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Cynthia
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2 Jul 2020 08:54 |
Good morning :-)
Such a lovely thing for the clergyman to do Sylvia. In these days of political correctness, it can be difficult for a cleric to visit even in normal circumstances - so to know that a person of their faith is with their loved ones, must be very comforting.
Hello Vera - I remember about your granddaughter working with those with dementia. Many happy returns of the day to her and I hope her day is just wonderful. xx
Is Emma okay by the way?
Continuing with David Livingstone and his fight against slavery.......
At home, Livingstone publicised the horrors of the slave trade, securing private support for another expedition to central Africa, searching for the Nile's source and reporting further on slavery.
Livingstone returned to Africa, after another short visit to Bombay, on January 28, 1866, with support from private and public bodies and the status of a British consul at large. His aim, as usual, was the extension of the Gospel and the abolition of the slave trade on the East African coast, but a new object was the exploration of the central African watershed and the possibility of finding the ultimate sources of the Nile. This expedition was infinitely better organized than Livingstone’s previous solitary journeys.
Cx :-)
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SuffolkVera
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1 Jul 2020 21:24 |
Thank you for deleting that post David. I think you made the right decision.
Another interesting week Cynthia. Thank you.
Sylvia, I think that is a lovely thing for the Anglican priest to do. It must comfort the families. Our local Anglican church has been open from 10 till 6 every day for private prayer but I have no idea when services proper will resume.
One of my lovely granddaughters is 18 today. She is the one working in the dementia care home. As she reaches adulthood I wish her and all others celebrating their special day a happy and blessed future.
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SylviaInCanada
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1 Jul 2020 17:42 |
I heard something interesting on our early morning radio show. It is Canada Day here, so shows are broadcast across the country instead of only regionally.
It was our own host here in Vancouver, but he interviewed an Anglican priest in Ontario, who is Anglican Chaplain and head of the religious committee at a local hospital.
Since March he has been the only religious person allowed in the ICUs at the hospital to be with the severely sick covid-19 patients, and then only if the family request him and the health team allow him.
If it is a different faith, he contacts the member of the committee concerned, and sets up a time.
Then he gets dressed in full PPE gear, takes an Ipad in to the room, faces it towards the patient, and then stands there while the Imam or whoever prays for the patient.
He said he has no idea if the patients hears but it brings comfort to family members to know that their faith is being followed.
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Cynthia
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1 Jul 2020 09:14 |
Good morning :-)
Still no news on when our church is opening kandji........ :-(
Continuing with David Livingstone......
In 1852, he began a four year expedition to find a route from the upper Zambezi to the coast. This filled huge gaps in western knowledge of central and southern Africa. In 1855, Livingstone discovered a spectacular waterfall which he named 'Victoria Falls'. He reached the mouth of the Zambezi on the Indian Ocean in May 1856, becoming the first European to cross the width of southern Africa.
News from and about him during the previous three years had stirred the imagination of English-speaking peoples everywhere to an unprecedented degree. Livingstone returned to England on December 9, 1856, a national hero. Honours flowed in upon him. His increased income meant that he was now able to provide adequately for his family, which had lived in near poverty since returning to Britain.
He left for Africa again in 1858, and for the next five years carried out official explorations of eastern and central Africa for the British government. His wife died of malaria in 1862, a bitter blow and in 1864 he was ordered home by a government unimpressed with the results of his travels.
Cx :-)
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kandj
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30 Jun 2020 15:09 |
Hello all
David Livingstone will be interesting. Thanks Cynthia
David the internet is very helpful to fill in long days.
Our parish church will open on 5th July with lots of necessary amendments in place to keep us all safe.
It's so hard to think that this is the last day of June!
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Cynthia
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30 Jun 2020 09:17 |
Good morning :-)
Apologies for not posting yesterday - I got carried away, yet again! :-(
David - the internet is, indeed, a blessing at times - we can travel the world from our armchairs.
Dermot - I think your PP is in hiding with ours. I am reading so much about how busy the clergy have been during the lockdown, but blowed if I can see what ours has been up to. He covers 7 churches and all we get is a weekly video. You message him and he doesn't respond, nor does he phone round. Fings ain't wot they used be!!! :-(
Right......we have heard so much about the dreadful things happening in the US with the murder of George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter campaign, that I thought I would look out for a story of a Christian Missionary who fought for the freedom of slaves. I decided on David Livingstone. I will have to give you two extracts because I missed yesterday - sorry folks.
MONDAY
David Livingstone was born at Blantyre, south of Glasgow on 19 March 1813 and grew up in a distinctively Scottish family environment of personal piety, poverty, hard work, zeal for education, and a sense of mission. He was reared as one of seven children in a single room at the top of a tenement building for the workers of a cotton factory on the banks of the Clyde.
At 10 he began working in the local cotton mill, with school lessons in the evenings. In 1836, he began studying medicine and theology in Glasgow and decided to become a missionary doctor.
A meeting with Robert Moffat, the notable Scottish missionary in southern Africa, convinced him that Africa should be his sphere of service. On November 20, 1840, he was ordained as a missionary; he set sail for South Africa at the end of the year and arrived at Cape Town on March 14, 1841.
From Moffat’s mission at Kuruman on the Cape frontier, which Livingstone reached on July 31, 1841, he soon pushed his search for converts northward into untried country where the population was reputed to be more numerous. This suited his purpose of spreading the Gospel through “native agents.”
TUESDAY By the summer of 1842, he had already gone farther north than any other European into the difficult Kalahari country and had familiarized himself with the local languages and cultures. His mettle was dramatically tested in 1844 when, during a journey to Mabotsa to establish a mission station, he was mauled by a lion.
On January 2, 1845, Livingstone married Moffat’s daughter, Mary. Livingstone became convinced of his mission to reach new peoples in the interior of Africa and introduce them to Christianity, as well as freeing them from slavery. It was this which inspired his explorations. In 1849 and 1851, he travelled across the Kalahari, on the second trip sighting the upper Zambezi River.
Mary accompanied him on many of his journeys until her health and the family’s needs for security and education forced him to send her and their four children back to Britain in 1852.
Continued tomorrow.
Cx :-)
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David
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30 Jun 2020 09:10 |
Sylvia, I have deleted the offending post.
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SylviaInCanada
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29 Jun 2020 20:09 |
David .................
I'm sorry for you that it happened
but that is far too much information to share on this thread ........ or anywhere else!
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SylviaInCanada
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29 Jun 2020 17:45 |
Reporting on the Baptist church.
I think they may have had a celebration yesterday ..... more cars, more people although seemingly still within the accepted limit of 50.
Then they had a group photo taken outside, on the grassy area.
Still only the Filipeno members though, I think the Canadian church is waiting a while longer.
It's been a bit of a dreary week, with lots of clouds and showers or "light" rain, with some sun in the afternoons. Yesterday and today have been much better.
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David
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29 Jun 2020 17:37 |
Good evening to you all :-) <3 I haven't been well recently, sorry. I'm sore in the most uncomfortable places. My mobility is reduced, but I can communicate thank God. In a planet that has allegedly 7 billion people, the only people I see are my wife a brief visit from a care in the morning. But, I have a PC, I'm on the internet so I have the privilege of threads like these to read or add to. Thank you for your company. <3 <3
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Dermot
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29 Jun 2020 11:55 |
I think our PP must be hibernating. A search party will have to be organised soon before the church building is officially released from lockdown. .
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kandj
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28 Jun 2020 09:47 |
Hello all
Amen to the collect for today Cynthia.
David I hope your new kindle will help you to pass the time along. I hope you and Ellen keep well.
Happy Sunday everyone! Stay safe.
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Cynthia
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28 Jun 2020 09:37 |
Good morning :-)
Hope everyone is keeping well. It's going to be a damp week by the looks of things :-( Never mind, we all have lots to be thankful for. :-)
The Collect (special prayer) for today:
Almighty God, you have broken the tyranny of sin and have sent the Spirit of your Son into our hearts whereby we call you Father: give us grace to dedicate our freedom to your service, that we and all creation may be brought to the glorious liberty of the children of God; through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who is alive and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, now and for ever. Amen.
The Gospel reading for today:
Matthew 10:40-42
40"Anyone who welcomes you welcomes me, and anyone who welcomes me welcomes the one who sent me. 41Whoever welcomes a prophet as a prophet will receive a prophet's reward, and whoever welcomes a righteous person as a righteous person will receive a righteous person's reward. 42And if anyone gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones who is my disciple, truly I tell you, that person will certainly not lose their reward."
Cx :-)
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David
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27 Jun 2020 11:20 |
Thank you kandj and others <3 <3
Last night I purchased a used Kindle from ebay.
This morning I reported the "loss" of my Kindle to Amazon.
Hoping you all have a pleasant day :-D
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kandj
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27 Jun 2020 11:07 |
Hello all
Another interesting week of posts, thank you Cynthia.
David I hope you have a better day today.
"For with God, all things are possible." (Matthew 19 v 26)
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Cynthia
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27 Jun 2020 09:40 |
Good morning :-)
You are bound to feel a bit out of sorts for a while I think David - take care.
Get REAL ! by louis gander
Tattoo's ink smeared everywhere, with piercings by the score - and colour-copied rainbow hair, how can we handle more? To get a little self-respect our clothes must have a label. Our auto's must be perfect, or we're appeared unstable.
Eye lashes must be fastened on. Scent squirts out from sprayers - liner must be perfect drawn with powder caked in layers. Our jewellery we can wear with pride and aging spots can cover - the wrinkles we can try to hide so no one will discover.
Through remedies we dig and dig. We make a real fuss. But apply the lipstick to a pig - it's surface, surface, surface! We try to conquer blunder, we think we've conquered dull, but what I have to wonder is, what's inside our skull?
Man can't look beyond the skin, Man looks at the face. Man sees only fat or thin. Man sees only 'race'. God sees through all shallowness. God sees through the skin. God sees down inside our heart, God sees deep within.
Some day man might teach our youth. Some day man might feel. Some day man might learn the truth and hopefully get REAL!
Cx :-)
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David
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26 Jun 2020 15:16 |
Thank you Cymthia <3 Since my return from Hospital I confess to being shook op, sometimes in pain. and vulnerable. For the first timr I confess to being at times sad. IIn my absence my Kindle has went AWOL, presumed stolen :(` Also a small collection of Belfast paper backs have disappeared. I feel reluctant to name the culprit as I cannot prove it :-S
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Cynthia
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26 Jun 2020 09:50 |
Good morning :-)
Well, I am only a youngster at heart Sylvia!! :-D
Kitchen War by louis gander
Discussions were beginning in the kitchen fraught with hate - and anger soon was spreading with the "who was best" debate. "I'm protein for the people," said the big roast to the greens. "I am so much, much better than potatoes, corn and beans."
"Without my oven you are absolutely nothing around here," said the stove so loudly so that all the rest could hear. Close by was some oregano, paprika and some clove. "Oh, do not boast for you are but an old and rusted stove.
Said the sea salt to the spices, "Here's some good advice. If you can't add some flavour, you're no better than the rice." Said the white rice to the sea salt, "Let me say a thing or two. The spices have a million times more flavour than you do.
The fridge could not stay silent and the toaster now was hot. Disposal? It was spinning while the blender had forgot. And that is how it started as the food began to fly. Please tell me why there's no respect. Please tell me, tell me why.
From floor to wall to ceiling, there was food stuck everywhere. And you could even see the peas come bouncing down the stair.
The bragging had continued and the sink began to boast! Then gravy splashed the window...and the fork had stabbed the roast! The big 'ol roast let out a scream. "I'm dying!" was his yell. It rolled right off the table and on the floor it fell.
The hush was so immediate and no one said a word. No sound was heard except from one small window perching bird. Hysterically, it laughed and laughed. I thought it'd blow its cork. And then we all had seen it too - that cheap weak plastic fork.
The laughter had crescendoed and it filled that messy room. But then who had to clean it up? The dustpan and the broom. Not one had learned a lesson and not one humility. They still each think they are the best. That's how they'll always be -
UNLESS they all repent and learn of God's most precious Son. ONLY THEN can we have peace for each and everyone. Until then we will be at odds. Until then we will fight. Until then we will be at war - and world, a messy sight.
Cx :-)
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kandj
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25 Jun 2020 21:29 |
Hello all
"Call to me and I will answer you; I will tell you wonderful and marvelous things that you know nothing about." Jeremiah 33 v 3.
Seems appropriate to share this verse from scripture following on from Cynthia's post today.
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SylviaInCanada
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25 Jun 2020 17:34 |
well, you are only a youngster, Cyn ;-)
Or you just didn't live in the backward places like a mill town, with a grandmother who just refused to have it removed, which is the only reason I know about them :-D
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