About fgwalkers@att.net

Editor, Canon212.com

3 Thoughts on “CANON212 UPDATE: DEATH MACHINE POWERED DOWN IN FRANCIS’S EUROPE

  1. I am concerned about your stance on free speech in your post “ONE DAY’S FRANCISCHURCH DESTRUCTION”. Could you please clarify your position?

  2. These days, ever wonder about the strange timing of Bergoglio’s near-fatal health emergency? It coincides with the old Roman Ides of February, idolatrous fest of the Wolf god featuring exhibition of real wolves or ravening costumed priests called “brothers of the wolf” (Luperci). The physician St. Valentine was among those true, faithful Christians condemned, stoned and beheaded during the Roman Lupercalia.

    In Medieval Great Britain, as Latin merged with local dialects, the word “leprechaun” (lupracan) was believed to have derived from “lupercus.” Myths and legends tell of malevolent goblins who always carry a purse and have a hidden pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. “According to William Butler Yeats, the great wealth of the leprechauns comes from the ‘treasure-crocks’ which they have uncovered and appropriated. According to David Russell McAnally, the leprechaun is the son of an ‘evil spirit’ and a ‘degenerate fairy’ not wholly good nor wholly evil.”

  3. Forgot to add that when Benedict XVI first became pope, he asked the faithful to “Pray for me that I may not flee for fear of the wolves.” He believed that the Church, within and without, was under attack from secularists and modernist fifth columnists.
    Interestingly, in 2012, Benedict canonized Hildegarde of Bingen, the saintly visionary and contemporary of St. Bernard of Clairvaux, who wrote of “five beasts” as symbols of successive chapters of history. She envisioned “the ruinous grey wolf” coming last before the end times and the final glorious victory of the Kingdom of Christ.

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