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Originally posted by herm
In Phillip K. Dick's final trilogy, he expounds upon this idea- That the social control mechanisim of Rome was transfered to the Pope after the Fall of Rome. The same organization has been controlling world affairs for 4,000 years. "In order to fight the Empire, one had to become what it represents. If a segment of the Empire is defeated, the victor assumes it's role, thus becoming what was defeated. In this way the mechanism of control is sustained" Babylon is our paternal, militant, consumer- oriented society, which we aren't about to give up. All of our "beat em up and take it" paradigms only sustain the Roman system- It's a way of doing things that we are conditioned to, more than any particular person pulling strings behind the curtain. The system is so successful precisely because it opperates in the open and is considered to be "the sensible way to do things". It is "official."
Responsible Anarchy is the future hope of Humanity.....
Originally posted by herm
"The Transmigration of Timmothy Archer"
"The Divine Invasion"
"Valis"
Originally posted by Thomas Crowne
I disagree. I think that Babylon is just that, Babylon, and that there is a possibility that the Vatican might be the backbone for the Harlot.
But hey, this is just as I see it. I don't see my position being any more rock-solid than anyone's else's. I do know that in time, those left behind will know for a fact.
Originally posted by riffraffalunas
++++++++
AH HA!!...someone prys the lid off the septic tank...
Vatican City is an independent city-state, albiet surrounded by Rome-->>SO, by mutual exclusion,
the Roman Catholic Church, seated in Vatican, cannot be a Harlot/Roman/anti-christ dragon, that some fantasize
modern catholicism is principaly 'Pauline' & not based on Peter as suggested. (Apostle Paul, conversion & epiphany- on road to Baghdad? or whatever....)
Originally posted by Cearbhall
"by the Pope who still today is regarded next to God in power. "- Mik's quote
"Just look at the Catholic history of popes and antipopes. They got worse than their enemy. They were bitten by the serpent, but the venom didn't kill them, the Old Serpent breeds on them."- Mik's quote
The Pope doesn't claim such a thing (the power), he is a sinner like the rest of us. The Pope is just a man capable of doing bad things as we all are. I'm sure that there are many popes burning in hell for their selfishness and unrepentant sin.
Also about kingship, all Kings or Queens claim to get their power from God, not just the HRE. By the way The Holy Roman Empire, ended by a decision of the last Emperor, Francis II, on 6 August 1806. If the HRE was the Church's vehicle to rise, it has been long gone.
About Clovis, it was a mutual agreement between the Church and his kingdom. You see the Church was in a dangerous position for it was competing with the Celtic church along with fighting off heresies like Arianism and Gnosticism. So the two became allies to help each other. Be aware the Church didn't make Clovis, King.
Also there wasn't a Pope Peter II either.
When they talk about the eighth king they are talking about Trajan.
In AD 98 Trajan became emperor. Politically he marked a great turning point. He was the first of the empire's "adopted emperors" � emperors chosen for what they could do rather than for their kinship to the previous emperor. (OK, strictly speaking Nerva was the first adopted emperor in AD 96, but he was opposed by the Praetorian Guard who mutinied in 97, hence the choice of Trajan. Nerva only reigned for "a short space" � see Revelation 17:10).
The Roman empire reached its greatest power under Trajan. But what is far more important is the condition he brought with him.
From the outside he seemed to be just another king � he came from the previous seven � albeit one who severely persecuted the Christians. But from the point of view of the church, his reign was a turning point of the worst possible kind. During his reign, the last of the apostles died or disappeared.
This next section is from David Wills, concerning the eighth:
[In the King James Bible, this verse read
"And the beast that was, and is not, even he is the eighth, and is of the seven, and goeth into perdition."
But if you look in other translations, this is translated in different ways. So clearly the words in the original Greek are not perfectly straightforward. I looked in my Greek study Bible, and found that most of the words in the English translations are not present in the Greek. In fact, the Greek words are just:
"wild beast � also � eighth � seven � go � into � perdition (or destruction)"
Now, I am not a Greek scholar. Perhaps the missing words are implied by the grammatical structure? So I looked at the "Literal Translation" Bible. This is what is says (Strong�s numbers come before each Greek word � words without numbers are added for convenience):
And | 3588 | the | 2342 | beast | 3759 | which | 2258 | was, | and | 3756 | not | 2076 | is, | 3383 | even | he | 3590 | eighth | 2076 | is, | and | of | the | 2033 | seven | 2076 | it is, | and | 4314 | to | 684 | perdition | 5562 | goes.
This is starting to look interesting�
"Even" he is the Eighth?
The key word is "even", Strong�s word number 3383. As I said, I am not a Greek scholar, so please correct me if I am wrong.
But I do not see how this word could be translated as "even". According to Strong�s concordance it is means "and not, neither ... nor, not so". In the King James Bible it is translated as follows: neither (20 times), nor (15 times), so much as (1 time), or (1 time). Replace the word "even" with one of those words, and see what you get.
Clearly the beast has something to do with being an "eighth", or why would John have introduced the word? But we do not have to stick strictly to it being Nero or any of the other emperors. It could be something quite different. So what did John mean by "eighth", and how does this relate to the "seven"?
He doesn't do muche else than sit these days, may God bless the guy, he has proven to be wise many times, but kissing the ground isn't very smart, God use dust in the water to decide whether a woman has been faithful to her husbond or not. If she has committed adultary, her belly will swell up and the hips will be weakened and shrink in, read up on the Law, it's quite amazing. John Paul was also shot and almost killed in the beginning of the eighties, he nearly survived the operation, exactly what is prophecied about "the eighth"... For all I know John Paul II may represent an old secret movement, being evil incarnated, but I somehow find that hard to believe. The whole Church thing is probably just be an illusion created by wicked forces to direct people away from God and God away from the people.
Originally posted by Cearbhall
Mik's quote-"According to official Catholic doctrine, the Pope is infallible in matters of doctrine, faith and morals. That would be quite alot of power when you see their doctrines."
The popes have used the doctrine of infallibility I think twice in all of the almost 2000 year of history. One was the Immaculate Conception and the other the Assumption of Mary. You think the popes go around saying they are speaking infallibly? No they do not, much research goes into making such statements. Remember the four things that must happen for something to be infallible:
1) he must be speaking 'ex cathedra' ... that is, 'from the Chair' of Peter, or in other words, officially, as head of the entire Church
2) the decision must be for the whole Church
3) it must be on a matter of faith or morals
4) the pope must have the intention of making a final decision on a teaching of faith or morals, so that it is to be held by all the faithful
Remember infallibility was given by Christ Himself.
Mik's quote- "If they have a doctrine which says kings and emperors are lower than the pope and that the pope is next to God in rank, and that the pope is the right hand of God so to speak, fully capable of and proved willing to judging and punishing, executing and torturing those who don't comply"
What is this doctrine that say such things? Surly not the doctrine of Papal infallibility. Read more on it please.
Mik's quote-"No, they didn't make him king, they made him Emperor of the Roman Empire."
Show me documents stating he was Emperor of Rome. Did he make any laws signed his name Emporer of Rome?
Originally posted by Cearbhall
He is not speaking infallibly when he talks, he could be wrong.
....
I meant Christ gave Peter the authority for being the true disciple. Christ gave him specifics on what needs to be done to further His Kingdom and what role Peter would play.
.....
When the Pope speaks infallibly (only twice, mind you this happened in the almost 2000 years of its existence) he is protected by Christ, because Christ isn't a liar. Christ won't let the "gates of hell to prevail against it"
Popes are human and make mistakes.
BTW didn't this Pope apologise for the atrocities the Church commited in the past? I know he did.
Quote-"he nearly survived the operation"
he survived, he didn't die.
I hope I'm not hard on you, I'm not trying to be, I have respect for you Mik.