
Check out Jane's, also.
Cui bono?
Just click each link and put the results together:I enjoyed this meme so much, I did it twice.
1. Band Name: Random Wikipeda Link
2. Album Title: Random quote generator (take the last four words from the first quote on the page)
3. Album Art: Flickr Interesting Photo (pick one)
Karl Barth - who introduced de Lubac to shark-fin soup at a Chinese restaurant in Paris - is for this reason prevented, de Lubac argues, from giving a 'proper consistency to the human spirit considered in relation to God'. - De Lubac - A Guide for the Perplexed by David Grumett, p.108
As for my spirit, I am well, through the Lord's good pleasure, and the strength which He condescends to impart; but as for my body, I am confined to bed. I can neither walk, nor stand, nor sit, because of the pain and swelling of a boil or tumour. But even in such a case, since this is the will of the Lord, what else can I say than that I am well?Thank you QM! I'd remembered reading it in a biography of Augustine, but didn't fancy trying to track down exactly where.
In 202, Origen's father was killed in the outbreak of the persecution during the reign of Septimius Severus. Origen wished to follow in martyrdom, but was prevented only by his mother hiding his clothes.
Timothy Salofakiolos (Wobblecap) against Peter Mongos (Stammerer)Almost like something you'd read ever at the Shrine of the Holy Whapping.
In 477 Timothy the Weasel died peacefully in Alexandria; a decision to exile him again, already taken at court, arrived just after his death. News of his impending demise may have reached the capital since control by the government ensured that a Monophysite successor, Peter Mongos, could be consecrated only in secret at midnight and then by a solitary bishop (Theodore of Antinoe) before Timothy Salofakiolos returned from his refuge making baskets in the Pachomian monastery at Canopus. The dead hand of Timothy the Weasel was laid on Peter Mongos' head - by old Alexandrian custom, otherwise attested, and older than the Nicen canon requiring three bishops for a canonical consecration.