U
undead_rat
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PIUS VIIThere are a lot of questions about it. I think it has to be taken with a grain (at the very least!) of salt. Here’s what Jimmy Akin wrote about it. You can google and get a lot of other articles as well.
How Reliable Is the St. Malachy Prophecy? – Jimmy Akin
14 March 1800
20 August 1823
Aquila rapax—“Rapacious eagle”
Another motto that Mr. Akin attempts to use to discredit the Prophecy of the Popes is “Aquila rapax.” Mr. Akins criticizes this as an event that could have happened anywhere in the world at this time and, therefore, is meaningless even if fulfilled. Here is what Wikipedia says about Pope Pius VII:
“From the time of his election as Pope to the fall of Napoleon in 1815, Pius VII’s reign was completely taken up in dealing with France.”
Pius VII signed the Concordate of 1801 with Napoleon.
He presided over the coronation of Napolean at the Cathedral Notre-Dame de Paris in 1804 saying, “May God confirm on you this throne and may Christ give you to rule with him in his eternal kingdom.”
He always referred to Napoleon as “my dear son.”
Three days after his coronation as Emperor, Napoleon introduced French Imperial Eagles as standards for all of the French regiments which were to be defended unto death. Under these eagle standards, Napoleon’s regiments invaded and seized most of Europe. In 1809 the French Imperial Eagle invaded the Papal States, and Pius VII was exiled to France.
In my opinion, the facts of this matter show that the motto, “Aquila rapax” to meet the requirement that it be “easily falsifiable.” It was very unlikely that a conquest of Europe would have been made under an eagle standard precisely during the time that this motto came into effect. Yet here we have it. As Horn and Putnam put it for Religio depopulata, “the prophecy demonstrates a breataking accuracy here.”
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