Total replacement.

It is hard for us to replace every erroneous thought and theory with which our minds have been crippled, but it is possible. First, we look to The Church. Not to those whose distortions of Her teachings may be popular, but to the complete wholeness of what She has held.

Then, we look to Scripture.

When we are ready to consider that they have a broader, more accurate view of reality, we may profitably review the book downloadable elsewhere on this site, “New Road to Rome”. In doing so, we see that reality, reason, and faith come together, all standing on the undeniable premise that “God has the ability to program in three dimensions.”

Just as it is now medically possible to replace the very hips and knees on which we stand, so it is now intellectually possible to replace those broken, twisted philosophies, ideas, and histories which keep us from getting closer to The Programmer.

We begin by considering, and reading, of His ability to program in three dimensions.

Then, we tell others about the astonishing Church that brings simplicity and truth to a world based on profiting from complexity and fraud.

Author's Notes:

Related:

Catholic priests and religious are more blessed.…

Catholics learn about an “unholy trinity” from The Most Beloved Disciple. ~ Question 1: ” Why are Catholic...

St. Augustine is God’s Reason to honor…

1 Thessalonians 3:7-13 connects Catholics with St. Monica and her similarly blessed son, St. Augustine: "For we now...

Catholic “Jesus Receivers” let us see…

Catholic “Jesus Receivers” love this message to St. Paul from “The Wholly Holy Spirit”! ~ Question 1: “What...

Priest holding the monstrance with incense clouds

What “Jesus Receivers” did and still do…

Catholics are blessed to make the phrase ‘Jesus Receiver’ part of our understanding. ~ Question 1: “What is...

Catholics are the Connection between Old and New…

An often overlooked reason for denying The Sanctity of Mary continues to echo among many: "No woman could...

Catholics can best make this connection!

St. Paul explains what blessed these early Macedonian Catholics with such "generosity" despite their "profound poverty":...