The Virgin Mary has historically communicated with individuals who were unlikely vessels for heavenly revelations. At Passover 2017 (Jewish year 5777), this long tradition of improbable candidacy continued when the Blessed Virgin sent a message to a Jewish, ultra-Orthodox rabbi!
Later, in epiphanies experienced by the Rabbi, the fundamental meaning of Mary's Immaculate Heart was clearly explained! Via such revelations, significant light was shed on the meaning of the Fatima apparitions a century ago (where Mary spoke to three Portuguese children). Moreover, by this exposition on the Immaculate Heart--epiphanies that reveals a true difference between good and bad--the dark clouds of sexual sin hanging over the Catholic Church's clergy can be finally dispelled!
THE FOLLOWING ARE THREE QUOTES FROM THE BOOK:
{1} "It is traditional Jewish belief that an authentic afterlife message can be received (1 Sam. 28), even from a soul as simple as a dead child's. So, I see no legitimate reason why a faithful Jew cannot believe that a message can be received from Mary, mother of Jesus, a woman who both lived and died!"
{2} "Into [this Christian man's] egotistical mind, I . . . drilled the theological understanding that humanity's ego killed Christ! That is, egotism nailed Jesus to the cross because Jesus did no wrong. He did not kill, cheat, or steal. Rather, Jesus was telling the truth and urging that all live righteously. Jesus bore the cross because enough people could not mentally bear hearing his words! In contrast, Saint Paul declares, crucifying the ego unites a person with Christ!"
{3} "To comprehend this commonality between Jewish and Christian theology, Lakewood's renowned, ultra-Orthodox, Jewish yeshiva (school), Beth Medrash Govoha (BMG), is considered the most prestigious college-age yeshiva outside of Israel. When I was in BMG . . . I had a conversation with one of the four heads-of-school, Rabbi Yisroel Tzvi Neuman. To him, I said that Moshiach (the Messiah) had been kept away because Jews, egotistically, did not want to be told the right thing to do. His response: 'Obviously!'"
About the Author:
The Roman Catholic Church's highest official in the Holy Land, the then Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem (now Patriarch Emeritus), His Beatitude Fouad Twal, wrote the following, in 2014, to Rabbi Chaim Gruber, the rabbi eventually perceiving the Virgin Mary's messages:
"As for violence against Christians, we thank you [Rabbi Gruber] for not only rejecting it but also for trying so long and so hard to achieve peace . . . and harmony between our two faiths. Your positive way of looking at the New Testament and therefore at Christianity is actually the very source of peaceful coexistence."