Since the beginning of this blog in 2007 there has been a veiled and sometimes a non-veiled annoyance at some religious pious publications.
Broadcaster Gay Byrne once wisely said, one always has the choice to turn off the dial - as it was in those days - if you don't like what you are hearing.
But reading the summer edition of a pious pamphlet it is difficult not to make a critical comment.
The opening sentence runs: "The summer months of June July and August slow down the pace of life for all of us."
Does a Dublin bus driver take it easy for June, July and August? Does a doctor, a plumber, a shop assistant, sign off for three months?
And then later in that same piece one reads: "As we plan to step back from our daily pace and spend time with our families and friends, the Blessed Virgin too beacons (sic) us to come close to her in order to unite us to the family of the Lord through the mysteries of her Divine Sons (sic) life"
Elsewhere: "Mary is the soil where once the seed of imperishable life was sown, may she make our hearts this summer a fitting place that the mystery of her Divine Son may penetrate us deeply and that his life may spring forth in us as it (sic) shown forth in her."
Not too sure what the Dublin bus driver, a doctor, a plumber, a shop assistant would make of this, that is, if they had time off to read it.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Featured Post
A religion that forgets and ingnores the poor is doomed
Any religion that professes to be concerned about the souls of people and is not concerned about the slums that damn them, the economic cond...
-
Dominican priest Leo Donovan died in Kiltipper Woods Care Centre, Tallaght on Saturday morning, February 17. Leo had been over two years in ...
-
Seósamh Laurence Collins died in Tallaght University Hospital in the early hours of Monday morning, January 22. Larry, as he was known in t...
-
John O’Rourke was born in Newry on November 14, 1939. He joined the Dominican Order in September 1958 and was ordained a priest in July 1965...
2 comments:
I was a briefly a reader for Veritas. When I suggested (1960s) that they lay off the holy panegyrics and deal with some of the issues of the day (eg Vatican II) they dropped me like a hot cake.
If I want to read fantasy, I love a good novel myself.
Post a Comment