“John and myself have another great call with Jay Dyer (jaysanalysis.com). We discuss Max Horkheimer,Theodore W. Adorno, Frankfurt School,Marxism, banking, Columbia University, Institute for Social Research,the Nazis, the MACY Group,...
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer Copyrighted. All rights reserved. Next to William Shakespeare, John Donne (1572-1631) and Ben Johnson (1572-1637) represent the English Renaissance’s top literary luminaries. While notable for its broad...
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 MoreSt. Hilary of Poitiers (300-368) rebukes the Protestant view of the believer’s union with Christ, word for word, and interestingly, the Protestant argument is the same as the Arians (whom he...
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 MoreBy: Jay As with my article on the prevalence of the masonic-Illuminati in top, mainstream historians’ works, the truth is often uncovered even in scholarship opposed to the principle of “secret cabals” influencing history. ...
Read MoreJay Sartre explained that the average man hides behind masks and sustains himself on a kind of false existence of wearing masks and role-playing. Nietzsche said much the same of the masses....
Read MorePart 7 from our old interaction By: Jay Turretinfan responded to the accusation that the strict legal imputation view must necessitate a damning, forsaking, cutting-off, or separation (choose whichever term you...
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 MoreBy: Jay Dyer I was, for several years in my early 20s a supporter of Paul Washer. To me he seemed a godly leader: A real missionary, and a true...
Read MoreResponse to Turretinfan’s Monothelitism Post Turretinfan, just as with the single subject issue, doesn’t understand the argument. A fully human will, with its own natural energy, is part and parcel...
Read MoreCritical Ruminations By: Jay Being a big fan of Eco, I like Eco’s critique of being. Not generic being, but the convertibility of being in Aquinas. I like being, too....
Read MoreBy: Jay Dyer A Calvinist has asked: how can Christ assume a fallen nature and not be sinful? In Calvinism, the tendency is to say that sin is actually in...
Read More“And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us.” –St. John’s Gospel, 1:14 “Why do you incessantly call Mary ‘Theotokos’?” –Julian the Apostate, (Pelikan, The Christian Tradition, Vol. I, pg....
Read More[So stop trying to get the hypostases to split and damn one another, Protestants! -Jay] Four Discourses Against The Arians, Discourse III: 54. Therefore as, when the flesh advanced, He is...
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 Granted, this is vintage Alpha Omega Ministries, and maybe James White has changed his position since then, and if so, I will gladly retract this post. However,...
Read MoreBy: Nick I would hope that anyone reading the title of this post would consider the suggested question nothing short of blasphemy. For those who don’t know, there are Christians...
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