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United States News
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Title: the worst flood in recorded history
Source: ABC News
URL Source: [None]
Published: Aug 28, 2017
Author: Barry Midyet
Post Date: 2017-08-28 00:31:07 by interpreter
Keywords: None
Views: 20942
Comments: 128

The news today is that the worst flood in recorded history is occurring right now, and right here (in my neck of the woods, the Houston/ Galveston area).

Moreover, as with all of the other major events of the last 25 years, I predicted it. (See my book, The Revelation: A Historicist View and turn to the section on the seven last plagues, Plague# 4). I very plainly said that hurricanes and major weather events including floods would wax much worse in 2017. Katrina was just a dress rehearsal, folks.

But Thank God I was fully prepared because like I advised everyone on earth to do, I am completely stocked up on distilled water and can goods, and mosquito spray, and (provided the police give me my gun back) on bullets also. And with all this water to breed in, I'm pretty sure the Aedes from Hades will be here next. And I am making that prediction once again, right here, right now.

So get ready folks for much worse before the 7 last plagues are mitigated.

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#84. To: paraclete (#74)

which part

Often, I'm dumbfounded by some of the questions that I receive.

Where was the question mark [?] within the scope of your earlier post just above?

buckeroo  posted on  2017-08-31   23:07:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#85. To: interpreter (#81)

I need to know what city Venus was over at high noon. ... And please keep in mind that God does not go by man's time (Daylght Savings Time), but His time.

I am not sure I can unscramble that question. Is God's time UCT? Local standard time varies from zone to zone, not that Venus would pay any mind to it. I am definitely not an astronomer, just a good finder of stuff.

http://celestialchart.com/ephemeris/

You can slug in a time here and get the position of Venus or other planets at the chosen UCT time.

At 12:00 UCT on 21 August 2017, Venus was at

Right Ascension 7h 44m 59.61s

Declinition 20° 45' 39.5"

I have no idea if that helps.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-01   1:23:25 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#86. To: interpreter (#82)

First it is both the King (or Queen) AND the Anglican Church (the Archbishop of Canterbury) who make the rules. The 2 roles of the king are to enforce the doctrine of the Church (as for what is a sin, and what is not) and to protect the Church from harm.

When Henry VIII made rules, he enforced them with beheading. It was simply his decree that broke the Church of England from the Roman Catholic Church. He wanted a Kennedy-like annulment and the Pope said no. So, he separated the Church of England from Rome and, wouldn't ya just know it, the now independent church gave him his Kennedy-like annulment. Wife #1 was annulled, #2 was executed, #3 died, #4 was annulled, #5 was executed, and #6 Henry died. (Joseph P. Kennedy obtained an annulment from the Archdiocese of Boston after 12 years of marriage, two kids, and a divorce. After ten years of bad publicity, the Vatican overturned the annulment.)

Spiritual rulings fell to Ecclesiastical courts.

And I know pretty much everything there is know about this subject, and that is because I'm an Anglican.

My father was Episcopal, my mother was Catholic. My mother said that in hospital, when I was born, she shared a semi-private room with a Jewish lady who also had a boy. The Jewish lady had the mohel come, and he did a two-fer and pronounced me an honorary member of the House of David. I have Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish covered.

BTW, the Anglican Church was founded (officially) by St. Mark in 47AD (who was sent by St. Peter), and before that Joseph of Arimethea arrived in England / Canterbury and converted a bunch of people right after the crucifixion. So dont let anyone tell you that the Church in Rome is the oldest Church or the only Church founded by St. Peter. It is simply not true.

Until Henry VIII, the Church of England followed Roman Catholicism and acknowledged the authority of the Pope in Rome. In modern times, I have seen its polity listed as Episcopal. Way back, I spent two years living in Northern Ireland. To a Yank, it was amazing how neighborhoods could be segregated, Catholic and Protestant.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-01   2:32:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#87. To: nolu chan (#86)

You are trying to rewrite history. The Anglican Church had never once been subject to Rome or the Pope except when the Pope sent someone to conquer England and force them to submit to Rome (as with the Norman kings). The Archbishop of Canterbury and the Anglican Church very seldom paid any attention to anything the Pope said except when they were forced to submit or be beheaded (as was also the case with Bloody Mary--that's why she is called Bloody Mary). And historically, it is/was the Archbishop who made the rules concerning divorce, not the Pope. I dont know why people think that started with Henry the 8th. That is not true.

But yes, for some reason the Irish have historically preferred to submit to the Pope rather than the Archbishop of Canterbury. But the rest of the British Isles have historically been loyal to their Archbishop rather than the Pope. And that is indeed the reason for a lot of fighting (and segregation, etc.) in Ireland over the centuries (unfortunately). And that's why my Grandmother's family left Ireland and came here. At least now most everyone has calmed down and just want peace (even though there are still some occasional flare-ups in that crazy country).

interpreter  posted on  2017-09-01   4:23:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#88. To: nolu chan (#85)

Thanks, I will go to that site when I have the time and do some more research on that. But as I have already suggested (several times), by doing some rough (quick) calculations, I think it was somewhere around Tulsa Oklahoma, at 1 PM (Daylight Savings Time which of course is high noon, God's time). And I am sticking with that until proven wrong (and with all the guys here on LF who love to prove me wrong, I am surprised that someone hasn't already tried). And that is where I was planning on being during the eclipse so that I could personally confirm it, and then go to all the hospitals in Tulsa and see who born in Tulsa at that moment. But something came up and I couldn't make it, so my next question is, .. is there anyone on LF from the Tulsa area?

interpreter  posted on  2017-09-01   4:58:32 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#89. To: Tooconservative (#76)

BTW, asteroid strikes cannot set the atmosphere on fire except on the SyFy channel. Or the earth would have been destroyed billions of years ago. The earth is not that fragile or we wouldn't be here to bandy electrons about discussing it.

Well it all depends on which version of history you believe, apparently 65 million years ago an asteroid wiped out just about every thing, it has been through many changes including millenia of ice, volcanic activity. It was people who were commanded to be fruitful and multiply, Christians came later after those people apparently stuffed it up. I don't need to call down the wrath of God, the people will do it eventually, through unbelief

paraclete  posted on  2017-09-01   19:28:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#90. To: interpreter (#87)

You are trying to rewrite history.

Not really. You either mislearned of misremember English history.

The Anglican Church had never once been subject to Rome or the Pope except when the Pope sent someone to conquer England and force them to submit to Rome (as with the Norman kings).

This is documented as categorically false.

King Henry VIII was denied an annulment by the Pope. Why did he ask for an annulment from the Pope? Why did he declare himself the head of the Church of England in order to get an annulment?

The Archbishop of Canterbury and the Anglican Church very seldom paid any attention to anything the Pope said except when they were forced to submit or be beheaded (as was also the case with Bloody Mary--that's why she is called Bloody Mary). And historically, it is/was the Archbishop who made the rules concerning divorce, not the Pope. I dont know why people think that started with Henry the 8th. That is not true.

I think it because it is a matter of documented history, and I can produce copies of the documents themselves.

The Pope excommunicated Henry VIII in 1533 because of his divorce from Catherine of Aragon. Henry VIII's Act of Supremacy was issued in 1534. It is a fact. Here is a copy of the document from the English Statutes at Large, 2 Stat. 203, C.22, CAP. I, 26 Hen. VIII, Anno. Dom. 1534:

With the stroke of a pen, the Church of England split from the Roman Catholic Church and the authority of the Pope in Rome.

But that is not the end of the story. In 1554, there issued another Act of Supremacy from Henry's Catholic daughter Mary, English Statutes at Large, 2 Stat. 473, C. 8, CAP. VIII., Anno primo & secundo Philippi & Maria, A.D. 1554.

That one starts, [boldface added, archaic letters modernized]

An Act repealing all Articles and Provisions made against the See Apostolick of Rome, since the twenjtieth Year of King Henry the Eigth, and for the Establishment of all Spiritual and Ecclestiastical Possessions and Hereditaments conveyed to the Laity.

Whereas since the twentieth Year of King Henry the Eigth of famous Memory, Father unto your Majesty our most natural Sovereign, and gracious Land and Queen, much false and erroneous Doctrine hath been taught, preached and written, partly by divers the Natural-born Subjects of this Realm, and partly being brought in hither from sundry other Foreign Countries, hath been sowen and spread abroad within the same: (2) By Reason whereof, as well the Spiritualty as the Temporalty of your Highness Realms and Dominions have swerved from the Obedience of the See Apostolick, and declined from the Unity of Christ's Church, and so have continued, until such Time as your Majesty being first raised up by God, and set in the Seat Royal over us, and then by his Divine and gracious Providence that in marriage with the most noble and virtuous Prince the King our Sovereign Lord your Husband, the Pope's Holiness and the See Apolostick sent hither unto your Majesties (as unto Persons undehled, and by God's Goodness preserved from the common Infection aforesaid) and to the whole Realm, the most Reverend Father in God the Lord Cardinal Pool, Legate de latere, to call us home again into the right Way from whence we have all this long while wandred and strayed abroad; (3) and we, after sundry long and grievous Plagues and Calamities, seeing by the Goodness of God our own Errors, have knowledged the same unto the said most Reverend Father, and by him have been and are the rather at the Contemplation of your Majesties received and embraced into the Unity and Bosom of Christ's Church, and upon our humble Submission and Promise made for a Declaration of our Repentance, to repeal and abrogate such Acts and Statutes as had been made in Parliament since the said twentieth Year of the said King Henry the Eigth, against the Supremacy of the See Apolostick, as in our Submission exhibited to the said most Reverend Father in God by your Majesties appeareth: The Tenour whereof ensueth.

II. We the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons, assembled in this present Parliament, representing the whole Body of the Realm of England, and the Dominions of the same, in the Name of our selvers particularly, and also of the said Body universally, in this our Supplication directed to your Majesties, with most humble Suit, that it may by your Graces Intercession and Mean be exhibited to the Father Pope July the third and the See Apostolick of Rome, do declare our selves very sorry and repentent of the Schism and Disobedience committed in this Realm and Dominions aforesaid against the said See Apostolic, either by making, agreeing or executing any Laws, Ordinances or Commandments, against the Supremacy of the said See, or otherwise doing or speaking, that might inpugne the same:

[...]

It is not possible to maintain that the England did not recognize the supremacy of the Pope in Rome, both before and after Act of Supremacy of Henry VIII in 1534. It is a matter of documented history.

The full Act of Supremacy of 1554 follows.

I do not allege that England recognized the supremacy of the Pope in Rome, I provide a complete copy of the document which did it, from the English Statutes at Large.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-02   3:07:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#91. To: interpreter (#87)

You are trying to rewrite history.

Not really. You either mislearned of misremember English history.

The Anglican Church had never once been subject to Rome or the Pope except when the Pope sent someone to conquer England and force them to submit to Rome (as with the Norman kings).

This is documented as categorically false.

King Henry VIII was denied an annulment by the Pope. Why did he ask for an annulment from the Pope? Why did he declare himself the head of the Church of England in order to get an annulment?

The Archbishop of Canterbury and the Anglican Church very seldom paid any attention to anything the Pope said except when they were forced to submit or be beheaded (as was also the case with Bloody Mary--that's why she is called Bloody Mary). And historically, it is/was the Archbishop who made the rules concerning divorce, not the Pope. I dont know why people think that started with Henry the 8th. That is not true.

I think it because it is a matter of documented history, and I can produce copies of the documents themselves.

The Pope excommunicated Henry VIII in 1533 because of his divorce from Catherine of Aragon. Henry VIII's Act of Supremacy was issued in 1534. It is a fact. Here is a copy of the document from the English Statutes at Large, 2 Stat. 203, C.22, CAP. I, 26 Hen. VIII, Anno. Dom. 1534:

With the stroke of a pen, the Church of England split from the Roman Catholic Church and the authority of the Pope in Rome.

But that is not the end of the story. In 1554, there issued another Act of Supremacy from Henry's Catholic daughter Mary, English Statutes at Large, 2 Stat. 473, C. 8, CAP. VIII., Anno primo & secundo Philippi & Maria, A.D. 1554.

That one starts, [boldface added, archaic letters modernized]

An Act repealing all Articles and Provisions made against the See Apostolick of Rome, since the twentieth Year of King Henry the Eighth, and for the Establishment of all Spiritual and Ecclesiastical Possessions and Hereditaments conveyed to the Laity.

Whereas since the twentieth Year of King Henry the Eighth of famous Memory, Father unto your Majesty our most natural Sovereign, and gracious Land and Queen, much false and erroneous Doctrine hath been taught, preached and written, partly by divers the Natural-born Subjects of this Realm, and partly being brought in hither from sundry other Foreign Countries, hath been sowen and spread abroad within the same: (2) By Reason whereof, as well the Spiritualty as the Temporalty of your Highness Realms and Dominions have swerved from the Obedience of the See Apostolick, and declined from the Unity of Christ's Church, and so have continued, until such Time as your Majesty being first raised up by God, and set in the Seat Royal over us, and then by his Divine and gracious Providence that in marriage with the most noble and virtuous Prince the King our Sovereign Lord your Husband, the Pope's Holiness and the See Apolostick sent hither unto your Majesties (as unto Persons undehled, and by God's Goodness preserved from the common Infection aforesaid) and to the whole Realm, the most Reverend Father in God the Lord Cardinal Pool, Legate de latere, to call us home again into the right Way from whence we have all this long while wandred and strayed abroad; (3) and we, after sundry long and grievous Plagues and Calamities, seeing by the Goodness of God our own Errors, have knowledged the same unto the said most Reverend Father, and by him have been and are the rather at the Contemplation of your Majesties received and embraced into the Unity and Bosom of Christ's Church, and upon our humble Submission and Promise made for a Declaration of our Repentance, to repeal and abrogate such Acts and Statutes as had been made in Parliament since the said twentieth Year of the said King Henry the Eigth, against the Supremacy of the See Apostolick, as in our Submission exhibited to the said most Reverend Father in God by your Majesties appeareth: The Tenour whereof ensueth.

II. We the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons, assembled in this present Parliament, representing the whole Body of the Realm of England, and the Dominions of the same, in the Name of our selvers particularly, and also of the said Body universally, in this our Supplication directed to your Majesties, with most humble Suit, that it may by your Graces Intercession and Mean be exhibited to the Father Pope July the third and the See Apostolick of Rome, do declare our selves very sorry and repentent of the Schism and Disobedience committed in this Realm and Dominions aforesaid against the said See Apostolic, either by making, agreeing or executing any Laws, Ordinances or Commandments, against the Supremacy of the said See, or otherwise doing or speaking, that might inpugne the same:

[...]

It is not possible to maintain that the England did not recognize the supremacy of the Pope in Rome, both before and after Act of Supremacy of Henry VIII in 1534. It is a matter of documented history.

The full Act of Supremacy of 1554 follows.

I do not allege that England recognized the supremacy of the Pope in Rome, I provide a complete copy of the document which did it, from the English Statutes at Large.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-02   3:33:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#92. To: interpreter (#87)

But yes, for some reason the Irish have historically preferred to submit to the Pope rather than the Archbishop of Canterbury.

They did not and do not fight about religion.

The English invaded and conquered Ireland. Afterwards the Irish were largely ruled by Scots Presbyterians. The Irish and the invaders did not mix much, so one can observe the division as ethnic or religious, separatist or unionist, or republican or unionist.

For some reason the conquerors thought it a swell idea during the potato famine to be exporting food from Ireland. For some reason the starving Irish did not appreciate starving.

But the rest of the British Isles have historically been loyal to their Archbishop rather than the Pope.

Tell it to William Wallace. Scots and English get on swell.

And that is indeed the reason for a lot of fighting (and segregation, etc.) in Ireland over the centuries (unfortunately).

In the present tense, there is no fighting and seperation in Ireland, and there has not been for quite some time. The fighting and segregation is, and has been, in Northern Ireland, which is part of the UK. Note that Scotland and Northern Ireland are not part of Great Britain.

Ireland is a seperate sovereign nation altogether. The fighting in Northern Ireland was about the seperatists wanting to reunite the six counties of Northern Ireland with the twenty-six counties of the Republic of Ireland. They were partitioned in 1921.

And that's why my Grandmother's family left Ireland and came here.

The second largest religious group in Ireland is the Anglicans, at under 3%.

Northern Ireland (2011) had 40.2% Catholic, 20.7% Presbyterian, and 13.7% Anglican, and 3% Methodist.

When I lived in Northern Ireland, it was between the Battle of the Bogside and the start of internment. Derry (or Londonderry) was predominantly Catholic. When I say predominantly, in 2011 there were 67.4% Catholic to 19.4% Protestant. The districts were gerrymandered to result in Protestant control of the city council. The police, the Royal Ulster Constabulary or RUC, were 100% Protestant. Since 2001 it is the Police Service of Northern Ireland or PSNI, integrated, but still majority Ulster Protestant. All civil service jobs were Protestant. At the U.S. base, now closed, the civilian employees were nearly 100% Catholic.

At least now most everyone has calmed down and just want peace (even though there are still some occasional flare-ups in that crazy country).

Well, if it is crazy for a majority to oppose rule by an alien minority, they were crazy. The crazy ones consider it British Occupied Ireland. Until fairly recently, the Irish constitution also claimed all thirty-two counties and anyone born in Northern Ireland could just go to Ireland and get an Irish passport.

There have been dozens of uprisings since 1534. There will probably be more.

It has not really stopped.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissident_Irish_Republican_campaign

Excerpt

In the run-up to Christmas 2013, there was a surge in dissident republican activity. This included the first bombings in Belfast city centre in a decade. On 25 November a car bomb partially exploded outside Victoria Square Shopping Centre and a PSNI base. A man was forced to drive the bomb to the spot and raised the alarm. On 13 December a small bomb exploded in a holdall outside St Anne's Square, following a telephoned warning. Nobody was hurt in the attacks, which were claimed by ONH. Also in December, two PSNI patrols were the target of automatic gunfire in Belfast.

In February 2014 the Real IRA (or 'New IRA') sent seven letter bombs to British Army recruitment offices in south-east England; the first time republican militants struck in Britain since 2001. The following month, a PSNI Land Rover was hit by a horizontal mortar in Belfast. A civilian car was also hit by debris, but there were no injuries. It was the first successful attack of its kind in more than ten years. On 25 December in North Belfast, police came under fire but were not injured. The attacker was charged with attempted murder. Days later, on 27 November 2015, police in West Belfast came under heavy fire. No officers were wounded, thanks to their vehicle's armour-plating and bullet-proof glass.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-02   4:37:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#93. To: nolu chan (#92)

They did not and do not fight about religion.

That is not true, not true at all, according to what Grandma told me. Her parents, being Protestants and therefore persecuted in Ireland for their religion,and also because of the potato famine you talk about which is only part of it, came to America to escape all of that. And in America she married a Jew. On the other side, my mother is/was a full-blooded German. That would never happen in Ireland or probably anywhere in Europe. I thank God every day that my parents met in America, the great "melting pot."

And it is not just in northern Ireland. Virtually all wars in the history of wars, or at least modern wars, have been fought over religion so your statemente is pretty laughable.

But I have some very Good News! I am predicting that in 2017, or else 2018, All of the Churches established by St. Peter, including my Church, will come back together as one, after 1000 years of the being united as one before the Pope got a wild hair up his butt and added one word to the Nicene Creed which caused the "Great Schism." And that is when all hell broke loose (i.e., the persecution of Christians in the Holy Land and the Crusades, and all that).

Fast forward one thousand years to today. Now there are about 10,000 schisms, and counting, and the world has completely gone to hell.

And even as we speak my prediction is coming to pass. The Archbihop of Canterbury is currently holding talks with the Patriarch of Constantinople, with the stated purpose of bringing our Churches back together for the first time in a 1000 years. But the current Pope at the present time at least, is refusing to join the talks. But it may yet happen, but IMHO probably after the current Pope is dead. (And no I am not making a death threat, but everyone has to meet their maker at some point).

Anyhow, when all the Churches established by St. Peter and his successors come back together (including the Lutherans and Presbyterians and Methodists, et al), then and only then will we be able to defeat the 7th head of Satan (Islam) in the final battle between good and evil. Then we will rule the Earth unhindered by Satan for a 1000 years! Barry Midyet BTW I haven't posted in 3 days basically because it took 3 days to get Harvey out of my boat, and for everything to return to some semblance of normal on the Gulf Coast and now a hurricane far worse than Harvey is coming, and I'm stocking up for the next one, a 4000 year storm the weathermen are saying.

interpreter  posted on  2017-09-07   5:24:02 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#94. To: nolu chan (#91)

Sorry, but I do not agree with you at all. The break with Rome in 1534 was just the latest in several breaks with Rome. In fact, it can well be argued that the Anglican Church was independent from Rome for a thousand years until the Pope sent the Norman Roman Catholic kings to conquer England by force. And England always had more liberal divorce laws than Rome, and that has nothing to do with Henry the 8th.

I know all this because that is what I learned in the 7 week Catachism class I had to sit through in order to join the English Church.

interpreter  posted on  2017-09-07   5:52:02 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#95. To: nolu chan (#91)

You are so funny. I cannot read one word of that small print old-English document, except for the tile which appears to have bloody Mary's name on it. Of course all the world knows she recognized the supremacy of the Pope. But the Church of England never once did so voluntarily (and only when Mary threatened to behead the Archbishop of Canterbury if he did not comply).

interpreter  posted on  2017-09-07   6:05:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#96. To: interpreter (#93)

They did not and do not fight about religion.

That is not true, not true at all, according to what Grandma told me. Her parents, being Protestants and therefore persecuted in Ireland for their religion,and also because of the potato famine you talk about which is only part of it, came to America to escape all of that.

Grandma didn't tell me much about Northern Ireland, but I lived there and married a local there.

Grandma is delusional if she thought protestants were persecuted in Ireland, or that it was about religion.

Your grandma would have to have left so long ago that it would most likely predate the 26 Counties becoming an independent nation in 1949 when it left the British Commonwealth.

The Potato Famine was from 1845 - 1852. It only affected the potato crop. During the famine, the country under British occupation and rule exported food. You do realize that your Granny had to be born 165 years ago to have been around during the Irish potato famine. It predates the American Civil War. It was the Catholics being persecuted.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Famine_(Ireland)

Irish food exports during Famine

Rioters in Dungarvan attempt to break into a bakery; the poor could not afford to buy what food was available. (The Pictorial Times, 1846)

Records show that Irish lands exported food even during the worst years of the Famine. When Ireland had experienced a famine in 1782–83, ports were closed to keep Irish-grown food in Ireland to feed the Irish. Local food prices promptly dropped. Merchants lobbied against the export ban, but government in the 1780s overrode their protests. No such export ban happened in the 1840s.

Throughout the entire period of the Famine, Ireland was exporting enormous quantities of food. In the magazine History Ireland (1997, issue 5, pp. 32–36), Christine Kinealy, a Great Hunger scholar, lecturer, and Drew University professor, relates her findings: Almost 4,000 vessels carried food from Ireland to the ports of Bristol, Glasgow, Liverpool, and London during 1847, when 400,000 Irish men, women, and children died of starvation and related diseases. She also writes that Irish exports of calves, livestock (except pigs), bacon, and ham actually increased during the Famine. This food was shipped under British military guard from the most famine-stricken parts of Ireland; Ballina, Ballyshannon, Bantry, Dingle, Killala, Kilrush, Limerick, Sligo, Tralee, and Westport. A wide variety of commodities left Ireland during 1847, including peas, beans, onions, rabbits, salmon, oysters, herring, lard, honey, tongues, animal skins, rags, shoes, soap, glue, and seed. The most shocking export figures concern butter. Butter was shipped in firkins, each one holding 9 imperial gallons; 41 litres. In the first nine months of 1847, 56,557 firkins (509,010 imperial gallons; 2,314,000 litres) were exported from Ireland to Bristol, and 34,852 firkins (313,670 imperial gallons; 1,426,000 litres) were shipped to Liverpool, which correlates with 822,681 imperial gallons (3,739,980 litres) of butter exported to England from Ireland during nine months of the worst year of the Famine. The problem in Ireland was not lack of food, which was plentiful, but the price of it, which was beyond the reach of the poor.

And in America she married a Jew. On the other side, my mother is/was a full-blooded German. That would never happen in Ireland or probably anywhere in Europe. I thank God every day that my parents met in America, the great "melting pot."

It is not the most likely thing in Ireland, but mainly due to the scarcity of Germans and Jews.

And it is not just in northern Ireland. Virtually all wars in the history of wars, or at least modern wars, have been fought over religion so your statemente is pretty laughable.

The difference, of course, being that I lived there and married there during The Troubles, and you have no idea of what you are talking about. The Troubles have always been about a foreign occupying group. If the Mexicans conquered Texas and instituted Mexican rule, there would be some troubles, but religion would not be the cause. The new occupiers could declare complete freedom of religion and somehow I feel that the Texans would not be satisfied.

But I have some very Good News! I am predicting that in 2017, or else 2018, All of the Churches established by St. Peter, including my Church, will come back together as one, after 1000 years of the being united as one before the Pope got a wild hair up his butt and added one word to the Nicene Creed which caused the "Great Schism."

What was that one word?

And even as we speak my prediction is coming to pass. The Archbihop of Canterbury is currently holding talks with the Patriarch of Constantinople, with the stated purpose of bringing our Churches back together for the first time in a 1000 years. But the current Pope at the present time at least, is refusing to join the talks. But it may yet happen, but IMHO probably after the current Pope is dead. (And no I am not making a death threat, but everyone has to meet their maker at some point).

When the Catholic church adopts protestantism, it will cease to be the Catholic church. It remains the predominant Christian faith, in a sea of thousands of denominations, because it has not changed dramatically.

Anyhow, when all the Churches established by St. Peter and his successors come back together (including the Lutherans and Presbyterians and Methodists, et al), then and only then will we be able to defeat the 7th head of Satan (Islam) in the final battle between good and evil.

It is good to hear that the Lutherans and Presbyterians and Methodists are going to rejoin the Roman Catholic Church, the only church built by Jesus upon His rock, Peter. But I thought the Lutherans were established by Martin Luther, rahter than St. Peter or one of his successors, the Popes, the Holy See of Rome.

I'm stocking up for the next one, a 4000 year storm the weathermen are saying.

Be positive. If it is a 4,000 year storm the over and under on its arrival is 2,000 years, so expect it in 4,117 A.D.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-07   19:28:00 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#97. To: interpreter (#95)

[interpreter #94] Sorry, but I do not agree with you at all. The break with Rome in 1534 was just the latest in several breaks with Rome. In fact, it can well be argued that the Anglican Church was independent from Rome for a thousand years until the Pope sent the Norman Roman Catholic kings to conquer England by force.

We can agree to disagree. The historical documents clearly present historical facts, and you believe something else. You are completely entitled to your own opinions.

[interpreter #94] And England always had more liberal divorce laws than Rome, and that has nothing to do with Henry the 8th.

Of course, Henry VIII could get a divorce. But then, Henry VIII was a Catholic at the time and divorce meant ex-communication. And so, Henry VIII sought an ANNULMENT, not a divorce, from the Pope, so that he could remarry in the Church. The Pope said NO. And so it came to pass that Henry VIII started his own religion where his behavior, unacceptable to the Roman Catholic Religion, suddenly became acceptable. And then along came Queen Anne in 1559 and the Church of England bent a knee to Rome, begged forgiveness for its heresies, acknowledged the Supremacy of the Holy See in Rome, and rejoined the Church of Christ in Rome.

[interpreter #95] You are so funny. I cannot read one word of that small print old-English document, except for the tile which appears to have bloody Mary's name on it.

By Bloody Mary, I assume you mean the then reigning Queen of England and the then head of the Church of England.

I thought I had provided a nice clear excerpt, as well as a copy of the complete 458-year old document. It must not have appeared on your monitor for some reason so, to make amends, I will repeat what my copy says.

An Act repealing all Articles and Provisions made against the See Apostolick of Rome, since the twentieth Year of King Henry the Eighth, and for the Establishment of all Spiritual and Ecclestiastical Possessions and Hereditaments conveyed to the Laity.

Whereas since the twentieth Year of King Henry the Eighth of famous Memory, Father unto your Majesty our most natural Sovereign, and gracious Land and Queen, much false and erroneous Doctrine hath been taught, preached and written, partly by divers the Natural-born Subjects of this Realm, and partly being brought in hither from sundry other Foreign Countries, hath been sowen and spread abroad within the same: (2) By Reason whereof, as well the Spiritualty as the Temporalty of your Highness Realms and Dominions have swerved from the Obedience of the See Apostolick, and declined from the Unity of Christ's Church, and so have continued, until such Time as your Majesty being first raised up by God, and set in the Seat Royal over us, and then by his Divine and gracious Providence that in marriage with the most noble and virtuous Prince the King our Sovereign Lord your Husband, the Pope's Holiness and the See Apolostick sent hither unto your Majesties (as unto Persons undehled, and by God's Goodness preserved from the common Infection aforesaid) and to the whole Realm, the most Reverend Father in God the Lord Cardinal Pool, Legate de latere, to call us home again into the right Way from whence we have all this long while wandred and strayed abroad; (3) and we, after sundry long and grievous Plagues and Calamities, seeing by the Goodness of God our own Errors, have knowledged the same unto the said most Reverend Father, and by him have been and are the rather at the Contemplation of your Majesties received and embraced into the Unity and Bosom of Christ's Church, and upon our humble Submission and Promise made for a Declaration of our Repentance, to repeal and abrogate such Acts and Statutes as had been made in Parliament since the said twentieth Year of the said King Henry the Eigth, against the Supremacy of the See Apolostick, as in our Submission exhibited to the said most Reverend Father in God by your Majesties appeareth: The Tenour whereof ensueth.

II. We the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons, assembled in this present Parliament, representing the whole Body of the Realm of England, and the Dominions of the same, in the Name of our selvers particularly, and also of the said Body universally, in this our Supplication directed to your Majesties, with most humble Suit, that it may by your Graces Intercession and Mean be exhibited to the Father Pope July the third and the See Apostolick of Rome, do declare our selves very sorry and repentent of the Schism and Disobedience committed in this Realm and Dominions aforesaid against the said See Apostolic, either by making, agreeing or executing any Laws, Ordinances or Commandments, against the Supremacy of the said See, or otherwise doing or speaking, that might inpugne the same:

[...]

As you can now hopefully see, there was an admission in 1559 that "the Spiritualty as the Temporalty of your Highness Realms and Dominions have swerved from the Obedience of the See Apostolick, and declined from the Unity of Christ's Church," and "by God's Goodness preserved from the common Infection aforesaid) and to the whole Realm, the most Reverend Father in God the Lord Cardinal Pool, Legate de latere, [was sent] to call us home again into the right Way from whence we have all this long while wandred and strayed abroad."

And they declared their repentance, "at the Contemplation of your Majesties received and embraced into the Unity and Bosom of Christ's Church, and upon our humble Submission and Promise made for a Declaration of our Repentance...."

And they took a knee and begged forgiveness from the See Apostolic, and acknowledged the Supremacy of the See Apostolic,

We the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons, assembled in this present Parliament, representing the whole Body of the Realm of England, and the Dominions of the same, in the Name of our selves particularly, and also of the said Body universally, in this our Supplication directed to your Majesties, with most humble Suit, that it may by your Graces Intercession and Mean be exhibited to the Father Pope July the third and the See Apostolick of Rome, do declare our selves very sorry and repentent of the Schism and Disobedience committed in this Realm and Dominions aforesaid against the said See Apostolic, either by making, agreeing or executing any Laws, Ordinances or Commandments, against the Supremacy of the said See....

I am sorry that only one word of the last copy was readable and hope this satisfies the deficiency.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-07   19:29:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#98. To: nolu chan (#96)

Well it was my greatgrandparents who experienced the potato famine (who I didn't know because I wasn't born yet). Anyhow they immigrated to Texas (to Brady Texas) and produced the Texas-size version of Brady bunch - 12 kids.

But my main point is, there was also a lot of persecutions/conflicts during the Potato famine and through-out Ireland's history.

The founders of the Lutheran, Presbyterian and Methodist Churches were all direct successors to Peter through the process called "the laying on of hands". But I did not say they were coming back together with the Roman Church (at least not any time soon). I said (or I meant to say) they would come back together with Canterbury and the six Orthodox Patriarchs, either in 2017 or 2018. At the present moment, the current Pope in Rome is refusing to take part in the talks which he considers blasphemy. But it can also be argued that it makes no difference. The Roman Catholic kings of today (the six Presidents and PM's of the six predominantly Roman Catholic nations in NATO) will overrule the Pope and unite as one with the Lutheran, Anglican and Orthodox nations in the 24 Christian-nation Alliance that is prophesied, that will rule the Earth for a thousand years.

And the Roman Church has changed and dramatically. For one thing, the Pope now says the Roman Church is the only Church established by St. Peter. It is one of many Churches established by St. Peter including the Jerusalem and Antioch Churches as recorded in the Bible. That change is a brand new change in doctrine on top of many other changes (Luther listed 17) that Protestants are protesting.

As for Irma, what the Meterologists are basically saying is that Irma is the worst storm in recorded history, because history did not begin to be recorded until about 4000 yeas ago, which is when the Genesis account of the great flood in the Gaden of Eden was written, and Archeologists and other Sumerian writings confirm that a couple big floods did indeed occur in Mesopotamia about the time the Bible says it did. In other words, Irma is the biggest weather event since the days of Noah.

Barry M

interpreter  posted on  2017-09-08   7:50:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#99. To: nolu chan (#97)

Henry the 8th did NOT start his own religion. The Church of England was estabished in 47 AD for God's sake, and long before the Church in Rome. And except for the Norman Kings (and later on Bloody Mary), Canterbury and/or London were never in the jurisdiction of Rome.

interpreter  posted on  2017-09-08   8:26:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#100. To: interpreter (#99)

Henry the 8th did NOT start his own religion. The Church of England was estabished in 47 AD for God's sake, and long before the Church in Rome.

I am afraid this is impossible. You cannot have a Church of England centuries before there was an England.

There was no England in 47 AD, and there was no Church of England in 47 AD.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/England

The area now called England was first inhabited by modern humans during the Upper Palaeolithic period, but takes its name from the Angles, one of the Germanic tribes who settled during the 5th and 6th centuries. England became a unified state in the 10th century, and since the Age of Discovery, which began during the 15th century, has had a significant cultural and legal impact on the wider world.

The Church in Rome, the most holy Church of Jesus Christ, created by Jesus Christ and built upon His rock, St. Peter, existed from the time that Jesus Christ ordained it, with St. Peter being the first Pope, and the apostles being sent forth to spread the faith.

Matthew 16:18 (NAS) — "And I also say to you that you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build My church, and the gates of Hades shall not overpower it."

Matthew 16:18 (Living Bible) — "You are Peter, a stone; and upon this rock I will build my church; and all the powers of hell shall not prevail against it."

Matthew 16:18 (KJV) — "And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it

Matthew 16:18 (DRB) — "And I say to thee: That thou art Peter; and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it."

http://www.drbo.org/chapter/47016.htm

Catholic doctrine would hold,

"Upon this rock": The words of Christ to Peter, spoken in the vulgar language of the Jews which our Lord made use of, were the same as if he had said in English, Thou art a Rock, and upon this rock I will build my church. So that, by the plain course of the words, Peter is here declared to be the rock, upon which the church was to be built: Christ himself being both the principal foundation and founder of the same. Where also note, that Christ, by building his house, that is, his church, upon a rock, has thereby secured it against all storms and floods, like the wise builder, St. Matt. 7. 24, 25.

The spreading of the faith then reached what would become England centuries later, and with that the most holy Church of Jesus Christ, under the papacy of St. Peter, became established in that land which, centuries later, would become England. It was not called the Church of England as there was no such place in existence. The Angles, from whom the name England is derived, did not arrive until the 5th century A.D.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_England

The Church of England (C of E) is the state church of England. The Archbishop of Canterbury (currently Justin Welby) is the most senior cleric, although the monarch is the supreme governor. The Church of England is also the mother church of the international Anglican Communion. It traces its history to the Christian church recorded as existing in the Roman province of Britain by the third century, and to the 6th-century Gregorian mission to Kent led by Augustine of Canterbury.

The English church renounced papal authority when Henry VIII failed to secure an annulment of his marriage to Catherine of Aragon in the 1530s. The English Reformation accelerated under Edward VI's regents, before a brief restoration of papal authority under Queen Mary I and King Philip. The Act of Supremacy 1558 renewed the breach and the Elizabethan Settlement charted a course enabling the English church to describe itself as both Catholic and Reformed:

King Henry VIII, as his predecessors, was a member of the Catholic Church established in England. The only way he could remarry in the Church was to obtain an annulment. Within his then-Catholic faith, a divorce meant ex-communication. When Henry VIII sought an annnulment from the Catholic Church in Rome, and said annulment was denied by the Pope, Henry VIII had a mad and, in 1534, renounced the authority of the Pope and started a religion with himself as the head honcho, and this new religion recognized an annulment granted to Henry VIII, and recognized Henry VIII through numerous annulments, divorces, and spousal beheadings.

In 1555, when Henry VIII had the decency to die, Queen Mary renounced the heresies of Henry VIII, acknowledged the supremacy of the Pope in religious matters, begged forgiveness, and the Church of England rejoined the Church of Jesus Christ in Rome. In 1559, Queen Elizabeth again seperated from the Church of Jesus Christ in Rome.

It is ludicrous to maintain that the Church of England was founded about 500 years before England was founded. It is equally ludicrous to maintain that Henry VIII sought an annulment from the Pope in Rome if he was not of that Church. Nor would it make sense to declare a seperation from the Church of Jesus Christ in Rome if the Church of England was not of that church. Nor could Queen Anne and the Church of England rejoin the Church of Jesus Christ in Rome had it not been of that church. Queen Anne only renounced the heresies of Henry VIII. Had the Church of England not been of the Church of Jesus Christ in Rome for the previous 1,500 years, renouncing the heresies of Henry VIII would have been seriously underwhelming.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-08   19:35:40 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#101. To: interpreter (#98)

Well it was my greatgrandparents who experienced the potato famine (who I didn't know because I wasn't born yet).

Well, what you said was,

That is not true, not true at all, according to what Grandma told me. Her parents, being Protestants and therefore persecuted in Ireland for their religion, and also because of the potato famine you talk about which is only part of it, came to America to escape all of that.

I was just pointing out that any actual observation of the famine was at least 165 years ago, pre-dating the American Civil War.

At page 8 of your book, you point out that Great Grandpa was a Christian and a Jew, and attended synagogue on Saturday and church on Sunday. I seriously doubt he was persecuted for being a Christian on Sunday. As for Jews in Ireland 165 years ago, I have no idea. Historically, the total Jewish population of IOreland peaked at around 5,000, and there are about 1,500 today, with the majority having been in Dublin.

But my main point is, there was also a lot of persecutions/conflicts during the Potato famine and through-out Ireland's history.

This is undoubtedly true, as stated. It is historical fact that the persecutions were of the Irish who were almost entirely Catholic, by the occupiers who were not.

The Irish were forbidden to speak or teach the Irish language, to keep their name if it were something like O'Sullivan (the "O" had to go), and in times of famine, they were denied any government aid if they owned land. They were given the choice of forfeiting their land or starve. They were not in a position to persecute anyone.

The founders of the Lutheran, Presbyterian and Methodist Churches were all direct successors to Peter through the process called "the laying on of hands". But I did not say they were coming back together with the Roman Church (at least not any time soon).

The Church of England left the most holy Roman Catholic Church in 1534 A.D., but took a knee, admitted heresy, begged forgiveness, and rejoined the most holy Roman Catholic Church in 1559, later to depart once again.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/England

The area now called England was first inhabited by modern humans during the Upper Palaeolithic period, but takes its name from the Angles, one of the Germanic tribes who settled during the 5th and 6th centuries. England became a unified state in the 10th century, and since the Age of Discovery, which began during the 15th century, has had a significant cultural and legal impact on the wider world.

And the Roman Church has changed and dramatically. For one thing, the Pope now says the Roman Church is the only Church established by St. Peter.

- - - - -

The founders of the Lutheran, Presbyterian and Methodist Churches were all direct successors to Peter through the process called "the laying on of hands". But I did not say they were coming back together with the Roman Church (at least not any time soon).

What you said:

Anyhow, when all the Churches established by St. Peter and his successors come back together (including the Lutherans and Presbyterians and Methodists, et al)

St. Peter did not found a church. Jesus founded a church. By the biblical words directly attributed to Jesus Christ, He founded a church upon His rock, St. Peter. Jesus Christ founded one such church, as stated at Matthew 16:18. If all the churches established by men are not coming back together with the church founded by Jesus Christ, what are they coming back to together with? How can all the churches established by St. Peter (sic - Jesus) and his successors (sic - Jesus), not include the Church of Christ established by Jesus upon His rock, Peter?

"Laying on of hands" is not the process of Jesus Christ as memorialized at Matthew 16:18. I don't care if someone chooses to do that, but I do not personally find that in any bible. What I find in the bible is that Jesus founded His church, and by what act he did so.

In your book, The Revelation, A Historicist View, Westbow Press, © 2017 by Barry Midyet, Westbow Press rev. date 3/2/2017, at page 20, you assert that,

[T]he Anglican Church, now the de facto head honcho of the West, will soon replace Rome as the western lampstand.

Not only is the Anglican Church not the de facto head honcho of the West, it is collapsing in England on center stage, in a dramatic way. Organized Christian religion has been declining, but the Anglican Church is leading the way.

http://www.secularism.org.uk/news/2015/06/new-research--49-percent-have-no-religion-anglican-church-collapse-continues-islam-increases-ten-fold-since-1983

New research: 49% have no religion, Anglican Church collapse continues, Islam increases ten-fold since 1983

Posted: Tue, 02 Jun 2015 10:43
National Secular Society

[...]

The percentage of non-religious people has increased from 31% in 1983, to 49% in 2014. Conversely, the share belonging to the Church of England has fallen from 40% to 17% over the same time period.

This means that by-far the single largest group of people is the non-religious. Based on estimates from the Office of National Statistics, there are 24.7 million non-believers in the UK. The next single-highest group is Anglicans on 8.6 million. However, according to the NatCen figures, the "nones" have outnumbered Anglicans since at least 1994- when there were over 2 million more non-believers.

The picture is different for non-Anglican Christians however. Roman Catholics have dropped by only 2 percentage points, from 10% of the population in 1983 to 8% last year.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/feb/17/church-of-england-attendance-decline-30-years-general-assembly

Church of England expects attendance to fall for next 30 years

C of E general assembly hears ‘much gloomier’ prediction as congregations age and young people spurn organised religion

The scale of the Church of England’s atrophy has been starkly set out by figures presented to its general assembly that show church attendance will continue to fall for the next 30 years.

Previously, the church predicted that its decline in numbers was likely to continue for another five years before recovering.

But John Spence, the C of E’s finance chief, said on Wednesday that the decline was expected to continue for another three decades, with today’s figures of 18 people per 1,000 regularly attending church falling to 10 per 1,000. An 81-year-old was eight times more likely to attend church than a 21-year-old, he said.

“On all likely measures of success, given the demographics of the church, it is unlikely we will see a net growth in church membership within the next 30 years,” said Spence. “I could have given you other facts, but I think you get the point.”

The figures illustrate the challenge facing a church whose congregations are ageing as the millennial generation increasingly spurns organised religion.

[snip]

http://www.abc.net.au/religion/articles/2016/11/08/4571329.htm

How the Church of England Lost the English People

Linda Woodhead
ABC Religion and Ethics
8 Nov 2016

Linda Woodhead is Professor of Sociology of Religion at Lancaster University. She is the co-author of That Was the Church That Was: How the Church of England Lost the English People.

"The Church of England. Loving Jesus with an air of superiority since 597." So goes the old joke, but the last few decades have seen this once-proud Church brought it to its knees.

The Church of England's own statistics, published late last month, show attendance falling relentlessly by 1% a year, and funerals declining even faster - down 30% since 2005. Today only about 1% of the population (750,000) are in one of its churches on Sunday, and fewer than one in three have an Anglican funeral.

Church leaders like to blame "secularization" but a glance at the Church of England's sister churches in Scandinavia shows this can't be the whole story.

Take the Church of Denmark, a fellow Reformation church integral to the project of nation-building and existing today in the context of an affluent liberal democracy. Its decline is far slower than the Church of England's, with over three-quarters of Danes still choosing to pay church tax, 83% having a Church funeral and two-thirds of Danish babies baptised.

Compare that with England where well under a third of the population identify as Church of England and just 1 in 10 babies are baptised. The only similarity between the two is a very low rate of Sunday churchgoing: around 1% of the population. But for these societal rather than congregational churches, Sunday attendance has never been as important as occasional offices.

As a sociologist of religion, I have spent much of my career tracking the Church of England's collapse; as an Anglican who once trained ordinands, my concern is more than professional. This year I published a book with Andrew Brown, religious correspondent of the London Guardian, to explain what went wrong.

The underlying answer we give in That Was the Church That Was is, in some ways, blindingly obvious: religion flourishes when it is enmeshed with the lives of those it serves and dies when it no longer connects. Societal churches depend on a healthy relationship with their societies, even when there is mutual criticism. But in England, after the 1980s, the increasingly stretched ties between the two snapped. Church and society spun off in different orbits. The gulf is now so profound that, despite residual constitutional ties, the chance of reconciliation is virtually zero.

[snip]

https://www.skepticink.com/tippling/2015/06/04/uk-49-have-no-religion-anglican-church-collapse-continues-islam-increases-ten-fold-since-1983/

New research: 49% have no religion, Anglican Church collapse continues, Islam increases ten-fold since 1983

Posted: Tue, 02 Jun 2015 10:43

New findings by the National Centre for Social Research have confirmed the long-term collapse in affiliation with the Church of England and the huge increase in non-belief.

Strikingly, the research also found that there had been a ten-fold increase in those identifying with Islam in the past 32 years. In 1983, Islam represented around half a percentage point of Britain’s population but in 2014 it had reached 5%, the research found.

“The proportion of people saying that they are Anglican has fallen quite dramatically in the last ten years, coinciding with a rise in people saying they are not religious,” NatCen noted.

The percentage of non-religious people has increased from 31% in 1983, to 49% in 2014. Conversely, the share belonging to the Church of England has fallen from 40% to 17% over the same time period.

[snip]

http://orthodoxengland.org.uk/rome.htm

An Orthodox Comment on the Decline of Anglicanism:

The Path to R.O.M.E., R.O.M.A. and R.O.M.A.N.Z.

The consecration in the USA of an active homosexual to the Anglican episcopate is leading to a Schism in the worldwide Anglican communion.

At first sight it may seem very strange that it is this which may lead to the final collapse of that denomination. Anglicanism was always based on a compromise between Protestantism and Catholicism in the desire to avoid the descent of a State into Civil War. For centuries Anglicanism has boasted of its 'comprehensiveness', the idea that 'dogmas' do not matter. As such, in the nineteenth century, Anglicanism laid the foundation-stone of ecumenism.

In recent decades it seemed not to matter in Anglicanism whether you believed or not in the Holy Trinity, in the Divinity of Christ, in the Resurrection, in the Virginity of the Ever-Virgin, in sacraments and therefore a male priesthood. Faith could be reduced to the lowest common denominator. Belief in the basics was optional. Being all things to all men, you could believe in anything you wanted - except in disunity. All the above divergences were indeed swept under the carpet - and as a result outward unity survived. And now this, the challenge to simple Christian morality, is leading to the suicide of a denomination.

However, looking more deeply at this phenomenon, we should not be surprised. The rejection of the fundamental revelations to the Church about the nature of God, the rejection of the 'dogmas' formulated by the saints of the first millennium, leads inevitably to the rejection of basic Christian morality. After an initial period of hypocrisy, sooner or later the collapse of the spiritual and dogmatic basis of any Christian group leads automatically to its moral collapse.

This is a law. Without spirituality, there is hypocrisy, followed by visible moral collapse. Here it is happening before our very eyes, proof that spiritual collapse always precedes moral collapse. The loss of belief in basic spiritual truths leads to the loss of belief in basic moral truths. Never underestimate the moral significance of the spiritual revelations of dogma.

Some are now looking to Catholicism as a refuge from Protestant divisions and sectarianism. But not many. Everybody knows that once the present ailing Pope has gone from the stage, Catholicism, especially in Western countries, may well implode. 99% of Western Catholics do not accept Papal Infallibility, clerical celibacy or rulings against artificial contraception. The gulf between the ordinary Roman Catholic and the Vatican has rarely been so wide. Pedophile scandals have ruined Catholicism, both morally and financially, even in recent strongholds like Ireland. In many ways the ill-health of Pope John-Paul II seems to be symbolic of that of a whole organisation, teetering on the brink of decay and division. An old, frail and shaky structure which is about to die, having come to the term of it historical existence.

Others look to the Orthodox Churches for authority.

[snip]

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-08   19:39:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#102. To: nolu chan (#100)

You just love to nit-pick everything I say. There may not have been a country called England in 47 AD, but I can assure you that Canterbury existed in 47AD, and that a Church was founded there in 47AD. You are also ignoring the fact that St. Peter also established a Church in Jerusalem, in Antioch, and in Alexandra. I have not made anything up. It is the official teaching/doctrine of the Anglican Church so you are really dissing the Archbishop of Canterbury, and not merely me. And can you please explain why all Popes, until very recently, taught that St. Peter established all the Orthodox Churches in addition to the Church in Rome? What you are spouting off is revisionist history, and a lie.

interpreter  posted on  2017-09-09   8:00:46 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#103. To: nolu chan (#101)

Obviously, you are lacking in reading comprehension, or else you do not know English. I said Grandma told me about what my Greatgrandma said about Ireland. And in most of Ireland in most of its history, sometimes the Roman Catholics were in charge and persecuting Protestants, and sometimes the Protestants were in charge and persecuting Roman Catholics. But I dont even pretend to be an expert on Ireland, and if you want to say that most of the time in recent years it has been Protestants persecuting Roman Catholics, I might concede that, but if true, it is payback for when the Roman Catholics were in charge and doing the persecuting. Whether right or wrong, it is just human nature, pure and simple. But I do pray that cooler heads will prevail and do the right thing, and forgive and forget.

As for the Anglican Church, it may be fast losing members in England (and the US branch), but world-wide it is growing, and especially in Africa. Even in the US, there are some Episcopal Churches that are growing. They are the ones who have not changed anything from what St.Peter and the first- century Church taught, and do not ordain/hire gay priests or perform same- sex marriages for example.

But the main reason I say the Anglican Church is the de facto head-honcho in the west is because Great Britain and the US, both founded by Anglicans, are the two most powerful nations on Earth, in other words,the de facto head honcho(s) of the west, if not the whole Earth.

The Patriarch of Constantinople is merely just making it official. The Patriarch of Constantinople has already removed the Roman Church (about a thousand years ago as prophesied in the letter to Ephesus which is also directed to Rome), and a thousand years later he is now planning on replacing Rome with Canterbury, which is also hinted at (or signified) in the Revelation (See Rev. 2:5 for starters). And it is occurring right on time. In the Dispensational View of things, the Church was united as one for 1000 years, then it was not for 1000 years, now it will be united as one again and for a thousand years (with or without Rome because Rome can be replaced, but it may be that Rome may also rejoin with the other Churches at some point to fully complete the picture). Either way, it will result in a glorious Heaven on Earth for a thousand years.

But I am very impressed that you have actually read my book. Did you buy a copy or are you just reading from Amazon's free excerpt? I suspect the latter. But if you want to read the whole thing and for cheap, I am pleased to announce that my updated e-book version is now out. It is available at BN.com (Barnes and Nobles). It has 20 full-color images, some of them original paintings, and is so much better than the B&W paperback version.

The e-book is quite affordable at $3.99 and it doesn't waste any trees, so it is a win-win deal.

interpreter  posted on  2017-09-09   11:53:46 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#104. To: interpreter (#103)

I want to be the first poster that positively identifies you as a DUMB-FUCK.

buckeroo  posted on  2017-09-09   11:58:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#105. To: interpreter (#102)

[interpreter #102] You just love to nit-pick everything I say. There may not have been a country called England in 47 AD, but I can assure you that Canterbury existed in 47AD, and that a Church was founded there in 47AD.

The first rule of digging holes is, when you in up to your neck, stop digging.

What you had claimed:

[interpreter #100] The Church of England was established in 47 AD for God's sake, and long before the Church in Rome.

I responded with the inconvenient fact the England did not exist until the 5th century A.D. I do not consider it nitpicking that you have the Anglican church existing in Durovernum Cantiacorum 47 A.D., when the Church in Canterbury was established in 597 A.D. when both England and Canterbury actually existed.

In your latest reimagination of history, based on nothing, you fantasize that the city of Canterbury was there in 47 A.D., and that at that time the Anglican Church was established with an Archbishop of Canterbury of said Anglican Church.

Excretions emanating from your cranial sphincter do not replace facts.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Durovernum_Cantiacorum

Durovernum Cantiacorum

Watling Street linked Britain to the rest of the Roman Empire.

Durovernum Cantiacorum was a town and hillfort (oppidum) in Roman Britain at the site of present-day Canterbury in Kent. It occupied a strategic location on Watling Street at the best local crossing of the Stour, which prompted a convergence of roads connected to the ports of Dubris (Dover), Rutupiae (Richborough), Regulbium (Reculver) and Portus Lemanis (Lympne). Considerable archaeological evidence of Roman activity has been found in Canterbury, much of which can now be found in the Roman Museum built on the remains of a Roman townhouse.

Origins

Plan of Durovernum

from The Saxon Cathedral at Canterbury and The Saxon Saints Buried Therein

The name Durovernum Cantiacorum is Latin for "Durovernum of the Cantiaci", preserving the name of an earlier British town whose ancient British name has been reconstructed as *Durouvernon ("Stronghold by the Alder Grove"),[1] although the name is sometimes supposed to have derived from various British names for the Stour.[2] The Iron-Age oppidum at the site was triple-ditched. The site seems to have been occupied and fortified by the Romans shortly after their invasion in AD 43. Military occupation continued until at least the time of Boudica's rebellion.

Development

There is no evidence of much development in Durovernum until the Flavian period (69-96), after demilitarisation.[3] It became the civitas capital of the Cantiaci (Cantii) tribes.

A large religious and administrative complex was soon established at its centre, consisting of forum and basilica, temple enclosure and theatre. The theatre, originally built around AD 80, was totally rebuilt in the early 3rd century. It was probably associated with religious festivals as much as the dramatic arts. The public baths were just to the north-east. A number of other possible temple and/or church sites have also been identified. The town was enclosed by defensive walls in the late 3rd century and was given single-arched gateways. Private buildings within the walls were originally of timber, but were later replaced with stone and some furnished with mosaic floors. An extensive complex of wooden pipes serviced the town. Industries included brick, tile and pottery production, as well as bronze working. There were many commercial shops, notably a baker's shop with donkey-driven millstone. Cemeteries outside the town appear to have continued in Christian use and St Martin's Church appears to be built around an old Roman mausoleum which stood in one of these.

Decline

Because of its links with Gaul, Durovernum seems to have survived in good order until the Romans administration left around AD 410. However, after that, its decline was rapid. Hired mercenaries were used to defend the town but they revolted and, by the time of the Battle of Aylesford in the mid-5th century, the Jutes had taken over the area. The British and Latin name survived as the medieval Latin placenames Dorobernia and Dorovernia,[2] but it also became known in Old Welsh as Cair Ceint ("Fortress of Kent")[4][5] and in Old English as Cantwareburh ("Kentish Stronghold"),[6] which developed into the modern "Canterbury".

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canterbury

Early history

St. Augustine's Abbey, which forms part of the city's UNESCO World Heritage Site, was where Christianity was brought to England.

Main article: Durovernum Cantiacorum

The Canterbury area has been inhabited since prehistoric times. Lower Paleolithic axes, and Neolithic and Bronze Age pots have been found in the area.[11] Canterbury was first recorded as the main settlement of the Celtic tribe of the Cantiaci, which inhabited most of modern-day Kent. In the 1st century AD, the Romans captured the settlement and named it Durovernum Cantiacorum.[6] The Romans rebuilt the city, with new streets in a grid pattern, a theatre, a temple, a forum, and public baths.[12] Although they did not maintain a major military garrison, its position on Watling Street relative to the major Kentish ports of Rutupiae (Richborough), Dubrae (Dover), and Lemanae (Lymne) gave it considerable strategic importance.[13] In the late 3rd century, to defend against attack from barbarians, the Romans built an earth bank around the city and a wall with seven gates, which enclosed an area of 130 acres (53 ha).[12] St. Augustine's Abbey gateway

Despite being counted as one of the 28 cities of Sub-Roman Britain,[8][9] it seems that after the Romans left Britain in 410 Durovernum Cantiacorum was abandoned except by a few farmers and gradually decayed.[14] Over the next 100 years, an Anglo-Saxon community formed within the city walls, as Jutish refugees arrived, possibly intermarrying with the locals.[15] In 597, Pope Gregory the Great sent Augustine to convert its King Æthelberht to Christianity. After the conversion, Canterbury, being a Roman town, was chosen by Augustine as the centre for his episcopal see in Kent, and an abbey and cathedral were built. Augustine thus became the first Archbishop of Canterbury.[16] The town's new importance led to its revival, and trades developed in pottery, textiles, and leather. By 630, gold coins were being struck at the Canterbury mint.[17] In 672, the Synod of Hertford gave the see of Canterbury authority over the entire English Church.[10]

In 597, Pope Augustine sent Augustine to convert the people to Christianity. The Pope did that. In 597, when Canterbury and England actually existed.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustine_of_Canterbury

Augustine of Canterbury

Not to be confused with Augustine of Hippo.

Augustine of Canterbury (born first third of the 6th century – died probably 26 May 604) was a Benedictine monk who became the first Archbishop of Canterbury in the year 597. He is considered the "Apostle to the English" and a founder of the English Church.[3]

Augustine was the prior of a monastery in Rome when Pope Gregory the Great chose him in 595 to lead a mission, usually known as the Gregorian mission, to Britain to Christianize King Æthelberht and his Kingdom of Kent from Anglo-Saxon paganism. Kent was probably chosen because Æthelberht had married a Christian princess, Bertha, daughter of Charibert I the King of Paris, who was expected to exert some influence over her husband. Before reaching Kent, the missionaries had considered turning back, but Gregory urged them on, and in 597, Augustine landed on the Isle of Thanet and proceeded to Æthelberht's main town of Canterbury.

King Æthelberht converted to Christianity and allowed the missionaries to preach freely, giving them land to found a monastery outside the city walls. Augustine was consecrated as a bishop and converted many of the king's subjects, including thousands during a mass baptism on Christmas Day in 597. Pope Gregory sent more missionaries in 601, along with encouraging letters and gifts for the churches, although attempts to persuade the native Celtic bishops to submit to Augustine's authority failed. Roman bishops were established at London and Rochester in 604, and a school was founded to train Anglo-Saxon priests and missionaries. Augustine also arranged the consecration of his successor, Laurence of Canterbury. The archbishop probably died in 604 and was soon revered as a saint.

Augustine of Canterbury was a Roman Catholic Benedictine missionary sent by the Pope to convert King Æthelberht from Anglo-Saxon Paganism to Christianity. Mission accomplished in 597.

550 years after your bleatings about 47 A.D., King Æthelberht from Anglo-Saxon Paganism to Christianity, by a Roman Catholic Benedictine missionary sent by the Roman Catholic Pope Gregory the Great.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_Saint_Benedict

Order of Saint Benedict

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Benedictine" redirects here.

For the Orthodox Benedictines, see Order of Saint Benedict (Orthodox).

For the Anglican order of the same name, see Order of St. Benedict (Anglican).

For other uses, see Benedictine (disambiguation).

"O.S.B." redirects here. For other uses, see OSB.

The Order of Saint Benedict (OSB; Latin: Ordo Sancti Benedicti), also known – in reference to the colour of its members' habits – as the Black Monks, is a Catholic religious order of independent monastic communities that observe the Rule of Saint Benedict. Each community (monastery, priory or abbey) within the order maintains its own autonomy, while the order itself represents their mutual interests. The terms "Order of Saint Benedict" and "Benedictine Order" are, however, also used to refer to all Benedictine communities collectively, sometimes giving the incorrect impression that there exists a generalate or motherhouse with jurisdiction over them.

Internationally, the order is governed by the Benedictine Confederation, a body, established in 1883 by Pope Leo XIII's Brief Summum semper, whose head is known as the Abbot Primate. Individuals whose communities are members of the order generally add the initials "OSB" after their names.

[...]

England

The English Benedictine Congregation is the oldest of the nineteen Benedictine congregations. Augustine of Canterbury and his monks established the first English Benedictine monastery at Canterbury soon after their arrival in 597. Other foundations quickly followed. Through the influence of Wilfrid, Benedict Biscop, and Dunstan, the Benedictine Rule spread with extraordinary rapidity, and in the North it was adopted in most of the monasteries that had been founded by the Celtic missionaries from Iona. Many of the episcopal sees of England were founded and governed by the Benedictines, and no less than nine of the old cathedrals were served by the black monks of the priories attached to them.[1] Monasteries served as hospitals and places of refuge for the weak and homeless. The monks studied the healing properties of plants and minerals to alleviate the sufferings of the sick.[4]

Germany was evangelized by English Benedictines. Willibrord and Boniface preached there in the seventh and eighth centuries and founded several abbeys.[1]

In the English Reformation, all monasteries were dissolved and their lands confiscated by the Crown, forcing their Catholic members to flee into exile on the Continent. During the 19th century they were able to return to England, including to Selby Abbey in Yorkshire, one of the few great monastic churches to survive the Dissolution.

[...]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Benedictine_Congregation

English Benedictine Congregation

The English Benedictine Congregation (abbr. EBC) unites autonomous Roman Catholic Benedictine communities of monks and nuns and is technically among the oldest of the 18 congregations that are affiliated in the Benedictine Confederation (the oldest being the Camaldolese).

History and administration

Although the EBC claims technical canonical continuity with the congregation erected by the Holy See in 1216, that earlier English Congregation was destroyed at the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1535-40. The present English Congregation was revived and restored by Rome in 1607-33 when numbers of Englishmen and Welshmen had become monks in continental European monasteries and were coming to England as missioners.

At the beginning of the 21st century the EBC has Houses in the United Kingdom, the United States, South America and Africa.

Every four years the General Chapter of the EBC elects an Abbot President from among the Ruling Abbots with jurisdiction, and those who have been Ruling Abbots. He is assisted by a number of officials. Periodically he undertakes a Visitation of the individual Houses. The purpose of the Visitation is the preservation, strengthening and renewal of the religious life, including the laws of the Church and the Constitutions of the congregation. The President may require by Acts of Visitation, that particular points in the Rule, the Constitutions and the law of the Church be observed.

The current Abbot President is Abbot Christopher Jamison, former Abbot of Worth Abbey.

Houses of the present Congregation

United Kingdom:

  • Ampleforth Abbey, fdd 1608 at Dieulouard
  • Belmont Abbey, fdd 1859
  • Buckfast Abbey, fdd 1882
  • Colwich Abbey (nuns), fdd 1651 in Paris
  • Curzon Park Abbey (nuns), fdd 1868
  • Douai Abbey, fdd 1615 in Paris
  • Downside Abbey, fdd 1607 in Douai
  • Ealing Abbey, fdd 1897
  • Stanbrook Abbey (nuns) fdd 1625 in Cambrai
  • Worth Abbey, fdd 1933

As for the Anglican Order of St. Benedict, pimping off the name of the Roman Catholic saint, they were late comers to the party.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_St._Benedict_(Anglican)

Order of St Benedict (Anglican)

See also Order of Saint Benedict (Orthodox) for information on the Eastern Orthodox order of this name.

The Roman Catholic equivalent may be found at the Order of Saint Benedict and the Benedictine Confederation.

There are a number of Benedictine Anglican religious orders, some of them using the name Order of St. Benedict (OSB). Just like their Roman Catholic counterparts, each abbey / priory / convent is independent of each other. The vows are not made to an order, but to a local incarnation of the order, hence each individual order is free to develop its own character and charism, yet each under a common rule of life after the precepts of St. Benedict. Most of the communities include a confraternity of oblates. The order consists of a number of independent communities:

[...]

England

Alton Abbey, Alton, Hampshire. Men. Founded in 1884 as the Order of St Paul. https://altonabbey.com/

Edgware Abbey (The Community of St. Mary at the Cross), Edgware, Greater London. Women. Founded 1866; dedicated to stand with Mary, the mother of Jesus, at the cross, thus sharing in her commitment to embrace all people in Christ's love. Black tunic and scapular with modernised headdress, black veil, and leather belt. Over the years the community's work has evolved to meet the present needs of elderly frail people for nursing or residential care. This care provision continues in Henry Nihill House at Edgware Abbey, where Residents enjoy close links with the community, its worship and its life. www.edgwareabbey.org.uk

Salisbury Priory, Salisbury, Wiltshire. Men. Founded at Pershore 1914; resited at Nashdom Abbey, Buckinghamshire, 1926; resited at Elmore Abbey, Berkshire, 1987. In 2011 they relocated again to Salisbury.

Malling Abbey, West Malling, Kent. Women. Original foundation c. 1090. Re-founded in London 1891; resited to Somerset 1906; resited to West Malling 1916. www.mallingabbey.org

Mucknell Abbey, Stoulton, Worcestershire. A mixed-sex abbey with an ecumenical focus founded in 1941, and previously located at Burford Priory. www.mucknellabbey.org.uk

[...]

Regarding Malling Abbey, the original Roman Catholic Benedictine monastery was established circa 1090, and terminated with the surrender of Malling to the Crown on 28 October 1538 during Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries. The Anglican Benedictine community of nuns that has made its home at Malling Abbey since 1916 was founded in 1891.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malling_Abbey

The manor of West Malling was given by King Edmund I to Burgric (or Burhic), Bishop of Rochester, in 946. The land was lost to the church in the Danish Wars but was restored to the diocese in 1076. About 1090, Gundulf, Bishop of Rochester and monk of Bec Abbey in Normandy, chose Malling as the site of his foundation for a community of Benedictine nuns, one of the first post-Conquest monasteries for women. Just before his death in 1108, Gundulf appointed the French nun Avicia as the first abbess.

Gundulf had endowed the community with the manor of Malling and Archbishop Anselm had given the manor of East Malling. Royal grants gave the nuns the rights to weekly markets and annual fairs as well as wood-cutting and pasturage rights in nearby royal forests. Bequests and gifts also added to the community’s income.

As the abbey prospered, West Malling became a flourishing market town. In the four-and-a-half centuries of Benedictine life at the abbey, major events included a fire in 1190 which destroyed much of the abbey and town, the Black Death in 1349 which reduced the community to four nuns and four novices, and the surrender of Malling to the Crown on 28 October 1538 during the Dissolution of the Monasteries.

[...]

Present

The Anglican Benedictine community of nuns that has made its home at Malling Abbey since 1916 was founded in 1891 as an active parish sisterhood. The sisters worked among the poor in Edmonton, north London, until they became attracted to the Benedictine contemplative life through the preaching of Abbot Aelred Carlyle. In 1906, they moved to a farmhouse in Baltonsborough, a remote village in Somerset, to begin their enclosed monastic life under Benedictine vows. In 1916, the trustees of Malling Abbey invited them to move to the more spacious and historic abbey and to continue its tradition of Benedictine prayer, worship, work, study and hospitality.

You are also ignoring the fact that St. Peter also established a Church in Jerusalem, in Antioch, and in Alexandra. I have not made anything up.

I definitely did not ignore your heretical claim that St. Peter established a church. Jesus Christ established His church. St. Peter went about spreading the faith, not establishing new churches. The church established by Jesus Christ was not a building or set of buildings, but a faith, a religion. There is the Church of Jesus Christ. Christ, assisted by his apostles, did not establish dozens of churches. They established ONE church. That ONE church was spread widely about the world.

It is the official teaching/doctrine of the Anglican Church so you are really dissing the Archbishop of Canterbury, and not merely me.

I cannot take your word for it that something is the official word of someone else. Document it.

And can you please explain why all Popes, until very recently, taught that St. Peter established all the Orthodox Churches in addition to the Church in Rome? What you are spouting off is revisionist history, and a lie.

I cannot explain your inane ramblings about some or all Popes.

That I decline to explain your symptoms does not indicate that I am lying.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-10   4:07:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#106. To: interpreter (#103)

Obviously, you are lacking in reading comprehension, or else you do not know English. I said Grandma told me about what my Greatgrandma said about Ireland.

Gee, I thought I understood that perfectly. You said your source was someone who gave you hearsay about a place she never lived in or visited, and about a famine of which she had no personal knowledge whatever.

As I stated, "I was just pointing out that any actual observation of the famine was at least 165 years ago, pre-dating the American Civil War."

You said, "Her [Grandmas's) parents, being Protestants and therefore persecuted in Ireland for their religion, and also because of the potato famine you talk about which is only part of it, came to America to escape all of that."

What you state is still nonsensical ignorance of Irish history.

And in most of Ireland in most of its history, sometimes the Roman Catholics were in charge and persecuting Protestants, and sometimes the Protestants were in charge and persecuting Roman Catholics.

This is, of course, a load of rubbish. The Irish were Gaelic-speaking Celts (pronounced as Kelts) when the English speaking British conquered Ireland.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Ireland

The Norman invasion of the late 12th century marked the beginning of more than 800 years of direct English rule and, later, British involvement in Ireland. In 1177 Prince John Lackland was made Lord of Ireland by his father Henry II of England at the Council of Oxford.[1] The Crown did not attempt to assert full control of the island until the rebellion of the Earl of Kildare threatened English hegemony. Henry VIII proclaimed himself King of Ireland and also tried to introduce the English Reformation, which failed in Ireland. Attempts to either conquer or assimilate the Irish lordships into the Kingdom of Ireland provided the initial impetus for a series of Irish military campaigns between 1534 and 1603. This period was marked by a Crown policy of plantation, involving the arrival of thousands of English and Scottish Protestant settlers, and the consequent displacement of the pre-plantation Catholic landholders. As the military and political defeat of Gaelic Ireland became more pronounced in the early seventeenth century, sectarian conflict became a recurrent theme in Irish history.

The 1614 overthrow of the Catholic majority in the Irish Parliament was realised principally through the creation of numerous new boroughs which were dominated by the new settlers. By the end of the seventeenth century, recusants (as adherents to the older religion were now termed), representing some 85% of Ireland's population, were then banned from the Irish Parliament. Protestant domination of Ireland was confirmed after two periods of war between Catholics and Protestants in 1641-52 and 1689-91. Political power thereafter rested entirely in the hands of a Protestant Ascendancy minority, while Catholics and members of dissenting Protestant denominations suffered severe political and economic privations under the Penal Laws.

Only Protestant denominations who dissented with the ruling minority were the subject of political and economic privations, and that was by the ruling minority, not the Irish Catholics.

In the 5th century A.D., Roman Britain was Roman Catholic and exported their religion to Ireland.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church_in_Ireland

Christianity has existed in Ireland since the 5th century and arrived from Roman Britain (most famously associated with St. Patrick), forming what is today known as Gaelic Christianity. It gradually gained ground and replaced the old pagan traditions. The Catholic Church in Ireland cites its origin to this period and considers Palladius as the first bishop sent to the Gaels by Pope Celestine I. However, during the 12th century a stricter uniformity in the Western Church was enforced, with the diocesan structure introduced with the Synod of Ráth Breasail in 1111 and culminating with the Gregorian Reform which coincided with the Norman invasion of Ireland.

As Ireland came to be occupied by the English Crown, which attempted to export the Protestant Reformation into Ireland, Irish national identity coalesced around the Irish Catholic concept in the 16th century.

So when in history did the Irish Catholics occupy a position of power to persecute the Protestants??? Cite a source other than your grandma told you that your great grandma told her.

But I dont even pretend to be an expert on Ireland, and if you want to say that most of the time in recent years it has been Protestants persecuting Roman Catholics, I might concede that, but if true, it is payback for when the Roman Catholics were in charge and doing the persecuting.

The Roman Catholics were never in charge from the time they were conquered until Dominionhood for 26 counties in 1922 and Statehood for those 26 counties in 1949.

In the 6 partitioned counties, the Catholics have not been in power since the conquest.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Ireland

"A Protestant state" (1921–1972)

The 1920 Government of Ireland Bill created the state of Northern Ireland, which consisted of the six northeastern counties of Londonderry, Tyrone, Fermanagh, Antrim, Down and Armagh.[39] From 1921 to 1972, Northern Ireland was governed by a Unionist government, based at Stormont in east Belfast. Unionist leader and first Prime Minister, James Craig, declared that it would be "a Protestant State for a Protestant People".

There followed,

Direct rule (1972–1999)

For the next 27½ years, with the exception of five months in 1974, Northern Ireland was under "direct rule" with a Secretary of State for Northern Ireland in the British Cabinet responsible for the departments of the Northern Ireland government. Direct Rule was designed to be a temporary solution until Northern Ireland was capable of governing itself again.

I was there during both the Protestant state and Direct rule.

Following Direct rule,

Devolution and direct rule (1999–present)

More recently, the Belfast Agreement ("Good Friday Agreement") of 10 April 1998 brought – on 2 December 1999 – a degree of power sharing to Northern Ireland, giving both unionists and nationalists control of limited areas of government.

However, both the power-sharing Executive and the elected Assembly were suspended between January and May 2000, and from October 2002 until April 2007, following breakdowns in trust between the political parties involving outstanding issues, including "decommissioning" of paramilitary weapons, policing reform and the removal of British army bases.

In new elections in 2003, the moderate Ulster Unionist and (nationalist) Social Democrat and Labour parties lost their dominant positions to the more hard-line Democratic Unionist and (nationalist) Sinn Féin parties. On 28 July 2005, the Provisional IRA announced the end of its armed campaign and on 25 September 2005 international weapons inspectors supervised the full disarmament of the PIRA. Eventually, devolution was restored in April 2007.

Note that the degree of power sharing is between unionists and nationalists. The dissent is not about how to finish the Lord's Prayer.

Your knowledge of Irish history does not exist. Where in this history is your alleged period "when the Roman Catholics were in charge and doing the persecuting."

Here is who was held the power,

Protestant ascendancy (1691–1801)

The majority of the people of Ireland were Catholic peasants; they were very poor and largely inert politically during the eighteenth century, as many of their leaders converted to Protestantism to avoid severe economic and political penalties. Nevertheless, there was a growing Catholic cultural awakening underway.[27] There were two Protestant groups. The Presbyterians in Ulster in the North lived in much better economic conditions, but had virtually no political power. Power was held by a small group of Anglo-Irish families, who were loyal to the Anglican Church of Ireland.

- - - - - - - - - -

As for the Anglican Church, it may be fast losing members in England (and the US branch), but world-wide it is growing, and especially in Africa.

As I stated, and to which you now nominally reply or avoid,

In your book, The Revelation, A Historicist View, Westbow Press, © 2017 by Barry Midyet, Westbow Press rev. date 3/2/2017, at page 20, you assert that,

[T]he Anglican Church, now the de facto head honcho of the West, will soon replace Rome as the western lampstand.

Not only is the Anglican Church not the de facto head honcho of the West, it is collapsing in England on center stage, in a dramatic way. Organized Christian religion has been declining, but the Anglican Church is leading the way.

When you said the Anglican Church is now the de facto head honcho of the West, and will soon replace Rome, what you meant was that there were some Anglican missionaries stomping in African elephant dung. You could have just said that. However, they are probably outnumbered by Seventh Day Adventists and Mormons.

Even in the US, there are some Episcopal Churches that are growing. They are the ones who have not changed anything from what St.Peter and the first- century Church taught, and do not ordain/hire gay priests or perform same- sex marriages for example.

On the other hand, on page 28 of your book (no index in the 21st century!) you observe that your Church, the Episcopal Church, "has lost a lot of members and is dying. All of the letters are so prophetic and so true." Of course, that was published all the way back in January.

But the main reason I say the Anglican Church is the de facto head-honcho in the west is because Great Britain and the US, both founded by Anglicans, are the two most powerful nations on Earth, in other words,the de facto head honcho(s) of the west, if not the whole Earth.

And on page 29 of our book, you told your story of disgruntlement with your church, the Episcopal church, your consideration of an alternative, and finding the Serbian Orthodox Church in Houston, not to be confused with the Serbian Orthodox church in Galveston which had become Americanized. Ultimately you rejected that alternative after encountering two hurdles, having to give up all your existing beliefs, and having to bow your head all the way to the ground. So you "returned to the Episcopal church ... that [you] were born into." But all that is so last January.

And the Anglican church can claim a 0.3% following in the United States, with the Episcopalians claiming 0.9%, which certainly gives them a right to rule the West and establish a dynasty and rule the entire Earth. Because REASONS.

The Patriarch of Constantinople is merely just making it official. The Patriarch of Constantinople has already removed the Roman Church (about a thousand years ago as prophesied in the letter to Ephesus which is also directed to Rome), and a thousand years later he is now planning on replacing Rome with Canterbury, which is also hinted at (or signified) in the Revelation (See Rev. 2:5 for starters).

Did you happen to notice that the Roman Catholic church is still around and, as you said, book, page 28, the Episcopal church "has lost a lot of members and is dying." I believe dying is not a good sign. And with the Anglican church at 0.3%, three-tenths of one per cent, one needs a search party to find them.

Then again, book at 42, I see a reference to "The US church, and especially the Episcopal Church which founded our great nation." It is truly amazing, the things one can learn just by reading. I never knew that the Episcopal church was the U.S. church, and had founded the United States of America. My episcopal dad failed me on that one, and my history teachers.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-10   4:10:55 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#107. To: interpreter (#103)

But I am very impressed that you have actually read my book. Did you buy a copy or are you just reading from Amazon's free excerpt? I suspect the latter.

I am impressed that you are impressed that I can read a book. Your first statement in the comment to which I now reply stated, "Obviously, you are lacking in reading comprehension, or else you do not know English." I suspect you are merely impressed with my being a fast learner.

I am hurt that you suspect I only read free excerpts. I suspect you don't know what Amazon has excerpted and placed online. You do not think there is a whole copy online, available for free, do you?

But I do have an inquiry to make about the contents of your book at pages 93 to 95.

On page 93, you show a shutterstock depiction of the reverse side of the Great Seal of the United States, with your caption being "The New Jerusalem on dollar bill."

https://www.state.gov/documents/organization/27807.pdf

The reverse of the Great Seal, sometimes referred to as the spiritual side of the seal, contains the 13-step pyramid with the year 1776 in Roman numerals on the base. At the summit of the pyramid is the Eye of Providence in a triangle surrounded by a Glory (rays of light) and above it appears the motto Annuit Coeptis. Along the lower circumference of the design appear the words Novus Ordo Seclorum, heralding the beginning of the new American era in 1776.

[...]

Although drawings of the obverse side of the Great Seal were done immediately upon adoption of the design in 1782, the first reverse was not drawn until 4 years later. A Philadelphia engraver, James Trenchard, working from the written description, produced a full page engraving of the reverse for the October 1786 issue of Columbian Magazine. He followed the law closely and produced an elongated, 13-step unfinished pyramid, with the two mottos, the date in Roman numerals, and the Eye of Providence in a blaze of glory.

The second drawing of the reverse was probably done by the artist and historian, Benson J. Lossing, to accompany an article he wrote on the Great Seal for the July 1856 issue of Harper’s New Monthly Magazine. Lossing gave his rather square pyramid a deep perspective and filled the ground around it with flowers and grass. He also changed Trenchard’s right Eye of Providence to a left eye, which it has been ever since. This drawing has influenced all later realizations of the written description of 1782, with the exception of the Great Seal Centennial Medal struck in 1882. The back of this medal, which followed closely Trenchard’s design, was the first realization of the reverse to be issued officially by the U.S. Government.

The design for the reverse was made available by the Continental Congress in case it was desired to impress the back surfaces of wax pendant seals. The United States used pendant seals for treaties from 1815 to 1871, but the backs were never impressed. Enthusiasm for cutting a die of the reverse has diminished, and to this day one has not been cut. The current official design of the reverse of the Great Seal follows almost exactly the Lossing drawing, and can be seen on the $1 bill.

Depicted in your book is the 1856 Benson Lossing drawing. On page 94 you observe that all the worthy will have to live on a new Earth, and said "new Earth is no doubt Mars." You further observe that living on Mars would require "a huge enclosed habitat like the New Jerusalem." On page 95 you further observe that on the reverse side of the dollar bill "the US is represented by the New Jerusalem," and that it is depicted as a pyramid because "our founding fathers, and most scientists, have deemed that for a structure the size of the New Jerusalem to support its own weight and be able to withstand earthquakes and storms, etc., it has to be pyramid shaped." And you observe that the New Jerusalem "happens to be exactly the right height for a space elevator on Mars, which is necessary for easy travel (for God and humans?) between the stars."

How was it determined that the pyramid on the Great Seal was just the right size for a space elevator? It has never existed except as a concept or as a drawing about four inches tall. And it is only 13 blocks high.

Why would we, much less God, need a space elevator? Can't they just use an eight chevron stargate powered by a zero point module, as all the scientists have said? And why would God need a device to travel ? Isn't He omnipresent, everywhere at once all the time?

How does a drawing of an unfinished pyramid from 1856 show that our founding fathers thought the U.S. was New Jerusalem and a pyramid was needed to withstand earthquakes and storms on Mars?

And most scientists who have deemed that we need a pyramid on Mars — who are they? Where can we read or hear what they said, in their own words? What did Dr. Daniel Tanz say?

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-10   4:12:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#108. To: nolu chan (#107) (Edited)

Mars Lol. Maybe you should have your own fact check sire.

A K A Stone  posted on  2017-09-10   7:44:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#109. To: A K A Stone (#108)

Mars Lol. Maybe you should have your own fact check sire.

Hey, it ain't me that claimed that worthy are going to Mars to live in a pyramid that can serve as a space elevator. It is claimed our Founding Father are responsible for that, and most scientists agree with it. I'm just asking to source and explain the claim.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-11   20:18:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#110. To: nolu chan (#109)

sire.

site.

He's goofy.

A K A Stone  posted on  2017-09-11   20:25:05 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#111. To: nolu chan, A K A Stone (#109)

Hey, it ain't me that claimed that worthy are going to Mars to live in a pyramid that can serve as a space elevator. It is claimed our Founding Father are responsible for that, and most scientists agree with it. I'm just asking to source and explain the claim.

I dunno. I'm starting to like that whole pyramid space elevator on Mars bit. All dreamed up by Ben Franklin, no doubt. Or maybe John Hancock. It's a weird Masonic/scifi/patriotic/National Treasure kind of thing. Or maybe it's just really stupid and delusional, I can't really tell.

It is more interesting than the boring facts of history we've all had to listen to since middle school.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-09-12   8:21:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#112. To: Tooconservative, A K A Stone (#111)

All dreamed up by Ben Franklin, no doubt. Or maybe John Hancock.

The Founders originally created only a written concept of the reverse side of the Great Seal. It took years before somebody turned the concept into a drawing. Only the obverse side was used as an actual seal.

It is more interesting than the boring facts of history we've all had to listen to since middle school.

Dr. Daniel Jackson and Dr. Rodney McKay figured out how to power and operate the eight chevron stargate, it is proven science, all the scientists agree. We don't need no stinkin' space elevator. All we need is the technology of the ancients hidden in Antarctica. That is my story and I'm sticking with it.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-12   16:35:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#113. To: nolu chan (#112)

Dr. Daniel Jackson and Dr. Rodney McKay figured out how to power and operate the eight chevron stargate, it is proven science, all the scientists agree.

I've followed their work closely over the years. I'm surprised you neglected to mention the contributions of Dr. Samantha Carter to interstellar travel.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-09-12   20:00:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#114. To: Tooconservative (#113)

I'm surprised you neglected to mention the contributions of Dr. Samantha Carter to interstellar travel.

Yes. Dr. Carter's Ph.D. was in theoretical astrophysics.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-09-12   21:42:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#115. To: nolu chan (#114)

12 monkeys TV show.

A K A Stone  posted on  2017-09-13   13:16:17 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#116. To: A K A Stone (#115)

12 monkeys TV show.

It started off so well, brilliant plot twists in that first season and well into the second season. Then the scripts totally went to shit in a big way. I suppose they got mired down in all their timeline inconsistencies.

Anyway, I had thought I had possibly finally found a time travel story that didn't just break down due to its own inherent contradictions. But I was wrong. It started off so well but could only delay, not overcome, the central problem with time travel scripts.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-09-13   23:14:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#117. To: Tooconservative (#116)

I saw first two seasons. Haven't seen third yet.

A K A Stone  posted on  2017-09-13   23:31:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#118. To: A K A Stone (#117) (Edited)

Well, IMO it kinda went to hell.

A lot of modern TV shows are like this. They have great writing for two seasons then peter out. Mr. Robot was another one that started well and by the time season two ended, I was praying for all of them to just die. Same with The Strain. Same with The Last Ship. Same with Fear The Walking Dead.

Of course, I keep grabbing them to put on my Plex server so I guess I'm not disgusted enough to stop watching the damned things. Apparently I just want to watch every last episode and still have complaining rights too.

Tooconservative  posted on  2017-09-13   23:39:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#119. To: paraclete (#89)

Well, I'll take back everything I said about you, Mr. Paraclete. You have posted a very intelligent 100% absolutely true post. It's called "Intelligent design. 65 million years ago God sent an asteroid that wiped out the giant but very dumb dinosaurs. And left the way open for little mammals to appear and practically overnight take over and repopulate the Earth. God knows what He (or she) is doing.

interpreter  posted on  2017-10-06   8:52:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#120. To: nolu chan (#112)

Greetings Mr Nolu,

I originally typed this late last night, but evidently I apparently didnt hit send and my long post has now disappeared into never-never land. But I will try here to kinda sum it very briefly, and whenever I have a chance to get back on LF, finish my post.

As everyone knows, all of the founding Fathers were Masons (with the possible exception of one of them). And the guy who created the Great Seal was also a Mason. And all Mason's believe (as I do) that the US is, if not THE New Jerusalem, at least an early version of it. Everything fits. For example, the square footage of the New Jerusalem (or square furlongs in the Bible) is exactly the same size as the square miles/furlongs encompassed within the US.

Plus all Masons (like virtually all structural scientists) say that for a massive structure like the New Jerusalem to be able to even support its own weight (much less withstand storms and earthquakes) would have to be shaped like a pyramid (like the pyramids of Egypt that have been there for many thousands of years so far and will probably be there forever).

And it may be just an accident (but in my opinion it is no accident) it so happens that the height of the New Jerusalem is exactly the right height for a space elevator on Mars from which either man or God or both can easily travel back and forth between Mars and the stars forever to the end of time.

interpreter  posted on  2017-10-06   10:21:12 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#121. To: interpreter (#119)

Well, I'll take back everything I said about you, Mr. Paraclete. You have posted a very intelligent 100% absolutely true post

Yes I usually try to stick to the truth, not a lot of it about these days

paraclete  posted on  2017-10-06   20:17:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#122. To: interpreter (#120)

I originally typed this late last night, but evidently I apparently didnt hit send and my long post has now disappeared into never-never land.

Don't ya just hate it when that happens? Like going to another room to get something and, by the time you get there, forgetting what it was.

But I will try here to kinda sum it very briefly, and whenever I have a chance to get back on LF, finish my post.

No hurry. Anytime before the non-existent plant of Niburu destroys Earth will be fine.

As everyone knows, all of the founding Fathers were Masons (with the possible exception of one of them).

I know that some of the Founders were Masons. I only state the extent of my knowledge.

And the guy who created the Great Seal was also a Mason.

I have no idea. What you chose to illustrate in your book was by Benson J. Lossing in the Civil War era.

And all Mason's believe (as I do) that the US is, if not THE New Jerusalem, at least an early version of it.

I have no idea what all Masons believe, or why.

Everything fits. For example, the square footage of the New Jerusalem (or square furlongs in the Bible) is exactly the same size as the square miles/furlongs encompassed within the US.

How does one measure the square footage of the New Jerusalem, which does not yet exist? I assume some foretelling, somewhere, talks to the area.

Plus all Masons (like virtually all structural scientists) say that for a massive structure like the New Jerusalem to be able to even support its own weight (much less withstand storms and earthquakes) would have to be shaped like a pyramid (like the pyramids of Egypt that have been there for many thousands of years so far and will probably be there forever).

I am unaware of any scientists who claim there will be a New Jerusalem the size of the United States, shaped like a pyramid. I have never heard mention of the concept, other than right here.

And it may be just an accident (but in my opinion it is no accident) it so happens that the height of the New Jerusalem is exactly the right height for a space elevator on Mars from which either man or God or both can easily travel back and forth between Mars and the stars forever to the end of time.

To get some notion of what a space elevator is, I resorted to Wikipedia.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_elevator

Space elevator

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Diagram of a space elevator. At the bottom of the tall diagram is the Earth as viewed from high above the North Pole. About six earth-radii above the Earth an arc is drawn with the same center as the Earth. The arc depicts the level of geosynchronous orbit. About twice as high as the arc and directly above the Earth's center, a counterweight is depicted by a small square. A line depicting the space elevator's cable connects the counterweight to the equator directly below it. The system's center of mass is described as above the level of geosynchronous orbit. The center of mass is shown roughly to be about a quarter of the way up from the geosynchronous arc to the counterweight. The bottom of the cable is indicated to be anchored at the equator. A climber is depicted by a small rounded square. The climber is shown climbing the cable about one third of the way from the ground to the arc. Another note indicates that the cable rotates along with the Earth's daily rotation, and remains vertical.

A space elevator is conceived as a cable fixed to the equator and reaching into space. A counterweight at the upper end keeps the center of mass well above geostationary orbit level. This produces enough upward centrifugal force from Earth's rotation to fully counter the downward gravity, keeping the cable upright and taut. Climbers carry cargo up and down the cable.

A space elevator is a proposed type of space transportation system. The main component would be a cable (also called a tether) anchored to the surface and extending into space. The design would permit vehicles to travel along the cable from a planetary surface, such as the Earth's, directly into space or orbit, without the use of large rockets. An Earth-based space elevator would consist of a cable with one end attached to the surface near the equator and the other end in space beyond geostationary orbit (35,786 km altitude). The competing forces of gravity, which is stronger at the lower end, and the outward/upward centrifugal force, which is stronger at the upper end, would result in the cable being held up, under tension, and stationary over a single position on Earth. With the tether deployed, climbers could repeatedly climb the tether to space by mechanical means, releasing their cargo to orbit. Climbers could also descend the tether to return cargo to the surface from orbit.

The concept of a tower reaching geosynchronous orbit was first published in 1895 by Konstantin Tsiolkovsky. His proposal was for a free-standing tower reaching from the surface of Earth to the height of geostationary orbit. Like all buildings, Tsiolkovsky's structure would be under compression, supporting its weight from below. Since 1959, most ideas for space elevators have focused on purely tensile structures, with the weight of the system held up from above by centrifugal forces. In the tensile concepts, a space tether reaches from a large mass (the counterweight) beyond geostationary orbit to the ground. This structure is held in tension between Earth and the counterweight like an upside-down plumb bob.

To construct a space elevator on Earth the cable material would need to be both stronger and lighter (have greater specific strength) than any known material. Development of new materials which could meet the demanding specific strength requirement is required for designs to progress beyond discussion stage. Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have been identified as possibly being able to meet the specific strength requirements for an Earth space elevator. Other materials considered have been boron nitride nanotubes, and diamond nanothreads, which were first constructed in 2014.

The concept is applicable to other planets and celestial bodies. For locations in the solar system with weaker gravity than Earth's (such as the Moon or Mars), the strength-to-density requirements for tether materials are not as problematic. Currently available materials (such as Kevlar) are strong and light enough that they could be used as the tether material for elevators there.

This is certainly not going to happen in my lifetime, if only for economic reasons. I see nothing to indicate that a theoretical space elevator would be the size of the continental United States. Maybe Jerry Jones will consider the design for his next football stadium for America's Team.

It seems more likely that such a project would constructed somewhere other than Earth with a lesser gravity force. Again, that puts it far in the future.

Scientists do not seem to know exactly what gravity is, but rather tend to speak in terms of the effects of gravity. There is certainly a power whose effects can be observed. When basketball players jump, they come back down.

Empty space has been determined to not be empty at all. Nature really does abhor a vacuum.

Before anybody builds such a contraption, I suspect someone will figure out how to harness the power of gravity or some force we have yet to identify.

the height of the New Jerusalem is exactly the right height for a space elevator on Mars

The original concept for the unfinished pyramid on the reverse side of the Great Seal consisted of words with no specified dimensions. It was describing a seal which would limit its dimension to a few inches at most.

The design depicted on page 93 of your book is the Bensing J. Lossing design from the Civil War era. Again, it is for the Great Seal, and is measured in inches. I have no idea how you identify a height dimension for that pyramid, other than the depiction on the Seal. It is not something from real life, or an architect's design of a structure. The original design was words to be used to make a drawing for use on the Great Seal.

nolu chan  posted on  2017-10-10   16:50:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#123. To: nolu chan (#122)

How does one measure the square footage of the New Jerusalem, which does not yet exist? I assume some foretelling, somewhere, talks to the area.

I am unaware of any scientists who claim there will be a New Jerusalem the size of the United States, shaped like a pyramid. I have never heard mention of the concept, other than right here.

This is certainly not going to happen in my lifetime, if only for economic reasons. I see nothing to indicate that a theoretical space elevator would be the size of the continental United States. Maybe Jerry Jones will consider the design for his next football stadium for America's Team.

It seems more likely that such a project would constructed somewhere other than Earth with a lesser gravity force. Again, that puts it far in the future.

"How does one measure the square footage of the New Jerusalem, which does not yet exist? I assume some foretelling, somewhere, talks to the area."

Your comments are crazy. Have you ever heard of the Bible? Its measurements are given in the Bible (in the Revelation to John). The New Jerusalem is 12,000 furlongs by 12,000 furlongs, and 12,000 furlongs high.

"I am unaware of any scientists who claim there will be a New Jerusalem the size of the United States, shaped like a pyramid. I have never heard mention of the concept, other than right here."

Virtually all scientists say that for a structure to be 12,000 furlongs high, it would have to be shaped like a pyramid (as on the dollar bill).

All maps show that the size of the US is about 2 million square miles (the size of the New Jerusalem when converted to miles).

"This is certainly not going to happen in my lifetime, if only for economic reasons. I see nothing to indicate that a theoretical space elevator would be the size of the continental United States."

Who said it was going to happen in your lifetime? It appears a thousand years from now for God's sake.

All scientists indicate that a space elevator on Mars would have to be about 12,000 furlongs high (about 1400 miles high).

"It seems more likely that such a project would constructed somewhere other than Earth with a lesser gravity force. Again, that puts it far in the future."

Exactly. The space elevator/new Jerusalem appears 1000 years in the future, and not on the Earth but on a planet without a sea (obviously Mars).

As for the Earth, what I said was the US (the 4th horseman) is an early version of it. In addition, the area controlled by the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd horsemen to rule the Earth for Jesus was also 2 million square miles. And the 5th horsemen (Greater Serbia) will very likely also be 2 million square miles in area after the Serbs take back Kosovo and Macedonia as prophecied. So there are 5 early versions of the New Jerusalem, not just the US.

After the Earth is destroyed by fire 1000 years from now (in a great war), those found worthy get to go to Mars and live in the New Jerusalem.

interpreter  posted on  2017-10-13   12:32:52 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#124. To: interpreter (#123)

After the Earth is destroyed by fire 1000 years from now (in a great war), those found worthy get to go to Mars and live in the New Jerusalem.

Mars? That's a new one. Why would the New Jerusalem be subject to the physical laws of the universe?

Revelation 21

9 Then one of the seven angels who had the seven bowls filled with the seven last plagues came to me and talked with me, saying, “Come, I will show you the bride, the Lamb’s wife.” 10 And he carried me away in the Spirit to a great and high mountain, and showed me the great city, the holy Jerusalem, descending out of heaven from God, 11 having the glory of God. Her light was like a most precious stone, like a jasper stone, clear as crystal. 12 Also she had a great and high wall with twelve gates, and twelve angels at the gates, and names written on them, which are the names of the twelve tribes of the children of Israel: 13 three gates on the east, three gates on the north, three gates on the south, and three gates on the west.

14 Now the wall of the city had twelve foundations, and on them were the names of the twelve apostles of the Lamb. 15 And he who talked with me had a gold reed to measure the city, its gates, and its wall. 16 The city is laid out as a square; its length is as great as its breadth. And he measured the city with the reed: twelve thousand furlongs. Its length, breadth, and height are equal. 17 Then he measured its wall: one hundred and forty-four cubits, according to the measure of a man, that is, of an angel. 18 The construction of its wall was of jasper; and the city was pure gold, like clear glass. 19 The foundations of the wall of the city were adorned with all kinds of precious stones: the first foundation was jasper, the second sapphire, the third chalcedony, the fourth emerald, 20 the fifth sardonyx, the sixth sardius, the seventh chrysolite, the eighth beryl, the ninth topaz, the tenth chrysoprase, the eleventh jacinth, and the twelfth amethyst. 21 The twelve gates were twelve pearls: each individual gate was of one pearl. And the street of the city was pure gold, like transparent glass.

22 But I saw no temple in it, for the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are its temple. 23 The city had no need of the sun or of the moon to shine in it, for the glory of God illuminated it. The Lamb is its light. 24 And the nations of those who are saved shall walk in its light, and the kings of the earth bring their glory and honor into it. 25 Its gates shall not be shut at all by day (there shall be no night there). 26 And they shall bring the glory and the honor of the nations into it. 27 But there shall by no means enter it anything that defiles, or causes an abomination or a lie, but only those who are written in the Lamb’s Book of Life.

redleghunter  posted on  2017-10-13   12:39:55 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  



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