Do you feel the same
way about priests molesting children?
Not exact matches
So given the topic of this article — which is
about Men of God diddling little boys — is the
way priests look at children better than they
way us filthy westerners look at women?
yes much has to be discerned in the book of remembrance, so called OT, for the
priest did all go astray from the
ways of YHWH, but one must read, pray, and do the righteous
ways of YHWH to get His anointment to understand, and call 1-773-874-0325, YHWH Our Righteousness, the Movement, and arm, and Branch of YHWH, prophesied in Jeremiah 23 vs. 1 - 8, and Jeremiah 33 vs. 14 - 21, also as described in Isaiah 59, and Malachi 3 vs.1 - 4, to get any answers to any questions
about this book.
Some people feel this
way about pastors, ministers,
priests, imams, rabbis, etcetera.
This is, by the
way, not
about Latin, the Tridentine liturgy, statues, or which
way the
priest faces.
But this is just the
way Christianity is talked
about... by believing
priests.
But then he taught many a young, inexperienced
priest how to speak
about matters which otherwise are rarely spoken
about in the contemporary Church, or at least not in
ways that are pastoral and convincing and true!
Pastores Dabo Vobis is clear
about the matter when it notes that if the
priest's ministry and mission is to be credible and acceptable «it is important that the
priest should mould his human personality in such a
way that it becomes a bridge and not an obstacle for others in their meeting with Jesus Christ the Redeemer of humanity».
Is it possible and after reading
about it i kept on thinking «i will sell to my soul for 20 carats get out shut up i will never ever sell my soul to you oh god please help me and this is continuing for a few days i am afraid that i have sold my sold to the devil have i please help and still i think god's
way of allowing others to hate him us much worse even you know and can easily think think
about much better punishments like rebirth after being punished for all the sins in life and i am feeling put on the sin of those who committed the unforgiviable sin (the early 0th century
priests) imagine them burning in hell fire till now for 2000 years hopelessly screaming to god for help i can't belive the mercy of god are they forgiven even though commiting this sin keans going to hell for entinity thank you and congralutions i think the 7 year tribulation periodvis over in 18th century the great commect shooting and in 19th century the sun became dark for a day and moon was not visible on the earth but now satun has the domination over me those who don't belive in jesus crist i used to belive in him but now after knowing a lot in science it is getting harharder to belive in him even though i know that he exsists and i only belived in him not that he died for me in the cross and also not for eternal life and i still sin as much as i used to before but only a little reduced and i didn't accept satan as my master but what can i do because those who knowingly sin a lot and don't belive in jesus christ has to accept satan as their master because he only teaches us that even though he is evil he gives us complete freedom but thr followers of jesus and god only have freedom because they can sin only with in a limit and no more but recive their reward after their life in heaven but the followers of satun have to go to hell butbi don't want to go to hell and be ruled by the cruel tryant but still why didn't god destroy satun long
way before and i think it was also Adam and eve's fault also they could have blamed satan and could have also get their punishment reduced but they didn't and today we are seeing the result
More important and immediate than the embargo question, I was impressed by the
way that U.S. pilgrims to Cuba - including cardinals, bishops, and many
priests - evinced a sense of urgency
about ongoing and very practical work with the Cuban Church.
I feel the same
way about the poor
priests who are good men and are being lumped in with the reallyreallyreally sick numbers of
priests who it appears will have a special place in hell tucked away just for them!
Do you know any
priests and have you talked to them
about they
way they are treated when they are out in public?
He recalled how his fellow
priests had in many cases become very casual, and how in Rome «I heard, among other clever and coarse anecdotes at mealtimes, members of the papal curia laugh and boast
about how some said Mass and with reference to the bread and wine spoke these words: ««Panis es, panis manebis; vinum es, vinum manebis» — «Bread you are and bread you shall remain; wine you are, and wine you shall remain» — and with these words they elevated the host and the wine in the usual
way.
It was this «juggling», this seemingly magical element that still offended Luther so deeply, and he criticised theological theories, enshrined in such a phrase as ex opere operato, referring in various
ways to the automatic realisation of a sacrament when performed correctly by a properly ordained
priest, with little or nothing said
about the recipient and the faith he should have.
Mary Gordon's disclaimers finally give
way to her admission
about priests and nuns: «Nevertheless I can't quite give up what they stand for.»
I suppose it is hard for able - bodied people to grasp its significance to families like mine: I can recall gatherings from my youth where we discussed hospital staff in the same
way other families chat
about revered schoolteachers, parish
priests, soccer coaches, or piano instructors.
If one thinks largely of responsibility and labor, there are boundless joys too — perhaps the
priest may take to himself the remark of a modern Chinese Christian
about the mystic
way, that «the sorrows are the sorrows of the ages; but the joy is the joy of eternity.»
«They never speak
about themselves in a
way that suggests that they were pure astronomers or mathematicians; their profession was to be scholar -
priests.»
But this movie ticks a lot of boxes: it's
about the death of investigative journalism, the quagmire that newspapers are in today, but it's also
about society and the
way that it dealt with this situation [the exposing of Roman Catholic pedophile
priests in Boston].
And why not do that when there isn't anything to do at work anyway, since the co-workers are shown as having nothing better to do than try to get a rise out of Hartnett at every turn, spending countless hours concocting
ways to get him to break his vow which they heard
about from... the wanna - be
priest brother??
Her firm but kind
way of dealing with Lady Bird's spates of rebellion is a really good example of what Alissa was talking
about with the
priest.
Along the
way, we hear the stories of invented psychopaths, like a Vietnamese man in
priest garments (Long Nguyen) still bitter over the war, a Quaker (a silent, powerful Harry Dean Stanton) who isn't
about to let his daughter's repentant killer rest easy, and a couple of serial killer killers.
As the
priest in Calvary who spends his last hours trying to solve the mystery of who is
about to kill him, Brendan Gleeson has a part worthy of his bearlike physique, sardonic intelligence, and fine - tuned empathy, which make him seem a little more than the rest of us in every
way.
We meet a landlord more interested in the
ways of the cosmos than in the individuals towards whom he has duties; a failed
priest who harbors an ancient guilt; a neurosurgeon, self - absorbed yet beset with questions
about the whole universe; and a lepidopterist who finds the rarest butterfly and love when she isn't looking for them.