"Prayer is the energy which accords with the dignity of the intellect; it is the intellect's true and highest activity."
— Akenside Institute for English Spirituality (@EngSpirituality) January 20, 2021
(Evagrios the Solitary, On Prayer, 84) pic.twitter.com/F1xwbCePGM
Wednesday, January 20, 2021
Perhaps Too Intellectualist?
Thanks Be to God
The Location of Christ's Baptism Finally Returned to the Church https://t.co/N8raf5DmCS
— SSPX News: Society of Saint Pius X (@SSPXEN) January 19, 2021
A Question
A Politicized Church
This is the same @americamag the criticized the US Bishops for *not being confrontational enough* in a call over *Catholic education* with the previous President. https://t.co/ajmcVj40tD
— Fr. Pius Pietrzyk OP (@PiusOP) January 20, 2021
.@ArchbishopGomez's Statement on the Inauguration of Joseph R. Biden, Jr., as 46th President of the United States of America: https://t.co/xrr2NA1COR #InaugurationDay
— U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (@USCCB) January 20, 2021
In rare rebuke, Cardinal Cupich criticizes USCCB president’s letter to President Biden | America Magazine https://t.co/w8t6ZsuWh2
— Father Edward Beck (@FrEdwardBeck) January 21, 2021
Today, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops issued an ill-considered statement on the day of President Biden’s inauguration.
— Cardinal Cupich (@CardinalBCupich) January 20, 2021
Three different bishops speaking on background to CNA said Cupich wanted a more supportive, clearly pro-Biden statement, and that he spent most of Wednesday trying to get the support of other bishops to come up with an alternative statement. https://t.co/e8N5w7jtAy
— Catholic News Agency (@cnalive) January 21, 2021
“Biden actually failed to quote Augustine in full,” and added that it was “more important still to note that he failed to identify the only common object of love that Augustine thought mattered for a true commonwealth: God.”
— National Catholic Register (@NCRegister) January 20, 2021
-@ccpecknold #BidenInaugurationhttps://t.co/QFXUpXEM8s