Wow. The demons are really having a hey day with this post. If you don't have anything good to say then don't speak or write it. If demons keep us looking at the evil of the world then we become less capable of seeing God's good. Taylor is popular because she emotionally supports women. If men learned how to do it properly, then maybe she wouldn't have written the songs she did. Giving warnings is scare mongering. Like this audience really needs to be warned against Taylor Swift. I just don't understand some of these posts on CathInfo.
I have a few questions:
Do you think the concept in the original post / thread title is incorrect? That is: Is the exorcist
wrong to warn against attending Taylor Swift concerts due to witchcraft?
If yes, is it because you think he’s wrong that there is witchcraft? Or you agree there is witchcraft, but think the priest is wrong to warn people about it? Do you think there is no harm from witchcraft?
If demons keep us looking at the evil of the world then we become less capable of seeing God's good. … Giving warnings is scare mongering.
Do you think people should never be warned about evils in the world? For example, were the popes wrong to write so many encyclicals warning about Fɾҽҽmαsσɳɾყ? Should Trad priests today never warn their flock against the dangers out there in our world today?
Like this audience really needs to be warned against Taylor Swift.
So, you really think all the people who post or lurk on CathInfo are
fully aware of the demonic aspects of Taylor Swift’s performances? Were you aware? Sean Johnson, above, in a joking sort of way, seemed to indicate that he thought she was just another modern ‘pop tart’, rather than knowing the full occult/witchcraft aspect.
And even if many Trads or CathInfo members might be the type to just avoid pop music altogether, do none of us have family or friends who don’t? If we just think, “well, I wouldn’t listen to her because she’s just another pop-tart, and I don’t listen to pop music”, if the priest/exorcist in the article is correct, some might think it more important to warn naive loved-ones about TS. I know Catholics who took their young daughters to the movie version of her tour.
I know Traditional Catholics whose daughters like to listen to Taylor Swift. Do you think the priest in the opening post was wrong to try to warn them?
Also, if you knew that, after spending an exorbitant sum of money to go to her concert, people experience some freaky sort of "amnesia", where they can't remember it, (a phenomenon I've
never heard of before WRT concerts), would you send your daughter(s) [assuming you had any; I say daughters because I get the impression she is much more popular with young girls than boys; I wouldn't send my sons or daughter] to her concert?