Yet another Roman Catholic curse that is still in force today

musterion

Well-known member
"Witch town" in Spain still under the voodoo hokum of Rome.

In 1511, the abbot of Veruela – with explicit permission from Pope Julius II – cast a powerful curse on the whole village and its descendants, by chanting psalm 108 of the Book of Psalms, the most powerful tool the Church possesses to pronounce a curse. Since the curse had been sanctioned by a Pope, it could only be lifted by one, but to this day, no Pope has done so. Trasmoz also remains the only Spanish community to be excommunicated by the Catholic Church.

So the Council of Trent's many anathemas aren't the only official curses still on the books.

But instead of trying to see these people saved with the Gospel of grace, the RCC cursed them instead.

Wonder why the RCC would do that.

:think:

Predicted RC response: "Oh, but that was back in medieval times, blah blah..."
 

Cruciform

New member
So the Council of Trent's many anathemas aren't the only official curses still on the books. But instead of trying to see these people saved with the Gospel of grace, the RCC cursed them instead.
Here we have just one more sectarian anti-Catholic who thinks that because he knows how to quote from Catholic sources, he actually comprehends what those sources are in fact saying---clearly a false assumption on his part. Try again. :yawn:

Wonder why the RCC would do that.
Your utter ignorance of any valid answer is noted.
 

Cruciform

New member
The Catholic Church has anathemaed Paul and Jesus Christ.
No, merely those 16th-century Protestant sectarians who tried to impose their own fallible opinions and non-authoritative ideas in place of the infallible and authoritative teachings of Christ's one historic Catholic Church a millennium-and-a-half after Christ's Resurrection. Try again.
 

Cruciform

New member
That is not true. Tyndale was hunted-down and strangled and burned at the stake for attempting to translate the Bible into English.
You're simply wrong. Tyndale was arrested and prosecuted not for translating the New Testament into English, but for illegally publishing and smuggling unauthorized Testaments that contained radically anti-Catholic doctrinal marginalia, footnotes, and commentary. THAT is why Tyndale's Testament was illegal, NOT because it happened to be printed in English.
 

musterion

Well-known member
You're simply wrong. Tyndale was arrested and prosecuted not for translating the New Testament into English, but for illegally publishing and smuggling unauthorized Testaments that contained radically anti-Catholic doctrinal marginalia, footnotes, and commentary. THAT is why Tyndale's Testament was illegal, NOT because it happened to be printed in English.

Christ gave no one the authority to persecute, much less murder, anyone for any reason, ever.

You're defending a church of Satan.
 

beameup

New member
1408 Constitutions of Oxford: "therefore we enact and ordain that no one henceforth do by his own authority translate any text of Holy Scripture into the English tongue or any other by way of book, pamphlet, or treatise"

It was illegal to translate the Bible into English. The only authorized version was the Latin.
 

SaulToPaul 2

Well-known member
Here we have just one more sectarian anti-Catholic who thinks that because he knows how to quote from Catholic sources, he actually comprehends what those sources are in fact saying---clearly a false assumption on his part. Try again. :yawn:


Your utter ignorance of any valid answer is noted.

:chuckle:

I guess we need the Magicsterium to interpret non-scriptural writings for us as well.
 
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