Off The Record
A “900-Year-Old” Vatican Secret Book “Reveals” The Precise Date Of “Judgement Day”
According to a secret 900-year-old Vatican book of prophesies, “Judgement Day” might actually arrive quite soon.
According to reports, a terrifying old manuscript found in the Vatican’s archives foretells the year of the alleged “Day of Judgement.”
‘Prophecy of the Popes’ was published in the 12th century by Saint Malachy, an Irish bishop, and seems to contain some wild speculations about the succession of popes from Celestine II in 1143 to Pope Francis, who is currently in office.
The prophecy, which was discovered in 1590, lists 112 brief Latin descriptions of each pope.

It also ominously predicts a rough date for Jesus’ second coming, when he will return to Earth to decide who will be sent to heaven and who will be condemned to the flaming depths of hell.
Since every person will stand before God to find out their fate, some Christians believe that the day—also known as Doomsday or the Final Judgment—marks the end of the world as we know it.
The Saint stated that it is scheduled to happen in 2027, which is just two years away, but he did not provide us with a specific day.
Still, the last passage of his book ominously reads: “In the final persecution of the Holy Roman Church there will reign Peter the Roman, who will feed his flock amid many tribulations, after which the seven-hilled city will be destroyed and the dreadful Judge will judge the people. The End,” reports the Daily Star
According to some interpretations of the scripture, Pope Francis, 88, who is presently battling a chronic illness following “acute respiratory failures,” will be succeeded by a man named Peter.
The book is said to have been written by Saint Malachy, who claimed to have had a vision while visiting Rome in 1139.
Additionally, some of his predictions have appeared to come true in the past, such as his assessment of Pope John XXII (1316–1334).
According to Catholic.com, the seer wrote “de sutore ossed,” which translates to “from the bony shoemaker.” This seemed to fit with John XXII, who was not only the son of a shoemaker but also had the family name “Ossa,” which means bone.
‘Lilium et rosa’ seemed to be a reference to Pope Urban VIII (1623-1644), whose family’s coat of arms featured roses and lilies.
Under ‘De labore Solis,’ or eclipse of the sun, the pope made another startlingly correct prediction.
Born during a solar eclipse in the 1920s, Pope John Paul II held the position from 1978 to 2005.
Additionally, he is said to have prophesied the 111th pope’s “Gloria Olivae,” or “Glory to the olive.”
The Catholic church concluded that Malachy’s prophecy was fulfilled once more between 2005 and 2013, when Pope Benedict XVI assumed power, because the Order of Saint Benedicts also goes by the name Olivetans.
But because many of the descriptions ‘become unclear’ from the 16th century onwards and until the book was ‘found’ in the Roman Archives, some academics have questioned the Saint’s texts’ provenance.
Although there have been “many more misses,” the Catholic church acknowledges that there have also been some hits in the modern period.
According to contemporary academics, the work is merely a partisan political fake.
We’ll have to find out.
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