Agent provocateur....
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Agent provocateur....
i suppose its probably a good idea for me to like, outline whats been going on for me lately. a few people already know but i havent yet made it public and perhaps i should be clear about it
as many of you know/remember, i started this account as a primarily-norse polytheist, specifically devoted to Freyja. in 2018, i swore an oath and devoted myself to her.
however in 2021, i started attempting to convert to Judaism. i realize now, i was not at liberty to do so, given my prior oath. my worldview at the time was that all gods are part of one, larger G-d, and this allowed me to justify conversion and monotheism to myself. when that did not work out, i decided to pursue Catholicism, which, similarly, i was not permitted to do.
recently, i realized that i had quite quickly abandoned the idea that all gods were part of one, and that i had been attempting (because i dont think i was ever actually able) to break my oath.
she has come back to reclaim me, and thus, there will be a return to some older (pre-2021) content on here, and a renewed relationship between myself and her, which you may get to hear some of the less personal bits of
anyone who followed me for christian content, or even because of my conversion is, of course, welcome to unfollow me, but youre also more than welcome to stay, i like you guys. if anyone has questions, feel free to send them and ill answer what im able to as always. thank you for your patience with me while ive figured this out, as you can imagine perhaps, ive had a pretty emotional couple of days
Happy Hanukkah. 18th December to 26th December.
Jewish celebration of Rededication of the second temple in Jerusalem.
Thursday Thoughts: Hanukkah Thoughts
One
The past two years, I’ve lived in a house where the landlady banned candles. She also put up a Christmas tree every year in the living room. I didn’t really mind that the tree was there; it didn’t mean anything to me. I didn’t really think I minded not being able to light the menorah, either.
At the beginning of this month, I moved to a new place. I got a menorah and candles, and I lit the shamash and sang the prayers.
It felt like getting a piece of myself back.
Two
I’m using “Hanukkah” in this blog post. I could just as easily use “Chanukah” instead; I’d feel the same way about it.
They’re both wrong. That’s how I see it. Sometimes you’re just stuck with using the wrong word as a label so that you can communicate with people who can’t understand you. It will always be spelled correctly – in Hebrew – in my heart.
Three
Last year I told myself that every time someone at work told me “Merry Christmas” when it was Hanukkah, I would reply, “Happy Hanukkah!” I didn’t end up doing it every time, but I got braver about it the further into the week I got.
There were never any outright negative reactions, thank G-d. Mostly people seemed confused. They would do a double take as they walked away from me, as though wondering if they’d heard me correctly.
“Merry Christmas!” one woman said late in the week.
“Thanks, Happy Hanukkah!” I said.
“That’s right!” she said with a big grin and a little laugh. “And Kwanzaa!”
It was not Kwanzaa.
HOMILY for Our Lady of Walsingham
Eccl 1:2-11; Ps 89; Luke 9:7-9
In the past few months there has been a worrying upsurge in enthusiasm for the destruction of statues and churches – not merely those statues that offend our current sensibilities about racial justice and equality, but, more upsettingly, there has been an upsurge of Christian iconoclasm and religious vandalism directed at the Church and her properties, her sacred images and objects. Two days ago, for example, the shrine of St Agatha in Sicily was desecrated, an image of Our Lady was destroyed, and the Blessed Sacrament was profaned. And every month, new stories emerge of churches destroyed by arson or by the Communist State in China.
But “what was will be again; what has been done will be done again; and there is nothing new under the sun”, says Qoheleth, the Preacher in today’s first reading. And so, every night, I pray to Our Lady, asking her to protect our church here in London from such terrors. For until 1538, a great Augustinian priory had stood in the centre of the village of Walsingham, a great focus of pilgrimage and Marian devotion, and then, all came to an end. The statue of Our Lady, it is thought, was consigned to the flames. Also destroyed was the replica of the Holy House wherein Our Lady had received the angelic Annunciation of Christ’s incarnation, which Richeldis had built around 1061 following a vision of Mary’s home in Nazareth. Hence, “England’s Nazareth”, as Walsingham was called, became desolate.
“No memory remains of earlier times”, says Qoheleth, but in 1896, Miss Charlotte Person Boyd, a convert from Anglicanism, remembered. And so, the medieval Slipper Chapel, a mile from the ruins of Walsingham Priory, which had fallen into disuse and had in turn become a poor house, a forge, a cowshed, and a barn, was once again return to sacred use as a place of divine worship, and a focus of prayer. At its heart was a little statue, a recreation of the medieval statue of Our Lady enthroned, holding the baby Jesus, and with her foot on a toad, an East Anglian symbol of evil, and they called her ‘Our Lady of Walsingham’. And so, “what was will be again.” Thus, Walsingham was again a centre for Marian devotion, a place sacred to Our Lady.
Indeed, part of the Walsingham story is the endowment of the whole of England by King Richard II to Our Lady as her Dowry. Hence, England belongs to Mary; the whole of England is a place sacred to Our Lady. But all that made England sacred because England was Christian has also been subjected to vandalism and destruction – not merely our buildings and sacred art and relics and shrines, but more importantly, the very notion of what it is to be human, and our relationship to God and the world, and how our society is to be structured and governed and patterned. Much of this has also been torn down, and it continues apace.
England was once transformed for the true good by what had happened at Nazareth. There, in the Holy House, in Mary’s Home, “the Word became flesh and dwelt among us”. And so, by his Incarnation, Christ had transformed the universe, and opened our eyes to the closeness of God to his people. Mary was truly our Mother, and we her Dowry, her treasure, her children. Human beings and life itself was acknowledged to be sacred and inviolable, endowed with a sacred dignity. But we live now among the ruins of this Christian worldview, as a society that rightly stands for black lives and against slavery and against unjust discrimination also incoherently defends the right to kill the unborn child; enslaves and sexualises the young through the acceptance of pornography and the hook-up culture, and we have become addicted to cheaply-produced goods, often produced through modern-day slavery. Without a coherent vision of the human person and his dignity; without the light of the Gospel and the liberating Word of Christ, then, as Qoheleth says: “All is vanity”! Herod the tetrach, mentioned in today’s Gospel, was himself prey to such vanities and practical godlessness. And yet, even he was attracted or at least intrigued by the marvels that Christ did, and the joy that he engendered.
Therefore, as Walsingham is restored as a sacred place of pilgrimage, so now is also the time to restore the sanctuary of human hearts and the sanctity of human persons. Now is the time to renew the joy of the Gospel in our lives.
For this reason, earlier this year, albeit during the lockdown, the Bishops invited us to rededicate ourselves to Our Lady. By divine Providence, the acts of rededication took place not in churches, but in our homes as we livestreamed the ceremonies taking place in Walsingham on the 29th of March. So, in giving our hearts and our lives to Christ through Mary, we were being called to make our hearts and our own homes into England’s Nazareth, into places that resonate with the joy of Christ’s Incarnation. For charity begins at home, and the task of sanctifying our culture and our country begins with the family, with those whom we live with. So, in our actions, in our speech, in our relating with others, our families, our communities, our homes, our priories, our workplaces at home, are all called to witness to this awesome transformative truth: God is with us!
The joy of the Annunciation, the joy of Our Lady at Nazareth and again at Walsingham stems from this truth. And this is a joy that England needs to experience once more. As Pope Francis said, he hoped that England’s rededication as Mary’s Dowry would inspire “all to persevere in the urgent task of sharing the joy of the Gospel to the men and women of our time”, as we strive to “bear witness to the beauty of our Catholic faith.”
So, on this feast day, let us ask Our Lady to share her joy with us. May we know this joy deep in our hearts and in our homes, so that we can share Mary’s joy with others. For the wicked might destroy our statues and burn our churches. But we stand steadfast in faith, with Christ in us; God with us! Thus, over the centuries, as things rise and fall around us, as viruses and economic crises come and go, we Christians can nevertheless say with the psalmist: “O Lord, you have been our refuge from one generation to the next.”
CONSTRUCTION ROUNDUP: 8 September 2020
Here is a full update on the status of temple construction throughout the world. Future news roundups will only feature construction updates since the last roundup post unless otherwise noted.
SCHEDULED TEMPLE DEDICATIONS
All temple open house and dedications which were scheduled to occur since the Church closed all temples due to the COVID-19 pandemic have been postponed until large public gatherings are deemed safe by local governmental authorities. There are currently no temple dedications currently scheduled. The following temples are completed or nearing completion and awaiting dedication:
Rio de Janiero Brazil Temple
Construction has been completed for the Rio de Janiero Brazil Temple. The open house and dedication were originally scheduled to occur in the spring of 2020 but were postponed. The Rio de Janiero Brazil Temple was announced by President Thomas S. Monson during the April 2013 General Conference. There are currently seven dedicated temples in Brazil, with three additional temples in various stages of development. (Photo from churchofjesuschrist.org)
Winnipeg Manitoba Temple
Construction is nearing completion for the Winnipeg Manitoba Temple. The open house and dedication were originally scheduled to occur in the fall of 2020 but have since been postponed. The Winnipeg Manitoba Temple was announced by President Thomas S. Monson during the April 2011 General Conference. It will be the first temple in Manitoba and the ninth temple in Canada. (Photo from churchofjesuschrist.org)
SCHEDULED TEMPLE REDEDICATIONS
All temple rededications which were scheduled to occur since the Church closed all temples due to the COVID-19 pandemic have been postponed until large public gatherings are deemed safe by local governmental authorities. There are currently no temple rededications currently scheduled. The following temple renovation has been completed and the temple is now awaiting rededication:
Washington DC Temple
The Washington DC Temple has been closed since 29 September 2017 for extensive renovations to the interior and exterior. It was originally scheduled for rededication in late 2020. The Washington DC Temple was the 16th temple in the Church and the first temple built in both the eastern United States and the state of Maryland. (Photo by Stephanie Williams Payne from churchofjesuschristtemples.org)
TEMPLES UNDER RENOVATION
The following additional temples are currently under renovation:
Columbus Ohio Temple
Hamilton New Zealand Temple
Hong Kong China Temple
Mesa Arizona Temple
St. George Utah Temple
Salt Lake Temple
Tokyo Japan Temple
SCHEDULED TEMPLE RENOVATIONS
There are no additional temples scheduled for renovation at this time.
TEMPLE GROUNDBREAKINGS
San Pedro Sula Honduras Temple
The Church broke ground for the San Pedro Sula Honduras Temple on Saturday, 5 September 2020. Elder José Bernardo Hernández , an Area Seventy originally from San Pedro Sula, presided over the groundbreaking ceremony. Attendance at the temple site was limited to a small number of area Church leaders, due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The San Pedro Sula Honduras Temple was announced by President Russell M. Nelson during the April 2019 General Conference. When completed, it will be the second temple in Honduras. (Photos from churchofjesuschrist.org)
Orem Utah Temple
The Church broke ground for the Orem Utah Temple on Saturday, 5 September 2020. Elder Craig C. Christensen, president of the Utah Area, presided over the groundbreaking ceremony. Attendance at the temple site was limited to a small number of area Church leaders, due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. The Orem Utah Temple was announced by President Russell M. Nelson during the October 2019 General Conference. When completed, it will be the 22nd temple in Utah and the sixth temple in Utah County, Utah. (Photos from churchofjesuschrist.org)
SCHEDULED TEMPLE GROUNDBREAKINGS
The following temples are scheduled for groundbreaking ceremonies to be held in the upcoming weeks. Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, attendance at the temple sites for the groundbreaking will be by invitation only, but the proceedings will be broadcast to select meetinghouses in the respective temple districts.
Brasília Brazil Temple
The groundbreaking ceremony for the Brasília Brazil Temple will be held on Saturday, 26 September 2020. Elder Adilson de Paula Parrella, president of the Brazil Area, will preside at the ceremony. The Brasília Brazil Temple was announced by President Thomas S. Monson during the April 2017 General Conference. There are currently seven dedicated temples in Brazil, with another awaiting dedication and two more in various stages of construction. (Photo from churchofjesuschrist.org)
Taylorsville Utah Temple
The groundbreaking ceremony for the Taylorsville Utah Temple will be held in October 2020, with the exact date yet to be annouced. Elder Gerrit W. Gong of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles will preside at the ceremony. The Taylorsville Utah Temple was announced by President Russell M. Nelson during the October 2019 General Conference. When completed, the Taylorsville Utah Temple will be the 23rd temple built in Utah and the fifth temple built in the Salt Lake Valley. (Photo from churchofjesuschrist.org)
Salta Argentina Temple
The groundbreaking ceremony for the Salta Argentina Temple will be held on Friday, 9 October 2020. Elder Benjamín De Hoyos, president of the South America South Area, will preside at the ceremony. The Salta Argentina Temple was announced by President Russell M. Nelson during the April 2018 General Conference. When completed, the Salta Argentina Temple will be the third temple built in Argentina. (Photo from churchofjesuschrist.org)
Bentonville Arkansas Temple
The groundbreaking ceremony for the Bentonville Arkansas Temple will be held in November 2020, with the exact date yet to be announced. Elder David A. Bednar of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles will preside over the ceremony remotely, with video and photos to be released to the public following the event. The Bentonville Arkansas Temple was announced by President Russell M. Nelson during the October 2019 General Conference and will be the first temple built in Arkansas. (Photo from churchofjesuschrist.org)
McAllen Texas Temple
The groundbreaking ceremony for the McAllen Texas Temple will be held in November 2020, with the exact date yet to be announced. Elder Art Rascon, an Area Seventy, will preside over the ceremony. The McAllen Texas Temple was announced by President Russell M. Nelson during the October 2019 General Conference and will be the fifth temple built in Texas. (Photo from churchofjesuschrist.org)
Red Cliffs Utah Temple
The groundbreaking ceremony for the Red Cliffs Utah Temple will be held in November 2020, with the exact date yet to be announced. Elder Jeffrey R. Holland of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles will preside over the ceremony. The Red Cliffs Utah Temple was originally announced as the Washington County Utah Temple by President Russell M. Nelson during the October 2019 General Conference. It was the 20th temple to be announced for Utah and will be the second temple built in Washington County, Utah. (Photo from churchofjesuschrist.org)
TEMPLES UNDER CONSTRUCTION
The following additional temples are currently under construction, with no completion or dedication dates announced:
Abidjan Côte d’Ivoire Temple
Belém Brazil Temple
Feather River California Temple
Layton Utah Temple
Pocatello Idaho Temple
Praia Cabo Verde Temple
Quito Ecuador Temple
Richmond Virginia Temple
San Juan Puerto Rico Temple
Saratoga Springs Utah Temple
Urdaneta Philippines Temple
Yigo Guam Temple
TEMPLES WITH ANNOUNCED SITES
Sites have been announced for the following temples, with groundbreaking plans to be announced at a later date:
Bengaluru India Temple
Cobán Guatemala Temple
Davao Philippines Temple
Mendoza Argentina Temple
Moses Lake Washington Temple
Neiafu Tonga Temple
Okinawa Japan Temple
Pago Pago American Samoa Temple
Phnom Penh Cambodia Temple
Syracuse Utah Temple
Tooele Valley Utah Temple
TEMPLES AWAITING SITE ANNOUNCEMENT
The following temples have been announced, with additional details yet to be released:
Antofagasta Chile Temple
Bacolod Philippines Temple
Bahía Blanca Argentina Temple
Benin City Nigeria Temple
Budapest Hungary Temple
Cagayan de Oro Philippines Temple
Dubai United Arab Emirates Temple
Freetown Sierra Leone Temple
Harare Zimbabwe Temple
Lagos Nigeria Temple
Lubumbashi Democratic Republic of the Congo Temple
Managua Nicaragua Temple
Nairobi Kenya Temple
Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Temple
Port Moresby Papua New Guinea Temple
Russia Temple
Salvador Brazi Templel
Shanghai China Temple
Tallahassee Florida Temple
I’ve decided to rededicate myself to Witchcraft.
I had an amazing experience with witchcraft last week. I’ve decided to rededicate my life to studying it, and reading up on spiritual matters. I’ve always had some witchcraft in my soul, but recently separated myself from any sort of religious or spiritual matters. I’m going to start reading a book about The Morrigan- Celtic Lore and Spell Craft of the Dark Goddess, and doing a ceremony during the Full Moon, which happens to coincide with an eclipse so that will be interesting. Any fellow witches want to chat?? pls pls message me! Maybe we can start a Group Chat or Discord server.
As for temples underscoring the importance of families, President Henry B. Eyring had his own a connection to the temple’s original dedication in 1981.