A blueprint for the DESTRUCTION of the Catholic Church
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… the term “Catholic Church” does not appear even once
… At no point in the document does Leo make reference to man’s true destination
… Nor does the document in any way allude to the possibility of eternal separation from God in Hell
… Leo identifies “dialogue” as an “integral part of the Church’s vocation.”
… However, the Church was not established by Jesus Christ to dialogue with the world but to judge it
… The Catholic Church teaches with authority truths that have been revealed by God.
These are not matters for dialogue,
but doctrines that must be obediently received by mankind, and that are necessary for our salvation
… Jerusalem is here identified with “fraternal coexistence” rather than the Church
… this new Jerusalem “means accepting the limits and weakness of humanity without considering them an error to be corrected.”
… Conversion, therefore, will not be required
… all “faith communities” have “their own section of the wall.”
… “the “rejected stones” — the poor, the sick, the migrants and the least among us — will become the cornerstone
and a solid, welcoming common home will emerge on the earth.”
… Leo’s church is one which carries out “her particular vocation of listening, dialogue and service
… This church “stands alongside the world without overpowering it”
… its doctrine is not “a handbook of principles and norms to be applied,
but a process of shared discernment.”
… Leo XIV gives it a new name: “a synodal Church, a Church that ‘walks together,’”
… Leo finds “an almost prophetic significance” in Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, Pablo Picasso’s painting Guernica and Steven Spielberg’s film Schindler’s List
… Leo praises humanity for being “capable of creating institutions that protect our shared life,”
… are not Catholic institutions but rather the Red Cross and the United Nations
… The document mentions the word “sin” only three times
… There is no reference to sin with relation to the offense caused to God or to its eternal consequences
… Among the individuals presented as examples for us are Nelson Mandela, Benazir Bhutto, and Martin Luther King Jr.













