Calvinists are swarming over on Free Republic

January 6, 2010 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog


Things are getting a little fidgety over in Calvinland, at least within the Sovereign Calvinist embassy to Free Republic. The Great Reformed Ping List is underway again, complete with some obligatory tub-thumping and chest-beating about their enemies’ “anthropomorphic rantings” and how their solas are being “mightily assailed,” etc., etc.

It’s kind of fun to watch (bad Latin grammar and all), but still, it’s sad to see good people become so hopelessly entangled in the errors of the Calvinist religious system (some of which are quite ably refuted here, here, and here).


Exurge, Calvinisti, et judica causam tuam…

Arise (some older mss still read ‘Swarm‘), O Calvinists, and plead your cause. The doctrines of grace are mightily assailed by those who would proclaim with their father, “I will be like the Most High.” Set forth the biblical case for a sovereign God who is jealous for His glory. Disallow through disputation (and lampooning when needed) the damnable errors of those who have refashioned the great sola doctrines into a salvation-helper gospel that exalts the fallen will of man.

From every corner, in every thread exalt the right of God to do whatsoever He pleaseth. Be not dismayed by persistent anthropocentric rantings. Blessed are you when they revile you for the sake of the truth. Happy are ye when the Servetus card is played and the strawmen are paraded before you for He who is enthroned in heaven reigns.




Google is for Dhimmies

January 6, 2010 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

Robert Spencer from Jihad Watch shows how Google automatically offers viciously derrogatory search suggestions on phrases such as “Christianity is” (I also found it does the same for searches on “Catholicism is,” “Pope Benedict is,” and “the pope is”), but it does not do the same when someone searches “Islam is.” In fact, as Robert points out, type in “Islam is” and Google suggests . . . nothing at all.


Draw your own conclusions.

If horses ran the world . . .

January 6, 2010 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog


“You’re late for work again, Smith. Mr. Ed wants to see you in his office immediately!”

Okay, as long as we're in the mood for some Shatner, feast on this

January 6, 2010 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

Daddy-O William Shatner's Beatnik Interpretation of Sarah Palin

January 5, 2010 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

Radical Feminist Theologian Mary Daly Dead at 81

January 4, 2010 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog



This just in from The National Catholic Reporter:

Feminist theologian Mary Daly died Jan. 3. She was a radical feminist philosopher, academic, and theologian who taught at Boston College for 33 years. Daly consented to retire from Boston College in 1999, after violating university policy by refusing to allow male students in her Women’s Studies classroom.

May the good Lord have mercy on her soul. Let’s all remember her in our prayers. Many of you know about her and her legacy. For those who do not, you can read more about her here and here.


I note without further comment that, at her particular judgment, she was judged by a Man.


The Time of Your Life

January 4, 2010 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

One heartbeat at a time . . . moment by moment . . . inexorably . . . imperceptibly . . . you are moving toward that final moment which God has appointed for you when the last grain of sand will fall through the hourglass of of your life.
Will you be ready when that moment arrives?

“Take heed, watch; for you do not know when the time will come” (Mark 13:13).



Tempus fugit. Memento mori.

Will The Next War Be Fought Over Water?

January 4, 2010 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog


I am a Southern California native, born and raised. When we were in our mid 30s, my wife and I moved our family to the beautiful countryside of Central Ohio, and the very first thing we had to adjust to — not the weather or the fact that there are no mountains — was how green everything is here: lawns, plants & bushes, trees, everything. And, at least where we live, no one I know of has a sprinkler system to keep his lawn emerald green. Mother nature handles that chore quite well enough, at least She does here in Ohio.


But not so in Southern California, where there is simply no such thing as a green, living plant or lawn without a sprinkler system or a garden hose keeping it that way. You want something to grow? You gotta water it regularly. If you don’t, your lawn will quickly develop the rich yellow-brown hue of terminal desiccation. Some, like folks on fixed incomes in retirement communities, dispense with the cost and effort of watering altogether and just put in a rock yard. No fuss, no muss, and no water required. (It saves money, and water, but try playing a round of golf on an 18-hole rock lawn.)

The reason water is such a big deal in Southern California is the opposite of why it’s no big deal here in Ohio. There’s plenty of H2O here in the Buckeye State, plenty of rain, plenty of snow, plenty of water everywhere you go. But Los Angeles? Orange County? Riverside? San Diego? They sit in an arid zone and most all the water consumed there must be brought in from out of the area. It costs big bucks to keep Southern California properly supplied with water, and with upwards of 23 million inhabitants there (about twice the number of people in a region roughly the size of Ohio), can be difficult as well as costly.


What would happen to all those people, one wonders, if for some reason they ran out of water?

The following article on the leftward-tilting NPR website considers that very possibility and raises some disturbing possibilities, wars over water included.

While I’m fairly certain that California will never go to war with Ohio in order to acquire water, even so, California will have a dire problem on its hands (even by California standards of dire problems) if, someday, the well runs dry.

“The lesson of history is that in the tumultuous adjustment that surely lies ahead, those societies that find the most innovative responses to the crisis are most likely to come out as winners, while the others will fall behind. Civilization will be shaped as well by water’s inextricable, deep interdependencies with energy, food, and climate change. More broadly, the freshwater crisis is an early proxy of the twenty-first century’s ultimate challenge of learning how to manage our crowded planet’s resources in both an economically viable and an environmentally sustainable manner. By grasping the lessons of water’s pivotal role on our destiny, we will be better prepared to cope with the crisis about to engulf us all. . . . (continue reading)

Related: “Three Reasons That Violence Could Erupt” over water.

Strange Buildings of the World. Surprisingly, No Modern Catholic Cathedrals Made the List

January 3, 2010 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog

Most of these edifices are pretty weird. Some are aggressively, stupidly weird. A couple (# 6, for example) are actually rather appealing. And some are reminiscent of certain modern cathedrals that have been inflicted on us built in recent years.

What do you think?



Let St. Philip Neri Help You Start the New Year Off Right

January 3, 2010 by  
Filed under Patrick's Blog



If you’re looking to deepen your love for God, our Lady and the saints, and your neighbor, this series of admonitions and counsels from the great St. Philip Neri, arranged by month, can help. In addition to your regular reading of Sacred Scripture and other daily devotions, such as praying the rosary, ingesting these spiritual one-a-day vitamins can give your interior life a real boost.


JANUARY:

1. WELL! when shall we have a mind to begin to do good?

2. Nulla dies sine linea: Do not let a day pass without doing some good during it.

3. We must not be behind time in doing good; for death will not be behind his time.

4. Happy is the youth, because he has time before him to do good.

5. It is well to choose some one good devotion, and to stick to it, and never to abandon it.

6. He who wishes for anything but Christ, does not know what he wishes; he who asks for anything but Christ, does not know what he is asking; he who works, and not for Christ, does not know what he is doing.

7. Let no one wear a mask, otherwise he will do ill; and if he has one, let him burn it.

8. Spiritual persons ought to be equally ready to experience sweetness and consolation in the things of God, or to suffer and keep their ground in drynesses of spirit and devotion, and for as long as God pleases, without their making any complaint about it.

9. God has no need of men.

10. If God be with us, there is no one else left to fear.

11. He who wishes to be perfectly obeyed, should give but few orders.

12. A man should keep himself down, and not busy himself in mirabilibus super se.

13. Men should often renew their good resolutions, and not lose heart because they are tempted against them.

14. The name of Jesus, pronounced with reverence and affection, has a kind of power to soften the heart.

15. Obedience
is a short cut to perfection.

16. They who really wish to advance in the ways of God, must give themselves up into the hands of their superiors always and in everything; and they who are not living under obedience must subject themselves of their own accord to a learned and discreet confessor, whom they must obey in the place of God, disclosing to him with perfect freedom and simplicity the affairs of their soul, and they should never come to any resolution without his advice.

17. There is nothing which gives greater security to our actions, or more effectually cuts the snares the devil lays for us, than to follow another person’s will, rather than our own, in doing good.

18. Before a man chooses his confessor, he ought to think well about it, and pray about it also; but when he has once chosen, he ought not to change, except for most urgent reasons, but put the utmost confidence in his director.

19. When the devil has failed in making a man fall, he puts forward all his energies to create distrust between the penitent and the confessor, and so by little and little he gains his end at last.

20. Let persons in the world sanctify themselves in their own houses, for neither the court, professions, or labour, are any hindrance to the service of God.

21. Obedience is the true holocaust which we sacrifice to God on the altar of our hearts.

22. In order to be really obedient, it is not enough to do what obedience commands, we must do it without reasoning upon it.

23. Our Blessed Lady ought to be our love and our consolation.

24. The good works which we do of our own will, are not so meritorious as those that are done under obedience.

25. The most beautiful prayer we can make, is to say to God, “As Thou knowest and willest, O Lord, so do with me.”

26. When tribulations, infirmities, and contradictions come, we must not run away in a fright, but vanquish them like men.

27. It is not enough to see that God wishes the good we aim at, but that He wishes it through our instrumentality, in our manner and in our time; and we come to discern all this by true obedience.

28. In order to be perfect, we must not only obey and honour our superiors; we must honour our equals and inferiors also.

29. In dealing with our neighbour, we must assume as much pleasantness of manner as we can, and by this affability win him to the way of virtue.

30. A man who leads a common life under obedience, is more to be esteemed than one who does great penance after his own will.

31. To mortify one passion, no matter how small, is a greater help in the spiritual life than many abstinences, fasts, and disciplines.

Go here for St. Philip Neri’s advice for the rest of the year . . .

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