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The European Union in Prophecy by Ellen White

The European Union in Prophecy provides insightful perspectives on the E.U. both as a political project in integration and a transformation of an ancient order. One would discern that the aligned and centralised powers, which firmly resolved on unification, conceived and instituted united kingdoms, united states and united nations, still persevere in their efforts for a more robust and resilient E.U. However, unknown to most, the territorial aggrandisement, economic and military supremacy and global dominance of the E.U. have all been foretold in prophecy, millennia before the reign of the first European monarch. Spiritual forces that engineered the rise of the European thrones, also calculated the suppression of dissidence and incited merciless carnage. Although now paraded as an industrialised paragon of progress and self-made sophistication, this book elucidates on the enigmatic and clandestine alliances, decrees and dogmas that consolidated Eurocentricity that moulded modern civilisation. Indeed, despite rooted religiopolitical tensions and divergences, a peculiar one-minded homogenisation facilitates the unification process. Keywords

The European Union in Prophecy provides insightful perspectives on the E.U. both as a political project in integration and a transformation of an ancient order. One would discern that the aligned and centralised powers, which firmly resolved on unification, conceived and instituted united kingdoms, united states and united nations, still persevere in their efforts for a more robust and resilient E.U. However, unknown to most, the territorial aggrandisement, economic and military supremacy and global dominance of the E.U. have all been foretold in prophecy, millennia before the reign of the first European monarch. Spiritual forces that engineered the rise of the European thrones, also calculated the suppression of dissidence and incited merciless carnage. Although now paraded as an industrialised paragon of progress and self-made sophistication, this book elucidates on the enigmatic and clandestine alliances, decrees and dogmas that consolidated Eurocentricity that moulded modern civilisation. Indeed, despite rooted religiopolitical tensions and divergences, a peculiar one-minded homogenisation facilitates the unification process. Keywords

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<strong>The</strong> <strong>European</strong> <strong>Union</strong> <strong>in</strong> <strong>Prophecy</strong><br />

Among those who challenged their authenticity were Nicholas of Cusa (1401-<br />

1464), Charles Dumoul<strong>in</strong> (1500-1566), and George Cassender (1513- 1564). <strong>The</strong><br />

irrefutable proof of their falsity was conveyed <strong>by</strong> David Blondel, 1628.<br />

An early edition is given <strong>in</strong> Migne Patrolgia Lat<strong>in</strong>a, CXXX. For the oldest and<br />

best manuscript, see P. H<strong>in</strong>schius, Decretales Pseudo-Isidorianiae at capitula<br />

Angilramni (Leipzig, 1863). Consult <strong>The</strong> New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of<br />

Religious Knowledge (1950), vol. 9, pp. 343-345. See also H. H. Milman, Lat<strong>in</strong><br />

Christianity (9 vols.), vol. 3; Johann Joseph Ignaz von Doell<strong>in</strong>ger, <strong>The</strong> Pope and the<br />

Council (1869); and Kenneth Scott Latourette, A History of the Expansion of<br />

Christianity (1939), vol. 3; <strong>The</strong> Catholic Encyclopedia, vol. 5, art. "False Decretals,"<br />

and Fournier, "Etudes sure les Fausses Decretals," <strong>in</strong> Revue d'Historique<br />

Ecclesiastique (Louva<strong>in</strong>) vol. 7 (1906), and vol. 8 (1907).<br />

Page 57. <strong>The</strong> Dictate of Hildebrand (Gregory VII).--For the orig<strong>in</strong>al Lat<strong>in</strong><br />

version see Baronius, Annales Ecclesiastici, ann. 1076, vol. 17, pp. 405, 406 of the<br />

Paris pr<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g of 1869; and the Monumenta Germaniae Historica Selecta, vol. 3, p. 17.<br />

For an English translation see Frederic A. Ogg, Source Book of Medieval History (New<br />

York: American Book Co., 1907), ch. 6, sec. 45, pp. 262-264; and Oliver J. Thatcher<br />

and Edgar H. Mcneal, source Book for Medieval History (New York: Charles<br />

Scribner's Sons, 1905), sec. 3, item 65, pp. 136-139.<br />

For a discussion of the background of the Dictate, see James Bryce, <strong>The</strong> Holy<br />

Roman Empire, rev. ed., ch. 10; and James W. Thompson and Edgar N. Johnson, An<br />

Introduction to Medieval Europe, 300-1500, pages 377-380.<br />

Page 59. Purgatory.--Dr. Joseph Faa Di Bruno thus def<strong>in</strong>es purgatory:<br />

"Purgatory is a state of suffer<strong>in</strong>g after this life, <strong>in</strong> which those souls are for a time<br />

deta<strong>in</strong>ed, who depart this life after their deadly s<strong>in</strong>s have been remitted as to the<br />

sta<strong>in</strong> and guilt, and as to the everlast<strong>in</strong>g pa<strong>in</strong> that was due to them; but who have on<br />

account of those s<strong>in</strong>s still some debt of temporal punishment to pay; as also those<br />

souls which leave this world guilty only of venial s<strong>in</strong>s."--Catholic Belief (1884 ed.;<br />

imprimatur Archbishop of New York), page 196.<br />

547

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