david starling
Well-known member
Easythreesies.
I guess it wasn't popular enough in Britain, so they tried selling it here. This was way back in the 60's, but the ad was memorable.
Is Hershey's popular in Britain?
Here is a 4 minute montage a friend made about Issac Kappy and his exposing of Satanism.
'we don't care about the masses, Satanism is a religion for the Elite.'
- EPSTEIN ISLAND SPECIAL: (jackets) The reason Isaac Kappy got suicided part one - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cuV...d8GNrw9LmetRjslMho-Zs-wjj3tyZEzPn1HECDXKdNasQ
Who was Isaac Kappy?
Is your friend in any danger for making the montage?
Rahu used to talk about deep state paedophile rings a lot.
Not saying he wasn’t paranoid but I also think he was conscious enough to be spiritually attacked too.
No, not paranoid--targeted, and by members of his own family.
It wasn't an occult, spiritual attack, it was on the physical level.
[IMO] He was too quick to label anyone who disagreed with anything he believed as an enemy, though.
The same way Rabbinic Judaism began. Over many centuries man-made traditions began to replace the commandments of God. ''So for the sake of your tradition you have made void the word of God. You hypocrites! Well did Isaiah prophesy of you, when he said:“‘This people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me; in vain do they worship me, teaching as doctrines the commandments of men.’'' - Matthew 15
Since this is going offtopic, I am going to continue in the random thoughts thread.
These traditions don't all come from Rome. Your initial point was that it originates from citizens of the Roman Empire (not the city of Rome) who were not Jews (Paul was a Jew and a Roman citizen) which is obviously wrong. The term ''Christians'' originates as a derogatory term from Greeks (Acts 11:26), just as ''Notzrim'' originates as a derogatory term from the Jews (Acts 24:5).
Well, is the Pope Catholic?
Yes, pope Francis is Catholic.
Are you asking was every bishop of Rome in the first few centuries a Catholic?
It is painfully anachronistic to call someone like Clement of Rome a Pope. Here is a translation of his letter to the Corinthians - https://www.newadvent.org/fathers/1010.htm from a Roman Catholic.
The Reformation acknowledged that most of the early Roman bishops, later called fathers had nothing to do with later ''developments'' and debaucheries.