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The one he was writing at the time of his death.

2006-07-13 07:00:20 · 1 answers · asked by SeraMcKay 3 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

1 answers

I don't know if this is accurate, since it's only one source (an article entitled "Malachi Martin: Dispelling the myths", by Jon Dougherty), but here goes:

Fr. Fiore, who lives in the Diocese of Madison, Wis., and belongs to the priestly fraternity of St. Peter, knew Fr. Martin for over 20 years. He worked, by personal request, as an editor for several of Malachi's best-selling books, and spoke with him at least weekly. In fact, he told me he had spoken with Malachi just a week or so before his death and had discussed, among other things, his newest book -- a nonfiction piece about Vatican power as the Church approaches the third millennium.

Regarding that book, "Primacy: How the Institutional Roman Catholic Church Became a Creature of the New World Order," Fr. Fiore said Malachi indeed believed it would be "his most controversial and important work." However, far from being fiction, the book would have dealt exclusively "with power and the papacy," and would have "analyzed the revolutionary shift in the ancient dogma of primacy that lies at the heart of what many now see as the first breakdown of papal power in two millennia."

In short, it was a book fashioned after one of the things Malachi was most noted for -- his uncanny ability to see through and predict the hidden geopolitics of the Vatican and its "complex global dealings with governments and nations."

You can read the entire article by clicking the link below.

2006-07-15 07:07:00 · answer #1 · answered by Iamnotarobot (former believer) 6 · 1 0

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