Mike Curtiss (23 Aug
2013)
"Pope Resigned Papacy
After An Encounter With a Mystical Being"
Dear Doves,
As a follow on to the
excellent post by PattiC about the Papacy, it's opposition to
God
and the antichrist nature of all Pope's in the RCC, I find the
article below absolutely
fascinating material. Consider months of visions, spirits and
mysticism as Benedict's
forced from power.
Consider, these are the highest members of
the clergy who are openly admitting to
communication with powers, principalities and spiritual beings.
When Francis first
became Pope, he descended into the catacombs and gave communion
with the dead.
At some point did Benedict ascertain the
identity of the spirit he was consorting with
during this mystical encounter? How did he determine this
apparition was God and not
a infamous 'angel of light' masquerading as God. I would be
willing to bet that this was
not the first time Benedict and this creature have met. This
part of the tale is very
ambiguous and impossible to adequately explain given there's no
documentation, or
written notes of these seances.
Scripture reminds us that the first Beast will
raise up and glorify the last. How does this
match up with what we know from God's Word? Read this
material for yourselves, it's
absolutely fascinating.
Agape,
Michael Curtiss
Ex-pope Benedict says God told him to resign during 'mystical
experience'
Pope Francis's predecessor breaks silence to contradict
explanation he gave to cardinals when he stepped down
Former pope Benedict greets Pope Francis at the Vatican
Benedict greets Pope Francis in May as the former pope returned
to the Vatican, where he is living in seclusion. Photograph:
Osservatore Romano/Reuters
The former pope Benedict has claimed that his resignation in
February was prompted by God, who told him to do it during a
"mystical experience".
Breaking his silence for the first time since he became the
first pope to step down in 600 years, the 86-year-old reportedly
said: "God told me to" when asked what had pushed him to retire
to a secluded residence in the Vatican gardens.
Benedict denied he had been visited by an apparition or had
heard God's voice, but said he had undergone a "mystical
experience" during which God had inspired in him an "absolute
desire" to dedicate his life to prayer rather than push on as
pope.
The German ex-pontiff's comments, which are said to have been
made a few weeks ago, were reported by the Catholic news agency
Zenit, which did not name the person Benedict had spoken to.
A senior Vatican source said the report was reliable. "The
report seems credible. It accurately explains the spiritual
process that brought Benedict to resign," he said.
Benedict said his mystical experience had lasted months,
building his desire to create a direct and exclusive
relationship with God. Now, after witnessing the "charisma" of
his successor, Pope Francis, Benedict said he understood to a
greater extent how his stepping aside was the "will of God".
Benedict's reported remarks contrast with the explanation he
gave to cardinals when he announced his resignation on 11
February. "My strengths, due to an advanced age, are no longer
suited to an adequate exercise of the Petrine ministry," he said
then.
At the time, a German journalist who had recently met Benedict
reported he was going deaf, appeared to be blind in one eye, and
was emaciated and "exhausted-looking".
Speculation also grew that he was depressed after his trusted
butler, Paolo Gabriele, was caught leaking his personal
correspondence. Italian press reports have recently claimed he
was frustrated by a network of influence built up at the Vatican
by a pro-gay lobby of prelates.
Zenit reported that Benedict has stuck to his plan to live a
life of secluded prayer, receiving very few visitors at his
house in the Vatican's gardens, which enjoys views across Rome
to the Apennine mountains beyond.
"During these meetings, the ex-pontiff does not comment, does
not reveal secrets, does not make statements that could be
understood as 'the words of the other pope', but is as reserved
as he has always been," wrote Zenit.
After concerns were raised that Benedict would exert undue
influence at the Vatican as his successor struggled to find his
feet, Francis's popular approach and his shakeup of Vatican
protocols have relegated Benedict to the sidelines.
Francis has even joked about the situation, saying in July: "The
last time there were two or three popes, they didn't talk among
themselves and they fought over who was the true pope!"
Having Benedict living in the Vatican, he added, "is like having
a grandfather – a wise grandfather – living at home".
Francis's first encyclical, issued in July, was started by
Benedict while he was in office and finished by his successor.
Benedict took his first day trip out of the Vatican on 18
August, walking in the gardens at the papal summer residence at
Castel Gandolfo, outside Rome, where he stayed after his
retirement while his new house was being refurbished. Benedict
did not risk running into Francis, who has preferred to stay at
his desk at the Vatican during the summer.