Catholic Info
Traditional Catholic Faith => Funny Stuff for Catholics => Topic started by: Binechi on June 08, 2014, 11:09:39 AM
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Not true.
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Wouldn t you say that this is what brought down Benedict XVI ?
The ICLCJ court case in Brussels charging Pope Francis and other global elites for Crimes Against Humanity was expected to extend for over a year. Last year’s ICLCJ court found 40 global elites guilty and ended with the unprecedented resignation of former Pope Ratzinger.
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No.
-The ICLCJ is a one-man-show run by a protestant nutjob called Kevin Annett
-The organisation is completely irrelevant and has no jurisdiction over anything
-He makes wacky claims about Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip being serial murderers, among other things
-There is no evidence for any of these allegations. You'd think there would be evidence, considering that he claims the Catholic Church murdered 25 million Canadian aboriginals.
-Kevin Annett uses the ICLCJ to solicit for cash donations. He claims that he needs the money to provide help for "victims". In other words, he benefits financially from these fabricated sensational stories
-He apparently can't tell the difference between the Catholic Church and the Church of England
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Wouldn t you say that this is what brought down Benedict XVI ?
That's a lovely photo you posted, Director. Five well-dressed and well-shod little boys and eleven well-dressed and well-shod little girls (each with a pretty ribbon in their hair) sitting down at what appears to be snack time in a scrupulously cleaning dining room, all overseen by the loving eye of a Catholic woman who has concescarated her life to God.
Thanks for posting.
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The Irish Archdiocese of Tuam has revealed that all of the children born out of wedlock at a "mother and child" home in Galway were baptized, contrary to reports that had circulated alleging that the children were buried without benefit of the sacraments.
Early reports about the Church-run institution in Galway had suggested that the bodies of nearly 800 children were discarded. In fact they were buried, and archdiocesan records prove that they were baptized. The impoverished institution did have a very high rate of mortality among infants, reflecting the generally high rate in all of Ireland during the early 20th century.
http://www.catholicculture.org/news/headlines/index.cfm?storyid=21747