Sunday, July 21, 2013

World Jailbait Day



Someone in the blogosphere has suggested that "World Youth Day" should be renamed "World Jailbait Day." Not a bad idea considering that Mr. Bergoglio and his clerical henchmen do nothing to stop clerical child abuse once and for all, and the Modernist Vatican is controlled by a so-called "gay mafia." Every couple of years the Vatican II sect conducts these "World Youth Days" (WYD) as a "rah-rah" exhibition to make the children trust the perverts whom they should fear. Not only are they a danger to a young person's body, but---more importantly--they are a danger to the soul.

"Catechesis" will be taught most probably exclusively using Youcat the "Youth Catechism" that is heretical to the core. The "instruction" given at the beginning of Youcat says the following:

"Instructions for Use

 The Youth Catechism, which is written in Language suitable for young people, deals with the entire Catholic faith as it was presented in the Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC of 1997), without aiming, however at the completeness provided in that volume. The work is structured in Question-and-Answer format, and numbers after each answer refer the reader to the more extensive and in-depth treatments of the CCC. A commentary following the answer is meant to give the young person additional help in understanding the questions that are discussed and their significance in his life. Furthermore, the Youth Catechism offers in the margin a continuous series of supplementary elements, such as pictures, summary definitions, citations from Sacred Scripture, quotations from saints, and reliable teachers of the faith but also from non-religious authors. At the conclusion of the book, there is an index of subjects and persons to facilitate finding specific topics."

Forgetting the fact it's "abridged heresy" taking after the "Catechism of the (Modernist) Catholic Church," it  claims to use (1) citations from Sacred Scripture, (2)quotations from saints, (3) quotations from reliable teachers of the faith, and (4) quotations from non-religious authors.
Query: Into which of the above referenced categories does heretic Martin Luther belong? He's quoted no less than three times (See Youcat pgs. 93, 200, 201). To say the quotations are inane would be to understate the situation. On page 201, which concerns keeping holy the Sabbath, Luther is quoted
   "That is the difference between animals and man: the latter has a Sunday outfit, too." Profound.

Then, on page 139 the topics covered are priests and the forgiveness of sin. Next to that text there are quotes in the sidebar which supplement the text. One of them is a quote by the British actor Peter Sellers which reads, "The closest thing to a father confessor is probably a bartender." (In the Vatican II sect, I would've thought a convicted pederast would be closer, but it's now tautological anyway.)

 Youcat also contains quotes from:
  • Roger Schutz, Protestant clergyman
  • Atheist philosopher Ludwig Fuerbach
  • Atheist philosopher Friederich Nietzche
  • Atheist philosopher Erich Fromm
  • Protestant theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer
  • Protestant existentialist philosopher Soren Kierkegaard
These are "reliable teachers of the faith"? Some are "non-religious authors" but none are quoted with the intent to condemn---they are quoted with approval. One could point out that even a broken clock is right twice each day, and a non-Catholic may say something sage. Perhaps, but if Jeffery Dahmer said something sagacious, I still don't think it belongs in a catechism.

 Its sexual teaching is just as disturbing. On page 222 we read, "The Church does not demonize masturbation, but she warns against trivializing it. In fact many young people and adults are in danger of becoming isolated in their consumption of lewd pictures, films, and Internet services instead of finding love in a personal relationship. Loneliness can lead to a blind alley in which masturbation becomes an addiction. Living by the motto ‘“For sex I do not need anyone; I will have it myself, however and whenever I need it” makes nobody happy." (Emphasis mine).

The Church (sic) does not "demonize" masturbation? St. Thomas Aquinas lists it as a sin against nature. But Youcat tells us it's wrong because of loneliness and it makes nobody happy. So the morality of an act is dependent on whether or not someone is made happy? When the youth are so brainwashed with heresy in Faith and morals, they will lose the former (if they ever had it!) and will give up the latter---perhaps to a predatory cleric of the Vatican II sect roaming about World Youth Day, seeking whom they may deflower. God save our youth.

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