Charlie Tuna

3K posts

Charlie Tuna banner
Charlie Tuna

Charlie Tuna

@BasedTunaCan

Ave Ave Christus Rex

เข้าร่วม Temmuz 2024
454 กำลังติดตาม66 ผู้ติดตาม
Quo vadis 🇻🇦
Quo vadis 🇻🇦@IesusRexEst·
@BasedTunaCan @michaeljknowles @BraedenSorbo It’s more beautiful than just about any modern church building. Certain aspects are great (eg the Nativity entrance) but overall, it convinced that any glory to God Gaudi wished to proclaim was lost after his death and replaced when the commies destroyed the plans during the war
English
1
0
0
9
Charlie Tuna
Charlie Tuna@BasedTunaCan·
@michaeljknowles @BraedenSorbo Its gorgeous. Ive been fortunate enough to have gone. The merging if nature with its creator is a unique idea. The light that poured in on the Sunday morning was there was awe inspiring. As someone who prefers tradition, I was blown away by the place
English
1
0
2
128
Michael Knowles
Michael Knowles@michaeljknowles·
@BraedenSorbo The cultural significance is great enough that I’m even willing to overlook the infamous ugliness of the actual basilica.
English
25
2
269
12.6K
TRIGGERnometry
TRIGGERnometry@triggerpod·
In the modern media space, people only talk and listen to people they agree with. No show in the world would interview both @tedcruz and @mehdirhasan on the same day, in long form, and challenge them respectfully while also letting them set their case out. That's what TRIGGERnometry is for. Both episodes coming soon.
TRIGGERnometry tweet media
English
237
125
2.9K
114.3K
Charlie Tuna
Charlie Tuna@BasedTunaCan·
@bibeIradikaI Its also possible that Protestantism was just the first step to either Atheism like we see in Europe or the worst theologically Christian sects like Reformed or Evangelical
English
0
0
0
9
Schizologius
Schizologius@bibeIradikaI·
"The doctrine of the Church of Rome is wicked and dangerous (...) their ceremonies—most of them—plain downright idolatry." - Queen Anne of Great Britain There was a time when Anglicans were serious people!
English
7
4
56
1.9K
Charlie Tuna
Charlie Tuna@BasedTunaCan·
@SahilBloom This is closer to my Saturday than that other guys post. Idk why people brag about being a loser on X
English
0
0
0
20
Jim
Jim@iacobus_p·
You need to be America-maxxing
Jim tweet mediaJim tweet mediaJim tweet mediaJim tweet media
English
4
4
26
1.9K
Auron MacIntyre
Auron MacIntyre@AuronMacintyre·
Conservatives simply can’t take politics seriously, they think it’s a debating society while liberals understand it’s the exercise of power Even as the left plans mass arrests we’re conducting an internal witchhunt, shooting each other before they can put us against the wall
AF Post@AFpost

Democratic Illinois Governor JB Pritzker speaks about a Democratic "Project 2029" in which members of the current Trump administration, along with federal agents, will be criminally and civilly prosecuted. "Whatever it is that we can do. It may be that you cannot criminally prosecute somebody, but you can go after them civilly." Follow: @AFpost

English
106
480
2.8K
49.2K
Katrine Latrine
Katrine Latrine@KatrineLatrine·
@breeadail I looked into the Orthodox church's lent fasting and its wayyyyyyy harder, no meat, fish, dairy, wine and oil for all of lent with exceptions on some weekends and feast days
English
2
0
5
180
Bree A Dail
Bree A Dail@breeadail·
I made a delicious breakfast sandwich—bacon, egg and cheese, this morning. Sat down, big mug of coffee in hand…ready to start the morning! It’s Friday. Oatmeal it is.
English
49
9
326
19.5K
Uzi
Uzi@UziCryptoo·
The latest 401k data was released Here is the median balance by age: 18-24: $2k 25-34: $16k 35-44: $40k 45-54: $68k 55-64: $96k Over 65: $95k Saddest thing you’ll see all day 😔
English
526
432
11.2K
2.3M
Charlie Tuna
Charlie Tuna@BasedTunaCan·
@CatholicArena This is a cleansing, a purification if you will. I believe this will lead to a more faithful and Orthodox Church
English
0
0
3
229
Catholic Arena
Catholic Arena@CatholicArena·
GERMANY 🇩🇪 The Catholic Church lost a further HALF A MILLION members in 2025, according to latest stats from the German Bishops Office
Catholic Arena tweet media
English
94
76
491
26.5K
THE ORTHOCHAT
THE ORTHOCHAT@THEORTHOCHAT·
Oleksandr Usyk bowing to the ground in prayer.. In Eastern Orthodox Christianity, this is known as a prostration, a sign of surrender, repentance, spiritual discipline and total submission to God. @usykaa does this before and after every training session…☦️☦️☦️
English
6
41
669
11.3K
Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️
Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️@christopherrufo·
I read the first hundred pages of The Road last year, and read the first hundred pages of Blood Meridian this year, and in both instances, gave up, because the books never clicked. Lyrical writing, but the characters are reduced to way down Maslow's hierarchy, and the tone is so relentlessly bleak, with almost no humanity breaking through, it was difficult to feel anything besides the flint clicking against the cold steel in the overwhelming darkness. I know many of you love it, but to me, it's overwrought, overstylized, and overhyped.
Kristen Rudd@kristenrudd

About to start Blood Meridian for the first time. Give me all your best advice.

English
523
26
988
1.5M
Kristen Rudd
Kristen Rudd@kristenrudd·
About to start Blood Meridian for the first time. Give me all your best advice.
English
501
3
490
642.8K
Charlie Tuna
Charlie Tuna@BasedTunaCan·
@Joseph_Spurgeon Catholic here. I have never spent one second even pretending to care about what Protestants think or do
English
0
0
0
20
Joseph Spurgeon
Joseph Spurgeon@Joseph_Spurgeon·
Roman Catholics never seem to understand the doctrine of sola scriptura. Sola scriptura is not the belief that Holy Scripture is the only authority, nor that an individual can infallibly interpret the Scriptures. Rather, it is the doctrine that Holy Scripture is the only infallible authority and therefore has supreme authority over the church. It is not the only authority. The church has real authority, along with other forms of authority in the Christian life. Those who hold to sola scriptura also maintain that Scripture is to be understood within the life of the church. It was given to the church. It guards and defines the boundaries of the church. It shapes the life of the church. The church receives it, interprets it, and works through it, not as a single infallible institution, but as a body that is accountable to the Word. A central problem in Roman Catholic argumentation is their equivocation on the word infallible. They blur the distinction between infallible and inerrant, and then build an entire doctrine on that confusion. Infallible means unable to err by nature. It is not merely that something happens to be correct in a given instance. It means it cannot be wrong. Holy Scripture is infallible because it is the very Word of God. God cannot err, and therefore His Word cannot err. Everything Scripture says carries full authority because it is true without any possibility of error. Human beings, however, can make inerrant statements without being infallible. “Jesus Christ is the Messiah” is an inerrant statement. “My name is Joseph Spurgeon” is an inerrant statement. Even something like the table of contents of Scripture can be correct. The church can recognize the canon without error. But none of that makes the church infallible. It simply means that, at times, it has spoken truly. Infallibility is not something that comes and goes. It is not something that appears in rare moments and then disappears. If a person or institution is infallible, that is a property of what they are, not a temporary condition they enter into under certain circumstances. That is exactly where the Roman doctrine of papal infallibility breaks down. It claims the Pope is infallible only in specific moments, under carefully defined conditions. That is not infallibility. That is a redefinition of the term to protect a doctrine that cannot stand on its own. And historically, this was not some universally held belief quietly passed down from the apostles. In the Middle Ages, the Franciscans, particularly in their disputes over poverty, began pressing arguments that would effectively bind the Pope to prior authoritative statements. They were attempting to lock in earlier papal rulings so that a later pope could not overturn them. In response, Pope John XXII rejected those claims outright. He saw exactly what was happening. To grant that kind of infallibility would place the pope in submission to prior declarations in a way that undermined his own authority. He resisted it, and the idea was not accepted as settled doctrine at the time. Only much later, under very different pressures, was papal infallibility formally defined at the First Vatican Council in 1870. It was not the clear, consistent teaching of the church through the ages. It was a deformation, argued for, resisted, and finally imposed. Sola scriptura cuts through all of this confusion. It locates infallibility where it actually belongs, in the Word of God. Scripture alone cannot err. Scripture alone carries absolute authority. The church has real authority, but it is always a derived and accountable authority. It can speak truly, but it is never incapable of error. Everything must be judged by the Word of God, because only the Word of God is infallible.
English
245
62
333
39.8K
Charlie Tuna
Charlie Tuna@BasedTunaCan·
@DavidAn1611 @Robkearney1981 @ryanburge You'd have to define "knowing the Bible well" because knowing how to recite parts of scripture and actually understanding it are 2 completely different things. Ive read the bible. It makes very little sense to me. Im humble enough to admit it but via the Church im able to live it
English
0
0
0
11
David Anderson
David Anderson@DavidAn1611·
@BasedTunaCan @Robkearney1981 @ryanburge How come Catholics don't know their Bibles very well when I talk to them. Even guys like Michael Knowles who seems serious about being a Catholic doesn't really know It well
English
3
0
0
40
Ryan Burge 📊
Ryan Burge 📊@ryanburge·
58% of evangelicals and Black Protestants say that the Bible is "extremely important" in their life. It's 48% of Latter-day Saints. Less than 20% of mainline Protestants and Catholics say that they Bible is extremely important to them.
Ryan Burge 📊 tweet media
English
73
84
537
67.6K
Charlie Tuna
Charlie Tuna@BasedTunaCan·
@Roach_VDB @ryanburge It isnt that its good. The question doesnt work for Catholics because the Bible is so intertwined with the Mass and Catholic life that when asked if the Bible (physical book on a shelf) is important the person may say no even though they ultimately read scripture every week
English
1
0
3
181
Hal Vandenberg
Hal Vandenberg@Roach_VDB·
@ryanburge I can't wait for the trads to explain how this is actually a good thing
English
2
0
30
1.6K
Robert Kearney
Robert Kearney@Robkearney1981·
@ryanburge Most Catholics really don't think reading the Bible is very important. We have the Church to tell us what to believe about religion so the idea of reading a book for it doesn't really make much sense.
English
12
0
19
2.1K