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Apologetics, The Papacy, And Eastern Orthodoxy
Homiletic and Pastoral Review ^ | James Likoudis

Posted on 06/21/2002 9:43:49 PM PDT by Polycarp

 

Apologetics, The Papacy, And Eastern Orthodoxy

By James Likoudis

Peter, the Rock

A sizeable religious literature in Apologetics has grown in past decades as the Catholic Church has continued to be attacked by those Protestants (Fundamentalists, evangelicals, and those belonging to minor sects) who remain influenced by the older Protestant polemics of the Reformation period filled with gross misunderstandings of Catholic doctrines. In an age which in large measure has appeared to have abandoned reason, it is desirable that Catholics restore the proper role of reason and to appeal to reason to establish the credibility of Christianity and the claims of the Catholic Church to be the visible embodiment in this world of the Church Christ Himself founded to be the "Pillar and Ground of the truth" (1Tim. 3:15).

In the opinion of this writer, much of the force of Catholic doctrinal debate with Protestants is rendered ineffective unless a major premise is established first - namely that the Church mentioned throughout the pages of the New Testament is a visible entity, a visible society, a visible body which can be clearly and without difficulty identified as the true Church established by the Savior. Most Protestants do not, in fact, hold the "one Church and one Church only" (Vatican II's Decree on Ecumenism, 1) to be a visible body at all but to be invisible in nature- a Church of the elect, or of the predestined, or of the "saved" who are known only to God, or perhaps- according to some modern ecumenists- are made up of all the baptized who possess a sort of vague spiritual unity sufficient to identify them all as members of the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ. Consequently, unless the grace of God intervenes to make a Protestant realize that a visible authority (in the form of an authoritative Church) actually exists in this world to teach unerringly and to judge and settle religious disputes, there is no way to avoid the kind of religious anarchy we see manifested among the 28,000 Protestant denominations listed in religious encyclopedias. Protestantism ends in absolute religious subjectivism and in the tragic spread of religious indifferentism and skepticism. The great Catholic Counter-Reformation Apologists were quite perceptive in judging that Protestantism logically led to infidelity or unbelief.

The teaching of the 2nd Vatican Council with regards to the nature of the Church constitutes the most magnificent Magisterial expression of ecclesiology in the 2,000 years of Catholic Christianity. The central document of Vatican II, its "Dogmatic Constitution on the Church" (Lumen Gentium), set forth Catholic teaching on the nature of the Catholic Church as a visible social body built on the Rock of Peter which was at the same time the mysterious Mystical Body of Jesus Christ. Its "Decree on the Catholic Eastern Churches" noted that "The holy Catholic Church, which IS the Mystical Body of Christ, is made up of the faithful who are organically united in the Holy Spirit by the same faith, the same sacraments and the same government." And "Lumen Gentium" had indeed much to say concerning "the unity of the flock of Christ, in so far as it is assembled under one (visible) head"(L.G. 22) — namely the Roman Pontiff, the Successor of Peter. Concerning that "supreme authority" in the College of Bishops which was established by the historical Christ for His "one and only Church" , Lumen Gentium noted, "The Holy Spirit preserves unfailingly that form of government which was set up by Christ the Lord in His Church." (L.G. 27)

The Primacy of supreme authority and universal jurisdiction of the Roman Pontiff in the Church and the authority of the other Bishops who make up the College of Bishops are therefore both essential elements in the divine constitution of the Church, and this has been the verdict of ecclesiastical history during the Church's 2,000 years. The teaching on Catholic Unity found in Vatican I's "First Dogmatic Constitution on the Church of Christ" and Vatican II's "Dogmatic Constitution on the Church" bear ample witness to this verdict.

It is to be emphasized that the position of the Eastern Orthodox churches (whose called- for- Unity with the Catholic Church is one of the highest priorities in Pope John Paul II's pontificate) is quite different than that of most Protestants. They believe that the Church is indeed visible and that their communion is, in fact, the "one, holy, Catholic, and apostolic Church" noted in the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed. The Primacy of the Pope as defined by the Councils of Florence, Vatican I and Vatican II is the "rock of contradiction" that now clearly serves as the biggest obstacle to the union of the Churches, though in the Middle Ages, curiously enough, it was the dogmatic issue of the Procession of the Holy Spirit and the use of unleavened bread in the Eucharist which identified for Byzantine dissidents the Pope and those in communion with him as "heretical".

The inability of Eastern Orthodox theologians and hierarchs to understand the proper relationship between Primacy and Collegiality (or Conciliarity) lies at the heart of their doctrinal resistance to the Papacy's Petrine Ministry. As some of them have said- in tune, interestingly enough, with some Protestants- the only Vicar of Christ is the Holy Spirit. In this statement lies the profound error concerning the visible government of the Church that has resulted in what we see among the 16 or so autocephalous (i.e., independent) churches making up the Eastern Orthodox communion - namely, a truncated hierarchy that cannot speak with one voice on doctrinal issues. A Catholic writer some years ago wrote beautifully that "From Christ the Apostles received the Holy Spirit who made them One". Concerning the episcopate in the Church (i.e., the corporate body of Bishops ruling the Church), he noted further :

"The Spirit of Christ present in the episcopal body is the source of its unity. It is He who assists the college in its teaching and prevents it from any substantial error in the matter of faith. He inspires, moves and helps the college in its activity. The one Holy Spirit is holding together the many members of the episcopal body.

The supernatural power of the Spirit is the common possession of the episcopal body, although the head and members do not share it in the same degree. The Successor of Peter posseses it in a way that makes him the principle of unity for the many members. The members possess it in a way that makes them able to act in a corporate manner when the head calls upon them to do so. The Spirit of Christ, says Lumen Gentium 'strengthens the organic structure of the college and its harmony'. The body, of course remains one : one theological subject of this mysterious power, of which the practical or legal manifestation is twofold- either through an act of the head of the college of bishops or through the action of the whole college [as in an Ecumenical Council]." (Fr. Ladislas M. Orsy, S.J., "Collegiality: Its Meaning" in America, May 15, 1965)

Clarifying further the relation between the Pope and the Bishops of the Church, he observed :

"Peter remains the Rock on which the Church is built. On this Rock rests even the college of bishops- not as a foreign body added to it, but as a structure that God has united to the Rock to help carry the weight of the whole edifice of the Universal Church."

And what a weight and burden the Bishop of Rome as the Successor of the Rock-man carries in his Petrine Office as Primate of the Universal Church. This was noted by John of Salisbury in the 12th century writing in his famous political treatise "Policraticus" of Pope Hadrian IV :

"The cathedra of the Roman Pontiff is a bed of thorns, his mantle, trimmed with the sharpest points all over, is so heavy that it weighs down, bruises, and crushes the strongest shoulders, and the tiara with its crown may well seem bright because it is made of fire."(VI, 24)

Though the Pope no longer wears a tiara, he, as the Chief Bishop of the Church, continues to image his Crucified Master in that Way of the Cross which constitutes the Church's pilgrimage through history. G.K.Chesterton once referred to "the halo of hatred that surrounds the Church of God" in that pilgrimage. In the past centuries of violent Protestant and Eastern Orthodox polemics directed against the Papacy as a, if not the, "Antichrist", we can see, in fact, that "halo of hatred" most glaringly manifested. We may recall the words of that astute 19th c. Catholic thinker Joseph de Maistre who observed that "the hatred of Rome is the only but universal tie between all the separated Churches." (Du Pape, Book IV, Chapter I)

Though ecumenical dialogue and contacts have greatly softened the polemics of the past regarding the role of the Pope in the Church- and God is to be thanked for that-, serious difficulties remain with regards to both Protestants and Eastern Orthodox coming to a better understanding and appreciation of the role of the Pope in the Church. Moreover, with some Catholics defecting to the Eastern Orthodox communion because of the doctrinal and liturgical disorders of the post-conciliar period, Catholic Apologists can not ignore the renewed intransigence of some Eastern Orthodox towards the "heresy" of the Papacy.

The Eastern Orthodox continue to profess the ancient belief of the "undivided Church" that the Episcopacy continues the apostolic mission of the original Apostolic College. They fail to acknowledge, however, the illogicality of rejecting the communion of the one Bishop, who is the heir of the one Apostle chosen by Christ to be the Rock-foundation, Holder of the Keys of the Kingdom, Confirmer of the brethren, and Chief Pastor of the entire flock (cf. Matt. 16:18ff; Lk. 22:31; Jn. 21:15-17), and thereby given the awesome responsibility to safeguard the visible unity of the one Church Christ had founded for the salvation of all men. As Vatican I and Vatican II have insisted :

"In order that the episcopate itself, however, might be one and undivided, Christ put Peter at the head of the other Apostles, and in him He set up a lasting and visible source and foundation of the unity both of faith and of communion." (Lumen Gentium, 18)

Catholic tradition has always seen clearly that if the Gates of Hell ( heresies, schisms, and persecutions, etc.) are not to prevail against the Church built on the Rock-foundation of Peter, Christ's authoritative Invisible headship of the Church must be reflected in the hierarchical order of the Church itself. It is the Primacy of Christ (1 Coloss.1:18) that is manifested in the Primacy of Peter's Successor in the hierarchy of the Church. It is Christ's headship that is reflected in the Bishop of Rome being constituted the. visible head and indivisible center of unity for all the local churches (East and West) making up the Catholic communion.

A recent polemic that is worth the atttention of Catholic Apologists is that of Mr. Clark Carlton, a former Southern Baptist minister who has converted to Eastern Orthodoxy. In his "The Truth: What Every Roman Catholic Should Know About the Orthodox Church" (Regina Orthodox Press, 1999; 270 pp.), he purports to give a "theological analysis of the differences between Rome and Orthodoxy, not a critique of the reforms of Vatican II". This does not keep him from alleging that "the Roman Catholic Church has become highly protestantized in the wake of Vatican II" and from attempting to dissuade "Evangelical Protestants who are considering converting to the Roman Catholic Church" (pages 8-9). He devotes an entire Chapter to criticize especially Catholic convert Scott Hahn for his "appalling ignorance of history", particularly with regards to the crippling influence of the Byzantine Greek and Russian Emperors who dominated the life of the dissident Greco-Slav churches for centuries. Following the lead of the Russian Orthodox Jean Meyendorff, Clark's attempt to discount a "caesaropapism which did not in fact exist" is not convincing.

Interestingly, Mr. Carlton earned an M.A. in Early Christian Studies from the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C. His recent book attacking the Catholic Church and the Papacy represents the sorry revival of the worst kind of polemics launched by dissident Byzantines before and after the Reunion Council of Florence (1439). This is evidenced by the author's inclusion of documents expressive of the bitterness and violent invective often hurled against "heretical Rome":

Mr. Carlton will have no part of Eastern Orthodox ecumenical efforts. [To him] Ecumenism is simply another "heresy". In fact, [he states that:]

This last doctrine is accused of "turning the Virgin Mary into some sort of super-human" (an immaculately conceived Co-redemptrix).

For Mr. Carlton, "Orthodoxy" also rejects the Catholic doctrine of salvation based upon concepts of satisfaction and merit. "To put it bluntly", he pontificates, Eastern Orthodoxy "knows a different Christ from that of the Roman Catholic Church" (page 187). "We simply do not confess the same faith".

Space does not permit here to deal adequately with the many doctrinal misconceptions, erroneous theological arguments, and distortions of historical fact found in this anti-ecumenical work. Its familiar charges and allegations have often been refuted by Catholic scholars, and are very similar in nature and import to another recent book published by the same Press (Michael Whelton's "Two Paths: Papal Monarchy or Collegiality" ) which is similarly directed against the "heretical" Papacy. Not surprisingly, both of these books clearly evidence the results of schism from the See of Peter, namely, doctrinal variations and contradictions among the Eastern Orthodox and consequent confusion as to what (in the absence of any Ecumenical Council since the 8th c.) constitutes their "official teaching".

Mr. Carlton says he converted to Eastern Orthodoxy rather than to the Catholic Church because he saw in the former's theology and life " a pure witness" to the religion of the early Church. Yet he is forced to acknowledge with the monks of Mt. Athos an "already disunited body of Orthodoxy"- one racked with the heresy of "phyletism" (a heresy condemned as such in an l872 Council at Constantinople). Phyletism is defined as "the theory that the Church should be organized according to ethnic make-up rather than according to territorial dioceses"- an innovation quite contrary to the ancient canons. The sorry result has been - in the words of the Mt. Athos monks- "ensuing chaos", now strikingly manifest in multiple Orthodox jurisdictions, a number of which are declared "uncanonical" by some and "schismatical" or "heretical" by others. Whereas Carlton insists that each of his "national churches" professes "one and the same Orthodox faith", he fails to see the flagrant contradictions into which he falls. The Church's ecclesiology, he declares, is "not subject to change". Yet he admits that Rome's claims to a primacy of universal jurisdiction is already found in the 5th century when the orthodox Eastern churches were in full communion with Rome. The 'Filioque", he charges 'ad nauseam' is "heretical", but he admits the doctrine of the Procession of the Holy Spirit from the Father and from (or through) the Son was already widespread in the Western Church since the 5th century (and when the orthodox Eastern churches were in full communion with it). In claiming that the Eastern Orthodox profess "one and the same Orthodox faith", he ignores the brute fact that theologians (both past and present) are found who believe that the 'Filioque' is not heretical; who have expressed belief in the Immaculate Conception of the Mother of God so venerated among them; who believe in a "purification or cleansing of the soul "in the after-life (with its pains and torments)- a teaching practically indistinguishable from our Catholic doctrine of purgatory ; and who believe that Papal supremacy has deep historical roots in the early Church being clearly admitted in the East long before the 11th century estrangement between Rome and Constantinople.

Fortunately, Mr. Carlton does not speak for all Eastern Orthodox bishops, theologians, and Laity; some will surely find his views quite extremist and strident, and will be embarrassed by his and fellow zealots' denunciation of ecumenism as "heresy". Also, readers of his book may find quite questionable his elevating the 14th century theologian Gregory Palamas' controversial teaching on the essence and energies of God to the status of dogma (and this without benefit of an Ecumenical Council !). Nor do his views on the nature of the Church find approval with a writer of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad.
Reviewing an earlier book by Mr. Carlton ("The Faith : Understanding Orthodox Christianity- An Orthodox Catechism", 1997), Fr.Alexey Young (himself a former Catholic) observed:

"The author says that 'the Orthodox Church has faithfully maintained the apostolic faith once delivered to the saints (Jude 3), neither adding to nor subtracting from it.' A fine statement, but one which is, in this context, at best an optimistic generalization, for some Orthodox jurisdictions have in fact departed significantly from the Faith 'once delivered to the saints', as even a cursory study will reveal."("Orthodox America", 1997)

Mr. Carlton must also be said to live in quite another theological world than that of the late Panteleimon, Metropolitan of Chios, who observed many years ago (in words that have been echoed by other Eastern Orthodox prelates) that:

"Between the Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church, it is fanaticism alone, that has emphasized the insignificant differences, differences that were never serious, that existed in former times without bringing on a schism." (Le Monde, January 26,1952)

Then, too, it can be perceived that behind many of the author's erroneous statements lies a residue of centuries of old Protestant prejudices and fanatical animus against "Romanism" and "Mariolatry". A number of Eastern Orthodox theologians he quotes (such as the 19th c. lay theologian Khomjakov) were undeniably influenced by Protestant negations of Catholic doctrines.

In conclusion, Mr. Carlton has rehashed old doctrinal grievances and complaints against the Catholic Church by Byzantine dissidents who have misunderstood and misinterpreted the Tradition of their own Eastern Fathers on those dogmatic matters where they choose to find themselves at odds with Catholic teaching. Ironically, his book has served to highlight the irreconcilable doctrinal divisions, disputes, and schisms currently found in the 16 or so autocephalous (jurisdictionally independent) churches making up the Eastern Orthodox communion.

Though by the grace of God, the Eastern Orthodox have kept in almost complete measure the Catholic faith as defined in the first seven Ecumenical Councils, they have departed from the fullness of that faith in sadly separating themselves from the communion of the Rock-foundation of the Church, Peter and his successors, the Roman Pontiffs. Readers will recall Cardinal Newman's famous aphorism : "To go deep into history is to cease to be a Protestant". It is also true that for those who seek integral orthodoxy, love the Catholic unity of the Church, and meditate seriously upon the role of the Papacy in the First Millenium, "To go deep into history is to cease to be Eastern Orthodox."

(c) James Likoudis. All Rights Reserved. This article was originally published in "Homiletic and Pastoral Review" issue of January 2001

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Comment #201 Removed by Moderator

To: RazorwreckTed
Again I ask, what have they to do with us?

Nothing...and...everything. I remember days of debauchery in college, yet was forgiven. And I know that it is by God's Grace alone that I resist temptations to backslide into serious sin. Even Kennedy's soul is precious, made in the image and likeness of God, yet stained with the foulest of sins, including fighting for the most extreme infanticide. But I desire his salvation too. God honestly desires his salvation. My desire is at times not completely 100%.

Only God knows whose names are written in the Book of Life.

Anyone on this planet who supposes they can tell another who is or is not or will not be saved, is a fool.

Thus rantings like those of the_doc and others on threads like these, that practicing Catholics cannot be saved, are just that, the rantings of a fool.

You include your Catholic Christian brethren when you say us. And for that I thank you.

202 posted on 06/22/2002 9:11:03 PM PDT by Polycarp
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Comment #203 Removed by Moderator

To: RobbyS
Funny, from what I've seen as the rule of thumb is that most Protestants who marry (and goes for a lot of the Catholics) Orthodox, become Orthodox....maybe has something to do with the fact that most protestants are lost and wondering around in denominations that have less and less to do with Christ and more with cults of personality or PCness. As for looking less exotic...sorry, you can keep your religion and still fit in. Or is there some criteria in America to living there and having to be protestant?
204 posted on 06/22/2002 9:16:58 PM PDT by Stavka2
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To: MarMema
bump
205 posted on 06/22/2002 9:17:14 PM PDT by Stavka2
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To: RobbyS
First, Vatican I had as much to do with Christian Unity as the Holy Roman Empire had to do with the Roman Empire of antiquity. It was not an ecomunical council and as such was not accepted by the Orthodox. The whole reason of the Schism and the excomunication the Catholics began was over power and earthly might and the Bishops of Rome wanted all of it, regardless of the cost. The cost has been pretty high, especially to them in the long run. Ever wonder why we have not had a break up like your reformation? By the way, the Ecomunical Patriarch is not a pope and does not rule over the Church as a whole. Something most of you guys don't seem to be able to grasp...sorry, we have no infallable dictators.
206 posted on 06/22/2002 9:20:58 PM PDT by Stavka2
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To: allend
Lets see...there is one Orthodox interpretation...a slightly wrong Catholic one :0) (sorry couldn't help that) and 30,000+ protestant interpretations (and growing daily...) Boy that other guys statement sure clearifies it for me.
207 posted on 06/22/2002 9:23:54 PM PDT by Stavka2
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Comment #208 Removed by Moderator

To: RazorwreckTed
Well, considering that all fundementalists claim to have the only solution to getting to Haven and that all other fundementalists are dead wrong (sounds a lot like cults of personality) which ones are right? Southern Baptists? First Baptists? Union Baptists? Church of Christ? Evangelicals? Non-denominationals?.....which ones?
209 posted on 06/22/2002 9:31:00 PM PDT by Stavka2
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To: RobbyS
Through out all this arguing, it is interesting to note that the fastest growing Christian Church in America and much of W. Europe is the Orthodox Church....not to mention our missions in S. America, Kenya, India, Indonesia (1 man converted 2,000 in 3 years), Malasia, Japan, Korea and China.
210 posted on 06/22/2002 9:42:30 PM PDT by Stavka2
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To: RazorwreckTed
Come on peg cut it out ...you have has your la$tminute pardon..
211 posted on 06/22/2002 9:43:13 PM PDT by RnMomof7
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To: the_doc
I think your friend came to late for the party.
Being a Dominican, he may have been turned off, as Etiene Gilson was, by the bastard Thomism of that order; then again, it may have been the incroaching of liberalism in the Church. An intellectual faith can be pretty arid; one based on the conceits of modernism is deadly. Traditional Catholicism has many devotional forms that deeply involve the individual. If one reads the life of Therese of Lieseux, one finds a person who "knew" Jesus as well as any Protestant enthusiast, but she represents a Catholicism that is now passe in France. The last thirty years have seen an deprecation by many of the clergy of "private" devotions in favor of a "public" ritualism that is, IMO, pretty sterile. Typical is the ugly transformation of the Mlwaukee Cathedral by former (Thank God!) Archbishop Weakland. I was recently in the Catholic Cathedral in San Antonio, and I happened to watch a Mexican--from the looks of him, a "real" Mexican"(an immigrant) standing before the statue of a saint with his eyes fixed on it and his lips moving in prayer. The look on his face told me he was "connected." Protestants will disapprove of course, but there is not doubt that his faith was "personal." Too bad your friend--and many priests--had no chance to learn through certain devotions how to lose oneself in prayer and to involve themselves for the moment in the world to come.
212 posted on 06/22/2002 9:44:44 PM PDT by RobbyS
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To: Stavka2
Glad to hear that the Orthodox Church is expanding.
213 posted on 06/22/2002 9:48:38 PM PDT by RobbyS
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To: RobbyS
The church I went to in America was chuck full of converts, as many as the Greeks, Palistinians, Slavs combined. There were several whole families and many spouses. At one church in Kentucky, the priest was an ex Catholic and his wife an ex protestant.
214 posted on 06/22/2002 9:51:26 PM PDT by Stavka2
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Comment #215 Removed by Moderator

To: Stavka2
No, Vatican I was an effort to save the Catholic Church in Europe and it gave the papacy the kind of control over the Church at large that it had never exercised before. Understand that the popes faced a German government that was trying to assimilate the Catholic Church in Germany, an Utalian state that was hostile, and a French government that was being fought over by Catholic royalists, Catholic imperialists, and anticlerical republicans. Don't forget Protestant English which was enraged because of the recent restoration of a Catholic hierarchy. Austria--the only Catholic power--was ruled by a family that regarded the pope as a family chaplain. All Vatican I did was to strengthen the pope's hand. Infalibility is analogous to sovereignty. It recognizes his position at the top, but it does not guarantee him actual power. The popes were not trying for supreme power: they will trying to keep the church from being submerged in an age of nationalism and materialism.
216 posted on 06/22/2002 10:06:48 PM PDT by RobbyS
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To: RobbyS
Many American bishops have simply ignore the warning about homosexuality put out by Cardinal Ratzinger in 1986.

I never heard about that one -- could you expand a bit?

217 posted on 06/23/2002 3:23:21 AM PDT by maryz
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To: RnMomof7
Sorry, Rn, don't want your head to swell. They have this thing called a "search engine" on FR. If you type in someone's name...it'll show what they've posted.

:-) !!

218 posted on 06/23/2002 4:18:45 AM PDT by xzins
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To: livius
Thanks for the clarification.

Pax tecum.

219 posted on 06/23/2002 4:52:58 AM PDT by Sock
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To: xzins
Here I thought you were stalking me:>)

Please write me the particulars of your wife surgery tomorrow OK?

220 posted on 06/23/2002 5:25:30 AM PDT by RnMomof7
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