Readings August 30
Prof. Barber introduces the readings for Sunday August 2 Sunday, August 30, 2009: Liturgy Reflection from JP Catholic University on Vimeo.
Readings August 30 Read More »
Prof. Barber introduces the readings for Sunday August 2 Sunday, August 30, 2009: Liturgy Reflection from JP Catholic University on Vimeo.
Readings August 30 Read More »
This site regularly connects spirituality and technology. For those struggling with their computer technology, here is a helpful flow-diagram, courtesy of xkcd
This coming Sunday (August 30) and the week following, Roman Catholics and Episcopalians (Anglicans) once again will be praying the same prayer at the Eucharist and at their Daily Offices. This is the Roman Catholic version of the prayer: Almighty God, every good thing comes from you. Fill our hearts with love for you, increase
August 30 Catholics & Anglicans share prayer Read More »
Yesterday the founder of Facebook’s Praying People Page posted Rev. Mark Brown indicated that he was interested that 71% of the over 5,500 members are female. This is made even more interesting because this almost 3 to 1 imbalance is not the case on my Facebook Liturgy Page where the ratio is 54% male, 46%
good worship is both/and Read More »
Having described my visits to Taize, I dug out my own photo of Br. Roger from 1983 (above). For me it speaks volumes of who he was (for me and for others) – and how I encountered him.
In the Old City of Jerusalem for centuries people of the Jewish faith have been writing prayers on pieces of paper and placing them between the massive stones of the Western Wall (Hebrew: הכותל המערבי, translit.: HaKotel HaMa’aravi – hence often referred to simply as the Kotel = wall. Arabic: حائط البراق, translit.: Ḥā’iṭ Al-Burāq)
Tweet prayers to Western Wall Read More »
It can regularly spoil a joke to need to explain it. In this case the Monsignor [Failblog FAILS! in calling him a “cardinal” – this is clearly NOT a cardinal] confuses the microphone that he has just been speaking into with the aspergillum (seen 0:20), a similarly shaped object used for sprinkling with Holy Water.
If social media is here to stay – how is the church responding? How is your parish or Christian community participating? The seven last words of a Christian community are, “we never did it like that before.” There are now a number of different ways that people can be present in web 2.0. It appears
Social media church Read More »