By DR. CHRISTOPHER MANION On June 19th, 2024, Louisiana Governor Jeff Landry signed House Bill 71 into law mandating that the Ten Commandments be put on display in every classroom in the state’s public school classrooms by January 1, 2025. Of course, the Ten Commandments were universally displayed in locations public and private before the cultural left’s attack on America’s religious character that has raged since the mid-twentieth century. But the Decalogue departed from public schools years ago, and the American Civil Liberties Union wants to keep it that way. Just five days after Governor Landry signed HB 71, the ACLU filed a lawsuit against the State of Louisiana in Federal District Court. The ACLU has followed this pattern literally hundreds of times in the past 75 years. The organization’s goal has been consistent: to reverse the Supreme Court’s 1892 unanimous decision which stated that “this is a religious nation” (Church of the Holy Trinity v. United States 143 US 457) and erase all traces
By RAYMOND DE SOUZA In this article we continue where we left in the previous one: providing more historical proofs that Jesus actually claimed to be divine, which deny the assertion that all religions are different path to God, as Pope Francis said in Asia to young people, and that Bishop Barron said to Ben Shapiro that Jesus was a privileged way. Let us investigate the historical evidence: 1. Jesus claimed to be omnipotent, to possess all divine power, therefore equal to the Father in Divine power. For instance, “All power is given to Me is Heaven and on earth…I am with you all days even unto the consummation of the world” (Matt 28:18-20). 2. “Amen, amen, before Abraham was made, I am.” Notice how He does not say I was, or I have been, but I am — present tense (John 8:57-58). By the way, in Hebrew and Aramaic, I am sounds like Yahweh… 3. “The Father has given all judgment to the Son,