Migrant Idolatry from the Pope By Peter West

“You shall have no other gods before me.” That is the first of the Ten commandments, and a mighty important one at that. Yet the Pope continues to compare today’s migrants, illegals, invading Europe with their designer shoes and mobile phones, as sharing the same conditions that our Lord Jesus Christ shared. That is simply ridiculous, but because he is courting favour with the globalists, the mainstream media, and even weak Catholics, do not call him out. And, here is some info on the mobile phones the illegals have:

https://www.wired.co.uk/article/europe-immigration-refugees-smartphone-metadata-deportations

https://www.breitbart.com/faith/2022/12/08/pope-francis-todays-immigrants-share-same-condition-as-jesus-christ/

“Pope Francis has praised the bishop of Brownsville Texas for his diocese’s work with immigrants, comparing the latter to Jesus Christ himself.

Brownsville Bishop Daniel E. Flores revealed on Twitter this week that he had received a personal letter from Pope Francis himself, in which the pontiff thanked the bishop and the people of Brownsville for their care of those who “find themselves far from home.”

“I have no doubt,” the pope said in his hand-signed missive, “that the current situation should drive us in the promotion and integration of those who share the same condition in which our Lord found himself.”

The pope does not specify whether this “condition” in which Jesus found himself refers to his birth in a stable in Bethlehem, the flight into Egypt when King Herod sought to kill him as a child, or to his presence on earth, where “his own did not receive him.”

In fact, Francis has often compared the plight of migrants to Jesus Christ. In 2019, for instance, the pope said that the strangers who knock on our door are “Jesus himself” in his message for the World Day of Migrants and Refugees.

“Jesus knows well the pain of not being welcomed,” the pope said in a 2018 tweet for International Migrants’ Day. “May our hearts not be closed as were the houses in Bethlehem.”

During the flight into Egypt, “the child Jesus experienced with his parents the tragic fate of the displaced and refugees,” Francis said in 2020, “which is marked by fear, uncertainty and unease.”

The pope has also said that like Jesus, migrants and refugees are often “forced to flee.”

 

 

 

 

 

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Thursday, 02 May 2024

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