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How to Truly "Be Different"
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How to Truly "Be Different" https://crisismagazine.com/opinion/how-to-truly-be-different?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=novashare via @CrisisMag
Dear brothers and sisters! The theme I have chosen for this year’s World Mission Day is taken from the Gospel parable of the wedding banquet (cf. Mt 22:1-14). After the guests refused his invitation, the king, the main character in the story, tells his servants: “Go therefore to the thoroughfares, and invite to the marriage feast as many as you find” (v. 9). Reflecting on this key passage in the context of the parable and of Jesus’ own life, we can discern several important aspects of evangelization. These appear particularly timely for all of us, as missionary disciples of Christ, during this final stage of the synodal journey that, in the words of its motto, “Communion, Participation, Mission”, seeks to refocus the Church on her primary task, which is the preaching of the Gospel in today’s world. 1. “Go and invite!” Mission as a tireless going out to invite others to the Lord’s banquet In the king’s command to his servants we find two words that express the heart of the mission: th
An English Dominican friar and an Italian nun will be the preachers for the October Synod - ZENIT - English : These individuals will be preaching for the first time in the history of synods (from Paul VI to Francis) during a retreat prior to the start of the one in October 2023. Although participants are not obliged to attend, they have been strongly encouraged to do so.
We used to call them hermaphrodites https://www.nature.com/articles/gim200711 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obando_Fertility_Rites Images of the three saints above the altar of Obando Church : Our Lady of Salambáo is in the centre, flanked by St Paschal to her right and St Clare to her left. The fertility rites were initially done in honour of the anito Diyan Masalanta, the Tagalog goddess of love, Lakapati, the Tagalog fertility deity, and Bathala , the supreme deity of the Tagalog people . The rites were performed within the vicinity of a dambana . When the Spanish arrived, they forcibly converted the natives to Roman Catholicism and changed their religious beliefs regarding the fertility rites. [2] Festivities [ edit ] The rites are observed in a triduum : 17 May for St. Paschal Baylon, 18 May for St. Clare of Assisi, and 19 May for Our Lady of Salambáo. Each of the three days usually begins with a morning Mass said by the parish priest. A procession , held immediately
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