Nicki Minaj: The Exorcism of Roman

Nicki Minaj Bishop

Nicki Minaj as Little Red Riding Hood at the 2012 Grammys.

Little Red Riding Hood is a fairy tale told to MK-Ultra slaves. Little Red Riding Hood is used in several ways along the lines of you think you’re going to Papa’s or Grandma’s house and you end up with a wolf.

Minaj Possession

Nikki was raped by her abusive Father. This split her mind into alters. The most malicious and evil alter is Roman Zoolanski, a cold and austere businesswoman.

Nicki Minaj Exorcism

A priest won’t be able to do the job. I have to do it myself. @nikkiminaj You need to remember the trauma. Stop disassociating and be brave. Every time I get flashbacks from the crucifixion I disassociate. I’m only human and so are you.

I want you to watch this video over and over again until all the memories come back. Only then you will be healed my child.

People are calling your cry for help anti-Christ. I don’t agree with them. Your sins are forgiven. Now sin no more and go in peace.

Actus contritionis

Deus meus, ex toto corde pænitet me ómnium meórum peccatórum, éaque detéstor, quia peccándo, non solum pœnas a te iuste statútas proméritus sum, sed præsértim quia offéndi te, summum bonum, ac dignum qui super ómnia diligáris. Ídeo fírmiter propóno, adiuvánte grátia tua, de cétero me non peccatúrum peccandíque occasiónes próximas fugitúrum. Amen.

Christ and the Serpent

Christ Serpent

In Mel Gibson’s Passion of the Christ I crush the serpent Lucifer on minute 9 second 11. Mel starred in the movie Conspiracy Theory. Do you think 9/11 was a conspiracy? Do you believe there was a conspiracy against Julius Caesar or a conspiracy against me?

Jews, Masons, and Modernists are Enemies of the Church

Bishop Bernard Fellay

New Hamburg, Canada, Jan 4, 2013 / 04:37 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Bishop Bernard Fellay, the head of the traditionalist Society of St. Pius X, mentioned Jews as “enemies of the Church” in a recent address reviewing the situation of the group as it considered full communion with Rome this past year.

“Who, during that time, was the most opposed that the Church would recognize the Society? The enemies of the Church. The Jews, the Masons, the Modernists,” Bishop Fellay, superior general of the society, said during a talk Dec. 28 at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Chapel in New Hamburg, Ontario.

The comment was made in passing during the wide-ranging address, which lasted one hour and 40 minutes.

The Society of St. Pius X was founded by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre in 1970 as a response to what he described as errors that had crept into the Church following the Second Vatican Council. Its relations with the Vatican became strained in 1988 when Archbishop Lefebvre consecrated four bishops without the permission of Pope John Paul II.

Since Benedict XVI became the Pope, talks to reconcile the society with the Church have intensified, with a particular increase in 2012. However, the discussions seem to have broken down over the summer.

Speaking about this impasse, Bishop Fellay said that groups “outside the Church, who were clearly during centuries, were enemies of the Church,” expressed opposition to the reconciliation of the traditionalist society with the Catholic Church. His reference to “groups” seems to have been a reference his earlier mention of “the Jews, the Masons, the Modernists.”

The bishop said that 2012 saw trials “extended to almost the whole Society,” an experience he worried could mean “some people have then lost the trust in the authority.”
Bishop Fellay said that the society has received mixed signals from Rome, and that talks eventually broke down with accusations of the Pius X Society being “Protestants,” and of Roman Catholics being “Modernists.”

The group’s position, according to Bishop Fellay, is that the portions of the Second Vatican Council “opposed to what the Church has always taught” must be rejected. He said that Pope Benedict’s “hermeneutic of continuity” is untenable because the council documents are in places “contrary” or “opposed to Tradition.”

But Bishop Fellay said that he remains hopeful for the situation in the long-term, even if reconciliation will not be possible in the near future.
“The situation is not desperate, no. It’s not worse than before … there’s some hope. I don’t think for right for now, but for us, we just continue.”

We must “continue to pray to the Blessed Virgin Mary, pray the Rosary,” Bishop Fellay concluded.