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“The Passion of Christ”: Mel Gibson’s
Vivid Deception
by Richard Bennett and J. Virgil Dunbar
There seldom has been a movie that has created such
favorable publicity and an-ticipation in the Evangelical community. A
tidal wave of excitement is sweeping the church and the movie world. On
the Catholic Ash Wednesday the film will appear in thea-ters across America.
Evangelical churches are buying huge blocks of tickets, reserving theaters.
An endless list of endorsements from church leaders publically promoting
the film is paraded. Names like Billy Graham, Jack Graham (President of
the Southern Baptist Convention), Rick Warren, Jack Hayford, names of
Catholic leaders, and an endless list of celebrities are presented to
the public as endorsing the film. It is being promoted as one of the greatest
evangelistic opportunities in history, a concept dear to the heart of
every Evan-gelical. Even the secular media, newspapers, magazines, TV,
radio, the Internet, feed the frenzy. There is a fawning adulation of
the film. The Evangelical church’s acceptance of Gibson’s
movie gives shocking - maybe apocalyptic - insight into the state of popular
Christianity today. Will history reveal this day as the time when Evangelicalism,
on a popular level, merged with the Roman Catholic Church?
The Church of Rome has done much to lead modern Evangelicalism
into making images of the Lord. Like the Catholics, many Evangelicals
today seem not even to be aware that such activity is idolatrous. The
Apostle Paul emphasizes the fact that idolatry involves exchanging the
glory of the incorruptible God for an image made like corruptible man.
And as he also stated to the Athenians, “forasmuch then as we are
the offspring of God, we ought not to think that the Godhead is like unto
gold, silver, or stone, graven by art or man’s device.”
Christ Jesus is a member of that Godhead. He told the religious leaders,
“I said therefore unto you, that you shall die in your sins: for
if you believe not that I am he, you shall die in your sins.” By
using the expression “I AM”, the Lord identifies Himself as
the God revealed in the Old Testament, the “I AM THAT I AM”,
the self-existing, eternal God who spoke to Moses and gave the Ten Commandments
from Mount Sinai. The Sec-ond Commandment totally prohibits making material
representations of His person. In creating images of Christ in books,
videotapes, films, stained glass windows and other ar-tistic mediums -
all things of “man’s devise” - men have gone beyond
Scripture in their attempt to add to the biblical revelation of who Christ
is.
The Lord God explicitly warned against adding to His written Word and
He warns just as explicitly against adding visual images of the Godhead.
Creating a visual representation of the Lord Jesus, by definition, is
to portray “an-other Jesus”. The Lord Jesus in His Person,
character, and work is divine and perfect. No Savior other than the One
proclaimed in Scripture is permissible. Those who claim they are only
depicting the humanity of Jesus Christ fall into the grievous heresy of
Nestorius, as they wrongly attempt to divide the humanity from the deity
of Christ, ending up with idols produced by the imaginations of their
own hearts.
The Lord God gave believers a Wordbook, not a picture book. The Gospel
is at stake—for the Scripture states that “faith cometh by
hearing and hearing by the word of God.” The Gospel is the power
of God unto salvation as it is written, read, preached, and spoken one
to another. The power of the Word is that it is God’s revealed propositional
truth. Rather than subjective imaginations created by man, “The
word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword,
piercing even to the dividing asun-der of soul and spirit, and of the
joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the
heart.” It is God’s revealed propositional truth that has
the power to change the hearts and minds of those who live in the darkness
of their own imaginations, for His light through the Written Word will
shine on their evil hearts and the thoughts and deeds that flow from them.
It is through this method that they will be convicted of their need for
a true Savior and ready for the Gospel of God’s grace alone in which
to trust by faith alone. The visual works of a man’s devising, for
all their emotional power, are too dull a tool to bring to the individual
conviction of sin and the explicit Gospel of grace that the Written Word
and the truth preached bring.
But this fact notwithstanding, a three-dimensional image of Christ is
not only al-lowed by official Catholic teaching, but it is also to be
venerated. The Vatican states, “Basing itself on the mystery of
the incarnate Word, the seventh ecumenical council at Ni-caea (787) justified…the
veneration of icons - of Christ, but also of the Mother of God, the angels,
and all the saints.” The temptation to replace the biblical Lord
with a visible Christ dominates Catholic nations across of the world.
Men calling themselves Christian are now beginning to accept it. A figure
one can touch, see, wear on jewelry, and is visible in statues and on
a crucifix, is identified as an object through which one can approach
God and learn of Him. Yet the Scripture clearly states that “there
is one God, and one media-tor between God and men, the man Christ Jesus.”
The Lord God is approachable only through the Lord Jesus Christ Himself.
But as the bleeding Saviour of Gibson’s passion is presented to
the world, this fact seems thrown aside. We ask, then, what worse blasphemy
could there be than depicting with an image the Lord God who condemns
images? Evangelical leaders, by endorsing this Catholic film, further
solidify the image of the counterfeit Christ upon the minds of many.
As we have seen, Catholic Church claims authority to make images of the
Lord. Since the Bible absolutely forbids this practice, where shall Evangelicals
find authority for using such images? Under what handier shelter can they
hide than the umbrella of the Catholic Church? Cut adrift from biblical
authority, Evangelicals seem to be drifting more and more under the Catholic
system of authority. Once they have, in practice, surrendered biblical
authority and accepted the papal system of authority regarding the use
of images of the Lord, where will Evangelicals draw the line on papal
authority? This is only one of the unforeseen consequences that started
when Evangelicals accepted forbidden pictures to represent the Lord and
entered into dialogue with the Catholic Church.
True meaning of the Cross as revealed in God’s
Written Word
Scripture makes clear that the meaning of Christ’s
crucifixion lay not in His physical suf-fering, but in His propitiation
of the wrath of God. God’s wrath was utterly placed on Christ Jesus,
who suffered the full extent of its unabated curse for the sins for His
people. The fullness of divine wrath that Christ suffered was like that
fire from heaven, recorded in the Old Testament, which consumed the sacrifices.
The wrath that should have fallen upon the sinner, had God not been appeased,
fell upon Him. He uttered the loud cry, “My God, my God, why hast
thou forsaken me?” The representative relationship of Christ to
His people is a real and necessary one. The All Holy God deemed it just
to punish Christ for the sins of His people, and to credit them with His
righteousness, and thus completely sat-isfy all the demands of His law
upon them. Why was Christ’s perfect life followed by the most terrible
punishment? Strict substitution demanded it so that real imputation of
His righteousness to His own people could follow. Rather than the physical
torture He suf-fered, the absolute horror that Christ endured was separation
from His Father. In His Spirit, He felt the full wrath of God. The Apostle
Paul explained it precisely, “For He hath made Him to be sin for
us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in
Him.” Christ Jesus was “made sin” for His people. The
wrath of God’s holiness flamed against Him. He was the sin offering,
the sacrifice for sin. “It pleased the Lord to bruise him; He hath
put him to grief: when thou shalt make his soul an offering for sin.”
He was personally All Holy; yet as the substitute for His own, He rendered
Himself legally responsible before the judgment of God. The consequence
of Christ’s faithfulness in all that He did culminated in His death
on the cross and in His resurrection that followed.
His righteousness is credited to the believer, “even
the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and
upon all them that believe.” It was God who legally constituted
Christ to be “sin for us.” He was “made sin” because
the sins of His people were transferred to Him, and in like manner, the
believer is made “the righteousness of God in Him” by God’s
reckoning to the believer Christ’s faithfulness to the precepts
of the law. Quite clearly therefore, justification, the Gospel message,
is the gracious act of God whereby a believing sinner has forgiveness
of sin and legal right standing in Christ. As Christ, who knew no sin
of His own, was made sin for believers so they who have no righteousness
of their own, are made the righteousness of God in Him. It is of extreme
importance that this entire biblical Gospel message is missing from the
movie, and that in its place is given the traditional Catholic faith of
Mel Gibson, and Jim Caviezel, who stars as Christ.
A Catholic Film with a Catholic Message
Mel Gibson is a traditionalist Catholic. He has produced
this film with an image of “Christ” that is based on the apparitions
of the Catholic mystic, Anne Catherine Emmerich, who claimed to have seen
visions of the passion, death and resurrection of “Christ”
which were recorded in her book, The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus
Christ. She nar-rated in incredible detail her understanding of the horrendous
sufferings undergone in His heroic act of Redemption.
“It is crucial to realize that the images and language at the heart
of ‘The Passion of the Christ’ flow directly out of Gibson’s
personal dedication to Catholicism in one of its most traditional and
mysterious forms - the 16th-century Latin Mass. ‘I don’t go
to any other services,’ the director told the Eternal Word Television
Network. ‘I go to the old Tridentine Rite. That’s the way
that I first saw it when I was a kid. So I think that that informs one’s
understanding of how to transcend language. Now, initially, I didn’t
understand the Latin....But I understood the meaning and the message and
what they were doing. I understood it very fully, and it was very moving
and emotional and effi-cacious, if I may say so.’ The goal of the
movie is to shake modern audiences by brashly juxtaposing the ‘sacrifice
of the cross with the sacrifice of the altar - which is the same thing,’
said Gibson. This ancient union of symbols and sounds has never lost its
hold on him. There is, he stressed, ‘a lot of power in these dead
languages.’”
The Church of Rome likewise juxtaposes the sacrifice of the cross with
the sacrifice of the Mass, to which Mel Gibson has given clear testimony.
She teaches that Mass and Christ’s sacrifice are “one single
sacrifice”. Thus she declares, “The sacrifice of Christ and
the sacrifice of the Eucharist are one single sacrifice: ‘The victim
is one and the same:…‘This divine sacrifice which is celebrated
in the Mass, the same Christ who of-fered himself once in a bloody manner
on the altar of the cross is contained and is offered in an unbloody manner.’”
Blending images together with the sacrifice of the Cross and with the
sacrifice of the Mass is extremely dangerous to the state of one’s
soul. Divine perfection is seen in the fact that the Lord Jesus Christ’s
sacrifice on the cross was one sac-rifice, once offered. To put forward
a reenactment of the one offering, once offered, is to replace the truth
with a falsehood implying that Christ’s sacrifice was not sufficient
and therefore imperfect. This is an utter blasphemy against the All Holy
God. In Catholicism and in the Passion movie, willfully putting together
the sacrifice of the cross with the sacri-fice of the Mass produces a
dramatic and a theatrical lie that serves only to deceive the very ones
it is purportedly meant to help.
Concerning the film, Gibson has declared, “It reflects my beliefs.”
He also has stated, “There is no salvation for those outside the
[Catholic] Church…I believe it.” Clearly, before the public
eye, here is a Catholic movie, made by a Catholic director, with Catholic
theological advisers and a Catholic message. According to a Catholic website,
Catholic Passion Outreach, “The Passion of The Christ offers a once-in-a-lifetime
oppor-tunity for you to spread, strengthen, and share the Catholic faith
with your family and friends.” It is obvious from this and other
Catholic sources that Catholics see this film as an excellent way to convey
the Catholic Christ.
Relationship of Christ to the Father: replaced with “Mary”
offering her Son
Christ’s willing sacrifice of Himself on the cross
and His subsequent resurrection is the greatest event in history, the
culminating achievement of God. The sacrifice as given in Scripture shows
forth the unique and distinctive relationship of Christ to the Father.
Christ’s readiness to fulfill His Father’s will is seen in
His words, “lo, I come to do thy will, O God.” The Father’s
will focused in Christ’s sacrifice to satisfy His divine justice
through the atonement of Christ, which was the propitiation of His just
wrath. It was an act of His will, and most profitable for His people.
The priceless double empowerment of Christ’s perfect sacrifice is
proclaimed by the Holy Spirit, “by the which will we are sanc-tified
through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all.”
Christ’s sacrifice originated in will of God the Father. It was
essential that the Father should be willing to call His Son to this work,
for He was the Person unto whom the satisfaction was to be made. The sacrifice
was the Father’s plan and purpose. “Him [Christ Jesus] being
deliv-ered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God.”
“But this Man, after He had offered one sacrifice for sins, for
ever sat down on the right hand of God. For by one offering He hath perfected
forever them that are sanctified.” The one offering of Christ, willed
by the Father, was offered. In view of this perfect sacrifice, to dare
to propose a re-lationship of Christ to Mary is to denigrate the very
will and purpose of the Father. This profane sacrilege is just what is
portrayed in the Catholic movie. Andrew J. Webb notes,
“‘The Passion of Christ’ leaves us with a vision of
the sacrifice of Christ that is only dolorous (Dolorous: Full of grief;
sad; sorrowful; doleful; dismal) and which puts into sharp relief the
Roman Catholic notion not only of the importance of Christ’s agony,
but that of Mary in ‘offering her Son’. In an interview with
Zenit, the Roman Catholic News Service, Father Thomas Rosica, the priest
who oversaw World Youth Day 2002 and its Way of the Cross through the
streets of Toronto, illustrated how ‘The Passion of Christ’,
in keeping with Roman Catholic theology, uses extra-biblical content to
mas-sively exaggerate the role of Mary: ‘One scene, in particular,
was very moving. As Je-sus falls on the Way of the Cross, there is a flashback
to his falling on a Jerusalem street as a child, and his mother running
out of the house to pick him up. The interplay of Mary and Jesus in this
film is moving, and reaches its apex in the scene of the Pietà.
The Mother of the Lord is inviting each of us to share her grief and behold
her Son.’ This use of extra-biblical material, emphasis on physical
suffering, exaggeration of the role of Mary, and explicitly Roman Catholic
theology should not surprise us, however, as these are all hallmarks of
the primary inspiration for this movie: [Anne Catherine Emmerich’s]
The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ.”
Fruitfulness of interaction between the Father and the
Son
Christ Jesus has triumphed in His sacrifice, and He will
perfectly give to all those that come to Him freedom from the guilt of,
the power of, and the punishment of sin. He will put them into the sure
possession of perfect holiness and joy of fellowship with Himself and
the Father. “And their sins and iniquities will I remember no more.
Now where remis-sion of these is, there is no more offering for sin.”
The true believer’s sins and iniquities the Father will remember
no more! This shows the riches of Divine grace, and the suffi-ciency of
Christ’s relationship with His Father in the satisfaction of the
cross, “where re-mission of these is, there is no more offering
for sin.” Nothing can ever separate the per-fection of the accord
between the Father and the Son.
One cannot question Gibson’s sincerity. Yet the utterly evil deceit
of his purpose - to portray his classic Catholic understanding of the
crucifixion of Christ - coupled with a very effective medium of communication,
reaches new heights in promoting blasphemy and contempt for Holy God and
His Word! This is undoubtedly the exact opposite of what Gibson had hoped
to achieve. Clearly then, Gibson himself and Jim Caviezel, who plays the
role of Christ in the film, are two of those most deceived by the Catholic
message. On the authority of Scripture alone, may the all Holy God in
His mercy pour forth mercy on these poor men to the saving of their souls
through faith alone in Christ Jesus alone and to God alone be the glory!
Influence of the apparitions of “Mary” in
Medjugorje on the film
The apparitions of “Mary” in Medjugorje in
Bosnia, Herzegovina, have had a huge impact on this film. The Catholic
Church rationalizes acceptance of other sources of extra-Biblical revelation
by stating that the ordinary faithful Catholics welcome whatever the “magisterium”
(teaching power of the Roman Church) guides them into accepting. She consolidates
her power over the rank and file Catholics by denying in practice that
revela-tion is complete and definitive. “The last century-and-a-half
has seen numerous accounts of appearances of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Jesus, Himself, is said to speak to a few of the seers. Some of the apparitions
have received official approval by the Roman Catholic Church.” “…Our
Lady continues to give messages to six young people from the village of
Medjugorje: Ivan, Jakov, Marija, Mirjana, Vicka, and Ivanka. These six
young people (referred to as "visionaries") have had apparitions
of the Blessed Virgin Mary since June 24, 1981…” The influence
of “Mary” of Medjugorje has been documented in the case of
Jim Caviezel, who stars as Christ in the movie. In an interview with Fr.
Mario Knezovic in Medjugorje on December 6th, 2003 Caviezel said,
“I was in seventh grade and our priest showed us a film of the children
during an appa-rition. We were told that it was true. We were from a mixed
catholic community – mostly Croatians and Italians. My grandmother
is a 100% Croatian. It didn’t seem hard to believe. I took me 15
years to come. When I came, I knew immediately - from what I was feeling
in my heart - that it was real. I haven’t seen signs or anything,
but - I have been a Catholic for my whole life and I had never felt in
confession as I felt when I was here. It was a tremendous healing.”
Fr. Mario Knezovic said to him,
“‘The Passion of the Christ’ movie, in which you are
playing Jesus Christ, is almost finished. What was it like to play Jesus?
How did you adjust your body and your soul to the body and the soul of
Jesus? How was it to be Jesus? Jim Caviezel [replied]: The catharsis for
me to play this role was through Medjugorje, through Gospa. In preparation,
I used all that Medjugorje taught me. Mel Gibson and I were going every
day for Mass together. Some days I couldn’t go for Mass, but I was
receiving the Eucharist. Somewhere along the line, I heard that the Pope
was going for confession every day, so I thought that I should go for
confession as often as possible…So, the confession was the preparation
for the Eucharist. Ivan Dragicevic and his wife Lorraine gave me a piece
of the true cross. I kept this on me all the time. They made a special
pocket in my clothes for it. I also had relics of Padre Pio, St. Anthony
of Padoua, Ste Maria Goretti, and saint Denisius, the Patron saint of
Actors. Another thing was fast-ing. I read many of the messages continuously.
Every day everyone could see me with the rosary in my hands.
The fact that the message of “Mary” in Medjugorje so deeply
influenced Jim Caviezel shows his point of view, and that of the movie
in which he has the main role.
Medjugorje teaches that the sufferings of Christ are
the offense, or the great sin against God, “Make reparation for
the wound inflicted on the Heart of My Son.” The truth is that the
wounds inflicted on Christ are the reason we do not need to make reparations,
but solely to believe the Gospel. The message of Medjugorje shows contempt
for the sanctity and purpose of the Cross of Christ. The blasphemy of
Medjugorje has had its influence on the film. The authority of Scripture
weighs in on the matter, “and no marvel; for Satan himself is transformed
into an angel of light.” Such things as pieces of bones carried
around as relics in a pocket of Jim Caviezel’s clothes may seem
like occultic practices, but for a Catholic it is official teaching. Papal
Rome also encourages people to contact the dead.
A defining moment of the present time
As visual images form the foundation for learning in
modern world, so images, movies, and videos of Christ have been accepted
in Evangelical circles. This idolatry has reached new heights in the highly
Catholic portrayal of the sufferings of Christ in the Passion movie. The
Christ portrayed, however, is not the Christ of the Bible. The sufferings
are not those of the One who was “made sin” because the sins
of His people. It does depict horrendous sufferings, however, undergone
in a heroic manner, and these are juxtaposed with the Catholic sacrifice
of the Mass. This heavy manipulation of people’s emotions is promoted
through enticing images and strange sounding words in Aramaic, the sum
of which is to establish collectively both a blasphemy against God and
a deceit against man. This high point of idolatry is evidence of a real
turning point in our day. It is very much like the idolatry of Jeroboam,
who sinned himself, and who made Israel to sin. Families and kingdoms
were ruined by Jeroboam’s idolatry. Once influential men do wickedly,
they involve many others both in their guilt and in their snare. Multitudes
follow their per-nicious ways. The Lord God gave Israel up to their wickedness
because of the sin of Jero-boam.
In all seriousness it appears that in our own day, the Lord God could
hand over the Evangelical world to the deceit into which they are running
with open arms. They may very well go to hell with a long procession following
them, and their condemnation will be intolerable. They will have to answer,
not only for their own sins, but for the sins which others have been drawn
into by their influence.
In the Old Testament, judgment came upon the people of Israel for conforming
to the idolatry of Jeroboam. In our own day, both blind leaders and their
blind followers look ready to fall into the ditch. “Repent; or else
I will come unto thee quickly, and will fight against them with the sword
of my mouth.” It is the duty of churches, pastors, elders, and Evangelical
leaders who have sinned in this tidal wave of idolatry in the use of images,
videos, and movies of Christ to repent publicly. It is the duty of Christian
people them-sleves to repent of these sins, in so far as they have been
accessory to them by involve-ment. When God comes to punish the corrupt
members of His people, His rebuke will be most sore. No sword cuts so
deeply, nor causes so grevious pain, as the sword of Christ Jesus’
mouth. We truly pray that the truth of the Word of God touch the conscience
of those who have sinned, are sinning and leading others into sin. If
the Lord’s threatenings be executed, sinners will utterly cut off.
We truly pray that the Word of God will take hold of sinners, including
ourselves, so that we all, “hold fast the profession of our faith
without wavering; for he is faithful that promised.” “And
we know that the Son of God is come, and hath given us an understanding,
that we may know him that is true, and we are in him that is true, even
in his Son Jesus Christ. This is the true God, and eternal life. Little
chil-dren, keep yourselves from idols. Amen.” ?
Romans 1:22-23 “Professing
themselves to be wise, they became fools, and changed the glory of the
un-corruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man, and to
birds, and fourfooted beasts, and creeping things.” Vv. 24-25, which
follow, are instructive, especially in light of the scandals that have
rocked the RCC in the past several years, “Wherefore God also gave
them up to uncleanness through the lusts of their own hearts, to dishonour
their own bodies between themselves: Who changed the truth of God into
a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator…”
Acts 17:29. Bolding in any quote indicates emphasis added in this paper.
John 8:24
Exodus 3:14
Exodus 20:4, Deuteronomy 4:12-16
Deuteronomy 4:2; 12:32; Proverbs 30:6 and Revelation 22:1
Exodus 20:4-5; Deuteronomy 4:5-28
IICorinthians 11:4
Romans 10:17.
Hebrews 4:12.
Catechism of the Catholic Church (1994) Para 2131
Code of Canon Law, Latin-Eng. ed. (1983) Can. 1188, “The practice
of displaying sacred images in the churches for the veneration of the
faithful is to remain in force….” See also Catechism, #2132
“The Chris-tian veneration of images is not contrary to the first
commandment which proscribes idols. Indeed, the honor rendered to an image
passes to its prototype, and whoever venerates an image venerates the
person portrayed in it.” This is the very idea that Aaron had when
he constructed the golden calf through which the children of Israel were
to worship Holy God, Exodus 32:4-5. For fuller explanation, see J. Virgil
Dunbar, Christ Can’t Be Pictured—God is not like Art, (available
from Richard Bennett, P. O. Box 192, Del Valle, TX 78617. $7.00 incl.
postage in USA).
I Timothy 2:5
Hebrews 8:6, 9:15
Romans 3:25 “Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through
faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of
sins that are past, through the forbearance of God.” See also I
John 4:10 “Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he loved
us, and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins”, and elsewhere.
Matthew 27:46
II Corinthians 5:21
Isaiah 53:10
Romans 3:22
The Catholic advertizement for the book states “Mel Gibson based
his upcoming movie, ‘The Passion of Christ’ on this book!
Faithful to the Bible story of the Passion and death of Jesus [sic], it
fills in many de-tails…It is also wonderful on the Blessed Mother’s
role in our redemption….recounts in incredible detail the horrendous
sufferings undergone by our Saviour in His (it would seem) superhumanly
heroic act of Redemp-tion….” www.catholiccompany.com/product_detail.cfm?ID=2739
2/20/04
www.gosanangelo.com/sast/lv_religion/article/0,1897,SAST_4948_2601442,00.html
2/18/04
Catechism, Para. 1367
www.ewtn.com/WorldOver/ 2/17/04
The New Yorker, September 15, 2003
http://216.239.51.104/search?q=cache:zUEbH4Mz2hgJ:passion.catholicexchange.com/
2/17/04
Hebrews 10:9
Hebrews 10:10
Acts 2:23
Hebrews 10:12,14
Father Thomas Rosica on Mel Gibson's "The Passion", National
Director of World Youth Day 2002 Weighs in on Film (2004-02-06)
Andrew J. Webb’s excellent aritcle: http://216.239.51.104/search?q=cache:E3yWWAGCuC8J:forums.5solas.org/showthread.php%3Fgoto%3Dlastpost%26t%3D1518+%22s
2/19/04
Hebrews 10:17-18
Hebrews 10:18
Catechism of the Catholic Church Para 67
www.apparitions.org/ 3/20/03
www.medjugorje.org/ 3/20/03
www.medjugorje.hr/Int%20Caviezel%20ENG.htm 2/17/04
www.medjugorje.hr/Int%20Caviezel%20ENG.htm 2/17/04
“Dear children, this evening I pray that you especially venerate
the Heart of my Son, Jesus. Make repara-tion for the wound inflicted on
the Heart of My Son. That Heart is offended by all kinds of sin.”
Words From Heaven: Messages of Our Lady from Medjugorje, 5th ed., (Birmingham,
AL: St. James Publishing Com-pany, 1991) Message of April 5, 1985, p.
162.
II Corinthians 11:14
Catechism, Para # 1674. “Besides sacramental liturgy and sacramentals,
catechesis must take into account the forms of piety and popular devotions
among the faithful. The religious sense of the Christian people has always
found expression in various forms of piety surrounding the Church’s
sacramental life, such as the veneration of relics, visits to sanctuaries,
pilgrimages, processions, the stations of the cross, religious dances,
the rosary, medals, etc.” That such practices are wide spread in
the Catholic world, see news item, “Replicas of the nails used to
hang Jesus on the cross have become the red-hot official merchandise linked
to Mel Gib-son's controversial new movie, ‘The Passion of the Christ.’”
www.nypost.com/news/regionalnews/18338.htm 2/21/04
Cathecism, Para # 958
I Kings 14:7-20
Revelation 2:16
Hebrews 10:23
I John 5:20-21
Permission is given by the authors
to copy this article if it is done in its entirety without any changes.
Permission is also given post this article in its entirety on Internet
WebPages.
Richard Bennett’s WebPage is: www.bereanbeacon.org
Virgil Dunbar can be contacted by email at: VDunbar@aol.com
Virgil Dunbar has written a book on this topic, Christ Can’t Be
Pictured--God is not like Art. The book is available from Richard Bennett.
$7.00 includes postage. P. O. Box 192 Del Valle, TX 79617
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