Our friend Peter Parker draws out even further insights from his angle. -Jay By: Peter Parker I’ve noticed the traditional “luciferian” formula of the atheistic type, generally goes like this....
Read MoreAnd this applies to “Catholic” freaks as well. The churches have become circuses. This is some of the gayest, most bizarre stuff imaginable. Peruse the collage of absurdity below....
Read MoreWhat Latin Traditionalists Need to Understand By: Jay My purpose here is to correct a tendency and misconception, which sometimes leads to an error. Debating the status of this document’s...
Read More(Back by popular demand. -Jay 😉 By M. B. One thing that amazes me when I read Reformed people’s arguments against Rome is not so much what they say...
Read MoreA Presuppositional Critique: It’s Inseparability from Faith By: Jay Dyer I shouldn’t have to go to my local church [!] and end up having to defend the accuracy and...
Read MoreThis week I read some really good articles I want to pass on. “Temple of Man: Freemasonry, Civil Religion and Education” by: Terry Melanson “The Church Impotent: The Feminization of...
Read MoreBy: Jay The “television event of the decade” ended with what is, in my opinion, the cheesiest and empty theme it could have possibly had. As it turns out, as...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer Plato, Philo, Plotinus, Dionysius, Augustine, Basil, John of Damascus, Maximus the Confessor, Isaac the Syrian, John Scotus, Thomas Aquinas, Bonaventure and many others all profess a doctrine of divine exemplarism. This is Plato’s...
Read MoreA Detailed Analysis of the Implications of Reformation Theology By: Jay Dyer St. Gregory of Nyssa wrote of the reason for the Incarnation: “Sick, our nature demanded to be healed; fallen, to...
Read More“He, the Eternal King, recapitulates everything in himself” (Adversus haereses, III, 21,9) By: Jay Dyer For a long time I assumed that the Eastern notions of the eschaton sounded universalist and...
Read MoreBy: Jay This one goes out to all those skeptics who, for some reason, always trust the “mainstream” historians. This fact is odd, since often times what is “mainstream” is...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer If you’ve read much in terms of Catholic theology and Church History, it’s not too long before you come into contact with various theories about what has...
Read MoreBy: Peter Parker Although the idea that Weird Science is rife with occult underpinnings might, at first, seem a ludicrous contention to some, on closer examination of the text numerous...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer A common thread in non-Christian religions and worldviews is that of dualism. In fact, nature itself does exhibit all forms of dualities, such as night and day,...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer Many are confused about the meaning and terminology of the debates that have been occurring lately in regards to Calvinism, the Trinity, Nature, Person, etc. So, an...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer No one should be afraid to read someone even the West believes to be a Doctor of the Church. Some Latins, however, actually discourage people from reading...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer A Reformed Protestant apologist recently sent me several objections to the Deuterocanonical Books. These are the books which are included in the Catholic and Orthodox canons,...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer As is evident in conversations with both unenlightened Catholics and Calvinists (but especially Calvinists), the starting point of theology – the ordo theologiae is radically different. The West...
Read MoreJay Dyer Researchers Peter Collier and David Horowitz were granted in the late sixties and early seventies special access to the Rockefeller Family archives, at that time housed at that...
Read MoreN. writes: No offense Jay, but you are operating on multiple, severely flawed groundworks. For example: 1) Thomas never taught God was like a blob of jello such that ‘Father...
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