Thursday, December 31, 2009

Put it in the right hands

 A basketball in my hands cost only Rp.50 thousand, but in the hands of a Michael Jordan, it costs Rp.5 million.

✠  A foot ball in my hand cost only Rp.75 thousand, but in the hands of a Ricardo Kaka it costs RP. 75 million.

✠  A guitar in my hand cost only Rp.500 thousand, but in the hands of Paul Gilbert it costs Rp.500 million.

THE COST DEPENDS ON THE HANDS THAT HOLD IT

✠  A tennis racket in my hand means sport, but in the hand of Serena Williams it means Wimbledon champion.

✠  A pen in my hand is just a stationary, but in the hand of Don Moen it means new songs for God.

✠  A stick in my hand can only be used to drive away animals, but in the hand of Moses it could split the ocean.

✠  A slingshot in my hand is just a toy, but in the hands David it is an incredible weapon.

✠  2 fish and 5 loaves in my hands means 2 fish sandwiches, but in the hands of Jesus 2 fish and 5 loaves means satiation for 5000 men

✠  Nails and wood in my hand would mean a new place for my dog, but the nails and wood in the hands of Jesus means salvation for the whole world.

YOU SEE? THE VALUE DEPENDS ON THE HANDS THAT HOLD IT

What I want to say is, There is hope for your future, your family, your relationships, your dreams, BUT it all depends on whose hands you lay it all.

YOUR LIFE’S VALUE DEPENDS ON THE HANDS THAT HOLD IT.
MAKE SURE YOUR LIFE IS THE RIGHT HANDS, THE HANDS OF JESUS.



Thanks to Jack Loloin.

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

La Australia del Espiritu Santo






"La Australia del Espiritu Santo"
(South Land of the Holy Spirit)


400 Year Anniversary, 14th May 2006.

"Let the heavens, the earth, ....and all those here present witness that I, Captain Pedro Fernandez de Quirós......in the name of Jesus Christ.... whereon He gave His life for the ransom and remedy of the human race ...on this Day of Pentecost, 14 May 1606......I take possession of all this part of the South as far as the pole in the name of Jesus.......Which from now on shall be called the Southern land of the Holy Ghost...and this always and forever ...to the end that to all the natives, in all the said lands, the holy, sacred evangel may be preached zealously and openly."

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Pharmacist Supported

In this world we are all called to be witnesses to Christ (Acts 1:8) - regardless of our vocation to the religious-life, lay or secular life. Below is an article showing a perfect example of one such person, putting morals and Church teaching above all else - moral above money? I like it!

This is taken from the "Together" newspaper, December 2009 issue - the free newspaper for the Wagga Wagga Diocese.

Pharmacist Supported
Church community admires courageous chemist
Griffith Pharmacist, Mr. Trevor Dal Broi, gained international media attention recently when the secular media beat up a story that he did not dispense the contraceptive pill from his pharmacy.
Several months prior to the sensationalised story hitting the headlines, Mr. Dal Broi had removed condoms and the 'morning after pill' from sale at his pharmacy. Also, when Mr. Dal Broi dispenses the oral contraceptive pill, he discreetly and politely gives the customer a leaflet explaining that the pill can be used to treat a range of medical conditions, but that if it is being used as a contraceptive then the customer is kindly asked to respect his conscientious objection to the sale and support of artificial contraception, and requests that in future the customer has their prescription filled elsewhere.
"I haven't stopped selling the pill", Mr. Dal Broi said. "I don't enquire why the customer is using the pill. That's their business unless they want to talk about it with me or ask my advice as a health professional."

"I simply advise the customer that I have a conscientious objection to selling the pill when it is used as a contraceptive." Mr Dal Broi said, "and humbly request the customers respect my views."
Mr. Dal Broi's objection is based on his acceptance of Jesus' moral teaching as faithfully transmitted through the Catholic Church, founded and preserved by Christ Himself.
Two of the major problems with the contraceptive pill are that on one hand it breaks the inseparable connection between fertility and sexual intercourse, and on the other hand, when the pill fails to supress ovulation, it acts as an abortifacient - killing new human life resulting from intercourse.
Mr. Dal Broi received the power to take his stance when he and his wife, Catherine, attended World Youth Day 2008, where they were inspired to draw closer to Jesus and live by His teachings.
"I used to be quite blinkered and only saw what I wanted to see. I didn't have much of an idea about my faith" Mr. Dal Broi admitted. "World Youth Day, our local youth group and my parish priests - Fr. Andrew Grace and Fr. Anthony Dunne - broadened my mind and opened my eyes to the truth. I have come to realise that when it comes to ethics there are some things that are right and some things that are wrong."
Mr. Dal Broi has joined a growing number of pharmacists who do not dispense the pill when it is used as a contraceptive/abortifacient.
Many people would not be aware that the pill is an abortifaceant when used as a contraceptive. Many people would also be unaware of the manifold increase in the incidence of cancer, particularly cervical and breast cancer among long term users of the pill, especially amongst younger users.
"There was a bit of a backlash when the news broke - people told me various things like 'keep your faith separate from your work and just do the religion thing on Sunday' and things like that," Mr. Dal Broi said. "But most of the feedback has been really positive. I am grateful for the love and support I have received from people in Griffith and all over - I even got a phone call of support from New York after it has hit the news in the USA!"
"Selling condoms and the 'morning after pill' was troubling me for a while, but when I decided to stop selling them I felt an enormous weight lift off my shoulders and I felt an amazing sense of peace. I knew straight away that I had done the right thing."
Mr. Dal Broi is not the only pharmacist in the diocese to take this stance. Mr. Simon Horsfall, owner of the Thurgoona Family Pharmacy found himself in the headlines a few years ago for the same reasons. There are also other pharmacists in the diocese who do not sell condoms or the 'morning after pill'.
Mr. Dal Broi and Mr. Horsfall's leadership is commended by informed pharmacists and authentic Catholics. Mr. John Wilks, consultant pharmacist, researcher, lecturer, author and faithful Catholic, said "Mr. Dal Broi is to be applauded for his stance", and quoted Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI in support of Mr. Dal Broi's actions. Mr. Wilks said that these popes have affirmed that pharmacists act in accordance with their professed belief.
Mr. Wilks also affirmed that "Mr. Dal Broi is not required to act against his conscience or to dispense products which are known to have deleterious effects on customers."
Courageous pharmacists like Trevor Dal Broi in Griffith and Simon Horsfall in Thurgoona deserve support from all people of goodwill in the community.
Moreover, Mr. Wilks said that all pharmacists who claim to be Catholic should follow suit, given the proven abortifacient nature of the pill. "Furthermore", Mr. Wilks said, "the Head of the Faith they claim to belong to has repeatedly said that a Catholic pharmacist cannot dispense or sell these products. So the question becomes this: to whom does a Catholic pharmacist give his/her loyalty - to arbitrary public opinion or to Jesus Christ?"

7%

THIS IS AWESOME....READ IT EVERY WEEK!!!


Written By Regina Brett, 90 years old, of The Plain Dealer, Cleveland , Ohio

"To celebrate growing older, I once wrote the 44 lessons life taught me. It is the most-requested column I've ever written. My odometer rolled over to 90 in August, so here is the column once more:"


1. Life isn't fair, but it's still good.

2. When in doubt, just take the next small step.

3. Life is too short to waste time hating anyone.

4. Your job won't take care of you when you are sick. Your friends and parents will. Stay in touch.

5. Pay off your credit cards every month.

6. You don't have to win every argument. Agree to disagree

7. Cry with someone. It's more healing than crying alone.

8. It's OK to get angry with God. He can take it.

9. Save for retirement starting with your first paycheck.

10. When it comes to chocolate, resistance is futile.

11. Make peace with your past so it won't screw up the present.

12. It's OK to let your children see you cry.

13. Don't compare your life to others. You have no idea what their journey is all about.

14. If a relationship has to be a secret, you shouldn't be in it.

15. Everything can change in the blink of an eye. But don't worry; God never blinks.

16. Take a deep breath. It calms the mind.

17. Get rid of anything that isn't useful, beautiful or joyful.

18. Whatever doesn't kill you really does make you stronger.

19. It's never too late to have a happy childhood. But the second one is up to you and no one else.

20. When it comes to going after what you love in life, don't take no for an answer.

21. Burn the candles, use the nice sheets, wear the fancy lingerie. Don't save it for a special occasion. Today is special.

22. Over prepare, then go with the flow.

23. Be eccentric now. Don't wait for old age to wear purple.

24. No one is in charge of your happiness but you.

25. Frame every so-called disaster with these words ''In five years, will this matter?".

26. Always choose life.

27. Forgive everyone everything.

28. What other people think of you is none of your business.

29. Time heals almost everything. Give time, time.

30. However good or bad a situation is, it will change.

31. Don't take yourself so seriously. No one else does.

32. Believe in miracles.

33. God loves you because of who God is, not because of anything you did or didn't do.

34. Don't audit life. Show up and make the most of it now.

35. Growing old beats the alternative -- dying young.

36. Your children get only one childhood.

37. All that truly matters in the end is that you loved.

38. Get outside every day. Miracles are waiting everywhere

39. If we all threw our problems in a pile and saw everyone else's, we'd grab ours back.

40.. Envy is a waste of time. You already have all you need

41. The best is yet to come.

42. No matter how you feel, get up, dress up and show up.

43. Yield.

44. Life isn't tied with a bow, but it's still a gift.

It's estimated 93% won't forward this. If you are one of the 7% who will, forward this with the title '7%'. I'm in the 7%. Remember that I will always share my spoon with you! Friends are the family that we choose for ourselves

Reflections on Jesus



The following reflections on the person of Jesus make us more aware of what an extraordinary person He was and is. Some of the lines that follow are original, the majority belonging to those writers we fondly recall as "Author Unknown", though where possible, the author has been identified.

He was conceived and born contrary to all biological law.

He grew up to be a very bothersome man.

He told the truth and it cost Him His life.

He could have avoided assassination by going fishing in Galilee for the weekend.

He was often seen talking and laughing after His death.

He remains forever a question mark with which people are never quite finished.

Non-believers forever worry lest they might be wrong.

The Church He founded is discussed daily on the first pages of the major newspapers of the world.

What might He have accomplished has He lived to 50?

As a babe, He terrified a King. As a youngster, He puzzled scholars. As a man, He intimidated a Roman Governor.

He was constantly in hot water. He did not seem to mind. He felt it would keep Him clean. He has no training in psychiatry. Yet, He has cured more minds and spirits than anyone else in history. - G.K. Chesterton.

Alexander, Caesar, and Napoleon established mighty empires by force. He began His with love and service. Theirs have disappeared. His remains.

Statesmen have legislated on their turn. Artists and philosophers have reigned for a short period. Some have said they were more popular than He. But their names are written in the sand. His is spoken with frequency by one billion followers.

Each week, millions assemble to salute Him in the Eucharist. He spoke that last night to a small band of illiterate men as though the memorial ceremony would continue down through the centuries. History has proved Him correct.

He calls us to Liturgy both to remember Him and worship Him.

The first food consumed on the moon was bread and wine consumed in His name.

Those who discover they cannot believe in Him live with sorrow. Those who believe but lack the courage to resemble Him survive with regret.

Though centuries separate us from Him, He is more vital than we. We will not even be memories in the next generation, but He will flourish.

He no longer stands in the dock. He has nothing to prove. He has survived the test of time. It is we who are on trial in our reaction to Him.

Unlike countless peoples who impacted society by jumping in front of it and going with the flow, He got in front of the parade to take it in the opposite direction.

He presides over the world like a Colossus.

After almost a century in U.S.S.R gulags, He walks openly in Moscow, Kiev and St. Petersburg. No one seems surprised.

No historian can portray humanity honestly without giving Him the foremost place. - H.G. Wells.

Millions utter His name upon rising. Other millions will shout it throughout the day in anger or pain. For still other millions, it is the last name they whisper before they die and the first they expect to speak when they awaken in His presence.

He is the hero you could never invent. - Robert Griffin.

Angels rush to Him. Devils flee from Him.

He not only pushed the envelope. He broke through it.

In a poor mans apparel, He pursues us always.

He is the long delayed but always expected something we live for. - Tennessee Williams.

His name is not so much written into the history of the world as ploughed. - Ralph Waldo Emerson.

He changed B.C into A.D. - Harry Emerson Fosdick.

He has no interest in people theorising about Him but rather reproducing Him in their lives. - Albert Nolan.

"Time" magazine suggests that in His lifetime, He had no equal. It is the same today.

It is not He who needs us. It is we who need Him.

Isn't it strange?



How a dollar bill seems like such a large amount when you donate it to church, but such a small amount when you go shopping?

How two hours seem so long when you're at church and how short they seem when you're watching a good movie?

That you can't find a word to say when you're praying, but you have no trouble thinking what to talk about with a friend?

How everyone wants front-row tickets to concerts or games but they do whatever is possible to sit in the last row in church?

How we need to know about an event for church two-weeks before the day so we can include it in our agenda, but we can adjust for other events at the last minute?

How difficult it is to learn a fact about God to share with others, but how easy it is to learn, understand, extend and repeat gossip?

How we believe everything that magazines and newspapers say, but we question the words in the Bible?

How everyone wants a place in Heaven but they don't want to believe, say or do anything to get there?

OPEN: Sacred Heart Church, Wodonga

Sacred Heart Wodonga is now open and ready for business... or prayer, rather! The church was closed on Easter Monday 2009 for renovations of both the interior and exterior, which was warmly welcomed by parishioners, young and old, new and life-long. The church was built in the 1960's/70's and after decades, time was taking its toll - both in aesthetics and general wear and tear.

On Saturday 12th December, the doors were once again reopen for the Vigil Mass of the Third Sunday of Advent, followed by an invitation to come and check out the new presbytery adjoining St. Augustine's Church (which the three priests only moved into over Friday and Saturday!) while the official opening and blessing will be over January 30th and 31st, officiated by the Bishop of the Sandhurst Diocese, Bishop Joe Grech.

All I can say is... WOW! What they have done to Sacred Heart is amazing! It is much brighter, much warmer looking and where everything is placed makes things much easier! As for the presbytery, once a convent, it has sat there unused for quite some time, giving off quite a derelict appearance if only you could see over the fence. Now it is fully renovated and looking just like a newly built home!

There are many rooms - quite the maze - with plenty of bedrooms for the three priests and guests. Upstairs also has a nice room with just window panels and slats for ventilation which would make a lovely summer room to sit and relax, read a book, or even put a table and some chairs in to share a meal. There has also been an extension so it adjoins the church with easy access inside for the priests. Perhaps if he gets sick of his parishioners, he can even slip out and go back home!

Overall I give the effort put in to this project a total thumbs up! It wasn't a half-assed attempt at making things look nice, but a major overhaul of the two sites! St. Augustine's was not left out of the loop though by all means. Though I have not yet been in there, work has also been done to make it more welcoming and safe. It is the older of the two churches, built sometime in the latter 1800's, though it has of course kept its original character and charm of a traditional Catholic Church. Sacred Heart on the other hand is by no means "traditional" so there is nothing the same there!

A job well done! I am only sad that this has all come to fruition after I have moved to this side of the border and not while I was still in Wodonga!

Friday, December 11, 2009

I MADE IT PEOPLE!

YES! I DID IT! I MADE IT TO MASS THIS MORNING! :-D

The way it turned out, seems like I was meant to go for a reason. Not only did the readings talk to me, I also spent a good ten-minutes before mass started, on my knees, deep in prayer, and several times during the mass.

At the conclusion on my way out, I checked for any interesting reading material to take away with me. It's the start of the month, so naturally the December issue of "Together", the monthly newspaper for the Wagga Wagga Diocese, was there, along with the Christmas edition of "Australian Catholics". Hidden beneath a bunch of St. Vincent de Paul Society "Vision" magazines, I found a small paper publication of the Sacred Heart parish - "Our Special Heart". I knew of this publication from seeing the parish website, but have never seen it at the church since moving here in April.

I was quite excited by this as I missed the similar "Parish Talk" that is distributed in the Wodonga Catholic Parishes. Once arriving home - a short stroll over the road - I opened it up and had a little flip through it. Haven't read any of the material yet, more just a flick through, but an advertisement caught my eye in "Our Special Heart" calling for front-cover design for what will be renamed "Heartbeat".

"Great! This is right up my alley!" I thought, so jumped straight online and emailed the parish secretary checking if they are still looking. I'm not sure if this is a monthly publication or a quaterly one, like "Parish Talk". Assuming it is quaterly, they will be taking submissions for some time. In the meantime while I wait to hear back, I plan to make a few rough sketches of different designs, choosing a few of my favourites to then transfer into digital-form using Adobe PhotoShop and/or Illustrator.

Many of the people in the parish are older, so presumably not many people would have ideas to enter, or if they do, they will be somewhat too outdated looking, not the look they're after, too simple or something-or-other. Not big-noting myself there, but that's the way I see it! With my creative talent and ideas, perhaps each new edition of "Heartbeat" will be adorned with MY design I can only hope!

It will give me a stronger sense of belonging in the parish. At the moment, I don't really "belong" in the parish as I have rarely been going to mass. The Church I have the strongest sense of belonging to would by far be the Wodonga Catholic Parish, where I was bought up, where my parents attend. I did their website for sometime, I had regular meetings with one of the priests for a general chit-chat over coffee and a bite at the cafe, I would help out on the days when the school-kids were to receive the Sacraments of Confirmation and First Holy Communion (as my mother was the Religious Coordinator at one of the Catholic Primary schools in Wodonga) and was also a Eucharistic Minister, though I never actually administered it too often as there are so many active parishioners there willing to do it, and I would always get a little shy standing up at the sanctuary in front of the congregation - Sacred Heart Church in Wodonga is a pretty big church!!! However, I was a Eucharistic Minister - I had been educated, I had received my certificate signed by the Bishop, name badge to identify myself if I administered to those at home or in hospitals or elsewhere.

I really want to become an active parishioner of a church - make it mine. So by participating and hopefully having the winning design will be the start of that, giving me a bigger sense of belonging!

Speaking of belonging, on my way out, I held the door open for two ladies coming out. They smiled and thanked me, and one of them started talking, "I haven't seen you here before. Are you new?" to which the other replied "Oh yes I have seen you before!" I told them how I had only moved here in April, and lived right across the road, pointing to my block of flats. We continued our little talk as we walked out of the Church grounds, then went our seperate ways. I liked that! Someone noticing another they haven't before encountered! Had I never been before, I am sure she would be the "Welcome!" type. That made me feel happy, brightened my day just that bit.

Another thing that brightens my day - usually happens every time I go on a weekday - are the many old people who look at me and simply flash me a warm smile - a happy smile, welcome smile, good to see a young person smile - not a look of worry - "Is he one of those thugs that will sit at the back and steal my purse when I go for communion?"

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Mass Attendance

I really need to be filled. No more "half-empty glass" syndrome - I want it filled to the brim; overflowing. Lately I've been staying up watching tele until I fall asleep, then I wake up at that hour or two in the morning when the only options to watch is basically infomercials or evangelical-TV. Never been a fan of either, but I've chosen the latter for these early-mornings before "Sunrise" or the "Today" shows.

I'm not as annoyed at evangelical-TV as much anymore... I guess I was just watching the wrong ones! These spoke to me more - Scripture was involved as opposed to some craze guy strutting the stage, talking in riddles, making false promises, creating false hope - basically detracting all the attention from God and putting it all onto himself.

I live just across the road from a Catholic Church and they have weekday mass at 9:30am every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. If I wanted to go everyday, then on Tuesday's and Thursday's I could catch a bus into town and go to St. Patrick's. Maybe that will come one day, once I get back into a rhythm of actually going to mass again! Bad me...

Lately I've been reading heaps about things to do with religion, watching religious movies and checking out religious websites. Also downloading religious videos off YouTube and podcasts off iTunes. Still, it is not enough, I hunger to go to mass again! It has been too long - perhaps a month - perhaps a little over? I really don't know, so in other words, too long. Besides, that last time was a funeral not a general mass.

So on Monday I was going to go, but I was crook as. Probably half a Xanax pill I had the day before, on top of a few other things... Endone and Buprenorphine. Wednesday I was still a little crook - a different kind of crook though. Just depressed. Couldn't work up the energy to do anything all day. So tomorrow - tomorrow I will go! Nothing will stop me, unless I get another one of my bouts of depression where I can't do anything... but unlikely, that only happened the other day.

What I envision standing in my way of going tomorrow is sheer laziness. That isn't a good enough excuse though. I will most likely end up waking up (I generally have another sleep around 7am then wake by 9am at the latest) but feel too tired to go... however, I have been out of coffee the last week, and got some today, so that will perk me up! I'm one of those people who really needs his morning coffee and cigarette or else I'm hell!!!

So... Tomorrow... Over the road... Mass... Better be there!!!

Race Relations




Last night I finally watched "MY" very first episode of "John Safran's Race Relations" on ABC. The reason I hadn't watched it in the past (NOTE: I am a HUGE Safran fan! I own "John Safran v God" DVD, all the episodes as podcasts of "Speaking in Tongues" - co-hosted by Fr. Bob - and listen to "Sunday Night Safran" - also co-hosted by Fr. Bob - on JJJ) is because there has always been something more pressing on. Now it is summer-time television, most the good shows are over, opening my window to watch different things. I know they ran "Race Relations" on ABC2, but I am still stuck in analogue-TV mode and forget all the digital channels - except "GO".

Moving along, it seemed quite the appropriate episode to watch given I am battling with my faith at the moment. I know it is still there, otherwise why would I care I was losing it? But my glass half empty, not half full - and I want it filled to the brim, overflowing! Though I will settle for just half-full!

This episode, John decided to de-Jewify himself by going to the Philippines and partaking of a traditional Easter ceremony where one goes through all the torture Jesus endured - yes, even the crucifixion, with real nails - real blood.

It was quite interesting as I heard of Safran doing this earlier this year and just assumed that it would have already been on "Race Relations" - not the last episode!!! Thinking I need to go buy the DVD now, except this time I won't have to limit myself to the small selection they have at Dymocks as JB-Hi-Fi has recently opened here in Albury - yay!

Has re-opened my eyes to my faith somewhat - thinking of watching "Jesus The Greatest Story Ever Told" and "Passion of The Christ" again sometime soon. However I am also thinking of buying "The Nativity Story" given it is that time of year, and I need a bit of Christmas cheer - REAL CHRISTMAS - not this capitalistic, consumerism, materialism Christmas celebrating the birth of Santa.

At the end of the crucifixion - not straight after, but once back in Oz and recovered - he talked how he couldn't de-Jewify himself blah blah blah. I think otherwise... perhaps he COULD have done so, but he went about the wrong way doing it! I mean, what's more Jewish than being tortured and crucified like Christ? Remember people - Jesus wasn't a Christian... He was a Jew!

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Sacred Heart Church opening!



After years of talk and planning, and months of construction and renovations, Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Wodonga is finally near completion. I drove past it today and can hardly recognise it! No longer is it the massive yellow-brick monstrosity it once was, but a nice, modern, white-rendered building with nice stained glass windows throughout. Inside are many changes, including, best to my knowledge, a hospitality section, meeting rooms and new piety stall (I think!).

Next weekend will be the first mass held there in months since being renovated - Saturday 12th at 6pm and Sunday 13th at 10:30am - followed by a tour of the new presbytery between St. Augustine's Church and St. Augustine's Primary School, in the former convent, which, like St. Augustine's Church, has also undergone massive changes and renovations.

No longer is the main Catholic Church of the Wodonga Parish an eyesore, but the best looking modern-church in the area. I look forward to seeing just what has been done to the church, also the presbytery, and finally, St. Augustine's, the original Catholic Church in Wodonga - an old, but lovely, traditional church.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

TIME

There are so many things
I'd have liked to do.
If I could do life again
Then I surely would.
People I would like
To have met.
Places I'd like
To go more often.
But now
It's too late.
Time
Has ticked past.
I'm getting on
Getting old.
Time to settle
Back down.
Sit at home
Be a recluse.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Ban the "Budgie Smugglers"

Lately I see on the weekday morning shows, also the late-night shows and early-evening ones, the likes of "7pm Project" (Network Ten), where the panel will talk about Budgie Smugglers, and men without tops etc;. I really don't understand the mentality of the heterosexual female. They are attracted to guys, right, yet not many approve of Budgie Smugglers or shirtless-men. Are they actually all closeted lesbians?

The thing that pisses me off so much is that it is fine for them to walk around in much the same thing - the bottom half of their bikini - and then there's the top half which clearly show their breasts and cleavage! On a man however, they find it WRONG. Why??? It's HOT!!! OK so not on old men, but young, hunky guys - yummy!

It's so hypocritical... The Budgie Smugglers reveal too much. And your point? Sorry but I thought you were a hetero-woman! As I said before - womens boobs are right there in front of you in a scantily clad bikini top! Seriously, women can be soooo fucking stupid.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

neurotic

I'm isolated.
Stuck in a hazy mist.
Angsty and neurotic.
Dull stabbing pain.
Nauseous and nervous.
Why can't it cease.
Taken a blunt cordless drill to my head.
Lobotomized.
Smoked up and blown out.
Wash it down by chasing the dragon.
Pin cushion.
Black Russian's.
Red Russian's.
Socialism.
Communism.
Anti-capital.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Story of the Candy Cane

There was a man who loved Jesus so much that he decided to do something special for Jesus' birthday. Since he was a candy maker, he wanted to use his talents to make a special candy to honour Jesus, so he designed the first candy cane.

If the candy cane is held upright, it is the shape of the shepherd's staff, which the shepherd uses as he watches over his sheep and is the symbol of Christian service and care. Jesus is our shepherd. If the candy cane is turned upside down, it becomes the letter "J" for Jesus. He is the joy of living.

The Scriptures tell us that by Jesus' stripes, we are healed. Jesus was beaten and stripes were put upon his back when he was crucified in payment for our sins. So the candy cane was made with red and white stripes to represent the blood of Jesus, which washes away our sins and makes us pure and white as snow.

One bold stripe represents out belief in the one God, who is Father of us all. The three fine stripes represent the Trinity - one God who has revealed Himself to using the three ways - the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.

The candy cane is breakable that it may be shared. Receive it as a gift, Jesus Christ the Lord is a wonderful gift of God's love to us all.

Taken from "Parish Talk" the quaterly magazine for Wodonga Catholic Parish.
Submitted by parishioner, Nancy Tanner.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Sozialismus!!!

It's not hard to see WHY the vast majority of the Western World are against the political ideology of Socialism and Communism - one only had to look at the past to see the terrors of the world committed by Communist and Socialist governments, from the National Socialist "Third Reich" to the Communist Stalinist period in Soviet Russia.

Still people refuse to look at certain communities that were Socialist or Communist in the past and got on just fine! Sure, they were not Marxist because this was before Marx, Engels and "The Communist Manifesto", but it is all still the same. Three I can pick from the top of my head - and all three are also deeply religious communities also, so keep this in mind if you are religious and feel that ALL Communist and Socialist way of life is anti-God.

Number one starts when Christianity started - the time of the Apostles - who lived in a fairly Communist way. Same as the early Latter-Day Saints and even up to this current period in time, there are many other communes in the world which are some of the best places to live for many people in the world. There are the Amish, there are also small communes that not many people know about that exist even in Australia, such as "Fairy Land", in New South Wales near Nimbin.

The Western World was going through the biggest change in history since the Protestant Reformation at the time of Marx, Engels and "The Communist Manifesto". Roughly one-hundred years before "The Manifesto" was published, the French Revolution occured, with The People overthrowing the Monarchy and eventually, after much bloodshed, wars and evil leaders, abolished the absolute monarchy and aristocracy, replacing it with a republic system.

Towards the start of the 20th century, not long after "The Manifesto" was published and distributed throughout Europe, the world was going to see the two largest wars in history. Countries such as Germany were in great depression and in need of a great leader - or a saviour, as they saw him - such as Adolf Hitler. Life was great for many German's, except the minorities, in pre-war Nazi Germany.

In Russia, the exiled-lawyer, Vladimir Lenin, returned and just as the French had done some one-hundred years earlier, the Russian aristocracy and monarchy was overthrown. The Kremlin, one the house of the Czar, became the Russian "White House" and still is to this day.

Here's an interesting little fact for you... the first country in the world to lift the ban on homosexuality was indeed the Soviet Union! Strange you may say because Stalin was such an iron-fisted ruler with very little tolerance, however this took place before Stalin became the leader, after the death of Lenin. What would the world be like had Stalin not taken his place, but Trotsky instead? Would the world have seen Communism and Socialism in a different light? Maybe, maybe not.

The thing to remember here is that the world was in chaos at that time, the countries who adopted the new practice of Communism and Socialism had a radical change in a short span of time. The leaders had to protect the country from invasion and economic hardship, so it's not hard to see why the leaders were Hitler's and Stalin's.

In the Western World, many people still haven't gotten past the thought and conviction that Communism and Socialism are bad ideologies that don't work because they only look to the period of time which was in utter chaos! Today there still remains many old slogans that were in use by the Western Democracies during the 1950's such as "Better to be dead than a Red" and others.

Many religious people see it as nothing more than replacing God with ones-self. I get many emails from fellow Catholic's telling me how evil Communism is for instance, with a link to a video on Communism by famous people in historical media such as Bishop Fulton Sheen et cetera.

The truth is, take a look at the world of today - it is just as evil. We all suffer because of the Western Democracy! The poorest countries are suffering because of global warming, which they didn't contribute much at all to creating this problem! People are starving and living on the streets because of the increase in EVERYTHING all because of what? The economic crisis of Wall Street in the Great Depression, also in the recent recession of 2009! Why do the poor have to suffer because of the greed of the big fat-cat capitalists? They lose millions, sure, but at the end of the day they sit down in their mansions, eating lobster and turkey for dinner, crying poor because they're no longer multi-billionaires, but simply "mere" millionaires... at the same time, the poor and the working class have to go without many of their basic needs because of the price hike in everything.

When will people see through the evils of capitalism? When will people start looking towards alternative political systems that are there for humanity? For women, for gays and other minorities, for the environment. The answer is - they won't! Why? Because the world has been brainwashed into loving the capitalist system, even the poorest of the poor, because everyone has the hope and dream that one day they will have money - the house, the sports car and the 2.5 kids who they will privately educate.

Communism and Socialism may have been evil in the past - but they were also good in the past in certain instances. What of capitalist society? They have been evil too! They just hide things with their propaganda and blame someone else.

CAPITALISM SUCKS!!!

And yes, I will still stand by this thought, even when I have heaps of money one day. I will never be one of those capitalists who puts all their money into the air on things such as the stock market and other ways of getting "fast cash". To hell with it! You need to understand those things properly in order to gain money, and even if you do understand it, you end up losing out because the fat cats at the top just take it all.

If a quater of the people in the country decided "to hell with the banks et cetera" and went in to close their accounts and withdraw their cash to put in a safe, imagine the chaos, simply because the money is simply a figure, not real. They would be able to give the first people in their money, but after a while, it all dries out, then what? Go print more money at the mint? No. Simply create a new law saying people must have bank accounts with savings in there. The chaos would then be blamed on the Communists and Socialists of the world, and the majority once again see this not as a personal attack on an innocent system, but simply as an evil political ideology that should have been banned with the dissolution of the U.S.S.R.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Bushfires


Hear our urgent prayer, O God, as we strive to quench the bushfires raging around us. Sustain our fighting spirits, keep us from harm, and bless our toil with success. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Drunks dodge driving bullet using blood alcohol, drugs loophole


Anthony Dowsley
Herald Sun November 02, 2009 12:00AM



KILLER drivers could dodge some of our toughest road laws because of a loophole affecting blood alcohol and drug testing.
Concerns are held that a ruling in a culpable driving court case may open the way for all drivers to contest blood samples recording alcohol and drug content.
A judge hearing the case against Mark Shannon, who was at the wheel of a car in which Samantha Saul, a woman he had just met, was killed, disallowed a blood reading because Shannon claimed he had not received a blood sample.
The County Court heard Shannon was recorded with a .119 reading, more than twice the legal limit, and was travelling at more than twice the speed limit when he was T-boned by another car as he drove through a red light at the city intersection of King and Flinders streets in August 2005.
The decision has outraged the victim's family and police are worried it has implications for all future culpable driving cases.
Shannon, 30, who pleaded guilty to the lesser charges of dangerous driving causing death and two counts of negligently causing serious injury was last Thursday jailed by Judge Stuart Campbell for a minimum of two years.
But during legal argument in September, Judge Campbell accepted it would not be fair to Shannon if he did not have a sample of blood he could have independently analysed.
Argument was heard on whether the Royal Melbourne Hospital doctor who took the blood samples complied with all regulations in taking and distributing the samples. Three blood samples were taken, one of which the doctor testified was put with Shannon's belongings as required by the Road Safety Act 1986, while another two were given to police to test.
Although Judge Campbell said he was satisfied the doctor had complied with the legislation, defence lawyer Brendan Murphy, QC, had evidence of the blood samples disallowed after sworn evidence from Shannon, his father and his girlfriend that he did not receive his sample, which was allegedly left at the foot of his hospital bed.
The prosecution subsequently dropped a culpable driving causing death charge because of the ruling.
Dangerous driving causing death at the time of the incident had a maximum penalty of five years' jail, much less than the 20 years available in culpable driving cases.
Ms Saul's mother, Barbara, wrote to Attorney-General Rob Hulls for support, but said her pleas were ignored.
"This is about rotten legislation," Ms Saul said. "If he can't help, who can? It's a precedent for every drink driver to have it (blood readings) thrown out. It's ludicrous".
Police sources have told the Herald Sun they are worried all culpable driving cases in which blood samples are taken could be in jeopardy.
"It's a ruling that has the potential to impact upon every blood alcohol content case," a police source said. "Every case we have involving drug and alcohol which we take blood for is in peril."
Inspector Martin Boorman of the traffic, drugs and alcohol section said other court rulings would be monitored.
"By its very nature it is of concern," he said. "I'm not sure that it is going to apply in all cases because it is based on one judge's decision."
Insp Boorman said the issue would be raised in reviews of laws about blood alcohol concentration.
Mr Murphy said later the ruling would be persuasive only in similar cases. "The judge was not satisfied the accused got his sample," he said. "Procedures were not followed."
The Office of Public Prosecution will consider whether to ask the government to tighten the law.

Chance meeting ends in death


Anthony Dowsley
Herald Sun November 01, 2009 11:27PM


SAMANTHA Saul had only hours to live when she met Mark Shannon at a Crown casino nightclub.
SAMANTHA Saul had only hours to live when she met Mark Shannon at a Crown casino nightclub.
It was a midweek night in August 2005 when the two met at Odeon, and clicked, but then went separate ways.
Shannon and his friend, Tim Allen, had been drinking at a Hawthorn nightclub before going to the casino and, after a few more drinks there, planned to head back to Hawthorn.
But another chance meeting at a nearby McDonald's sealed their fates.
Ms Saul and her friend, David Clarke, piled into Shannon's four-wheel drive to head back to Cheers in Hawthorn.
But after driving just 1km Shannon ran a red light and at twice the speed limit, causing a horrific crash with another car.
Ms Saul, a former exotic dancer who had come to Melbourne from Queensland for a change of scene, had been having trouble with her seatbelt as they hurtled towards the accident.
She was found critically injured and lying beneath the driver's seat of the mangled car at the corner of Flinders and King streets.
Shannon, a chef, was taken to the Royal Melbourne Hospital with serious injuries, where his blood was extracted.
Three samples were taken, two of them for police to analyse and another for Shannon.
His blood showed he had an alcohol content reading of .119, more than twice the legal limit.
Twenty six-year-old Ms Saul's battle for life ended 17 days later in The Alfred hospital when her parents, Barb and John, made the excruciating decision to turn off her life support.
In 2006 Shannon was charged with culpable driving causing death.
Three years later he was sentenced after pleading guilty to the lesser charge of dangerous driving causing death.
He also admitted two counts of negligently causing serious injury.
He was sentenced to a maximum four years' jail, with a two-year minimum.
During his plea hearing the court heard he was a "reluctant driver" who was remorseful.
But it also heard in the years following the incident Shannon received four penalty notices for his poor driving.
He came under demerit point pressure after failing to stop at a stop sign and had also been nabbed for three speeding offences.
Ms Saul's mother's victim impact statement, which was not heard by the court for legal reasons, told of her devastation.
In part, it read: "One never expects to lose a child, it only happens to other people. I have only met two of my blood relatives. I gave birth to both, and I hope to God I don't have to bury both. I don't know that I could survive it a second time."
Ms Saul's friend, Mr Clarke, suffered acquired brain injury and ongoing problems with his back from the accident. He is not expected to make a full recovery.

Driver jailed over passenger death


AAP October 29, 2009 6:43PM

A SPEEDING Melbourne driver who killed his passenger when he ran through a red light and slammed into another car has been jailed for four years.
Mark Donald Shannon, 30, was travelling at more than double the 40km/h speed limit in a Flinders Street roadworks zone in central Melbourne on August 24, 2005, when he crashed.
One of his passengers, Samantha Saul, was critically injured and died several weeks later when her life-support system was turned off in hospital.
Two other passengers - Tim Allen and David Clarke - were seriously injured.
The Victorian County Court heard that Shannon and his passengers had been at Crown Casino and were driving to a nightclub when the crash occurred at about 3.45am.
Judge Stuart Campbell noted Shannon was driving at 84km/h in the 40km/h zone and road conditions and visibility at the time were described as poor.
After speeding through the light he slammed into another car and then into a temporary traffic barrier.
"This was an extraordinarily high speed to be travelling in the vicinity of these roadworks, let alone in the city," Judge Campbell said.
"How did you come to drive in this manner and be responsible for so much misery?"
Judge Campbell noted Shannon had drunk alcohol on the night of the crash but evidence regarding his blood alcohol reading was ruled inadmissible.
Shannon pleaded guilty to dangerous driving causing death and two counts of negligently causing serious injury.
The court heard Shannon had only met Ms Saul and Mr Clarke on the night of the crash.
The pair agreed to go in Shannon's car to another nightclub.
Shannon was remorseful and had accepted responsibility for his actions, the court heard.
Judge Campbell said he was legally bound to sentence Shannon under old legislation that had a five-year maximum sentence for dangerous driving causing death.
The penalty has since increased to 10 years.
Shannon, of Murrumbeena in Melbourne's southeast, must serve two years prison before being eligible for parole.
He was also disqualified from driving for three years.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

One thing at a time...

"One thing at a time" I replied to a friend a short time ago on FaceBook after he commenting on me dropping the F-Bomb, saying that "f*****g is better".

By one thing at a time, for those who have been living under a rock, or who are only recent followers, I am battling a drug-addiction at the moment. Mostly just prescription-drugs (OxyContin and Benzos).

Perhaps not though... as in, perhaps not just one thing at a time. In a nutshell, I haven't been practicing my faith very much recently (I am Roman Catholic) but this week all of a sudden I was filled with faith again, wanting to go back, making appointments with priests etc;. I'll go to mass tomorrow (I live right across a small street from a Roman Catholic Church!).

Today at the bus stop, the bus came and I went to get up but my keys were stuck in between the slats on the seat. Nothing uncommon. I quickly pulled them out to get the bus, and it wasn't until I was on the bus and out of the CBD that I checked my keys and noticed I lost my USB key!!!

Note that I didn't care much about the USB drive. I mean, though it was a good one - a Sony - it was a little old, so not very big... only 2-gig if I remember correctly. Or was it 1-gig? Oh I don't know... it's a few years old anyways and was the biggest back then.

What I DID care about though was what was on it. Nothing important, just a load of smut. Videos, pictures - my entire collection... and the only copy - no backups - though I do still have some, but not much, on CDs laying about.

Is it a sign? Give up everything that's sinful? Not just drugs but everything like porn and sex and stuff? Perhaps I'm just too Catholic... by that I mean, we have this thing of guilt instilled in us from birth! LOL. Who knows, but I'm not worrying about it... it's happened, it's done. So be it. Bad luck. Or good luck?

150 reasons I'm Catholic... and you should be too!


1. Best One-Sentence Summary: I am convinced that the Catholic Church conforms much more closely to all of the biblical data, offers the only coherent view of the history of Christianity (i.e., Christian, apostolic Tradition), and possesses the most profound and sublime Christian morality, spirituality, social ethic, and philosophy.


2. Alternate: I am a Catholic because I sincerely believe, by virtue of much cumulative evidence, that Catholicism is true, and that the Catholic Church is the visible Church divinely-established by our Lord Jesus, against which the gates of hell cannot and will not prevail (Mt 16:18), thereby possessing an authority to which I feel bound in Christian duty to submit.


3. 2nd Alternate: I left Protestantism because it was seriously deficient in its interpretation of the Bible (e.g., "faith alone" and many other "Catholic" doctrines - see evidences below), inconsistently selective in its espousal of various Catholic Traditions (e.g., the Canon of the Bible), inadequate in its ecclesiology, lacking a sensible view of Christian history (e.g., "Scripture alone"), compromised morally (e.g., contraception, divorce), and unbiblically schismatic, anarchical, and relativistic. I don't therefore believe that Protestantism is all bad (not by a long shot), but these are some of the major deficiencies I eventually saw as fatal to the "theory" of Protestantism, over against Catholicism. All Catholics must regard baptized, Nicene, Chalcedonian Protestants as Christians.


4. Catholicism isn't formally divided and sectarian (Jn 17:20-23Rom 16:171 Cor 1:10-13).


5. Catholic unity makes Christianity and Jesus more believable to the world (Jn 17:23).


6. Catholicism, because of its unified, complete, fully supernatural Christian vision, mitigates against secularization and humanism.


7. Catholicism avoids an unbiblical individualism which undermines Christian community (e.g., 1 Cor 12:25-26).


8. Catholicism avoids theological relativism, by means of dogmatic certainty and the centrality of the papacy.


9. Catholicism avoids ecclesiological anarchism - one cannot merely jump to another denomination when some disciplinary measure or censure is called for.


10. Catholicism formally (although, sadly, not always in practice) prevents the theological relativism which leads to the uncertainties within the Protestant system among laypeople.


11. Catholicism rejects the "State Church," which has led to governments dominating Christianity rather than vice-versa.


12. Protestant State Churches greatly influenced the rise of nationalism, which mitigated against universal equality and Christian universalism (i.e., Catholicism).


13. Unified Catholic Christendom (before the 16th century) had not been plagued by the tragic religious wars which in turn led to the "Enlightenment," in which men rejected the hypocrisy of inter-Christian warfare and decided to become indifferent to religion rather than letting it guide their lives.


14. Catholicism retains the elements of mystery, supernatural, and the sacred in Christianity, thus opposing itself to secularization, where the sphere of the religious in life becomes greatly limited.


15. Protestant individualism led to the privatization of Christianity, whereby it is little respected in societal and political life, leaving the "public square" barren of Christian influence.


16. The secular false dichotomy of "church vs. world" has led committed orthodox Christians, by and large, to withdraw from politics, leaving a void filled by pagans, cynics, unscrupulous, and power-hungry. Catholicism offers a framework in which to approach the state and civic responsibility.


17. Protestantism leans too much on mere traditions of men (every denomination stems from one Founder's vision. As soon as two or more of these contradict each other, error is necessarily present).


18. Protestant churches (esp. evangelicals), are far too often guilty of putting their pastors on too high of a pedestal. In effect, every pastor becomes a "pope," to varying degrees (some are "super-popes"). Because of this, evangelical congregations often experience a severe crisis and/or split up when a pastor leaves, thus proving that their philosophy is overly man-centered, rather than God-centered.


19. Protestantism, due to lack of real authority and dogmatic structure, is tragically prone to accommodation to the spirit of the age, and moral faddism.


20. Catholicism retains apostolic succession, necessary to know what is true Christian apostolic Tradition. It was the criterion of Christian truth used by the early Christians.


21. Many Protestants take a dim view towards Christian history in general, esp. the years from 313 (Constantine's conversion) to 1517 (Luther's arrival). This ignorance and hostility to Catholic Tradition leads to theological relativism, anti-Catholicism, and a constant, unnecessary process of "reinventing the wheel."


22. Protestantism from its inception was anti-Catholic, and remains so to this day (esp. evangelicalism). This is obviously wrong and unbiblical if Catholicism is indeed Christian (if it isn't, then - logically - neither is Protestantism, which inherited the bulk of its theology from Catholicism). The Catholic Church, on the other hand, is not anti-Protestant.


23. The Catholic Church accepts the authority of the great Ecumenical Councils (see, e.g., Acts 15) which defined and developed Christian doctrine (much of which Protestantism also accepts).


24. Most Protestants do not have bishops, a Christian office which is biblical (1 Tim 3:1-2) and which has existed from the earliest Christian history and Tradition.


25. Protestantism has no way of settling doctrinal issues definitively. At best, the individual Protestant can only take a head count of how many Protestant scholars, commentators, etc. take such-and-such a view on Doctrine X, Y, or Z. There is no unified Protestant Tradition.


26. Protestantism arose in 1517, and is a "Johnny-come-lately" in the history of Christianity. Therefore it cannot possibly be the "restoration" of "pure", "primitive" Christianity, since this is ruled out by the fact of its absurdly late appearance. Christianity must have historic continuity or it is not Christianity. Protestantism is necessarily a "parasite" of Catholicism, historically and doctrinally speaking.


27. The Protestant notion of the "invisible church" is also novel in the history of Christianity and foreign to the Bible (Mt 5:14Mt 16:18), therefore untrue.


28. When Protestant theologians speak of the teaching of early Christianity (e.g., when refuting "cults"), they say "the Church taught . . ." (as it was then unified), but when they refer to the present they instinctively and inconsistently refrain from such terminology, since universal teaching authority now clearly resides only in the Catholic Church.


29. The Protestant principle of private judgment has created a milieu (esp. in Protestant America) in which (invariably) man-centered "cults" such as Jehovah's Witnesses, Mormonism, and Christian Science arise. The very notion that one can "start" a new, or "the true" Church is Protestant to the core.


30. The lack of a definitive teaching authority in Protestant (as with the Catholic magisterium) makes many individual Protestants think that they have a direct line to God, notwithstanding all of Christian Tradition and the history of biblical exegesis (a "Bible, Holy Spirit and me" mentality). Such people are generally under-educated theologically, unteachable, lack humility, and have no business making presumed "infallible" statements about the nature of Christianity.


31. Evangelicalism's "techniques" of evangelism are often contrived and manipulative, certainly not directly derived from the text of the Bible. Some even resemble brainwashing to a degree.


32. The gospel preached by many evangelical Protestant evangelists and pastors is a truncated and abridged, individualistic and ear-tickling gospel, in effect merely "fire insurance" rather than the biblical gospel as proclaimed by the Apostles.


33. Evangelicalism often separates profound, life-transforming repentance and radical discipleship from its gospel message. The Lutheran Bonhoeffer called this "cheap grace."


34. The absence of the idea of submission to spiritual authority in Protestantism has leaked over into the civic arena, where the ideas of personal "freedom," "rights," and "choice" now dominate to such an extent that civic duty, communitarianism, and discipline are tragically neglected, to the detriment of a healthy society.


35. Catholicism retains the sense of the sacred, the sublime, the holy, and the beautiful in spirituality. The ideas of altar, and "sacred space" are preserved. Many Protestant churches are no more than "meeting halls" or "gymnasiums" or "barn"-type structures. Most Protestants' homes are more esthetically striking than their churches. Likewise, Protestants are often "addicted to mediocrity" in their appreciation of art, music, architecture, drama, the imagination, etc.


36. Protestantism has largely neglected the place of liturgy in worship (with notable exceptions such as Anglicanism and Lutheranism). This is the way Christians had always worshiped down through the centuries, and thus can't be so lightly dismissed.


37. Protestantism tends to oppose matter and spirit, favoring the latter, and is somewhat Gnostic or Docetic in this regard.


38. Catholicism upholds the "incarnational principle," wherein Jesus became flesh and thus raised flesh and matter to new spiritual heights.


39. Protestantism greatly limits or disbelieves in sacramentalism, which is simply the extension of the incarnational principle and the belief that matter can convey grace. Some sects (e.g., Baptists, many Pentecostals) reject all sacraments.


40. Protestants' excessive mistrust of the flesh ("carnality") often leads to (in evangelicalism or fundamentalism) an absurd legalism (no dancing, drinking, card-playing, rock music, etc.).


41. Many Protestants tend to separate life into categories of "spiritual" and "carnal," as if God is not Lord of all of life. It forgets that all non-sinful endeavors are ultimately spiritual.


42. Protestantism has removed the Eucharist from the center and focus of Christian worship services. Some Protestants observe it only monthly, or even quarterly. This is against the Tradition of the early Church.


43. Most Protestants regard the Eucharist symbolically, which is contrary to universal Christian Tradition up to 1517, and the Bible (Mt 26:26-28Jn 6:47-631 Cor 10:14-221 Cor 11:23-30), which hold to the Real Presence (another instance of the antipathy to matter).


44. Protestantism has virtually ceased to regard marriage as a sacrament, contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Mt 19:4-51 Cor 7:141 Cor 7:39Eph 5:25-33).


45. Protestantism has abolished the priesthood (Mt 18:18) and the sacrament of ordination, contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Acts 6:6Acts 14:221 Tim 4:142 Tim 1:6).


46. Catholicism retains the Pauline notion of the spiritual practicality of a celibate clergy (e.g., Mt 19:121 Cor 7:81 Cor 7:271 Cor 7:32-33).


47. Protestantism has largely rejected the sacrament of confirmation (Acts 8:18Heb 6:2-4), contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible.


48. Many Protestants have denied infant baptism, contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Acts 2:38-39Acts 16:15; Acts 16:33Acts 18:81 Cor 1:16Col 2:11-12). Protestantism is divided into five major camps on the question of baptism.


49. The great majority of Protestants deny baptismal regeneration, contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Mk 16:16Jn 3:5Acts 2:38Acts 22:16Rom 6:3-41 Cor 6:11Titus 3:5).


50. Protestants have rejected the sacrament of anointing of the sick (Extreme Unction / "Last Rites"), contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Mk 6:131 Cor 12:91 Cor 12:30Jas 5:14-15).


51. Protestantism denies the indissolubility of sacramental marriage and allows divorce, contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Gen 2:24Mal 2:14-16Mt 5:32Mat 19:6Mat 19:9;Mk 10:11-12Lk 16:18Rom 7:2-31 Cor 7:10-14; 1 Cor 7:39).


52. Protestantism doesn't believe procreation to be the primary purpose and benefit of marriage (it isn't part of the vows, as in Catholic matrimony), contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Gen 1:28Gen 28:3Ps 107:38Ps 127:3-5).


53. Protestantism sanctions contraception, in defiance of universal Christian Tradition (Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant) up until 1930 - when the Anglicans first allowed it - and the Bible (Gen 38:8-10Gen 41:52Ex 23:25-26Lev 26:9Deut 7:14Ruth 4:13Lk 1:24-25). Now, only Catholicism retains the ancient Tradition against the "anti-child" mentality.


54. Protestantism (mostly its liberal wing) has accepted abortion as a moral option, contrary to universal Christian Tradition until recently (sometime after 1930), and the Bible (e.g., Ex 20:13Job 31:15Ps 139:13-16Isa 44:2Isa 49:5Jer 1:5Jer 2:34Lk 1:15Lk 1:41Rom 13:9-10).


55. Protestantism (largely liberal denominations) allow women pastors (and even bishops, as in Anglicanism), contrary to Christian Tradition (inc. traditional Protestant theology) and the Bible (Mt 10:1-41 Tim 2:11-151 Tim 3:1-12Titus 1:6).


56. Protestantism is, more and more, formally and officially compromising with currently fashionable radical feminism, which denies the roles of men and women, as taught in the Bible (Gen 2:18-231 Cor 11:3-10) and maintained by Christian Tradition (differentiation of roles, but not of equality).


57. Protestantism is also currently denying, with increasing frequency, the headship of the husband in marriage, which is based upon the headship of the Father over the Son (while equal in essence) in the Trinity, contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (1 Cor 11:3Eph 5:22-33Col 3:18-191 Pet 3:1-2). This too, is based on a relationship of equality (1 Cor 11:11-12Gal 3:28Eph 5:21).


58. Liberal Protestantism (most notably Anglicanism) has even ordained practicing homosexuals as pastors and blessed their "marriages," or taught that homosexuality is merely an involuntary, "alternate" lifestyle, contrary to formerly universal Christian Tradition, as the Bible clearly teaches (Gen 19:4-25Rom 1:18-271 Cor 6:9). Catholicism stands firm on traditional morality.


59. Liberal Protestantism, and evangelicalism increasingly, have accepted "higher critical" methods of biblical interpretation which lead to the destruction of the traditional Christian reverence for the Bible, and demote it to the status of largely a human, fallible document, to the detriment of its divine, infallible essence.


60. Many liberal Protestants have thrown out many cardinal doctrines of Christianity, such as the Incarnation, Virgin Birth, the Bodily Resurrection of Christ, the Trinity, Original Sin, hell, the existence of the devil, miracles, etc.


61. The founders of Protestantism denied, and Calvinists today deny, the reality of human free will (Luther's favorite book was his Bondage of the Will). This is both contrary to the constant premise of the Bible, Christian Tradition, and common sense.


62. Classical Protestantism had a deficient view of the Fall of Man, thinking that the result was "total depravity." According to Luther, Zwingli, Calvin, and Calvinists, man could only do evil of his own volition, and had no free will to do good. He now has a "sin nature." Catholicism believes that, in a mysterious way, man cooperates with the grace which always precedes all good actions. In Catholicism, man's nature still retains some good, although he has a propensity to sin ("concupiscence").


63. Classical Protestantism, and Calvinism today, make God the author of evil. He supposedly wills that men do evil and violate His precepts without having any free will to do so. This is blasphemous, and turns God into a demon.


64. Accordingly (man having no free will), God, in classical Protestant and Calvinist thought, predestines men to hell, although they had no choice or say in the matter all along!


65. Classical Protestantism and Calvinism, teach falsely that Jesus died only for the elect (i.e., those who will make it to heaven).


66. Classical Protestantism (esp. Luther), and Calvinism, due to their false view of the Fall, deny the efficacy and capacity of human reason to know God to some extent (both sides agree that revelation and grace are also necessary), and oppose it to God and faith, contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Mk 12:28Lk 10:27Jn 20:24-29Acts 1:3Acts 17:2Acts 17:17Acts 17:22-34Acts 19:8). The best Protestant apologists today simply hearken back to the Catholic heritage of St. Aquinas, St. Augustine, and many other great thinkers.


67. Pentecostal or charismatic Protestantism places much too high an emphasis on spiritual experience, not balancing it properly with reason, the Bible, and Tradition (including the authority of the Church to pronounce on the validity of "private revelations").


68. Other Protestants (e.g., many Baptists) deny that spiritual gifts such as healing are present in the current age (supposedly they ceased with the apostles).


69. Protestantism has contradictory views of church government, or ecclesiology (episcopal, Presbyterian, congregational, or no collective authority at all), thus making discipline, unity and order impossible. Some sects even claim to have "apostles" or "prophets" among them, with all the accompanying abuses of authority resulting therefrom.


70. Protestantism (esp. evangelicalism) has an undue fascination for the "end of the world," which has led to unbiblical date-setting (Mt 24:30-44Mt 25:13Lk 12:39-40) and much human tragedy among those who are taken in by such false prophecies.


71. Evangelicalism's over-emphasis on the "imminent end" of the age has often led to a certain "pie-in-the sky" mentality, to the detriment of social, political, ethical, and economic sensibilities here on earth.


72. Protestant thought has the defining characteristic of being "dichotomous," i.e., it separates ideas into more or less exclusive and mutually-hostile camps, when in fact many of the dichotomies are simply complementary rather than contradictory. Protestantism is "either-or," whereas Catholicism takes a "both-and" approach. Examples follow:


73. Protestantism pits the Word (the Bible, preaching) against sacraments.


74. Protestantism sets up inner devotion and piety against the Liturgy.


75. Protestantism opposes spontaneous worship to form prayers.


76. Protestantism separates the Bible from the Church.


77. Protestantism creates the false dichotomy of Bible vs. Tradition.


78. Protestantism pits Tradition against the Holy Spirit.


79. Protestantism considers Church authority and individual liberty and conscience contradictory.


80. Protestantism (esp. Luther) sets up the Old Testament against the New Testament, even though Jesus did not do so (Mt 5:17-19Mk 7:8-11Lk 24:27Lk 24:44Jn 5:45-47).


81. On equally unbiblical grounds, Protestantism opposes law to grace.


82. Protestantism creates a false dichotomy between symbolism and sacramental reality (e.g., baptism, Eucharist).


83. Protestantism separates the Individual from Christian community (1 Cor 12:14-27).


84. Protestantism pits the veneration of saints against the worship of God. Catholic theology doesn't permit worship of saints in the same fashion as that directed towards God. Saints arerevered and honored, not adored, as only God the Creator can be.


85. The anti-historical outlook of many Protestants leads to individuals thinking that the Holy Spirit is speaking to them, but has not, in effect, spoken to the multitudes of Christians for 1500 years before Protestantism began!


86. Flaws in original Protestant thought have led to even worse errors in reaction. E.g., extrinsic justification, devised to assure the predominance of grace, came to prohibit any outward sign of its presence ("faith vs. works," "sola fide"). Calvinism, with its cruel God, turned men off to such an extent that they became Unitarians (as in New England). Many founders of cults of recent origin started out Calvinist (Jehovah's Witnesses, Christian Science, The Way International, etc.).


87. Evangelicalism is unbiblically obsessed (in typically American fashion) with celebrities (TV Evangelists).


88. Evangelicalism is infatuated with the false idea that great numbers in a congregation (or rapid growth) are a sign of God's presence in a special way, and His unique blessing. They forget that Mormonism is also growing by leaps and bounds. God calls us to faithfulness rather than to "success," obedience, not flattering statistics.


89. Evangelicalism often emphasizes numerical growth rather than individual spiritual growth.


90. Evangelicalism is presently obsessed with self-fulfillment, self-help, and oftentimes, outright selfishness, rather than the traditional Christian stress on suffering, sacrifice, and service.


91. Evangelicalism has a truncated and insufficient view of the place of suffering in the Christian life. Instead, "health-and-wealth" and "name-it-and-claim-it" movements within Pentecostal Protestantism are flourishing, which have a view of possessions not in harmony with the Bible and Christian Tradition.


92. Evangelicalism has, by and large, adopted a worldview which is, in many ways, more capitalist than Christian. Wealth and personal gain is sought more than godliness, and is seen as a proof of God's favor, as in Puritan, and secularized American thought, over against the Bible and Christian teaching.


93. Evangelicalism is increasingly tolerating far-left political outlooks not in accord with Christian views, esp. at its seminaries and colleges.


94. Evangelicalism is increasingly tolerating theological heterodoxy and liberalism, to such an extent that many evangelical leaders are alarmed, and predict a further decay of orthodox standards.


95. "Positive confession" movements in Pentecostal evangelicalism have adopted views of God (in effect) as a "cosmic bellhop," subject to man's frivolous whims and desires of the moment, thus denying God's absolute sovereignty and prerogative to turn down any of man's improper prayer requests (Jas 4:31 Jn 5:14).


96. The above sects usually teach that anyone can be healed who has enough "faith," contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (e.g., Job, St. Paul's "thorn in the flesh," usu. considered a disease by most Protestant commentators).


97. Evangelicalism, by its own self-critiques, is badly infected with pragmatism, the false philosophical view that "whatever works is true, or right." The gospel, esp. on TV, is sold in the same way that McDonalds hawks hamburgers. Technology, mass-market and public relations techniques have largely replaced personal pastoral care and social concern for the downtrodden, irreligious, and unchurched masses.


98. Sin, in evangelicalism, is increasingly seen as a psychological failure or a lack of self-esteem, rather than the willful revolt against God that it is.


99. Protestantism, in all essential elements, merely borrows wholesale from Catholic Tradition, or distorts the same. All doctrines upon which Catholics and Protestants agree, are clearly Catholic in origin (Trinity, Virgin Birth, Resurrection, 2nd Coming, Canon of the Bible, heaven, hell, etc.). Those where Protestantism differs are usually distortions of Catholic forerunners. E.g., Quakerism is a variant of Catholic Quietism. Calvinism is an over-obsession with the Catholic idea of the sovereignty of God, but taken to lengths beyond what Catholicism ever taught (denial of free will, total depravity, double predestination, etc.). Protestant dichotomies such as faith vs. works, come from nominalism, which was itself a corrupt form of Scholasticism, never dogmatically sanctioned by the Catholic Church. Whatever life or truth is present in each Protestant idea, always is derived from Catholicism, which is the fulfillment of the deepest and best aspirations within Protestantism.


100. One of Protestantism's foundational principles is sola Scriptura, which is neither a biblical (see below), historical (nonexistent until the 16th century), nor logical (it's self-defeating) idea:


101. The Bible doesn't contain the whole of Jesus' teaching, or Christianity, as many Protestants believe (Mk 4:33Mk 6:34Lk 24:15-16Lk 24:25-27Jn 16:12Jn 20:30Jn 21:25Acts 1:2-3).


102. Sola Scriptura is an abuse of the Bible, since it is a use of the Bible contrary to its explicit and implicit testimony about itself and Tradition. An objective reading of the Bible leads one to Tradition and the Catholic Church, rather than the opposite. The Bible is, in fact, undeniably a Christian Tradition itself!


103. The NT was neither written nor received as the Bible at first, but only gradually so (i.e., early Christianity couldn't have believed in sola Scriptura like current Protestants, unless it referred to the OT alone).


104. Tradition is not a bad word in the Bible. Gk. paradosis refers to something handed on from one to another (good or bad). Good (Christian) Tradition is spoken of in 1 Cor 11:22 Thess 2:152 Thess 3:6, and Col 2:8. In the latter it is contrasted with traditions of men.


105. Christian Tradition, according to the Bible, can be oral as well as written (2 Thess 2:152 Tim 1:13-142 Tim 2:2). St. Paul makes no qualitative distinction between the two forms.


106. The phrases "word of God" or "word of the Lord" in Acts and the epistles almost always refer to oral preaching, not to the Bible itself. Much of the Bible was originally oral (e.g., Jesus' entire teaching- He wrote nothing -St. Peter's sermon at Pentecost, etc.).


107. Contrary to many Protestant claims, Jesus didn't condemn all tradition any more than St. Paul did. E.g., Mt 15:3,6Mk 7:8-9Mk 7:13, where He condemns corrupt Pharisaical tradition only. He says "your tradition."


108. Gk. paradidomi, or "delivering" Christian, apostolic Tradition occurs in Lk 1:1-2Rom 6:171 Cor 11:231 Cor 15:32 Pet 2:21Jude 3Paralambano, or "receiving" Christian Tradition occurs in 1 Cor 15:1-2Gal 1:9,121 Thess 2:13.


109. The concepts of "Tradition," "gospel," "word of God," "doctrine," and "the Faith" are essentially synonymous, and all are predominantly oral. E.g., in the Thessalonian epistles alone St. Paul uses 3 of these interchangeably (2 Thess 2:152 Thess 3:61 Thess 2:9,13 (cf. Gal 1:9Acts 8:14). If Tradition is a dirty word, then so is "gospel" and "word of God"!


110. St. Paul, in 1 Tim 3:15, puts the Church above Bible as the grounds for truth, as in Catholicism.


111. Protestantism's chief "proof text" for sola Scriptura, 2 Tim 3:16, fails, since it says that the Bible is profitable, but not sufficient for learning and righteousness. Catholicism agrees it is great for these purposes, but not exclusively so, as in Protestantism. Secondly, when St. Paul speaks of "Scripture" here, the NT didn't yet exist (not definitively for over 300 more years), thus he is referring to the OT only. This would mean that NT wasn't necessary for the rule of faith, if sola Scriptura were true, and if it were supposedly alluded to in this verse!


112. The above 11 factors being true, Catholicism maintains that all its Tradition is consistent with the Bible, even where the Bible is mute or merely implicit on a subject. For Catholicism, every doctrine need not be found primarily in the Bible, for this is Protestantism's principle of sola Scriptura. On the other hand, most Catholic theologians claim that all Catholic doctrines can be found in some fashion in the Bible, in kernel form, or by (usu. extensive) inference.


113. As thoughtful evangelical scholars have pointed out, an unthinking sola Scriptura position can turn into "bibliolatry," almost a worship of the Bible rather than God who is its Author. This mentality is similar to the Muslim view of Revelation, where no human elements whatsoever were involved. Sola Scriptura,, rightly understood from a more sophisticated Protestant perspective, means that the Bible is the final authority in Christianity, not the record of all God has said and done, as many evangelicals believe.


114. Christianity is unavoidably and intrinsically historical. All the events of Jesus' life (Incarnation, Crucifixion, Resurrection, Ascension, etc.) were historical, as was the preaching of the apostles. Tradition, therefore, of some sort, is unavoidable, contrary to numerous shortsighted Protestant claims that sola Scriptura annihilates Tradition. This is true both for matters great (ecclesiology, trinitarianism, justification) and small (church budgets, type of worship music, lengths of sermons, etc.). Every denial of a particular tradition involves a bias (hidden or open) towards one's own alternate tradition (E.g., if all Church authority is spurned, even individualistic autonomy is a "tradition," which ought to be defended as a Christian view in some fashion).


115. Sola Scriptura literally couldn't have been true, practically speaking, for most Christians throughout history, since the movable-type printing press only appeared in the mid-15th century. Preaching and oral Tradition, along with things like devotional practices, Christian holidays, church architecture and other sacred art, were the primary carriers of the gospel for 1400 years. For all these centuries, sola Scriptura would have been regarded as an absurd abstraction and impossibility.


116. Protestantism claims that the Catholic Church has "added to the Bible." The Catholic Church replies that it has merely drawn out the implications of the Bible (development of doctrine), and followed the understanding of the early Church, and that Protestants have "subtracted" from the Bible by ignoring large portions of it which suggest Catholic positions. Each side thinks the other is "unbiblical," but in different ways.


117. Sola Scriptura is Protestantism's "Achilles' Heel." Merely invoking sola Scriptura is no solution to the problem of authority and certainty as long as multiple interpretations exist. If the Bible were so clear that all Protestants agreed simply by reading it with a willingness to accept and follow its teaching, this would be one thing, but since this isn't the case by a long shot (the multiplicity of denominations), sola Scriptura is a pipe-dream at best. About all that all Protestants agree on is that Catholicism is wrong! Of all Protestant ideas, the "clarity" orperspicuity of the Bible is surely one of the most absurd and the most demonstrably false by the historical record.


118. Put another way, having a Bible does not render one's private judgment infallible. Interpretation is just as inevitable as tradition. The Catholic Church therefore, is absolutely necessary in order to speak authoritatively and to prevent confusion, error, and division.


119. Catholicism doesn't regard the Bible as obscure, mysterious, and inaccessible, but it is vigilant to protect it from all arbitrary and aberrant exegesis (2 Pet 1:20, 3:16). The best Protestant traditions seek to do the same, but are inadequate and ineffectual since they are divided.


120. Protestantism has a huge problem with the Canon of the NT. The process of determining the exact books which constitute the NT lasted until 397 A.D., when the Council of Carthage spoke with finality, certainly proof that the Bible is not "self-authenticating," as Protestantism believes. Some sincere, devout, and learned Christians doubted the canonicity of some books which are now in the Bible, and others considered books as Scripture which were not at length included in the Canon. St. Athanasius in 367 was the first to list all 27 books in the NT as Scripture.


121. The Council of Carthage, in deciding the Canon of the entire Bible in 397, included the so-called "Apocryphal" books, which Protestants kicked out of the Bible (i.e., a late tradition). Prior to the 16th century Christians considered these books Scripture, and they weren't even separated from the others, as they are today in the Protestant Bibles which include them. Protestantism accepts the authority of this Council for the NT, but not the OT, just as it arbitrarily and selectively accepts or denies other conciliar decrees, according to their accord with existing Protestant "dogmas" and biases.


122. Contrary to Protestant anti-Catholic myth, the Catholic Church has always revered the Bible, and hasn't suppressed it (it protested some Protestant translations, but Protestants have often done the same regarding Catholic versions). This is proven by the laborious care of monks in protecting and copying manuscripts, and the constant translations into vernacular tongues (as opposed to the falsehoods about only Latin Bibles), among other plentiful and indisputable historical evidences. The Bible is a Catholic book, and no matter how much Protestants study it and proclaim it as peculiarly their own, they must acknowledge their undeniable debt to the Catholic Church for having decided the Canon, and for preserving the Bible intact for 1400 years. How could the Catholic Church be "against the Bible," as anti-Catholics say, yet at the same time preserve and revere the Bible profoundly for so many years? The very thought is so absurd as to be self-refuting. If Catholicism is indeed as heinous as anti-Catholics would have us believe, Protestantism ought to put together its own Bible, instead of using the one delivered to them by the Catholic Church, as it obviously could not be trusted!


123. Protestantism denies the Sacrifice of the Mass, contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Gen 14:18Ps 110:4Isa 66:18,21Mal 1:11Heb 7:24-25Heb 13:10Rev 5:1-10/cf. Rev 8:3Rev 13:8). Catholicism, it must be emphasized, doesn't believe that Jesus is sacrificed over and over at each Mass; rather, each Mass is a representation of the one Sacrifice at Calvary on the Cross, which transcends space and time, as in Rev 13:8.


124. Protestantism disbelieves, by and large, in the development of doctrine, contrary to Christian Tradition and many implicit biblical indications. Whenever the Bible refers to the increasing knowledge and maturity of Christians individually and (particularly) collectively, an idea similar to development is present. Further, many doctrines develop in the Bible before our eyes ("progressive revelation"). Examples: the afterlife, the Trinity, acceptance of Gentiles. And doctrines which Protestantism accepts whole and entire from Catholicism, such as the Trinity and the Canon of the Bible, developed in history, in the first three centuries of Christianity. It is foolish to try and deny this. The Church is the "Body" of Christ, and is a living organism, which grows and develops like all living bodies. It is not a statue, simply to be cleaned and polished over time, as many Protestants seem to think.


125. Protestantism separates justification from sanctification, contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (e.g., Mt 5:20Mat 7:20-24Rom 2:7-131 Cor 6:111 Pet 1:2).


126. Protestantism pits faith against works (sola fide), which is a rejection of Christian Tradition and the explicit teaching of the Bible (Mt 25:31-46Lk 18:18-25Jn 6:27-29Gal 5:6;Eph 2:8-10Phil 2:12-13Phil 3:10-141 Thess 1:32 Thess 1:11Heb 5:9Jas 1:21-27Jas 2:14-16). These passages also indicate that salvation is a process, not an instantaneous event, as in Protestantism.


127. Protestantism rejects the Christian Tradition and biblical teaching of merit, or differential reward for our good deeds done in faith (Mt 16:27Rom 2:61 Cor 3:8-91 Pet 1:17Rev 22:12).


128. Protestantism's teaching of extrinsic, imputed, forensic, or external justification contradicts the Christian Tradition and biblical doctrine of infused, actual, internal, transformational justification (which inc. sanctification): Ps 51:2-10Ps 103:12Jn 1:29Rom 5:192 Cor 5:17Heb 1:31 Jn 1:7-9.


129. Many Protestants (esp. Presbyterians, Calvinists and Baptists) believe in eternal security, or, perseverance of the saints (the belief that one can't lose his "salvation," supposedly obtained at one point in time). This is contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible: 1 Cor 9:27Gal 4:9Gal 5:1,4Col 1:22-31 Tim 1:19-201 Tim 4:11 Tim 5:15Heb 3:12-14Heb 6:4-6;Heb 10:26,29,39Heb 12:14-152 Pet 2:152 Pet 2:20-21Rev 2:4-5.


130. Contrary to Protestant myth and anti-Catholicism, the Catholic Church doesn't teach that one is saved by works apart from preceding and enabling grace, but that faith and works areinseparable, as in James 1 and 2. This heresy of which Catholicism is often charged, was in fact condemned by the Catholic Church at the Second Council of Orange in 529 A.D. It is known as Pelagianism, the view that man could save himself by his own natural efforts, without the necessary supernatural grace from God. A more moderate view, Semi-Pelagianism, was likewise condemned. To continue to accuse the Catholic Church of this heresy is a sign of both prejudice and manifest ignorance of the history of theology, as well as the clear Catholic teaching of the Council of Trent (1545-63), available for all to see. Yet the myth is strangely prevalent.


131. Protestantism has virtually eliminated the practice of confession to a priest (or at least a pastor), contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Mt 16:19Mt 18:18Jn 20:23).


132. Protestantism disbelieves in penance, or temporal punishment for (forgiven) sin, over against Christian Tradition and the Bible (e.g., Num 14:19-232 Sam 12:13-141 Cor 11:27-32Heb 12:6-8).


133. Protestantism has little concept of the Tradition and biblical doctrine of mortifying the flesh, or, suffering with Christ: Mt 10:38; 16:24: Rom 8:13,17; 1 Cor 12:24-6; Phil 3:10; 1 Pet 4:1,13.


134. Likewise, Protestantism has lost the Tradition and biblical doctrine of vicarious atonement, or redemptive suffering with Christ, of Christians for the sake of each other: Ex 32:30-32; Num 16:43-8; 25:6-13; 2 Cor 4:10; Col 1:24; 2 Tim 4:6.


135. Protestantism has rejected the Tradition and biblical doctrine of purgatory, as a consequence of its false view of justification and penance, despite sufficient evidence in Scripture: Is 4:4; 6:5-7; Micah 7:8-9; Mal 3:1-4; 2 Maccabees 12:39-45; Mt 5:25-6; 12:32; Lk 16:19-31 (cf. Eph 4:8-10; 1 Pet 3:19-20); 1 Cor 3:11-15; 2 Cor 5:10; Rev 21:27.


136. Protestantism has rejected (largely due to misconceptions and misunderstanding) the Catholic developed doctrine of indulgences, which is, simply, the remission of the temporal punishment for sin (i.e., penance), by the Church (on the grounds of Mt 16:19; 18:18, and Jn 20:23). This is no different than what St. Paul did, concerning an errant brother at the Church of Corinth. He first imposed a penance on him (1 Cor 5:3-5), then remitted part of it (an indulgence: 2 Cor 2:6-11). Just because abuses occurred prior to the Protestant Revolt (admitted and rectified by the Catholic Church), is no reason to toss out yet another biblical doctrine. It is typical of Protestantism to burn down a house rather than to cleanse it, to "throw the baby out with the bath water."


137. Protestantism has thrown out prayers for the dead, in opposition to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Tobit 12:12; 2 Maccabees 12:39-45; 1 Cor 15:29; 2 Tim 1:16-18; also verses having to do with purgatory, since these prayers are for the saints there).


138. Protestantism rejects, on inadequate grounds, the intercession of the saints for us after death, and the correspondent invocation of the saints for their effectual prayers (Jas 5:16). Christian Tradition and the Bible, on the other hand, have upheld this practice: Dead saints are aware of earthly affairs (Mt 22:30 w/ Lk 15:10 and 1 Cor 15:29; Heb 12:1), appear on earth to interact with men (1 Sam 28:12-15; Mt 17:1-3, 27:50-53; Rev 11:3), and therefore can intercede for us, and likewise be petitioned for their prayers, just as are Christians on earth (2 Maccabees 15:14; Rev 5:8; 6:9-10).


139. Some Protestants disbelieve in Guardian Angels, despite Christian Tradition and the Bible (Ps 34:7; 91:11; Mt 18:10; Acts 12:15; Heb 1:14).


140. Most Protestants deny that angels can intercede for us, contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Rev 1:4; 5:8; 8:3-4).


141. Protestantism rejects Mary's Immaculate Conception, despite developed Christian Tradition and indications in the Bible: Gen 3:15; Lk 1:28 ("full of grace" Catholics interpret, on linguistic grounds, to mean "without sin"); Mary as a type of the Ark of the Covenant (Lk 1:35 w/ Ex 40:34-8; Lk 1:44 w/ 2 Sam 6:14-16; Lk 1:43 w/ 2 Sam 6:9: God's Presence requires extraordinary holiness).


142. Protestantism rejects Mary's Assumption, despite developed Christian Tradition and biblical indications: If Mary was indeed sinless, she would not have to undergo bodily decay at death (Ps 16:10; Gen 3:19). Similar occurrences in the Bible make the Assumption not implausible or "unbiblical" per se (Enoch: Gen 5:24 w/ Heb 11:5; Elijah: 2 Ki 2:11; Paul: 2 Cor 12:2-4; the Protestant doctrine of the "Rapture": 1 Thess 4:15-17; risen saints: Mt 27:52-3).


143. Many (most?) Protestants deny Mary's perpetual virginity, despite Christian Tradition (inc. the unanimous agreement of the Protestant founders (Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, etc.), some Protestant support, and several biblical evidences, too involved to briefly summarize.


144. Protestantism denies Mary's Spiritual Motherhood of Christians, contrary to Christian Tradition and the Bible (Jn 19:26-7: "Behold thy mother"; Rev 12:1,5,17: Christians described as "her seed.") Catholics believe that Mary is incomparably more alive and holy than we are, hence, her prayers for us are of great effect (Jas 5:16; Rev 5:8; 6:9-10). But she is our sister with regard to our position of creatures vis-à-vis the Creator, God. Mary never operates apart from the necessary graces from her Son, and always glorifies Him, not herself, as Catholic theology stresses.


145. Protestantism rejects the papacy, despite profound Christian Tradition, and the strong evidence in the Bible of Peter's preeminence and commission by Jesus as the Rock of His Church. No one denies he was some type of leader among the apostles. The papacy as we now know it is derived from this primacy: Mt 16:18-19; Lk 22:31-2; Jn 21:15-17 are the most direct "papal" passages. Peter's name appears first in all lists of apostles; even an angel implies he is their leader (Mk 16:7), and he is accepted by the world as such (Acts 2:37-8,41). He works the first miracle of the Church age (Acts 3:6-8), utters the first anathema (Acts 5:2-11), raises the dead (Acts 9:40), first receives the Gentiles (Acts 10:9-48), and his name is mentioned more often than all the other disciples put together (191 times). Much more similar evidence can be found.


146. The Church of Rome and the popes were central to the governance and theological direction and orthodoxy of the Christian Church from the beginning. This is undeniable. All of the historical groups now regarded as heretical by Protestants and Catholics alike were originally judged as such by popes and/or Ecumenical Councils presided over and ratified by popes.


147. Protestantism, in its desperation to eke out some type of historical continuity apart from the Catholic Church, sometimes attempts to claim a lineage from medieval sects such as the Waldenses, Cathari, and Albigensians (and sometimes earlier groups such as the Montanists or Donatists). However, this endeavor is doomed to failure when one studies closely what these sects believed. They either retain much Catholic teaching anathema to Protestants or hold heretical notions antithetical to Christianity altogether (Catholic, Protestant, and Orthodox), or both, making this Protestant theory quite dubious at best.


148. Catholic has the most sophisticated and thoughtful Christian socio-economic and political philosophy, a mixture of "progressive" and "conservative" elements distinct from the common-place political rhetoric and Machiavellianism which typically dominate the political arena. Catholicism has the best view of church in relation to the state and culture as well.


149. Catholicism has the best Christian philosophy and worldview, worked out through centuries of reflection and experience. As in its theological reflection and development, the Catholic Church is ineffably wise and profound, to an extent truly amazing, and indicative of a sure divine stamp. I used to marvel, just before I converted, at how the Catholic Church could be so right about so many things. I was accustomed to thinking, as a good evangelical, that the truth was always a potpourri of ideas from many Protestant denominations and Catholicism and Orthodoxy (selected by me), and that none "had it all together." But, alas, the Catholic Church does, after all!


150. Last but by no means least, Catholicism has the most sublime spirituality and devotional spirit, manifested in a thousand different ways, from the monastic ideal, to the heroic celibacy of the clergy and religious, the Catholic hospitals, the sheer holiness of a Thomas a Kempis or a St. Ignatius and their great devotional books, countless saints - both canonized and as yet unknown and unsung, Mother Teresa, Pope John Paul II, Pope John XXIII, the early martyrs, St. Francis of Assisi, the events at Lourdes and Fatima, the dazzling intellect of John Henry Cardinal Newman, the wisdom and insight of Archbishop Fulton Sheen, St. John of the Cross, the sanctified wit of a Chesterton or a Muggeridge, elderly women doing the Stations of the Cross or the Rosary, Holy Hour, Benediction, kneeling - the list goes on and on. This devotional spirit is unmatched in its scope and deepness, despite many fine counterparts in Protestant and Orthodox spirituality.


By Dave Armstrong.