Posts tagged “Liturgical Year

Leading people toward the eschaton

Posted on March 7th, 2012

[For the attentive celebrant of the liturgy,] the future offers another possibility for his pastoral use of time. He should encourage his people to look forward, through and beyond the transitory moments of this life, to the telos, to the finality and purpose of it all. As a pastor, he is leading his people toward the eschaton, to the goal and beatific fulfillment of our journey through time to eternity. That is the eschatological meaning of the annual cycles of Christian seasons and celebrations. It is also the reason Christians have traditionally turned to pray towards the East, where the dawn of Christ lights this world in anticipation of his eternal Day. Like liturgical orientation, the Church year points beyond itself. It is never…

Post-election depression diversions

Posted on November 10th, 2008

President-elect B.H. Obama has announced he plans to give terrorists and enemy combatants rights as American citizens in granting them civilian trials. Now that’s change the terrorists can believe in! Adrian Peterson is awesome awesome awesome. The Museum of Idolatry has additional exhibits on Barack “The Messiah” Obama. Michelle Malkin on how “Peggy the Moocher” beat “Joe the Plumber”. Voter fraud in Ohio. Milwaukee vote-fraud special investigative unit ordered not to work on election day. Military voters disenfranchised in Virginia. LCMS church in Wisconsin ordered to remove pro-life church sign on election day. Concordia–Chicago (formerly River Forest) professors supporting terrorist William Ayers. Rev. Benjamin Harju on the Church Year as presented in LSB. GetReligion’s Terry Mattingly on “Christian” churches offering communion to the unbaptized.…

Question about capitalization of ordinal numbers in titles

Posted on October 6th, 2008

When writing out an ordinal number in a formal title (such as in a liturgical book, or, for my purposes, on the cover of a service folder), is the part of the number after the hyphen capitalized? For example, is it properly “The Twenty-First Sunday after Trinity,” or “The Twenty-first Sunday after Trinity”? I’ve seen it both ways, and many books simply cheat by putting the whole title in caps. Sneaky, eh? My Chicago Manual of Style would probably help, but it’s at home, alas, and I won’t be there for some time. The Google doesn’t want to give up the answer without a fight for which I have no strength. So, grammatical experts, help a pastor out, will you?