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  1. coastalwanderer

    "debts" or "sins" in the Lord's Prayer

    For what it's worth - and I have no idea as the background to why the different choices were made, but the (Presbyterian) Church of Scotland has tended to use the words "debts" and "debtors" in its favoured translation of the Lord's Prayer.
  2. coastalwanderer

    UK Profile: The Women of Opus Dei

    Well, if physical addresses are what you're after, Opus Dei in the UK seem to make no secret whatsoever of where they can be contacted and found Look here, for example: Opus Dei - OPUS DEI IN BRITAIN - Centres in Britain It's also absolutely no secret that they also run one parish in London...
  3. coastalwanderer

    Fascinating Overview of UK Catholicism

    Not quite... In 1936 King Edward VIII abdicated because he wished to marry a divorcée - which was regarded as scandalous at the time. Which seems odd, given how the Church of England came into being... Maybe what you have in mind are cases (which have happened more recently) where people have...
  4. coastalwanderer

    Fascinating Overview of UK Catholicism

    As a British (indeed London - not that I live there presently) Catholic - yep, that seems like a fair and reasonably accurate portrayal from a publication not noted as being particularly friendly towards the Church. I had to sn-igg-er at the "Salvation by tweed alone" bit, but, well, I know what...
  5. coastalwanderer

    a great article about challenges facing Catholics today

    Wow, many thanks for highlighting that, Monica! That's good indeed! (A great pity it is, in many ways, that the author has just very recently retired as Bishop of Lancaster)
  6. coastalwanderer

    Top Ten Most Stunning Roman Catholic Basilicas

    If this list List of basilicas in Italy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia is to be believed (and given the number of basilice in Italy, I'd be surprised if it weren't), the Duomo at Florence is indeed a basilica. From my travels (in beloved Italy and elsewhere, erm, but mostly in beloved...
  7. coastalwanderer

    Simple Questions about RCIA program for adults.

    3 years? I could kind of understand that (theoretically at least) if the idea was that that way would you get through the entire cycle A-B-C of bible readings at Sunday masses. I have come across two churches that make the process take two entire years: one is the French cathedral bang in the...
  8. coastalwanderer

    Simple Questions about RCIA program for adults.

    Thanks, BAFRIEND, that's more helpful than you know. I am intending to start RCIA in the autumn; part of the (ridiculously lengthy) delay has been because of past parish-shopping, both when I lived in London and now where I live by the sea. Where I moved 18 months ago I seem to have really got...
  9. coastalwanderer

    Sin

    You don't sound as though you are being selfish at all (as opposed to, perhaps, more isolated or questioningly introspective than is healthy). And it is far better to work through these issues, to find a resolution to them, even if it takes time, even if it takes a long time, as with St...
  10. coastalwanderer

    "The Ghost of Identity"

    THE GHOST OF IDENTITY Something I just read ....I think it's a minor work of genius and there may be some stuff that might be of interest to some people here. It's a very personal kind-of biographical sort of text, of coming to adulthood, the story of one English man, who long aspired to become...
  11. coastalwanderer

    The Roman Catechism

    TAN Press publish a lot of good ,orthodox, and/or otherwise hard to find, or long out-of-print stuff. (For someone trying to track down a lot of Belloc's works, they should be a first port of call, among other things) My only gripe with them (and I speak as someone who works in a publishing...
  12. coastalwanderer

    St Patrick's Purgatory

    (very much a north of ireland thing) THREE DAY PILGRIMAGE - Lough Derg Has anyone here ever undertaken anything like this? (This specific pilgrimage is also the topic of a series of poems, "Station Island", by Seamus Heaney) (An intense 3-day pilgrimage, fasting eating only bread & salted...
  13. coastalwanderer

    Anyone know a good wine to pair with lamb?

    Can't go wrong with a Beaujolais I'd have thought. A Beaujolais Villages, perhaps; fairly light and "thin" in texture as reds go (so as not to overwhelm the relatively subtle tastes of lamb), but a little more substantial (and less acidic/"vinegary") than a Beaujolais Nouveau
  14. coastalwanderer

    Soviet 5 Day Week

    One thing of note: It is a little bit odd that a calendar intended for Russian workers in the old Soviet Union, complete with blank lines for name, number, and shift, is shown here in English. :) That might point to it being a forgery. Of course, it could just as easily be a reproduction in...
  15. coastalwanderer

    Has anyone here every been to Medjugorje?

    Hmm..If time permits I'll try to answer more fully later. I went there in the summer of 2004, not exactly as a pilgrim (I have long been kind of wary of quite a few things, shall we say, to be brief, of this world, that appear to me to be associated with the Medjugorje phenomena), but as part...
  16. coastalwanderer

    Condoms and the Pope: The Facts

    Well, I certainly agree that the ABC programme has been rather successful where it has been implemented, such as Uganda. And I agree with you that "no responsible professional advocates condoms as the exclusive or even the best protection against AIDS". And the ABC programme is certainly...
  17. coastalwanderer

    A Language They'll Understand

    How is calling a regime or mindset that supports ready access to abortion or euthanasia "anti-life" either inflammatory or untrue? One SHOULD call things by their name; and not hide under misleading or euphemistic verbiage
  18. coastalwanderer

    "Why does anyone who is not Catholic even care?"

    Oh, that's true enough. I think things need to be more bottom-up than top-down. Which does kind of encourage some kind of active expression of opinions/participation in the moral economy (which, to return to the OP, is, I suppose kind of what these critics are kind of doing). In theory, at...
  19. coastalwanderer

    "Why does anyone who is not Catholic even care?"

    Well, *influence* (and authority; and moral authority above all) is something distinct from formal mechanisms of power. Maybe I am too prone to mysticism but I think non-formal channels are every bit as important as formally organized, societal structures.
  20. coastalwanderer

    "Why does anyone who is not Catholic even care?"

    Ooh, I think you're in danger of falling into moral relativism or (gasp) situational ethics and even heading along the road to perdition. I know the way I've said that sounds a bit overdramatic, but I do mean it. Seriously. Oh dear. [/finger-pointing] I mean, I can understand the appeal (and...