| Core: noun, the most important part of a thing, the essence; from the Latin cor, meaning heart. |
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| Needless Commentary from Small-Town America |
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The Weblog at The View from the Core - Sunday, July 06, 2008
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To Set the World at Nought St. Thomas More was martyred this day, July 6, 1535. A godly meditation, written by Sir Thomas More Knight while he was prisoner in the Tower of London in the year of our Lord 1534.1 Give me Thy grace, good Lord, To set my mind fast3 upon Thee, To be content to be solitary; Little and little utterly to cast off the world, Not to long to hear of any worldly things, Gladly to be thinking of God, To lean unto the comfort of God, To know mine own vility8 and wretchedness, To bewail my sins passed; Gladly to bear my purgatory here; To walk the narrow way that leadeth to life, To have the last thing9 in remembrance, To make death no stranger to me, To pray for pardon before the judge come, For His benefits uncessantly11 to give Him thanks, To abstain from vain confabulations13 Recreations15 not necessary to cut off; To think my most18 enemies my best friends; These minds19 are more to be desired of every man 1. This heading is from the 1557 English Works, but the text of the prayer given here is taken directly from More's handwritten version in the margins of a book of hours he had with him in the Tower. St. Thomas More (1478-1535) The Tower Works: Devotional Writings (1980), ed. Garry E. Haupt, pp. 301ff. Lane Core Jr. CIW P Sun. 07/06/08 11:25:18 PM |
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Theocracy Coming? WaPo publishes Obama Addresses His Faith today: .... "In my own life, " he said, "it's been a journey that began decades ago on the South Side of Chicago, when, working as a community organizer, helping to build struggling neighborhoods, I let Jesus Christ into my life. I learned that my sins could be redeemed and that if I placed my trust in Christ, that he could set me on the path to eternal life when I submitted myself to his will and I dedicated myself to discovering his truth and carrying out his works." He suggested that he would apply the lessons of his faith to the problems he would face if he became president. "The challenges we face today war and poverty, joblessness and homelessness, violent streets and crumbling schools are not simply technical problems in search of a 10-point plan," he said. "They are moral problems, rooted in both societal indifference and individual callousness, in the imperfections of man. And so the values we believe in empathy and justice and responsibility to ourselves and our neighbors these cannot only be expressed in our churches and our synagogues, but in our policies and in our laws." .... Your Humble, Faithful Blogster suspects that one would look in vain for any condemnation from the Left of Obama's expressed views as a desire to convert the federal government into a theocracy though that's exactly what one would find, with voluminous vitriol, had such sentiments been uttered by a Republican. That Democratic politicians get a pass in the mainstream media for saying / doing exactly what Republicans would get trashed for having said / done is nothing new. But I will speculate on the reason(s). Sure, it might just be that a Democrat gets a pass just because he's a fellow Democrat. But might it also be either of the following? (1) Journalists assume that, when it comes to religion, a Democratic politician doesn't mean a word he says, and/or (2) they know that, no matter what he says about faith and religion, he would actually do absolutely nothing in office that would be out of line with secular collectivism. I think (1) and (2). Lane Core Jr. CIW P Sun. 07/06/08 11:00:56 PM |
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