@Yk_Rojas@IDreamyDoll There's a difference in getting a tattoo /piercing and having a brain so dissociated with your body you try to stamp out any semblance to natural appearance . It's self hate and deeply disturbing.
@forbiddenmerch Judaism died in 70 AD just as Daniel the prophet said it would . Daniel's 70 weeks were completed. All of church history taught this as a proof of our gospels until a JESUIT named Ribara inserted a gap pushing that last week far into the future.
Nothing to see here folks. It’s just Israeli Zionists attacking Christians in the Holy Land and burning their homes. But it’s okay cause they’re God’s chosen and you know — prophecy. So keep scrolling… Keep scrolling….
“Yes, Diversity Is About Getting Rid Of White People (And That's A Good Thing)” - By Emily Goldstein✡️
Rabbi claims world peace can only be achieved once whites are no longer a majority in any country
"Veremos pronto la Gran Israel, desde el Rio Nilo hasta el Rio Éufrates todo estará en nuestras manos. Volveremos al Sinaí (Egipto), a la orilla de Jordania, alcanzaremos Siria... Todo este territorio es nuestro, tenemos a Ben Gvir, que lo llevará a cabo".
Yisrael Ariel, rabino sionista, reivindica el proyecto imperialista bíblico de la "Gran Israel" que invade territorios de hasta 6 países y asegura que uno de sus discípulos, el actual ministro de seguridad Itamar Ben Gvir, hará realidad sus ideas.
@4biddnKnowledge You forgot to mention the watchers fell and taught men war, women to abort their babies, raped the women and created hybrid beings that could not be redeemed and were cannibals.
@DanielLMcAdams Hollywood producers don't just produce videos favorable of Israel . They create hoaxed events that air as real and move the people to accept new legislation.
The great schism . You should read about that.
The Great Schism (1054) was the culmination of long‑standing theological, liturgical, cultural, and political differences between the Western (Latin) and Eastern (Greek) Christian churches. In 1054 the mutual excommunications between the papal legate Humbert and Patriarch Michael I Cerularius symbolized a formal break: the Byzantine Church rejected papal claims to universal jurisdiction and certain Latin practices (e.g., filioque in the Creed, unleavened bread in the Eucharist, clerical customs), while Rome objected to what it saw as Eastern challenges to papal authority. Over time both sides hardened their positions, and the schism became institutionalized — the Eastern Orthodox churches did not accept the pope’s universal supremacy, and the Roman Church viewed the East as outside its jurisdiction.
Key points:
•Not a single momentary event but a longprocess of estrangement culminating in1054.
•Central issue: authority — Rome’s claimof papal primacy vs. the East’sconciliar/territorial model and theautocephaly of Eastern patriarchates.
•Doctrinal/liturgical disputes (filioque,Eucharistic practice), language andcultural divides, and political rivalry(Byzantine–Latin relations) all mattered.
•Reconciliation attempts occurred (e.g.,Council of Florence, 1438–39) but failedto achieve lasting unity for mostchurches.
•Result: two distinct communions —Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox —each with different ecclesiology andmany divergent practices.