A site dedicated to G.K. Chesterton, his friends, and the writers he influenced: Belloc, Baring, Lewis, Tolkien, Dawson, Barfield, Knox, Muggeridge, and others.
Hey, this has absolutely no relationship to anything, but I figured this would be the place to ask - do any of Chesterton's works have imprimatur / nihil obstat?
What are the Religious Police doing about it? How come this sort of stuff can get through censorship into Islamic countries? Can't the authorities put up some kind of dream firewall?
Most likely the Jooooooooz are behind it since they control all the media. And wasn't Jesus a Joooooo?
Sorry no one answered your question. I would have, but I don't know the answer. I will tell you this, though: I have over thirty GKC books, and none of them have the imprimatur, and I've never heard of any of them having the imprimatur.
Hey, this has absolutely no relationship to anything, but I figured this would be the place to ask - do any of Chesterton's works have imprimatur / nihil obstat?
ReplyDeleteHeroe de Lepanto, Miguel de Cervantes
ReplyDeleteLove this day.
ReplyDeleteLily
BAN THESE KUFFAR DREAMS!
ReplyDeleteThere are reports that Jesus is appearing to Muslims in dreams and converting them to Christianity:
http://www.amightywind.com/fastfood/dreams/040723muslimdreams.htm
http://www.jesusvisions.org/chapt08.shtml
http://www.isaalmasih.net/
What are the Religious Police doing about it? How come this sort of stuff can get through censorship into Islamic countries? Can't the authorities put up some kind of dream firewall?
Most likely the Jooooooooz are behind it since they control all the media. And wasn't Jesus a Joooooo?
religion of pieces:
ReplyDeleteplease think cheerful thoughts before posting your comments here.
thank you so much.
Michael Novak published an article "Remembering Lepanto" in National Review Online. (and GKC's poem gets mentioned)
ReplyDeletelink to Novak's Oct 7 article
Anonymous:
ReplyDeleteSorry no one answered your question. I would have, but I don't know the answer. I will tell you this, though: I have over thirty GKC books, and none of them have the imprimatur, and I've never heard of any of them having the imprimatur.