by J. P. Migne, 1858 edition. "The Pope takes the place of Jesus Christ on earth…by divine right the Pope has supreme and full power in faith, in morals over each and every pastor and his flock. He is the true vicar, the head of the entire church, the father and teacher of all Christians. He is the infallible ruler, the founder of dogmas, the author of and the judge of councils; the universal ruler of truth, the arbiter of the world, the supreme judge of heaven and earth, the judge of all, being judged by no one, God himself on earth." Quoted in the New York Catechism. -These words appeared in the Roman Canon Law: "To believe that our Lord God the Pope has not the power to decree as he is decreed, is to be deemed heretical.-I?i the Gloss "Extravagantes" o.f Pope John XXII Cum inter, Tit. XIV, Cap. IV. Ad Callem Sexti Decretalium, Paris, 1685. -Father A. Pereira says: "It is quite certain that Popes have never approved or rejected this title ‘Lord God the Pope,’ for the passage in the gloss referred to appears in the edition of the Canon Law published in Rome in 1580 by Gregory XIII." -Writers on the Canon Law say, "The Pope and God are the same, so he has all power in heaven and earth."- Barclay Cap. XXVII, p. 218. Cities Petrus Bertrandus, Pius V. – Cardinal Cusa supports his statement. .-Pope Nicholas I declared that "the appellation of God had been confirmed by Constantine on the Pope, who, being God, cannot be judged by man." – Labb IX Dist.: 96 Can. 7, Satis evidentur, Decret Gratian Primer Para. "The pope is of so great dignity and so exalted that he is not a mere man (…) he is as it were God on earth, sole sovereign of the faithful of Christ, chief of kings, having plenitude of power." -Lucius Ferraris,
If you like this post and would like to receive updates from this blog, please subscribe our feed.