ROME: V.C. News - The Pope said "the changes of seasons and climates warn us" and that "before long we may look" for other signs in the "sun and moon and stars."
In his First Homily on the Gospels as recorded in Matins of the First Sunday of Advent, Pope St. Gregory the Great (540 - 604) has confirmed "climate change" undoubtedly understanding that the climate in fact, does change, and then changes again.
Interviewed about Pope Gregory's comment and the obvious conclusion that the climate is always changing, George Soros' dupe, Greta Thunberg, said that "the climate crisis is not just about the environment. It is a crisis of human
rights, of justice, and of political will." With Soros looking on approvingly, Thunberg then confessed to being a communist stating that, "Colonial, racist, and patriarchal
systems of oppression have created and fueled it. We need to dismantle them
all."
Homily by Pope St. Gregory the Great,
1st on the Gospels
Our Lord and Saviour wisheth to find us ready at His second
coming. Therefore He telleth us what will be the evils of the world as it
groweth old, that He may wean our hearts from worldly affections. Here we read
what great convulsions will go before the end, that, if we will not fear God in
our prosperity, we may at least be scourged into fearing His judgment when it
is at hand.
Immediately before the passage which hath just been read
from the Gospel, are found the following words of our Lord, Nation shall rise
against nation, and kingdom against kingdom, and great earthquakes shall be in
divers places, and pestilences and famines. Then, after a few more verses,
cometh today's Gospel. There shall be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in
the stars; and upon the earth distress of nations with perplexity, the sea and
the waves roaring. Now some of these things are come to pass already, and we
fear the others are not far off.
In these our days we see nation rise against nation, and
their distress over all the earth, more than we read in books hath ever come to
pass of old time. Ye know also how often we hear of earthquakes overwhelming
countless cities in other parts of the world. As for pestilences, we suffer
from them ourselves, with hardly any intermission. As yet we do not see signs
in the sun, and in the moon, and in the stars; but the changes of seasons and
climates warn us that we may look for these also before long.