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Exclusive Interview with Dave Hunt about the Gospel-less Mother Teresa & Compromiser

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Dave Hunt is the author of such books as "The Seduction of Christianity," "Occult Invasion: The Subtle Seduction of the World and Church," "Beyond Seduction: A Return to Biblical Christianity," "The God Makers: A Shocking Expose of What the Mormon Church Really Believes" & others.
WAS MOTHER TERESA A TRUE CHRISTIAN?
Mother Teresa was born Agness Gonxha Bojaxhiu in what is now Yugoslavia on August 27, 1910. Raised in a middle-class Roman Catholic family, she felt the call to be a nun at age 12. Five years later, in 1928, Agness said good-bye to her mother (it was the last time she would ever see her) and made her way to Darjeeling, India, a picturesque town nestled 7,000 feet in the Himalayas, for training. In 1931, she took the new name of Sister Teresa, after the French nun St. Therese of Lisieux (the Little Flower). In 1939 she took final vows and was named mother superior at St. Mary’s School at the Loreto Sisters convent in a suburb of Calcutta.
Mother Teresa was a thorough-going Catholic, a faithful daughter of Vatican II. She was a great worshiper of Mary; she believed the wafer of the mass is literally and actually Jesus Christ.
Thus Mother Teresa believed that the Catholic priest has the power to absolve sinners of sin and that we come to Jesus through Mary.
At the same meeting Mother Teresa called on the audience to pray the rosary, “which we pray everyday, in the streets, around the world, wherever we are,” and to have adore the Eucharist in their parishes. She asked that the rosary be said for peace...” (The Tidings, Los Angeles, Calif., June 20, 1986).
The rosary is largely a prayer to Mary.

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36:43
Aug 21, 2017
Sunday Service
Ephesians 2:8-10; Galatians 1:6-9
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