Anonymous ID: 95887b March 13, 2022, 10:13 p.m. No.15859316   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9333 >>9402 >>9503

>>15859280

It's hard to watch any movies anymore.

Not only movies, once you know how they mark almost everything it's hard to go anywhere without seeing the marks. That evil shit is fucking everywhere!

All you have to do is look. How could ppl have been so blind to it.

Anonymous ID: 95887b March 13, 2022, 11:49 p.m. No.15859610   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15859549

 

GN all

 

Think about it: when someone says “I told you so,” aren’t our feelings hurt because our pride is wounded? Don’t we hear “I told you so” with a bit more arrogance or sarcasm because it hurts our pride to know that we could make a mess of our lives? As Christians, we know that feeling as “sin.” You’re right, not every stupid human action is a sin—but a good number of our stupid, human actions do come from our own pride and the lack of thinking about how we can act better with the principles of our faith or the teachings of Jesus informing our actions.

 

We are currently celebrating a Jubilee Year of Mercy in the Catholic Church that is meant to help us understand, as Pope Francis has clearly proclaimed, “without God’s mercy, we would not exist.” Mercy is that incredible and gratuitous gift of God that restores our ability to live as His children with full faith and confidence that in His love we are held in His embrace.

 

Every Divine admonition or word of caution in the Scriptures is a loving reminder from our Heavenly Father. Believe it or not, God does not want to punish us as much as He wants to love us; but love, as we know, typically involves receiving and giving. The Year of Mercy helps us to receive God’s mercy through a change of heart and action. We call this conversion. Conversion is an ongoing process in our lives. The more active we are about examining our lives and adjusting our behavior the more we have the opportunity to experience being loved by God. Yes, we will still hear an occasional “I told you so” both from God and maybe even from our friends (and maybe even from our non-friends); but, relax, that is a sign of our humanity, which God loves so much that He took it on Himself in Jesus, and clearly that we’re not in heaven yet.

 

Commit your life to Christ—and I’ll see you at Sunday Mass!