CAFOD Marchers
Holy Trinity 2013 - Homilies and Stories
Background:
Why else would God
stun us with this baffling, if dazzling, notion other then to show us that God
could love all beings, even as He loves His Self. Our God is not an isolated
entity. Rather She is a network of relationships and hence all human networks
are actually or potentially grace-full.
Some Catholic theologians are now arguing that only because
God is triune is it possible for Her to relate to us. A God who was one person,
they say, would not be capable of relationships. But precisely because He has
internal relationships is God able to have external relationships too. It’s
kind of a neat idea, but I must leave it to others how it stands up to
theological analysis. It does make the revelation of the Trinity seem
reasonable.
Orissa: 2 more arrested in Staines murder case
Staines and his two sons Philip, 10, and Timothy, 6, were burnt to death Jan 22, 1999.
| A file picture of the missioner with his family |
A CBI team arrested Ghanashyam Mohant, 35, and Ranjan Mohant, 38, from their villages Gayalmunda and Bhalughera in Keonjhar district, a senior district police official, who assisted in the arrest, told IANS.
Staines and his two sons Philip, 10, and Timothy, 6, were burnt to death Jan 22, 1999, while they were sleeping in their station wagon in front of a church at Manoharpur village in Keonjhar, about 400 km from Bhubaneswar.
UK: Catholic Religious march to end global hunger
Story By: mattersindia.com
More than 250 members of religious orders and their supporters urged members of parliament to keep their promises on aid and prevent tax evasion to help end hunger worldwide, reported scotman.com.
The Catholic Agency For Overseas Development (CAFOD) organized the mass lobby as part of the “Enough Food for Everyone IF” campaign.
Members attended a service at Westminster Central Hall before walking to parliament where they met the parliamentarians.
A little girl’s trust -Story
Pentecost Sunday C- Homilies and Stories
Opening Story:
I heard a story the other day, an amusing story, about a boy who was
wandering around the narthex of a large downtown church one Sunday morning
and stopped and examined a large bronze plaque that was hung on the wall.
"What are all those names up there?" he asked one of the ushers.
"Those are the names of people who died in the service." the usher
replied.
Curious, the boy asked the usher
- "which service, the 9:30 service or the 11 o'clock service?"
I am happy to report today that we are about,
what we are celebrating,
is a birth - not a death -
the birth of the church - the birth of Christ
in you and me - and in all who call on his name.
I heard a story the other day, an amusing story, about a boy who was
wandering around the narthex of a large downtown church one Sunday morning
and stopped and examined a large bronze plaque that was hung on the wall.
"What are all those names up there?" he asked one of the ushers.
"Those are the names of people who died in the service." the usher
replied.
Curious, the boy asked the usher
- "which service, the 9:30 service or the 11 o'clock service?"
I am happy to report today that we are about,
what we are celebrating,
is a birth - not a death -
the birth of the church - the birth of Christ
in you and me - and in all who call on his name.
-------------------------------
Thomas O’Loughlin
Introduction to the Celebration
Introduction to the Celebration
Today we are celebrating a feast that was celebrated by many
of the Jews who lived at the time of Jesus. Many of his early followers
continued to celebrate it after the resurrection, and so it became part of the
annual celebrations of all Christians. However, over the first few decades of
the church, this feast took on a new meaning: Jesus has risen and ascended to
the Father, but he promised us his Spirit. So today we rejoice that the Spirit
is moving in each of our hearts making us a people, inspiring us to understand
the mystery of our faith, and strengthening us to follow Jesus the Anointed
One.
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