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All journeys must end someday
Peter Akinola’s recapitulation of the running battle in the Anglican Communion (A Most Agonizing Journey towards Lambeth 2008, also here) is as good of a summary as one could want.
One of the titles, however, is intriguing: "All journeys must end someday." We’ve been conditioned to think that the journey itself is the central experience of life. But the reality is that the objective is what’s most important. When the journey is at an end, the goal (hopefully) is reached.
It’s obvious that the journey that Akinola speaks of is coming to an end. But there is a more important one, and it’s the journey that’s behind all of the efforts. It’s the journey into eternity. This life’s journey will end someday. What is your objective?
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Military Golf
While trolling for new material for companion site vulcanhammer.net, I ran across the military document UFC 4-750-01NF, Golf Clubhouses. The U.S. Military doesn’t leave anything to chance, and this includes the design of the clubhouses for the golf facilities it operates. Below are a few photographs of these structures, taken directly from the document.

Vandenberg AFB – California

McChord AFB – Washington

Luke AFB – Arizona

Robins AFB – Georgia

McChord AFB – Washington

Ramstein AB – Germany

Hickam AFB – Hawaii

Vandenberg AFB – California -
The Anglican Calendar Script and Feast Days
Recently I received the following email from one of our visitors:
I am writing about the Anglican Calendar php program on this website. Firstly, thank you so much for creating it and sharing it! It is fantastic!
I am developing a website for my 1928 bcp church, and wanted something to put a bit of info about the current day. Your program works perfectly. However, I noticed at least one thing that I had a question about.
In checking for feast days, your program simply looks at the day of the month. But I know that sometimes the feast days are moved if they overlap with other holidays. For example, the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary normally occurs on March 25th. But in 2007, March 25th is Palm Sunday, and in 2008, March 25th is the 1st Sunday after Easter.
The calendar at commonprayer.org moves the Annunciation for both those years.
So here is my question: do you know how to tell when overlapping holidays need to be separated, how to know which takes precedence, and how far you need to push the lesser holiday (and in which direction!)?
It would be awesome if you updated your code, but if you have access to the info, I will use it to update the code myself, since the website will be going up soon.
Again, thanks for all the resources on your site, keep it up!
My response was on this wise:
As you may have noted, the calendar as it exists attempts to cover both the 1662 and 1928 BCP. As a consequence, I had to generalise the output, and that’s why it puts out the Sundays and feasts simultaneously.
As far as the precedence issue you mentioned, I think part of the problem is that a lot of what’s actually done isn’t strictly speaking "by the book." Part of the problem is with the book itself.
Let’s consider the example you gave, the Annunciation. I’m looking at my 1928 BCP. Page l of course lists the Annunciation as a feast. But on the following page it tells us that all of the Sundays in Lent (and that includes Palm Sunday) take precedence over "any other Sunday or Holy Day," but that doesn’t apply to the First Sunday after Easter (Low Sunday.) And it doesn’t give moving the feast as an option.
It also lists Holy Days "which have precedence of days" over certain Sundays (such as those in Lent,) but the Annunciation isn’t one of them.
Faced with this situation, I "punted" and simply had the days come up as they appeared on the calendar.
The source code of the script can be modified, as is the case with the Catholic Calendar Script. But that doesn’t solve the problem of precedence. I’m open to comments and suggestions as to the proper method of dealing with this problem.
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Yahweh in the Morning: Spirit
This week’s podcast continues Emmanuel’s music with Spirit (appropriate enough for a Charismatic prayer group.)
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Peace, Justice and Catholic Education
Back in the early 1980’s, I was involved in a Catholic Charismatic prayer group. We were under a great deal of pressure, some of which was of our own making and some of which came from a Church which didn’t really care much for what we were doing. It was also the days of "if you want peace, work for justice," the nuclear freeze, and other left-wing emphases which tended to deflect hierarchy and faithful alike from their relationship with God.
A major turning point for me took place on day when, while discussing things with one of our prayer group leaders, she mentioned that, because of the high tuition, she could not afford to send her eight children to Catholic school. So they went to public school.
That revelation was the beginning of the end of me as a Roman Catholic. I concluded that any church that was too bourgeois and self-satisfied not to subsidise its own needful children to attend the schools it wanted them to attend was too bourgeois to be an advocate for social justice. So I took my leave on a course that’s best encapsulated in The Preferential Option of the Poor.
Now, a quarter of a century later, the Aussies are starting to realise that this is a problem in Australian Catholic schools: a preferential option for the wealthy?
The only hitch is that they’re looking at government funding for the schools. And government funding brings government control, which will in the long run forces the schools to teach things the Church cannot support. But at least the problem is recognised.
Hopefully someone on this side of the Pacific will tackle this problem as well.
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A Link From Indonesia
In the course of all of the social, political and other rants that fill this blog, it’s easy to forget that a major source of visitors is our companion site vulcanhammer.net, the site for geotechnical and marine engineering downloads. In the course of those links this site received one from the website The works of Wiryanto Dewobroto, civil engineering lecturer at the Universitas Pelita Harapan in Indonesia. Professor Dewobroto is Roman Catholic, and that in the largest Muslim country on the planet.
In the midst of the challenges that face Christians both here and in Indonesia, I especially like his vision statement:
do not worry about your life, . . . your heavenly Father knows that you need . . . . . . seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.
His mission statement is as follows:
You are the light of the world. . . . Let your light shine before men, that they may see your good deeds and praise your Father in heaven.
Both of these are from Mathew’s Gospel, and they bear repeating in the times we live in.
