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Kori Ellis
04-01-2005, 03:55 AM
Report: Pope in Coma

Pope in Coma, Italian Report Says; Vatican Announces Pontiff Has Suffered Heart Failure

The Associated Press

VATICAN CITY Apr 1, 2005 — Pope John Paul II was in a coma Friday, Italian news agency Apcom said citing unidentified sources.

Earlier Friday the Vatican had said that the pope suffered heart failure during treatment for a urinary tract infection and was in "very serious" condition.

Kori Ellis
04-01-2005, 04:05 AM
Vatican Denies Reports of Pope in Coma

4 minutes ago Europe - AP

VATICAN CITY - The Vatican denied reports Friday that Pope John Paul II was in a coma.

The AP news agency had reported the pontiff had entered a coma earlier Friday. The pope suffered heart failure during treatment for a urinary tract infection and was in "very serious" condition, the Vatican said Friday.

timvp
04-01-2005, 04:06 AM
I can hear it now.

"God took the Pope because the human race failed Terri Schiavo."

Bluto Blutarsky
04-01-2005, 07:27 AM
Tragic. Very interesting how Terri just died yesterday and now the Pope's end is near. He's in my prayers.

Taco
04-01-2005, 08:37 AM
:(

alamo50
04-01-2005, 09:50 AM
Vatican: Pope in grave condition but lucid

Weeping spokesman says pontiff told of gravity of situation

The Associated Press
Updated: 9:38 a.m. ET April 1, 2005


VATICAN CITY - Pope John Paul II suffered heart failure and is in “very grave” condition, the Vatican said Friday.

Spokesman Joaquin Navarro-Valls choked up with tears as he told reporters about the pope’s worsening condition. He said the 84-year-old pontiff had been “informed of the gravity of his situation” and decided to remain in his apartment overlooking St. Peter’s Square, where thousands of pilgrims gathered to pray for him.

John Paul participated in Mass and received some top aides Friday morning, Navarro-Valls said.

“The pope is still lucid, fully conscious and extraordinarily serene,” Navarro-Valls said. He said the pope had unstable blood pressure and remained in “very grave” condition.

Among the top church officials who gathered at his bedside was Archbishop Paolo Sardi, the Vatican vice chamberlain who runs the Holy See between the death of a pope and the election of a new one.

Millions pray
Thousands stood vigil on the square outside, many tearfully gazing up at his third-floor window, and millions more around the world paused to pray for him.

In Wadowice, Poland, people left school and work early and headed to church to pray for their native son.

“I want him to hold on, but it is all in God’s hands now,” said 64-year-old Elzbieta Galuszko at the church where the pope was baptized in Wadowice, southern Poland. “We can only pray for him so he can pull through these difficult moments.”

In the Philippines, tears streamed down the face of Linda Nicol as she and her husband asked God to grant John Paul “a longer life.” Muslims in France were praying for the pontiff because he was a “man of peace,” said Dalil Boubakeur, president of the French Council of the Muslim Faith.

Navarro-Valls said John Paul asked aides to read him the biblical passage describing the final stage of the Way of the Cross, the path that Christ took to his crucifixion. In that stage, according to the Bible, Christ’s body was taken down from the cross, wrapped in a linen shroud and placed in his tomb.

Navarro-Valls said the pope followed attentively and made the sign of the cross.

“This is surely an image I have never seen in these 26 years,” Navarro-Valls said. Choking up, he walked out of the room.

Sharp decline
John Paul’s health declined sharply Thursday when he developed a high fever brought on by the infection.

On Thursday afternoon, the pope suffered heart failure and a condition called “septic shock” during treatment for the infection, the Vatican said Friday, but it denied an Italian news report that he was in a coma.

The pope received the sacrament for the sick and dying on Thursday evening. Formerly called the last rites, the sacrament is often misunderstood as signaling imminent death. It is performed both for patients at the point of death and for those who are very sick — and it may be repeated.

The Rome daily La Repubblica reported Friday that the sacrament was administered by John Paul’s closest aide, Polish Archbishop Stanislaw Dziwisz, who serves as his private secretary. Dziwisz had given the pontiff the same sacrament on Feb. 24 just before the pope underwent a tracheotomy to insert a breathing tube in his throat at the Gemelli Polyclinic hospital, the newspaper said.

Italy’s Apcom news agency reported Friday morning that the pontiff had fallen into a coma, but the Vatican dismissed the report.

Among the aides John Paul received Friday were Secretary of State Cardinal Angelo Sodano, the Vatican’s No. 2 official; Undersecretary of State Archbishop Leonardo Sandri; the pope’s vicar for Rome, Cardinal Camillo Ruini; his doctrinal chief, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger; the Vatican foreign minister, Archbishop Giovanni Lajolo; and American Cardinal Edmund Szoka, the governor of Vatican City.

'Basically incurable'
The pontiff was attended to in his apartment by the Vatican medical team, and provided with “all the appropriate therapeutic provisions and cardio-respiratory assistance,” the Holy See said.

It said the pope was being helped by his personal doctor, two intensive care doctors, a cardiologist, an ear, nose and throat specialist and two nurses.

Heart failure occurs when the heart no longer has the strength to pump blood through the body, and is a sign that the body’s cardiac system is failing.

Dr. Paolo Nardini, a Rome physician who is not part of the pope’s team, said a heart attack affects only the heart, while heart failure signals a “breakdown of the entire system, basically incurable.”

Septic shock
Dr. Peter Weissberg, medical director of the British Heart Foundation, said septic shock “puts a phenomenal strain on the heart.”

In a statement Friday, Weissberg said that “those already suffering from heart disease — including those with heart failure — are even more susceptible to septic shock. Infection triggers a profound loss of blood pressure, depriving organs around the body of their vital blood supply and putting an enormous strain on the heart.”

Even the fittest patients need special care and medicine to survive, he said.

'Profoundly serene and fully lucid'
Ruini said he visited John Paul early Friday and found him “profoundly serene and fully lucid.”

“I prayed with him for a moment which profoundly moved me. Certainly the pope has completely left himself in God’s hands. I invite all Romans and Italians to intensify prayers for him in this moment,” Ruini told private TG5 television.

He asked Italians to pray for John Paul, and said a special Mass for the pope would be held at 7 p.m. at the basilica of St. John Lateran in Rome. The patriarch of Venice, Cardinal Angelo Scola, also planned a Mass in St. Mark Basilica at the same time.

Hospitalized twice last month following two breathing crises, and fitted with a breathing tube and a feeding tube, John Paul has become a picture of suffering.

His 26-year papacy has been marked by its call to value the aged and to respect the sick, subjects the pope has turned to as he battles Parkinson’s disease and crippling knee and hip ailments.

It is not clear who would be empowered to make medical decisions for an unconscious pope. The Vatican has officially declined to comment whether John Paul has left written instructions.

© 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

maxpower
04-01-2005, 09:58 AM
and they are both catholic......strange omen.
Yeah....two catholics dying or close to dying, a couple days apart.
Call Ripley's.

ducks
04-01-2005, 10:20 AM
he should have resign along time ago

Jimcs50
04-01-2005, 10:27 AM
he should have resign along time ago

Yeah that helps.

:rolleyes

travis2
04-01-2005, 12:06 PM
Per WOAI...a news bulletin from the Vatican says the Pope's breathing has shallowed and his kidneys are failing (I think that's what he said)...

:depressed

desflood
04-01-2005, 12:16 PM
Drudgereport says he's now lost consciousness.

travis2
04-01-2005, 01:32 PM
Unconfirmed reports that the Pope has died...per WOAI...

bigzak25
04-01-2005, 01:33 PM
i think it's official that he's gone now per cnn. RIP JP.

CAPARG
04-01-2005, 01:34 PM
http://www.spurstalk.com/forums/images/smilies/smidepressed.gif http://www.spurstalk.com/forums/images/smilies/smicry.gif

tlongII
04-01-2005, 02:56 PM
What do we need a Pope for anyway?

E20
04-01-2005, 03:02 PM
Isn't he a descendent of St. Peter?

travis2
04-01-2005, 03:05 PM
Isn't he a descendent of St. Peter?

Not by blood. The office of the Bishop of Rome is traced all the way back to St. Peter.

CosmicCowboy
04-01-2005, 03:07 PM
with the celibacy thang I assume its rather difficult to perpetuate extensive bloodlines in the papal office.

EasilyAmused
04-01-2005, 03:17 PM
:cry




What do we need a Pope for anyway?

Besides being the spiritual leader of the Roman Catholic Church, the pope assigns Cardinals and Bishops, he also guides and speaks on all matters of Catholic doctrine.

Spurminator
04-01-2005, 03:25 PM
with the celibacy thang I assume its rather difficult to perpetuate extensive bloodlines in the papal office.

:lol

tlongII
04-01-2005, 03:44 PM
:cry





Besides being the spiritual leader of the Roman Catholic Church, the pope assigns Cardinals and Bishops, he also guides and speaks on all matters of Catholic doctrine.


So I guess we don't really need a pope then, huh?

Duff McCartney
04-01-2005, 03:47 PM
For real he should just die already...it's not like he's going to hell, they'll probably rush him to the front of the line.

EasilyAmused
04-01-2005, 03:54 PM
So I guess we don't really need a pope then, huh?


Well, I don't know about you but for me the pope plays a vital role. :king

tlongII
04-01-2005, 04:06 PM
Well, I don't know about you but for me the pope plays a vital role. :king

Does he give you spiritual guidance?

Ed Helicopter Jones
04-01-2005, 04:14 PM
Does he give you spiritual guidance?


TLong, do you even really care about that at all? Don't you have more important things to do like post some more Jennifer Alba pics?

Extra Stout
04-01-2005, 04:15 PM
The guy was only one of the dozen or so most important figures of the latter half of the 20th century.

Duff McCartney
04-01-2005, 04:27 PM
The guy was only one of the dozen or so most important figures of the latter half of the 20th century.

To who?

Extra Stout
04-01-2005, 04:34 PM
To who?To those who are happy that communism failed, that Eastern Europe is free.

I can understand that leftists might be mad at him for that and might celebrate his death. While he stood for the plight of the poor, he believed in helping them through faith and charity, rather than letting a handful of leftist elites run the state.

Unfortunately for them, the Power by which he worked lives on.

I'm not even Catholic, but I do have a sense of history.

tlongII
04-01-2005, 04:45 PM
TLong, do you even really care about that at all? Don't you have more important things to do like post some more Jennifer Alba pics?

Chopper, of course I care. I wouldn't ask if I didn't. I'm just curious about what a pope is needed for. Obviously, I'm not catholic and in fact I believe all organized religion is mis-guided. I admit that I'm a bit of a troll and I do like to create tension. However, I do like to hear what people say.

And by the way, it's Jessica Alba, not Jennifer Alba.

Victor Newman
04-01-2005, 04:56 PM
Show me where in the bible it says believe in the pope and you go to heaven,

The Pope is only a man. The Bible talks about not worshiping a man or a statue.

I went to catholic church for 3 years straight and not one person priest or anyone came up to me and asked me if I was saved, The only reason I didn't say anything sooner is cuz there are so many Catholics that chances are I might piss off many including webmasters and moderators.

I look at all those people on TV and I read all about theso called Pope lovers on the WWW

And I am willing to bet maybe 2% of them even read the Bible other than on Sunday.

Jesus was right there will be a large group of people who will be mislead and will burn in the lake of fire.

Extra Stout
04-01-2005, 05:04 PM
Pope John Paul II: Cold Warrior with a cross (http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cold.war/episodes/19/spotlight/)

'They trembled before the pope'
By John Christensen
CNN Interactive

On June 2, 1979, just eight months after his consecration as pope, John Paul II returned to his native Poland for a nine-day visit that heralded the beginning of the end of the Soviet empire.

The pope said Mass that day in Victory Square in Warsaw, a place more often the scene of army parades and rallies orchestrated by the ruling communist government.

Officially, Poland was atheist, and the government had confined and thwarted the church at every turn, stopping just short of outright confrontation. But Poland had been a stronghold of Catholicism for more than a 1,000 years. It would take more than 35 years of communism to snuff out that faith.

So it was that 250,000 Poles crowded into the square to behold this robust and charismatic fellow Pole, charged with emotion and special purpose, standing beneath an enormous wooden cross.

To understand himself, the pope told his listeners, man must understand Jesus Christ. He can understand neither who he is nor what his truth may be, neither his vocation nor his final end, without the help of the Lord.

After a pause, the pope then uttered words that could only be regarded as at once an affirmation to the faithful and a challenge to the secular authorities:

"Therefore, Christ cannot be kept out of the history of man in any part of the globe, at any longitude or latitude of geography. ... Christ cannot be kept out of this part of the world. To try to do this is an act against man."

The applause began slowly, then rose in a crescendo, thundering across the square again and again like storm waves battering a seashore.

For eight long minutes the applause continued. And when it began to subside, and the pope, hand on his chest, was unable to continue, the singing began.

"Christ conquers, Christ rules," they sang, hundreds of thousands of triumphant voices. And from among the yellow and white papal flags in the crowd a banner was unfurled that read: "Freedom, independence, protection of human rights."


'The pope was the real power'

It was, says a bishop who was there that day, "an awakening."

"Everyone suddenly perceived that the pope was the real power," the Rev. Jan Sikorski, a priest, told the Boston Globe. "The police meant nothing. The politicians meant nothing. They trembled before the pope. The people did not sing the Internationale, they sang church hymns."

Media reports estimate that despite a virtual news blackout in Eastern Europe, news of the pope's visit to Poland reached 40 million Catholics behind the Iron Curtain.

A year later, the Solidarity trade union was born in Poland. In time, the movement would enlist 10 million Poles as members, and priests visiting the imprisoned Solidarity leaders often concealed messages of encouragement from the pope in their robes.

In the autumn of 1989, Solidarity played the pivotal role in bringing down the government and replacing it with a democracy.

Attempts have been made to credit the pope with the subsequent fall of the Soviet empire over the next few years, but without much credibility.

No other country was as strongly Catholic as Poland, and policy experts say there are too many other variables to make such a generalization. Mikhail Gorbachev's decision not to use the Soviet army in Poland and elsewhere, experts say, probably was more the result of Russia's economic decline and the realization that in the future he might need Western help.


Pushing over the first domino

Nevertheless, John Paul is credited with helping to push over the first communist domino. Others in the Eastern bloc were not only encouraged but emboldened by his support for freedom and rights.

"There was never any doubt in the way the pope talked that he wanted to bring their system down," a Vatican official told the Chicago Tribune in 1992. "He always believed the division of Europe was a bad thing, and he was concerned that the peoples of Eastern Europe should take their rightful place in Europe."

Joaquin Navarro Valls, the pope's spokesman and one of his closest advisers, told the Tribune that the pope was certain communism would fall.

"He was convinced that it was so corrupt it could not last forever," Navarro said. "He was basing himself in philosophical and moral ground, and that was the thing the communists feared most. They knew how to deal with political pressure, but they didn't know what to do with moral pressure."

tlongII
04-01-2005, 05:06 PM
for Chopper...

http://www.maximonline.com/girlfriend_of_day/girls/jessica_alba/gfd_l3.jpg

CosmicCowboy
04-01-2005, 05:10 PM
To those who are happy that communism failed, that Eastern Europe is free.

I can understand that leftists might be mad at him for that and might celebrate his death. While he stood for the plight of the poor, he believed in helping them through faith and charity, rather than letting a handful of leftist elites run the state.

uhhh Duff...Ronald Reagan wasn't the pope...:lol

tlongII
04-01-2005, 05:16 PM
uhhh Duff...Ronald Reagan wasn't the pope...:lol


Agreed CC. Captain Ron had much more to do with the collapse of communism than the pope.

CAPARG
04-01-2005, 05:16 PM
TLong, sometimes the silence is a good medicine, if you don´t care about the Pope, ok, but respect the people who think different.

Duff McCartney
04-01-2005, 05:21 PM
uhhh Duff...Ronald Reagan wasn't the pope...:lol

What are you talking about?

tlongII
04-01-2005, 05:21 PM
TLong, sometimes the silence is a good medicine, if you don´t care about the Pope, ok, but respect the people who think different.

Where have I dis-respected anyone?

tlongII
04-01-2005, 05:24 PM
I'm not even criticizing the Pope himself actually. He seems like he is or has been a good person. However, I will criticize the "position or office" of the pope.

Extra Stout
04-01-2005, 05:25 PM
uhhh Duff...Ronald Reagan wasn't the pope...:lol
I'm sorry... that CNN article is too long for people with short attention spans to comprehend it.

Short version: JPII was the moral force behind the Solidarity movement in Poland, and by extension, the anti-communist movements in Eastern Europe.

Ronald Reagan didn't do it by himself.

Extra Stout
04-01-2005, 05:26 PM
I'm not even criticizing the Pope himself actually. He seems like he is or has been a good person. However, I will criticize the "position or office" of the pope.Well, yeah, if we agreed with the "position" of the papacy, we'd probably be Catholic.

desflood
04-01-2005, 05:30 PM
Pope John Paul: A giant bent by illness
By Philip Pullella
February 25, 2005 - 1:07PM

Adored by some, attacked by others, Pope John Paul II is perhaps the most widely recognised person in the world.

On the world stage, he has been at once a champion of the downtrodden and an often contested defender of orthodoxy within his own church.

In recent years, the world has watched the decline in the health of the 84-year-old Pope, who has both Parkinson's disease and severe arthritis. He has been unable to complete his prepared speeches and has difficulty pronouncing his words.

Yesterday, the Pope was rushed to hospital in Rome for the second time this month with a relapse of flu, reviving fears in the 1.1 billion strong Catholic world that one of the most historic pontificates is nearing an end.

The Polish Pope burst on the scene on October 16, 1978, when cardinals in a secret conclave chose him as the first non-Italian pontiff in four and a half centuries.

The third longest-serving pope in Roman Catholic history, the steely-willed John Paul ushered his church into the new millennium despite his sapped stamina.

Historians say one of the Pope's most lasting legacies will be his role in the fall of communism in Eastern Europe in 1989.
Poles believe his unflagging support for the banned Solidarity trade union while communists tried to crush it was a potent force keeping the movement alive.

Solidarity formed the East Bloc's first non-communist government in 1989, marking the start of a wave of freedom which saw Marxist regimes fall like dominoes across Europe.

"Behold the night is over, day has dawned anew," the Pope said during a triumphant visit to Czechoslovakia in 1990.

desflood
04-01-2005, 05:31 PM
Read your history, dammit.

Inbred
04-01-2005, 07:38 PM
Make sure you don't say anything bad about Catholics on KTSA they will run you off the radio.

JoeChalupa
04-01-2005, 08:26 PM
I love John Paul II.

mouse
04-01-2005, 10:07 PM
I love John Paul II.

Love? What kind of love? The love that a local priest shows to an 11 year old boy? Or the love you say you have for your religion and faith and yet you have never invited me to church, why is that?

All of a sudden everyone and there mother is a catholic. You folks make me laugh... :lmao

Kori Ellis
04-01-2005, 10:13 PM
I'm not Catholic. But I respect the Pope. But I don't think that his death would bother me more than anyone else's death bothers me that I don't know. To me, it's sad because of the loss of human life, but not much more.

mouse
04-01-2005, 11:28 PM
I'm not Catholic. But I respect the Pope. But I don't think that his death would bother me more than anyone else's death bothers me that I don't know. To me, it's sad because of the loss of human life, but not much more.
Respect is one thing, saying his life means more than Maria Schiavo is another, or do you feel The Pope is better than us?

My God ' what, or who, did you people worship before he even got the the Job? What about Pope John the first? :lmao


Does anyone here really read the Bible?

http://users.wi.net/~johnh/cnn.JPG

TheMrPeanut
04-02-2005, 12:02 AM
damn it

SequSpur
04-02-2005, 12:46 AM
You all are fucking high as usual.

The Pope is the most recognizable and respected human on the face of the earth. Whether you are a Catholic or not, the Pope is a symbol of leadership within religion that breaks all barriers of all races, religion and culture.

Pope John Paul has reached out to the youth like no other Pope has.

I also don't think referring to the Pope as a Pedophile like the noncomedian Mouse alluded to is bullshit.

Have a little respect for the Pope and what he stands for. It doesn't matter if you are religious or not. As far as the earth goes, no one is more respected than the Pope.

SequSpur
04-02-2005, 12:48 AM
As for whether the Pope is more important than Mouse? I would say Yes times one trillion.

Dude has done more for the world than anyone.

Duff McCartney
04-02-2005, 12:53 AM
Pot meet kettle.

SequSpur
04-02-2005, 12:56 AM
Is that all you got? Pot meet kettle. Well how about you meet a fucking ATM machine and pay your debts?

Stay the fuck out of this topic, because your dumb young punk ass doesn't know shit about it anyway because you live your life with your head firmly stuck in your ass.

timvp
04-02-2005, 01:25 AM
You all are fucking high as usual.

The Pope is the most recognizable and respected human on the face of the earth. Whether you are a Catholic or not, the Pope is a symbol of leadership within religion that breaks all barriers of all races, religion and culture.

Pope John Paul has reached out to the youth like no other Pope has.

I also don't think referring to the Pope as a Pedophile like the noncomedian Mouse alluded to is bullshit.

Have a little respect for the Pope and what he stands for. It doesn't matter if you are religious or not. As far as the earth goes, no one is more respected than the Pope.

Now you know how people feel like when you diss Manu.

:blah

E20
04-02-2005, 01:53 AM
As far as the earth goes, no one is more respected than the Pope.


What about God?

xcoriate
04-02-2005, 02:48 AM
breaks all barriers of all races, religion and culture.

Dude I'm sure there are countless societies around the world that have been bullied into the catholic religion that don't feel to good about that.

Yep its sad that he has died, but many others have dies the same day.

You get over it, maybe the new "pope" will be able to put a coherent sentance together.

Just out of curiosity does the Pope address the people or does god do it via the pope?

mouse
04-02-2005, 09:21 AM
You all are fucking high as usual.

The Pope is the most recognizable and respected human on the face of the earth. Whether you are a Catholic or not, the Pope is a symbol of leadership within religion that breaks all barriers of all races, religion and culture.

Pope John Paul has reached out to the youth like no other Pope has.

I also don't think referring to the Pope as a Pedophile like the noncomedian Mouse alluded to is bullshit.

Have a little respect for the Pope and what he stands for. It doesn't matter if you are religious or not. As far as the earth goes, no one is more respected than the Pope.


Are you Catholic Sequ? If not? Then whay are you so upset?

and if you are? Then why would you make other Catholics look bad with your cursing? To have the Pope's name and Fucking in the same topic must really show all of us non Catholics how much love your religion has for others,

Thank you for making my point.

Shelly
04-02-2005, 09:37 AM
I'm not Catholic. But I respect the Pope. But I don't think that his death would bother me more than anyone else's death bothers me that I don't know. To me, it's sad because of the loss of human life, but not much more.

I'm Catholic (non-practicing) and I agree with Kori. The man is old, he lived a full life, and may he go peacefully.

JoeChalupa
04-02-2005, 09:52 AM
I guess it is just a personal issue to me.
I understand what Kori and Shelly are saying but I guess I feel a special love for the Pope that some don't.
Death affects us in different ways. Of course I don't feel anything special when someone dies who I don't know or have a special affection for.
When my parents pass I'm sure I'll feel it more than most.
Friends will extend their condolances but they won't feel anything special.
My daughter told me yesterday that one of her friends at school was asking her if she was Catholic and why did she think so highly of the Pope.
I told her just to respect others opinions and don't argue about her faith.

mouse
04-02-2005, 10:01 AM
Funny how many of you didn't care when Jesus died.

JoeChalupa
04-02-2005, 10:04 AM
I care because he died for me.

SequSpur
04-02-2005, 01:41 PM
Now you know how people feel like when you diss Manu.

:blah


Send me a PM and let me know when Manu is going to play well, because I see it in flashes.

You can live on the gold medal and the allstar appearance, but when your losing your starting job to Hedo, there is nothing more to say.

Manu hasn't done shit in the playoffs, when it counts.

A game where he should have led this team to a victory or at least a decent game, he sat in a chair wondering when Barry was taking his job or if Devin comes back will he be hedoed again.


As for Mouse, yes I am or was a Catholic but I don't worship anyone or go to church anymore. I haven't for 20 years. My life is all about what I can do today to make tomorrow better.

As I said, which you probably can't understand, was that he has done more for the world than most.

I never even stated my faith. So GFY.

As for xcoriate, yes its sad, but everyone must die and move on. Pope is the Pope. There will be another one when this one goes. Life goes on.

bigzak25
04-02-2005, 03:01 PM
Well, NOW it is official, Godbless him on his ascent to heaven. :(

samikeyp
04-02-2005, 03:02 PM
Amen.

td4mvp21
04-02-2005, 03:18 PM
Funny how many of you didn't care when Jesus died.

Your the one that has all the pictures with your face on his body mocking him I wouldn't be talking.

mouse
04-02-2005, 03:55 PM
Send me a PM and let me know when Manu is going to .

As for Mouse, yes I am or was a Catholic

Your funny :lmao That's like me saying I was once gay.
Either you suck dick or you don't Stop riding the fence.


but I don't worship anyone or go to church anymore. I haven't for 20 years. My life is all about what I can do today to make tomorrow better.

sure you do , telling everyone fuck you, every 5 minutes does make all our lives much better thank you so much.


As I said, which you probably can't understand, was that he has done more for the world than most.

Did he bring us the WWW? There are only 3 important people in life
Mark Cuban/Jesus and Al Gore

mouse
04-02-2005, 03:58 PM
Your the one that has all the pictures with your face on his body mocking him I wouldn't be talking.


My Pictures promotes Jesus, when was the last time you posted a picture of Jesus? or made a topic about him?

Ps: I didn't make this picture Dusty Garza did, go sue his ass not mine...
http://www.boomspeed.com/woaimouse/mouse-saves.jpg

SequSpur
04-02-2005, 04:28 PM
Your funny :lmao That's like me saying I was once gay.
Either you suck dick or you don't Stop riding the fence.

I really don't give a fuck, you're wasting your time as usual. Whether me being a catholic or not is for dipshits like you to decide. Classify it as to what you want. You might suck a dick or two, but I don't see the reference.


sure you do , telling everyone fuck you, every 5 minutes does make all our lives much better thank you so much.

I have never said FU to anyone here, so you're wrong again.


Did he bring us the WWW? There are only 3 important people in life
Mark Cuban/Jesus and Al Gore

Not even worthy of a comment.

mouse
04-04-2005, 07:26 PM
I really don't give a fuck,

Famous last words from a vato who is about to melt down,




you're wasting your time as usual.

are you saying I need to get a life? Wasting time is you buying a growth chart :lmao

Dude your on the WWW . you can't lectur anyone about wasting time :smokin




Whether me being a catholic or not is for dipshits like you to decide.

What is there to decide? when we see your passion for the Pope? Your your true colors show....your a Catholic and your are Embarrassed ...we know, no need to hide your roots...





Classify it as to what you want. You might suck a dick or two, but I don't see the reference.

meet me at Zippers tonight and use the back entrance, And I will show you... :lmao

Bro after all the folks I saw on TV? I to want to say the Pope was the man.

it's the short fused
midgets like you with a
Guilty continuos like all the other ex Catholics I have a problem with....

I just realized that today thanks to you...
I owe you one brah...............



I have never said FU to anyone here, so you're wrong again.



Ok who wants to quote this guy first? :lmao



Not even worthy of a comment.
and yet I did anyway, that shows I care........

http://img161.exs.cx/img161/2446/datnigascrazy6gh.gif

.