DoobyDoozy

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DoobyDoozy

DoobyDoozy

@DoobyDoozy

Katılım Kasım 2022
418 Takip Edilen83 Takipçiler
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George Alexopoulos
George Alexopoulos@GPrime85·
Professional complainers making me tap the sign again
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DoobyDoozy
DoobyDoozy@DoobyDoozy·
Woke up and the Church was right again
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Rand Paul
Rand Paul@RandPaul·
The DOJ has ONE WEEK left to charge Anthony Fauci for the worst cover-up in modern medical history. He lied to Congress about funding gain-of-function research in Wuhan. Millions died. Trillions were spent. And Fauci walked away with book deals and fawning media coverage instead of handcuffs. I re-upped my criminal referral to the DOJ because the evidence is overwhelming, and justice has been delayed long enough. RT if you’re ready to see Fauci behind bars.
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Crime Reports India
Crime Reports India@AsianDigest·
In India Hindus flinging Cats to air to celebrate their Festival of Holi
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MrCasey
MrCasey@MrCasey62·
Evangelical “Christianity” ISN’T “what God actually said”. God makes that clear in the Bible.
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The General
The General@GeneralMCNews·
BREAKING: The Department of Justice does not plan to arrest Dr. Fauci and is expected to let the statute of limitations for lying to Congress expire.
The General tweet media
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Bennie🕊️
Bennie🕊️@Bennieeexyz·
My English Professor last semester was complaining to us about how the school library was charging him for losing a book he'd returned. I work in the library, so after class I did some poking around and found the book on the shelf and took it to the head librarian. It turned out it just hadn't been checked in, which was an easy enough fix. I wrote an email to the Professor letting him know that I'd "taken care of the problem" and it "shouldn't bother him anymore," signed it with my full name, and sent it. Now might be a good time to mention that I have a very Italian name. For the rest of the semester, my roommate and classmates referred to me as the leader of the Librarian Mafia.
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Skeletor 🧼🧽🫧
Skeletor 🧼🧽🫧@TheMuppetPastor·
I learned an interesting fact the other day about Jesus’ lineage. Some of you know this, but one of his ancestors was Ruth, the Moabite, and heroine of her own book. What I had forgotten was this verse: ““No Ammonite or Moabite may enter the assembly of the Lord. Even to the tenth generation, none of them may enter the assembly of the Lord forever,” Deuteronomy 23:3 ESV NO Moabite could enter the assembly of the Lord? This harsh punishment was a result of Moab’s many sins against their cousin, Israel (sons of Lot and born of incest) when they tried to hire Balaam to curse the Hebrews, when they refused to help their cousins, when they invaded, and when their wicked religion butchered infants to their pagan gods. So why was Ruth able to not only become Hebrew, but to be a proud member of the line of David, and later, Jesus? “But Ruth said, “Do not urge me to leave you or to return from following you. For where you go I will go, and where you lodge I will lodge. Your people shall be my people, and your God my God.” Ruth 1:16 ESV Ruth the Moabite did more than pledge loyalty to Naomi; she rejected her culture, her gods, and her old life, choosing the true God instead. Ruth was not subject to the curse against Moab because she was penitent, humble, and a convert. God punished the host who violently opposed him and embraced sin even when they knew a better way. Moab knew about God; Lot was a follower, but they chose wickedness instead. Yet God forgave anyone who abandoned wickedness and returned to Him. More than just a love story; Ruth is a reminder that God forgives all who seek His face.
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j.m. kettle
j.m. kettle@jmkettle·
Giving a restaurant a three star review is illegal in Germany.
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Templarpilled
Templarpilled@Templarpilled·
Catholics pulling out a list of all the popes in response to Mormon lineage from the 1800s:
Templarpilled tweet media
meta thomist 🇻🇦@metathomist

1. St. Peter (32–67) 2. St. Linus (67–76) 3. St. Anacletus (Cletus) (76–88) 4. St. Clement I (88–97) 5. St. Evaristus (97–105) 6. St. Alexander I (105–115) 7. St. Sixtus I (115–125) 8. St. Telesphorus (125–136) 9. St. Hyginus (136–140) 10. St. Pius I (140–155) 11. St. Anicetus (155–166) 12. St. Soter (166–175) 13. St. Eleutherius (175–189) 14. St. Victor I (189–199) 15. St. Zephyrinus (199–217) 16. St. Callistus I (217–222) 17. St. Urban I (222–230) 18. St. Pontian (230–235) 19. St. Anterus (235–236) 20. St. Fabian (236–250) 21. St. Cornelius (251–253) 22. St. Lucius I (253–254) 23. St. Stephen I (254–257) 24. St. Sixtus II (257–258) 25. St. Dionysius (259–268) 26. St. Felix I (269–274) 27. St. Eutychian (275–283) 28. St. Caius (283–296) 29. St. Marcellinus (296–304) 30. St. Marcellus I (308–309) 31. St. Eusebius (309) 32. St. Miltiades (311–314) 33. St. Sylvester I (314–335) 34. St. Mark (336) 35. St. Julius I (337–352) 36. Liberius (352–366) 37. St. Damasus I (366–384) 38. St. Siricius (384–399) 39. St. Anastasius I (399–401) 40. St. Innocent I (401–417) 41. St. Zosimus (417–418) 42. St. Boniface I (418–422) 43. St. Celestine I (422–432) 44. St. Sixtus III (432–440) 45. St. Leo I (the Great) (440–461) 46. St. Hilarius (461–468) 47. St. Simplicius (468–483) 48. St. Felix III (II) (483–492) 49. St. Gelasius I (492–496) 50. Anastasius II (496–498) 51. St. Symmachus (498–514) 52. St. Hormisdas (514–523) 53. St. John I (523–526) 54. St. Felix IV (III) (526–530) 55. Boniface II (530–532) 56. John II (533–535) 57. St. Agapetus I (535–536) 58. St. Silverius (536–537) 59. Vigilius (537–555) 60. Pelagius I (556–561) 61. John III (561–574) 62. Benedict I (575–579) 63. Pelagius II (579–590) 64. St. Gregory I (the Great) (590–604) 65. Sabinian (604–606) 66. Boniface III (607) 67. St. Boniface IV (608–615) 68. St. Adeodatus I (Deusdedit) (615–618) 69. Boniface V (619–625) 70. Honorius I (625–638) 71. Severinus (640) 72. John IV (640–642) 73. Theodore I (642–649) 74. St. Martin I (649–655) 75. St. Eugene I (654–657) 76. St. Vitalian (657–672) 77. Adeodatus II (672–676) 78. Donus (676–678) 79. St. Agatho (678–681) 80. St. Leo II (682–683) 81. St. Benedict II (684–685) 82. John V (685–686) 83. Conon (686–687) 84. St. Sergius I (687–701) 85. John VI (701–705) 86. John VII (705–707) 87. Sisinnius (708) 88. Constantine (708–715) 89. St. Gregory II (715–731) 90. St. Gregory III (731–741) 91. St. Zachary (741–752) 92. Stephen II (III) (752–757) 93. St. Paul I (757–767) 94. Stephen III (IV) (768–772) 95. Adrian I (772–795) 96. St. Leo III (795–816) 97. Stephen IV (V) (816–817) 98. St. Paschal I (817–824) 99. Eugene II (824–827) 100. Valentine (827) 101. Gregory IV (827–844) 102. Sergius II (844–847) 103. St. Leo IV (847–855) 104. Benedict III (855–858) 105. St. Nicholas I (the Great) (858–867) 106. Adrian II (867–872) 107. John VIII (872–882) 108. Marinus I (882–884) 109. St. Adrian III (884–885) 110. Stephen V (VI) (885–891) 111. Formosus (891–896) 112. Boniface VI (896) 113. Stephen VI (VII) (896–897) 114. Romanus (897) 115. Theodore II (897) 116. John IX (898–900) 117. Benedict IV (900–903) 118. Leo V (903) 119. Sergius III (904–911) 120. Anastasius III (911–913) 121. Lando (913–914) 122. John X (914–928) 123. Leo VI (928) 124. Stephen VII (VIII) (928–931) 125. John XI (931–935) 126. Leo VII (936–939) 127. Stephen VIII (IX) (939–942) 128. Marinus II (942–946) 129. Agapetus II (946–955) 130. John XII (955–964) 131. Leo VIII (963–965) 132. Benedict V (964–966) 133. John XIII (965–972) 134. Benedict VI (973–974) 135. Benedict VII (974–983) 136. John XIV (983–984) 137. John XV (985–996) 138. Gregory V (996–999) 139. Sylvester II (999–1003) 140. John XVII (1003) 141. John XVIII (1003–1009) 142. Sergius IV (1009–1012) 143. Benedict VIII (1012–1024) 144. John XIX (1024–1032) 145. Benedict IX (1032–1044, 1045, 1047–1048) 146. Sylvester III (1045) 147. Gregory VI (1045–1046) 148. Clement II (1046–1047) 149. Damasus II (1048) 150. St. Leo IX (1049–1054)

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Shane Schaetzel †☧
Shane Schaetzel †☧@ShaneSchaetzel·
A common Protestant objection to the Catholic Bible is that none of the New Testament authors directly quoted from the seven additional books (Deuterocanon/Apocrypha) found in the Greek Septuagint that the Catholic Old Testament is based on. Therefore, they argue these books should not be included in the Bible. This, in spite of the fact that the Apostles quoted the Old Testament ten times more often from the Greek Septuagint over the Hebrew Tanakh used by the Pharisees, and later adopted by the Protestants for academic reasons. However, none of the New Testament writers quoted the following Old Testament books from the Hebrew Tanakh either… Judges Ruth Ezra Esther Ecclesiastes Song of Solomon Lamentations Obadiah Jonah Zephaniah Shall we exclude these books from the Christian Bible too? Of course not! Nor should we exclude those Deuterocanonical books not directly quoted from the Septuagint. Nevertheless, while we have no direct quotes, we do have references the New Testament authors made toward the Deuterocanonical books from the Greek Septuagint. These references, combined with the 10 to 1 ratio of New Testament authors citing the Greek Septuagint over the Hebrew Tanakh, make a strong case for the Catholic Bible… • Matthew 6:14-15 — Sirach 28:2 • Matthew 7:12 — Tobit 4:15 • Matthew 27:43 — Wisdom 2:15-18 • Luke 6:31 — Tobit 4:15 • John 10:22 — 1 Maccabees 4:59 • Romans 1:18-32 / 9:21 — Wisdom (esp. chs. 13-15, potter/clay imagery) • Romans 11:34 — Wisdom 9:13 • 2 Corinthians 9:7 — Sirach 35:8-9 • Hebrews 1:3 — Wisdom 7:26 • Hebrews 11:35 — 2 Maccabees 7 (esp. 7:1-29, tortured for resurrection) • Revelation 8:2-4 — Tobit 12:15 (seven angels)
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DoobyDoozy
DoobyDoozy@DoobyDoozy·
@heidiklessigmd This is still going on, btw, in fact - they even have children on the chopping blocks for this.
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Dr. Heidi Klessig
Dr. Heidi Klessig@heidiklessigmd·
In 2005, a patient told Dr. Jacob Lavee that he was going to go to China to get a heart transplant. In fact, the procedure was scheduled to take place in just two weeks. Lavee was shocked: how could a heart transplant be scheduled? How could it be known that a properly matched donor would be available on a scheduled date? This could only mean one thing…someone was going to be executed to make that heart available. “Simply by going on the internet, I found out to my horror that since 1984 there has been a secret law in China which enables physicians to harvest organs from executed prisoners. That law has been kept secret for many, many years; and a huge industry based on forced organ harvesting became developed.”
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varrock
varrock@varrock·
Mass deportations are horrible. Yes, your wages would go up and housing would be more affordable. Your school would have more resources while your health and car insurance rates would go down. But GDP might go down a bit. Is that really something you'd want?
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