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Pope Francis Has Died
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Pope Francis died on Easter Monday, April 21, 2025, at the age of 88 at his residence in the Vatican's Casa Santa Marta. <a href="https://t.co/jUIkbplVi2">pic.twitter.com/jUIkbplVi2</a></p>— Vatican News (@VaticanNews) <a href="https://twitter.com/VaticanNews/status/1914226689065865254?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 21, 2025</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
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I’m sure this thread will last in the lounge.
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He looked in very rough shape last i saw.
RIP |
I'm afraid that's what happens to the elderly when they spend all day eating chocolate. I can't understand why the church insists on celebrating Easter every year. What is so theologically significant about a bunny handing out choccy eggs to kids? Does this not send out a terrible message to our youth that gluttony = good?
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This is why I don’t go to confession.
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This Pope lived near you?
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RIP.
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I didn't think he was good at the job, but far from the worst. Let's hope the next one is better.
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Holy smoke!
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Rip….
This is why I don’t covert to Catholicism |
If this affects you... I'm sorry for your loss.
However, I just do not understand the importance of his position. |
I don't know anything about being Catholic, but the Pope passing away on the Easter of Jubilee seems kind of crazy.
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When he pulled the Jesus piece out, bitches like peace out….
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PAPAL CONCLAVE SEASON DURING DRAFT SEASON?!?!?!?!
Oh man, this is just way too much stimulation... |
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So yeah, if the Catholics believe that the Pope is essentially a living Bible of sorts, that's a pretty big deal. That said, I'm not sure why the Pope should carry any influence over the Protestant religions at all. They exist largely BECAUSE the Protestants didn't believe in the plenary authority of the Papacy. If you don't believe in papal supremacy (and the Pope very obviously does) then why would you consider him a leader of your Church? |
Francis?
I never knew him, the last I recall a Pope was John or Paul, Something like this. I'm not Catholic, can't ya tell? :hmmm: |
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Time to go back and review the Eurotrip movie. I don't know if the process will be the same since Michelle Trachtenberg died, though.
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He doesn't. This is only how protestants are viewed by non-protestants. |
I'm currently reading a book about the history of England from the Roman occupation to the present. I'm up to the early 1600s now.
A lot of English history through that time is linked to the island's relationship with Catholicism. The first hiccup came when an English philosopher in Roman times came up with the novel concept that people could impact their own afterlife and weren't necessarily ruled by church (i.e., Catholic rules). So England took a different path early on as this took hold. The next big hiccup was in the 1200s (I think). There were essentially two governments, a secular one in England and a religious one based out of Rome. There were two justice systems, one for priests (and other religious folks like monks) and one for everybody else. The priests were running wild on criminal stuff because the church courts wouldn't punish them, so that led to a lot of conflict. Around that time, the pope decided that kings should report to the pope, and was trying to get the kings around Europe to acquiesce. One English king did due to financial problems, but then England backed out of that deal. Then we made it forward to Henry VIII in the 1500s, and we know how that turned out. But apparently it wasn't just a whim of Henry to break away, but rather the result of 1,000 years of popes trying to make England a vassal state when the English people didn't agree with some of the basic tenets of Catholicism. Plus, the church was appointing Italian (and maybe French) bishops into English operations, and they were notorious for doing nothing religious and just collecting taxes from the locals, which caused resentment. Interestingly, this author also mentions that Ireland is predominantly Catholic not because of embracing Catholic beliefs early on, but because they needed an ally against English expansion and the Catholic church had the power to be that ally. The church never really helped them, but the Catholic tradition got entrenched. There's probably some stuff here that I'm misunderstanding or overly simplifying, but it's interesting to read how powerful the Catholic church was back in the day, and how a lot of early popes used that power for secular reasons. |
Is the Vatican still tied up with the Mafia like in the Godfather movies?
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Let's wait till Wednesday and see what happens!
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Died before his consciousness could be encapsulated within AI.
.... or was it? |
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RIP cool pope.
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As long as the Pope Smoke isn’t rainbow all should be good :thumb:
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Unfortunately he had to, Skeleta comes out Friday. Just like Tobias released 'Rats' directly before the pandemic. He's a se'er.
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RIP Pope Francis. As an ardent practicing Catholic, I must say I admired a lot about him, but I was also puzzled and frustrated by him as well. On the whole, a good and holy man who was devoted to the Church and to all the people of the world, regardless of religion etc.
And I won't be visiting the DC thread on this, as I'm sure it will piss me off... God Speed Papa Francis. |
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