wht 2.0 @wht
19 December, 12:31 (E)
Food for thought.

Just occurred to me to wonder, if the Jesuits were formed *specifically* as the 'church militant' (they are a military order headed by a 'General') to go out and *counter* the Protestant Reformation (LITERALLY 'by any means necessary' if you read their extreme oath), WHY was one of their very earliest campaigns (maybe even their first?) to establish a "missionary" front in China where they quickly set about building universities w/ many of their own even attaining high positions in the emperor's government?
It's not like China ever became "Christian" or even "Catholic" as a result?
But they ('China') sure have achieved critical leverage in the geopolitics of THE WORLD. Especially at this juncture in time in the formation of a 'New World Order'/Rev13 beast system that's coming on fast as we speak.
#justthinkingoutloud #WhatsItAllAboutAlfie

https://en.wikipedia.org/w...

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Water Mark @Watermark
19 December, 01:43
In response wht 2.0 to his Publication
If you think about the word 'mission' and its connotations, you'll find your answer.

Same with all the Spanish missions on the west coast. Jordan Maxwell discusses this. Mission is a military term. The Jesuits weren't spreading Christianity. They were building beach heads of Catholic political control ahead of protestant pioneers rolling west across the plains.

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wht 2.0 @wht
ahhh .. definitions can be so critical

interesting yes .. 👍
01:52 PM - Dec 19, 2024 (E)
In response Water Mark to his Publication
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