No one should be confused regarding the Chicago Cubs fan in the white robe and beanie who sits in the Vatican. Pontificating. The problems arise when considering him a true Christian, the emissary of Christ on earth, someone holy — when the truth is, he is anything but. Each subsequent papal pretender is worse than their predecessor when it comes to being askew of the Word of God, of serving the world, and of being further lost.
This offends?
Perhaps you need to read and believe the Holy Bible, the inerrant, infallible, unchangeable, eternal, living, and active Word of God.
The Cubs fan did what he did in Algiers to take further steps in preparing the world for the one world religion that will be established when the faithful, born again followers of the LORD Jesus Christ are raptured, and what remains will be nothing but false faith folks. The “but we did the works! we did the rituals, we did all the Sunday malarkey!” folks, who will be ripe to meld with Islam’s imams and the lost far, far left Judaism rabbis who have pushed one world religion in the ecumenical movement.
It’s coming.
Heretics. False teachers. Pretenders. Liars. Wolves in sheep’s clothing. The great grand deception. The strong delusion. The Laodicean church.
Chicago guy now working in Rome is just another minister of his master, and his master is not Jesus Christ.
Want proof? Listen. Watch. A true, faithful, obedient follower of the LORD Jesus Christ does not bow to appease the enemy of Christianity, the enemy of The Way, The Truth, The Light, leading to Life.
They do not appease and accommodate the lie, evil, and a false god, a belief that is contrary in every way to the Word of God. No, that person is called a heretic, a false teacher, a wolf in sheep’s clothing, a minion of the devil, certainly not a person who has the God of the Holy Bible, who does not have Jesus alive and thriving within their heart.
They are more:
“For certain men have crept in unnoticed, who long ago were marked out for this condemnation, ungodly men, who turn the grace of our God into lewdness and deny the only Lord God and our Lord Jesus Christ.”
Jude 1:4
“Every way of a man is right in his own eyes, But the LORD weighs the hearts.”
Proverbs 21:2
By their fruit, a person is known.
What comes out of the tongue is what is truly in the heart.
Don’t like that? Well, each person either serves the LORD Jesus Christ — according to the Scriptures, born again, faithfully, obedient, to the best they can — or they serve the world and he who is god of this world for a season. Hint — he was very talkative and a liar when he showed up in the Garden of Eden, and he’s never stopped.
But he will one day.
God will see to it.
Every person will one day learn if they were true, of God, born again, serving and following The Son, Jesus Christ, Yeshua Hamashiach, or not.
And it comes down to that, no matter what else took place here on earth in a person’s life, in their heart, in their spirit, in their soul.
Just the way it is.
We can be soft, accommodating the world, adopting worldly ways and philosophies, worried about offending people rather than offending God — or we can spend enough time in prayer, in the whole Word of God to learn what our priorities ought to be and how we are to live in order to please God. Not concerned about pleasing men and women, appeasing, accommodating the world.
No one should follow a man above following the LORD; following the ways of the world leads to confusion, appeasement, eventually leading to death — the Second Death. Follow the LORD Jesus Christ. Test all things. Test all spirits. Find answers to everything in the Bible. Not on social media, on some glowing device, or someone you know.
Follow Jesus.
Serve Jesus.
Know Jesus.
Know Him through His Word, the whole Holy Bible.
Want to truly help the Cubs fan who sits behind high walls with armed guards, a personal army, and more stolen obscene wealth than any place on earth, who speaks heresies and false teachings?
Pray he repents before his last breath.
Read on…
Ken Pullen, Thursday, April 16th, 2026
Pope Leo’s Mosque Visit Raises Serious Concerns Over Doctrinal Confusion
April 15, 2026
By PNW Staff
Reprinted from Prophecy News Watch
Pope Leo XIV’s recent visit to the Mosque of Algiers–where he removed his shoes, stood in silent reflection before the mihrab, and expressed gratitude for being in “a place that represents the space proper to God”–is not a harmless gesture of goodwill. It is a deeply consequential moment that raises serious questions about how the highest office in the Catholic Church is choosing to represent Christian truth in the public square.
Because this is not simply about respect. No one is arguing against basic courtesy toward Muslims or any other religious group. Christians are called to love their neighbors and treat sacred spaces with dignity. But what happened in Algiers went beyond respect and entered the realm of symbolic participation–actions that inevitably communicate theological agreement where none exists.
Standing in silent reflection in a mosque, directly before the mihrab–the directional focal point of Islamic worship–is not a neutral act. It is not the same as visiting a historical site or engaging in dialogue in a conference room. It is entering a space defined by a specific act of worship to God as understood in Islamic theology, and participating in its atmosphere of devotion without any accompanying doctrinal clarification.
When the Pope then describes the mosque as “a space proper to God,” the problem intensifies. Proper to which understanding of God? Christianity and Islam do not simply differ in language; they differ in the most foundational claims about who God is, how He is known, and how He has revealed Himself. To speak in generic terms of shared divine space is not bridge-building–it is theological flattening.
This is not an isolated misstep. It sits within a wider pattern of interfaith language emerging from the Vatican over recent years, particularly under Pope Francis, that has repeatedly blurred distinctions between Christianity and other religions in ways that have caused legitimate concern among clergy and theologians.
Pope Francis famously stated that “every religion is a way to arrive at God,” and described religions as “different languages” pointing toward the same divine reality. He also declared that “God is God for all,” and placed Sikh, Hindu, Muslim, and Christian traditions within a shared framework of spiritual pathways.
Those are not minor semantic choices. They represent a shift in tone that directly challenges the historic Christian claim that salvation is found uniquely in Jesus Christ. When the Pope speaks in this way, confusion is not just possible–it is inevitable.
This is precisely why the Algiers visit matters. It is not an isolated gesture of kindness. It is part of a trajectory in which symbolic actions and ambiguous language increasingly replace doctrinal clarity.
The Core Problem: Symbolism Without Theology
Religious leadership carries weight precisely because symbols are never just symbols. When the Pope stands in silent reflection in a mosque, the global audience does not see a neutral academic observer. They see the visible head of Catholicism engaging in a posture of reverence within a non-Christian act of worship.
Silence in such a setting does not clarify intent–it obscures it. And when combined with language about shared divine “space,” it creates the impression that Christianity and Islam are simply different cultural expressions of the same faith. That impression is not only inaccurate–it directly contradicts core Christian teaching.
The issue is not that Catholics should be hostile toward Muslims. The issue is that the distinct claims of Christianity are being visually and verbally diluted at the highest level of representation.
The Five Irreconcilable Differences That Are Being Blurred
If there is any clarity needed in this discussion, it is here. Christianity and Islam are not parallel routes up the same mountain. They are fundamentally different religious systems built on incompatible claims.
1. Jesus Christ: Divine Son or Human Prophet
Christianity declares Jesus Christ to be the eternal Son of God, not merely a messenger but God incarnate. This is not a symbolic title–it is the center of Christian faith. Jesus is worshipped, not merely respected, because He is understood as God made flesh.
Islam explicitly denies this. Jesus (Isa) is honored as a prophet, but the idea of His divinity is rejected as theological error. This is not a minor disagreement–it is the single most important dividing line between the two faiths. If Jesus is not divine, Christianity collapses into something entirely unrecognizable.
2. The Cross: Central Event or Theological Rejection
Christianity is built on the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ. The cross is not optional theology–it is the foundation of salvation. Without the death and resurrection of Jesus, there is no Christian Gospel.
Islam rejects the Christian understanding of the crucifixion. Traditional Islamic teaching holds that Jesus was not crucified in the manner Christians believe, and therefore the entire redemptive framework of sin, atonement, and resurrection is denied. That alone makes the two faiths structurally incompatible.
3. The Nature of God: Triune Revelation or Strict Unitarianism
Christianity teaches that God is one being in three persons–Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. This is not polytheism, but relational unity within the divine nature.
Islam rejects this entirely. God is absolutely singular, indivisible, and without internal relationship. Any suggestion of “Sonship” or Trinitarian structure is considered a distortion of monotheism. These are not small doctrinal differences–they represent entirely different understandings of who God is.
4. Salvation: Grace Through Christ or Judgment by Deeds
Christianity teaches salvation as a gift of grace through faith in Jesus Christ. Human effort cannot earn reconciliation with God; it is received through Christ alone.
Islam emphasizes submission to God’s will expressed through obedience, prayer, fasting, and righteous deeds, with final judgment based on a balance of actions and mercy. While both traditions value moral living, the mechanism of salvation is fundamentally different: grace versus merit, redemption versus accountability.
5. Revelation: Fulfilled in Christ or Finalized in the Qur’an
Christianity holds that God’s revelation reaches its fulfillment in Jesus Christ, with the New Testament bearing witness to Him as the culmination of God’s self-disclosure.
Islam teaches that the Qur’an is the final, perfect, and unaltered revelation, superseding previous scriptures, including the Bible. This creates not just different interpretations, but competing claims about final authority.
Respect Does Not Require Theological Confusion
It must be said clearly: respect between Christians and Muslims is not optional in a plural world. Civility, peace, and dialogue are necessary. But respect does not require symbolic actions that blur essential distinctions. It does not require standing in silent quasi-devotional posture inside another religion’s place of worship while using language that implies shared theological space.
That is not unity–that is confusion.
The danger in the Pope’s actions is not that he visited a mosque. It is how he did it, what was said, and what was left unsaid. In a world already drowning in relativism, religious leaders do not have the luxury of ambiguity. Their words and gestures define how millions understand God.
And when those gestures begin to suggest that Christianity is simply one language among many ways of reaching the divine, the result is not harmony–it is the erosion of Christian identity itself.

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