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Apostasia satânica e sinal do fim dos tempos:RATZINGER NÃO QUER QUE O EVANGELHO SEJA LEVADO AOS JUDEUS



E Disse Jesus: "Ide por todo o mundo e pregai o Evangelho a toda a criatura."

Caríssimos leitores, o discurso de Ratzinger é um sinal de gravíssima apostasia. Não é a primeira vez que ele nega que a Igreja deva pregar o Evangelho. Isso já aconteceu aqui no Brasil. E foi há exatamente dois anos atrás, no dia 13 de maio de 2007, em Aparecida. Lá ele disse que a Igreja simplesmente não deve fazer "proselitismo", mas que deve somente atrair. Há pessoas entre nós que foram testemunhas disso, pois, no dia, estavam lá presentes para ver a apostasia de perto. Agora vemos que o Evangelho, que deve ser pregado a todos, pois isso é um grave mandato de Nosso Senhor Jesus Christo, é negado àqueles que, outrora, foram o único povo de Deus. Isso é uma lástima! O que diriam os apóstolos sobre tal aberração? O que diria o Papa Pio XII, que foi instrumento de conversão para o rabino romano Zolli ? Que venham as duas testemunhas e que elas façam aquilo que estes homens iníqüos deveriam estar fazendo!

Não tivemos tempo ainda de traduzir a notícia, mas, para os que sabem inglês, aqui a disponibilizamos:


'Vatican to stop mission on Jews' Pope agrees to stop missionary activity among Jews
(May. 12, 2009)
JPost.com Staff , THE JERUSALEM POST


In his welcoming address Tuesday to Pope Benedict XVI at Heichal Shlomo,adjacent to Jerusalem's Great Synagogue, Chief Ashkenazi Rabbi YonaMetzger said that the pontiff had agreed that the Catholic Church wouldcease all missionary activity among Jews, and thanked him for thegesture.



Metzger opened by congratulating the pontiff on his arrival to "our holyland - the land to which we prayed to return during 2000 years ofexile... And, with God's help, our meeting today is taking place in theLand of Israel, in our city of Jerusalem - the eternal capital of theJewish people."



Speaking of the necessity to hold dialogue between the faiths, Metzgersaid that "if a historical meeting such as this, where the head of thelargest religion in the world meets in Jerusalem with the head of theJewish religion, had taken place many years ago, how much blood wouldhave been spared and senseless hatred prevented."



Metzger thanked Benedict for preventing the return to the Catholic Churchof the Holocaust denier Bishop Richard Williamson. [????]



"Had you not done so," Metzger explained, "a message may have beenunderstood by another Holocaust denier- the president of Iran, grantinglegitimacy to his sinful declarations of his will and intention todestroy our country. I commend with appreciation your clear proclamationthat anti-Semitism is not only a sin against the Jews, but also a sinagainst God."



In a hint of criticism over Benedict's speech at Yad Vashem on Monday,which was received with some disappointment for his failure to apologizeon behalf of the Catholic Church while paying tribute to the memory ofthe six million Jews who perished in the Holocaust, Metzger hailedBenedict's predecessor, "Pope John Paul II, who visited us nine yearsago, placed a note between the stones of the Western Wall, and in it arequest for forgiveness from the Jewish people for the suffering causedto them throughout history, and of the Christian commitment towards truefraternity between our peoples."



Alluding to the threat of Islamic extremism, Metzger said "we must teachthe leaders of other religions that it is not with terror that they willobtain their aims, not by the killing of innocent people do theyrepresent their God."



The chief Ashkenazi rabbi went on to thank the pope for his "historicagreement and the commitment given by the Vatican, that the Church willhenceforth desist from all missionary and conversion activities amongstour people. This is for us an immensely important message."Metzger then asked the pope to act on the issue of lost Jewish refugees;children saved by Christians during the Holocaust and never told by theiradopting parents that they were Jewish.



"Your Holiness - as you know, during the Holocaust many parents depositedtheir children in trust with the various churches throughout Europe," hesaid. "To our sorrow, six million Jews did not return. Many of thechildren who survived thanks to the Church, grew up unaware of theirJewish heritage. We ask that the Church under your guidance, displaytransparency and reveal their roots so that they may choose theirnational and religious paths.



"A lack of transparency on this sensitive issue may perpetuate thesuffering of many Jews and ultimately obtain the Nazi's aim - theannihilation of the Jewish People."



Metzger also mentioned the pope's visit to the Western Wall which is a"house of prayer for all people," but lamented that "unfortunately thereare those who have transformed their houses of prayer into warehouses ofweapons and terror."



"One thing alone still threatens us all," he said, "the use of religionas a means for the killing of innocent people."



He concluded by calling to establish "an international body, a UN forreligions alongside the UN for diplomats and statesmen. There, side byside, around one table will sit the representatives of all the religions.Even those coming from countries that still lack diplomatic relationsbetween them, will sit together to solve conflicts and differences ofopinions arising from a religious cause."
"It is my heartfelt blessing that together we will merit to add love,mutual respect and peace in our world," the rabbi ended his speech. "Foreach people will walk in the name of his God; And we will walk in thename of the Lord our God..."



Following Metzger's speech, the pope vowed to maintain the dialoguebetween Christianity and Judaism in an effort to continue thereconciliation process between the two religions.

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