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Shout out to my newest followers! Excited to have you onboard!Christopher Mumbi Nkhoma, Olu Wa Seun, Itz Is'haka Jago Ba...
21/05/2025

Shout out to my newest followers! Excited to have you onboard!

Christopher Mumbi Nkhoma, Olu Wa Seun, Itz Is'haka Jago Bageega, Binta SA Idu

  💜 give thanks to the Source that Creates Life ❣️             ゚viral
01/12/2024

💜 give thanks to the Source that Creates Life ❣️ ゚viral

Today on All Souls' Day, I remember and celebrate the incredible woman who shaped my life - my beloved Mother. Though yo...
02/11/2024

Today on All Souls' Day, I remember and celebrate the incredible woman who shaped my life - my beloved Mother. Though you may be gone, your love, guidance and memories remain deeply etched in my heart. I miss you more with each passing day, but I find solace knowing you're now at peace. Thank you for being my rock, my inspiration, and my forever love.

Rest in peace, Mom. Forever in my heart.

MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS FOR WORLD MISSION DAY 2024 20 October 2024  Go and invite everyone to the banquet (...
20/10/2024

MESSAGE OF HIS HOLINESS POPE FRANCIS
FOR WORLD MISSION DAY 2024

20 October 2024

Go and invite everyone to the banquet (cf. Mt 22:9)



Dear brothers and sisters!

The theme I have chosen for this year’s World Mission Day is taken from the Gospel parable of the wedding banquet (cf. Mt 22:1-14). After the guests refused his invitation, the king, the main character in the story, tells his servants: “Go therefore to the thoroughfares, and invite to the marriage feast as many as you find” (v. 9). Reflecting on this key passage in the context of the parable and of Jesus’ own life, we can discern several important aspects of evangelization. These appear particularly timely for all of us, as missionary disciples of Christ, during this final stage of the synodal journey that, in the words of its motto, “Communion, Participation, Mission”, seeks to refocus the Church on her primary task, which is the preaching of the Gospel in today’s world.

1.“Go and invite!” Mission as a tireless going out to invite others to the Lord’s banquet

In the king’s command to his servants we find two words that express the heart of the mission: the verbs “to go out” and “to invite”.

As for the first, we need to remember that the servants had previously been sent to deliver the king’s invitation to the guests (cf. vv. 3-4). Mission, we see, is a tireless going out to all men and women, in order to invite them to encounter God and enter into communion with him. Tireless! God, great in love and rich in mercy, constantly sets out to encounter all men and women, and to call them to the happiness of his kingdom, even in the face of their indifference or refusal. Jesus Christ, the Good Shepherd and messenger of the Father, went out in search of the lost sheep of the people of Israel and desired to go even further, in order to reach even the most distant sheep (cf. Jn 10:16). Both before and after his resurrection, he told his disciples, “Go!”, thus involving them in his own mission (cf. Lk 10:3; Mk 16:15). The Church, for her part, in fidelity to the mission she has received from the Lord, will continue to go to the ends of the earth, to set out over and over again, without ever growing weary or losing heart in the face of difficulties and obstacles.

I take this opportunity to thank all those missionaries who, in response to Christ’s call, have left everything behind to go far from their homeland and bring the Good News to places where people have not yet received it, or received it only recently. Dear friends, your generous dedication is a tangible expression of your commitment to the mission ad gentes that Jesus entrusted to his disciples: “Go and make disciples of all nations” (Mt 28:19). We continue to pray and we thank God for the new and numerous missionary vocations for the task of evangelization to the ends of the earth.

Let us not forget that every Christian is called to take part in this universal mission by offering his or her own witness to the Gospel in every context, so that the whole Church can continually go forth with her Lord and Master to the “crossroads” of today’s world. “Today’s drama in the Church is that Jesus keeps knocking on the door, but from within, so that we will let him out! Often we end up being an ‘imprisoning’ Church which does not let the Lord out, which keeps him as ‘its own’, whereas the Lord came for mission and wants us to be missionaries” (Address to Participants in the Conference organized by the Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life, 18 February 2023). May all of us, the baptized, be ready to set out anew, each according to our state in life, to inaugurate a new missionary movement, as at the dawn of Christianity!

To return to the king’s command in the parable, the servants are told not only to “go”, but also to “invite”: “Come to the wedding!” (Mt 22:4). Here we can see another, no less important, aspect of the mission entrusted by God. As we can imagine, the servants conveyed the king’s invitation with urgency but also with great respect and kindness. In the same way, the mission of bringing the Gospel to every creature must necessarily imitate the same “style” of the One who is being preached. In proclaiming to the world “the beauty of the saving love of God made manifest in Jesus Christ who died and rose from the dead” (Evangelii Gaudium, 36), missionary disciples should do so with joy, magnanimity and benevolence that are the fruits of the Holy Spirit within them (cf. Gal 5:22). Not by pressuring, coercing or proselytizing, but with closeness, compassion and tenderness, and in this way reflecting God’s own way of being and acting.

2. “To the marriage feast”. The eschatological and Eucharistic dimension of the mission of Christ and the Church.

In the parable, the king asks the servants to bring the invitation to his son’s wedding banquet. That banquet is a reflection of the eschatological banquet. It is an image of ultimate salvation in the Kingdom of God, fulfilled even now by the coming of Jesus, the Messiah and Son of God, who has given us life in abundance (cf. Jn 10:10), symbolized by the table set with succulent food and with fine wines, when God will destroy death forever (cf. Is 25:6-8).

Christ’s mission has to do with the fullness of time, as he declared at the beginning of his preaching: “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand” (Mk 1:15). Christ’s disciples are called to continue this mission of their Lord and Master. Here we think of the teaching of the Second Vatican Council on the eschatological character of the Church’s missionary outreach: “The time for missionary activity extends between the first coming of the Lord and the second…, for the Gospel must be preached to all nations before the Lord shall come (cf. Mk 13:10)” (Ad Gentes, 9).

We know that among the first Christians missionary zeal had a powerful eschatological dimension. They sensed the urgency of the preaching of the Gospel. Today too it is important to maintain this perspective, since it helps us to evangelize with the joy of those who know that “the Lord is near” and with the hope of those who are pressing forward towards the goal, when all of us will be with Christ at his wedding feast in the kingdom of God. While the world sets before us the various “banquets” of consumerism, selfish comfort, the accumulation of wealth and individualism, the Gospel calls everyone to the divine banquet, marked by joy, sharing, justice and fraternity in communion with God and with others.

This fullness of life, which is Christ’s gift, is anticipated even now in the banquet of the Eucharist, which the Church celebrates at the Lord’s command in memory of him. The invitation to the eschatological banquet that we bring to everyone in our mission of evangelization is intrinsically linked to the invitation to the Eucharistic table, where the Lord feeds us with his word and with his Body and Blood. As Benedict XVI taught: “Every Eucharistic celebration sacramentally accomplishes the eschatological gathering of the People of God. For us, the Eucharistic banquet is a real foretaste of the final banquet foretold by the prophets (cf. Is 25:6-9) and described by the New Testament as ‘the marriage-feast of the Lamb’ (Rev 19:9), to be celebrated in the joy of the communion of the saints” (Sacramentum Caritatis, 31).

Consequently, all of us are called to experience more intensely every Eucharist, in all its dimensions, and particularly its eschatological and missionary dimensions. In this regard, I would reiterate that “we cannot approach the Eucharistic table without being drawn into the mission which, beginning in the very heart of God, is meant to reach all people” (ibid., 84). The Eucharistic renewal that many local Churches are laudably promoting in the post-Covid era will also be essential for reviving the missionary spirit in each member of the faithful. With how much greater faith and heartfelt enthusiasm should we recite at every Mass: “We proclaim your death, O Lord, and profess your resurrection, until you come again”!

In this year devoted to prayer in preparation for the Jubilee of 2025, I wish to encourage all to deepen their commitment above all to take part in the celebration of Mass and to pray for the Church’s mission of evangelization. In obedience to the Saviour’s command, she does not cease to pray, at every Eucharistic and liturgical celebration, the “Our Father”, with its petition, “Thy kingdom come”. In this way, daily prayer and the Eucharist in particular make us pilgrims and missionaries of hope, journeying towards everlasting life in God, towards the nuptial banquet that God has prepared for all his children.

3. “Everyone”. The universal mission of Christ’s disciples in the fully synodal and missionary Church

The third and last reflection concerns the recipients of the King’s invitation: “everyone”. As I emphasized, “This is the heart of mission: that ‘all’, excluding no one. Every mission of ours, then, is born from the heart of Christ in order that he may draw all to himself” (Address to the General Assembly of the Pontifical Missionary Societies, 3 June 2023). Today, in a world torn apart by divisions and conflicts, Christ’s Gospel remains the gentle yet firm voice that calls individuals to encounter one another, to recognize that they are brothers and sisters, and to rejoice in harmony amid diversity. “God our Saviour desires everyone to be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth” (1 Tim 2:4). Let us never forget, then, that in our missionary activities we are asked to preach the Gospel to all: “Instead of seeming to impose new obligations, [we] should appear as people who wish to share their joy, who point to a horizon of beauty and who invite others to a delicious banquet” (Evangelii Gaudium, 14).

Christ’s missionary disciples have always had a heartfelt concern for all persons, whatever their social or even moral status. The parable of the banquet tells us that, at the king’s orders, the servants gathered “all whom they found, both good and bad” (Mt 22:10). What is more, “the poor, the crippled, the blind and the lame” (Lk 14:21), in a word, the least of our brothers and sisters, those marginalized by society, are the special guests of the king. The wedding feast of his Son that God has prepared remains always open to all, since his love for each of us is immense and unconditional. “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have life eternal” (Jn 3:16). Everyone, every man and every woman, is invited by God to partake of his grace, which transforms and saves. One need simply say “yes” to this gratuitous divine gift, accepting it and allowing oneself be transformed by it, putting it on like a “wedding robe” (cf. Mt 22:12).

The mission for all requires the commitment of all. We need to continue our journey towards a fully synodal and missionary Church in the service of the Gospel. Synodality is essentially missionary and, vice versa, mission is always synodal. Consequently, close missionary cooperation is today all the more urgent and necessary, both in the universal Church and in the particular Churches. In the footsteps of the Second Vatican Council and my Predecessors, I recommend to all dioceses throughout the world the service of the Pontifical Mission Societies. They represent the primary means “by which Catholics are imbued from infancy with a truly universal and missionary outlook and [are] also a means for instituting an effective collecting of funds for all the missions, each according to its needs” (Ad Gentes, 38). For this reason, the collections of World Mission Day in all the local Churches are entirely destined to the universal fund of solidarity that the Pontifical Society of the Propagation of the Faith then distributes in the Pope’s name for the needs of all the Church’s missions. Let us pray that the Lord may guide us and help us to be a more synodal and a more missionary Church (cf. Homily for the Concluding Mass of the Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, 29 October 2023).

Finally, let us lift our gaze to Mary, who asked Jesus to perform his first miracle precisely at a wedding feast, in Cana of Galilee (cf. Jn 2:1-12). The Lord offered to the newlyweds and all the guests an abundance of new wine, as a foreshadowing of the nuptial banquet that God is preparing for all at the end of time. Let us implore her maternal intercession for the evangelizing mission of Christ’s disciples in our own time. With the joy and loving concern of our Mother, with the strength born of tenderness and affection (cf. Evangelii Gaudium, 288), let us go forth to bring to everyone the invitation of the King, our Saviour. Holy Mary, Star of Evangelization, pray for us!

Rome, Saint John Lateran, 25 January 2024, Feast of the Conversion of Saint Paul



FRANCIS

Copyright ©️ Dicastero per la Comunicazione - Libreria Editrice Vaticana

𝙎𝙔𝙈𝘽𝙊𝙇𝙎 𝙊𝙁 𝙏𝙃𝙀 𝙄𝙈𝙈𝘼𝘾𝙐𝙇𝘼𝙏𝙀 𝙃𝙀𝘼𝙍𝙏 𝙊𝙁 𝙈𝘼𝙍𝙔The Immaculate Heart of Mary, seen on countless statues and holy pictures, is one...
07/09/2024

𝙎𝙔𝙈𝘽𝙊𝙇𝙎 𝙊𝙁 𝙏𝙃𝙀 𝙄𝙈𝙈𝘼𝘾𝙐𝙇𝘼𝙏𝙀 𝙃𝙀𝘼𝙍𝙏 𝙊𝙁 𝙈𝘼𝙍𝙔

The Immaculate Heart of Mary, seen on countless statues and holy pictures, is one of the most fundamental symbols of pure Divinity by which Our Lady Mary is identified as Our Mother God.
As we celebrate the feast of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, here is a look at the explanation behind some of the features of it:

✓ FIRE
The fire we see has a symbolic meaning, in which is signifies the burning love that the Blessed Mother has for Jesus and for us.

✓ SWORD
The swords in the immaculate heart of Mary signifies the sorrow of Mary.

✓ ROSES
The roses signifies the sorrow of the Blessed Mother.

✓ HEART
Her heart symbolizes her maternal love as the mother of the Church and of Christ.

Source: Symbols of the Heart of Mary—Catholic Link (Retrieved on June 11, 2021)




Just a Moment

Interreligious Peace Signed 🇻🇦💞🇲🇨Today, the Holy Father and the Grand Imam of the Istiqlal Mosque signed a joint declara...
05/09/2024

Interreligious Peace Signed 🇻🇦💞🇲🇨

Today, the Holy Father and the Grand Imam of the Istiqlal Mosque signed a joint declaration to 'Promote religious harmony for the good of humanity.' Representatives of six official religions in the country attended the interreligious meeting: Christians (Catholics and Protestants), Islam, Buddhists, Hindus, and Confucians.

The Istiqlal Mosque, the largest in Southeast Asia, is located in the heart of Jakarta, Indonesia. With a capacity for 120,000 people, it is a symbol of the country's unity in diversity, reflecting the national motto "Bhinneka Tunggal Ika" (Unity in Diversity).

Opposite the Istiqlal stands the Catholic Cathedral, highlighting the peaceful coexistence of religions in Indonesia. Both structures are connected by the "friendship tunnel," promoting interreligious harmony.

Inaugurated in 1978 after 17 years of construction, the Istiqlal was designed by Christian architect Friedrich Silaban. The mosque, with its 45 m dome and 66.66 m tower, is a tribute to Indonesia's independence.
Bishop Shanahan Bulletins Interreligious Peace Signed 🇻🇦💞🇲🇨

Today, the Holy Father and the Grand Imam of the Istiqlal Mosque signed a joint declaration to 'Promote religious harmony for the good of humanity.' Representatives of six official religions in the country attended the interreligious meeting: Christians (Catholics and Protestants), Islam, Buddhists, Hindus, and Confucians.

The Istiqlal Mosque, the largest in Southeast Asia, is located in the heart of Jakarta, Indonesia. With a capacity for 120,000 people, it is a symbol of the country's unity in diversity, reflecting the national motto "Bhinneka Tunggal Ika" (Unity in Diversity).

Opposite the Istiqlal stands the Catholic Cathedral, highlighting the peaceful coexistence of religions in Indonesia. Both structures are connected by the "friendship tunnel," promoting interreligious harmony.

Inaugurated in 1978 after 17 years of construction, the Istiqlal was designed by Christian architect Friedrich Silaban. The mosque, with its 45 m dome and 66.66 m tower, is a tribute to Indonesia's independence.
Bishop Shanahan Bulletins Interreligious Peace Signed 🇻🇦💞🇲🇨

Today, the Holy Father and the Grand Imam of the Istiqlal Mosque signed a joint declaration to 'Promote religious harmony for the good of humanity.' Representatives of six official religions in the country attended the interreligious meeting: Christians (Catholics and Protestants), Islam, Buddhists, Hindus, and Confucians.

The Istiqlal Mosque, the largest in Southeast Asia, is located in the heart of Jakarta, Indonesia. With a capacity for 120,000 people, it is a symbol of the country's unity in diversity, reflecting the national motto "Bhinneka Tunggal Ika" (Unity in Diversity).

Opposite the Istiqlal stands the Catholic Cathedral, highlighting the peaceful coexistence of religions in Indonesia. Both structures are connected by the "friendship tunnel," promoting interreligious harmony.

Inaugurated in 1978 after 17 years of construction, the Istiqlal was designed by Christian architect Friedrich Silaban. The mosque, with its 45 m dome and 66.66 m tower, is a tribute to Indonesia's independence.

Just a Moment
Bishop Shanahan Bulletins

Tuesday of the Twenty-first Week in Ordinary Time. Year II (St Monica). Reflection by Rev Fr Oselumhense Anetor (Uromi D...
27/08/2024

Tuesday of the Twenty-first Week in Ordinary Time. Year II (St Monica). Reflection by Rev Fr Oselumhense Anetor (Uromi Diocese)

Focusing on what matters!
2 Thess.2:1-3,14-17; Ps.95:10-13; Matt.23:23-26

Just yesterday, we talked about how Jesus condemned the Scribes and Pharisees who were more concerned about "eye service" than genuine Christian leadership. Today's gospel reading is a continuation. In the first reading, St Paul exhorts the Thessalonians not to be carried away by the many tales of rapture flying about. What's important, he says, is to keep the oral and written traditions they've been taught, and seek strength to persevere in good deeds.

Friends, St Monica, whose memorial we celebrate today prayed fervently for her son Augustine to be able to realise what truly matters. She simply refused to give up. She prayed and shed many tears, and eventually, her prayers received an answer, and her son not only got converted, but went on to become one of the greatest African Bishops of his time. How many of us pastors and preachers still pay attention to JUSTICE and MERCY and Faith as Jesus encouraged the Scribes and Pharisees to do today? We must pray for the grace not to give up on the things that matter and to practice what we preach. Amen.

Good morning dear. St. Monica pray for us!

 : HOW LONG DID SAINT MONICA PRAY FOR THE CONVERSION OF SAINT AUGUSTINE?Today, August 27, the Church remembers Saint Mon...
27/08/2024

: HOW LONG DID SAINT MONICA PRAY FOR THE CONVERSION OF SAINT AUGUSTINE?

Today, August 27, the Church remembers Saint Monica, patron of mothers, married women, alcoholics, and conversion. The said was known for her persistence in prayer. Her son, Saint. Augustine of Hippo, lived a life of immorality, especially that of impurity and lust, prior to his conversion to Catholicism. Throughout these years, Saint Monica endured a tremendous amount of suffering. Augustine rejected her on several accounts, but she continued to love and pray for her son throughout his wayward period.

Saint Monica fervently prayed and patiently waited for Saint Augustine's conversion for 17 years. Truly, there is no other love like a mother's love for her child.
__________________________

Sources:

[1] ChurchPOP | 5 Facts About the Great St. Monica That Will Inspire You to Never Give Up Hope

[2] Franciscan Media | Saint Monica

Clarifying Abel Damina on the Concept of HeavenDear friends, while Dr Abel Damina continues to speak against some wrong ...
24/08/2024

Clarifying Abel Damina on the Concept of Heaven

Dear friends, while Dr Abel Damina continues to speak against some wrong practices and teachings in Christendom, of which some have been proven to be right; nevertheless, we have to be alert and guard against some other teachings of his that are false and do not sit well with Scripture and what the Church teaches. Another teaching we must debunk today is his concept of heaven, and the good we have to do is to share this teaching and make it go viral to reach many persons who have consumed his viral teachings.

Now, according to Damina: "Heaven is not up there in the sky but is an immaterial reality. Therefore, no one dies and goes to heaven in the afterlife—we are already in heaven. Nowhere in the Bible does it say that a believer dies and goes to heaven. It is not heaven at last, but heaven at first."
Sadly, this is a false teaching, in what I shall call a mixture of falsity and truth; that is 90% false and 10% truth. Let us break it down in 10 points, viz:

1. Damina says: "Heaven is not up there in the sky but is an immaterial reality.” In response to this, the Church teaches through Sacred Scripture that heaven is both a place (up there) and a state (immaterial reality). How can we understand this better? Sacred Scriptural references to Heaven as the Abode of God. In Psalm 11:4: "The Lord is in his holy temple; the Lord’s throne is in heaven..." This verse clearly depicts God's throne in heaven, indicating it as His dwelling place. The Hebrew word used for heaven here is “שָׁמַיִם,” (shamayim). This word is often used in the Old Testament to describe the physical sky or the abode of God, indicating a place that is "above" or distinct from the earth. Even in Greek, Heaven is understood as “οὐρανός,” (ouranos). This is used in the New Testament to describe both the sky and the dwelling place of God. It’s also used in a physical sense, as in Matthew 24:30, where it describes the "heavens" shaking. Then, in Matthew 6:9, in the popular “Lord’s Prayer,” Jesus teaches us to pray, "Our Father who art in heaven..." This indicates that heaven is the location where God dwells.

2. As we continue to search the Scriptures, we also read in John 14:2-3: "In my Father’s house are many mansions; if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you to Myself; that where I am, there you may be also." The term "place" in Greek is “τόπος” (topos). This suggests a physical location that Jesus is preparing for the righteous, indicating that heaven is indeed a place where we go after death.

3. Sacred Scripture also tells us in Acts 1:9-11 that Jesus ASCENDED into Heaven in the presence of His disciples. The angels told the disciples that Jesus was "taken up" into heaven and would return in the same way. The phrase "taken up" in Greek is “ἀνελήμφθη” (anelēmphthē ), which indicates a directional movement, implying that heaven is "above."

4. Dr. Abel Damina goes on to say that “Therefore, no one dies and goes to heaven in the afterlife—we are already in heaven. Nowhere in the Bible does it say that a believer dies and goes to heaven.”
But the Bible does not teach this. In 2 Corinthians 5:8, we read that the righteous go to heaven after death, viz: “We are confident, I say, and willing rather to be absent from the body, and to be present with the Lord." Here, Paul is stating that to be absent from the body (to die) is to be present with the Lord. This indicates that believers do go to be with the Lord (in heaven) after death. Also, Philippians 1:23 reads: "For I am hard pressed between the two, having a desire to depart and be with Christ, which is far better." Here, Paul’s expression of desire to "depart and be with Christ" clearly implies that after death, he expects to be with Christ in heaven; because the Bible says “after death comes judgement” (Heb. 9:27).

5. Proving further that believers go to heaven immediately after death, we read in Luke 23:43, that Jesus tells the thief on the cross, "Today you will be with me in Paradise." The word "Paradise" in the New Testament is παράδεισος (paradeisos), and this kind of paradise is understood as heaven, because in 2 Corinthians 12:2-4, Paul uses "Paradise" and "the third heaven" interchangeably. He describes a man (most likely himself) being "caught up to the third heaven" (Greek: τρίτου οὐρανοῦ) and then says that he was "caught up to Paradise" (Greek: παράδεισον). This suggests that Paul viewed Paradise as synonymous with the highest heaven, where God dwells. This connection implies that "Paradise" is another term for "Heaven," particularly the abode of God and the blessed.

6. Please note that the term “Paradise” “παράδεισος” (paradeisos) is derived from an Old Persian word meaning "garden" or "enclosed park," and it corresponds to the Hebrew word (pardes), which also means "orchard" or "garden" (as seen in Nehemiah 2:8, Ecclesiastes 2:5). This explains why the Garden of Eden (Hebrew: Gan Eden), described in Genesis 2:8-10, is often associated with Paradise. Hence, in Jewish and Christian thought, Eden is a prototype of heaven, a place of perfect communion with God before the fall of man. So, when we use the word “paradise” in another sense to mean heaven, kindly understand the context.

7. For Damina to say "it is not heaven at last," then I wonder where he got that idea from. The Bible teaches us that Heaven is also the final destination for the righteous; that is, heaven at last. We read in Revelation 21:1-4, where a description of a new heaven and a new earth is clearly mentioned, where God will dwell with His people. The depiction of a new heaven implies a place of eternal dwelling for the righteous. Also, Matthew tells us in chapter 25 how heaven is our final goal/destination. Inasmuch as the concept of the “Kingdom” is used in place of heaven in that chapter, Matthew predominantly uses the phrase "Kingdom of Heaven" (Greek: ἡ βασιλεία τῶν οὐρανῶν - hē basileia tōn ouranōn). This explains why we read in Matthew 19:23-24, where “Heaven” and the “Kingdom” are coined, viz: "And Jesus said to his disciples, 'Truly, I say to you, only with difficulty will a rich person enter the KINGDOM OF HEAVEN. Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich person to enter the kingdom of God.'"

8. Dr. Damina was correct to say that “Heaven is immaterial” or better understood as a "State." The Catholic Church through the Bible believes and teaches that as well. In Luke 17:20-21: Jesus says, "The kingdom of God is within you" or "in your midst," indicating that the reality of God’s reign can be present within believers, not limited to a physical location. This makes us understand Heaven as the state of being in perfect communion with God. This reality starts once a person begins the new life in Christ in this life, and ultimately reaches its full realization at the end of time; thus, transcending the limitations of physical space and is often described as the "beatific vision," where the soul sees and knows God fully (cf. 1 Corinthians 13:12). Nevertheless, a good reconciliation of Heaven as a Place and State/immaterial reality can be done here. Needless to say, Heaven as a Place and a State are not mutually exclusive but are complementary. The "Place" aspect of heaven speaks to the reality of a future, transformed creation where God and His people dwell together in a renewed physical existence (cf. Revelation 21:1-3). The "State" aspect illustrates the spiritual and relational dimension of heaven, where the essence of heaven is the eternal communion with God, which can begin even now in the life of grace, and reach its fullness at the end of time. That is why the Church Fathers, such as St. Augustine, often described heaven as a state of the soul that begins on earth through the life of grace and is perfected in the afterlife. Yet, they also affirmed the belief in a future resurrection of the body and a renewed creation, thus integrating the spatial understanding of heaven.

9. For this reason, the Catholic Church teaches that heaven is both a place and a state. The Catechism, CCC 1023 explains that those who die in God’s grace and friendship and are perfectly purified live forever with Christ, seeing Him "face to face" (the beatific vision), while CCC 1024 states that this perfect life with the Most Holy Trinity—this communion of life and love with the Trinity, with the Virgin Mary, the angels, and all the blessed—is called "heaven." Heaven is the ultimate end and fulfilment of the deepest human longings, the state of supreme, definitive happiness.

10. Therefore, Dr Damina, Heaven is both a place and a state, a dual reality that reflects the fullness of Christian hope. As a place, heaven is where God dwells and where holy souls go after death, and above all, where believers will dwell in resurrected bodies in the new creation. As a state, it is the eternal communion with God, a reality that begins in this life through grace and is perfected in the beatific vision. This understanding is rooted in Scripture and upheld by the Church’s teachings, offering a holistic view of the eternal destiny of believers.

Dear friends in Christ, the task lies in your hands to share this post to reach as many persons as possible and also tag Dr Damina as I have done so that he might come to a better understanding of heaven, while looking forward to his response.

Shalom!
© Fr. Chinaka Justin Mbaeri (Fr. CJay)

Clarifying Abel Damina With ScriptureDear friends in Christ, First I would like to appreciate Dr. Damina for being vocal...
24/08/2024

Clarifying Abel Damina With Scripture

Dear friends in Christ,
First I would like to appreciate Dr. Damina for being vocal against many wrong practices and doctrines in Christendom today. Some days back, I openly appreciated his teaching where he refuted the idea of “generational curse.” Nevertheless, having listened to him on the Honest Bunch Podcast, I highlighted some statements that are fallacious and need to be corrected immediately. So, today we shall be clarifying the first I highlighted yesterday. Dear readers, I crave your indulgence to patiently read this post to understand it better and don’t forget to share after reading. It would take you about 5 - 7 minutes to read.

Dr Damina stated: “There are two Jesuses in the Bible: the incarnate one and the glorified one. The incarnate one is not useful to me, but the glorified Christ is. The incarnate Christ could not get anyone born again in the Bible, but after He rose, He received all power and authority..."

We shall refute and correct this statement in 10 points, viz:

1. Biblically, the belief in two Jesuses, the incarnate one and the glorified one is anti-biblical and breeds so many confusions and misunderstandings of the nature and Person of Christ. Scripture never indicated a division between an "incarnate" and a "glorified" Jesus. Instead, it affirms that Jesus, in His entire ministry—from incarnation to glorification—carries the fullness of divine glory. How can we understand this? The Bible consistently presents Jesus Christ as one person, fully divine and fully human. The idea of two separate "Jesuses" is a misunderstanding of the Christian doctrine of the hypostatic union, which teaches that Jesus has two natures—divine and human—united in one Person, for John 1:14 makes us understand that "the Word became flesh and dwelt among us." This same Jesus, who took on human flesh, is also the glorified Christ, that is why Hebrews 13:8 says: "Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.” If there were two different Jesuses, then he wouldn’t be the same.

2. An attempt should not be made to separate the natures of Christ into two separate persons because Jesus' incarnation and glorification are two aspects of His singular mission. They are not separate identities but stages in His work of redemption. The same Jesus who was born in Bethlehem is the one who died, rose, and ascended to heaven. Thus, there is no division between an "incarnate" Jesus who is less than God and a "glorified" Jesus who is fully God. From birth, Jesus is worshipped, indicating His divine status and the unity of His personhood. Little wonder Hebrews 1:6 says, "And again, when he brings the firstborn into the world, he says, 'Let all God’s angels worship him.'" This verse is very important because it shows that the infant Jesus, even in His incarnate state, is worthy of worship by the angels. Worship is due only to God, which means that Jesus, even as an infant, is recognized as fully divine. That is why also Hebrews 1:3 says: “He is the radiance of the glory of God and the exact imprint of his nature,” before going on to say he made purification for sins. This indicates that Christ is fully divine and even radiates the glory of God before his death and resurrection – that is, in His earthly and glorified states.

3. For Damina, the incarnate Jesus (which he separated from the glorified one) is not useful to him, but he seems to forget that God becoming flesh (incarnation) is foundational to salvation. Without the incarnation, there would be no sacrifice for sin. Hebrews 2:14-17 explains that Jesus shared in our humanity so that by His death, He might destroy the devil and free those who were held in slavery by the fear of death. Likewise, Paul declares in 1 Corinthians 15:3-4 that Christ's death and resurrection are of “first importance” because they are the means by which we are saved. The glorification of Christ is important, but it is His incarnation that made the glorification possible.

4. Damina seems to have forgotten that Christ (before his death) even gave us a glimpse of his glory, “the same glory he had with the Father, even before the world was” (John 17:5), which was made possible by the Transfiguration. The same Christ that took his disciples to the mountain was transfigured in their presence, revealing His glory to His disciples (cf. Matt 17.1-9 Mark 9.2-9 Luke 9.28-36). Verse 32 of Luke’s account of the Transfiguration (Luke 9:28-36) says: “Now Peter and his companions were weighed down with sleep; but since they had stayed awake, THEY SAW HIS GLORY and the two men who stood with him. This passage is a powerful revelation of Jesus' divine glory, witnessed by Peter, John, and James; meaning that even in His incarnate state, His glory strongly dwells on Him. Now, will Damina tell us that when “incarnate Christ” got to the mountain of transfiguration, he was replaced by another glorified Christ or was that incarnate Christ different?

5. I’d also like to take Damina through Colossians 1:19, where the phrase "In Him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell" comes from the original Greek: “ἐν αὐτῷ εὐδόκησεν πᾶν τὸ πλήρωμα κατοικῆσαι.” Here, The preposition ἐν ("in") and the pronoun “αὐτῷ “(autō) “Him” are very important. The pronoun αὐτῷ refers to Christ, indicating that the fullness is not merely around or associated with Him but is intrinsically within Him, indicating that Christ is one Person, not two. Paul did not write “in them” but “In Him.” This affirms the unity of Christ’s Personhood. In other words, the use of the singular pronoun αὐτῷ (Him) and the verb “κατοικῆσαι” points to the fact that there is one Jesus, not two. The fullness of God didn’t dwell in one "kind" of Jesus (e.g., the glorified Jesus) and not in another (e.g., the incarnate Jesus). Instead, the fullness of God is present in the one Person, Jesus Christ, from His incarnation through His glorification. There is no distinction between an "incarnate" and a "glorified" Christ as separate entities; the same Christ, in His singular personhood, embodies the fullness of God.

6. Damina also stated that: “The incarnate Christ could not get anyone born again in the Bible, but after He rose, He received all power and authority…” He must understand that the task of making people "born again" was not directly Jesus' mission during His earthly ministry, according to the Gospel of John. The concept of being "born again" is deeply tied to the sacrament of Baptism, as Christ explained in John 3:3-5, that "no one can enter the kingdom of God unless they are born of water and the Spirit," which is understood by the Church to refer to Baptism, for through Baptism, we are reborn by water and the Holy Spirit, and this baptism is done in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit (Matt. 28:18-19).

7. However, we must note that John 4:2 clarifies that "although Jesus himself did not baptize, but only his disciples." This detail is pertinent because it shows that Baptism, while essential for salvation and becoming "born again," was to be administered by Jesus’ followers in the name of the Trinity. Jesus, being the Son of God, did not need to perform the act Himself; instead, He delegated this to His disciples, to signify His authority and the new life granted through His death and resurrection. By not baptizing Himself, Jesus ensures that the focus remains on the sacrament as a communal act within the Church, performed by His ministers, rather than an action He personally undertakes.

8. Damina must also understand that Jesus' authority and power were evident even before and after His resurrection in various ways, as seen in Mark 4:39-41, Mark 2:5-12, John 10:17-18, etc. After His resurrection, Jesus then goes on to explicitly declare his authority as seen in Matthew 28:18, where He says, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.” This statement reveals the fulfilment and culmination of His earthly ministry. Thus, the resurrection itself serves as the ultimate confirmation of His divine authority, as seen in Matthew 28:6, where the angel announces, “He is not here; he has risen, just as he said.”

9. So, dear friends, the belief in "two Jesuses"—one incarnate and one glorified—clearly shows a theological misunderstanding, which in itself is a heresy called Nestorianism that was condemned by the Church. Nestorianism, named after Nestorius, the Patriarch (bishop) of Constantinople in the 5th century, proposed that Jesus Christ existed as two separate persons: one human (Jesus) and one divine (the Son of God). This heresy sadly divided Christ's nature, which is contrary to orthodox Christian teaching. The Church addressed and refuted Nestorianism at the Council of Ephesus in 431 AD. The Council affirmed that Jesus Christ is one Person (hypostasis) with two natures, fully divine and fully human, united in what is known as the hypostatic union – united in one person without confusion, change, division, or separation. This unity in the person of Christ is foundational to the doctrine of the Incarnation and the redemption offered through His life, death, and resurrection. To assert that there are "two Jesuses" undermines Scripture’s teaching on the Incarnation and redemption. The Council of Ephesus, with its Christological declarations, made it clear that such a division is heretical and contrary to the faith handed down by the Apostles.

10. Above all, the distinction between the "incarnate" and "glorified" Jesus is a theological error. There is only one Jesus Christ, who is both God and man, and who accomplished salvation through His incarnation, death, and resurrection. The incarnate Christ is not separate from the glorified Christ; rather, they are the same Person at different stages of His redemptive work. Both the incarnation and glorification are important to the Christian faith. Anyone who believes and prays to two Jesuses believes in a kind of Jesus that does not exist.

Shalom!
© Fr. Chinaka Justin Mbaeri (Fr. CJay)
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