Joshua Bailey

669 posts

Joshua Bailey

Joshua Bailey

@BaileyJosh2000

Navy Veteran|America First

Spring, TX Katılım Kasım 2025
235 Takip Edilen119 Takipçiler
Catholic Quotes
Catholic Quotes@CatholicQuote12·
Saint Carlos Acutis,intercede for us!
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helen henning
helen henning@helenckh·
Could Trey Gowdy be a good choice to replace Lindsey Graham?
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Joshua Bailey
Joshua Bailey@BaileyJosh2000·
@Pontifex Really? Have you read the Bible? One thing God never says anywhere in any translation of any version of the Bible ever written is that there is any good in us.
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Pope Leo XIV
Pope Leo XIV@Pontifex·
God's generosity towards us is not naïve but wise. He sees within us the potential of a good that, at times, we ourselves might fail to recognize. For this reason, the Lord, who knows the soil of our hearts better than we, never ceases to believe in us—in who we are and in who we can become, day by day, if we entrust ourselves to him in faith. #GospelOfToday (Mt 13:1–23) #Angelus
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Joshua Bailey
Joshua Bailey@BaileyJosh2000·
@EcciusMaximus @rickbrennanjr Wrong answer, Satanist. The reason is that the Bible is against pagan, satanist worship of the Roman Catholic Church. You can not read the Bible, understand what it says, and remain in the cult of satan with a clear conscience.
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BIBLE SCHOLARMAXXING
BIBLE SCHOLARMAXXING@EcciusMaximus·
@rickbrennanjr The reason for this is bc the Bible is all Evangelicals have, they have stripped the deposit of faith bare.
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Pastor Rick Brennan Jr
Pastor Rick Brennan Jr@rickbrennanjr·
The evidence is clear that some Catholics can—and do—read and study the Bible. But after growing up Catholic and interacting with Catholics for more than fifty years since becoming Protestant, my experience is that most Catholics primarily encounter Scripture through the readings at Mass and rarely study it consistently on their own. When researchers ask why, we find that the Mass and the Eucharist occupy the central place in Catholic devotional life. In Protestantism, especially evangelical Protestantism, the preached and studied Word is central, so regular personal Bible reading is more deeply embedded in the culture. Evidence of this can can be found in scholarly survey data. For instance, Pew Research found that evangelical Protestants are far more likely than Catholics to read Scripture outside worship at least weekly; in one comparison, 63 percent of evangelicals did so, while the Catholic figure was much lower. Then, among Hispanic Christians, Pew found Protestants were twice as likely as Catholics to read Scripture regularly outside services, 67 percent to 33 percent. So this is not an insult. It is a measurable difference in the devotional priorities of the two faith traditions.
Bruno Shillyshally@BShillyshally

@rickbrennanjr I think the point is that Scott Hahn directly refutes the point made by the post that Casey was responding to. Us Catholics are told all the time that if we just “read and study the Bible” we won’t be Catholic anymore yet there are countless examples counter to that.

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Joshua Bailey
Joshua Bailey@BaileyJosh2000·
@EcciusMaximus And one of those times Jesus calls him Satan. ....and not one single time does anyone call him a pope or recognize him as pope, or gives any hint that he has any authority of any kind.
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BIBLE SCHOLARMAXXING
BIBLE SCHOLARMAXXING@EcciusMaximus·
The first Pope is mentioned 162 times in the Gospels alone.
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owen cyclops
owen cyclops@owenbroadcast·
my friends, it is time: in conjunction with @avemariapress and a new book they released, i spent the last few months illustrating the entire structure of the summa theologica, by thomas aquinas. in my shop here: owen-cyclops.myshopify.com can i show and tell you, in this thread:
owen cyclops tweet mediaowen cyclops tweet mediaowen cyclops tweet mediaowen cyclops tweet media
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Rabbi Brian Samuel
Rabbi Brian Samuel@rabbriansamuel·
Judaism has a great formula for interpreting scripture, and I ascribe to it as well. It is called "PaRDeS", with the consonants being an acronym for: 1. P'shat: The plain sense of the text 2. Remez: A hint of something greater within the text 3. Drash: A homiletical interpretation of the text 4. Sod: A deep mystery behind the text Here's an example: Genesis 25:22: But the children struggled together within her. The P'shat, the plain sense, is simply that Jacob and Esau literally wrestled together in Rebecca's womb. The Remez, the hint of something greater, is that it parallels the contention between the Jewish people and their Arab neighbors. The Drash, the homiletic interpretation, could be that it is a picture of the battles we face in our own lives prior to God birthing something new. The Sod, the deep meaning, could be that it is a prophecy of the final battle between good and evil. Every Scripture can have layers of meaning. The rule, however, is that the p'shat, the plain sense, cannot be canceled out by other interpretations. It must remain pure.
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Joshua Bailey
Joshua Bailey@BaileyJosh2000·
You mean they are different from what the Satanists of the Roman Catholic Church altered the originals to? That should be expected since he was not a satan worshipers like Roman Catholics. Roman Catholics like Origen, Augustine, and every liquored-up Pope who ever lived altered the scriptures at will to provide justification to their demon worship. He worked from manuscripts that did not originate out of North Africa. Ham is the founder of the Roman Catholic church.
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BIBLE SCHOLARMAXXING
BIBLE SCHOLARMAXXING@EcciusMaximus·
The charge from the Church that Christ established in 33ad against Sola Scriptura has always been that the final authority ultimately rests with the individual, Tyndale proves that. Tyndale used deliberate linguistic interventions that replaced the theological vocabulary of the original text with his own.. What he did was the exact same thing Martin Luther did in adding the word “alone” to the text. Here are just a few of the verses he altered (and there are many more but these give you the picture) Matthew 16:18, Acts 20:28, 1 Corinthians 1:2, Ephesians 1:22, Colossians 1:18, Acts 14:23, Titus 1:5, James 5:14, 1 Timothy 4:14 and 5:17, Peter 5:1, Matthew 3:2, Acts 2:38, Luke 13:3, 2 Corinthians 7:10. In making these edits to the Holy Scriptures, Tyndale was unsurping God, correcting God, and giving himself the authority to edit the text as he saw fit. Tyndale, one man with no authority appointed himself the corrector of the text. This is how you get 40,000 denominations.
Wes Huff@WesleyLHuff

I’m standing in Vilvoorde Prison dungeons, built on top of the ruins of Vilvoorde Castle, located six miles north of Brussels in Belgium. The original fortress became the site of William Tyndale’s imprisonment after his betrayal and capture in Antwerp on May 21, 1535. Once imprisoned in Vilvoorde, Tyndale occupied one of the castle’s foul dungeons, surrounded by dampness, rats, and the sounds of the moat outside. The significance of this prison to Tyndale’s legacy lies not merely in his confinement there, but in what he accomplished during his captivity. 

Rather than despair, Tyndale continued writing and translating while imprisoned. After spending 18 months in the castle, Tyndale faced trial and was condemned as a heretic in early August 1536. In his last few months of life he wrote a letter, entreating the local lord commissary to allow him warmer clothes and, “a leave to use a lamp in the evening for it is tiresome to sit alone in the dark. But above all, I beg and entreat your clemency earnestly to intercede with the lord commissary, that he would deign to allow me the use of my Hebrew Bible, Hebrew Grammar, and Hebrew Lexicon, and that I might employ my time with that study.”

Tyndale was strangled and then burned not far from the Castle, on October 6, 1536. His final words were, “Lord, open the king of England’s eyes.” A prayer answered, when in 1538 — only two years after his death — Cromwell issued injunctions on King Henry’s behalf requiring every parish church to purchase a complete English Bible by Easter and keep it accessible to all parishioners. The Great Bible was issued in April 1539 to fulfill this mandate. It’s been estimated that as much as 90-95% of the Great Bible’s New Testament was derived from Tyndale’s translation.

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BIBLE SCHOLARMAXXING
BIBLE SCHOLARMAXXING@EcciusMaximus·
We dont have records of all the books cited at this council in @WesleyLHuff’s video but we know for sure that the 7 books Protestants later deleted were used. We know this through St Jerome. (image attached)
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Wes Huff@WesleyLHuff

The Council of Nicaea and Constantine often get relegated to boogeyman status when it comes to narratives concerning it’s/his history. But is the actual background to the Roman Emperor and the council he called?

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Sacramento Sheriff
Sacramento Sheriff@sacsheriff·
THE SAXOPHONES ARE GETTING LOUDER! For those who chose to ignore the law, reality is about to get expensive. Investigations are underway, and those responsible for using illegal fireworks can expect citations of up to $10,000 per device.
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Joshua Bailey
Joshua Bailey@BaileyJosh2000·
@JoshuaTCharles You would do better with throwing anything they have written in the trash and reading a Bible instead.
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Joshua Charles🇻🇦
Joshua Charles🇻🇦@JoshuaTCharles·
People very often ask me what works of the Church Fathers they should start with (“top 5” or something). Of the more famous works, I’d suggest: 1. St. Ignatius of Antioch, Letters (all of them) 2. St. Irenaeus of Lyon, Against Heresies 3. St. Athanasius, Incarnation of the Word 4. St. Augustine, City of God 5. St. Pope Gregory the Great, Dialogues I could make cases for many different variations. I’d probably have the same #1-3 in all of them. If I focused on lesser known works, I’d suggest: 1. St. Clement of Alexandria, Stromata 2. St. Augustine, Christian Combat 3. St. Cyril of Alexandria, Glaphyra on the Pentateuch 4. St. Pope Gregory the Great, Moralia on Job 5. St. Isidore of Seville, Sententiae Bonus. St. John Chrysostom, On the Providence of God
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Bill
Bill@BillWiIdin·
The American obsession with buying massive $70,000 pickup trucks just to use them for grocery shopping and commuting to an office job is hilarious. You don't need a V8 engine to haul three bags from Target, you just have an insecurity complex.
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Joshua Bailey
Joshua Bailey@BaileyJosh2000·
It is posts like this that make you sound like a retard for your lack of knowledge. Scripture has always been sufficient. That is why the Satanists of the Roman Catholicism did everything they could to destroy the inspired and infallible Word of God that was the AV 1611 King James Bible. The Satanists of the Roman Catholic Church immediatley made their own altered manuscripts Vaticanus and Sinaticus and responsible for all modern translations of the Bible (NIV, ASV, RSV NASV, NKJV, ESV, and others) which are as inspired as pile of dog crap. The Satanists of the Roman Catholic Church despise the Word of God because it exposes them and their pagan worship and their end time confederation with the antichrist!
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BIBLE SCHOLARMAXXING
BIBLE SCHOLARMAXXING@EcciusMaximus·
Sola Scriptura claims that Scripture alone is the sole infallible rule of faith, clear, sufficient, and self interpreting. This is how our favorite 90’s pop star theologian James White describes it. (see defiant baptists post) If the wording of Scripture can be revised by a private individual to make it conform to “true” doctrine as Tyndale stated, then Scripture is not clear or sufficient on its own. The Scriptures protestants now appeal to is no longer the historic received text of the Church. It is the Scripture as edited by Tyndale, the authority has shifted from the text to the man who rewrote the text. Once you start editing the text theologically, you never stop. His burning at the stake was just and deserved. By taking it upon himself to rewrite the Bible according to his theology, Tyndale proved that Sola Scriptura is unworkable. This is who @WesleyLHuff champions.
Wes Huff@WesleyLHuff

I’m standing in Vilvoorde Prison dungeons, built on top of the ruins of Vilvoorde Castle, located six miles north of Brussels in Belgium. The original fortress became the site of William Tyndale’s imprisonment after his betrayal and capture in Antwerp on May 21, 1535. Once imprisoned in Vilvoorde, Tyndale occupied one of the castle’s foul dungeons, surrounded by dampness, rats, and the sounds of the moat outside. The significance of this prison to Tyndale’s legacy lies not merely in his confinement there, but in what he accomplished during his captivity. 

Rather than despair, Tyndale continued writing and translating while imprisoned. After spending 18 months in the castle, Tyndale faced trial and was condemned as a heretic in early August 1536. In his last few months of life he wrote a letter, entreating the local lord commissary to allow him warmer clothes and, “a leave to use a lamp in the evening for it is tiresome to sit alone in the dark. But above all, I beg and entreat your clemency earnestly to intercede with the lord commissary, that he would deign to allow me the use of my Hebrew Bible, Hebrew Grammar, and Hebrew Lexicon, and that I might employ my time with that study.”

Tyndale was strangled and then burned not far from the Castle, on October 6, 1536. His final words were, “Lord, open the king of England’s eyes.” A prayer answered, when in 1538 — only two years after his death — Cromwell issued injunctions on King Henry’s behalf requiring every parish church to purchase a complete English Bible by Easter and keep it accessible to all parishioners. The Great Bible was issued in April 1539 to fulfill this mandate. It’s been estimated that as much as 90-95% of the Great Bible’s New Testament was derived from Tyndale’s translation.

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Catholic Quotes
Catholic Quotes@CatholicQuote12·
Pray for Pope Leo XIV!
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Joshua Bailey
Joshua Bailey@BaileyJosh2000·
@riecker All of Roman Catholicism is built around demons and demonic spirits.
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Cameron Riecker
Cameron Riecker@riecker·
During an exorcism, these two Protestant ministers accidentally disproved Protestantism. Here's exactly what happened. They walked into the exorcism of a young woman named Nicola Aubry, convinced the whole thing was a "popish cheat." One of them opened his Protestant prayer book, certain his prayers would drive the demon out. The demon just laughed. "Do you intend to expel me with your prayers and hymns?" he sneered. "Don't you know that they are mine? I helped to compose them!" This was the 1566 case of Nicola Aubry in Laon, France — one of the most publicly witnessed exorcisms in Church history. It started with a 16-year-old bride praying at her grandfather's grave. A spirit claiming to be him appeared to her. Before long, "Grandpa" turned violent, and a priest determined this was no grandfather at all. It was Beelzebub — "prince of devils, next to Lucifer." When one minister pushed back, insisting, "I am not a devil, I am a servant of Christ," the demon shot back: "A servant of Christ, indeed! I tell you, you are worse than I am... go first and expel all the devils that are in your own heart!" As they left, defeated, he called after them: "You are all mine, and I am your master." Nothing they said, read, or believed could move this demon an inch. Only one thing did — the moment the Bishop of Laon raised the Blessed Sacrament and commanded him, "in the name and by the power of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ," to depart. The demon himself confessed it: "It is the Body of God. I must confess it, for I am forced to do so." He was cast out for good on February 8, 1566 — a Friday, at three in the afternoon, the same day and hour Christ triumphed over hell on the cross. Investigated by the University of Paris. Approved by two popes. Witnessed by up to 150,000 people. It even converted a Protestant historian, Florimond de Raemond, along with his entire family. Two Protestant ministers walked in to disprove the Eucharist. They walked out as living proof of it. If you're Catholic, go to Mass today. Receive Him. Tag someone below who needs to see this. 👇 Source: Fr. Michael Müller, C.SS.R., "Triumph of the Blessed Sacrament: History of Nicola Aubry" (Baltimore: Kreuzer Brothers, 1877).
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Trad West
Trad West@trad_west_·
The Shroud of Turin is real.
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Valentina Gomez
Valentina Gomez@ValentinaForUSA·
250 years of Greatness, Guns & Freedom. Proud to be an American. God bless our Troops past & present.
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Rabbi Brian Samuel
Rabbi Brian Samuel@rabbriansamuel·
Great message from this guy tonight. Know him?
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