I promise I will put up a post soon. I'm quite overwhelmed by this move. I did take a drive this morning down to Pemaquid Point to see the lighthouse. Of course, this was after I went to the hardware store for some much needed cleaning supplies.
Update: for those who want to see what the light house looks like here's a link.
"Laws alone can not secure freedom of expression; in order that every man present his views without penalty there must be spirit of tolerance in the entire population."
When I was ordained in 2000, my son joked "my mother is a father." So the name. I worked as a scientist for over 30 years, first in Boston, then LA, San Francisco area, Denver, D.C, Vienna and back to San Fran. Good training for an interim who has served in Eastern Michigan, Wyoming, California and now Maine.
Isabelle, the little white dog, better known as Izzie has her own blog now.
Rob Voyle has been instrumental in my work as an interim. I highly recommend Appreciative Inquiry as a way of looking at life in a parish, or for life in general.
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Science and Religion
"Yet its [science] enthralling account is not sufficient by itself to quench our thirst for understanding, for science describes only one dimension of the many-layered reality within which we live, restricting itself to the impersonal and general, and bracketing out the personal and unique." In the preface to "Exploring Reality: The Intertwining of Science and Religion" by John Polkinghorne
Icon of Our Lady of Vladimir
wrote this icon under the direction of Alekandr Kharon. It sits in the Lady Chapel of All Saints, San Francisco
New things happen in regimes that we have learned to identify as being 'at the edge of chaos.' Too far on the orderly side of that frontier and things are too rigid for there to be more than a shuffling rearrangement of already existing entities. Too far on the disorderly side and things are too haphazard for any novelties to persist.
John Polkinghorne, Exploring Reality: The Intertwining of Science and Religion.
Trinity
wrote this also under the direction of Aleksandr Kharon. Given to Bp. William Swing, California at his last visit to All Saints'
5 comments:
From a guy who, every time he sees a moving truck prays, "Thank you, God, that it's not my moving day," you have complete dispensation.
Thank you Rick. How many days off purgatory is that.
Maybe it´s time for a nap? There is a wonderful commentary here:
http://kirkepiscatoid.blogspot.com/2009/07/sacrament-of-nap.html
Nice, the Lighthouse visit.
Happy everything as *move* along!
LR Thanks for the link. I do believe in naps. Thank you so much for reminding me. I haven't been doing much napping the last week or so.
Amelia, don't worry; be happy. (Ducks and runs)
Take your time, love. The lighthouse is a beauty.
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