WITCHES SWARM vs. 100,000 Hail Marys

Discussion in 'Mother of God' started by Muzhik, Jul 10, 2019.

  1. Muzhik

    Muzhik Powers

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    This is a copy of an email I recv'd from "America Needs Fatima". (https://www.americaneedsfatima.org/forms/E19625.html)

    Witches and Warlocks Will Soon Convene In New Orleans
    Thus Infesting America With Demonic Influence
    Won’t You Join Me In Making Reparation?
    (And share with as many as possible.)


    "Everyone therefore that shall confess me before men, I will also confess him before my Father who is in heaven." (Matthew 10:32)

    URGENT: on August 9 – 11, the Bourbon Orleans Hotel is planning to host HexFest: A Weekend Of Witchery.

    O Virgin Mother, Help Us!

    Here’s their plan, and make no mistake… this is part of a full-blown, ongoing, nationwide assault on the remnants of Christian Civilization in our dear American society.

    • HexFest is a gathering of "Witches, root workers, Voodoo priests and other magical teachers from within New Orleans and around the world…"
    • For the witches, its opening ritual on the riverboat Creole Queen will "align us to the energies of the work to come."
    • It "will feature an invocation of the spirits of New Orleans while the Dragon Ritual Drummers invoke the spirits with powerful percussion!"
    • "It is to honor the Voodoo Queen Marie Laveau."

    Last year, we organized an on-site rosary rally of reparation for this evil event. But prior commitments and activities this year make doing an on-site protest very unlikely. So I’m asking thousands of our email friends to make prayerful reparation at home. Prayer is so POWERFUL!

    So May I Count On You To Console Our Lady
    For This Weekend Of Witchery
    By Making A Powerful

    Act of Reparation


    It might not seem like much on our part, but when The Blessed Virgin Mary and St. Michael the Archangel present our pledges to The Blessed Trinity … well, nothing is impossible for God, Whose Spirit will be gladdened by our little effort of love for Him.

    So, if every one of us reading this email will pledge to devoutly pray this Act of Reparation To The Blessed Virgin, the Litany of The Blessed Virgin Mary, and the Short Exorcism Prayer to St. Michael, not only will we be able to "send" to God close to 100,000 devoutly said prayers of reparation…

    …I’ll then send a list of our thousands of pledges to Mr. Mark Wilson, manager of the host venue Bourbon Orleans Hotel, asking him not to host HexFest. And our acts of reparation will be a powerful and real deterrent to the evil spirits sure to be summoned at ‘HexFest.’

    And I’ll also send them to the two organizers and hosts, Brian Cain and Christian Day. Cain "is a teacher, psychic, medium and a New Orleans Warlock." "He is a devotee of several forms of British Traditional Witchcraft and is a High Priest of the Alexandrian Tradition." Day is "a modern-day Warlock" and he is a "practitioner of the ancient arts of Witchcraft."


    FURTHER INSULT OFFERED TO GOD
    The Hex Fest is being hosted at the Bourbon Orleans Hotel. Built in 1817 as the Orleans Ballroom, in 1881 the Sisters of the Holy Family, founded by Venerable Henriette Delille and two friends, and "the oldest female-led African-American Catholic order of nuns in the United States", purchased the property and for the next 83 years ran it as an orphanage, medical ward, school, and convent by, of, and especially for African-Americans.

    Several of the rooms still bear the names of saints. For example:
    • Saint Mary Salon
    • Saint Joseph Salon
    • Saint Anne Cottage

    So May I Count On You To Console Our Lady
    For This Weekend Of Witchery
    By Making A Powerful

    Act of Reparation


    A Sovereign Contempt For The Demon
    The Saints and spiritual authors also encourage a sovereign contempt for the demon.

    Let us hear what Saint Therese says:
    "It is very often that these damned spirits come to torment me; but they inspire very little fear in me, because I know them well and they cannot even stir without God's permission… This should be well known by all: every time we show our contempt for the demons, they lose their strength and the soul acquires more predominance upon them… To see themselves despised by weaker beings is, in fact, a severe humiliation for these arrogant beings. Well, as we said before, humbly supported by God, we have the right and the obligation of showing our contempt: if God is with us, who will be against us? They can bark, but they cannot bite, unless in the cases that - by imprudence, or pride - we place ourselves in their power".​

    Importantly, we must not confuse this contempt for the demon with the vain pretension that we, by ourselves, have any power over the fallen Angels.


    By our nature, we have no power whatsoever over them; on the contrary, by their superior nature, they are far more powerful than us. Therefore, the foundation of this healthy contempt for the infernal enemies must not be based on a rash disregard of danger.

    Rather, it must be supported by a most sincere humility and true confidence in the Creator and in the Most Holy Virgin.

    If these cares are taken, it is befitting to do what the great Saint Therese indicates with such propriety.

    Above all, we should make every effort to live a life of serious and sincere piety, without superstition or sentimentality. This will certainly maintain the demon at a distance, as much as that is possible. (A Sovereign Contempt For The Demon by Luis Solimeo, from his book Angels and Demons.)

    So May I Count On You To Console Our Lady
    For This Weekend Of Witchery
    By Making A Powerful

    Act of Reparation


    God love you!
    And Mary be with you.
     
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  2. HeavenlyHosts

    HeavenlyHosts Powers

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    You can count on me. Thank you.
     
  3. padraig

    padraig Powers

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    Prayers tonight and mass tomorrow.

    Interesting that they choose New Orleans.
     
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  4. Pray4peace

    Pray4peace Ave Maria

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    My in-laws live in New Orleans. My mother-in-law was born there and adores everything about the city. I just don't get it.

    I'm not really surprised they'll be having that witchfest there. There is so much voodoo tied up in the city's history. Strangely, a lot of Catholicism too though. :confused: As everyone already knows, New Orleans is well known for it's eccentricities and debauchery. They seem to embrace it there. The weirder, the better.

    I hope that this event causes all the Catholics in the area to come out in droves. I will add this to my prayer list ASAP.
     
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  5. padraig

    padraig Powers

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    I would love to see it someday, it looks so romantic. I think Raymond Arroyo comes from there. I suppose the Voodoo thing is the same as Haiti, which some people say is the most evil place in the world.
     
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  6. Carol55

    Carol55 Ave Maria

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    Padraig,

    I didn't find it to be romantic.

    I thought it was a den of iniquity, luckily I was only there for dinner one night in the early 90's(?) with some co-workers. Maybe I'm being too harsh but I don't think so.

    You're correct, Raymond Arroyo is from there and every time he talks it up I cringe.

    It is far worse than 42nd street in NYC imo, it's more similar to Las Vegas but smaller and historical. You walk down the street and you are constantly solicited to go to some crazy show. I remember it being dirty, rundown and filled with lots of drunk people.

    I have a very conservative cousin who imo is an orthodox Catholic. She is about 9 years older than me and she would always go to Mardi Gras there years ago but after I visited New Orleans I questioned her judgment.

    It may have just been my experience and like I said I was only there for a few hours one night but I would never go back. I would avoid Las Vegas too, obviously. I went to the Grand Canyon and it made sense at the time cost-wise to fly home from Vegas.

    Maybe because I live near NYC I much prefer to visit the great outdoors like you do - if you've seen one city you've seen them all.

    I remember my husband going to New Orleans on a business trip too and he basically said the same thing.

    I also remember that I overheard someone talking about a night cruise that they went on that left out of New Orleans and the things that went on during the cruise were simply shocking to me.

    PS - When I see images of Mardi Gras parades they often remind me of the images that I have seen of gay pride parades. It's sad. I thought Mardi Gras was supposed to be a Christian celebration(?).
     
  7. padraig

    padraig Powers

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    So sad. I love the accent too. Funny Raymond has never mentioned any of this; I suppose it is too close to his heart. Anyway I love the accent. :)..and a lot of the architecture. Funnily enough there does seem to be a lot of horror movies and literature that home in on the area, like 'Interview with a Vampire'.

    There seems to be certain places in the wrold that are kind of spiritual, 'Dead zones'. I remember a priest , an exorcist one time telling me that numerous Catholic Missionaries have commented that when first stepping of a plane in Haiti that they could feel a wave of pure evil. Maybe New Orleans is a little like this?

    The exorcist also said that the devil can operate much more freely in places where the mass is rarely offered.

    I have heard people talking about Las Vegas too.

    [​IMG]
     
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  8. padraig

    padraig Powers

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  9. Carol55

    Carol55 Ave Maria

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    Padraig,

    I'm sure that Raymond Arroyo knows exactly where and where not to go and when.

    I probably went to the touristy part, Bourbon Street area and walked around without a plan and there you go.

    I think that this is true for any city. Trump for instance takes a limo into NYC and goes right to the swankiest restaurants etc. The tourists go to the typical tourist spots and judge the whole city from that.

    Imo the nicest images of New Orleans on the internet are taken when the streets are empty. The Mardi Gras images are some of the worst images of New Orleans. I am pretty certain that I was there in August, it was definitely not Mardi Gras but the streets were pretty crowded nonetheless.

    This Wikipedia page talks about Mardi Gras in New Orleans a little bit, some very questionable things go on there - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mardi_Gras_in_New_Orleans .

    Padraig, I watched this yesterday, it is pretty good.

    I like that Timothy suggested a full investigation of St. Gallen to be done and that neither Dr. Marshall or Timothy were comfortable with conjecturing about St. Gallen and McCarrick, etc. The conjecturing was getting to me recently, I just had to say that I had enough. My brain was wandering too much about these creepy subjects and that's not healthy.

    They also restated something from Dr. Marshall's interview with James Grein and that is that McCarrick attended a language school in St. Gallen (not a Carthusian monastery). I think that Dolours would be interested in this. This makes sense too because McCarrick knows 5 languages.

    It is also interesting that they linked a lot of things together. They linked that Spirit Cooking lady Hillary Clinton is connected to, Aleister Crowley and McCarrick all to St. Gallen and of course, the St. Gallen Mafia but they admit that they don't really have all of the dots connected yet. I like their honesty.
     
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  10. padraig

    padraig Powers

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    I think the way it works is that if real goodness, real holiness are done it kind of impregnates the surrounding area. Whereas if acts of Satanic evil are done the opposite happens. Not always but sometimes.

    There is a religious house near me called Clonard Monastery. I have been visiting it since I was a little child. I used to call into it everyday after school and it is amazing. The atmosphere of instance holiness blows you away. Of course I understand it might have been my imagination but many others have reported this. It has become part of the tourist trap in the city. I read one time that there have been numerous occasions of spontaneous conversions of people who simply walked through the door ( including, astonishingly Protestant Ministers).

    So if you have a place of evil it can have a similiar effect from the othhr side. A kind of doorway that opens to hell. Sometimes but not always. Sometimes such places get, 'Cleaned up by God and His holy angels.

    A good example of this is the former Concentration Camp of Aushwitz in Poland. I was sure there would be a feeling of pure evil there, but not at all. It is totally pure. 6,000 Polish priests were murdered there including several Catholic saint such as St Edith Stein and Maximilian Kolbe. I think this has actually made the place holy, like the Catacombs in ROme.

    But there is a legend from Germany for the other Concentration Camp Dachau that the birds never fly over it. It is a heavily forested area with a huge bird population but the birds never fly over it. This is fact. The ground has a kind of white sand which is actual ground up human bones.

     
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  11. AED

    AED Powers

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    And me. My mother had a great devotion to Our Lady of Prompt Succor. Under that title she saved New Orleans during the war of 1812. There is a convent of sisters there who have her miraculous statue and promote this devotion. It might be a good idea to invoke her under thos title.
     
  12. AED

    AED Powers

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    I keep thinking if the scripture "where sin abounds there does grace much more abound."
     
  13. AED

    AED Powers

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    I agree Carol. I was there in 1968 with some friends and I was very young and impressionable. We were in the French Quarter and I was quite taken with the steamy ancient sultry sense of the place. The churning waters of Lake Ponchetrain and the Spanish moss and the strange cemeteries. My mother went there often as my father had to travel there for business. She became quite attached to an order of nuns who are connected to Our Lady of Prompt Succor. She corresponded with them for years. She loved Brennans and the Cafe DuMonde. One of her best friends had been an art professor from Tulaine. But in spite of all that I think if is a place of swirling currents of evil. Seductive and destructive. I would never go back. I intend to join the prayers of reparation.
     
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  14. padraig

    padraig Powers

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    What a really wonderful apt Scripture quote.

    If you keep this up you'll end up being promoted to a Protestant.:D:D:D;)

    I do so love an apt quote.:)

    [​IMG]
     
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  15. AED

    AED Powers

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    LOL. I do love me my scriptures. I returned to the Church via some Nazarene Evangelicals I knew who on my search were very charitable and non pressuring. They knew some wonderful scriptures I have come to love. "The earnest prayer of a righteous man availeth much" and "He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness."
    They were dismayed when I returned to the Church but were kind about it. Lovely Christian oeople.
     
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  16. Don_D

    Don_D ¡Viva Cristo Rey!

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    The wilderness and the desert are used as symbols. The wilderness is a gentile place, pagan and full of beliefs such as atheism or idol worship or voodoo and the desert is a place of spiritual death. Devoid of God completely. A place like Stalin's Russia was for a time when God was simply banished.

    America certainly fits the bill as a wilderness and places like New Orleans and Vegas are like great temples of debauchery here for many people. Obviously there are places there as well that are great strongholds.

    How many can make this claim?

    The Cathedral-Basilica of St. Louis King of France is the oldest Catholic cathedral in continual use in the United States.

    https://www.stlouiscathedral.org/about/our-history/

    It is right down the street from the N.O. Voodoo museum.
     
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  17. padraig

    padraig Powers

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    One time I met an old lady in the park who was a Jehovah's Witness and handed me a tract. I took a notion and decided to have a discussion with her as it attacked the Catholic Church as the Whore of Babylon.

    Just for fun. An idle moment.

    Well you know what this little old lady totally defeated me by quoting Scripture. :D:D I was left like a gold fish gasping.

    It took me about a month of Scripture study looking at sources to untangle it all. She was quite brilliant. She was not argumentative at all. I understood at once she was very, very well prepared indeed...a lifetime in fact.

    I would have needed to spend moths and moths of study just to keep up with a single intervention. I know now the antidote is to refer to the Fathers of the Church...and not to be too big headed.:);)

    A bit of the salt of humility does none of us any harm. I think my big mistake was pride and to count on self pride rather than the Holy Spirit to lead me.

    Such a wonderful old lady, bless her. Now when I meet the Jehovah's Witnesses outside the local church I mostly go up to them to pet my dogs rather than to cross scripitural swords.:D:D

    But I do understand the need for study if I need to do so.
     
    Last edited: Jul 10, 2019
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  18. Carol55

    Carol55 Ave Maria

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    Don, That's beautiful.

    The Church goes where they can help the most people and many people go to the Church in times of trouble.

    ***
    We absolutely need to pray for New Orleans. I just saw that they are experiencing some very bad weather there today, a lot of places are flooded already and they have the threat of a possible hurricane. This article states that they have only experienced a hurricane in July there 3 times in the past and that the Mississippi River has been continuously flooding southern Louisiana since January 6 and if this storm hits things could get really bad.:eek: Tornadoes and water spouts too.

    upload_2019-7-10_14-2-34.png

    upload_2019-7-10_13-28-0.jpeg

    New Orleans Braces for a One-Two Weather Punch
    The dual threat of late-season river flooding and early-season hurricanes is a sign of things to come for our warming world.
    By Eric Holthaus | July 10, 2019

    The 2019 hurricane season has barely begun, and a troubling storm is already brewing. Heavy rains paralyzed New Orleans on Wednesday, with as much as ten inches falling in just a few hours, and the National Weather Service declared a “flash flood emergency.” This is just the beginning of what could be a truly awful week of weather.

    [​IMG]

    On Wednesday morning, the National Hurricane Center issued a storm surge watch and a tropical storm watch for coastal Louisiana, forecasting the ongoing thunderstorms to eventually develop into a hurricane which would be named Barry and make landfall sometime on Saturday. The National Weather Service (NWS) office in New Orleans has begun circulating hurricane preparedness tips, and the NWS’ Twitter account said—in a since-deleted tweet—that the approaching storm “gets us thinking about what we can be doing TODAY to get ready for the big one.”

    The storm’s timing is unique: In 168 years of hurricane records, a July hurricane in Louisiana has only happened three times, and all of those occurrences have been within the past 40 years. There’s a growing body of research that shows that as the Gulf of Mexico waters warm because of climate change, early-season hurricanes like proto-Barry could become more common. (Right now, water temperatures in the Gulf are at near-record levels, more typical of peak hurricane season.)

    More concerning than the storm’s early timing, however, is its bad timing. The Mississippi River has been continuously flooding southern Louisiana since January 6, the longest flood in recorded history for the river in this region. Spring floods aren’t supposed to last until mid-July, and after 185 days of high water, it’s unclear Louisiana could handle any more. A potential worst-case scenario could prove disastrous for Louisiana, and shows how unprepared we are for the scary new era of overlapping climate disasters.

    In Louisiana, there are two types of levees: those that protect the coast from an ocean storm surge, and those that are designed to keep the Mississippi River in its current course. Katrina caused a failure of the storm surge levees. This week, the river levees—which were first built after the historic 1927 flood—are being put to the test for the first time in modern history.

    As much as 15 to 20 inches of additional rain is possible this weekend as the storm moves inland, according to the latest weather models. And because Barry’s storm surge could essentially block the flow of the river from reaching the Gulf of Mexico, the National Weather Service now forecasts that the Mississippi may rise to 20 feet—the highest crest since 1927, before the modern levee and spillway protection system was completed. In New Orleans, the river levees are only 20 feet high in some places.

    In recent years, extreme river floods have begun happening with increasing frequency as the spring rains arrive earlier each year as the atmosphere warms. In 2011, a flood came dangerously close to breaking the levee system upstream from New Orleans. At that time, officials feared that in a worst-case scenario, parts of the levee system could “slide into the river” if the earthen barriers became too saturated with floodwaters.

    A river levee breach would be an entirely different type of flooding disaster than what occurred during Hurricane Katrina, but possibly no less devastating. Depending on where exactly a breach occurred, it may not be possible to return the Mississippi River to its previous state. This would cripple America’s agricultural and petrochemical industries, deal a potentially fatal blow to New Orleans, and change the course of American history.

    Of course, it’s possible none of this will happen. But the odds are growing that, if not this week, it will happen someday soon. Even if Barry steers away from Louisiana, this won’t be the last time the region has to deal with the dual threat of extreme late-season flooding and extreme early-season hurricanes. As the climate continues to warm, the atmosphere will continue to be able to hold more moisture, increasing the likelihood of intense rainfall in already-wet areas.

    The region is not prepared for this increasing threat. More than a decade after Katrina, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has only just finished the reconstruction of the storm surge levees after Katrina in the past year. That reconstruction came at a cost of $14 billion—and already, the Corps has noticed problems with the system, which is settling at a faster rate than expected when it was designed in 2007 and may no longer be able to provide adequate protection from the rising seas.

    Overlapping extreme-weather events aren’t just a New Orleans problem. In November, a team of researchers found that unless carbon emissions are greatly reduced, by the end of the century many parts of the world would face overlapping disasters most of the time. Drought will worsen the water scarcity caused by the over-pumping of aquifers. Rising sea levels will make the storm surge from hurricanes even more destructive. The combination of extreme heat and wildfire smoke will create widespread public health crises. These disaster overlaps, they said, would magnify the intensity of the climate crisis and “pose a broad threat to humanity.”

    Already in 2019, we’ve seen overlapping disasters in Mozambique, which in the span of a month endured two of the worst cyclones ever to hit the Southern Hemisphere, and in India, where Chennai, a city of seven million people, ran out of water after the delayed start of a second consecutive monsoon season. If New Orleans’ levees hold this week, it will be because we were lucky. But the more carbon dioxide we pump into the atmosphere, the sooner our luck will run out.

    [This article is blaming climate change for the early hurricanes, etc. I think that those witches need to repent.]
     
    Last edited: Jul 10, 2019
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  19. HeavenlyHosts

    HeavenlyHosts Powers

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    fr. Engelmar Unzeitig is called The Angel of Dachau
    He is a Catholic priest who is up for sainthood because he died helping others at Dachau. I think he died of typhus during an epidemic in the death camp.
     
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  20. padraig

    padraig Powers

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