“Archbishop” of Glasgow Throws Masonic Sign

Laura writes:

“Archbishop” of Glasgow William Nolan is seen here in a recent Facebook post making the inverted pyramid hand sign, which is associated with Freemasonry. That he would do it openly in Masonic Scotland is not so surprising. Could it have been accidental? Perhaps, but it just doesn’t appear that way.

Peggy Hall, by the way, recently did a post on the various Masonic hand signs used by celebrities and politicians. She includes many images.

Unfortunately, this gesture is not as bold as the writings and speeches of the Vatican II Church’s “popes,” from John XXIII to Leo XIV, which are filled with Masonic ideas — always mixed in with Catholic doctrine. They have openly pushed, for instance, the doctrine of universal salvation, which is part of the Masonic creed. They have warped the faith in the minds of millions, changing dogma, worship, discipline and morals — in short everything. But, and this is so crucial, they have mixed it with true Catholicism. Ambiguity and contradiction are their masterstrokes. (more…)

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The Art of the Deal

TRUMP is a fantastic liar. Always has been. Doubling down on big lies is the way to make people accept them. Just confidently assert a falsehood.

In an interview with Laura Ingraham yesterday, he insisted the economy was the best ever. “Eggs are now what they were .. we got it all down.”

Eggs are the only things that are less (less than they were under the fake bird flu). Also, he said, we will need to bring in lots more foreign workers. There just isn’t enough talent in America to fill the jobs he will supposedly be creating. Trump has closed the southern border to bring in more Asians, but then he never was against open borders.

Don’t trust Ingraham, by the way, she’s just a shill for the GOP, which like the Democratic Party, represents the will of the banksters. Democracy is another name for Communism with a veneer of capitalism and feel-good socialism. Both parties will continue to do the will of their masters and flood this country with foreigners, inflicting onerous inflation while increasing governmental control over every aspect of our lives.

Trump says things will be better with 50-year mortgages. Who do you think will benefit most?

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“My Boy Jack”

MY BOY JACK
by Rudyard Kipling

“Have you news of my boy Jack?”
Not this tide.
“When d’you think that he’ll come back?”
Not with this wind blowing, and this tide.

“Has any one else had word of him?”
Not this tide.
For what is sunk will hardly swim,
Not with this wind blowing, and this tide.

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Veterans Day

Prayer for Deceased Soldiers

Thou art all-powerful, O God, and livest forever in light and joy. Look with pity and love, we beseech Thee, upon those who have bravely fought and gallantly died for our country. (more…)

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Think of the Dead

“IT is an odd weakness of mankind, that while death surrounds us in its myriad forms, it is never present to our minds. At funerals one only hears words of astonishment that a mortal man has died. Each brings to mind the last time he spoke with the deceased and what they had spoken about. Then, all of sudden, he was dead. And we say: How fleeting are a man’s days! (more…)

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The Disgusting Nick Fuentes

NICK Fuentes is a repulsive blabbermouth in the highly compromised “alt-right” who could only rise to popularity in today’s media snake pit if he was being financially supported and protected by powerful people.

He praises Stalin and Communism. He says the most outrageous things about feminism, race, anti-semitism, etc., always favoring the extreme and tarnishing the image of genuine opposition. He calls himself a Catholic, they say, which even in this day of nominal Catholicism is impossible to believe.

I believe Nick Fuentes doesn’t believe in anything — he’s an agent provocateur enjoying an artificial and profitable rise to fame. (more…)

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Friends in Purgatory

“THE thought of death and what follows death can be not only salutary, but even sweet and attractive, by linking it with the thought of our deceased ones — parents, relations, neighbours, friends. When a person is advanced in years, he can count more friends beyond the grave than this side of it. It is sweet to live in memory with them, to pray for and to them. When our conversation is with them, as St. Paul might put it, we learn to see the things of this life in their proper perspective. The soul turns from things of earth, and unites itself with God, and longs for the day when they shall receive it into everlasting dwellings, where it will be united to its friends. The invisible and beneficient presence of our departed friends is about it. Whether they are in Heaven or in Purgatory, they pray for us. When the soul has tasted the sweetness of this company, it cannot be separated from it, because the world holds no charm for it and a heavenly nostalgia fills it to the overflow.

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Democracy as Religion

FROM The Heresy of Democracy: A Study in the History of Government,” by Lord Percy of Newcastle (Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1954):

Religion always asserts the Equality of all men. In a sense, that is what religion is for. But obviously, no two human beings can be equated in their totality. To assert their equality is to make a judgment of value, to believe that certain characteristics common to both have a special importance to each. To make such a judgement is an essential function of religion. Primitive or debased religion asserts the equal liability of all men to the arbitrary action of the gods, or their equal dependence upon the processes of nature. From that, at ascending levels, religions have asserted the equal subjection of all men to a divine moral law, or their equal son-ship to the fatherhood of a single or a supreme God. At the Christian level, the assertion has been expressed in a more compelling language, which has been the origin of all that seems to most of us most lovely in the social life of the Western Continents, and most enduring in their law…. (more…)

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America: Revolutionary Nation

 The Great Seal of the United States with its Masonic symbols

“THE revolutionary intelligentsia in every nation on the continent had been vitally interested in the American experiment from the beginning. How else can we explain so many foreigners who suddenly appeared out of nowhere to occupy posts of command in the American revolutionary militia? The Germans, General Von Steuben and ‘Baron’ de Kalb, the Poles Kosciuszko and Count Pulaski, the French Count de Rochambeau, Count de Grasse and the Marquis de Lafayette, not to mention the English and Irish and others? Is it coincidence that these were nearly all, if not all, Masons? (more…)

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The Fire of Purgatory

                                         The Slave Ship, J.M. Turner

“THE existence of fire in Purgatory is vouched for also by numerous apparitions and private revelations. They demonstrate to our very eyes this fire as a material one, thus indicating that the words ‘fire’ and ‘fiery torments’ used by Scripture are to be taken in a literal sense. St. Bridget, of whom the Church, in her official prayer, says, ‘O God, who through Thy Divine Son didst reveal to blessed Bridget heavenly mysteries,’ was permitted in one of her ecstacies to witness how a soul was sentenced to a three-fold punishment: to an external and internal fire, an intense cold, and to furious assaults of the devil. Mechtildis of Magdeburg saw a lake of fire mixed with brimstone, in which the Suffering Souls had to bathe in order to be cleansed. According to St. Frances of Rome Purgatory consists of three apartments, one above the other, all alive with a clear, sparkling fire, unlike that of hell, which is dark and sombre. Bautz … relates of the Venerable Mary Anna Lindmayer: ‘Her friend Mary Becher and her mother appeared to her, and left marks of fire on one of her feet, which she saw and felt for weeks. At one time she beheld Purgatory in the shape of a torrent of fiery water, at another, as a prison of fire. The souls themselves appeared to her as sparks of fire falling about her. The appearance of some souls caused her to shiver with frost caused by the cold proceeding from them.’

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Gerontius in Purgatory

0-Italian-sculptor-Relief-with-Angel-c1430-35-marble-Met
                Relief with Half Figure of an Angel; ca. 1430–35 (Metropolitan Museum of Art)

Softly and gently, dearly-ransom’d soul,
In my most loving arms I now enfold thee,

And, o’er the penal waters, as they roll,
I poise thee, and I lower thee, and hold thee.

And carefully I dip thee in the lake,
And thou, without a sob or a resistance,

Dost through the flood thy rapid passage take,
Sinking deep, deeper, into the dim distance.

Angels, to whom the willing task is given,
Shall tend, and nurse, and lull thee, as thou liest;

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“Three Glances at the Cemetery”


TODAY is All Souls’ Day, the start of this beautiful month of praying for the faithful departed.

From “Three Glances at the Cemetery” by Rev. John Evangelist Zollner, 1884:

If we cast a glance into the grave what do we see? We see:

1. What the dead man has in the grave. Alas! he has nothing but his winding-sheet and the coffin which contains his mouldering body. Though he may have been rich during life, though he may have had money by the millions, superb houses, immense possessions, and a lucrative business, he now possesses nothing of all these things; he must say with Job: “Only the grave remaineth for me.” The Caliph Hesham, who died at Baspha, in the year 742, possessed seven hundred boxes of gold pieces, and so large a quantity of clothes and silk garments, that to remove these goods from one place to another six hundred camels were required. He had scarcely closed his eyes in death, when his palace was plundered, and there was not left even a basin in which to wash his inanimate body, not a piece of linen in which to wrap it for the grave. How poor death made this rich ruler!

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The Victory of the Saints

“IN this wise have the martyrs shown their power, leaping with joy in the presence of death, laughing at the sword, making sport of the wrath of princes, grasping at death as the producer of deathlessness, making victory their own by their fall, through the body taking their leap to heaven, suffering their members to be scattered abroad in order that they might hold their souls, and, bursting the bars of life, that they might open the. gates of heaven.”

— St. Gregory Thamaturgis, On All the Saints

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On Veneration of the Saints

“Worship is the homage which goodness claims as its due. God is the all good, and therefore claims supreme homage or worship, which is known as latria. But creatures, too, are good, and some creatures there are that possess the kind of goodness — virtue, namely, or moral worth — which merits the homage of rational beings. Such, in a preeminent sense, are ‘the spirits of the just made perfect,’ the saints and the holy angels who dwell with God.”

— “Veneration of the Saints,” by the Right Rev. Alexander MacDonald, D.D., 1921

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