Why do we call Catholic priests “Father”?

12322507_1049453378452012_2340394188138322730_o.jpg  nativity

Each of us is a compilation of DNA from parents, grandparents, great-grandparents and so on back to Adam and Eve. Each unique combination disappears from earth at death. When we die, many thousands of years disappear.

We are built from DNA selected from countless ancestors from dozens of centuries. Each death is the end of ten thousand lines.

The Church Jesus Founded understands what a miracle each of us is. The Church Jesus Founded is, therefore, so Pro-Life that it condemns any artificial birth control as an attack on the miracle of life.

Realizing “Part of me came from a great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandmother whose husband died in the Revolution.” begins respect for all human life and all that each ancestor did for us.

Catholic Fundamentalism suggests that God and His angels compile each person. Angels work in micro-seconds at the moment of conception. They compile, according to God’s Plan, what characteristics each new soul will have. Then, the soul downloads spirit, mind, and body from the elements around it, beginning with its mother’s blood. We are each built from elements of the huge banks of ancestral DNA from mother and father written into our individual blueprint.

The haters of life and neighbors do what they can to end every human life and line, often including their own.

On earth, the great, Pro-Life work is done by The Catholic Church, in opposition to Babylon and the Culture of Death.

Catholic Priests do God’s work of protecting life on earth.

In a startling reversal, celibate Priests, who give up children of their own, are called “Father”. It is not they who are addressed, but the Spirit of God Who lives in them.

God’s Spirit, living in His Catholic priests, has helped bring into being billions of Catholic children. Priests, wielding the Weapons of The Sacraments in The War For Life, have protected The Church’s children through the beginnings, middles, and ends of each Catholic’s life.

We are overwhelmed with gratitude to God and His priests for the great gifts they have given us.

Related: