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Vicarius filii Dei is still making the rounds apparently.

mioque

New Member
Bob
"And thus my point EACH LETTER HAD A NUMBER and that was considered when "calculating the number of a name" "
Well no.
V=5
I=1
C=100
A=no number
R=no number
I=1
U=5
S=no number

F=no number
I=1
L=50
I=1
I=1

D=500
E=no number
I=1
 

tragic_pizza

New Member
Originally posted by Kamoroso:
The first beast rises up out of the sea. Water, in prophetic symbolism, represents peoples and nations and tongues. "Rev 17:15 15 And he saith unto me, The waters which thou sawest, where the whore sitteth, are peoples, and multitudes, and nations, and tongues." This beast arises in the midst of multitudes, and nations and tongues.

Verse two says that the beast has different body parts from the leopard, the bear, and the lion. the dragon is the one who gives the beast his power and authority. The leopard, the bear, and the lion, are the same three animals that depicted beasts, or kingdoms in the book of Daniel. We know that these three beasts represented Babylon, Medo Persia, and Greece. The next major kingdom or power in the earth was Rome. The fourth beast of Daniel 7 was Rome, in both it's pagan and papal form. This first beast of Revelation is also Rome, for it rises out of these other nations, and tongues, and peoples that we already know to be the same as those in the book of Daniel 7.

The fourth beast of Daniel 7 was also dreadful and powerful. It also had ten horns just like this beast does. Verse 21 of Daniel seven says that the fourth beast made war with the saints and prevailed, so also this first beast in Rev. 13 is said to do the same," Rev 13:7 7 And it was given unto him to make war with the saints, and to overcome them: and power was given him over all kindred's, and tongues, and nations."

Verse 20 of Daniel seven says that the fourth beast had a mouth that spoke very great things. So also the first beast of Rev. 13 has a mouth speaking great things," Rev 13:6 6 And he opened his mouth in blasphemy against God, to blaspheme his name, and his tabernacle, and them that dwell in heaven."

The fourth beast of Daniel seven also came out of the sea. This sea is a place of peoples, and nations, and tongues. It is what we now refer to as Europe. The fourth beast of Daniel was Rome, and as is made obvious by all of the similarities, the fourth beast of Daniel, and the first beast of Rev. 13 are one and the same. That is to say Rome, in her pagan and papal forms.
Wow, that's quite a logical leap. Do you need special shoes to jump so far?

First, please share your source text for this commentary. Second, explain in exactly what way that this refers to Rome in both the sense of the predominant world power of the day and as the Church.

For pete's sake, if we were to extrapolate as freely as this commentator, we could argue that the world power of note is not Rome (which fell a few centuries back, you may recall), but the good old U.S. of A., the current leading world power.

Iraneus' words carry the day, I must say. Shouldn't we be busy making sure people come to Christ, and not so busy trying to demonize one another?

Just a thought. Thanks, by the way, for being the ONLY one to even acknowledge my post.
 

mioque

New Member
Tragicpizza
"Thanks, by the way, for being the ONLY one to even acknowledge my post."
Well this Bob fellow has been drawing a lot of attention.
 

BobRyan

Well-Known Member
Bob
"And thus my point EACH LETTER HAD A NUMBER and that was considered when "calculating the number of a name" "



V=5
I=1
C=100
A=no number
R=no number
I=1
U=5
S=no number

F=no number
I=1
L=50
I=1
I=1

D=500
E=no number
I=1

And "thus" the point is proven. EACH LETTER (rather than a spatial positioning of letters) is given a number. (And "obviously" each letter can have AT MOST one number and at least - no number -- as even mioque seems to see clearly).

Nothing new there. (Or did I miss something?)

In Christ,

Bob
 

BobRyan

Well-Known Member
For pete's sake, if we were to extrapolate as freely as this commentator, we could argue that the world power of note is not Rome (which fell a few centuries back, you may recall), but the good old U.S. of A., the current leading world power.

Iraneus' words carry the day, I must say. Shouldn't we be busy making sure people come to Christ, and not so busy trying to demonize one another?
#1. EVEN the RCC admits that Papal Rome WAS the WORLD Power to follow Pagan Rome AND that Papal Rome covered more lands, held more political power and controlled more of secular life than Pagan Rome ever did.

#2. This is not a case of "Wanting to demonize" - RATHER - once you discover that you are a non-Catholic (something most non-Catholics discover rather early as it turn out) -- AND you discover that the RCC is the oldest, largest Christian church - loaded with doctrinal and guilty of massive atrocities in the dark ages -- THEN you (being somewhat Calvinist) "expect" that God would have "noticed" such a mammoth problem that endured for centuries in the dark ages.

Opening your Bible you "discover" -- "sure enough" God "picked up on that" AND He describes how it fits into world history - and the global "plan" - in the controversy between good and evil.

In Christ,

Bob
 

BobRyan

Well-Known Member
Baptists differ with Methodists differ with Catholics differ with ....

But that does not mean that they each find the other figuring so prominently in world history and the book of Revelation.

There is only one church organization visible on such a massive scale.

IN Christ,

Bob
 

mioque

New Member
Bob
"Or did I miss something?"
Numerology 101 perhaps?
In numerology each letter has a number. The moment you start to have letters without numbers it is no longer numerology.

"EVEN the RCC admits that Papal Rome WAS the WORLD Power to follow Pagan Rome AND that Papal Rome covered more lands, held more political power and controlled more of secular life than Pagan Rome ever did." :rolleyes:
Nonsense, the Byzantine empire, the Persian empire and Islam are all better candidates for the term next worldpower.
The Holy Roman empire and the Franks both claimed the title of heir to the Roman empire and both were supported in their claims by the papacy of the time. Papal Rome covered a large section of Italy at one time and it's bishops also controlled nice tracts of land across western europe, but it never came near the pagan roman empire.
The pope's political power was huge at it's height but not as huge as that of the more capable roman emperors.
The size of the pope's impact on secular life is debatable, it was significant, but a lot of the huge changes between medieval Europe and the roman empire were caused by Christianity in general not by the papacy.
 

tragic_pizza

New Member
Bob, give me a few minutes, I'm looking for that verse where Jesus says that if you find your brother in sin, you are to beat him over the head with it ceaselessly, accuse his leadership of being the Antichrist, and then not listen to anyone else on the subject. Can you show me which Gospel that's found in?
 

WPutnam

<img src =/2122.jpg>
Just a quick note to let you guys know I am watching this thread!

Also, I am not the mean looking guy you saw in my avatar (picture), but a "harmless little fuzz ball" in old age!
wave.gif


But I can still type a lot when I get the notion!
type.gif


God bless,

PAX

Bill+†+


Regina Angelorum, ora pro nobis!
 

mioque

New Member
Bill
"But I can still type a lot when I get the notion!"
You have no idea how jealous I am of you. I can barely type with 2 fingers and that makes writing books and articles a looong proces.
It feels good to know that you are still watching this thread.
 

mioque

New Member
Last night I reread a large number of my own posts across this whole board and came to the conclusion that I must seem highly peculiar to you all and probably a liar.
(I am truly in need of a graemlin that bashes something against his head right now).
When you read everything in the right order however, my life turns out to be quite boring.

Worth mentioning.
I promissed to the man who is my employer and my preacher that when on the internet I would not look at the naked 'ladies' and not reveal any concrete information about myself or my church. So the following will be purposefully vague in a number of spots. (and will not contain links to websites with naked ladies) ;)

So without further ado: The story of my life (the mini-version)
applause.gif
 

mioque

New Member
Some of my ancestors were Huguenots who emigrated to the Netherlands to flee RC persecution in France (my last name is French, it is however not the one I post under. I simply pulled that one out of a travelers guide about Normandy, apparently a family Mioque runs a restaurant in Le Havre).
I was born in the 60's and if the baptist tradition hadn't been opposed to childbaptism I would have been baptised in the same (independant fundamental...you know the drill) baptist church I still visit today.
I was bored with the services in that church all throughout the 70's
sleeping_2.gif
and was greatfull that my grades were such that I could go to university somewhere else, anywhere else.
wave.gif
 

mioque

New Member
There were only 2 questions. What was I going to study? And how was I going to sell that to mum and dad?
The grass is always greener on the other side of the fence. So the 2 things that fascinated me most, were 2 things that we did't have in my church. A suitably lurid history and lots of kitschy art. So I decided to try to get a degree in those 2 things. My parents were not pleased....
flower.gif
One is after all supposed to use one's higher education to get vocational skills and not waste it on impressive but ultimately 'useless' degrees.
flower.gif

So naturally I did the opposite of what my parents wanted and eventually got myself 2 'useless' doctorates.
To be honest, the only reason I am not unemployed is that our church needed a new caretaker shortly after I graduated and I got the (minimum wage) post mostly to keep me out of trouble.
I may act cynical about my provincial little church at times, but these folks have proven to care strongly about me and I'm very fond of them.
So now I'm the 'verger'/librarian of my church. A job that leaves me with plenty of spare time to write the ocasional article.
 

mioque

New Member
In Dutch university cities there is always a shortage of suitable living space for students and in the early 80's many Dutch students simply claimed empty buildings for habitation (krakers, I think squatters is the English word for them).
I was living in a nice boarding house, that had a suitably Christian hospita (arranged for by one of the church elders). But I made a bunch of friends who were squatters (and communists and vegetarians and chainsmokers and political activists etc). They had regular streetbrawls with the local law enforcement and I happily participated :rolleyes:
I learned 3 important lessons. Being hit with a club by a policeman hurts :( I can dirty any target I want within 40 metres with a slingshot and a tomato :D Leftwing political radicals generally make not good friends
tear.gif
 

mioque

New Member
To finish my story (YES FINALLY).
Students are always going weird places, because they can find a job there, or because they are interning overthere, or because they are researching that peculiar spot overhere.
In the 7 years of my study I have done all those things in a number of Roman Catholic institutions. My specialty in both fields of history I studied was Roman Catholicism, so it seemed the natural thing to do.

The KDC (Katholiek Documentatie Centrum= Catholic Documentation Centre). It's an archive with as purpose to preserve, collect and make accessible of documentation on catholic life in the Netherlands from the beginning of the nineteenth century up to the present day.
http://www.kdc.kun.nl/geschindex.html
and
The museum of religious art in Uden.
http://www.museumvoorreligieuzekunst.nl/
are 2 of the more glamorous locations were I dwelled.
But I also spend some time in a bishop's palace and as a cleaner in a convent/retirement home for old monks.
That's the place I met Hans Kolvenbach who is knicknamed the 'black pope', he is the head of the Jesuit order and supposedly the 2nd most powerful man in the RC church.
I helped him arrange the transfer of the contents of 2 convents that had closed to the proper destinations.
Including the earlier mentioned KDC. This was not as easy as it sounds, figuring out what is usefull for the KDC is so counter intuïtive that the standard advice usually was: "put everything you want to throw away in one box, put everything you want to give to the KDC in another box afterwards switch the boxes!".
Hans was so happy with my help that he invited me over for a behind the scenes tour of the Vatican. And to tie this all in with the thread, on that trip did I get to see 11 papal tiara's and none of those had Vicarius Filii Dei on them.
wave.gif
 

thessalonian

New Member
Originally posted by MikeS:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />Originally posted by tragic_pizza:
and?
or? xor? not? neg? bne? jsr? adc?

(any other programmers hanging out here?)


ret
</font>[/QUOTE]Assembly lanuage hey.

I prefer HOL though have done my share of 8080, z8000 and I8051.

if (Bob Ryan)
While (Bob_POST) || (DHK_POST)
{
Mood = ZZZZzzzzzZZ
Ignore;
return WASTEOFTIME;
}
else
{
Mood = 1 Pet 3:15;
return TRUTH;
}

How's that?
 

BobRyan

Well-Known Member
Originally posted by tragic_pizza:
Bob, give me a few minutes, I'm looking for that verse where Jesus says that if you find your brother in sin, you are to beat him over the head with it ceaselessly, accuse his leadership of being the Antichrist, and then not listen to anyone else on the subject. Can you show me which Gospel that's found in?
Classic misdirection.

The point is not to find your friendly neighborhood catholic church member and accuse him of torturing and exterminating all the RCC victims of the dark ages.

"Rather" the point is to "show" that God's Word predicted the Historic events that have been recorded AND that by admitting to the real history of the dark ages (rather than constantly trying to revise it) "TODAY's" Catholic can be freed from the darkness of blind loyalty and brought into the light of day. SEEING that the Bible predicted that such an apostacy would occur in hisotry.

Some deny those acts of extermination however - but most informed Catholics do not.

In Christ,

Bob
 
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