Anyone here watch South Park? There's an episode where people from the year 3045 travel back in time to find work (everything in the future is sh*t).
Because all races mixed and borders disappeared, the future humans all share a uniform, ugly-yellowish-brownish appearance and speak a single puked up blended language.
Each city in the meme is already the video on the right, as we watch more and more fall each year.
“For Orthodox Christians of the 20th century there is no more important Holy Father of recent times than Blessed Paisius Velichkovsky. This is so not merely because of his holy life; not merely because, like another Saint Gregory Palamas, he defended the hesychast practice of the mental Prayer of Jesus; not only because he, through his many disciples, inspired the great monastic revival of the 19th century which flowered most notably in the holy Elders of Optina Monastery; but most of all because he redirected the attention of Orthodox Christians to the sources of Holy Orthodoxy, which are the only foundation of true Orthodox life and thought whether of the past or of the present, whether of monks or of laymen.”
Saint Seraphim Rose, Introduction to Blessed Paisius Velichkovsky: The Man Behind the Philokalia
“…We live near the end of this fearful age of demonic triumph and rejoicing, when the eerie ‘humanoids’ (another of the masks of the demons) have become visible to thousands of people and by their absurd encounters take possession of the souls of those men from whom God’s grace has departed.
The UFO phenomenon is a sign to Orthodox Christians to walk all the more cautiously and soberly on the path to salvation, knowing that we can be tempted and seduced not merely by false religions, but even by seemingly physical objects which just catch the eye….”
-Fr. Seraphim Rose, Orthodoxy and the Religion of the Future, p112
She’s from Gaza. She lost her legs.
She barely made it alive. Look at her.
From princess to a Holocaust Survivor.
This is the outcome of Israeli occupation.
BUCHAREST, ROMANIA — The Holy Synod of the Romanian Orthodox Church approved a wide range of liturgical, educational, and administrative measures during its working session on June 3, chaired by His Beatitude Patr. Daniel at the Patriarchal Palace.
Among the most notable decisions was the addition of new commemorations to the Church calendar. The Synod approved the inclusion of the Council of the Holy Military Martyrs, to be celebrated on Oct. 26, and the Fool-for-Christ St. Gabriel Urgebadze of Georgia, whose feast will be observed Nov. 2. Liturgical texts associated with both commemorations were also approved. The bishops further authorized services, akathists, and other texts honoring Athonite saints, the Mother of God’s icon from Craiova, and several Romanian women saints.