A Discernment and Apostasy watch site for African Saints.
Prove all things..(1 Thesa.5:21)
Test Spirits..(I John 4:1)
Like the Bereans, check whether things are so(Acts 17:11)
Tuesday, 24 June 2014
When people get disgusted by the lies of roman Catholicism and react in a carnal way: Man decapitates Jesus statue, cites Ten Commandments
Man decapitates Jesus statue, cites Ten Commandments
Vandalized concrete statue of Jesus at Sacred Heart Catholic church in Charleston, S.C.
CBS affiliate WCSC
CHARLESTON, S.C. - A man arrested for
decapitating a church lawn statue of Jesus Christ says he did it because
"the second or first commandment" forbids public displays of men and
women, police in Charleston, S.C. say.
Charles Short, 38, was
arrested on Sunday, June 15 after admitting to police that he beheaded
the statue of Jesus outside the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in
Charleston, The Post and Courier reports.
CBS affiliate WCSC
Authorities charged
38-year-old Charles Short with malicious injury to real property.
He reportedly told police the Ten Commandments forbid the public display of any type of person, including Jesus, according to CBS affiliate WCSC.
An
excerpt of the King James Bible version of The Second Commandment
reads: "Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness
of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath..."
A
diocese spokeswoman for Sacred Heart told the station the 6-foot
concrete statue of Jesus represents Christ's love for humanity - and now
a nearly $5,000 repair bill.
Just last week, someone hacked off
the heads and hands of another statue of Christ and a child outside the
church, a police report stated, according to The Post and Courier. The
marble statues had been outside the church since 1996. Police are
investigating any possible connection.
Short was being held Monday on $2,130 bail, charged with malicious injury to real property.
Man Decapitates Jesus Statue at Charleston Church; Cites 10 Commandments as Reason
A man who recently decapitated a Jesus Christ statue outside of a
church in Charleston, South Carolina told police he did so for religious
reasons, citing the Ten Commandments.
Charles Jeffrey Short of
Columbia was arrested after he decapitated a Jesus Christ statue using a
Kobalt sledgehammer outside of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in
downtown Charleston in the early hours of Sunday morning. Two witnesses
contacted police after they saw a man lob off the head of the statue at
around 5:45 a.m. Short, 38, was then found walking near the church on
Huger Street. When police asked him where he was coming from, he pointed
to the church on King Street.
According to the Charleston Post Courier,
Short gave authorities permission to search his backpack, where they
found the sledgehammer with "color dust/residue," assumedly from the
six-foot concrete statue that depicted the Sacred Heart of Jesus Christ.
A
police report states that Short told the officer that he allegedly
knocked the head off of the Jesus statue because it violated the Ten
Commandments. "I think I used a sledge hammer to strike that statue
about six or seven times, because the first or second commandment states
to not make an image of a male or female to be on display to the
public," he reportedly told officers, according to WCIV-TV.
Police then returned to the church to find the head "was completely demolished off the statue" of Jesus.
Short
has been charged with malicious injury to real property, and is being
held on a $2,130 bond as he awaits his court hearing.
Authorities
are currently investigating a similar incident that happened at the
church just a few days earlier, when a member of the congregation
arrived on the church property Friday to find the hands and heads of
another marble statue missing. The hands and heads of a statue depicting
Jesus and a child had also been knocked off, and police were alerted
about the incident.
A similar incident took place in New Jersey back in January, when statues at two Catholic churches in Vineland were vandalized in what authorities called a "sicko" and "disturbed" manner that included decapitation and the gouging out of eyes.
Richard
Samson, Deacon of the Christ the Good Shepherd Church, one of the
churches vandalized in the attack, told CBS News: "I cannot imagine what
is going through the mind of a person that would deliberately go deface
statues that are dedicated to our savior."