Blog round-up, part two

  • Late fall viewSnow? What snow? It’s a late-late fall fake-out. Today it’s in the 50′s, but the sun is out and the sky is postcard-blue. We’re all sup­posed to believe that this is win­ter, and then scream like fright­ened chil­dren when the real thing hits. Yep, been there.

    Well, it’s too pretty of a day to stay inside for too long, even with the cold still keep­ing me down, so I’ll hit the blo­gos­phere again and then find some rea­son to go on dri­ve­about. (Why yes, my hus­band is out of town so there’s no one to enforce work ethics on me. How did you guess?) There’s all kinds of fun to be had in the Ortho-blogosphere:

    • Oh shoot. I might have to read Ann Rice’s new book, though as I said here, I didn’t think I would. (Thanks to Orthodixie for point­ing that out. And for cor­rect­ing the name in the blogroll, even though I never noticed the mis­take either. :-) )
    • I get caught up in Erica’s adven­tures as an Ortho­dox cat­e­chu­men attend­ing BIOLA. I don’t have the oppor­tu­nity to find out what the Protes­tant state of mind is these days, but this exper­i­ment with com­par­a­tive reli­gion is painful to read. It sounds like a germ of a good idea that just got bogged down with polit­i­cal cor­rect­ness long before any­body could actu­ally learn any­thing from it. But then, it’s a very dif­fi­cult thing to try to be civil about. The fact is, Islam and Chris­tian­ity are in oppo­si­tion to each other. They can’t both be true, and fun­da­men­tal­ists on both sides think the mat­ter is too impor­tant to just drop it in the inter­ests of har­mony or ecu­meni­cal­ism. And as Erica points out, the Protes­tants don’t make major points by “for­giv­ing” the Mus­lims when they don’t know what they’re for­giv­ing. Read up on the hagiogra­phies of new mar­tyrs from Greece, Turkey and other Muslim-dominated coun­tries — THEN for­give. (I couldn’t link to OCA’s pages of new mar­tyrs’ hagiogra­phies — but if you go here and enter “new mar­tyr” into the search field, it comes up with pages of them.)
    • Fr. John’s tran­scrip­tion of this speech by Churchill is timely and thought-provoking.

      Dur­ing the first four years of the last war the Allies expe­ri­enced noth­ing but dis­as­ter and dis­ap­point­ment. That was our con­stant fear: one blow after another, ter­ri­ble losses, fright­ful dan­gers. Every­thing mis­car­ried. And yet at the end of those four years the morale of the Allies was higher than that of the Ger­mans, who had moved from one aggres­sive tri­umph to another, and who stood every­where tri­umphant invaders of the lands into which they had bro­ken. Dur­ing that war we repeat­edly asked our­selves the ques­tion: ‘How are we going to win?’ And no one was able ever to answer it with much pre­ci­sion, until at the end, quite sud­denly, quite unex­pect­edly, our ter­ri­ble foe col­lapsed before us, and we were so glut­ted with vic­tory that in our folly we threw it away.

      Four years. Worth not­ing. Not one month, like the Gulf War. Not sev­eral months, like the time to lib­er­ate Afghanistan from the Tal­iban. We can be grate­ful for these easy vic­to­ries with­out allow­ing them to make us for­get that those are recent aberrations.

    • From Ortho­doxy Today, the NCC is sud­denly feel­ing all inclusive-like after the Anti­ochi­ans left sev­eral months ago. Phooey. Tell them to take a hike. (Orig­i­nal rant here.)

    Well, that’s all I can get to today. With any luck, I’ll still be sick tomor­row and can fin­ish up.


    Related posts:

    1. Blog round-up
    2. Blog bag for today
    3. Blog-o-matic
    4. VERY quick round-up

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