Holy Saturday #2
Part #1: Holy Saturday Since last week’s initial exploration of Holy Saturday, I have been trying to figure out where to go next. It is not so much that I do not know what
Part #1: Holy Saturday Since last week’s initial exploration of Holy Saturday, I have been trying to figure out where to go next. It is not so much that I do not know what
Part #2: Holy Saturday • The last week has been, once again, difficult – to say the least … • The last week has been, once again, joyful – to say the
Be ...Image: Thor We’re always doing. Schedules and phone calls, meeting and gatherings. The constant ebb and flow of a world hard-wired, digitised, centralised and sanitised leaves little time to be. To
Only the chaste may enterImage: Simon Harrod In my pastoral experience of walking with others – through the traumas and hurts that do occur on life’s journey – words stereotype, pigeon-hole, typecast,
Mercy It’s funny how we anticipate that rising dawn sun 2000-and-change-years later: an event/time/story/experience that Christians call Easter. This Lent – the season before Easter – has been a difficult, sad and weary making
It's a Trap Image: Newtown grafitti We live in a phenomenally vibrant, exciting, and emergent time in which change, technology and uncertainty dance an intimate movement. And this party shows no choreographed pattern of
Okay, before you starting scratching your head about the focus for this week’s blog, yes I know we are in the Easter Season and we have moved on from Lent. In other words, I’m not
Solidarity Mural Photo: Terrence Faircloth 2006 Living and striving to change the world is no easy thing. Living and striving for the Kingdom can be humbling, frustrating, tear making and – let’s
St. Ignatius Loyola Plate 4 I have to admit that I have been avoiding writing this blog for a long time. I’m not sure if this is a one-time exploration for this
The Lenten journey is long … it can be challenging. We get tripped sometimes, we see things we’ve done, been part of and – truth be told – we would rather not look into the mirror, as we might really see ourselves. Fear of what we might find can be daunting, paralysing and most certainly fear making.