Christian Missionary tactics

guno

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History has shown us what happens

Missionaries employ various strategies to destroy other religions/cultures and convert people to their religion/denomination. The exact strategy deployed depends on the target population's situation. There are 7 categories of conversion methods: 1)Pre-evangelism 2)Personal Evangelism 3)Preaching Evangelism 4)Persuasion evangelism 5)Pastoral evangelism 6)Programmed evangelism 7)Prayer Evangelism. All the methods employed come under at least one of these categories though many come under multiple categories. Here is the listing of the prominent methods employed.

http://www.crusadewatch.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=section&id=21&Itemid=54
 
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Christian Conversion Tactics

Most Missionary organizations disguise their conversion efforts as charity organization. Often in the press, we hear about “faith-based initiatives” but that is just a euphemism for aggressive and violent conversion organizations. In the Western media, Missionaries are portrayed as true saviors who feed the hungry and nurse the sick.

However, Missionaries do not do this for the good of humanity, but instead to convert people to Christianity. Missionaries have also decided to target the poorest for conversions, not because they are the neediest, but rather, because they can be easily bribed into changing their faith, and they can not easily report to the press the atrocities which the Missionaries have inflicted upon them.



Christian Conversion Tactics - SgForums.com
 
Lets See Missionary tactics..... Lie by placing their idol Jesus in a verse.... Then lie about how Jesus attoned for our sins....Then repeat all lies over and over again fooling the gulliable and naive... When questioned fall back on said lies by covering them with another lie....Missionaries like to be on top that is why they prefer the "missionary" position....Wink...
 
Lets See Missionary tactics..... Lie by placing their idol Jesus in a verse.... Then lie about how Jesus attoned for our sins....Then repeat all lies over and over again fooling the gulliable and naive... When questioned fall back on said lies by covering them with another lie....Missionaries like to be on top that is why they prefer the "missionary" position....Wink...

It is written:

A naughty person, a wicked man, walketh with a froward mouth. He winketh with his eyes, he speaketh with his feet, he teacheth with his fingers.
Frowardness is in his heart, he deviseth mischief continually; he soweth discord. Therefore shall his calamity come suddenly; suddenly shall he be broken without remedy.

Proverbs 6:13-15
 
Oh jeremiah have you come to say hello... Lets play then ..prov 30:11 there is a generation that curses their father, and doth not bless their mother...one must wonder if to deny ones natural father is not cursing.. To deny ones mother in favor of the cult family called christianity is to with hold blessing from her and prov 30:17 the eye that mocks his father and hates to obey his mother, the ravens of the valley shall pick it out and the young vultures shall eat it....ironically this is the typical fate of anyone crucified... Thus i can wink at you while your saviour jesus cannot because the ravens of the valley have plucked out both his eyes.... Wink...
 
According To Jeremiah Jesus and herself is therefore naughty & wicked. Do they ever read what they are cutting and pasting and reflect it back to see how their own words and verse usage bites them in the back?

Let's review the falsely claim love of Jesus.
Jesus hated families (Luke 8:19-21,Luke 14:26,33,Luke 18:29-30, Matt 10:34-37), hated life (1 John 2:15-17) and this earth and mankind (2 Peter 3:10, Mat 10: 34-40 & Thomas 16, 2 Thessalonians 1:8), hated the Pharisee , hated Woman (1 Cor. 11, 1 Timothy 2:11-15 & all over the book of Thomas), hated his brethren (seen by what he caused to them), hated people with disabilities(Mark 9:14-19,Matt 9:32-33, 12:22 & Luke 11:14) hated gentiles (Matt15:26), hated his own chosen town of Capernaum (Mat.11:23), thus must not have Knoweth G-d according to 1John 4:8
 
Talk about reflecting back on one's statements.
An Evangelical spokesperson on Fox news this morning said Evangelicals find Trump problematic for their supoort because of things like Trump's Casinos as being preditory on poor people...wohhh.
And their Baal Harvest seed scam and wanting to sign up all the thirdcworld countries are not predatory on poor people? Do they ever look at themselves when they come up with this stuff....talk about blinders and in denial.
You could see the Fox Host biting his tongue holding back his laughter and grinding his teeth at this Evangelical daring to accuse someone of predatory acts against the poor. Like the Host wanted to tell him he had some nerve but couldn't for obvious reasons.
 
Well how fitting then that that evangelist ... Evil/angel was on fox news because the evil angels of christianity with their evil message would like to be the only "foxes" in the henhouse and how dare another "don"(that is what itlains call their mafia bosses) as in donald trump " steal" from then hens er i mean sheeple when only they are entitled to fleece them.... He is infringing on their territory the gall of him.......lol..
 
I didn't think of that, maybe subconciously they are saying or feeling he steals their Sunday tithes from the old church ladies who put those coins in the slot snd gamble their money away till nothings left for Sunday Church.
So they are fighting over those same people's spare change sort of speak. I think those ladies have more fun at casinos and bingo halls though and that's gotta result in the hostility.
 
They don't even need to raid the box and head to Vegas to live large off of parishioners. Look at home many people involved with running their churches that have nice cares, clothes, and houses yet their lifestyle doesn't exactly mesh with their known income. Or look how many churches spend vast amounts of money on the building they use and the like (and look at who is doing the work).
 
Jeremiah self describes incredibly well.

A naughty person, a wicked man, walketh with a froward mouth. He winketh with his eyes, he speaketh with his feet, he teacheth with his fingers.
Frowardness is in his heart, he deviseth mischief continually; he soweth discord. Therefore shall his calamity come suddenly; suddenly shall he be broken without remedy.

Proverbs 6:13-15[/QUOTE]
 
No Steven it is true they dont need to head to Vegas but I remember many years ago someone telling me he went to a church in las Vegas and the pastor of the church telling his members that if they didnt have any spare change that it was perfectly acceptable for his parishioners to give hotel chips for donations....I thought that was the funniest thing I ever heard considering where the churches supposedly stand on such things
 
Yes Michael they are upset because this "Don" is not there "don" as Don Rickles would say the "don" of the Italian people....The Capo de Capo the Vende de Vende....Or to put it another way he is stealing from "their" action....Capishe...
 
History has shown us what happens

Missionaries employ various strategies to destroy other religions/cultures and convert people to their religion/denomination. The exact strategy deployed depends on the target population's situation. There are 7 categories of conversion methods: 1)Pre-evangelism 2)Personal Evangelism 3)Preaching Evangelism 4)Persuasion evangelism 5)Pastoral evangelism 6)Programmed evangelism 7)Prayer Evangelism. All the methods employed come under at least one of these categories though many come under multiple categories. Here is the listing of the prominent methods employed.

Crusade Watch Religious Conversion Watch Evangelism watch - Evangelism amp Conversion Methods
The happiest man on earth

August 4, 2015

HOLDING the hand of a neglected Jamaican child eaten by rats in a public alms house marked the beginning of Fr Richard Ho Lung’s fight to love the world’s forgotten people.

The Jamaican-born Catholic convert from Buddhism left behind “the best of education and best of opportunities” as a Jesuit priest to live in the ghettos and serve the poor more than 30 years ago.

The sight of “deep suffering in the streets” punctuated the former Jesuit and university lecturer’s early travels to work.

“People were crawling in the streets, begging, sleeping,” he said.

“I found myself going past them as I had to go to the university to teach and so forth, realising in fact not only was I not being a good priest, I was not even being a good Christian, not given the circumstances in which I saw Jamaica was declining, to become a place where there are lots of poor people.”

Jamaica’s Eventide home, a government-run home for destitute women and children housing “more rats than people” was Fr Ho Lung’s doorway into a life with just two pairs of priestly clothes and no money.

“At Eventide there were 155 women who were burnt to death, and there was I, going to the university to teach and telling people about it, but not really doing anything except to say that it was unjust,” he said.

“Then you begin to realise that the doing of theology or the doing of the Word or the embodiment of the Word of Christ was absolutely necessary in our times, otherwise we were all basically hypocrites, unless you did the work of Christ.

“I began to become more and more agitated by that, and then finally, capitulated to the Lord and found in it, oddly, the greatest joy I’d ever found, which I could not find in teaching, and preaching and other works that I was doing.”

Fr Ho Lung said he “would not survive” spiritually as a Jesuit and in 1980, at 40 years old, left the order.

With two other men, Fr Ho Lung set off with episcopal permission to start a small group called the Brothers of the Poor who “set our minds on working with the poorest”, not meaning to found a religious order.

Starting at Eventide, Fr Ho Lung collated photographs of the neglected residents and made it available to the public, with help from the Jamaican press, leading to “huge confrontations with the government”.

“When I established the book, with pictures of all these people, the government forbade it and they called me and told me I was being a traitor,” Fr Ho Lung said.

“But I knew, deep down I knew, that all this rejection, I knew that that definitely was the hand of God wanting me to be purified, so I had no fear.

“And I sensed there was a victory to be won for the poor.”

He was victorious, the government announcing to rehouse all the poor, a “sign that God was pushing me in that direction” of fighting for the poor.

Fr Richard’s next stop was the slums of Kingston, Jamaica’s capital city, where families called weak structures made of recycled cardboard and material scraps “home”.

“Each day you went down and all of them would come running out with their arms wide open and say ‘Father, Father’, or ‘Brother, Brother – look at me, you came again’,” he said.

“And they would throw their arms around you.

“And you realised that was very much like Christ in Matthew 25, ‘Welcome into my kingdom, for I was hungry and you fed me, I was thirsty and you gave me to drink’.

“The poor are really Christ in disguise, they are the ones who are going to be your judge.”

The slums and streets were a dumping ground for babies with Down syndrome, disfigured bodies or other disabilities, who were cast out in shame and left to die on the streets.

The disturbing sights caught Fr Ho Lung’s attention and he sought to provide a home where the dying, forgotten and abandoned could live.

“We eagerly built a first home called Faith Centre and we had quite a few Down syndrome homeless, Down syndrome cripples, old men, old women taken into our Faith Centre, named that because we had no resources, you know,” he said.

“It was an act of faith that we were taking in homeless people.

“And we also were earning no money because if you really want to attend to the poor you can’t be divided.

“And to our surprise, we were able to feed people, clothe them and so forth.

“We increased after that, and built a second home.”

The brothers witnessed miracles in the houses, which Fr Ho Lung said was a testament to the power of love.

“Miracle after miracle, people who were dying, just by the fact that the brothers love them, touch them, feed them and pray with them, their desire to live is the miracle,” he said.

“I want to live because I am loved.

“And many people who would have died, have lived.

“Miracles are really the power to love and to find in yourself something way beyond yourselves, beyond your capacities.”

Within two years almost 20 men joined, mainly from other Caribbean countries, and in 1992 the Brothers of the Poor took on a new title, the Missionaries of the Poor.

Word of the “ghetto priest” spread not only through Jamaica, but also caught the attention of Blessed Mother Teresa, to whom Fr Ho Lung is often compared, and St John Paul II.

Both saintly figures visited Fr Ho Lung and the Missionaries of the Poor and confirmed with the ghetto priest that their life “was the right life and the right work for our times”.

Today there are more than 550 brothers, the majority born in Asia, Africa or the Caribbean, setting up international missions in Jamaica, Haiti, India, Kenya, the Philippines, Uganda, the United States and Indonesia.

Work is also starting on three new mission houses in East Timor in August, with the hope Fr Ho Lung’s recent visit to Australia will provide the funds.

“How many times you know, we’ve had to struggle, including myself, to say, ‘Go to Africa, go to Uganda, Kenya’,” he said.

“‘How are you going to get money to get building on land?’ It will be provided.

“To go past practical reality to spiritual reality.

“God is in charge, His hand is there.

“As Saint Paul says, ‘I have a cloak on my back, I have bread in my hand, what else do I need’.

“We have to live a life of faith to awaken those who live purely by the practical realities of every day.

“Let them see us Christians doing that, that we had it all but we said no to it because it was not enough.

“Let the Lord work.

“The more we provide for ourselves, the less God needs to provide for us.

“And also, it is God’s poor, so they’re his special children, so they have to call upon Him each day.”

Written by: Emilie Ng


http://catholicleader.com.au/people/the-happiest-man-on-earth
 
History has shown us what happens

Missionaries employ various strategies to destroy other religions/cultures and convert people to their religion/denomination. The exact strategy deployed depends on the target population's situation. There are 7 categories of conversion methods: 1)Pre-evangelism 2)Personal Evangelism 3)Preaching Evangelism 4)Persuasion evangelism 5)Pastoral evangelism 6)Programmed evangelism 7)Prayer Evangelism. All the methods employed come under at least one of these categories though many come under multiple categories. Here is the listing of the prominent methods employed.

Crusade Watch Religious Conversion Watch Evangelism watch - Evangelism amp Conversion Methods
The happiest man on earth

August 4, 2015

HOLDING the hand of a neglected Jamaican child eaten by rats in a public alms house marked the beginning of Fr Richard Ho Lung’s fight to love the world’s forgotten people.

The Jamaican-born Catholic convert from Buddhism left behind “the best of education and best of opportunities” as a Jesuit priest to live in the ghettos and serve the poor more than 30 years ago.

The sight of “deep suffering in the streets” punctuated the former Jesuit and university lecturer’s early travels to work.

“People were crawling in the streets, begging, sleeping,” he said.

“I found myself going past them as I had to go to the university to teach and so forth, realising in fact not only was I not being a good priest, I was not even being a good Christian, not given the circumstances in which I saw Jamaica was declining, to become a place where there are lots of poor people.”

Jamaica’s Eventide home, a government-run home for destitute women and children housing “more rats than people” was Fr Ho Lung’s doorway into a life with just two pairs of priestly clothes and no money.

“At Eventide there were 155 women who were burnt to death, and there was I, going to the university to teach and telling people about it, but not really doing anything except to say that it was unjust,” he said.

“Then you begin to realise that the doing of theology or the doing of the Word or the embodiment of the Word of Christ was absolutely necessary in our times, otherwise we were all basically hypocrites, unless you did the work of Christ.

“I began to become more and more agitated by that, and then finally, capitulated to the Lord and found in it, oddly, the greatest joy I’d ever found, which I could not find in teaching, and preaching and other works that I was doing.”

Fr Ho Lung said he “would not survive” spiritually as a Jesuit and in 1980, at 40 years old, left the order.

With two other men, Fr Ho Lung set off with episcopal permission to start a small group called the Brothers of the Poor who “set our minds on working with the poorest”, not meaning to found a religious order.

Starting at Eventide, Fr Ho Lung collated photographs of the neglected residents and made it available to the public, with help from the Jamaican press, leading to “huge confrontations with the government”.

“When I established the book, with pictures of all these people, the government forbade it and they called me and told me I was being a traitor,” Fr Ho Lung said.

“But I knew, deep down I knew, that all this rejection, I knew that that definitely was the hand of God wanting me to be purified, so I had no fear.

“And I sensed there was a victory to be won for the poor.”

He was victorious, the government announcing to rehouse all the poor, a “sign that God was pushing me in that direction” of fighting for the poor.

Fr Richard’s next stop was the slums of Kingston, Jamaica’s capital city, where families called weak structures made of recycled cardboard and material scraps “home”.

“Each day you went down and all of them would come running out with their arms wide open and say ‘Father, Father’, or ‘Brother, Brother – look at me, you came again’,” he said.

“And they would throw their arms around you.

“And you realised that was very much like Christ in Matthew 25, ‘Welcome into my kingdom, for I was hungry and you fed me, I was thirsty and you gave me to drink’.

“The poor are really Christ in disguise, they are the ones who are going to be your judge.”

The slums and streets were a dumping ground for babies with Down syndrome, disfigured bodies or other disabilities, who were cast out in shame and left to die on the streets.

The disturbing sights caught Fr Ho Lung’s attention and he sought to provide a home where the dying, forgotten and abandoned could live.

“We eagerly built a first home called Faith Centre and we had quite a few Down syndrome homeless, Down syndrome cripples, old men, old women taken into our Faith Centre, named that because we had no resources, you know,” he said.

“It was an act of faith that we were taking in homeless people.

“And we also were earning no money because if you really want to attend to the poor you can’t be divided.

“And to our surprise, we were able to feed people, clothe them and so forth.

“We increased after that, and built a second home.”

The brothers witnessed miracles in the houses, which Fr Ho Lung said was a testament to the power of love.

“Miracle after miracle, people who were dying, just by the fact that the brothers love them, touch them, feed them and pray with them, their desire to live is the miracle,” he said.

“I want to live because I am loved.

“And many people who would have died, have lived.

“Miracles are really the power to love and to find in yourself something way beyond yourselves, beyond your capacities.”

Within two years almost 20 men joined, mainly from other Caribbean countries, and in 1992 the Brothers of the Poor took on a new title, the Missionaries of the Poor.

Word of the “ghetto priest” spread not only through Jamaica, but also caught the attention of Blessed Mother Teresa, to whom Fr Ho Lung is often compared, and St John Paul II.

Both saintly figures visited Fr Ho Lung and the Missionaries of the Poor and confirmed with the ghetto priest that their life “was the right life and the right work for our times”.

Today there are more than 550 brothers, the majority born in Asia, Africa or the Caribbean, setting up international missions in Jamaica, Haiti, India, Kenya, the Philippines, Uganda, the United States and Indonesia.

Work is also starting on three new mission houses in East Timor in August, with the hope Fr Ho Lung’s recent visit to Australia will provide the funds.

“How many times you know, we’ve had to struggle, including myself, to say, ‘Go to Africa, go to Uganda, Kenya’,” he said.

“‘How are you going to get money to get building on land?’ It will be provided.

“To go past practical reality to spiritual reality.

“God is in charge, His hand is there.

“As Saint Paul says, ‘I have a cloak on my back, I have bread in my hand, what else do I need’.

“We have to live a life of faith to awaken those who live purely by the practical realities of every day.

“Let them see us Christians doing that, that we had it all but we said no to it because it was not enough.

“Let the Lord work.

“The more we provide for ourselves, the less God needs to provide for us.

“And also, it is God’s poor, so they’re his special children, so they have to call upon Him each day.”

Written by: Emilie Ng


The happiest man on earth The Catholic Leader


Thankfully the catholics no longer missionize to Jews

Church should not pursue conversion of Jews, pope says

Church should not pursue conversion of Jews pope says National Catholic Reporter
 
Christian missionary tactics:

1) would you like to hear a message about Jesus Christ? No? Have a nice day!

2) would you like to hear a message about Jesus christ? Yes? Here is our message...

Not overly complicated
 

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