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In 1961 at Garabandal, at the height of power of the Soviet Union, Mary told Conchita and the other three girls that "When Communism comes back, these things [marking the end of time] would begin." e girls asked: "Come back? Where is it going?" Now we've seen Communism go, overcome by Pope St. John Paul II and other leaders, and now we're seeing it come back. At Fatima, Mary said that if the Holy Father in union with the bishops of the world consecrated the world to her Immaculate Heart, "An era of peace would be granted to mankind." Pope St. John Paul II made this consecration in 1984. But…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In 1961 at Garabandal, at the height of power of the Soviet Union, Mary told Conchita and the other three girls that "When Communism comes back, these things [marking the end of time] would begin." e girls asked: "Come back? Where is it going?" Now we've seen Communism go, overcome by Pope St. John Paul II and other leaders, and now we're seeing it come back. At Fatima, Mary said that if the Holy Father in union with the bishops of the world consecrated the world to her Immaculate Heart, "An era of peace would be granted to mankind." Pope St. John Paul II made this consecration in 1984. But how long is an era of peace? In the Psalms a man's life is 70 or 80 years, an average of 75. The Soviet Union lasted for 75 years (1917-1991). Perhaps the Chinese CCP will last for 75 years, having begun in 1949. If the era of peace is 75 years long, and if it began with the end of World War II in 1945, the era of peace ended in 2020. Mary also said that "in the end [her] Immaculate Heart would triumph."
Autorenporträt
Ed Helmrich graduated from Yale in 1983 with a B.A. in Mathematics and courses in Philosophy and English Literature. He finished one year of graduate Mathematics at Fordham University. During a few decades of limited action because of illness, working at Iona University library for the (Irish) Christian Brothers, he collected thoughts on faith and literature. Putting together these thoughts and assisted by those presented on EWTN, especially by Scott Hahn, the result was a set of essays and a set of collections of thoughts on different subjects. He lives in Larchmont, N.Y. and is a member of the Legion of Mary and the Knights of Columbus, and serves as lector, Eucharistic Minister, altar server and sacristan at the local Catholic Church.