Free Republic
Browse · Search
Smoky Backroom
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Another Diocesan Priest Rejects Novus Ordo
The Remnant ^ | 1/31/05 | Thomas A. Droleskey, Ph.D.

Posted on 01/25/2005 2:58:28 PM PST by csbyrnes84

Father Paul Sretenovic, a priest of the Archdiocese of Newark, New Jersey, who was ordained to the priesthood in 2002, has abandoned the Novus Ordo in order to embrace Catholic Tradition without compromise. Father Sretenovic (pronounced Stre-ten-o-vich) informed his ordinary, the Most Reverend John Myers, the Archbishop of Newark, of his decision in a letter mailed to his Excellency’s home address on the Feast of the Holy Innocents, Wednesday, December 28, 2004:

“Your Excellency: I am writing to inform you of my decision to leave the Archdiocese of Newark. It is a decision that is eighteen months in the making, and it has finally come to a head. This archdiocese, while retaining some very good priests, is, like every other diocese in the Catholic Church today, plagued by the heresy of modernism in many different forms. I recently attended a Monday afternoon of Reflection at Southmont with the Opus Dei priests and listened as one of them said that we are not looking to return to Christendom. To me, that said it all. It is not just about the Latin Mass. It is something much, much deeper, and it is the basis of my decision. Pope Pius XI in his encyclical, Quas Primas, said that Jesus Christ is not only the Lord of every individual, but also of every human society. The Syllabus of Errors of Blessed Pius IX, #77, in particular, exposes the error of separation of Church and State, a doctrine now upheld by the Vatican as the ideal, using both the Second Vatican Council’s Declaration on Religious Liberty, which could very easily have been called the Declaration of Religious Liberty (reference to our Declaration of Independence intended), as well as individual decisions from the Vatican to accelerate such a separation in what were otherwise thoroughly Catholic countries, such as, among others, Colombia, 98% Catholic. The orientation of the Church is now very much in line with the principles of the French Revolution, namely liberty, fraternity, and equality. Hence, the mainstay catchwords from the Council—religious liberty, ecumenism, and collegiality. That is not a coincidence, and it is evil. The Liturgy is just one of the many lambs to be slaughtered along the way towards a Christian Democracy, which, to the dismay and shock of many in the Church, will lead directly to the worldwide takeover of Atheistic Communism, warned of indirectly by Our Lady of Fatima in 1917, and communicated by Sr. Lucia to the Catholic historian William Thomas Walsh in 1946. Russia has still not been consecrated, and she continues to spread her errors until one day, it will be too late. In the meantime, I choose to exercise my priesthood in the way intended by Almighty God, teaching sound doctrine and leading the flock by holiness of life, as St. Paul exhorted St. Timothy in his pastoral epistle.

“In the situation in which I am now, and basically in any Novus Ordo parish anywhere in the world, let alone this particular Archdiocese, I always have to watch my back and I always, at each and every Mass that I offer, have to compromise. Whether it is in the bad wording or bland prayers of the Sacramentary, or in the distribution of Communion in the hand, or in the virtually mandatory use of Extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion, there is always something there to remind me, as the song goes, and it stops now. I pray to God and to Our Blessed Mother that you obtain the grace necessary to perceive the gravity of the present situation and to act accordingly. I include my email address below for further correspondence. I know this is a shock, but for me, even the FSSP would be a compromise. Haven’t we all done enough of that?! As people were looking East this Advent season, Our Lady was leading me to, go West. In Christ the King, Fr. Paul Branko Sretenovic.”

In an e-mail to this writer sent on January 9, 2005, Father Sretenovic explained the sequence of events after this point:

“To give you the backdrop of my correspondence with the Archbishop, he said that parts of what I wrote, without specifying, were ‘inaccurate’ and ‘unfair.’ I responded through the Vicar General for the time-being that what I wrote was not ‘inaccurate’ and ‘unfair.’ I then asked the question as to whether the Archbishop would say that Cardinal Ratzinger was either of the two, specifying the terms, when he wrote that through the Council, the Church had ‘come to terms with the principles of 1789.’ I left it at that and will write the Archbishop directly within the week.”

Father Sretenovic had determined quite clearly that he could no longer make any further compromises with a Mass that did not give God the full honor and glory that are His due and a pastoral approach to the problems of the world that was premised upon a rejection of a defined teaching of the Catholic Church, the Social Kingship of Jesus Christ, and an actual embrace of the errors of Modernity and Modernism.

Father Sretenovic did indeed head west, leaving Our Lady, Queen of Peace Church in Maywood, New Jersey, on Thursday, December 29, 2004, the Feast of Saint Thomas a Becket, to drive out to Our Lady Help of Christians Church in Garden Grove, California, joining Father Patrick J. Perez and Father Lawrence C. Smith in the offering of the Traditional Latin Mass and the totality of the Catholic Faith in all of its integrity to Catholics in one of the most liturgically revolutionary places in the whole Church, the Metropolitan Province of Los Angeles, California. Father Sretenovic distributed Holy Communion to the faithful at Our Lady Help of Christians on the Feast of the Holy Family on Sunday, January 9, 2005, saying, “I have never before felt like I did in my first Traditional giving of the Eucharist, or however you want to put it. It was awesome and I felt like a priest in a way that I haven't before. The formula is much better, not to mention the signing of the Cross, and the use of the paten for the Sacred Particles, AND the posture of the people with open mouths, heads tilted upwards like chicks eagerly welcoming their mother with the food that she is providing for them.” [He offered his first Traditional Latin Mass there on Sunday, January 16, 2005.]

Father Sretenovic, who was born on January 8, 1974, found his way to Our Lady Help of Christians within three months of meeting Father Perez at Father Nicholas Gruner’s Fatima conference in Glendale, California, at the end of September, 2004. Father Perez’s mother, Mrs. Margaret Perez, saw Father Sretenovic and told him that he had to meet her son, making sure that the two of them sat down for dinner after Father Perez’s talk at the conference. Father Sretenovic was impressed with Father Perez’s knowledge of the Faith and of the development of the Mass. Mr. John Vennari, the editor of Catholic Family News, also spoke to Father Sretenovic about the crisis in the Church and of the necessity of fleeing from the Novus Ordo structures. Seeds were being planted.

Father Sretenovic contacted this writer in early December of 2004, and a luncheon meeting was arranged in Wayne, New Jersey, following a First Friday Mass at Our Lady of Fatima Chapel in Pequannock, New Jersey, on December 3, 2004. This writer and his wife, to put it charitably, pummeled Father Sretenovic, asking him bluntly as to how long he could continue to give out Communion in the hand and continue to offer a Mass that less fully communicates the truths of the Catholic Faith and does not render God the full honor and glory that are His due. Father Sretenovic listened, particularly to Mrs. Droleskey’s heartfelt plea to give Our Lord and His flock unfettered access to the fullness of the Catholic Faith. Father Sretenovic promised to contact Fathers Perez and Smith. He also wrote fairly immediately to Father Stephen P. Zigrang, whose association with the Society of Saint Pius X prompted the soon-to-be promoted Archbishop of Galveston-Houston, the Most Reverend Joseph Fiorenza, a protégé of the late Joseph Cardinal Bernardin, to suspend him for an association with a “schismatic” group that, among other things, denied the “enduring validity of the Old Covenant God made with the people of Israel.”

Father Sretenovic carefully weighed his options, keeping in close contact with Father Lawrence C. Smith, who left the Diocese of Davenport, Iowa, on September 8, 2003. Father Sretenovic also had contact with priests in the Society of Saint Pius X, determining ultimately that it would be best for him to be with Fathers Perez and Smith in California. Father was most intent on placing himself in a situation where the gaps in his preparation for priestly ordination could be closed and he could concentrate on his own personal sanctification while offering Catholics the Immemorial Mass of Tradition. He arrived at his decision after a great deal of reflection and a bit of indecision, coming to the conclusion in the final analysis that he needed to make a clean break from the diocesan structure sooner rather than later, understanding that the faithful have a right in perpetuity to the Traditional Latin Mass, which can never be subject justly to any limitations or conditions by any bishop, including the Pope himself. Father Smith was most instrumental in helping Father Sretenovic to come to this decision, saying that “it was his call that put me over the edge. Within 20 minutes after my conversation with him, I was writing my letter” to Archbishop Myers.

Father Sretenovic was not heedless of the fact that his own ordinary, Archbishop Myers, though not a traditionalist himself, has been sympathetic to priests desirous of offering the Traditional Latin Mass. Father Sretenovic also understood, however, that the embrace of Tradition, while it starts with the Mass, involves quite fundamentally an embrace of the totality of the Catholic Faith without any taint of corruption by the novelties and errors of the past forty to forty-seven years. Father Sretenovic also knows that ordinaries come and go, a point demonstrated quite graphically when Bishop John Myers of Peoria, Illinois, was elevated to the archbishopric of Newark. Although Bishop Myers had granted permission to Father Michael Driscoll, the pastor of Saint Mary’s Church in Rock Island, Illinois, to offer the Traditional Latin Mass on a daily basis, that permission was revoked by Myers’s successor, Bishop Michael Jenky, who demoted Father Driscoll to the post of an assistant hospital chaplain at Saint Francis Hospital in Peoria. Father Sretenovic, understanding, as eight cardinals noted in a finding sent to Pope John Paul II in 1986, the binding nature of the Traditional Latin Mass can never be abrogated, did not want to subject himself to the vagaries of episcopal arbitrariness. He realized that he needed the stability offered by the Traditional Latin Mass for his own sanctification–and that the people have the absolute right to safe harbor found therein.

The story of Father Paul Sretenovic continues, therefore, a remarkable display of courage on the part of diocesan priests who have been willing to forsake all of their canonical safety and human respect in order to embrace Tradition without compromise. Men such as Fathers Sretenovic and Zigrang and Smith were ordained after the implementation of the liturgical revolution had begun. Father Zigrang was ordained in 1977. Father Smith was ordained in 1997. Father Sretenovic was ordained in 2002. Although there have been priests (such as Father Stephen Somerville) who were ordained in the Traditional rite and have returned thereto, the embrace of Tradition by priests who are relatively young (in the case of Father Zigrang) or very young (in the case of Fathers Smith and Sretenovic) is particularly galling to the liturgical revolutionaries, men and women who brook no opposition and who protest with great vehemence the glories of the “liturgical renewal.” How can it be, they ask themselves, that men who have been immersed in their handiwork all of their lives can become counter-revolutionaries and reject all of their “enlightened” schemes and programs?

The revolutionaries can protest all they want. The plain fact of the matter is that there are a number of priests across the nation who may be following the examples of Fathers Zigrang, Smith and Sretenovic. More than a handful of priests are on the fence as this is being written. Some are waiting for Rome to come to their “rescue” by means of an Apostolic Administration. Some are afraid of what will happen to their sheep should they simply leave their diocesan assignments. Others are simply afraid to pray for the graces to muster up the courage to stop participating in sacrileges such as the distribution of Communion in the hand. From the vantage point of one who travels great distances across the nation to get his family to the daily offering of the Traditional Latin Mass, it is time for our shepherds to give us our due, the Immemorial Mass of Tradition, understanding that Our Lady will take care of their temporal needs and that the rectitude of their actions will be understood fully only on the Last Day at the General Judgment of the Living and the Dead.

Indeed, the witness given by Fathers Zigrang, Smith and Sretenovic, as well as the witness given by the bishops and the priests of the Society of Saint Pius X, to the necessity of proclaiming the fullness of the Catholic Faith without compromise and without any dilution serves as an inspiration to the sheep who are seeking safety and security in the midst of doctrinal and liturgical instability and turmoil within the diocesan structures. They are willing to be calumniated, even by fellow traditionalists who have anointed themselves to be in the august and pristine "mainstream," in order to bear a witness to the authentic Tradition of the Church without any compromise at all. No loss of human respect and no amount of name-calling or sloganeering will ever deter them from giving their sheep the fullness of the Catholic Faith.

At least some of the sheep will respond when their shepherds put themselves on the line to give them what is their due, namely, the Traditional Latin Mass. Hundreds upon hundreds of people, for example, have found their way to Our Lady Help of Christians Church in Garden Grove, California. Most of these people have never heard of The Remnant, Catholic Family News, or Christ or Chaos. They've never heard of Christ the King College and most of them probably think that GIRM Warfare has something to do with bacteriology. They're just Catholics who understand that the first law of the Church is the salvation of souls and that they do not have to sit idly by and be subjected to the rot of conciliar novelties in the context of what pretends to pass for the Church's liturgy and catechesis. These good souls are fed up with what is going on in their local dioceses and parishes and they simply want the fullness of the Catholic Faith to be made manifest to them during Holy Mass and in the life of their parish. The same is true of the fifteen families who have found their way from Saint Andrew's Church in Channelview, Texas, to Queen of Angels Church in Dickinson, Texas (and Saint Michael the Archangel Chapel in Spring, Texas), following after their inimitable pastor, Father Zigrang. The sheep want Christ and His truth to be made manifest to them without novelty or dilution. This is nothing other than one of their baptismal birthrights as Catholics.

Father Paul Sretenovic finds himself some 3,000 miles away from his parents, who are residents of New Jersey. He has gone this distance to serve sheep without compromise. He is in need of our prayers. More of his brother priests need to follow his example of humility and fidelity, to say nothing of his courage. As a son of Our Lady, Father Sretenovic has entrusted himself entirely to her Immaculate Heart. He knows that she will take good care of him as he acts in the person of her Divine Son as a sacerdos. Father Sretenovic delivered his first sermon at Our Lady Help of Christians on Sunday, January 16, 2004, stating that he had come to realize that the devil has essentially used the hierarchy of the Church to communicate the belief that one can eat from all of the trees in the "garden" today (Judaism, Islam, the New Age Movement, Wicca, Modernism) except the tree of Tradition, from which it is forbidden to eat. He said that the Novus Ordo Missae breeds lukewarmness, crediting Father Paul Kramer’s The Devil’s Final Battle and this writer’s G.I.R.M. Warfare with helping him to see how he was stuck in this lukewarmness himself. His sermon resonated with the 700 parishioners in attendance at the three Masses offered at Our Lady Help of Christians.

Our Lady Help of Christians, pray for Father Sretenovic. Pray for all traditionally-minded priests to follow his example of pure love for Tradition without fear of the canonical and/or temporal consequences. Pray for us sheep, that we might make the sacrifices necessary to help our shepherds feed us with the pure milk of Tradition.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: archbishopmyers; bergencounty; cary; frpaul; independent; jihad; latinmass; maywood; newjersey; nj; roguepriest; tridentine
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 141-160161-180181-200 ... 441-454 next last
To: pascendi

Funny how G always uses authoritative Church documents, usually prior to Vatican II, to debunk your notions. The Kingship of Christ IS reaffirmed in the new Catechism and even in Dignitatis Humanae itself. But don't bother yourself with the facts.

Sometimes I wonder if you even know what the content of modernism is. It seems to be free flowing with you.


161 posted on 01/26/2005 11:28:18 AM PST by Mershon
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: gbcdoj

As a traditional Catholic who is not blinded to where authority lies, keep up the good work. Your witness here is sorely needed and is in complete harmony with truth and unity.


162 posted on 01/26/2005 11:33:45 AM PST by Mershon
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 27 | View Replies]

To: sinkspur

"The establishment of Catholicism as the national religion is forbidden by our constitution, and Catholicism as a "state religion" is the very thing the concept of the Kingship of Christ advocates."

You are correct. It was founded based upon Freemasonic principles and is a heresy--as is freedom of speech.


163 posted on 01/26/2005 11:35:26 AM PST by Mershon
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 25 | View Replies]

To: BikerNYC

No, only anti-Catholics call it the Dark Ages. But with today's educational system and media propaganda, who can blame you for spreading this misinformation.


164 posted on 01/26/2005 11:37:23 AM PST by Mershon
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 33 | View Replies]

To: Mershon

"Free speech" as in Protestants preaching in their churches?


165 posted on 01/26/2005 11:39:40 AM PST by sinkspur ("Preach the gospel. If necessary, use words.")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 163 | View Replies]

To: sinkspur

That has to do with religious liberty. In the U.S., religious liberty can be "tolerated" according to Church teaching and Dignitatis Humanae.

But is of course not the ideal. We cannot coerce people against their will to convert to Catholicism. It is about as simple as that.

Also, error has no rights. So nobody has a moral right to publicly promulgate error. Sometimes though, to avoid a greater evil, this must be tolerated by the State.


166 posted on 01/26/2005 11:59:38 AM PST by Mershon
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 165 | View Replies]

To: sinkspur; Mershon
No Protestant has, strictly speaking, a right to spread something harmful to the common good. The CCC makes this distinction very carefully, and cites Pius VI's condemnation of the Declaration of the Rights of Man on this very point.
2108 The right to religious liberty is neither a moral license to adhere to error, nor a supposed right to error,37 but rather a natural right of the human person to civil liberty, i.e., immunity, within just limits, from external constraint in religious matters by political authorities. This natural right ought to be acknowledged in the juridical order of society in such a way that it constitutes a civil right.38

2109 The right to religious liberty can of itself be neither unlimited nor limited only by a "public order" conceived in a positivist or naturalist manner.39 The "due limits" which are inherent in it must be determined for each social situation by political prudence, according to the requirements of the common good, and ratified by the civil authority in accordance with "legal principles which are in conformity with the objective moral order."40
37 Cf. Leo XIII, Libertas praestantissimum 18; Pius XII AAS 1953,799.
38 Cf. DH 2.
39 Cf. Pius VI, Quod aliquantum (1791) 10; Pius IX, Quanta cura 3.
40 DH 7 § 3.


167 posted on 01/26/2005 12:03:21 PM PST by gbcdoj ("The Pope orders, the cardinals do not obey, and the people do as they please" - Benedict XIV)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 165 | View Replies]

To: pascendi

While I don't believe you are intending to be mean spirited and hateful toward your Protestant brethren, your dogmatic attitude is no different from those Protestants who believe that the Pope is the anti-Christ and that the Roman Catholic Church is the Whore of Babylon.


168 posted on 01/26/2005 1:29:32 PM PST by BnBlFlag (Deo Vindice/Semper Fidelis)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 138 | View Replies]

To: Mershon
"The Kingship of Christ IS reaffirmed in the new Catechism and even in Dignitatis Humanae itself. But don't bother yourself with the facts."

Weakly, Mershon. It's done weakly. Like everything else anymore. Kind of like how you approach traditional Catholicism.

"Sometimes I wonder if you even know what the content of modernism is."

Yes I do.

"It seems to be free flowing with you."

Of course Modernism is free flowing. That's part of the nature of it.

G uses whatever texts suits his purpose of trying to make the new stuff jive with the old stuff. If you like it, hey, who's stopping you from being every which way at once.

Doesn't matter. Tomorrow you'll change your mind again anyways.

169 posted on 01/26/2005 3:12:12 PM PST by pascendi (Quicumque vult salvus esse, ante omnia opus est, ut teneat catholicam fidem)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 161 | View Replies]

To: BnBlFlag
"While I don't believe you are intending to be mean spirited and hateful toward your Protestant brethren..."

Actually, not at all. I actually get along with them quite well in person. You know what? I think they appreciate the fact that I'm completely up front with them. Perhaps they find it more refreshing than seeing the usual walking on pins and needles and psuedo-tact and bogus politeness and all that garbage... we obvious watering down and preparation of hard Catholic dogma for their consumption. They clue in real fast to that kind of dishonesty.

"...your dogmatic attitude is no different from those Protestants who believe that the Pope is the anti-Christ and that the Roman Catholic Church is the Whore of Babylon."

There's a big difference. They're wrong. lol!

170 posted on 01/26/2005 3:18:25 PM PST by pascendi (Quicumque vult salvus esse, ante omnia opus est, ut teneat catholicam fidem)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 168 | View Replies]

To: annalex
but couldn't states have official religions? Didn't Massachusetts have a state denomination till 1840s or so?
171 posted on 01/26/2005 3:43:36 PM PST by Piers-the-Ploughman
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 51 | View Replies]

To: Piers-the-Ploughman

True. The Constitution is silent on establishment of religion by states and as far as I know several states had religious requirement for voters and for office holders.

Separation of church and state, as the modern conventional view understands it, is a fiction as far as American Constitution, or common sense, are concerned.


172 posted on 01/26/2005 3:53:51 PM PST by annalex
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 171 | View Replies]

To: St.Chuck

True enough but what we ususally hear on TV and school is that politicians derive their power from the people--but that is not correct.


173 posted on 01/26/2005 3:56:25 PM PST by Piers-the-Ploughman
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 111 | View Replies]

To: csbyrnes84

I have a question that seems to be over looked, many traditionalist believe, that the New Ordinations are NOT VALID. So with this news of Priests converting Back, to the One True Mass, the Latin Mass, were these priest re- Orained in the Old Rite, (like Fr. Sommerville time), and who did the re- Ordaining!!!!?//??? This is an all important question, please answer.
Lord, give us priests, many holy Catholic priests!


174 posted on 01/26/2005 5:01:43 PM PST by Rosary (Pray the Rosary daily)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: pascendi

Gooooooood one !!!


175 posted on 01/26/2005 5:04:33 PM PST by Rosary (Pray the Rosary daily)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 47 | View Replies]

To: Rosary

Yes this is a very astute question, and it was one of the first things that I thought about when I heard that Fr. Paul was leaving for California. I really doubt that Fr. Paul will agree to be re-ordained. Personally I was hoping that some of the parishoners out in California would figure out that Fr. Paul was ordained as a Novus Ordo priest, and result in his coming back to New Jersey. I don't know if this will be the case however. It seems as though the Pastor of the Independent Chapel in California is extremely smart, I think he has a PhD., so I doubt he'll allow something like that to happen.


176 posted on 01/26/2005 6:01:18 PM PST by csbyrnes84
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 174 | View Replies]

To: Rosary
For whatever reason, I was just thinking about you, and there you are, whoever you are. Keep praying dem Rosaries, would ya? lol.

Thank you.

177 posted on 01/26/2005 6:21:31 PM PST by pascendi (Quicumque vult salvus esse, ante omnia opus est, ut teneat catholicam fidem)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 175 | View Replies]

To: Rosary; csbyrnes84

Father Perez, the pastor of Our Lady Help of Christians, has not been reordained in the Old Rite so I strongly doubt he would request that of Fr. Paul.

In my experience, the idea of reordination is controversial. My spiritual director is the former diocesan director of CCD and a brilliant priest. He, and I gather those in the SSPX hierarchy, maintain that the essentials are still there in the N.O. ordination so the sacrament does not need to be repeated. I know there are others who disagree. Then of course, consideration always has to be given as to the bishop who ordained the priest and whether the ordination was altered to make it outright invalid.

My two cents.


178 posted on 01/26/2005 7:10:27 PM PST by Canticle_of_Deborah
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 174 | View Replies]

To: csbyrnes84
Personally I was hoping that some of the parishoners out in California would figure out that Fr. Paul was ordained as a Novus Ordo priest, and result in his coming back to New Jersey

It won't happen. Fr. Perez and Fr. Smith are in the same situation.

179 posted on 01/26/2005 7:11:54 PM PST by Canticle_of_Deborah
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 176 | View Replies]

To: csbyrnes84; kstewskis
When I first read this article yesterday,I was very concerned for the priest. It seemed to me only a very confused and impatient person would make two contrary life commitments within two and a half years.

I sensed something was very wrong but chose not to respond because I did not have all the facts. I also do not like to get into controversies with Catholics,with whom I have much in common,because I love the Church and see disunity as troubling to the max. However,in addition to the change of commitment,there was something odd about the statement he attributed to Opus Dei,which he claimed was the last straw. I have never heard Opus Dei members say anything remotely like that.

Furthermore,nothing was said to indicate that archBishop Myer's had refused to answer him or dismissed his concerns. In fact it seemed to me that he wished to discuss this further. This then led me to wonder whether the young priest gave a hoot what the archBishop,to whom,I assume he pledged obedience,had said. (I don't know who the FSSPdoes report to so am not sure of the whole story) Nonetheless,I sensed something was amiss and I was sad and concerned.

After reading your comment,I am convinced that he is in great need of our prayers.

180 posted on 01/26/2005 7:21:00 PM PST by saradippity
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 148 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 141-160161-180181-200 ... 441-454 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Smoky Backroom
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson