Jesuits Catholics

Seven-year plan launched for next phase of Laudato Si’ – Search (bing.com)

The Jesuit Vatican New World Order

The Jesuit Seven: -Year Plan for the Environment was launched at a ceremony at Windsor Castle in England, along with hundreds of other plans by different faiths, denominations, and religious orders. Jesuit conferences, provinces, works, communities, and individuals are encouraged, with the help of this plan, to fulfill the mandate of GC35 to “move beyond doubts and indifference and take responsibility for our home, the earth” 


Jesuit NWO – Search (bing.com)

VATICAN CITY — To help lead the world’s Catholics along a journey of intensified action in caring for creation, Pope Francis asked everyone to join a new global grassroots movement to create a more inclusive, fraternal, peaceful and sustainable world.
The new initiative, the Laudato Si’ Action Platform, is “a seven-year journey that will see our communities committed in different ways to becoming totally sustainable, in the spirit of integral ecology,” the Pope said in a video message released May 25.
“We need a new ecological approach that can transform our way of dwelling in the world, our lifestyles, our relationship with the resources of the Earth and, in general, our way of looking at humanity and of living life,” he said.
This can only come about by everyone working together in a coordinated effort, he said. “Only in this way will we be able to create the future we want: a more inclusive, fraternal, peaceful and sustainable world.”
The Pope’s message was released on the last day of Laudato Si’ Week —

the “crowning event” of a special Laudato Si’ Anniversary Year, which closed May 24.
But the end of anniversary celebrations of Pope Francis’ 2015 encyclical, Laudato Si’, 

on Care for Our Common Home, ushered in a new wave of initiatives including a new website at laudatosi.va and an action platform at laudatosiplattform.org as part of a “road map” of action for the next decade.

Satanic Jesuits – Search (bing.com)

The platform is meant to help those who want to increase their commitment to bringing Laudato Si’ to life by promising a set of actions over a period of seven years.
Integral ecology requires every member of the wider Church to contribute their skills and work together on common goals, which is why the platform specifically invites: families; parishes and dioceses; schools and universities; hospitals and health care centres; workers, businesses and farms; organizations, groups and movements; and religious orders. People can register May 25-Oct. 4 to assess what they are doing now and to see how they can further contribute to the seven Laudato Si’ goals.
Those goals are: responding to the cry of the Earth and environmental degradation; responding to the cry of the poor and vulnerable; creating an ecological-sustainable economy; adopting simple lifestyles; supporting ecological education; promoting ecological spirituality; and building community awareness, participation and action.
Choosing the biblical time frame of seven years “enables us to work slowly but surely without being obsessed with immediate results,” said Salesian Fr. Joshtrom Kureethadam, co-ordinator of the “ecology and creation” desk at the Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development.
“We envisage the first year to be dedicated to the three fundamental tasks of community building, resource sharing and drawing up concrete action plans for each of the Laudato Si’ goals,” followed by five years of solid concrete action and a final year as a sabbatical year “to praise and thank God,” he said May 25 at a Vatican news conference, unveiling the new projects.
The strategy, he said, is to create a snowball effect by enrolling increasingly larger numbers of groups each year “to create the critical mass needed” for achieving real change in the world.
“The good news is that the critical mass is not a very big number. Sociologists tell us

that if you reach 3.5 percent of a group” or community, “we have the critical mass.
That’s what Mahatma Gandhi did, that’s what Nelson Mandela did,” Kureethadam said.

Jesuits and Freemasonry – Search (bing.com)

Jesuits – Wikipedia member of the Society of Jesus (S.J.), a Roman Catholic order of religious men founded by St. Ignatius of Loyola, noted for its educationalmissionary, and charitable works. 

The order has been regarded by many as the principal agent of the 

Counter-Reformation and was later a leading force in modernizing the church.
The order grew out of the activity of Ignatius, a Spanish soldier who experienced a religious conversion during a period of convalescence from a wound received in battle. After a period of intense prayer, he composed the Spiritual Exercises, a guidebook to convert the heart and mind to a closer following of Jesus Christ.

On August 15, 1534, at Paris, six young men who had met him at the University of Paris and made a retreat according to the Spiritual Exercises joined him in vows of poverty, chastity, and a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. If this last promise did not prove possible, as it did not, they vowed to accept any apostolic work requested by the pope.
In 1539 Ignatius drafted the first outline of the order’s organization, which Pope Paul III approved on September 27, 1540.

St. Ignatius of Loyola
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St. Ignatius of Loyola: Founding of the Jesuit order
The final period of Loyola’s life was spent in Rome or its vicinity. In 1539 the companions decided to form a permanent union, adding a…
Jesuits Illuminati – Search (bing.com)

The society introduced several innovations in the form of religious life.

Among these were the discontinuance of many medieval practices—such as regular penances or fasts obligatory on all, a common uniform, and the choral recitation of the liturgical office—in the interest of greater mobility and adaptability. Other innovations included a highly centralized form of authority with life tenure for the head of the order, probation lasting many years before final vows, gradation of members, and lack of a female branch. Particular emphasis was laid upon the virtue of obedience, including special obedience to the pope. Emphasis was also placed upon flexibility, a condition that allowed Jesuits to become involved in a great variety of ministries and missionary endeavours in all parts of the world.
The society grew rapidly, and it quickly assumed a prominent role in the 

Counter-Reformation defense and revival of Catholicism. Almost from the beginning, education and scholarship became the society’s principal work. The early Jesuits, however, also produced preachers and catechists who devoted themselves to the care of the young, the sick, prisoners, prostitutes, and soldiers; they also were often called upon to undertake the controversial task of confessor to many of the royal and ruling families of Europe. The society entered the foreign mission field within months of its founding as Ignatius sent St. Francis Xavier, his most gifted companion, and three others to the East. More Jesuits were to be involved in missionary work than in any other activity, save education. By the time of Ignatius’s death in 1556, about 1,000 Jesuits were already working throughout Europe and in AsiaAfrica, and the New World.
By 1626 the number of Jesuits was 15,544, and in 1749 the total was 22,589.

Matteo Ricci
Matteo Ricci
The society encountered an important controversy centred on the Italian Jesuit Matteo Ricci, who worked as a missionary in China in the late 16th and the early 17th century. Decades of scholarly research into Buddhist and Confucian thought had prepared Ricci to attach the Roman Catholic understanding of the Christian faith to the deepest spiritual apprehensions of the Chinese religious tradition. The veneration of Confucius, the great Chinese religious and philosophical leader, and the religious honours paid to ancestors were to be seen not as elements of paganism to be rejected out of hand but as rituals of Chinese society that could be adapted to Christian purposes. Although Ricci’s apostolic labours won him many converts in China, they also aroused the suspicion of many in the West that the distinctiveness of Christianity was being compromised. The suspicion did not assert itself officially until long after Ricci’s death, but, when it did, the outcome was a condemnation of the so-called Chinese rites by Pope Clement XI in 1704 and 1715 and by Pope Benedict XIV in 1742. Ancestor veneration and Confucian devotion were said to be an inseparable element of traditional Chinese religion and hence incompatible with Christian worship and doctrine.


Encarnación, Paraguay: Jesuit mission
Encarnación, Paraguay: Jesuit mission
Among the repercussions of the controversy over Chinese rites was an intensification of the resentment directed against the Jesuits. Their preeminent position among the religious orders and their championship of the pope exposed them to hostility, and by the middle of the 18th century a variety of adversaries, both lay and clerical, were seeking to destroy the order. The opposition can be traced to several reasons, primarily perhaps to the anticlerical and antipapal spirit of the times. Hostility to the Jesuits was further inspired by their defense of the indigenous populations of the Americas against abuses committed by Spanish and Portuguese colonizers and by the strength of the order, which was regarded as an impediment to the establishment of absolute monarchist rule.
The Portuguese crown expelled the Jesuits in 1759, France made them illegal in 1764, and Spain and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies took other repressive action in 1767. Opponents of the Society of Jesus achieved their greatest success when they took their case to Rome. Although Pope Clement XIII refused to act against the Jesuits, his successor, Pope Clement XIV, issued a brief abolishing the order in 1773. The society’s corporate existence was maintained in Russia, where political circumstances—notably the opposition of Catherine II the Great—prevented the canonical execution of the suppression. The demand that the Jesuits take up their former work became so insistent that in 1814 Pope Pius VII reestablished the society. Meanwhile, however, the suppression of the Jesuits had done serious damage to the missions and the educational program of the church at a time when both enterprises were under great pressure.

After the society was restored, the Jesuits grew to be the largest order of male religious. Work in education on all levels continued to involve more Jesuits than any other activity, while the number of Jesuits working in the mission fields, especially in Asia and Africa, exceeded that of any other religious order. They were involved in a broad and complex list of activities, including the field of communications, social workecumenismhuman rights, and even politics. In 1968 the Jesuit superior general, Father Pedro Arrupe, refocused the order with “a preferential option for the poor,” and the Jesuit ranks experienced a rise in the popularity of liberation theology, which holds that ministry should include involvement in the political struggle of the poor. This ideology influenced a number of Jesuit leaders in Latin America in the late 20th century, some of whom were met with violence and death because of their activism, and brought the order into conflict with Pope John Paul II, who sought to curb the movement with the appointment of conservative prelates in Latin America. In 2013 Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina became Pope Francis, the first Jesuit to be elected pope. 
Pope Francis sent a video message to the TED Countdown summit on climate change Saturday explaining how a more “integral ecology” can help the poor.
Vatican City, Oct 11, 2020 / 04:30 am

“Science tells us, with more precision every day, that urgent action is needed – and I am not exaggerating, this is what the science says – if we are to have any hope of avoiding radical and catastrophic climate change. And for this we must act now. This is a scientific fact,” Pope Francis said in the video posted online Oct. 10.
“Conscience tells us that we cannot be indifferent to the suffering of the poorest, to growing economic inequalities and social injustices. And the economy itself cannot be limited to production and distribution. It must necessarily consider its impact on the environment and the dignity of the person,” he added.
Pope Francis’ video message was one of many sent by celebrities and public figures

from around the world for the virtual TED Talk summit. Prince William, Al Gore, Chris Hemsworth, and Mark Ruffalo also urged action to prevent climate change in the global launch of TED Countdown.

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The Pope Embraces Gaia Mother Earth.

This new venture from Pope Francis is unsurprising, as the pontiff has been effusive with his flattery and worshipful praise of Mother Gaia, joining with pagans to worship a topless earth goddess, saying that fossil fuels are immoral and should be banned, suggesting that God will flood the world again if we don’t stop global warming, and arguing that we need to ditch capitalism so that we don’t kill the planet and each other.  
(Protestia)  The capitalism-hating, socialism-loving Vicar of the Roman Catholic Church has come up with a seven-year plan to greenify the world and heal “Mother Earth” on account of the “wounds that we cause by our predatory attitude, which makes us feel that we are masters of the planet and its resources,” in order to “inaugurate a lifestyle and a society that is finally eco-sustainable.” View article →

PAGAN POPE URGES 1.5 BILLION FOLLOWERS TO PROTECT ‘MOTHER EARTH’ AS HE PREACHES THE GREEN GOSPEL  IN HIS ‘LAUDATO SI’ LAUNCH – Gospel News Network

His Holiness Pope Francis: Our moral imperative to act on climate change — and 3 steps we can take | TED Talk

Video Message of the Holy Father to mark the launch of the “Laudato Si” Action Platform (25 May 2021) | Francis (vatican.va)

The Jesuit Seven-Year Plan for the Environment was launched at a ceremony at Windsor Castle in England – Search (bing.com)

Pope Francis Is a Jesuit: Seven Things You Need to Know About the Society of Jesus (thedailybeast.com)

Pope Francis Once Again Proves He’s Pro-Communist (lifezette.com)

Pope Francis is a Jesuit South American commie pig – Search (bing.com)


The Pope’s Radical 7-Year Environmental Plan — Fulcrum7

Pope renews call to protect “mother Earth” – YouTube


What is the Pope’s Action Plan for the environment?

The pope explained that the action plan also has seven goals: the response to the cry of the earth, the response to the cry of the poor, ecological economics, adoption of simple lifestyles, ecological education, ecological spirituality, and community involvement.


Who Are the Jesuits, and Should You Be Concerned Today?

By Stuart Quint
Rome commemorates the death of Ignatius of Loyola on July 31 each year. [i] 
Loyola was the notorious founder of the Society of Jesus, also known as the “Jesuits”.  While the man died long ago, his movement lives on with its malicious mission nearly
500 years later.
The Jesuit agenda has relevance today for America, Europe, and other nations around the world.
Former Catholic priest Richard Bennett recognized the danger:
“It is a well-established fact that the Jesuits throughout their history have caused many serious disturbances by their nefarious schemes within the civil governments of many countries. Over the centuries, they have justifiably earned their reputation as troublemakers to the extent that they were denied residence in some nations for varying periods of time.[ii]
This article will explore the historical record of nations that “denied residence to Jesuits”.  We will also highlight current celebrities educated under the “nefarious schemes” of the Jesuits.
When considering the Jesuits, we should avoid extremes.  One extreme is to give the Jesuits too much credit and stoke needless, irrational panic.  However, today, we see another extreme that is more common: many ignore or underestimate the impact of Jesuits in history and today. [iii]
For us to stand in the time of trouble in our day, we need to be able to see the enemy.  “Beware of false prophets, which come to you in sheep’s clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves.” [iv]
Our encouragement in the Lord is that He will eventually expose the false Jesuit prophets and judge them. In the end.  “Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down and cast into the fire.  Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them.” [v]
The Fanatical Founder of the Jesuits[vi]
The historian J.A. Wylie draws remarkable parallels between Loyola and the Jesuits to Luther and the Reformers. [vii] His comparison goes beyond the fact that both men were born and lived around the same time in the 1500’s.
Both men began as stubborn, secular careerists.  Near disastrous events turned their lives to strict, even fanatical, Catholicism.
Loyola was a military officer who refused to surrender until forced to by a near fatal injury.  Luther was set on a career as a lawyer until nearly being struck dead by lightning.
Both men turned to extreme asceticism in Catholic monasteries.  Both Loyola and Luther were tortured by their consciences as the guilt of their sin weighed heavily upon them.  This austere Catholicism brought out their passion, genius, and organizational skills.

Yet, this is where the similarities end.
Luther dove deeper into God’s Word.  God used Luther’s circumstances not only to drive him to a personal faith in Christ alone through grace alone.  He also prompted Luther to teach others in rediscovering the core doctrines of the Reformation taught in Scripture.  God’s work in Luther’s life led to the liberation of many people and even cultures from the dead works of the false gospel of Rome.
In contrast, Loyola strayed deeply into Catholic mysticism.  He performed acts of self-humiliation and masochism to deepen his devotion to “Mary”.  This asceticism made Loyola claim he saw fanatical visions of Heaven and Hell, Mary and Jesus.  Eventually, he convinced himself to become a “knight for Mary” serving as a “soldier of Jesus”.  He would offer his unconditional loyalty to the Roman Pope and aggressively recruited other men to his fanatic cause.
At first, Loyola’s initial intent was to serve “Mary” by converting the heathen Muslims in the Promised Land.  Over time, he recognized the more urgent need was to fight heresy in lands dominated by Catholicism.  Loyola saw Reformed Christians as the main opposition to his zealous devotion to Mary.
The Founding of the Jesuits[viii]
Loyola named his group “the Society of Jesus”.  They’re existed other orders in the Roman Catholic Church, such as the Augustinians, Dominicans, and Franciscans.  However, members of these orders stayed inside their monasteries and churches.  They also had earned a harsh reputation for corruption and fell into disrepute among people.  At times, these orders clashed with the Popes.
The Jesuits would be different. 
They would not stick to the comforts of a monastery.  Rather, Jesuits would travel anywhere as their leadership ordered them.  Their mandate was to go preach outside, serve the least fortunate of the sick and poor, and open schools and colleges.  Jesuits also sought control of the upper classes.  They befriended members of the political and economic elites as counselors and confessors.  The goal of the Jesuits was for absolute subjection to the Roman Pope and destruction of dissenting belief in God’s Word alone.  Hence, many refer to the Jesuits as the movement of “Counter Reformation”. [ix]
Imitating Loyola’s asceticism, the Jesuits also enforced strict discipline.  Entry into the order was demanding and could take months and even years to ascend the ranks.  Jesuits were to learn absolute obedience, to the point of doing and thinking as the leader, the “Successor General”, commanded them.
Loyola illustrates the ironclad authority of the Society over any independent and rational judgment of the individual.   “If we wish to proceed securely in all things, we must hold fast to the following principle: What seems to me white, I will believe black if the hierarchical Church so defines.”[x]

Obedience to the Jesuit order encompassed more than forfeiting one’s rational judgment.  The Jesuit must also yield in terms of his moral conscience, even to the point of violating God’s Word for the sake of the order.
Jesuit theologians justify and practice sins contrary to God’s Word: lying under oath[xi], theft[xii], murder[xiii], and blasphemy[xiv].
It should be no surprise that the Jesuits have left for us such a long and tarnished legacy of ill fruit.
Loyola recorded his methods for ascetic discipline in The Spiritual Disciplines.[xv]  
The fruit of these “disciplines” is quite visible today in acolytes such as Pope Francis[xvi] and Dr. Robert Redfield, head of the US CDC. [xvii]
Pope Paul III in 1540 blessed the formation and statutes of the Society of Jesus despite opposition from other Catholic orders.  Rome was weakened by the gains of the Reformation.  The Jesuits’ zeal and unquestioning loyalty appealed to the Pope.  Other Popes later would have varying levels of confidence in the Jesuits.  One even dissolved the order, only for the next to restore them later.
The Jesuits today are the largest order in the Roman Catholic Church.[xviii]  Pope Francis is the most visible authority in the Roman Catholic Church and the first Jesuit Pope in history.[xix]

The Bitter Fruit of the Jesuits
The Jesuits have left an indelible mark on history.  Their influence and havoc has ranged from communist indigenous colonies in Paraguay to syncretism in India, civil war in China and Germany, genocide in Bohemia, disastrous war with Muslims in Portugal, stagnation in Spain, attempted coup in England, and even an imposter tsar in Russia.[xx]  They have been tied to collaboration with fascists in Europe[xxi] and assassination of heads of state, including President Abraham Lincoln in the US.[xxii]  All kinds of moral scandals also pervaded the Jesuits in their relations, especially with women.[xxiii]
Numerous nations expelled the Jesuits because of their malice!
“Between 1555 and 1931 the Society of Jesus was expelled from at least 83 countries, city-states and cities, for engaging in political intrigue and subversive plots against the welfare of the State, according to the records of a Jesuit priest of repute [Ed.: i.e., Thomas J. Campbell].… Practically every instance of expulsion was for political intrigue, political infiltration, political subversion, and inciting to political insurrection. “[xxiv]
We need to remember politics is a tool, not an end, for the Jesuits.  The goal is secular and spiritual domination under their rule.  The Jesuits seek to co-opt the secular authorities to persecute and eliminate the influence of God’s true people from the scene.
The successors of both Loyola and Luther continue in conflict today.
One objection today is: “Well, those were the Jesuits of old.  They have changed.  Today, they are more liberal, weaker, and kinder.  Why should we worry about the Jesuits?”
The Holy Scriptures address the deceptive nature of the Antichrist system in its ability to adapt its appearance to cater to a specific audience.  
Antichrist appears “gentle like a lamb”. 
Yet, God’s Word also reveals that the essence of Antichrist does not change!
And I beheld another beast coming up out of the earth; and he had two horns like a lamb, and he Spake as a dragon.” [xxv]
Indeed, the Jesuits are well-trained in adapting to the context of the audience whom they woo. [xxvi]   Future articles will unpack these questions in detail and relate them to our current day. The Jesuit Seven | Spring 2018 | The Scranton Journal

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Famous People under Jesuit Influence
Major players in the COVID crisis in the US are Jesuit alumni!  They include Dr. Anthony Fauci, Governor Andrew Cuomo of New York, Governor Gavin Newsom of California, and President Donald Trump!
[xxvii] (Trump studied for 2 years at the Jesuit Fordham University in New York.)  Additionally, Dr. Robert Redfield, head of the US Center for Disease Control (“CDC”), is another Jesuit graduate and a key player in Operation Warp Speed. [xxviii]
Former US President Bill Clinton graduated from the Jesuit Georgetown University. [xxix]
Ivan Duque[xxx], President of Colombia, Alejandro Toledo, former President of Peru, Mario Draghi[xxxi], former head of the European Central Bank, and both brothers Fidel and Raul Castro, former and current head of Cuba, graduated from Jesuit schools.[xxxii]
The Jesuits are just as influential and menacing today as they were 500 years ago.
Conclusion: What Should We Do?
If you are Catholic, you need to see the danger of your soul.  These Jesuits blaspheme the name of Christ for their ill-gotten gain.  The Roman Church supports these false prophets and will suffer God’s judgment with them.
But you do not have to suffer along with them.  Leave Rome!  Depart from her sins!  “Flee out of the midst of Babylon and deliver every man his soul be not cut off in her iniquity; for this is the time of the Lord‘s vengeance; he will render unto her a recompense.” [xxxiii]
Run to Christ!  Make Him your refuge.  Ask Him for forgiveness, directly.  “For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus.[xxxiv]
If you profess Christ Jesus as your savior, let us remember that our struggle is not against flesh and blood.  “For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds.”[xxxv]

May we heed the words of Charles Spurgeon.  He was quite familiar with the wiles of Rome and her Jesuits.  Over 100 years later, his words of action are relevant for us as we face the same enemies he did.  Let us pray to the Lord against the Antichrist of Rome:
“It is the bounden duty of every Christian to pray against Antichrist, and as to what Antichrist is no sane man ought to raise a question.  If it be not the popery in the Church of Rome there is nothing in the world that can be called by that name.  If there were to be issued a hue and cry for Antichrist, we should certainly take up this church on suspicion, and it would certainly not be let loose again, for it so exactly answers the description.” [xxxvi]

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[i] https://www.ignatianspirituality.com/31-days-with-saint-ignatius/ 
accessed on July 25, 2020.
[ii] https://bereanbeacon.org/pope-francis-shows-his-true-colors-2/ 
accessed on July 26, 2020.
[iii] One factor that has desensitized Christians to the Jesuits is fabricated testimonies.  For instance, doubts over the credibility of Alberto Rivera, the role model for Chick comic strips on the Jesuits, are significant.  See https://www.biblebasedministries.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/The-Alberto-Rivera-Story.pdf  accessed on July 25, 2020.  (Shaun Willcock is a pastor in South Africa who had worked for a time with Rivera.)
Another factor is the growing attraction of evangelicals for ecumenism with Rome. 
This has blinded them to the false gospel of Catholicism and to the dangerous Jesuits.  See https://bereanbeacon.org/ecumenism/ for a whole list of articles.
[iv] Matthew 7:15.
[v] Matthew 7:19-20.
[vi] Much of the material for this section comes from J.A. Wylie’s “History of the Jesuits” in History of Protestantism on https://bereanbeacon.org/history-of-the-jesuits/  accessed July 25, 2020.  See also Theodor Griesinger, The History of the Jesuits (G.P. Putnam’s Sons: New York, 1883), Vol 1-3.
[vii] See chapter 1 on https://bereanbeacon.org/history-of-the-jesuits/  accessed July 25, 2020
[viii] Much of the material for this section comes from J.A. Wylie’s “History of the Jesuits” in History of Protestantism on https://bereanbeacon.org/history-of-the-jesuits/  accessed July 25, 2020.  See also Theodor Griesinger, The History of the Jesuits (G.P. Putnam’s Sons: New York, 1883), Vol 1-3.
[ix] https://bereanbeacon.org/the-counter-reformation-and-the-jesuit-order/  accessed on July 26, 2020.
[x] http://www.ibosj.ca/2013/04/thinking-with-church.html  accessed on July 27, 2020.
[xi] Jesuit theologian Sanchez states, “A man may swear that he hath not done such a thing, though he really have [perjury]…”  J.A. Wylie, The History of Protestantism, (Heartland Publications: 2002, Rapidan, VA) 1121.
[xii] Jesuit teacher Emmanuel Sa writes: “But it is not a mortal sin to take secretly from him who would give if he were asked.”  Ibid., 1122.
[xiii] Reginald permitted the murder of false witnesses (on the assumption they might murder you otherwise); Fagundez allowed parents seeking to turn their children away from Rome “may justify be killed by them”; Amicus allowed “calumniators” to be murdered “when other means of defence are wanting.”  Idem.
[xiv] The Jesuit Casnedi believed: “Do what your conscience tells you to be good, and commanded if through invincible error you believe lying or blasphemy to be commanded by God, blaspheme.”  Idem.
[xv] http://www.ignatianspirituality.com/ignatian-prayer/the-spiritual-exercises/  accessed on July 26, 2020.
[xvi] https://bereanbeacon.org/pope-francis-master-of-jesuit-spiritual-exercises/ and  https://bereanbeacon.org/pope-francis-shows-his-true-colors-2/ 
both accessed on July 26, 2020.
[xvii] https://bereanbeacon.org/28721/ accessed on July 26, 2020.
[xviii] https://www.jesuits.org/about-us/the-jesuits/  accessed on July 27, 2020.
[xix] http://wuja.org/2013/07/01/habemus-papam/  accessed on July 27, 2020.
[xx] Theodor Griesinger, The History of the Jesuits (G.P. Putnam’s Sons: New York, 1883), Vol 1, Book 2.
[xxi] E.H. Lehmann, Behind the Dictators: A Factual Analysis of the Relationship of Nazi-Fascism and Roman Catholicism, (Kindle: 2015).
[xxii] Charles Chiniquy, 50 Years in the “Church” of Rome: The Conversion of a Priest, (Chick Publications: 1985, Chino, CA), 291-310.
[xxiii] Griesinger, Vol. 1, Book 3.
[xxiv] J.E.C. Shepherd, The Babington Plot: Jesuit Intrigue in Elizabethan England, (Toronto: Wittenburg Publications, 1987).
[xxv] Revelation 13:11. Author’s emphasis.
[xxvi] Jesuits used different strategies in Germany and China from the 16th to the 18th centuries.  In Germany, Jesuit coercion led to forced conversions, exile, or execution of Protestants.  In China, where they were less powerful, Jesuits resorted to compromise.  They promoted syncretism of Catholic and pagan religion.  Priests dressed like pagan Mandarins, and Confucius was adored in Masses like a god. 
See Griesinger, Vol. 1, Book 2 and Vol. 2, Book 4.
[xxvii] http://wuja.org/2020/04/27/fauci-cuomo-trump-three-jesuit-alumni-three-different-ways-of-dealing-with-the-coronavirus-crisis-in-the-land-of-uncle-sam/  accessed on July 27, 2020.
[xxviii] https://bereanbeacon.org/28721/  accessed on July 27, 2020.
[xxix] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Clinton  accessed on July 27, 2020.
[xxx] https://latinamerica.georgetown.edu/  accessed on July 29, 2020.
[xxxi] https://www.ft.com/content/8fca75b8-4535-11e2-838f-00144feabdc0  accessed on July 29, 2020.  Pope Francis appointed Draghi in June to head the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. 
 https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/pope-francis-appoints-former-european-central-bank-chief-mario-draghi-to-pontifical-academy-89403  accessed on July 29, 2020.
[xxxii] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_alumni_of_Jesuit_educational_institutions  accessed on July 29, 2020.
[xxxiii] Jeremiah 51:6.
[xxxiv] 1 Timothy 2:5.
[xxxv] 2 Corinthians 10:4.
[xxxvi] Charles Haddon Spurgeon, “Pray for Jesus”, Sermon on October 12, 1866 at Metropolitan Tabernacle, 
on https://www.spurgeon.org/resource-library/sermons/pray-for-jesus/#flipbook/  accessed on July 27, 2020.
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