Friday, November 14, 2025

In Response to a Long One from Christine Niles


Gay Confirmation; Co-Redemptrix Confusion & more | FORWARD BOLDLY
Christine Niles | 13.XI.2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJALrSptY6g


5:36 This is one beef I have with some Vatican II-ists and even some Trads.

Do they encourage gay men to leave homosexuality for and by marriage, or is their sole offer of conversion a conversion to chaste gay?

How many of the ex-gays who are married are Catholics or were Catholics at the time of leaving homosexuality?

9:22 JRRT invited other Inklings into his home. One of them is known to have been openly gay (he was an Anglican).

I recently heard a horrific story from JRRT's priest son, Fr. John Tolkien, about his childhood.

17:24 Do they have the authority to do that?

Or are people so openly heretical also outside the Church and therefore without authority?

If I were you, I'd contact Pope Michael II to see if he is fine with doing a consecration or leaving it to bishop Clary.

23:19 [Mary is a great stumbling block.]

For a very specific sector of the world.

I thankfully grew up in Vienna, part time, and my mother didn't, she went to a Bible school for summer camp some year before I was born, so, Mary never was a stumbling block to me the way such ideas were to my mother for some time.

23:45 Catholic Apolegetics doesn't need to come as a ministry.

The well known ministry Catholic Answers is unfortunately heterodox on some issues, and even obtuse to limit dishonest.

I saw Trent Horn state that "Cardinal Baronius stated that the Bible doesn't teach us how the heavens go, but how to go to Heaven" and I think he even said "in the context of the Galileo affair" ...

Now, the one 17th C. source I know of with that phrase is Galileo's letter to Grand Duchess Cristina of Tuscany. And while he says it was said by a Church man who has reached a high place, he doesn't say who that Church man is.

IF it was Cardinal Baronius, a very holy man, a direct disciple of St. Philip Neri, then it wasn't in the Galileo affair, even if Galileo cited it in his affair. How do I know? Because Baronius died 30 June 1607, before the affair broke out. Catholic Encyclopedia cites him as Venerable, meaning, it is placing a very high moral authority in fake service of Heliocentrism or agnosticism on the issue to state such things about Baronius.

However, IF it was Baronius, it could have been in stating Tycho was as licit as Ptolemy as to Geocentric model.

IF it was instead, as I suspect, since it was a man Galileo knew, Cardinal Maffeo Vincenzo Barberini, future pope Urban VIII, then he obviously turned around for any generosity toward Heliocentrism the statement could have entailed, since as Pope he confirmed a judgement against Galileo.

Meanwhile, I'm a writer, and I do Apologetics as part of that. The "Apologetics Section" of my blogs, well, it's not all of my Apologetics, just essays in English on these issues, exists side by side with other writings, some of which are not specifically Christian (though I hope compatible with Christianity).

1) Creation vs. Evolution, against both Atheists and inconsistent Christians who believe Deep Time and possibly even Human Evolution from apelike creatures.
2) somewhere else, named after a comment by Tim O'Neill, an Atheist whom I respect more than most of them, since he doesn't peddle Antimedieval and Anticatholic takes, dedicated to arguing the Gospels are trustworthy to Atheists, Jews and Muslims, and arguing parts of OT are trustworthy to mainly Atheists, and arguing existence of God, also to mainly Atheists.
3) Great bishop of Geneva! whose patron saint is obviously St. Francis of Sales. Yes, against Protestant errors.

Last essay on each would be: "A Km Deep Global Ocean ... Navigable Or Would the Ark Have Floundered?" / "What Are Pagan Gods, Specifically Greek and Norse and Hindu?" (whenever Pagans sacrifice, they sacrifice to demons, but apart from that?) / "Obscurity and Perspicuity"

So, I'm not the first Catholic Apologist to not do a ministry, also true of Chesterton and Belloc (but not of Catholic Truth Guild, whom I also value).

In this connection, being a Catholic Apologist is not a position in the Church, and therefore not sth the Church needs to vet one's moral fibre for. If Milo Yiannopoulos wants to do Catholic Apologetics, so be it.

25:32 It so happens, in 2005, the election of Ratzinger temporarily made me think "we have a Pope" (among those in the Vatican).

I am very disappointed, partly with what he did, partly with what I found out he had done as "Cardinal" ... with all affection I once had for him, as a budding Trad, when he died, I drank a Guiness in memory, not of a Catholic, but of a Bavarian (with lots of Catholic culture, but I didn't dare to find him as having actually kept the faith).

He is also known on earth (whatever he may be known for in the hereafter) of heavy disingeniousness on the issue of Fundamentalists. Both because he was active in the CCC, with its §283, and because he was taking some (indirect?) part in the document THE INTERPRETATION OF THE BIBLE IN THE CHURCH. It has a section that's both a calumny against actual Fundamentalist Protestants, and a sleight of hand disrecommendation of Fundamentalist positions related to Biblical inerrancy.

So, Tucho citing Ratzi ... no, doesn't mean Tucho is right. As said. There is a specific section of the world that finds Catholic Mariology a stumbling block. Evangelical and even Lutheran / Anglican types of Protestants aren't all of the non-Catholics.

Plus, the point of "co-" connoting sometimes equality doesn't go to the issue that the doctrine has been clearly explained as not denoting that. It's like saying one needs to ditch the phrasing in Catholic Encyclopedia which says we "worship Mary with hyperdulia" because some have taken "worship" as meaning adoration. The United States are a great country, and its Evangelicals are a great section of the non-Catholics, a section in which my mother started raising me as a Christian, but neither the US, nor the Evangelicals, are all of the world. And the same is true of Protestants in the Germanies, to whom Ratzinger was probably being diplomatic.

25:47 "too far from Scripture"?

From Scriptural truth? No. She clearly did sacrifice along with Her Son on Calvary. From Scriptural terminology? So what!

1) Deacon, 2) Presbyter, 3) Bishop is "straying from" Scriptural terminology, since in NT times, the terms were 1) Deacon, 2) Bishop, 3) Apostle / Evangelist / Angel / Teacher, possibly also Prophet.

Normal moral theology says, it's praiseworthy to want to be a priest. It's usually not safe to want to be a bishop, you become one of obedience, not your own choice.

The NT says "he who wants to be a bishop, is after a good job" (paraphrasing), but also "do not many of you be teachers, since they will have a stricter judgement" ...

The NT terms bishop and teacher map on to what normal theology says about presbyter and bishop.

We are not bound to use Scriptural terminology in all we express.

26:12 I thought he was a bulldog for orthodoxy in 1992, and to some extent still in 2005.

29:06 Pope Michael II disagreed on that one.*

29:44 Doesn't the document also speak against Mediatrix of all graces, even as a doctrine?

As welcome as that would be to Protestants, count on backlash from Orthodox, if so.

It was Anthony Bloom, The Archbishop's Prayer School**, which taught me, those redeemed need to be forgiven by Our Lady, and then She prays for them. THEN God saves.

He was founder and for many years bishop - then archbishop, then metropolitan - of the Diocese of Sourozh, the Patriarchate of Moscow's diocese for Great Britain and Ireland (the name 'Sourozh' is that of the historical episcopal see in Sudak in Crimea).


36:29 "until He decides to abolish it"

The usual Catholic view is, He decides to come back and replace it. When the King is physically present, speaks audibly before all, the Viceroy ceases to rule.

This is also the view of Vatican in Exile. Papacy took a pause between 1958 and 1990, it was comparable to another near pause when there were two Popes and therefore both could be seen as dubious, which lasted just a bit longer, 39 years, not 32.

However, the guys usually considered as Sedevacantists actually seem to think Christ has decided to abolish papacy, by allowing an intruder after Pius XII and by allowing all cardinals named by Pius XII and Pius XI to die out before an alternative election could be held. Their view is, only Cardinals elect Popes. That's a law introduced by Popes, and can be either abolished by a Pope or temporarily sidestepped in an emergency such that Popes had not foreseen it.

38:43 My online content is free.***

I don't have a patreon, I don't even have paypal.

There are perks to reading me on paper offline (I've printed out some, but not on a commercial level), like getting things in the logic and topical context instead of scrolling, or reading in a more peaceful environment than over the web (and frankly, many of my posts are totally too long to be easy to read without computers, I don't recommend accessing me on cell phones).

This is why I, for my part, would appreciate someone starting a publishing house. As homeless, I cannot do that myself, partly trouble with bank accounts, but even more, I have no network for selling around me, and I have no place to stock a pile of copies of a book safely.

* "That one" meaning the words after "but" in the following quote:

you can still use the title, but the church is rejecting 28:59 formally adopting that title for Our Lady formally adopting it, including it in the church's prayers, 29:05 you know, referring to her that way in official rights, that's all the church is doing. It's rejecting that as a formal title adopted by the church for Our Lady.


** Probably identic to either "1970 – School for Prayer" or "1986 – The Essence of Prayer (Contains Living Prayer, School for Prayer, God and Man, and Courage to Pray)" ... I backtranslated the Swedish title Ärkebiskopens böneskola into English. It was promoted in Catholic parishes, and I would say, rightly so. From my memory, it contains nothing against the Catholic faith.

*** In response to her appeal for support, from those affording.

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Mount Everest and Grand Canyon Might Differ by Centuries


The Signs at the Grand Canyon Are WRONG!
Answers in Genesis | 11 Nov. 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SeB6GO9n1cw


1:03 Psalm 103:8* indicates that the mountains rose and next verse that the shorelines were fixed in connection with the Flood ending, but the fact is, you'd agree shorelines were very different in parts of the Ice age, up to centuries after the Flood, but also before King David, so, you cannot fix the rising of the mountains to "same year" by that verse.

I'd say the mountains rose during the Ice age basically immediately following the Flood, but it took some centuries. This is confirmed by Himalaya archaeology, the earliest post-Flood culture found in the Sivali hills are from some century after Babel, which ended 401 after the Flood when Peleg was born.**

6:18 Even if your research proved most layers of the Himalayas were bent (those that are bent) during the weeks after the Flood (I tend to think of those weeks as ground solidifying extra rapidly around the Ark, and it took longer elsewhere), that doesn't mean the actual height of the Himalayas was reached as quickly.

What I said about the Sivali [Siwalik] hills suggests that the ground was still unstable the first few centuries after the Flood, and I take that as indicating a rapid rise in the mountain, still ongoing some centuries after the Flood. But I also think the Himalayas are metamorphic rock (according to the quickest check I get, I'm right) and I think part of the heat was God's way of getting surrounding mud dried quicker. Including by making rivers rise in the higher mountains and once arriving down, draining the landscape by creating a river basin.

The Pyrenees also seems to be unstable to get up in to centuries after the Flood.***

* The video say 104:8, Catholic and Protestant Bibles number and at some places divide the psalms differently, though there are 150 of them either version.
** Siwalik, more precisely Patu industry in Nepal: Himalayas, bis ... and Pyrenees
*** While mentioning them in the Himalayas series, I added a more indepth research on it on this post: Fr. Robinson Attacking Biblical Chronology (But Not Special Creation of Man)

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Sharing


[Automatically translated]*
Breaking Points | 3 Nov. 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vI64Vo7ucDg


* French translation: La société israélienne s'indigne face au « droit au viol » which would mean "Israeli society in uproar against 'right to rape'" ... however, either it's "for right to rape" or "against rape going to justice" ...

Automatic translations keep proving that AI doesn't understand language, is only able to handle it probabilistically .... here the translation algorithm was the wrong one.

Christian Nationalism Doesn't Make Christian Individuals a Privileged Group


What do you think about this Christian Nationalist's simple explanation of the movement?
Rev Ed Trevors | 3 Nov. 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8-yk4cYWBH0


If it's Jan Fugelsang, you pronounce it Yahn Fooglesung if Norwegian or Yann Fooglesang if Danish.

It means Johnny Birdsong.

1:59 I'd say, so far so good.

The Latino immigrant isn't against Catholic Christianity in the same way that some Sudanese or Algerian immigrants are against it in France.

Is he arguing that Christian Nationalists should oppose ICE? If so, nice.

3:17 You do admit that one of them is teach ye all nations — right?

A teacher is a culturally dominant force in his classroom.*

Jesus says the Apostles (and their successors) should have entire nations as classrooms. In such a way that ... baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. So, all or most citizens are supposed to be Christians. Not just give out the message and let any individual who will take it up (that's part of it), but go on and specifically target politicians (like targetting the Candace of Ethiopia by her Eunuch) and do other stuff intending for them to actually succeed in teaching all or most of the baptised to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you ...

Sounds like some degree of Christian nationalism is actually incumbent on the actual Christian Church (that being the Catholic one).

This doesn't mean necessarily all the Trump régime is currently doing is the exact right thing to do, but some things are in the right direction.

4:10 It's not all Jesus asked us to do, but clearly part of it.

Yes, there are lots of things one can and must do individually, not matter what the régime, but Matthew 28 clearly states wanting a Christian nation and therefore also government is a good and for much of the time necessary thing.

Obviously, once the world enters Apocalypse 13, it's no longer an option. Speaking of which, the restrainer, if you ask me, was the Roman Emperor as a monarch. Taken out of the way in 1918 (Nicholas II killed, Charles I abdicated, and some pronounce him as "Charles the Last" for that reason), and Russia finds Lenin and Hungary Bela Kún in power. And if Jesus doesn't, at least St. Paul does say:

only that he who now holdeth, do hold, until he be taken out of the way.


Perhaps it's been too late for Christian nationalism for 100 years and some. 16 Nov. 1918, but he left some room for others to continue resisting. Suggesting the time of withholding may not be over.

There is obviously a relation between a restrainer like that and what was in the ending centuries of the OT the Fourth Beast. So much, the Roman Emperor, if actually such (like Karl Franz Josef Ludwig Hubert Georg Otto Maria up to 1918) is too old to be part of the Endtimes Beasts. Wonder whether AEIOU will be true in a Christian sense or ... I'm sad to see the Austria I knew is not quite itself when I see headlines ...

4:49 That Christianity is the dominant cultural force doesn't make every Christian upper class or high cast and also doesn't degrade non-Christians to lower class or low caste.

It may involve more or less feeling at home within the society, but it would be true of all classes and ... a thing that shouldn't exist in a Christian nation ... castes.

Now, having Marxists as cultural force actually does depend on having Marxists as a favoured class. For instance, a class is favoured if having at the same time better access to becoming teacher and demanding equal access of others' children to the school. A very obvious example to me as a former teacher.

But Catholic bishops don't automatically** draft people into Sunday Mass and Confession just because the country is Catholic. And bishops are anyway much more restricted as a venue than teachers, especially in a country with twelve years of more or less imposed school attendance for most of the population.

I'm not sure if you've noticed, but Christian Nationalists are not just likelier to favour Christians as teachers, they are also likelier to favour homeschooling, meaning, it comes with less power to be a teacher.

I'm also not sure if you've noticed, but Christian Nationalists are not saying "ban Atheists from aborting" or "ban Christians from aborting" but more like, where they have the power for it, "ban all abortions" ... they are not shouting for Christian girls having more ways of getting out of motherhood or Christian parents' babies having better guarantees for not getting aborted.

5:53 "keeping us attached to the things around us"

The rich man didn't become an unbeliever just because he didn't follow Jesus.

Jesus didn't say all believers had to be disciples.

Nor did St. Peter:

Whilst it remained, did it not remain to thee? and after it was sold, was it not in thy power? Why hast thou conceived this thing in thy heart? Thou hast not lied to men, but to God
[Acts Of Apostles 5:4]


In other words, while overcoming attachment to personal belongings is virtuous, it is not obligatory on all Christians. Ananias and Sapphira would have been free to be baptised and Christians and share only some extras, if they had done so openly.

6:16 "transcend into the spiritual"

Sorry, sounds like Gnosticism to me.

We are, body and spirit, poverty or possessions, to become partakers of God's nature***, God's ways°. But we do not become pure spirits, and the bodies will resurrect.

* If he's good at his job or lucky or both. I wasn't.
** In Medieval Sweden absenting from Sunday Mass possibly, absenting from baptising your babies, certainly, got you fined. But this was not the case with Eamon DeValera's Ireland.
*** By infused grace.
° By matching our actions to grace.

Since I'm Young Earth Creationist, Some Will Always Speculate on How I Read Genesis 9 (and 11), and Danielle Romero Gave Me an Opportunity to Answer


The Curse of Ham & The Southern Baptist Convention
NYTN | 10 Nov. 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ld2bLAtdWpU


2:51 "son' is also used of grandson, and Canaan may at this point have been the youngest descendant of Noah.

Now, why is it marked that the one who sees him naked is "Ham, the father of Canaan" and why is Canaan rather than Ham cursed?

A wild guess is maybe not so wild if there is a passage in Habacuc (misused by Mr. Hovind to argue teetotalism as a Christian duty) that says:

Woe to him that giveth drink to his friend, and presenteth his gall, and maketh him drunk, that he may behold his nakedness
[Habacuc (Habakkuk) 2:15]


Ham came in and saw Noah's nakedness by surprise, but Canaan had already gone away and tipped him, after, being the first tester, having deceived his grandfather about what quantities are safe and what aren't. He was thereon condemned to be a sommelier while others drank wine. And preferrably an honest one.

3:48 So far, so good. The whole human race comes from these brothers.

Harvey Wabbit
@harveywabbit9541
and they were the ancient year divided into three seasons of four months each.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
@harveywabbit9541 Look, if you divide the year into three, four or five seasons depends on the climate, not on the calendar.

Very localised calendars may take only the local seasons into account, but that doesn't mean the seasons depend on the calendar rather than the climate.

Now, I don't know exactly why you adress me on side issues, hope it's not calculated to drag me into some kind of freemasonry ...

[my response disappeared]

gal has
@galhas537
No this is not the reality but a Jewish story you people choose to believe in for no rational reason except to use as a justification to your culture crimes. Gth

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@galhas537 I don't see any culture crime involved in believing all men descend from Shem, Ham and Japheth.

If you meant racism against black people, you are barking up the wrong tree. The Theory of Evolution has been much more involved in it.

Your bad. And I don't know what gth is supposed to mean.


5:45 There were different moments in different confessions, in America.

As a Catholic, I don't really have a stake in this, but the idea that slavery is pronounced on black people, while extant among Latino Catholic theologicans (Brazil, I think), is pretty absent from Catholic clergy, even when they are for continuing the slavery that's already there (like when Pope Gregory XVI had pronounced a ban on slave trade).

Among Baptists, there is a three way split. A majority South, leading to Southern Baptist, take Genesis 9 literally and as pronouncing slavery on the black. In the North, a majority reject this and reject a literal reading, but a minority also reject the pro-slavery implication (at least for blacks having met Christians, since Philemon supersedes Genesis 9, basically), while still being literal about what Genesis 9 says. Noah actually did get drunk.

6:22 Ethiopia = all of black Africa.

As you note, Cush is not Canaan.

As far as I'm concerned, the wider and prophetic sense of the curse was already fulfilled in OT times. Joshua who came from Shem conquered "the land of Canaan" (except the parts that are now Lebanon) and Scipio who came from Japheth conquered the Canaanite or Phoenician colony Carthage.

"The Third Punic War (149–146 BC) was the third and last of the Punic Wars fought between Carthage and Rome."


So, OT times.

10:18 Dabney was not Southern Baptist, he was Southern Presbyterian.

11:31 God is selectively doing the opposite.

He's uniting nations in the Church, starting with Jews within those nations, sometimes also metuentes, but He's not promising world wide political or social unity outside the Church.

At least not on Pentecost.

There is an argument both that slavery will exist on Doomsday and that all nations will be united on Doomsday, but that's a different beast ... literally.

And it was given unto him to make war with the saints, and to overcome them. And power was given him over every tribe, and people, and tongue, and nation
[Apocalypse (Revelation) 13:7]


Political reunion of the nations ...

And he shall make all, both little and great, rich and poor, freemen and bondmen, to have a character in their right hand, or on their foreheads
[Apocalypse (Revelation) 13:16]


Bondmen, a k a slaves, exist. This is within 3 and 1/2 years from Doomsday.

Perhaps not the argument that the fourth SB leader was looking for ... and it doesn't need slavery in Christian nations to be fulfilled, since the AC will obviously be ruling over non-Christian nations as well, and in some of them, slavery is thriving.

12:43 I'm not sure Anglos were for 400 years referring to Ham for black slaves.

I think it's a meme from Jews and Muslims, which first entered Christian circles by a Lutheran professor in Kiel, in the 1600's, and later became popular in the Netherlands (with some contamination to Catholic Belgians, who should have known better, I'm not a fan of Leopold II). And even later than that, English speakers in the Americas.

The main argument for keeping a black man as a slave after his shipping from Africa is, you bought him, and you presume the African king had a right to sell him for some crime he had committed, or if he had asked for it in the hope of allieving poverty. The main argument for keeping a black child on your plantation as a slave is, he was born into the slavery of his parents. But the normal upshot of this, and it happened in French Louisiana, and quite a lot in Brasil too, sooner or later you start liberating slaves by generosity or as asking for their prayers to get you out of Purgatory, and a slave once liberated is (at least up to the Enlightenment) treated as an equal of the majority white free population. With no segregation.

Even the Latino theologian (Brazilian, I think) who brought in curse of Ham didn't argue the curse was per se a justification of keeping anyone as a slave, but brought on the misfortune of bad education, leading to the crimes (including mutual wars of enslavement!) that then in their turn justified slavery.

13:27 As far as they are speaking of people living in different countries, they are at least partly right.

God probably doesn't want all the differences to remain, since some of the cultural uniqueness of some peoples are actual sins, like slavehunt (if that's still a thing) or like considering for instance Christians or people who use alcohol in any (even just moderate) quantity as fit for slavery. While other peoples have a uniqueness in overusing alcohol every weekend, when they drink.

13:36 Ban on interracial dating?

Ouch! I mean black and white Americans are Americans (in the sense of Estadunidenses), right? There's probably more difference between a Georgian and a Canadian, than between Georgians of different pre-Columbian main origin populations!

13:44 Tower of Babel is not bad theology, but let's not ignore that some nations now existing are composites compared to the earliest ones after Babel.

The Roman Empire mixed Germanic and Canaanean, and the US has been involved in some melting pot too ...

Harvey Wabbit
Babel is two words of bab (gate) and el (god).

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@harveywabbit9541 To Nimrod. To Peleg and Noah, it's more like a verb form or verbal nouns of balal.

Monday, November 10, 2025

Some Think I Have More in Common with This Man, I Think I have More in Common with That Lady


No, it's not about gender confusion.

I mean some think I should take homelessness like this man does:

I Asked a Homeless Man Why God Allows Suffering — His Answer Moved Me
CPR Missions | 5 Nov. 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lYKRrw6VCFM


For my part, I take "background discreditation" the way Megan Basham does:

Christian Publishers Tried to Stop This Book | Megan Basham
Eric Metaxas | 9 nov. 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PxCm6gEpIv8


Anyone who is asking me to ignore things about publishing, and just take homelessness like this man in a wheelchair, who for that reason cannot do physical work, and according to his accent wasn't trained for intellectual work the way I was, is, as far as I am concerned, my enemy. Just as pastor so and so was enemy to Megan Basham or remains so./HGL