"And fear ye not them that kill the body, and are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him that can destroy both soul and body in hell."
(Mt. 10: 28)
Traditional Catholicism opposes Zionism in a spirit quite different from that of Islamic 'militants,' as the media now call them. Muslims who celebrate acts of murder of Jews ("Judaics") are delivering up their own souls as a sacrifice to Satan, not harming the Zionist oppressor. They may even be helping the Zionists, as Hoffman appears to be intimating.
In Revisionist literature, Purim is basically an all-embracing symbol for orgies of Judaic violence. Elizabeth Dilling, (IIRC) questioned whether the Book of Esther should be canonical; Julius Streicher is said to have called his execution "Purim day"; others say that the Russian Revolution broke out on Purim, etc.
The Catholic Encyclopedia says that Purim is an Old Testament feast, citing 2 Macc. 15, 37. Do you then consider Purim a legitimate feast per se, or do you consider it a Talmudic perversion?
4 comments:
Maurice,
Consider paying me a visit from time to time as I am just beginning:
http://thetyranny.wordpress.com
"And fear ye not them that kill the body, and are not able to kill the soul: but rather fear him that can destroy both soul and body in hell."
(Mt. 10: 28)
Traditional Catholicism opposes Zionism in a spirit quite different from that of Islamic 'militants,' as the media now call them. Muslims who celebrate acts of murder of Jews ("Judaics") are delivering up their own souls as a sacrifice to Satan, not harming the Zionist oppressor. They may even be helping the Zionists, as Hoffman appears to be intimating.
In Revisionist literature, Purim is basically an all-embracing symbol for orgies of Judaic violence. Elizabeth Dilling, (IIRC) questioned whether the Book of Esther should be canonical; Julius Streicher is said to have called his execution "Purim day"; others say that the Russian Revolution broke out on Purim, etc.
The Catholic Encyclopedia says that Purim is an Old Testament feast, citing 2 Macc. 15, 37. Do you then consider Purim a legitimate feast per se, or do you consider it a Talmudic perversion?
Look at that one
http://www.usccb.org/comm/archives/2008/08-028.shtml
So called "pope" to meet with his good friends in his next visit in the US.
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