Tuesday, May 20, 2025

Pope Leo Admitted it! He Called Mary "God"!!

 


🚨 More Lies from the Anti-Catholic Brigade

Here we go again. More lies. More slander. More garbage from anti-Catholic bigots—including some who have the nerve to call themselves “Christians.” It’s tired, it’s lazy, and it’s getting old, but unfortunately, it still spreads like wildfire among the gullible.

Now circulating on the anti-Catholic dark web and conspiracy forums is a laughably bad translation of Pope Leo XIV’s inaugural address—the one that marked the historic election of the first American Pope. According to this viral clip, the Pope supposedly called Mary “our god.”

He didn’t. Not even close.

Here’s what he actually said: “Maria, nostra madre. Ave Maria.” Translation? “Mary, our mother. Hail Mary.” It’s a direct and uncontroversial phrase that every Catholic—heck, every literate Christian—recognizes. “Madre” means “mother” in Italian and Spanish. Not “god.” Not “goddess.” This isn’t rocket science. Anyone with a brain cell to spare can confirm this with a free app.

So, what happened? Did the translator flub it by accident? Or was it a deliberate distortion designed to stir up more ignorant rage against the Catholic Church?

And more importantly—why are so many so-called Christians sharing this trash as if it were gospel?

Well, we already know the answer: anti-Catholic bigots never met a sewer too filthy to crawl through if it meant taking a swipe at the Church. Truth doesn't matter. Honesty doesn't matter. Their only goal is to smear, confuse, and pull Catholics away from the one, true, holy, Catholic, and apostolic Church.

Let’s be clear: this isn’t just a mistake—it’s spiritual sabotage. It’s Satan doing overtime.

Most Catholics—and frankly, many Protestants—know better. They know it's wrong to knowingly share a mistranslation to stir outrage. They understand that twisting someone's words to push a false narrative is bearing false witness, plain and simple.

But thanks to the internet and YouTube, things that once belonged on the lunatic fringe now go mainstream in a heartbeat. Conspiracy videos that should have stayed buried in the back pages of a tabloid or a Babylon Bee satire are suddenly getting hundreds of thousands of views—many from people who are too young, too naive, or too trusting to know they’re being manipulated.

This is the danger. Not just the lie, but the way the lie spreads. The sheer speed with which nonsense becomes “truth” in the eyes of the misinformed. And yes, that includes Catholics who should know better but fall for clickbait dressed up as spiritual insight.

That’s why this blog exists—to call out the lies, destroy the slander, and drag the truth back into the light where it belongs.

And here, once again, we’ve got a prime example: a shameless misrepresentation of the Pope’s words, shared by people who don’t care what he said—as long as it gives them an excuse to hate the Church.

We're not falling for it. And we’re not letting others fall for it either.



The Lies:
 
 

 The truth:
 



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