Archive for February, 2009

Lent – the journey

Lent is about a personal journey, but not a private one; Lent is about the choices each one of us makes, but not selfishly…

…We will be wise to  allow our own Lenten choices to be judged by this criterion: will this way open me to that love poured into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, that alone enables us to live as one body of Christ…

…Love for all demands that this Lent is not private, but public, not selfish but self-giving.

from Living Lent within the Body of Christ by Archbishop Patrick Kelly in this week’s Catholic Herald.

1 comment Monday 23 February 2009

What I learnt today (or yesterday)

  • WALL-E captured my imagination completly when I watched it today – just through the animation and the words ‘WALL-E’ and ‘EVE’. Amazing.

Add comment Sunday 22 February 2009

You’re great

Have seen this in so many places. Love it.

Maybe we should have a National Validation Day:-)

Add comment Saturday 21 February 2009

Why I read blogs, especially Catholic ones

I first became aware of blogs probably about eight or nine years ago. Some of the first blogs I stumbled across were about Star Trek. Then I came across a Luthern blog, which I think was named something about pirates. Reading this blog was a revelation and one of the reasons that I am still a Christian.

Later I came across Amy Welborn’s Open Book, Disputations and Flos Carmeli. By this time, I  realised, that I had not found any UK Catholic blogs to read.

Over the following year, I gradually found other UK Catholic blogs, often just starting out.

The initial flurry has faded, and many have come and gone. Reading Catholic blogs is important to me – for information that I probably wouldn’t find out any other way, connecting individuals across the world and for broadening my opinions and experience of living out Catholicism.

Reading UK Catholic blogs is even more important, because there are some joys and struggles that are unique to living in these isles – the media attitude to religion, our Bishop’s Conference, our Catholic papers (The Universe, The Herald, The Tablet) and umpteen other things.

But most important, is bringing it home that the Catholic Church is a Body – what affects one part, affects the others, whether we know it or not.

Just three examples of this in the last couple of weeks that have been mentioned on multiple blogs, commented on and prayed about by many:

  • The death of Michael Dubruiel – someone I never met, don’t know, but have found myself praying for because I read Charlotte Was Both
  • Nancy Pelosi’s meeting with Pope Benedict – someone I would never have heard of or really cared about were it not for the blogosphere. I found myself pleased that the Pope met with her, for her and for the American bloggers I read who have posted about her.
  • The Tablet’s unpleasant article about Fr. Tim Finigan’s  – again someone I’ve never met, whose blog I’ve read for years. Again, I find myself praying for Fr. Tim, the parish, and surprisingly, the journalists at The Tablet.

I’m running out of words, so perhaps I’ll close by quoting Pope Benedict as to why this is a good thing:

The desire for connectedness and the instinct for communication that are so obvious in contemporary culture are best understood as modern manifestations of the basic and enduring propensity of humans to reach beyond themselves and to seek communion with others.

and

…the emergence of new digital networks that seek to promote human solidarity, peace and justice, human rights and respect for human life and the good of creation. These networks can facilitate forms of co-operation between people from different geographical and cultural contexts that enable them to deepen their common humanity and their sense of shared responsibility for the good of all.

from New Technologies, New Relationships: Promoting a culture of Respect, Dialogue and Friendship, Message for the 43rd World Communications Day.

Add comment Saturday 21 February 2009

Think


Your Word is “Think”


You see life as an amazing mix of possibilities, ideas, and fascinations.

And sometimes you feel like you don’t have enough time to take it all in.

You love learning. Whether you’re in school or not, you’re probably immersed in several subjects right now.

When you’re not learning, you’re busy reflecting. You think a lot about the people you know and the things you’ve experienced.

What’s Your Word?

Add comment Wednesday 18 February 2009

Witness to Life

There has been a lot in the media in recent days about Jade Goody. The former Big Brother contestant has been suffering from cancer for the past while (I want to say the past year?) and has now been given  two months to live.

I admire Jade for her courage in facing this situation in public. I found this video on the Critical Studies in Television website, which highlights the positive impact this story is already causing:

The increase in awareness of cervical cancer is a good thing, especially the uptake in tests.

However, what has struck me the most is Jade’s decision as to what to do next. With two months to live, the things that have been reported in the media as the things that Jade will do be to get married, to spend time with her children and to provide for her children by having them Christened and earning money for them.

Wow. To get married and to have her children Christened.

Today, the Chartered Management Institute publish a guide for employers now that religious discrimation cases are on the rise. The mainstream media often seems hostile to religion and religious practices, often promoting the negative or the extremist viewpoints. And yet, here we have someone who has money and celebrity, someone motivated to act now, choosing Baptism and Marriage.

Jade Goody may be dying, but in these actions, it seems to me that she is witnessing powerfully to life.

Add comment Tuesday 17 February 2009

Doodlebuzz

Going though RSS Feeds, I came across this great new tool, Doodlebuzz. Described as a ‘typographic news explorer’, it’s a more visual way of searching and linking to news online.

Add comment Monday 2 February 2009


To list…

...to be actively striving for, to be genuinely interested in (Erich Fromn)

BXVI’s General Prayer Intention for June 2009

That international attention towards the poorer countries may give rise to more concrete help, in particular to relieve them of the crushing burden of foreign debt

BXVI’s Mission Prayer Intention for June 2009

That the particular Churches operating in regions marked by violence may be sustained by the love and concrete closeness of all the Catholics in the world

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