Kraichgauer wrote:
naturalplastic wrote:
So...
How does that prophecy go again?
Only two more popes after the 'current one'(the one who is retiring now) until the last one- who will be named "Peter the Roman"?
Things are moving along faster than expected maybe?
As most of my people haven't been Catholic since the 16th century, you have to explain this "prophecy" thing to me.
-Bill, otherwise known as Kraichgauer
I read about that prophecy when I was a kid. Essentially, an Irishman in the 11th century whose name I believe was Malachy, made a list of all the popes who would reign until the end of either the world or the Church, depending on who you ask. He gave short descriptive phrases to each one, never naming them. According to Malachy, Benedict XVI is the last pope before the FINAL pope, "Petrus Romanus" or Peter the Roman. According to some traditions, Peter the Roman will be the servant of Satan, either the Antichrist himself or the right hand man of the Antichrist. Some say that Jesus will come after the reign of Peter the Roman. PTR is traditionally associated with a scary woodcut showing a man in papal regalia standing in a river surrounded by spears, and a poem suggesting, if my hazy memory serves, that during his reign the world will rise up against the Catholic Church. Off I go to find more info...
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prophecy_of_the_Popes
The Pope about to be elected is Peter of Rome, after who "the city of seven hills shall be destroyed, and the terrible judge will judge his people". It should be noted that the veracity of this poem cannot be ascertained, and even the Prophecy itself is in doubt. It only came to light in the 16th century, and was attributed to St. Malachy, however the writer who did so never produced an original manuscript, and it has been noted that the Prophecy is similar to the prophecies of Nostradamus, whose Centuries were then popular and widely read (in 1595, when the Prophecy was published). Some have suggested that Nostradamus wrote the Prophecy and attributed it to Malachy. The official position of the Catholic Church is that the Prophecy is a forgery, and even if it is not it is divination, which is forbidden in the Bible. Catholics are forbidden from seeing fortunetellers due to the Biblical pronouncements against divination and soothsaying. It should be noted that there is no record of Malachy having visited Rome in 1190, nor of him being received by Pope Innocent III.