Audrey Assad Day!
I have the day off work today and I’m off to see Audrey Assad in concert! Feel free to enjoy this interview I found online:
"We are travellers…not yet in our native land" – St. Augustine
I have the day off work today and I’m off to see Audrey Assad in concert! Feel free to enjoy this interview I found online:
Who doesn’t love Cardinal Newman?! If you would like to purchase the newly-published book “The Quotable Newman“, then please click on the link below:
Therefore, it seems only appropriate that today’s “Wise Words On Wednesday” come from the famous Anglican convert himself:
“If we are intended for great ends, we are called to great hazards”
– Blessed John Henry Newman
In addition, the author, Dave Armstrong is also offering free e-books if you publicize his book on your Facebook page or blog!
I’ve started reading “Rediscovering Catholicism” by Matthew Kelly and I wanted to share a one quotations from the opening pages:
“Every single day the Catholic Church feeds, houses, and clothes more people, takes care of more sick people, visits more prisoners, and educates more people than any other institution on the face of the earth could ever hope to…
The Catholic education system alone saves American taxpayers eighteen billion dollars a year…
This year, catholic charities will provide 2.2 million free meals to the hungry and the needy of Chicago. We don’t ask them if they are Catholic – we just ask them if they are hungry”
– Matthew Kelly, Rediscovering Catholicism
When there is a scandal in the Catholic Church it is blasted from every media outlet so that the whole world gets to hear about it. Yet how is it that the continued good works of the Church so often go unreported?
Aside from the fact that it’s not as sensational, it’s not news! This is the same service which the Church has offered the world every day for two thousand years. It ceased being news a long time ago…
This weekend I finished recording another document of the Church onto MP3. It is the decree on ecumenism from the Second Vatican Council, Unitatis Redintegratio.
In that vein, I’d also invite you to read the article Because our love has grown cold, written by my friend Nelson. I think his blog post points to the key thing which is needed in order for there to any meaningful ecumenical dialogue between Catholics and non-Catholics.
“My prayer is not for them alone. I pray also for those who will believe in me through their message, that all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I am in you. May they also be in us so that the world may believe that you have sent me. I have given them the glory that you gave me, that they may be one as we are one — I in them and you in me—so that they may be brought to complete unity. Then the world will know that you sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me” – John 17:20-23
This seems appropriate Monday morning viewing…
(Just in case you don’t get the reference, it comes from Monty Python and the Holy Grail)
I was wondering if anyone who reads this blog knows of a good internet forum for discussing the works of the Early Church Fathers. I have been looking for a little while and haven’t had much success. I’ve been petitioning Catholic Answers to add a “Patristics” section to their forum, but so far I haven’t had much luck…
The best one I’ve found to date has been the Orthodox site Monachos.net:
So…any others?