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The Lord’s descent into the underworld
At Matins/the Office of Readings on Holy Saturday the Church gives us this 'ancient homily', I find it incredibly moving, it is abou...
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A French newspaper has reported Pope Francis, once Benedict dies, will abrogate Summorum Pontificum and handover Old Rite's celebrat...
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I was at the Verona Opera Festival when Summorum Pontificum was published but it wasn't until All Souls Day that I first attempted to s...
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In a conversation with our bishop recently, I thought he said that some parishes in the diocese were already using the new ICEL translations...
6 comments:
Shadowplay by Clare Asquith was published last year. It covers the same issues with a political overview. It's all there in code.
Sonnet 23
'More than that love which more hath more expressed' doesn't make sense until you hear the emphasis with a capital 'More than that love which More hath more expressed'
Jim
Just for the record, I think many writers accept that S. was indeed a Catholic but rather a cryptic or hidden one. The theory was first put forward in the 19th century by Richard Simpson who was a friend of Cardinal Newman and edited the famous RAMBLER MAGAZINE
A Jesuit did some work on this about 20 years ago and concluded from the texts of his plays that he could not have written as he did unless he had done the Ignatian exercises.
There is also evidence that he was resident in a Catholic recusant house in Lancashire when a very young man.
I guess you haven't seen this:
http://www.shakespeareunmasked.com/
Interesting article by Robert Miola at: http://www.catholicculture.org/library/view.
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It has also been claimed that he was a Neoplatonist. He could have started off as a Catholic and become a Neoplatonist, which would explain both the speculation that he had undertaken the Spiritual Exercises and other material which has been suggested as evidence for Neoplatonism. There was a lot of it around at the time.
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