Pope Bergoglio's Easter Week statement in which he denies the existence of Hell, the concept of Redemption, and of Eternal Justice sends a clear message to RCC and those who still take the "Vicar of Christ's" words literally (as THE word of God himself.) HOW WILL RCCs REACT?
It's Easter Week. This Pope is making mockery and reason of and for Jesus Christ; HIS sacrifice. His Resurrection. The concept of Salvation. Denying Heaven and Hell as real destinations in the Hereafter. This Pope purposely undermines the ENTIRE Bible and Word of God.
This is heartbreaking. Millions of souls will heed and embrace the Pope's words and position. As a result, millions will surrender their own soul for all Eternity
That's the bad news.
If there's any good news, millions will also realize that The Vatican had been playing a shell-game with Salvation and The Truth; And know that the Vatican had been an organization that's hid its centuries-long pedophilia and corruption behind The Cross.
Maybe now those millions who realize they've been duped will seek and find true Salvation.
(More bad news -- this Pope THIS Vatican may help collude their co-NWO elites and support ISLAM.)
Whenever I see these these guys coming along, I think they might be FBI agents investigating me for Internet gambling. Then I see the bikes, oh okay, Mormons. At least they are not as annoying as Jehovah's Witnesses.
Around here, the Mormons stopped knocking some years back. I suppose they finally realized it's counterproductive over the long term. The JWs try to capitalize on the Mormon absence, I think.
Around here, the Mormons stopped knocking some years back. I suppose they finally realized it's counterproductive over the long term. The JWs try to capitalize on the Mormon absence, I think.
Mormons still active in my area which some call the belt buckle of the Bible belt.
The show up in the neighborhood in a white van (no bikes) dismount and canvass the neighborhood. They went to every house but mine. I think it had something to do with me out front hitting tennis balls to my Yellow Lab. Big Louisville Slugger probably turned them off.
The show up in the neighborhood in a white van (no bikes) dismount and canvass the neighborhood. They went to every house but mine. I think it had something to do with me out front hitting tennis balls to my Yellow Lab. Big Louisville Slugger probably turned them off.
The Mormons are tech-savvy overall. I've suspected that they work from curated address lists.
You may have had some doctrinal conversation in the past with Mormon missionaries and they now have a record to steer their sales staff in the field away from your door. Some years back, a friend of mine was getting regular visits from them, including giving him a Book of Mormon. One day I happened to catch them there and had many many questions for them to answer. After that, they didn't ever darken his door again.
I think Mormons are looking for easy fishing. They don't ever want to get into doctrinal discussions or any discussion about the history of Mormonism. It doesn't take much to scare them off and keep them away. They're only looking for the low-hanging fruit: sick elderly people who spend a lot of time alone or homebound or people who are alone after losing a spouse. They know that these are their best targets for proselytizing. It is, after all, a sales job.
I think the door-to-door thing is also kinda over. The days of the Fuller Brush man and the encyclopedia salesman and the Avon lady are largely past.
I think the door-to-door thing is also kinda over. The days of the Fuller Brush man and the encyclopedia salesman and the Avon lady are largely past.
I'd thought so too...
But not according to Red.
I haven't seen a JW or Mormon in a good ten years.
And though few were overly big fans of door to door salesmen, that's the way the times were -- we almost forget. And they weren't all that bad nor...feared.
When I was a kid, I distinctly recall the door-to-door salesman who'd manage to sell something different every few weeks. And we knew him by name.
We had our utility-sales-guy "Harry", encyclopedia sales, Avon, and others. They were especially convenient for stay at home moms who didn't drive (before society and the economy demanded they work.)