Liturgy
This link will keep 'parishioners-at-large' in touch with current creative liturgy sources and resources that respect a variety of 'traditions' within the Church.
COMMONWEAL Magazine
A 'lay' Catholic weekly publication with an accent on an intelligent analysis and commentary on curent issues, trends and concerns of interest to Catholics.
National Catholic Reporter
A national Catholic lay newspaper covering events not usually covered or presented with a clerical bias in the local diocesan press or but of concern and interest to Catholics.
Survivos' Network for those Abused by Priests or Religious
A National Network of self-help support groups for people abused by clergy or religious.
Bishop Accountability
Vital information about the disclosure of sexual abuse and related issues affecting Catholics in the pew and the manner in which Bishops continue to exempt themselves from accountability
Voice of the Faithful
A 'movement' of lay Catholics 'inspired' by the abuse scandal calling for greater accountability of bishops to 'Catholics in the Pew.'
+ 21st Week in Ordinary Time
Every day is a gift and a blessing.
Readings: I Corinthians 1:1-9 Psalm 145:2-7 Matthew 24:42-51
I give thanks to my god always on your account for the grace of God bestowed on you in Christ Jesus, that in him you were enriched in every way, with all discourse and all knowledge, so that you are not lacking in any spiritual gifts as you wait for the revelation of our Lord Jesus Christ.” [I Cor 1:4-5, 7]
My mother used to say that every day is a gift and a blessing—an opportunity for grace indeed, many graces.
I suppose it’s all according to one’s perspective. The greatest challenge in life is to find something to be thankful for every day. This is particularly difficult during stressful times and certainly during illness of one kind or another.
I think I may have shared difference between a hermit and a nightclub performer. The hermit wakes up at dawn and says, “Thank you, God!” The nightclub entertainer wakes up at noon and says, “Good God, morning?”
There is so much going on in the world at large and in our own particular worlds to bring anxiety and stress. It’s hard work to maintain balance. An active spiritual life based on the confidence that nothing can happen today that can defeat us if we are grounded in the belief that God’s presence is abiding but it’s difficult and sometimes terrifying to let go.
I still remember the first time I road my two-wheeler bike without my dad holding on to the seat. We started off—I, confident that he hand was firmly attached to the seat. I had ridden almost a full block before I realized that he had let go and there I was, gliding down the street. It’s that way with God. We just need to remain conscious that God’s ‘hand’ is not a crutch but that God’s grace within us is real.
Some days it seems as if we are starting all over again.
Daily Scripture Archive»In a world so ready to go on the attack, I think this bit of wisdom can modify the extremism that is rampant in religious circules.
The Peoples of the Book Need to Find a New ‘Convivencia
Jonathan Sacks, Arab News
If you haven’t yet been to Sacred, the British Library’s display of religious manuscripts, go. It is a stunning exhibition of some of the oldest and most beautiful texts in Judaism, Christianity and Islam, shown side by side in all their complex, intricate glory. The idea was to show how much the three faiths have in common. And they really do.
For they are all religions of the Word, “Peoples of the Book”, faiths that believe that God who created the Universe did not hide His purposes in silence. He spoke to those humble enough to listen. They taught those words to others and preserved them in sacred texts which became their most precious possession: The Hebrew Bible, the Old and New Testaments and the Qur’an.
Here they are, displayed together: A fragment from the Dead Sea Scrolls, ancient versions of the gospels including the only remaining copy of a composite narrative written by Tatian, a 2nd-century Christian, and a Qur’an written in Arabia within a century of the Prophet’s lifetime.
What you see immediately is the creative interplay between the faiths in earlier times. They learned calligraphy, design and illumination from one another. Ancient Torah scrolls, the elaborate capital letters of the Lindisfarne Gospels, and the rich geometric patterns of Islamic texts each sends forth ripples of resonance and imitation in the other faiths. At times the illustrations look like direct copies. King David looks suspiciously alike in two 13th century French texts, one Jewish, one Christian.
And this is only the surface of what was in fact a much deeper web of reciprocal borrowing. Jewish law, Halakhah, influenced Shariah, its Islamic counterpart. The great Muslim philosophers of the 11th and 12th centuries introduced the thought of Plato and Aristotle to Jewish sages such as Maimonides, who in turn influenced Aquinas. The Jewish poetry of medieval Spain owed much to Arabic verse. The encounter with Christianity stimulated Jewish Bible commentary.
The strands interweave, forming unexpected patterns. But there is another story about which the exhibition is silent. Ages of tolerance, what the Spanish called convivencia, were short. This struck me when I saw a rare, beautiful and lavishly decorated Hebrew manuscript: The Lisbon Bible of 1482. Look at it and you see a settled Jewish community, able to commission works of craftsmanship that must have taken years to make.
Yet within ten years, Jews and Muslims had been exiled from Spain, and five years after that they were driven from Portugal. It was the sudden, brutal end of medieval Jewry’s golden age. Religion, I constantly have to emphasize these days, has no monopoly on bloodshed. French revolutionary terror, Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia, secular systems all, were far more murderous. The issue has nothing to do with faith and everything to do with our inability to recognize the human dignity of those with whom we disagree. I sometimes worry whether we might be living in another 1482, a time of economic growth and affluence, but one in which you have to be deaf not to hear the distant thunder of civilizational conflict.
That is when libraries and ancient manuscripts become terribly important. If we forget the past, we may repeat it. We need Jews, Christians and Muslims prepared to bring together what the winds of globalization are driving apart. One such figure was the late Dr. Zaki Badawi, a generous role model of moderate Islam. Another is Akbar Ahmed, whose forthcoming Journey into Islam tells the story of his search for tolerance within, and dialogue between, faiths.
Look at these manuscripts in the British Library and ask yourself: If the rabbis, priests and imams who cherished them could only have seen them side by side, as we do now, would they not have recognized that however different, they share a loving devotion to the sacred word.
Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks is the Chief Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth. Rabbi Sacks studied philosophy and obtained the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. He has also been awarded honorary doctorates from the universities of: Cambridge; Glasgow; Haifa; Middlesex; Yeshiva University; Liverpool and St. Andrews, and is an honorary fellow of Gonville and Caius and King’s College London.
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