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Loin Girders

A passionate orthodox Christian man's occasional blog to support those who stand firm. Gird your loins, noble warriors for Christ.

Friday, April 22, 2011


Go to Dark Gethsemane

The Triduum, the three days of Jesus passion, are not "celebrated" by all churches. The Reformers threw some stuff out. The Resurrection Cross, without the crucified Christ is common in non-liturgical Christendom. I grew up with the dark cloaking of Lent. I remember vividly the nuns covering all the statuary in our parish with black. At All Saints, we started every school day in church. During Lenten preparations, second graders prepared for their first confession, practicing with a nun the words, "Bless me Father, for I have sinned." The sinfulness of man was on display in that we were educated to assume deep sorrow during Lent for the fact that our sins were responsible for Jesus' crucifixion and death. The dark draping included the altar, the nuns covered all stained glass windows, the music was somber, the tone was death. We attended Lenten prayers at the foot of the cloaked cross. We suffered with Him, we asked Him for forgiveness.

I attend a United Methodist church now. There are no statues to drape, no Christ on the cross, but there is a somber Maundy Thursday service bridge us from the Palm Sunday leccionary readings to Easter, giving a taste of the Passion along the way. When Mel Gibson's movie came out, we all saw it, Protestant and Catholic, Orthodox and Atheist. I know of no one who has seen it twice. It hurts us to feel responsible for His death; we look away. But the "sorrowful mysteries" include Dark Gethsemane. We must look.

But, the magical contrast between dark Gethsemane and Easter morning is not as deep. Let's remember to mourn our loss before we celebrate our salvation.


Sunday, April 03, 2011

G. K. Chesterton Rocks

Finding a 6'4" 300 lb genius is quite a find. Here is the man whose book The Everlasting Man was credited with C. S. Lewis conversion(I always knew there was more to it that a motorcycle ride).

I first bumped into Chesterton on an EWTN half hour show narrated and written by Dale Ahlquist dedicated to his thought. I was intrigued and have now read a few books and am fascinated. His personality and intellect now consume me. His contemporariness is startling. A year after Nietzche was published in England, Chesterton knew where it would lead in our time. Chesterton predicted modernism and post-modernism. He debated the best thinkers of his time and bested them all. He did this as a working journalist, writing thousands of newspaper columns, a series of mystery stories featuring a Catholic priest detective, novels, plays, poems (that rhyme) and the most engagingly packaged philosophy and apologetics ever written.

I read Orthodoxy first, considered to be his most complete philosophical work. I re-read it three times (it's short). I read The Man Who Was Thursday. I read a Father Brown mystery, then Eugenics and Other Evils, Dale Ahlquist's two books, and an essay by Ralph C. Wood entitled "The Permanent Validity of Christian Humanism". I've become a member of the Denver Chesterton Society and have a new library card for the Chesterton Reading Room of the Cardinal Stafford Library at St. John Vianney Seminary that houses it. In short, I'm nuts about Chesterton right now.

I just bought The Everlasting Man to read on our Barnes & Noble color Nook. Gotta go.

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