x.m.doodles
1.2K posts

x.m.doodles
@Xmdoodles
Hi! I'm a digital artist who loves animated movies and shows 💖 Fanart + OC stuff | NSFW @DdlsSpice ✨Commissions OPEN✨ Find me on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube
Katılım Eylül 2021
33 Takip Edilen1.4K Takipçiler
x.m.doodles retweetledi
x.m.doodles retweetledi

Caine vs Alastor:
ULLLTIMMAAAAA🍉🇵🇸|#TENOÍ!@Ultima_Undead
CAIIIINEE TURN THAT MONKEY INSIDEOUT AND MY LIFE IS YOURRRSS
English
x.m.doodles retweetledi

x.m.doodles retweetledi

Let them see You in me, Lord.
When they murder Your innocent people in cold blood, let them see You.
When they persecute the outcasts, let them see You.
Unveil the hypocrisy of those who use Your name in vain; as to justify such atrocities towards Your children.
#collageart

English
x.m.doodles retweetledi
x.m.doodles retweetledi
x.m.doodles retweetledi
x.m.doodles retweetledi
x.m.doodles retweetledi
x.m.doodles retweetledi
x.m.doodles retweetledi
x.m.doodles retweetledi
x.m.doodles retweetledi
x.m.doodles retweetledi

wow i can’t believe a republican president did what the last 3 republican presidents did and launched us into a recession and a useless war for oil.
BNO News Live@BNODesk
BREAKING: Trump has ordered airstrikes on sites in Venezuela, including military facilities, U.S. officials confirm - CBS
English
x.m.doodles retweetledi

x.m.doodles retweetledi

Sharing this remarkable image, José y Maria, by Everett Patterson, seems even more urgent this year. In the past, I’ve delighted over the clever visual puns (Dave’s City Hotel, Weisman cigarettes and Mary’s “Nazareth High School” sweatshirt) and in the reminder that Mary and Joseph were, like this couple, desperate young people looking for lodgings, when there was “no room at the inn,” as one translation of Luke’s Gospel has it.
In the past few years, there has been an intense debate (mainly online) over whether Mary and Joseph were refugees. To me, it seems clear that they were, at least during the “Flight into Egypt” where they flee a murderous king, leave Galilee and travel to Egypt to take refuge. That fits the classic description of a refugee: someone who leaves their homeland out a “well founded fear of persecution.” Some people say, well, they were still in the Roman Empire, which is beside the point. Do we really think that a poor couple from Galilee would have considered Egypt their homeland? Popes since at least Pope Pius XII have agreed. He called the Holy Family the “archetype of every refugee family.”
But before that, as a couple looking for lodging, they mirror thousands of couples and families today who have been denied “room at the inn.” In the United States, couples and families (and children) looking for “room” have been harassed, rejected, arrested, beaten, imprisoned and tortured. “No room at the inn.”
I will never understand how people can treat other human beings like this—even if they are, or are assumed to be, somehow breaking the law. Christ is present in every person, and every person has infinite dignity--whether you are Joseph and Mary, José y Maria, or an unknown person looking for room for their family.
If we delight in making room in our homes for our Nativity scenes, and delight in making room for Baby Jesus in the creche’s manger, can we make room for Christ, who is present in every migrant and the refugee? José y Maria, pray for us.
(Image: "José y Maria," Everett Patterson everettpatterson.com)

English
x.m.doodles retweetledi



















