Day: December 3, 2008

LifeStream

Daily Digest for 2008-12-03

blog (feed #1) 12:09pm Supplying the Church’s requirements
twitter (feed #4) 12:09pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: Supplying the Church’s requirements http://tinyurl.com/5vx4hu
blog (feed #1) 12:23pm Christmas Craft Fair at St. Joseph’s, Stratford, CT
twitter (feed #4) 12:23pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: Christmas Craft Fair at St. Joseph’s, Stratford, CT http://tinyurl.com/5oq6qw
blog (feed #1) 12:27pm Remembering Odetta Holmes
twitter (feed #4) 12:58pm Posted a tweet on Twitter.

New blog post: Remembering Odetta Holmes http://tinyurl.com/5csn3g
lastfm (feed #3) 1:18pm Scrobbled 7 songs on Last.fm. (Show Details)

Christian Witness, Perspective,

Remembering Odetta Holmes

A tribute to Odetta by John Guzlowski at Living in Partial Light:

…She was just there sitting on the lawn playing her guitar. They had asked her down for a concert or something, and she was just playing a guitar and singing on the lawn.

Her voice was so natural. She saw me standing listening to her, and she asked me to sit down and sing with her, and I was embarrassed. I apologized and said I didn’t have much of a voice. She said that’s fine, “If you can talk you can sing.” Then she started humming. It was a song called “Nobody knows you when you’re down and out.”

She played it and then she started singing it, but it was more like talking than singing, and I knew the song so I talked it as she talked it.

It was pleasant, like a conversation. She wanted me to feel comfortable.

What I like about the post is that it recalls a person who lived her humanity. All talent aside, one person’s humanity is worth more than 10,000 forgotten concerts or millions of dollars. Odetta Holmes stood up, lending her voice to the struggle for civil rights. Standing up is more than words. If it is only word those are the words of false prophets, gangsters, and hucksters. When words meet actions we stand in moments imprinted by Christ Jesus, moments that call us to our potential. May the angels guide her home.

PNCC, , ,

Christmas Craft Fair at St. Joseph’s, Stratford, CT

From the Stratford Bard: A Christmas Craft Fair will be held at St. Joseph’s of Stratford National Catholic Church, 1300 Stratford Road, Stratford, Connecticut from 10am to 3pm on Saturday, Dec. 6th.

Area crafters and home show vendors will be displaying and selling their crafts. There will also be a bake sale, continental breakfast, and meatball grinders and hot dogs for lunch. There is free admission and free parking. Every adult that attends the fair will receive a free entry into the door prize for a grocery gift card.

St. Joseph’s is located at 1300 Stratford Road in the Lordship section of Stratford, Connecticut at the south end of Main Street beside Sikorsky Memorial Airport. For more information please call the parish office at (203) 377-9901 or Patti at (203) 378-0073.

Fathers, PNCC

December 3 – St. Leo the Great from his sermons

When the Saviour would instruct His disciples about the Advent of God’s Kingdom and the end of the world’s times, and teach His whole Church, in the person of the Apostles, He said, “Take heed lest haply your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness, and care of this life.” And assuredly, dearly beloved, we acknowledge that this precept applies more especially to us, to whom undoubtedly the day denounced is near, even though hidden. For the advent of which it behoves every man to prepare himself, lest it find him given over to gluttony, or entangled in cares of this life. For by daily experience, beloved, it is proved that the mind’s edge is blunted by over-indulgence of the flesh, and the heart’s vigour is dulled by excess of food, so that the delights of eating are even opposed to the health of the body, unless reasonable moderation withstand the temptation and the consideration of future discomfort keep from the pleasure. For although the flesh desires nothing without the soul, and receives its sensations from the same source as it receives its motions also, yet it is the function of the same soul to deny certain things to the body which is subject to it, and by its inner judgment to restrain the outer parts from things unseasonable, in order that it may be the oftener free from bodily lusts, and have leisure for Divine wisdom in the palace of the mind, where, away from all the noise of earthly cares, it may in silence enjoy holy meditations and eternal delights. And, although this is difficult to maintain in this life, yet the attempt can frequently be renewed, in order that we may the oftener and longer be occupied with spiritual rather than fleshly cares; and by our spending ever greater portions of our time on higher cares, even our temporal actions may end in gaining the incorruptible riches. — Sermon 19, On the Fast of the Tenth Month, VIII.