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A Stowaway in the Kitchen Crawl Space…


A guy in New York discovers that food is taken every night from his kitchen. He confronts his girlfriend who lives with him and she denies she has anything to do with it. So he installs a camera to find out what’s going on

Who would have thought a stowaway would live in the crawl space of his kitchen?

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December 8 – The Immaculate Conception of Our Lady


immaculate-conception During Advent, everything is dialling back: there are no flowers in our churches, the gloria is omitted during Mass and the colour is purple. The church is preparing for Christ’s coming with Christmas. We sing “Veni, Veni, Immanuel” and the “Rorate Caeli” only during this season. But on Dec. 8 the colour gets bright, the church flares up: it is the Solemnity of The Immaculate Conception. There’s a reason that this Solemnity is on the calendar at the beginning of Advent. It helps us to understand the coming of Christ better. It really helps preparing for Christmas.
A lot of Catholics think, because we are preparing for Christ’s birth, this feast is referring to the Immaculate Conception of Jesus, when the virgin Mary became pregnant of the Holy Spirit. This is not the case. We celebrate the Immaculate Conception of Christ’s mother, the Virgin Mary, also called in the Bible the second Eve. From Catholics to Protestants the general agreement is that Genesis 3:15 refers to the Blessed Virgin giving birth to the one who would crush the snake’s head.

The LORD God said to the serpent, “Because you have done this, cursed are you above all cattle, and above all wild animals; upon your belly you shall go, and dust you shall eat all the days of your life. I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your seed and her seed; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel.”

(Genesis 3, 14-15)

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Saint Nicholas Arrives in Holland… Political Corectness Gone Overboard


sinterklaas-amsterdam-2009 The Dutch have a long tradition when it comes to Saint Nicholas, whose feast day they celebrate today. Even after most Dutch abandoned the Catholic tradition in earlier ages and more recently Christian symbols and culture as a whole, St. Nicholas remains. It’s not done to decorate your shop window in the Netherlands before St. Nicholas left the country and Santa Clause is frowned upon, despite the fact Santa’s history reveals he is the same person as St. Nicholas. The Dutch want St. Nicholas and want to celebrate St. Nicholas’ Eve on Dec. 5th. They also don’t want to have anything to do with Christianity in general and Catholicism in particular. They are so proud they are open to other traditions, and therefore St. Nicholas needs to be “culture neutral”. Which means in the eyes of some enlightened souls that the cross on his mitre needs to be replaced by something neutral. And so they did.

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Sinterklaas 2009: Mijtergate


[SinglePic not found]Ik heb niet echt een “echte” Nederlandse opvoeding genoten en ik kan me ook niet herinneren dat ik me als kind druk gemaakt heb om sinterklaas. In ons atheïstische gezin werd er snel chocolademelk gedronken, koekjes naar binnen gewerkt, cadeaus geopend en daarmee speelde je dan. Het ging om de cadeaus, het gedoe met die oude man in die rare kleren voor lief nemend. Dat zal wel niet doorsnee-Nederlands geweest zijn, maar het is hoe ik sinterklaas altijd ervaren heb. De dag na Sinterklaasavond ging je naar school en iedereen schepte tegen elkaar op wat hij of zij gekregen had. Ik snap de hele heisa rondom sinterklaas ook niet zo goed. Nederland is een van de meest geseculariseerde landen in Europa, maar iedereen vindt Sinterklaas ‘typisch hollands’. Terwijl het van oorsprong een katholiek feest is en tenzij je blind bent is dat ook goed te zien als Sinterklaas ten tonele verschijnt: oude man met baard en bril verkleed als bisschop met staf en mijter.

En dan heb je ook nog zwarte piet. Mijn opa vertelde dat er altijd maar één zwarte piet was toen hij klein was, waar iedereen bang voor was, want hij liep rond met een roede waar hij soms ook kinderen mee belaagde. Na de Tweede Wereldoorlog waren er opeens heel veel zwarte pieten, alleen maar omdat geallieerde soldaten het leuk vonden om verkleed als zwarte piet de lokale bevolking te vermaken. Een paar jaar geleden bedachten een aantal mensen dat zwarte pieten discriminerend waren, terwijl Zwarte Piet van oorsprong een geketende duivel uit de hel was, een slaaf van sinterklaas, dat had helemaal niets met donkere mensen te maken. Maar in het tijdperk van politieke correctheid zouden mensen zomaar opeens beledigd kunnen worden door het bestaan van zwarte pieten. Dus kwamen er ook opeens rode pieten, blauwe pieten, groene pieten, paarse pieten, je kon het zo gek niet bedenken. Het was een grote nederlaag voor de verlichte geesten die dit bedacht hadden om te zien dat kinderen, nog in hun naïviteit niet aangetast door het fenomeen politieke correctheid, niets van dit alles moesten hebben. Veel eer valt er dus niet te behalen bij zwarte piet als je “waarde-neutraliteit”, “tolerantie”, “multiculturele samenleving” hoog in het vaandel hebt staan. Dus wat doe je dan? Je zoekt een nieuw slachtoffer.

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Inventing Advent Traditions


Advent Candles 22Time flies, it sounds corny but it’s true! Last year I experienced Advent for the first time as a “real” Catholic. And because I didn’t give the topic much thought I didn’t really do anything special during Advent. I wanted to read Spe Salvi, but somehow never got around doing it. The encyclical still sits on my book shelf. And to my great dismay I discover that the last year flew by and now it’s Advent again. And again I don’t have a plan. I wanted to buy an Advent candle, but I don’t know where to buy it and I forgot about it later. I also wanted to make an Advent wreath, but found it too expensive to make. I went to the store to see how much an Advent Star would cost, but again, it was outside my budget.

I wasn’t raised with Christianity, so the whole idea of Advent was alien for me until a few years ago. In the Presbyterian Church they didn’t really do anything special during Advent in the first few years, later on I noticed how they were copying some symbols from the mainstream Protestant Church, like introducing ‘Advent colored’ flower pieces. The reason why it was purple? Because it was the color of Advent, but the symbolic meaning of purple was lost in translation, so to say. I felt like they were copying outward symbols, but had no idea what the meaning behind it was. I only discovered the true meaning of Advent when I discovered how Catholics and Lutherans celebrated Advent. It was a time of penance, I discovered.

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Well Said…


I just read this on Plurk, posted by Debi:

Don’t let your worries get the best of you; remember, Moses started out as a basket case.

:nuncool:

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Audio van de lezing van Paul van Geest online!


[SinglePic not found]Bij deze post vind je de geluidsopname van de lezing door Prof. Paul van Geest over het leven van de heilige Augustinus. Helaas zat ik niet dicht genoeg bij de spreker, waardoor het geluid niet de kwaliteit heeft die je van ons gewend bent. Excuses daarvoor!

De links die ik noemde aan het einde zijn:

Hyves: rkstudentengroningen.hyves.net
Twitter: twitter.com/gustiparochie
Facebook: St. Augustinusparochie groep
Website: rkstudentengroningen.nl

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Where Food Meets Faith


catholicfoodie Most of you who read this blog frequently know I went to the United States last summer. Now towards the end of the year it’s still hard to grasp I really went there. I hardly can’t believe it. It was a dream come true, because one of the things I always wanted to do was visit the United States to see how it is like. During my stay, which was made possible by the great people over at SQPN, I attended SQPN’s Catholic New Media Conference, where I made a lot of new friends. One of those friends I met was Jeff Young, who started to podcast not too long ago. Over at SQPN they refer to him as the “Catholic Foodie”, because there are a number of Jeffs around already. So who is Jeff Young, and what makes him tick? I interviewed him in honour of October being the Catholic Speaker Month over at Fallible Blogma.

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Comic Relief


I know this isn’t supposed to be a picture blog, but I saw this one posted on Facebook, I think it was by Scott Bilik a few days ago, and I just HAD to repost it here:

kidsinafrica

I used to hate it when my mom would bring up the ‘think about the children in Africa’ thing. :-?

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Grover is geweldig


Nog eentje, om het af te leren, wederom doorgestuurd door Deborah. Ik vind ‘m geweldig, omdat ik ook zo’n hekel heb aan Dr. Phil op TV (om nog maar van al die ‘klonen’ te zwijgen). Deborah en ik hebben beide psychologie gestudeerd, dus ik weet precies wat ze bedoelt als ze het over ‘populaire psychologie’ heeft (je weet wel, die troep die ze in de huis-tuin-en-keuken-boekhouder onder de noemer ‘psychologie’ verkopen). Als boekverbrandingen weer mogen, dan ben ik ervoor om die hele afdeling erop te mikken!

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