Friday Frivolity: P&W Songwriting How-To
I’ve written a few Praise and Worship (P&W) songs in the past. I never knew it was actually so easy!
"We are travellers…not yet in our native land" – St. Augustine
I’ve written a few Praise and Worship (P&W) songs in the past. I never knew it was actually so easy!
I’m heading up into the clouds today as I fly back to England for a much needed vacation…
“We don’t know if we want to be rescued. We are so enamored with our small stories and our false gods, we are so bound up in our addictions and our self-centeredness and take-it-for-granted unbelief that we don’t even know how to cry for help”
– John Eldredge, Epic, Page 62
A while back I wrote some thoughts about the new Les Miserables movie. It might surprise some that the book by Victor Hugo once appears on the Church’s “List of Forbidden Books”. Catholic Lane has the explanation:
Since today is the Feast of the Annunication, I thought I’d post a quick response to a recent question asked by a non-Catholic:
“1 Timothy 2:5 says ‘For there is one God and one Mediator between God and men, the Man Christ Jesus’. How does Mary fit into this?”
As I’ve said before, the media has had a field day in recent years with the various sex abuse scandals in the Catholic Church. Of course, in contrast, they tend to get very quiet when the subject matter isn’t quite so juicy, such as the feeding of the poor all across the world which happens day in, day out without acclaim or fanfare.
Over Lent I came across this article by Brendan O’Neill talking about the McAleese Report which was recently released by the Irish government. Although it hardly paints a rosy picture of the Magdalene Laundries it does dispel many of the myths and assumptions popularized by the recent movie The Magdalene Sisters…
Just to be clear, this isn’t saying that the laundries were idyllic places with no problems whatsoever, nor does it exonerate those who, in the name of Christ, committed cruelty towards those made in the image and likeness of God. This is just an appeal to stick to the facts rather than indulging in the various “embellishments” which have been recently made popular.