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Friday, December 28, 2007

Feast of the Holy Innocents


Two posts for the day:

The stunning (not in the sense of "beautiful" -- prepare to lament) post by MadPriest.

And a different take by Rmj at Adventus, whose blog I recently discovered (I think via MadPriest).

Adventus, by the way, bears at the top of the page a saying that has been stirring my head and heart for a few days and which seems very much related to the Merton quote on Christmas -- and, for that matter, to Dom Pedro Casaldaliga's reflections below.

The central doctrine of Christianity, then, is not that God is a bastard. It is, in the words of the late Dominican theologian Herbert McCabe, that if you don’t love you’re dead, and if you do, they’ll kill you. --Terry Eagleton

10 comments:

  1. Jane, I've been reading Rmj since his blog was born. I have learned so much from him. He even got me to read Kierkegaard, and I've never been quite the same since.

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  2. Is there no religious blog you don't know?!

    Very glad I found this one.

    I forgot to put the quote I mentioned up. I'm pasting it in the post right now.

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  3. Jane, Robert's was the first religious blog that I ever read. I started by reading the political bloggers, and then when he started, I became a faithful follower. BTW, he's Rmj rather than Jmr.

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  4. Thanks for the correction. Duly noted and changed on the post.

    Now it's time for a little more non-blog writing and then to bed.

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  5. P.S. Bonus Giotto for you and for me. Just found it on the Web.

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  6. Mimi,

    I was never the same after reading Kierkegaard: *Fear and Trembling*.

    I, too, found MP's Holy Innocents post moving; move to follow elsewhere.

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  7. Jane, the Giotto is, as you have said stunning, not in the sense of beautiful.

    Johnieb, that was the very book that changed me - forever.

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  8. Early Spring, 1973, Mimi; I finally met someone more clever than myself, which was quite a relief. Or so agreed my then Spiritual Director.

    A peaceful night and a blessed end be ours, dear sisters and brothers.

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  9. Johnieb, my introduction was a couple of years ago, and I was advised by Rmj not to start with K's "Fear and Trembling", but I didn't listen.

    A peaceful night to all.

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  10. Peace to you, friends, and a good and restful night. I'm about to post today's Latin American quote (Casaldaliga, part 2) and to go finish that sermon Mimi partly inspired.

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