Everything Else

Sphere Blog Search

Sphere is a new blog search tool. It was designed with the help of the 9Rules team. You can read more about it at the 9Rules site, or you can go directly to Sphere to check it out.

The nifty part of Sphere is the profile information provided for each blog. They also accept user suggestions for sites related to certain subjects (in beta), and they reference related media.

They seem to pick up info from blogs4God (T-Tagged posts) pretty readily.

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Saints and Martyrs

May 2 – St. Sigismund (Św. Zygmunt)

Święty Zygmuncie, królu Burgundzki, uproś nam u Boga tę łaskę, abyśmy naśladując cię za grzechy nasze żałowali i szczerą czynili za nie pokutę, a otrzymawszy odpuszczenie, abyśmy mogli stanąć bezpiecznie przed tronem sprawiedliwego ale i miłosiernego sędziego. Przez Chrystusa Pana naszego. Amen.

Media

Unholy cra*

From the New Yorker – A Church Asunder

It is true, Griswold says, that from —the classical point of view— sexuality —is to be exercised only within heterosexual, monogamous marriages.— But he notes that the church has, through time, come to an understanding of marriage and sexuality that is less rigid than that prescribed by the Bible and church tradition. —The Episcopal Church over the years has come to, let us say, an understanding of the human person that is more sophisticated, possibly, than the understanding on the part of the Biblical authors.—

Tip o’ the biretta to Western Orthodoxy

Everything Else

Fostering Vocations

From Sacramentum Vitae via the Young Fogey: Vocations: stop the insanity!

To which I would only add prayer. How many parishes pray for vocations at each Holy Mass?

My Pastor recalled a visit from a German Bishop to a Polish Diocese. When the German Bishop heard of the number of seminarians he assumed it was for the entire country. When he heard it was only for one diocese he was flabbergasted. He asked how it was possible. He was simply told that —we pray for vocations.—

The article could just as easily apply to Western Europe. The priests and bishops live a solitary, yet comfortable —“ on the government dole —“ life.

That’s what I’d want, a steady stream of income, little work, no intimacy, and doing it all for no purpose —“ because you’ve lost any shred of faith.

If you are going to exist as a business then there are many other business models, even in the human services field, that can provide a better life (in this world).

It all starts with faith. If I didn’t believe that Jesus was present in the Church in a unique, special, and extraordinary way —“ in both Word and Eucharist, then why would I want to stand there in layers of hot vestments or sit in an uncomfortable pew? Since I acknowledge the truth of Christ’s presence, my standing there only reminds me of my unworthiness and His great love and mercy.

Lord, Jesus, the fields are ripe for the harvest. Call men to reap the harvest for Your kingdom and glory. Amen.

Homilies

Third Sunday of Easter

While they were still speaking about this,
he stood in their midst and said to them,
—Peace be with you.—
But they were startled and terrified
and thought that they were seeing a ghost.

Do you have the ghost of Jesus in your life? Do you possess a sort of ephemeral, see-through, not really there Jesus?

The disciples who were gathered together on this day had that kind of Jesus, at least until he appeared to them. They had a Jesus of memory. They remembered His face, maybe a few of His words, and probably were pondering a few of His promises. They had ghost Jesus.

Is that the sort of Jesus you have? You might remember a few of His words now and then. You might think of His promises at times of tragedy. You might even recall some representation of Jesus, a cross, a picture, some distant memory from your days studying the catechism.

I prefer the real Jesus. The Jesus of the cross, tomb, and resurrection. I prefer the ‘fish fry’ Jesus. I love to picture myself sitting down with the Lord for some Dunkirk smoked whitefish. I think we’d have a great time.

Sure, it sounds funny, but that’s the reality. Jesus is real. He is not only real in the historical sense, but in the past, present, and future sense.

No, it is no ghost.

So, if He is not just a passing puff of smoke, but the real living God-man, what are we going to do about it? How are we going to react?

The only reaction that makes sense is to live our lives with His reality. To live our lives in a way that reflects the fact that He is standing right next to you and me. More than standing next to us, He lives within us. He has joined Himself to us through the everlasting gift of Himself in the Holy Eucharist. He joins with us to change us, convert us, and renew us.

It is a difficult burden. You would think that people would run from the Church knowing that they have to live with the reality of someone who places so many expectations on them. You would think that the reality of it all would be too much to bear, especially in light of our sinfulness.

St. John tells us:

But if anyone does sin, we have an Advocate with the Father,
Jesus Christ the righteous one.
He is expiation for our sins,
and not for our sins only but for those of the whole world.

Peter put it even more plainly:

Now I know, brothers,
that you acted out of ignorance, just as your leaders did;
but God has thus brought to fulfillment
what he had announced beforehand
through the mouth of all the prophets,
that his Christ would suffer.
Repent, therefore, and be converted, that your sins may be wiped away.—

Yes, we continue to act out of ignorance. It is a self imposed ignorance. It is the way we cover over the uncomfortable fact that God would die on the cross for us. That He would sacrifice His only Son so that we could be with Him one day in heaven.

Remember that He told us that He came not to condemn us but to bring us salvation.

Therefore, we need to set aside the discomfort of living with the real Jesus, and we need to act. We need to repent of our ignorance. We need to throw open the shades, break out the fish fry, and live with the real Jesus.

Once we have done that we will truly be His disciples, ready to follow His command:

And he said to them,
—Thus it is written that the Christ would suffer
and rise from the dead on the third day
and that repentance, for the forgiveness of sins,
would be preached in his name
to all the nations, beginning from Jerusalem.
You are witnesses of these things.

You are witnesses of these things —“ proclaim your witness. Our sins are forgiven. Jesus is alive and real. Life in union with Him is ultimate and everlasting joy. We are changed by His body and blood – and we need to act on that reality.

[dels]blogs4god/sermons[/dels]

Current Events, Media

9 out of 10 press outlets get it wrong

The BBC, reporting on a clash between the All Poland Youth Group and a group of homosexual marchers in the Polish city of Krakow, gets it wrong yet again.

Background: A —gay tolerance— march on Krakow, Poland was attacked by some members of the youth group who threw rocks and eggs at the marchers.

Now, in the first place, that sort of violence, regardless of the reason, is absolutely wrong. Some youth group members (a very small part of the group) who took part in such violence should be arrested and prosecuted.

However, the BBC goes on to claim: —Homophobia is not uncommon in this staunchly Catholic country.—

Ummm, no!

The BBC’s report is not at all descriptive of what is going on, nor is it a fair or just statement. It’s painting an entire country as gripped by fear and aversion. It’s like saying all members of any group are something. I think that’s called stereotyping or racism. Can we say, racism is not uncommon among BBC reporters? Hmmmm…

No, the Poles are not homophobic. Homophobia is exactly that —“ a term used to describe a phobia. As we read in the phobia wiki:

A phobia (from the Greek φόβος “fear”), is a strong, persistent fear of situations, objects, activities, or persons.

No, the Catholic youth in Poland, who marched peacefully, were only standing in the forefront of a battle that is raging. They stood up for their faith and for the truth. For that, everyone in the entire country has been labeled by the BBC.

The Christian faithful, who adhere to the teachings of the Church on homosexuality, euthanasia, abortion, capitol punishment, war, and any number of other issues, are receiving what we will soon experience more and more: negative stereotypes and eventually outright persecution.

The teachings of the Roman Church, the PNCC, Orthodoxy, and any other orthodox Christian group are almost completely at odds with secular culture; a culture that believes that everyone has a right.

The real point is that no one has a right. There are no rights other than those given by God as interpreted through His Church.

The ‘gay’ culture is not a right. It is disordered and defective. Euthanasia is not a right nor is abortion. It is disordered, defective, and murder.

Certainly, homosexuality is a burden that some must bear. It is a heavy burden indeed. The Church is to love all people and support them in facing the burdens —“ the crosses they have been asked to bear. No one is to be —put out—. However, no one has a right to do as he or she pleases.

All that is required is that people come forward in truth and pledge to live the life Christ calls us to live. It is rarely the life we would like to live, yet its rewards are eternal.

See the entire BBC article: Clashes erupt at Poland gay march

Shortly after he became Prime Minister, Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz said in an interview that homosexuality is unnatural.

According to surveys, nine out of 10 Poles agree with him.

Everything Else

Being Christian

As posted at Echo Faith a 9Rules member site.

Christianity For Sale

God does not want salesmen. Salesmen don’t care about the people they’re selling to. They don’t want to know their life-stories, the struggles they’ve dealt with, the passions they’ve pursued, the dreams they’ve had.

So many times in life I’ve felt like I’d been hired to be God’s salesman. It was my job, in all situations and conversations, to find that angle or loophole to slip God into the conversation and convert, convert, convert!

The problem with this mentality is when you’re busy looking for a loophole, you miss the conversation. It’s like a quarrelsome couple in a fight. When one talks, the other spends all their energy trying to think of a comeback and how to defend their position instead of actually listening to what the other side has to say.

We need to lose the briefcase and suit and just be real people. There’s no need to ‘sell your point’ as long as you live it. Don’t go out of the way to hide your christianity from conversation but don’t shout it out either. Being christian should be as much a part of us as being a graphic designer or being a husband, a sister, an artist, a construction worker, a skater, a girlfriend, or whatever combination of things makes you who you are.