Mormonism and The Apostasy
I’ve posted a few links to Soul Device articles recently, so I thought I’d do another. I’d like to invite you to check out the great article about the Mormonism and the Great Apostasy:
"We are travellers…not yet in our native land" – St. Augustine
I’ve posted a few links to Soul Device articles recently, so I thought I’d do another. I’d like to invite you to check out the great article about the Mormonism and the Great Apostasy:
It has been a while since I’ve done a “My favourite people” post. Today will just be a short one on one of my favourite comedians, Jim Gaffigan. If you have no idea who this guy is, this short video should give you a feel for what he’s like:
As he mentions in the interview, Jim is Catholic and that naturally spills out over into his comedy, particularly with regards to his material on dating, marriage and especially family:
We’ll be leaving classical music for the next few weeks. I know I’ve shared this video in an earlier Wise Words on Wednesday post, but I think it’s so good, I want to post it again. Here’s Theology Of The Body in a song, Colleen Nixon‘s “You wouldn’t mind”:
My lips aren’t kissable they’re normally chapped
but you wouldn’t mind, baby you wouldn’t mind
My hair is frizzy I don’t straighten it flat
but you wouldn’t mind baby you wouldn’t mind…
…because you love me completely
you won’t separate my body from my soul
I’m so lucky that you chose me
I can’t wait to spend my life with you
My eyes are brown and you don’t wish they were blue
and I’m thankful for that baby, I’m thankful for that
You don’t have to say “I love you” cause you show me you do
and I’m thankful for that baby, I’m thankful for that…
Body and soul, body and soul our love is always becoming
and it’s dependent upon, the way we die to ourselves
and the depth of our commitment to loving the body and soul, body and soul,
I will give and never take
I’m so faint with love for you body and soul, body and soul
I love you body and soul, body and soul
You don’t have to say I love ’cause you show me you do
and I’m thankful for that baby, I’m thankful for that
In the past I wrote a few posts on the subject of marriage, but being without a wedding ring myself, I’ve generally posted the advice of others (including commenters!). Here’s some more advice from someone who knows what they’re talking about 🙂
Today I want to share a quotation I often refer to on the subject of justification and the Protestant doctrine of Sola Fide. Often non-Catholics will tell us (incorrectly) that we believe in salvation by works. For this reason, I think it’s useful to hear what Pope Benedict has to say on the primacy of faith in salvation, and even the sense in which Luther was right, that we are saved by “faith alone”…
Being “just” simply means being with Christ and in Christ. And this suffices. Further observances are no longer necessary. For this reason Luther’s phrase: “faith alone” is true, if it is not opposed to faith in charity, in love. Faith is looking at Christ, entrusting oneself to Christ, being united to Christ, conformed to Christ, to his life. And the form, the life of Christ, is love; hence to believe is to conform to Christ and to enter into his love. So it is that in the Letter to the Galatians in which he primarily developed his teaching on justification St Paul speaks of faith that works through love
– Pope Benedict XVI, Wednesday Audience, 19th November 2008

I recently discovered that Fr. Anthony Saroki, pastor at Our Lady of Mt Carmel in San Diego, has started posting his homilies on YouTube. If you’d like to listen to them, then subscribe to his YouTube Channel.
Fr. Saroki is one of my favourite homilists here in San Diego and he’s recently launched a new website, Good Life USA, as part of his parish’s ministry:
In the parish where I grew up it was understood that, upon receiving their First Holy Communion, boys were then eligible for training to become altar servers. I followed in this tradition and became an altar boy at the age of eight. Even after we changed parishes, every week I served on the altar and did so for many years. I continued to serve regularly until after I completed university and, even then, when I was back home visiting my family I would typically don my cassock and carry a candle on Sundays.
I loved being an altar server and I think that all parents should consider encouraging their sons to become altar boys. In this post I’d like to share my top ten reasons why altar serving is great…