o{]:¬)

Fr. Z is Moderator of the Catholic Online Forum and the ASK FATHER Question Box. The WDTPRS columns appear weekly in The Wanderer. Fr. Z lives in Rome, though he is often in the USA. He is available for retreats and conferences. E-mail


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    24 January 2007

    Blow winds and crack your cheeks!

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 2:10 pm

    The wind is absolutely HOWLING against my corner room high above the City.

    Notata in: Rome, IY
    Elevatio: 331 ft / 101 m
    48 °F / 9 °C
    Procellae Tonitruales Pluviaque Leves
    Umor: 66%
    Frigus in quo Ros apparet: 37 °F / 3 °C
    Ventus: 20 mph / 32 km/h / 8.7 m/s from the Inter Austrum et Zephyrum
    Venti Impetus: 32 mph / 52 km/h / 14.4 m/s
    Pressio: 29.50 in / 999 hPa
    Frigus Venti: 41 °F / 5 °C
    Visibilitas: 6.2 milia passuum / 10.0 chiliometri
    UV: 2 de 16
    Nubes: Nubes Dispersae 1500 ft / 457 m
    Nubes Dispersae 1600 ft / 487 m

     

    Die Mercurii
    Pluvia. Partialiter Nubila. Maximum: 51° F. / 11° C. Ventus Magis Zephyrus quam Auster 38 mph. / 61 km/h. Chance of precipitation 60%.

    Nocte Diei Mercurii
    Fors Pluviae. Aequaliter Nubila. Minimum: 39° F. / 4° C. Ventus Magis Zephyrus quam Auster 33 mph. / 54 km/h. Chance of precipitation 50%.

    • • • • • •

    Don’t annoy Arinze

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 1:32 pm

    This is great about Cardinal Arinze.  With due respect to the titular Cardinal of my diocese…


    Biretta is tipped to Catholic Cartoon Blog.   o{]:¬)

    • • • • • •

    From Father’s desk

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 12:54 pm

    It has been a while since I give you my view of things.  When I am at work in the evening at my desk, I can turn my head and see this….


    • • • • • •

    “Put out into the deep”

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 11:33 am

    In today’s Gospel from Mark 4 we hear:

    On another occasion, Jesus began to teach by the sea. A very large crowd gathered around him so that he got into a boat on the sea and sat down. And the whole crowd was beside the sea on land. And he taught them at length in parables, ...

    Wherever the Lord went, there were heavy crowds pressing in on him. Imagine the moving sphere of chaos surrounding the Lord as people with illnesses or loved ones with afflictions called to Him, tried to touch him. His disciples no doubt did their best to clear the way and protect Him physically.

    Here they are now along the sea shore. The Lord gets into a boat. They let Him out a little way on a line. Many more can now see Him and hear what He has to say.

    This is a model for "online" instruction, how to use the modern means of communication.

    We must do what ever we can at all levels of the Church to make the best use possible of the means of communication. The Lord preached from heights so that He could be heard, as when He preached on the Mount. He enjoined His disciples to preach from roof tops. He preached from His Cross and on the height before His Ascension.

    The late Holy Father, in a 2002 letter wrote about the internet:

     

    For the Church the new world of cyberspace is a summons to the great adventure of using its potential to proclaim the Gospel message. This challenge is at the heart of what it means at the beginning of the millennium to follow the Lord’s command to "put out into the deep": Duc in altum! (Lk 5:4).

    In all the ages of the Church’s Christ-given mission to preach the Good News to all nations, Catholics have always made use of the very best means of social communication available. Jesus let Himself be set out from shore in a boat so that more people could hear Him. The Apostles wrote letters which were read aloud and recopied. When Constantine let the bishops use the imperial postal system, they so over-taxed it that it nearly collapsed. When we learned how to make thin and soaring walls of stone, stained-glass taught the literate and unlettered alike the mysteries of the faith in glittering colors. We made powerful use of the printing press. We had the first radio station. There was a Catholic film industry and Servant of God Fulton Sheen dominated the broadcast TV waves. A simple woman religious built satellite network with a global footprint.

    Now we have the internet.

    We Catholics must not leave the Internet in the hands of those who would violate human dignity. Instead, we can use these new tools positively in order to make Christ known and loved. We must work with determination to fulfill Christ’s command to teach and to make Him known and loved.

    I hail you internauts who have builts sites and pages, and you who read them and participate in them. We have created with the blogosphere a farflung yet tightly joined community sharing news and thoughts with the speed of a keystroke.

    In linking solidarity.

    • • • • • •

    Thanks for donations

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 9:52 am

    A couple more kind souls sent donations through the button on the left bar.  I am grateful.

    FYI: This last week I made a few tweaks to the blog so that it would load faster.  On the backend, however, there have been problems.  The server load has been running at close to 100% and there are occasional problems with the MySQL resulting in a WordPress error page occasionally when you bring up the blog.  I am told they are working on this… but I haven’t yet seen any evidence of their labor.   Say a prayer to the angel guardians of the geeks to urge them actually to do what they said they were doing.

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