Editor’s Note: Prevost attended an inter-faith pray service for “peace”, held at the Arch of Constantine, on the south side of the Roman Forum, near the Flavian Amphitheater.
The Arch was constructed to celebrate the victory of Constantine over the forces of Maxentius, on October 28, 312 A. D.. At the time of the Battle, Constantine’s mother St. Helena was a Catholic and just as the battle began, the Sign of the Cross appeared in the morning sky, and Constatine was inspired that “In this sign” he would have the victory, and God granted it.
To hold a “peace” service with multiple religions at this Arch is therefore the most diabolic sacrilege and profanation possible, since the Arch was erected to show that true peace comes from Christ’s cross. Indeed, the Arch is the first monument at Rome to feature the Angels on its upper decorations, showing that the Empire had come under the care of God, the Christian God.
As masons often do, they hold satanic services before or around Halloween. Not far from the Arch — only about 500 feet — is the Church of Saint Athanasia, the head quarters of the Mafia of St. Gallen, and near to that an underground Mithreum, where the elites of the city are inducted into Satanic rituals, according to what one Carabinieri told me, whose own friend was invited there for a Satanic ritual initiation.
In this article, I use the English word, “desecrates” in its transferred or metaphorical sense of dishonoring a thing’s dignity or true character, since to my knowledge, this Arch was never consecrated in a ritual of the Catholic Church. — I say this for non-English speakers who are reading this article of mine through a translation app.
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The Book on the Trinity, every faithful Catholic priest would love as his next present
This is Br. Bugnolo's English Translation, of Saint Bonaventure's encylopedic book of theology on the Trinity: With this book, your priest will always have something intelligent and awesomely inspiring to preach to you about
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Thanks. Useful to know. Apparently there are quite AT LEAST 15
In the city of Rome: Vi sono a Roma almeno altri 15 mitrei in varie parti della città, non tutti visitabili.
https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitreo
Mithrea are quite common throughout the territory of the former Roman Empire. Nearly every city of note had at least one, though many are still being discovered. Noto in Sicily has one, but it is nearly always under water, due to the higher water levels underground in modern times.