Sunday, May 21, 2017

A NEW BOOK BY AN EX-NEO CATECHIST

Posted by Chuck White

"Kiko Argüello: Santo o impostore?" (Kiko Argüello: Saint or Impostor?), by Daniel Lifschitz.  Lifschitz was an early Neocatechumenal catechist and Jewish convert to the Catholic Faith.  SPOILER ALERT

Kiko Argüello is an impostor.

8 comments:

  1. Spoiler Alert - no big surprise. The Jungle Nation has known the truth about Kiko for a long time!
    When will they learn they can't play cat and mouse in the jungle. We'll eat them up.

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  2. I think Kiko is a Catholic Church-hating, closeted homosexual and so was Carmen. They use the satanic NCW to infiltrate and destroy the Church. Kiko is protected by high-ranking Vatican perverts.

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  3. I’m sorry y’all are dumb and taking this a bit too seriously 😐 like srsly wasting ur time on writing books and hate on something that did not work for you😂 like im an ex-neocat for personal reasons and the way seems to help other people (does not have to be everyone) only getting into heaven. Do whatever works for you to getting into heaven. Spend ur time reflecting, repenting and in penance instead of this 🙃

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  4. It's not hate, it's just pointing out error (LOTS of error) that actually could put you on the wrong path and keep you from heaven. See https://thoughtfulcatholic.com/?page_id=766 for the details.

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    Replies
    1. Good point, Chuck. Blowing the whistle on false teaching is a generous act of Charity.

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    2. I've read it all, and yes I understand not everyone is perfect but all I've seen from the way is love. I'm not in the way anymore, but my parents are catechists and they still love me and treat me like their other kids who walk. I feel like it all depends on the person because I have heard stories of people getting kicked out of their house and how people have suffered after leaving because of people cutting their connections with them. My parents always say to love everyone even if they have the opposite ideas you do. I did not feel pressured to stay, and yes, I do get callings from ex-brothers and sisters of the community, but I just see it as love because they want what is best for me. And another thing is when people say that Catechist pressure for money and take it, if that were the case then my family would have money. When I'm telling you we live in a house because of God's providence I mean it. My mom volunteers to take care of children, and my dad is in mission at home, leaving him NO time for working, and we have been evicted, but people took us in, and we found another place to live eventually now paying the rent every month with what we have, although it is a struggle I am happy to live under a roof with food on my plate. Catechist only ask for the money to pay for the places their at, or for any debts of the community such as flowers, food etcc.. When I was there I never felt pressured to speak, (I rarely spoke) and when catechists saw that someone does not want to be there, they let them know that they are free to leave, and God maybe has another way to connect to them.

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  5. Hello anonymous, I am not contradicting your assertion that you've been loved. I assume that's true. But your catechists and presumably your parents, teach many falsehoods, including moral, scriptural, liturgical and eschatological.

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  6. "The way" and its leaders are profoundly wrong on so many levels, as Chuck points out. Most serious theologists point to a modernized version of Gnostic approach. As many on this site have pointed out over the years, most people in the Way are honest Catholics trying to better themselves and have very little to do with the initiators and the cadres of the group who knowingly preach falsehoods and manipulations for their own personal benefits.

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