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Showing posts from October, 2014

Thirtieth Sunday in Ordinary Time – 26 October 2014

Shared Homily Starter First Reading: Exodus 22.21-27 Second Reading: 1 Thessalonians 1.5c-10 Gospel: Matthew 22.34-40 Today's Gospel sums up the Exodus chapters on the Law, which include today's reading. In the First Reading, the author of Exodus presents just a few ways we show love for our neighbour. If I were to contemporize the first two, it would go something like this. You shall not exploit, oppress or make life difficult for immigrants and refugees. Remember you or your ancestors were also once strangers to this land. You shall not refuse the necessities of life to anyone. Everyone should have security when it comes to their sustenance and health, especially single mothers, children, the disabled and the elderly. Unfortunately the truth is, we, the ordinary folks of the world, are witnesses of oppression on a global scale. This mega-oppression operates as a pervasive erosion that

Help me reduce the retail price

To reduce the retail price, I'm aiming to buy 20 copies. The list below shows how the number of copies and price per copy that I buy reduce the retail price. 1 € = $1.5 CAD. I buy at least 3 copies: 46.67 €/copy (retail price 54.90 €) I buy at least 5 copies: 38.17 €/copy (retail price 44.90 €) I buy at least 20 copies: 34.77 €/copy (retail price 40.90 €) I buy at least 50 copies: 32.22 €/copy (retail price 37.90 €) I buy at least 200 copies: 25.42 €/copy (retail price 29.90 €) I buy at least 500 copies: 22.87 €/copy (retail price 26.90 €) I buy at least 1000 copies: 16.92 €/copy (retail price 19.90 €) If you would like to help, please click here   thank you.

12 October 2014 - Thanksgiving Weekend

Twenty-Eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time First Reading Isaiah 25.6-10a Second Reading Philippians 4.12-14, 19-20 Gospel Reading Matthew 22.1-14   Sometimes in our dedication to being good Christians, we forget that Jesus was a Jew. We forget that much of what Jesus says in the New Testament is an expansion of themes found in the Hebrew Scriptures, especially the Prophets. We also forget that Paul's writing comes from a man grounded in the Torah and the Prophets. One of the central themes found in the Hebrew Scriptures is justice. Jesus' parable in today's Gospel can be viewed as a prequel of sorts to today's passage from Isaiah, in which the Prophet tells us of the feast God will prepare. But our God is not content just to feed our stomachs and relieve our thirst, God is going to soothe the hurts we have received. God “will wipe away the tears from all faces” and take away the disgrace