You better learn from Dr Alberto Rivera.
Ha-Ha..... Dude, you should really refrain from the herb before posting such drivel. With that being said, maybe you should read the exposé by Gary Metz in
Cornerstone magazine. (Metz, Gary (1981). "The Alberto Story".
Cornerstone 9 (53): 29–31. Archived from the original on 2005-12-02); (Alberto Rivera: Is He For Real?".
Christianity Today 2 (2). 1981-03-13)
According to the
Cornerstone exposé Rivera had a 'history of legal entanglements' including fraud, credit card theft, and writing bad checks. Warrants had been issued for his arrest in New Jersey and Florida, and he was wanted by the Spanish police for 'swindles and cheats'; while in the USA in 1967, he claimed to be collecting money for a Spanish college, which never received this money. The details of his claims changed: In 1964 he said he had left the Catholic Church in July 1952, but he later put the date at March 20, 1967; despite this, he was still promoting Catholicism in a newspaper interview of August that same year. Although supposedly placed in the sanatorium in 1965 and held there for three months, he gave the date of his release as September 1967, leaving a period of over a year unaccounted.
Not only that,
Cornerstone also questioned Rivera's claim to various degrees, including three doctorates (Th.D., D.D., and Ph.D.), reporting that his known chronology did not allow enough time for him to have completed these degrees and that he had admitted to receiving them from a Colorado diploma mill. Lol! If you never heard of of Gary Metz, he is a evangelical Protestant as are the Cornerstone and
Christianity Today magazines.
Did you also know that Alberto Rivera, a.k.a. Alberto Romero, has a history of legal entanglements. No? Well i
n 1965, a warrant for his arrest was issued in Hoboken, New Jersey, for writing bad checks. He also left debts in excess of $3,000. Also,
In 1969 two warrents were issued against him in DeLand and Ormond Beach, Florida. The first was for the theft of a Bank-Americard. The criminal investigation division of the Bank of America reports he charged over $2,000 on the credit card. The second warrant was for the 'unauthorized use of an automobile.' Alberto abandoned the vehicle in Seattle, Washington. From there he moved to Southern California. I could go on, would you like to hear more? I mean really dude, next time you feel the need to use the likes of someone like Alberto Rivera to back up your claims, save yourself an embarrasment and do a little research on them! [rolling eyes]
Nope.... but Jack Chick is pretty slick Lol! Funny thing is, your hero "Dr. Alberto Rivera" even pulled the wool over Jack Chick's eyes. Of course, Chick was willingly deceived and had no compunction about printing Rivera's outrageous claims in his comic book series. Lol!
they save a Jews if they convert to catholic. they send it to Argentina/ south America.
Do you have something to back this up, or is it just more of your anti-Catholic drivel?
But they stop this program because lot of them back to Jews religion after in the save place for a while.
p.s. In the future, do us all a favor. Put down the pipe, and try writing coherent sentences for a change.
Pax Christi
"from henceforth, all generations shall call me Blessed." ---Luke 1:48.