Showing posts with label god owes the Talmudic Jews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label god owes the Talmudic Jews. Show all posts

Monday, March 20, 2017

Archbishop Charles J. Chaput’s talmudic orthodoxy flares up again



“For Catholics, anti-Semitism is more than a human rights concern. It’s viewed as a form of sacrilege and blasphemy against God’s chosen people. In recent weeks, our country has seen a new wave of anti-Semitism on the rise. It’s wrong and it should deeply concern not only Jews and Catholics, but all people.”









And there you have it straight from a ‘conservative’ noahide Novus Ordo archbishop — the Talmudic Jews are sacred and holy persons — when the reality is that they like Chaput are guilty of blasphemy and sacrilegious behavior.  Why don’t Francis, Chaput, and others of their ilk drop their conservative modernist façades and come out as the Talmudists that they really are?



More on Chaput:

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

‘Holocaustianity’ in the ‘Noahide’ Novus Ordo

Teachers!!! Learn how ‘Holocaustianity’ is central to your life, is an on-going dynamic matrix, where its deepest roots are from, and finally take home a cutting edge understanding of ‘Holocaustianity’ which you can then bring into every subject taught at your school!



Dennis McManus wants Christians to pay back the principle and interest on the debt he feels they owe to the Talmudic Jews

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

the company Francis keeps

Rabbi Walter Homolka shakes Francis' hand. (28 October 2015)

“In September 2008, the Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel startled his audience at a Holocaust Educational Trust appeal dinner in London when he declared: "I was there when God was put on trial at a concentration camp." When the JC put doubts of Rabbi Jonathan Romain and Rabbi Dan Cohn-Sherbock to Mr Wiesel, he replied: "Why should they know what happened? I was the only one there. It happened in Auschwitz at night; there were just three people. At the end of the trial, they used the word chayav, rather than 'guilty'. It means 'He owes us something'. Then we went to pray."”
source: Dresden lecture on Theodicy by Rabbi Walter Homolka