Forwarded from ☪️🦮✡️The Eternal Sand N1gger
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L O L
I cannot stop laughing
I cannot stop laughing
Forwarded from 𝕱𝖗𝖆𝖚𝖊𝖓𝖜𝖊𝖗𝖐 ᛉ
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"If the goal of National Socialist men's communities is to educate men to be soldiers and knights, we want to try to educate women with motherly hearts. Both belong together and need each other. For the knight and the mother have had one thing in common at all times in history, namely the protection of everything that is in need of protection.
It has always been the knight's task to cover the unprotected with his shield. The woman, however, follows her law of life..."
— Gertrud Scholtz-Klink's speech to the National Socialist Women's League (NSF), 1939
It has always been the knight's task to cover the unprotected with his shield. The woman, however, follows her law of life..."
— Gertrud Scholtz-Klink's speech to the National Socialist Women's League (NSF), 1939
Forwarded from ☪️🦮✡️The Eternal Sand N1gger
Sand Niggers got owned LMAO https://twitter.com/consummatumest0/status/1491528173137412101?s=21
Twitter
Petra🇻🇦🐑(not around much)
this week i learned that the painting of the Virgin and Child from the part of the ceiling that is the highest of Hagia Sophia is so high that the muslims failed to cover it multiple times...... Our Lord and Our Lady will never be erased from Hagia Sophia.
Forwarded from SERVIAM- I Will Serve
Some notes I have been taking on Prometheus; The Religion of Man by Fr. Alvaro Calderon
Girolamo Zanchi on the question of whether God is the author/cause of sin, a claim commonly yet falsely attributed to the Reformed and Thomistic traditions regarding predestination:
“God, as the primary and efficient cause of all things, is not only the Author of those actions done by His elect as actions, but also as they are good actions, whereas, on the other hand, though He may be said to be the Author of all the actions done by the wicked, yet He is not the Author of them in a moral and compound sense as they are sinful; but physically, simply and sensu diviso [1] as they are mere actions, abstractedly from all consideration of the goodness or badness of them.
Although there is no action whatever which is not in some sense either good or bad, yet we can easily conceive of an action, purely as such, without adverting to the quality of it, so that the distinction between an action itself and its denomination of good or evil is very obvious and natural.
In and by the elect, therefore, God not only produces works and actions through His almighty power, but likewise, through the salutary influences of His Spirit, first makes their persons good, and then their actions so too; but, in and by the reprobate, He produces actions by His power alone, which actions, as neither issuing from faith nor being wrought with a view to the Divine glory, nor done in the manner prescribed by the Divine Word, are, on these accounts, properly denominated evil. Hence we see that God does not, immediately and per se, infuse iniquity into the wicked;...”
“Every work performed, whether good or evil, is done in strength and by the power derived immediately from God Himself, “in whom all men live, move, and have their being” (Acts 17:28). As, at first, without Him was not anything made which was made, so, now, without Him is not anything done which is done. We have no power or faculty, whether corporal or intellectual, but what we received from God, subsists by Him, and is exercised in subserviency to His will and appointment. It is He who created, preserves, actuates and directs all things. But it by no means follows, from these premises, that God is therefore the cause of sin, for sin is nothing but άνομία, illegality, want of conformity to the Divine law (1 John 3:4), a mere privation of rectitude; consequently, being itself a thing purely negative, it can have no positive or efficient cause, but only a negative and deficient one, as several learned men have observed....
Every action, as such, is undoubtedly good, it being an actual exertion of those operative powers given us by God for that very end; God therefore may be the Author of all actions (as He undoubtedly is), and yet not be the Author of evil. An action is constituted evil three ways—by proceeding from a wrong principle, by being directed to a wrong end, and by being done in a wrong manner. Now, though God, as we have said, is the efficient cause of our actions as actions, yet, if these actions commence sinful, that sinfulness arises from ourselves. Suppose a boy, who knows not how to write, has his hand guided by his master and nevertheless makes false letters, quite unlike the copy set him, though his preceptor, who guides his hand, is the cause of his writing at all, yet his own ignorance and unskillfulness are the cause of his writing so badly. Just so, God is the supreme Author of our action, abstractedly taken, but our own vitiosity is the cause of our acting amiss.”
“God, as the primary and efficient cause of all things, is not only the Author of those actions done by His elect as actions, but also as they are good actions, whereas, on the other hand, though He may be said to be the Author of all the actions done by the wicked, yet He is not the Author of them in a moral and compound sense as they are sinful; but physically, simply and sensu diviso [1] as they are mere actions, abstractedly from all consideration of the goodness or badness of them.
Although there is no action whatever which is not in some sense either good or bad, yet we can easily conceive of an action, purely as such, without adverting to the quality of it, so that the distinction between an action itself and its denomination of good or evil is very obvious and natural.
In and by the elect, therefore, God not only produces works and actions through His almighty power, but likewise, through the salutary influences of His Spirit, first makes their persons good, and then their actions so too; but, in and by the reprobate, He produces actions by His power alone, which actions, as neither issuing from faith nor being wrought with a view to the Divine glory, nor done in the manner prescribed by the Divine Word, are, on these accounts, properly denominated evil. Hence we see that God does not, immediately and per se, infuse iniquity into the wicked;...”
“Every work performed, whether good or evil, is done in strength and by the power derived immediately from God Himself, “in whom all men live, move, and have their being” (Acts 17:28). As, at first, without Him was not anything made which was made, so, now, without Him is not anything done which is done. We have no power or faculty, whether corporal or intellectual, but what we received from God, subsists by Him, and is exercised in subserviency to His will and appointment. It is He who created, preserves, actuates and directs all things. But it by no means follows, from these premises, that God is therefore the cause of sin, for sin is nothing but άνομία, illegality, want of conformity to the Divine law (1 John 3:4), a mere privation of rectitude; consequently, being itself a thing purely negative, it can have no positive or efficient cause, but only a negative and deficient one, as several learned men have observed....
Every action, as such, is undoubtedly good, it being an actual exertion of those operative powers given us by God for that very end; God therefore may be the Author of all actions (as He undoubtedly is), and yet not be the Author of evil. An action is constituted evil three ways—by proceeding from a wrong principle, by being directed to a wrong end, and by being done in a wrong manner. Now, though God, as we have said, is the efficient cause of our actions as actions, yet, if these actions commence sinful, that sinfulness arises from ourselves. Suppose a boy, who knows not how to write, has his hand guided by his master and nevertheless makes false letters, quite unlike the copy set him, though his preceptor, who guides his hand, is the cause of his writing at all, yet his own ignorance and unskillfulness are the cause of his writing so badly. Just so, God is the supreme Author of our action, abstractedly taken, but our own vitiosity is the cause of our acting amiss.”
Forwarded from Soldiers of the Precious Wounds of Jesus
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Teaching Leo how to drive on gas and practice transitions
Forwarded from Soldiers of the Precious Wounds of Jesus
How can we say that Adolf was a humble man when he commanded complete obedience? When he repeatedly affirmed his right to rule and proclaimed that he himself was the movement how can we say that he had humility?
Because what he was saying was nothing less than the truth. Any act of greatness is the vision and will of a great man, no matter how many people support it, it is the vision of the genius whom God has elected for some great purpose.
Why did he read voraciously? Because he was participating in the aristocracy of geniuses and great minds of the ages. It was not leisure but counsel and great minds cannot be counseled by anything but other great minds. This is why it’s so important to read and to listen to those who came before, those men whose valor and intellect has been proven correct by the passage of time.
I do not put any stake into any man, no matter how articulate or bold, who does not pay his respect to the aristocracy of the past to the great men of the ages and what they have to teach.
Because what he was saying was nothing less than the truth. Any act of greatness is the vision and will of a great man, no matter how many people support it, it is the vision of the genius whom God has elected for some great purpose.
Why did he read voraciously? Because he was participating in the aristocracy of geniuses and great minds of the ages. It was not leisure but counsel and great minds cannot be counseled by anything but other great minds. This is why it’s so important to read and to listen to those who came before, those men whose valor and intellect has been proven correct by the passage of time.
I do not put any stake into any man, no matter how articulate or bold, who does not pay his respect to the aristocracy of the past to the great men of the ages and what they have to teach.