Anonymous ID: 76c1b3 April 22, 2018, 10:29 p.m. No.1153436   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3471

>>1153293

I normally only follow tv news really during Pres election cycles. This time I just turned it off recently, went about 22 months, because of the winning. It's usually less than a year. I dont recommend tv to anybody. One Anon.

Anonymous ID: 76c1b3 April 22, 2018, 10:33 p.m. No.1153468   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1153328

Trump's movement is part of the new agethat commenced 2012. Not everybody will make it through to the new side. How many are we seeing destroy themselves already, just atthe beginning.

 

What we will have is a NEW AMERICA. Nothing "again," but NEW. If you can see that, then you will make it through. Abandon anything that's old and rotten. Look ahead.

 

That's how we win.

Anonymous ID: 76c1b3 April 22, 2018, 11:05 p.m. No.1153694   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1153639

Read the online Catechism to learn theology and doctrine, you have not even 5% of the knowledge you think you have about the Church and theology. Protestantism is high school-level religion.

Anonymous ID: 76c1b3 April 22, 2018, 11:09 p.m. No.1153719   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1153693

If you want to cite the Catechism, why not just cut and paste for accuracy?

751 The word "Church" (Latin ecclesia, from the Greek ek-ka-lein, to "call out of") means a convocation or an assembly. It designates the assemblies of the people, usually for a religious purpose.139 Ekklesia is used frequently in the Greek Old Testament for the assembly of the Chosen People before God, above all for their assembly on Mount Sinai where Israel received the Law and was established by God as his holy people.140 By calling itself "Church," the first community of Christian believers recognized itself as heir to that assembly. In the Church, God is "calling together" his people from all the ends of the earth. The equivalent Greek term Kyriake, from which the English word Church and the German Kirche are derived, means "what belongs to the Lord."

 

752 In Christian usage, the word "church" designates the liturgical assembly,141 but also the local community142 or the whole universal community of believers.143 These three meanings are inseparable. "The Church" is the People that God gathers in the whole world. She exists in local communities and is made real as a liturgical, above all a Eucharistic, assembly. She draws her life from the word and the Body of Christ and so herself becomes Christ's Body.