vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com
Vaguely religious: The Man I Want to Speak To
http://vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com/2006/03/man-i-want-to-speak-to.html
On Philosophy and religion. No, I dont pretend to be particularly learned of clever, but I do have things I sometimes want to say, and maybe this will help someone who reads it. The Man I Want to Speak To. Thanks Steven, who first taught me this). The trap is used to catch the rabbit. After the rabbit is caught, the trap is of no use, and we put the trap away. The net is used to catch the fish. After the fish is caught, the net is of no use, and we put the net away. The words are used to catch the truth.
vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com
Vaguely religious: Our Father / Pater Noster
http://vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com/2006/04/our-father-pater-noster.html
On Philosophy and religion. No, I dont pretend to be particularly learned of clever, but I do have things I sometimes want to say, and maybe this will help someone who reads it. Our Father / Pater Noster. We started saying the Pater Noster, i.e. the "Our Father" in Latin in church. Well. its being chanted actually, not just recited. If you want to hear what a chanted Latin prayer sounds like, go here. I append my humble translation below. Pater Noster (Our Father). Pater noster, qui es in caelis,. Azly R...
vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com
Vaguely religious: Corpus Christi
http://vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com/2006/06/corpus-christi.html
On Philosophy and religion. No, I dont pretend to be particularly learned of clever, but I do have things I sometimes want to say, and maybe this will help someone who reads it. The Feast of the Body and Blood of Christ. The night before he died, Christ shared the Passover. Dinner with his diciples. This is where he took bread, gave thanks for it, broke it, and gave it to them saying:. Take this and eat - this is my body. This is my blood. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). My Very Simple Blog.
vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com
Vaguely religious: Homilies of a Jesuit
http://vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com/2008/01/homilies-of-jesuit.html
On Philosophy and religion. No, I dont pretend to be particularly learned of clever, but I do have things I sometimes want to say, and maybe this will help someone who reads it. Homilies of a Jesuit. This is an excellent find! Someone is collecting the homilies of a Jesuit and blogging them (with permission of course, and before you ask, its not me). Great for a weekly reflection based on the theme of the previous Sunday readings. The home page is here: http:/ homiliesofajesuit.blogspot.com/.
vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com
Vaguely religious
http://vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com/2006/04/reading-from-office-of-readings-for.html
On Philosophy and religion. No, I dont pretend to be particularly learned of clever, but I do have things I sometimes want to say, and maybe this will help someone who reads it. From the Office of Readings for Holy Saturday). THE LORD DESCENDS INTO HELL. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). My Very Simple Blog. Other Blogs I like. Homilies of a Jesuit. Zz - Azly Rahman (Essays and Opinions). READING (from the Office of Readings for Holy Satu. Our Father / Pater Noster. View my complete profile.
vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com
Vaguely religious: 2008-03
http://vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com/2008_03_01_archive.html
On Philosophy and religion. No, I dont pretend to be particularly learned of clever, but I do have things I sometimes want to say, and maybe this will help someone who reads it. Malaysia: ‘Allah’ Just for Muslims. We all know about the HERALD being at risk of not having it's licence renewed due to this issue - you can read a quick summary in the New York Times article HERE. Notice at the end of the article:. Cross reference - click here to read an interesting blog article on 'ALLAH. Links to this post.
vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com
Vaguely religious: To the Man who stole my watch at the pool.
http://vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com/2006/03/to-man-who-stole-my-watch-at-pool.html
On Philosophy and religion. No, I dont pretend to be particularly learned of clever, but I do have things I sometimes want to say, and maybe this will help someone who reads it. To the Man who stole my watch at the pool. It is a good watch: I have had it for over 10 years, and it has kept time faithfully all through except for the times when the battery needed changing and when water got into it at the pool (after a badly done battery change). So what shall I say to you, who took what is not yours? Azly ...
vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com
Vaguely religious: 2008-07
http://vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com/2008_07_01_archive.html
On Philosophy and religion. No, I dont pretend to be particularly learned of clever, but I do have things I sometimes want to say, and maybe this will help someone who reads it. The use of the word “Allah”. Here is a news item from the STAR today. I have found that the New Straits Times is an unreliable news source, because their stories and pages can 'dissappear' from their site. Probably when the article is deemed 'sensitive'). Religious councils want to intervene in application. While the dedication o...
vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com
Vaguely religious: Ash Wednesday, 2006-03-01
http://vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com/2006/03/ash-wednesday-2006-03-01.html
On Philosophy and religion. No, I dont pretend to be particularly learned of clever, but I do have things I sometimes want to say, and maybe this will help someone who reads it. Ash Wednesday, 2006-03-01. Ash Wednesday' is the beginning of the season in the Catholic church known as 'Lent'. I just want to share something about a song we sang at church that day. I haven't memorised all the words, but mostly it goes like this:. We rise again from ashes, from the good we've failed to do,. The song continues;.
vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com
Vaguely religious: Dhammapada verse 366
http://vaguelyreligious.blogspot.com/2006/03/dhammapada-verse-366.html
On Philosophy and religion. No, I dont pretend to be particularly learned of clever, but I do have things I sometimes want to say, and maybe this will help someone who reads it. A monk who does not despise what he has received, even though it be little, who is pure in livelihood and unremitting in effort, him even the gods praise. From "Dhammapada - a practical guide to right living" Sukhi Hotu Dhamma Publications). Imagine my surprise later in the day when I was making a cup of coffee and someone starte...