Message from @Deleted User
Discord ID: 427544833461190668
A side benefit of the Latin Mass is that they're often filled with young people and families, especially if it's a parish that offers the TLM exclusively
@here We gonna do a rosary soon fellas
Fellas
Holy ghost
or Holy Spirit
whats the real redpill
Holy Ghost for sure
>not being Lutheran
<:powerthink:402373351961788417>
Are Lutheran churches serious?
No
What is the significance of Christ riding on a donkey? Is this a signifier of humility?
Its a mode of transportation
Stop over analyzing everything
can I get a response from someone that won't be burning in Hell?
lol
@Deleted User Not being a Catholic <:powerthink:402373351961788417>
>everyone who isn't Catholic will burn in hell
Typical (((Roman)))
Nice strawman buddy. I never said that 😉
Typical (((lutheran)))
tfw everything is (((jewish)))
got my palms!
nice!
^
lovely mass
remember this from my child hood
man ill remeber this as long as i live
watching it with the fAMILY now so glad its on youtube
If anyone wants to join me and Torcher in tonights rosary let me know
group prayers are POWERFUL
Lutherans (or any other culturally & theologically rich Protestant denominations that aren't pozzed), Catholics, and Orthodox Christians-->convince me why I ought to try your denomination
Actually Catholics don't have to convince me because I'm already locked on SSPX/FSSP (though I could use some pointers to getting adjusted to traditional Latin mass), and Orthodox Christians only need to give me pointers too
Get a good 1962 Missal, Angelus Press has a fantastic one if you can afford it
There was a brief question on one of the last America Firsts where Nick mentioned he believed in Catholicism and not Orthodoxy because of the authority of St. Peter. St. Peter presided over Antioch as well as Rome, I don't understand the argument.
Eastern schismatics don't believe in the supreme authority of the See of Rome, which presides over the whole world
Why isn't it the See of Antioch, why Rome
Peter was in Rome when he died and his successors stayed in Rome. It's easy to understand why he was in Rome to spread Christianity considering its political and geographic significance
Sure. But why does the See of Rome have authority over Antioch, which also had St. Peter's disciples
It seems clear to me that Orthodoxy and the patriarchs have just as much claim to authority as the See