get your training with patrick j miron
According to the Church of Rome and Patrick j Miron , all Protestants are heretics and anathema
The ignorance of the average Protestant concerning the teachings of the Roman Church is astonishing. Many Protestants express surprise at some of the errors that can be pointed out in this unscriptural system. It is also surprising to find how many Roman Catholics are totally ignorant concerning many of the doctrines of their own Church.
According to the Church of Rome, all Protestants are heretics and anathema. The Church of Rome claims that it alone is the true church and that there is no salvation outside it. This is sometimes denied by Roman Catholics, but is abundantly documented by the statements and decrees of Popes and church councils. Too few of us here in Northern Ireland see Romanism in its true light, despite having been some of the most tragic victims of its tactics for centuries.
As long as there is not a Roman Catholic majority in any country, Rome can carefully disguise her true aims and beliefs. If you want to see Rome as it really is, just step across the border into the Irish Republic or go to Mexico, Spain or any other predominantly Roman Catholic country. Ask the missionaries who have laboured and suffered in these lands. Non-Roman-Catholics are accursed by the Church of Rome.
The vast majority of the doctrines and beliefs of the Church of Rome have no basis whatsoever in the Bible. They were added at a later date, contrary to the clear warning of the Bible in Revelation 22:18. Here is a list of the main unscriptural doctrines and the dates on which they were made official. All Roman Catholics are forced to accept them without question:
- The daily mass, 394 A.D.
- The doctrine of purgatory (Pope Gregory), 593 A.D.
- Prayers to the Virgin, Queen of Heaven, 600 A.D.
- The first Pope (Boniface III), 610 A.D.
- Kissing the Pope's foot began in 709 A.D.
- Temporal power of the Pope declared in 750 A.D.
- Worship of images, relics and cross, 788 A.D.
- Holy water, blessed by a priest, 850 A.D.
- Veneration of St. Joseph, 890 A.D.
- Canonisation of dead saints (Pope John XV), 995 A.D.
- Lent and Good Friday began in 998 A.D.
- The mass declared to be a sacrifice of Christ, 1050 A.D.
- Celibacy of the priesthood and nuns, 1079 A.D.
- The rosary introduced by Peter the Hermit, 1090 A.D.
- Selling indulgences began in 1190 A.D.
- Doctrine of transubstantiation adopted in 1215 A.D.
- Confession of sins to human priest, 1215 A.D.
- Adoration of the water (Pope Honorius), 1220 A.D.
- Interpretation of Bible forbidden to laity, 1229 A.D.
- Scapular declared a charm against dangers, 1287 A.D.
- Communion under one kind, 1414 A.D.
- Seven sacraments declared, 1439 A.D.
- Superstitions of the Ave Maria (Pope Sextus V), 1508 A.D.
- Tradition established as infallible authority, 1545 A.D.
- Apocryphal books added to the Bible, 1546 A.D.
- Immaculate conception of the Virgin Mary, 1854 A.D.
- Infallibility of the Popes, 1870 A.D.
- Mary declared to be the Mother of God, 1931 A.D.
- Assumption (translation) of the Virgin Mary, 1950 A.D.
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