De volgende paus is de duivel

devil or angel?

Je komt af en toe berichten op het web tegen waarvan je denkt… Wat moet je ermee. Berichten over het einde van de wereld is niet nieuws, maar het blijft opmerkelijk als een groepering roept dat de volgende paus de duivel is. Het einde van de wereld komt eraan… Bekijk het filmpje hieronder maar.

 

Een groepering die zichzelf World's Last Chance noemt; zegt te kunnen
voorspellen wie de volgende paus wordt. Een ene John Paul II. Nee, niet
die Johannes de Paulus II die al dood is. Maar de duivel die zichzelf
presenteert onder dezelfde naam. En WLC kan het weten, want ze hebben
er een bijbelstudie naar gedaan. Lees zelf maar dit wereldschokkend nieuws op hun
website 

 

foto van sweet.hobbes  

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6 reacties op “De volgende paus is de duivel

  1. F.Floor (61)

    Het ‘de laatste paus’verhaal is duidelijk ge-ent op de monnik Malachus die een 300 pausen op een lijstje zette met een dichtregel erachter (verhaal staat nog ergens op Indernet) en de èèn na laatste paus kreeg de toevoeging: “Van de halve maan”.
    Hierna komt volgens zijn lijstje er nog maar eentje dus dat is makkelijk voorspellen zo.
    Wat die dichtregel te betekenen heeft is veel onderzoek naar gedaan en de helft bleek onwaar volgens journalisten. Maar onderzoekers scoorden een punt toen bleek dat veel pausen er een geheim liefdesleven op na bleken te houden: een boek daarover is gepubliceerd en ik citeerde er al veel uit.

      /   Beantwoorden  / 
  2. Jos

    Je moet toch wel een beetje veel debiel zijn om al die onzin te geloven…

      /   Beantwoorden  / 
  3. scierdesy

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  4. CalkRarAdyday

    Wow Check out this rumor…..

    ABC will announce Monday that TLC reality star Kate Gosselin will be one of the hoofers on the next round of “Dancing With the Stars,” according to a source with knowledge of the situation.

    At press time, the deal was virtually done for the now-divorced mother of eight to become one of the celebrities vying for the cheesetastic Mirrored Disco Ball.

    This will be the fulfillment of a dream for Gosselin who, on Jay Leno’s ill-fated prime-time show, said she’d like to be on “Stars” because she can’t dance. “I want to laugh at myself,” Gosselin told Leno. “I so cannot dance.”

    Will you Watch?

      /   Beantwoorden  / 
  5. symnwhism

    Hey everyone what do you think of this! Pretty crazy stuff! I don’t think anyone is going to stop young people from partying but what do my fellow moms think?

    At Virginia Tech, where tailgating and raucous apartment complex parties are time-honored rituals, university officials are turning increasingly to Mom and Dad to curb problem underage drinking.

    This semester, the school in Blacksburg, Va., began notifying parents when their under-21 students are found guilty of even minor alcohol violations such as getting caught with a beer in a dorm room.

    Although it’s common for colleges to alert parents of major alcohol offenses — or when a student faces suspension — Virginia Tech is part of a small but growing number sending letters home on minor ones.

    The debate about how much to involve parents in such cases is a balancing act for colleges and universities. Officials want to hold young adults accountable as they venture out on their own, are well aware that drinking is part of the college experience, and also recognize potential allies in a generation of hands-on parents who can help when things go too far.

    “I think it helps students open up to parents,” said Steven Clarke, director of Virginia Tech’s College Alcohol Abuse Prevention Center. “And parents can be helpful in setting boundaries students might need.”

    The beefed-up parental notification policy is part of a broader strategy that includes alcohol-education classes and a “party positive” program that encourages responsible drinking.

    The student reaction to the policy change, not surprisingly, has been less than enthusiastic.

    “If you have one beer in the dorm and you get caught, I don’t feel like parents should be notified,” said Erik Pryslak, a junior engineering major. “Now that we’re all in college, we’re all adults. It’s kind of your responsibility to take care of yourself. If you want to make your parents aware you’re about to be kicked out of school, then it’s on you.”

    Studies show that students who say their parents would disapprove of them drinking are less likely to drink heavily once they get to college, said Toben Nelson, an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health who has studied campus drinking.

    At Virginia Tech, the school has operated on a “three strikes” system for years: Students get one strike for a minor alcohol violation and two for a major one — things like getting a DUI or vomiting all over a residence hall bathroom. Three strikes and a student is suspended for at least one semester.

    After a spate of alcohol-related deaths on college campuses, Congress in the late 1990s changed student privacy laws to lower barriers to parental notification in cases involving students under 21.

    Schools took a wide array of approaches in response. Virginia Tech started notifying parents of under-21 students after major alcohol offenses or when a student had accumulated two strikes with two minor ones.

    But some parents complained that because they had not been notified of minor offenses, they were in the dark until a student was suddenly facing suspension, said Edward Spencer, Virginia Tech’s vice president for student affairs. Hence the change this semester — a move Spencer says also reflects changing times.

    Parents of Generation X students were often reluctant to get involved when the school invoked an emergency clause in privacy laws and alerted them of alcohol problems, he said.

    “The response would be, ‘You know, I’m leaving on a cruise. I’m going to a class reunion.’”

    But today, parents of millennials tend to be tethered by cell phone to children who studies show often idolize their parents — so it makes sense to go a step further in parental involvement, he said.

    “We’d like to strike a happy medium,” Spencer said. “We’re grateful for the positive involvement of parents. We find it difficult when their involvement is over-involvement.”

    Research has found more than 40 percent of college students reported at least one symptom of alcohol abuse or dependance. One recent study estimated that more than 500,000 full-time students at four-year colleges suffer injuries each year related to drinking, and about 1,700 die in such accidents.

    “When it comes to safety, there really is a fine line,” said Max DiSesa, a sophomore from Durham, N.H. “I completely understand Virginia Tech and they want to keep people safe. But I think this might be overall detrimental to the growth of students.”

    Some universities already have found success alerting parents earlier. The University at Albany, State University of New York has seen a decline in repeat offenders since it began notifying parents of under-21 students of minor alcohol violations four years ago, said Laurie Garafola, director of residential life.

    “I don’t send many second letters out to parents,” she said.

    At the University of North Carolina Wilmington, the philosophy is different. The school — which like many others stresses shared responsibility to parents and students during summer orientation — does not notify parents of minor offenses. Parents, however, are notified before any under-21 student is suspended.

    “Part of students coming to college is to learn how to be a responsible adult — and hopefully learn from their mistakes,” said Patricia Leonard, vice chancellor for student affairs.

    Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

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  6. blogging to the bank

    I really love to read some articles that have great positive impacts on its reader and benefit by reading such article especially concerning Gold and the stock market. I admire these writers in sharing their views and or opinions that can enlighten the mind of the readers.

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