Hitler Attacks Pope Benedict Video

In 2004, the film Downfall was released chronicling the last 10 days of Adolf Hitler’s life.  One scene in particular, where Hitler launches into a furious tirade once he realizes that the war is lost, has been widely used in parody.  People have changed to subtitles so that Hitler reacts to a wide variety of subjects.  One of the latest and best concerns Pope Benedict XVI.  Watch and enjoy.

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Women Shall Be Quiet in Church

The other day I went to Mass and at Communion time three lay distributors went up to the altar.  All three were women!!!  That is not acceptable.NoCommunionInTheHand

Most of you would not give it another thought, but to me the thought of a woman on the altar is very distasteful.  The problem is that women have no place leading worship.  Since the beginning of time, the men have offered sacrifices and performed other forms of worship.  In the Old Testament, there were High Priests, but no High Priestesses or any priestesses for that matter.  Priestesses have long been a fixture of pagan religions, but they have no place in Jewish or Christian ceremonies.

This preference for male priests started at the Last Supper.  According to How Christ Said the First Mass, only 12 men were present at the Last Supper and Christ consecrated them as priests.  This was a sign that all future priests would be men.

St. Paul himself stated it best.

“Let the woman learn in silence with all subjection.  But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to use authority over the man: but to be in silence.  For Adam was first formed; then Eve.  And Adam was not seduced; but the woman, being seduced, was in the transgression.  Yet she shall be saved through child bearing; if she continue in faith and love and sanctification with sobriety.”  (1 Timothy 2:11-15)

The push for women on the altar comes from several fronts.  First, there are those who want priests to marry.  There are also those who want homosexuals to be consecrated priests.  Both of these groups are seeking to destroy the Church, not update the Church as many of them claim.

Once again, women do not belong on the altar.  That is not because they are bad people.  The priests of the Church have always been men and must always be men.  God does not change and neither should His Church.

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Growing Number of Detroit Pastors Wear Handguns in Pulpit

    Yes, you read the headline of this post correctly.  I couldn’t believe it myself when I saw the title.  It turns out that there is an increase in crime has led some pastors to start carrying handguns.  I’m also no surprised that this article centers around Detroit, Michigan.

    Personally, I’m okay with priests carrying weapons to protect themselves, their parishioners, and their parish.  In fact, Fr. Corapi, the great American conservative and out-spoken priest, at one time carried a gun because there were several threats on this life.

    In the Bible, Our Lord saidclint-eastwood-dirty-harry “all that take the sword shall perish with the sword.” (Matthew 26:47)  This refers to people who wage for a living (as St. Thomas Aquinas says in his Summa Theologica) or who wantonly kill others.  This does not refer to those who pick it up to defend themselves or others.  Please feel free to comment.

    Below you will find the original article.

 

The Rev. Lawrence Adams teaches his flock at the Westside Bible Church to turn the other cheek. Just in case, though, the 54-year-old retired police lieutenant also wears a handgun under his robe.

Adams is one of several Detroit clergymen who have taken to packing heat in the pulpit. They have committed their lives to a man who preached nonviolence and told followers to love their enemies. But they also say it’s up to them to protect their parishioners in church.

"As a pastor, I’m referred to as a shepherd," Adams said. "Shepherds have the responsibility of watching over their flock. Do I want to hurt somebody? Absolutely not!"

Responding to a break-in at his church Sunday evening, Adams surprised a burglar carrying out a bag of loot and shot the man in the abdomen after the man swung the bag at him.

The burglar survived — for which Adams is grateful — but the reverend said he could have been hurt or killed if he had not been armed.

Detroit had the nation’s highest homicide rate last year among cities of at least 500,000 residents. The city has been losing manufacturing jobs for decades, and these days about one in four working-age residents is without a job.

The northwest Detroit neighborhood surrounding Adams’ church isn’t one of the city’s most dangerous. But there have been many recent reports of crimes in the area, including four burglaries, three auto thefts, one armed robbery and four assaults, including one with intent to murder.

"It’s getting worse because of the economy," Adams said. "People are out of work and feel they have to provide for their families."

Prior to 2000, anyone who wanted to carry a concealed weapon in Michigan had to show a need to do so. Now, gun owners simply have to pass a stringent background check and complete eight hours of handgun training.

"I get people from all walks of life, including pastors," said Rick Ector, owner of Rick’s Firearm Academy in Detroit. "But it’s not anything specific to pastors. Detroit is not a very safe place."

Michigan allows pastors to decide if someone registered to carry a handgun can do so for protection inside churches.

The clergy in Detroit who arm themselves say they do so because of the high overall crime rate. But churchgoers elsewhere have been the target of violent attacks several times in recent years:

Last year in a New Jersey church, a man fatally shot his estranged wife and a man who intervened in the attack.

A pastor was found stabbed to death in August in an Oklahoma church.

A Maryville, Ill., preacher was gunned down during his Sunday sermon in March.

In December 2007, a gunman killed two people at a Christian youth mission center near Denver and two others at a megachurch in Colorado Springs.

Near Detroit, a man was shot to death in 2003 while worshipping in a Catholic church. And an attacker fatally shot a woman and wounded a child inside another Detroit church three years ago because of a domestic dispute.

"I don’t know what kind of issues people are bringing with them. You could be running from estranged husband, boyfriend," said Bishop Charles Ellis III, pastor of the 6,500-member Greater Grace Temple in Detroit.

Ellis said he sometimes carries a gun, but never in the pulpit. His church has a "ministry of defense" for Sunday services made up of about 18 armed congregants who are off-duty law enforcement officers.

Clergy are adjusting to society, said the Rev. Kenneth J. Flowers, pastor of Greater New Mt. Moriah Baptist Church in Detroit.

"In addition to their faith, they are carrying weapons," said Flowers, who does not carry a gun. "There used to be a time when everybody respected a pastor. Even a drunk would straighten up if a preacher came by."

Many people are uncomfortable with the idea of an armed clergy, because Christ preached against violence and taught people they should love their enemies.

"But the scriptures also are clear that civil authority is part of God’s plan," said Claude Wiggins, a former pastor and current assistant at the Detroit Baptist Theological Seminary.

"In our country, it says in due process that you may bear arms to protect yourself. While we should be committed to trusting God, that doesn’t prevent us or command us to be totally passive," Wiggins said.

Al Meredith, pastor of the Wedgwood church in Fort Worth, said some off-duty police officers who are deacons at his church carry guns, but he’s uncomfortable with the idea of an armed congregation.

"It discourages the crazies from acts of violence if they see uniforms around, but I don’t want everybody bringing guns," Meredith said. "My ultimate conviction is what does the word of God say and what would Jesus do? Can you in your wildest imagination ever see Jesus packing a .38? I can’t imagine Peter and Paul carrying .45s."

The Rev. William Revely, who sometimes wears his .357-caliber handgun while preaching at the Holy Hope Heritage Church in Detroit, does not worry whether it might be wrong for a man of God to carry a firearm in church.

"I’ve always felt that the only way to handle a bear in a bear meeting is to have something you can handle a bear with," said the 68-year-old pastor, who practices at a gun range with another pastor. "We have to be realistic. I know too many people who’ve been shot, carjacked."

Adams said most — if not all — of Westside’s 50 members have supported his actions after encountering the burglar.

"People want to look at Christians and the church as believers in God and ask ‘Why doesn’t God protect you?" Adams said. "The reality is God has given man free will. We have to use our God-given talents and protect ourselves."

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Thoughts on the Passion of Christ

Today is the feast of St. Maximilian Kolbe, martyr.  St.St_Kolbe_Prayer_Card Maximilian was a Polish Franciscan, who was imprisoned by the Nazis in the notorious Auschwitz concentration camp.  It was here that he traded places with a family man sentenced to die to discourage prisoners from escaping.  This selfless act was the main cause of St. Maximilian’s canonization in 1982.  His sacrifice is an example to all Christians of how they should be willing to lay down their lives for the good of others.

Your probably asking what this has to do with the Passion of Christ.  Well, today my brother and I were serving Mass and the priest was telling how similar St. Maximilian’s sacrifice was to Jesus’ when He died on the Cross.  This started to get me thinking and meditating on the Passion of Christ and what it means.

According to The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition published by Houghton Mifflin Company, passion is defined as 1) A powerful emotion, such as love, joy, hatred, or anger; 2) ardent love.

For me, this sums it all up.  Christ loved us so wholly, so unconditionally, and so entirely that He suffered a cruel, painful, and humiliating death.  He loved us with every drop of blood that left His body.  Every time the whip of His tortures fell upon His body, His love for us increased.  He did not want us to be destroyed because of our sins.  Because of all the love that Jesus showed for us through the tortures that He endured, I think that it should be called the Way of Love, not Way of the Cross.

Not only did Jesus love us, but His Eternal Father loved us, as well,  The often quoted passage John 3: 16 states, “For God so loved the world, as to give His only begotten Son: that whosoever believeth in Him may not perish, but may have life everlasting.”

The question is: do we love our fellow man so much and ourselves so little that we can give up something for the benefit of others?  If we were given the chance, would we go so far as to lay down our lives for other or for the Church?  We have have that opportunity sooner that we want to think about.

We need to keep in mind that every time we sin, we are causing Jesus even more pain.  Every time we sin, we are driving the nails deeper into His hands; we are driving the throne deeper into His Divine Head.  If we keep this in our minds always, hopefully we will be able to keep temptation away and sin at arms length.

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Pope Benedict and Nancy Pelosi – The Wave of a Hand Brings Joy

Pope Benedict and Nancy Pelosi are on the same stage in front of a  huge crowd. The Madame Speaker and The Pope, however, have seen it all before.Pope Benedict XVI smiling

To make it a little more interesting, Madame Speaker says to the Pope, “Did You know that with just one little wave of my hand I can make every Democrat in the crowd go wild?”

He doubts it, so she shows him. Sure enough, the wave elicits rapture and cheering from every Democrat in the crowd. Gradually, the cheering subsides.

The Pope, not wanting to be outdone by such a level of arrogance, considers what he could do…

“That was impressive”, the Pope says, “But did you know that with just one little wave of MY hand I can make many people in the crowd, and many around the world, go crazy with joy?  This joy will not be a momentary display like that of your subjects, but will go deep into their hearts, and they will forever speak of this day and rejoice.”

The speaker seriously doubts this, and says so. “One little wave of your hand and so many people will rejoice forever? Show me.”

So Pope Benedict slapped her.

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A Taste of Things to Come

This is the first of hopefully many posts to come.  If you go to my profile you will see that it says three things, “Born Roman Catholic.  Raised Roman Catholic.  Will die Roman Catholic.”  That will gives you some idea how important my faith is to me.

For me the Roman Catholic Church is the one, true, holy, and Apostolic church founded by Jesus Christ.  I know that will turn some people off, but let me assure my Protestant friends that I consider you an important part of the Body of Christ.  Back over 30 years ago, a teaching nun told my Dad that Protestants had the spirit of the Law (the Bible), while the Catholics had the letter of the Law (all the writing of the Father’s of the Church and the Traditions).  I have spend the last four years of my life attending a formerly Baptist, but now non-denomination university, and I can understand that what that Sister said was true.  (I will write more about this later.)

The main purpose of this blog will be to give a conservative viewpoint in an increasingly liberal world.  In particular, this blog will set it’s sights on the problems that liberalism has caused within the Roman Catholic Church.

I’d better end here and leave the good stuff for later.

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