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Madonna's New Age End Time Satanism: A Revelation

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a b "In Philadelphia, Madonna gives 'Popey-wopey' her blessing". Huron Daily Tribune. Associated Press. September 26, 2015 . Retrieved September 12, 2022.

Tortora, Laura (August 1, 2018). "Madonna's Most Iconic Looks". Vogue Italia . Retrieved September 10, 2022. Russell, Erica (April 24, 2019). "Why Madonna's Legacy of Reinvention is More Relevant Than Ever". MTV. Archived from the original on October 22, 2019 . Retrieved July 10, 2022. a b c McGreal, Chris (September 20, 2004). "Madonna in mystical mode dismays Orthodox Jews". The Guardian . Retrieved September 10, 2022.Madonna attended a Kabbalah lecture in Israel during the 2004 Jewish New Year. Her decision to visit Rachel's Tomb was criticized by pro-Palestinian activists, and some protests were made. [148] Agence France-Presse (AFP), informed that she raised questions over the nature of her faith. [57] Professor Goldman, commented she received an overwhelming amount of media and government attention, resulting in "unforeseen diplomatic consequences". [25] As a result, Egypt banned Madonna from visiting their country. [25] In an article for The Guardian, Chris McGreal described how Orthodox men chanted shabbos while others yelled at her to go home, accusing Madonna of desecrating their religion. [79] The Jewish agency International Society for Sephardic Progress requested to Yitzhak Kaduri —the maximun authority of Kabbalah in his time— refuse to bless the singer. [149] Kaduri flatly refused to see Madonna on her pilgrimage to Israel. [150]

Magid, Shaul (2013). American Post-Judaism: Identity and Renewal in a Postethnic Society. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0253008091. Bellafante, Ginia (November 23, 2006). "A tribute to Madonna's current and former selves". The New York Times. Archived from the original on September 23, 2021 . Retrieved September 23, 2021. Catholic group Tradition, Family, Property, distributing flyers against Madonna prior her Girlie Show (1993) in Argentina Olitzky, Kerry M. (2013). Playlist Judaism: Making Choices for a Vital Future. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1566996037. The Vatican State and Popes of her generation condemned numerous of Madonna's acts. During the late-twentieth century, the Catholic Church opposed to her Italian show of the Who's That Girl Tour in 1987, her advertisement with Pepsi in 1989, the Blond Ambition Tour in 1990 or for her first book Sex, in 1992. [67] [11] [68] Organizations related to the Church, such as the Episcopal Conference of Italy criticized Madonna, and tried to ban her concerts. A parish priest from the organization, denounced Madonna as "an infidel and sacrilegious". [69]Madonna has not admitted the entire performance was a means of sending subliminal messages to the world, but many who know her say otherwise. Some have stated that the message Madonna hoped to send the world was to, “Take heart lovers of pleasure. Our satanic messiah is about to appear with great power to usher in world peace (false peace)” Shortly after her debut in the 1980s, various cultural analyses of her figure touched on Madonna's religious connotations. Various of them were categorized under her academic mini-subdiscipline, the Madonna studies, which flourished with other topics, according to observers such as Andi Zeisler, Douglas Kellner and Ricardo Baca. [2] [3] [4] Author and professor Thomas Ferraro notes this early stage, saying "Madonna's impact posed an expressly religious puzzle". [5] She also became a "favorite topic" for religious fundamentalists in her prime. [6] According to editors of Religion and Popular Culture (2016), her video " Like a Prayer" inspired "perhaps more than any other music video scholarly analysis of its religious meanings". [6] On the other hand, other religious studies scholars, like James R. Lewis, have explored Madonna's figure from perspectives that included astrology. [7] Catholic iconography has been Madonna's constant. [18] She is credited with even popularizing the cross in pop music as a decorative object, which she uses in her shows and videos. [55] Martin commented that her love affair with the cross "has spanned her music career". [53] As her career continued, she involved Kabbalistic motives in her work and reportedly refused to work on Friday night and Saturday, as a result in her observance of the Jewish Sabbath. [24] [56] Religious Jewish symbols and Hebrew letters featured in some of her works, and Madonna was seen numerous times, with the red string around her wrist to ward off the evil eye, [57] a trendy practice among celebrities during Bush era. [28] Among her many other religious references, she included sufism themes. [50] Italian Catholicism informs just about everything Madonna does, most often in ways that are not officially sanctioned. In the most bizarre theory yet, Illuminati theorists claim Fetty Wap traded his eye to the Illuminati for fame. He actually lost his eye when he discovered he had a condition called Congenital glaucoma, which severely damaged his optic nerve, per We Got This Covered.

a b Guardian music (March 4, 2016). "Madonna is 'highly offensive to Christianity', says New Zealand bishop". The Guardian . Retrieved September 11, 2022. Halevi, Yossi Klein (September 24, 2004). "Madonna and the Kabbalah Cult". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on February 1, 2020 . Retrieved September 10, 2022. In Language, Society, and New Media: Sociolinguistics by semiotician Marcel Danesi, is documented that the word " icon" is a "term of religious origin" and "arguably used for the first time in celebrity culture to describe the American pop singer Madonna". [197] The following description asserts that this word is "now used in reference to any widely known celebrity, male or female". [197] Madonna's name is even used as an illustration of its new meaning in reference works such as the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary and Diccionario panhispánico de dudas. [198] [199] Having mentioned the case of Madonna, Guy Babineau from Xtra Magazine stated in 2008: "I'm old enough to remember when people weren't called icons". [200]

10. Beyoncé

According to scholar Ana Wortman, in the Latin American Council of Social Sciences (2007), she achieved status of "cultural object" in the sense of cultural anthropology. Therefore, Wortman believes that some people wear her image on a T-shirt as a cultural artifact. [203] From left to right: actresses Iyari Limon, Adriana Torrebejano, and Emilia Mazer and gay porn actor, Landon Conrad wearing T-shirts with Madonna's image. It is suggested that Iggy Azalea only found fame after she made a deal with Satanto produce raunchy music. Beyoncé’s rumored affiliation with the Illuminati is so prevalent it has been parodied by Reductress.Theorists claim her music videos, performances, and photos highly reference the Illuminati. Along with that, theorists claim she’s the “Queen” of the Illuminati. Lang, Cady (2018). "Let Madonna Take You to Church With Her Crazy Surprise Met Gala Performance". Time. Archived from the original on June 23, 2022 . Retrieved June 23, 2022.

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