“Jesus turned water into wine – so drink up!” – Local Partier Says

How is that not different from this?
Bare on the beach is OK with God, Catholic says

“Certainly the Garden of Eden story, which most people know from Genesis, does not suggest that the crime or the sin of Adam and Eve was being unclothed,” said Rapoport. “It was disobeying a higher power.”

Of course that’s true. But that doesn’t mean it’s ok to romp around nude playing volleyball. Goodness – that’s just awful.

New Material for the Hitler… er History Channel

Hitler’s Music Collection Turns Up in Dead Russian Soldier’s Attic

The most astonishing fact about the records — essentially Hitler’s “Best of . . .” collections — is the presence of Jewish performers. Among the recordings is a Tchaikovsky concerto performed by the virtuoso Polish Jewish violinist Bronislaw Huberman. Hitler would have been aware, while listening to Huberman’s playing, that he had founded the Palestine Orchestra in 1936 (which went on to be the foundation of today’s Israel Philharmonic Orchestra) and that he was living in enforced exile.
The Austrian Jewish pianist Artur Schnabel, whose mother was killed by the Nazis, also had his work included in Hitler’s personal collection. It is not known which records in the collection were listened to most frequently, nor have they been formally catalogued.
“I’m not terribly surprised by Hitler’s record choices,” said James Kennaway, of Stanford University. “Nazi music policy was pretty incoherent. Stravinsky was played in the Third Reich because he was known to have right-wing views, Bartok because Hungary was a German ally.” Dr Kennaway, a leading musicologist who specialises in the Nazi period, added: “The only real point of consistency in Nazi policy was antiSemitism, so the Schnabel and Huberman recordings do stand out.”

Get up, stand up

If you’ve been wondering how to let bishops know that there is interest in the old form of Mass, I recommend you take a look at Jacob Michael’s Summorum Pontificum contact database. So far there are about 1000 people who’ve manifested their desire to attend and support Masses celebrated according to the extraordinary form of the Roman Rite, but I think the word about this project is just starting to get out.

On Chris Benoit’s death – or why I’m Catholic

By now most wrestling fans, especially Canadian ones, will have heard of the murder-suicide of Chris Benoit and his family. The following is an editorial I wrote this morning for the local secular media:
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On Chris Benoit’s death
By Pete Vere
SooToday.com
Tuesday, June 26, 2007
Initially I was going to write this editorial on last weekend’s fun at the St. Jean Baptiste Day festival, the opening of the Desbarats farmers’ market this Friday, and this weekend’s Canada Day celebrations. I had not intended to devote another editorial to professional wrestling so soon after the last one.
Nevertheless, like most other fans of this sport, I was both shocked and saddened by the death of Chris Benoit, his wife Nancy, and their seven-year-old son Daniel, in what now appears to have been a murder-suicide.
Although he struggled at his mic skills, Benoit was a gifted technical performer and rose to become Canada’s best after injury forced Bret Hart into retirement. In an industry where egos often clash, my contacts within the industry tell me Benoit was a good guy in the locker-room who always treated other wrestlers with respect. This certainly was the case with the fans, for whom he never gave any less than 100 percent.
I regret never having had the opportunity to see Benoit perform live. Yet he certainly entertained me on many a Monday and Thursday night. His flying headbutt was one of my favorite moves. His departure from WCW after the company aborted his championship run angered me – enough to reconsider my boycott of the WWE.
But this is now in the past.
This morning I find myself, along with many other fans, struggling with the following question: How do I reconcile Chris Benoit the humble performer who consistently gave his all, with the Chris Benoit who reportedly killed his family before ending his own life?
Was it steroids? A mid-life crisis? Had he suffered some sort of brain injury in the ring of which nobody was aware? Is there some other medical or scientific explanation that the experts don’t know?
I certainly don’t.
So this is one of those times when I must set aside logical explanations for the comfort of my Catholic faith. As a Catholic, I believe both murder and suicide to be acts of great evil. Each of these acts ends one of God’s most precious gifts to us: the gift of human life. Those who take innocent life are worthy of eternal damnation.
Yet as a Catholic I also believe in forgiveness and redemption. I believe that Jesus Christ gave His own life to bring us an even greater gift, namely, salvation which is the gift of eternal life. Because Christ is an infinite God who became man, whereas we are finite human creatures who desire to come to God, I believe there is no sin of which we are capable that Christ cannot forgive.
This includes sins against human life.
There is no way of knowing what went through Chris Benoit’s mind as he struck out against his family and himself. Yet there is also no way of knowing what conversation took place between him and God in the final moments of his life. Therefore, what sustains at moments like these is the hope that Chris, Nancy and Daniel, in their dying moments, each made their final peace with God.
May their souls, and the souls of all the faithfully departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen.