Saturday 6 April 2013
This is brilliant....
Posted by
Supertradmum
http://the-hermeneutic-of-continuity.blogspot.co.uk/2013/04/vatican-press-office-response-to-end-of.html
and my promised post on St. Isidore of Seville will be delayed until Monday.
and my promised post on St. Isidore of Seville will be delayed until Monday.
It has been one week since Easter
Posted by
Supertradmum
and, can you believe it, I have had NO chocolate! The nuns gave me three eggs, which I passed on to supertradson.
Visible and Invisible Popes
Posted by
Supertradmum
I was listening to some discussions on the relationship between popes and the world of the people and popes who have spoken primarily to the clergy.
Benedict was a clergyman's pope. He wrote and taught the clergy, as popes in the past had done, in order for them to take the good knowledge he was sharing at the theological and liturgical level. The clergy appreciate clear guidelines and the insights of such as Benedict (at least most do) and want to be taught the real deal
Francis and Bl. John Paul II are/were popes of the people, and by this, I mean even non-Catholics. A Mormon mentioned that the Pope serves as a symbol of religion in a non-religious world, even for himself and other non-Catholics. A celebrity pope takes the burden on himself, like a celebrity soccer manager, who is in the press all the time and says a lot, while the players are ignored, letting the players get on with it. Gregory the Great, in early days, was a great example of the visible, pope of the people.
Most popes were invisible and worked through their cardinals, bishops and priests, rather than the people.
That we have had celebrity popes in the late 20th and 21st centuries indicates, perhaps, a need for the world, to have someone most people can relate to when it comes to Faith and Morals.
However, those who were discussing this favored the Benedict style of leadership, as they said it gives the clergy much more confidence in their weekly preaching to have a brilliant, yet clear, teacher as Benedict has been.
Interesting....
The Teaching of the Catholic Church
Posted by
Supertradmum
I repeat, for the sake of some disgruntled commentators, that what I put on this blog regarding the teaching of the Church, is the teaching of the Church.
Am I entitled to my opinion on other things? Yes, as we all are.
Am I responsible to form my mind and conscience to that of Christ? Yes, as we all are.
T
Am I entitled to my opinion on other things? Yes, as we all are.
Am I responsible to form my mind and conscience to that of Christ? Yes, as we all are.
T
TT
Sorry about yesterday
Posted by
Supertradmum
I did not know I was going to be in a complete wifi or Internet black hole for a day and one half....sorry readers.
Dartmoor is beautiful, but not practical for bloggers. A vacation for me would involve MORE time for blogging, not less.
Dartmoor is beautiful, but not practical for bloggers. A vacation for me would involve MORE time for blogging, not less.
A sign of the stages of persecution
Posted by
Supertradmum
Last year I said we were at the end of the fourth out of five steps of persecution. Here is another indication, just in case some readers do not believe this.
http://wdtprs.com/blog/2013/04/obama-admin-in-army-reserve-brief-lumps-catholicism-in-with-al-qaeda-hamas-kkk/
http://wdtprs.com/blog/2013/04/obama-admin-in-army-reserve-brief-lumps-catholicism-in-with-al-qaeda-hamas-kkk/
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