Conservative Thread: U.S. Steele - Back In Business

Status
Not open for further replies.
I still think that he's got a secret stash of ugly clothes that he likes at the office and when no one is looking, he puts them on and walks out in front of the camera. By then it's too late... :rolleyes1 :rolleyes1 :rolleyes1
:lmao: :lmao:

Wow. And I'm really glad the taxpayers wrote in and resoundingly said "NO!". And the politicians listened. Now why won't those clowns in DC listen?

ETA: Ooh, my Yankee Candle catalogue came. Man, those plumeria candles smell gooooooooood. Someday I'm going to make my own candles.
 
:wave: Good evening' everybody!!

I've had a good day and hope ya'll have to.:thumbsup2 During times, such as these, we need to appreciate every small blessing. It's what keeps us chugging.:goodvibes

We Catholics don't just pratice self-denial for Lent. It's also a time for penance, self-reflection, prayer and giving. Lent is a time to detox our mind, bodies and souls. One doesn't have to Catholic to benefit from a good cleansing. :rotfl:

I'm not giving up the Dis for Lent, but will be spending less time here. I am going to spend my spare time doing something a little more constructive. So, instead of "giving up" I'm "giving".

I need help finding something to give up for Lent. I told my mom I was giving up my brain tumor... she didn't find that very funny or acceptable. TV and the DIS are out because after surgery, I won't be able to do anything else and I'll go nuts if I can't keep in contact with everyone else. Candy is the old standby, but I don't really eat much of it.
 
I need help finding something to give up for Lent. I told my mom I was giving up my brain tumor... she didn't find that very funny or acceptable.

Maybe that's just me, but I think that's funny.

TV and the DIS are out because after surgery, I won't be able to do anything else and I'll go nuts if I can't keep in contact with everyone else. Candy is the old standby, but I don't really eat much of it.
Hmmm...hot guys? Maybe if a hot resident comes in you can request an ugly old dude instead?
Or scratchy bed sheets!
 
I need help finding something to give up for Lent. I told my mom I was giving up my brain tumor... she didn't find that very funny or acceptable. TV and the DIS are out because after surgery, I won't be able to do anything else and I'll go nuts if I can't keep in contact with everyone else. Candy is the old standby, but I don't really eat much of it.

Instead of giving up TV and the DIS, especially considering your situation, perhaps limit your time on them and devote it to something like:

http://bibleresources.bible.com/bible_nlt.php
 

Maybe that's just me, but I think that's funny.

I thought it was too, especially considering surgery is in the middle of Lent. But you know how moms are... when it comes to kids and their health, even when they're adults, mom's just don't find those things funny. All my friends have thought it was funny though! :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl:


Hmmm...hot guys? Maybe if a hot resident comes in you can request an ugly old dude instead?
Or scratchy bed sheets!

Hmmm, giving up hot guys would be a stretch. Maybe I can just agree to look at Senator Ted Kennedy for 15 minutes a day? That would be torture in itself!!!!!

I can give up scratchy bed sheets! I like that one!!!!!!! Can I tell my nurse I'm giving up being poked for Lent?


Instead of giving up TV and the DIS, especially considering your situation, perhaps limit your time on them and devote it to something like:

http://bibleresources.bible.com/bible_nlt.php

That's a really good idea. Thanks! I may have to go down to the Catholic bookstore tomorrow and see if I can get a large print bible. I'm having trouble reading lately and that might encourage me to read it more.
 
I need help finding something to give up for Lent. I told my mom I was giving up my brain tumor... she didn't find that very funny or acceptable. TV and the DIS are out because after surgery, I won't be able to do anything else and I'll go nuts if I can't keep in contact with everyone else. Candy is the old standby, but I don't really eat much of it.

I'm not a big lent giver upper (I'm not Catholic I"m Protestant) but this year I'm giving up Facebook and another chat forum I'm on. You could always start a new healthy habit like daily devotions or exercising.
 
I'm not a big lent giver upper (I'm not Catholic I"m Protestant) but this year I'm giving up Facebook and another chat forum I'm on. You could always start a new healthy habit like daily devotions or exercising.

Thanks for the ideas.:flower3: I think the daily devotions might be the way to go. I'll be able to exercise up to my surgery date, then I won't be able to do it the last couple of weeks before easter, so I'm not sure I how I could make that work. I guess I could try to shoot for a certain number of steps a day and make sure I walk.
 
:happytv:
I need help finding something to give up for Lent. I told my mom I was giving up my brain tumor... she didn't find that very funny or acceptable. TV and the DIS are out because after surgery, I won't be able to do anything else and I'll go nuts if I can't keep in contact with everyone else. Candy is the old standby, but I don't really eat much of it.

Offer up the brain tumor as a penance and that would fulfill your obligation. From what I've read through the years, it's good to offer up suffering because God uses it for good. Offer it up and ask God to use it to cure brain tumors, or to feed hungry children, or to use however He wants to use it.
 
Hi everyone...I am off to a school meeting that has been called by the District superintendent about my sons Middle school budget for this year :eek: this is the first year that he has addressed the schools....cant be good news...most likely lots of cuts...as if there is anything left these schools can cut.

Let ya know what happens. :scared:
 
:happytv:

Offer up the brain tumor as a penance and that would fulfill your obligation. From what I've read through the years, it's good to offer up suffering because God uses it for good. Offer it up and ask God to use it to cure brain tumors, or to feed hungry children, or to use however He wants to use it.

I've never heard that before. I'm not Catholic in the first place, but one of my oldest friends and my husband are, so I thought I had SOME idea about Lent. Thanks for your comment. I like learning new things.

[QUOTE="Got Disney";30501781]Hi everyone...I am off to a school meeting that has been called by the District superintendent about my sons Middle school budget for this year :eek: this is the first year that he has addressed the schools....cant be good news...most likely lots of cuts...as if there is anything left these schools can cut.

Let ya know what happens. :scared:[/QUOTE]

Oh yikes. Best wishes, let us know how it turns out.
 
Why are so many ready and willing to assume the worst of our soldiers??:sad2: It seems anyone can throw out accusations, and there are those who take them simply at their word.:sad2:
 
Pretty sure I know what you're talking about, and the comment that really got your attention really got mine too. :sad2:
 
Why are so many ready and willing to assume the worst of our soldiers??:sad2: It seems anyone can throw out accusations, and there are those who take them simply at their word.:sad2:

I don't think people like that have any idea of what sacrifice it takes to be a member of the military. I understand not agreeing with policy, but to disrespect those who serve is pretty contemptible behavior, IMO.
 
Instead of giving up TV and the DIS, especially considering your situation, perhaps limit your time on them and devote it to something like:

http://bibleresources.bible.com/bible_nlt.php

I was thinking the same thing ... preparing my heart for Easter [and the rest of life in general] by spending more time reading the Bible and praying...there's so much for which to pray!

Physically, I was thinking of working to rid myself of clutter - just go through the house and throw away - I did that with my closet and it was quite cathartic.
 
I don't think people like that have any idea of what sacrifice it takes to be a member of the military. I understand not agreeing with policy, but to disrespect those who serve is pretty contemptible behavior, IMO.

I agree. That's just about exactly what I was thinking when I read the comment: "you have NO idea." :sad2:

Hey, Debbie, I did some decluttering lately here too. It IS cathartic, isn't it? I sent an entire van load full of stuff to charity, and my friend came and took a bunch more to the dump for me. It's such a nice feeling. Trust me, though, I could probably take three MORE van loads of stuff out of here before anybody actually noticed. :lmao:
 
I agree. That's just about exactly what I was thinking when I read the comment: "you have NO idea." :sad2:

Hey, Debbie, I did some decluttering lately here too. It IS cathartic, isn't it? I sent an entire van load full of stuff to charity, and my friend came and took a bunch more to the dump for me. It's such a nice feeling. Trust me, though, I could probably take three MORE van loads of stuff out of here before anybody actually noticed. :lmao:

That's what I'm afraid of!

Hey, how are you feeling today?
 
The full text of the archbishop's speech can be found here: http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/document.php?n=790

Toronto, Canada, Feb 23, 2009 / 09:03 pm (CNA).- Canadians packed St. Basil’s Church in Toronto on Monday evening to hear Archbishop Charles Chaput speak about how Catholics should live out their faith in the public square. He warned that in the U.S., Catholics need to act on their faith and be on guard against "a spirit of adulation bordering on servility" that exists towards the Obama administration.

The public lecture by Archbishop Chaput took place on the campus of the University of Toronto at St. Basil’s Church and was attended by an overflow crowd of more than 700 people.

After giving a sketch of the basic principles in his New York Times Bestseller "Render Unto Caesar," the archbishop offered his insights on the need for an honest assessment of the situation of the Church in the public square.


"I like clarity, and there’s a reason why," began the archbishop. "I think modern life, including life in the Church, suffers from a phony unwillingness to offend that poses as prudence and good manners, but too often turns out to be cowardice. Human beings owe each other respect and appropriate courtesy. But we also owe each other the truth -- which means candor."

The Denver prelate then provided his critique of President Obama.

"President Obama is a man of intelligence and some remarkable gifts. He has a great ability to inspire, as we saw from his very popular visit to Canada just this past week. But whatever his strengths, there’s no way to reinvent his record on abortion and related issues with rosy marketing about unity, hope and change. Of course, that can change. Some things really do change when a person reaches the White House. Power ennobles some men. It diminishes others. Bad policy ideas can be improved. Good policy ideas can find a way to flourish. But as Catholics, we at least need to be honest with ourselves and each other about the political facts we start with."

Yet this will be "very hard for Catholics in the United States," Chaput warned.

According to the archbishop, the political situation for Catholics is difficult to discern because a "spirit of adulation bordering on servility already exists among some of the same Democratic-friendly Catholic writers, scholars, editors and activists who once accused pro-lifers of being too cozy with Republicans. It turns out that Caesar is an equal opportunity employer."

Looking ahead to the coming months and years, Chaput offered four "simple things" to remember.

"First," he said, "all political leaders draw their authority from God. We owe no leader any submission or cooperation in the pursuit of grave evil."

"In fact, we have the duty to change bad laws and resist grave evil in our public life, both by our words and our non-violent actions. The truest respect we can show to civil authority is the witness of our Catholic faith and our moral convictions, without excuses or apologies."

In a reference to the messianic treatment the Barack Obama received from some Americans during the presidential primaries, Archbishop Chaput delivered his second point: "in democracies, we elect public servants, not messiahs."

Noting that Obama actually trailed in the weeks just before the election, the Denver archbishop said that this places some of today’s talk about a "new American mandate" in perspective.

"Americans, including many Catholics, elected a gifted man to fix an economic crisis. That’s the mandate. They gave nobody a mandate to retool American culture on the issues of marriage and the family, sexuality, bioethics, religion in public life and abortion. That retooling could easily happen, and it clearly will happen -- but only if Catholics and other religious believers allow it."

The third point to focus on when the beliefs of Catholics are challenged is that "it doesn’t matter what we claim to believe if we’re unwilling to act on our beliefs," Chaput counseled.

"The fourth and final thing to remember, and there’s no easy way to say it," remarked Archbishop Chaput, is that the "Church in the United States has done a poor job of forming the faith and conscience of Catholics for more than 40 years."

"And now we’re harvesting the results -- in the public square, in our families and in the confusion of our personal lives. I could name many good people and programs that seem to disprove what I just said. But I could name many more that do prove it, and some of them work in Washington."

American Catholics need to realize that many in the current generation haven’t just been "assimilated" into the American culture, but have in fact been "absorbed and bleached and digested by it," Archbishop Chaput asserted.

If this realization doesn’t happen, the coming generations will continue on the same path and "a real Catholic presence in American life will continue to weaken and disappear," said Chaput.

Citing the example of "unhappy, self-described Catholics who complain that abortion is too much of a litmus test," he stated, "We can’t claim to be ‘Catholic’ and ‘pro-choice’ at the same time without owning the responsibility for where the choice leads – to a dead unborn child."

The archbishop also addressed the "abortion reduction" argument being made by some in politics.

"We can’t talk piously about programs to reduce the abortion body count without also working vigorously to change the laws that make the killing possible. If we’re Catholic, then we believe in the sanctity of developing human life. And if we don’t really believe in the humanity of the unborn child from the moment life begins, then we should stop lying to ourselves and others, and even to God, by claiming we’re something we’re not."

"Catholic social teaching goes well beyond abortion," Chaput noted. "In America we have many urgent issues that beg for our attention, from immigration reform to health care to poverty to homelessness."

Winding his talk down, the Archbishop of Denver remarked on the misunderstanding of the word "hope."

"For Christians," he explained, "hope is a virtue, not an emotional crutch or a political slogan. Virtus, the Latin root of virtue, means strength or courage. Real hope is unsentimental. It has nothing to do with the cheesy optimism of election campaigns. Hope assumes and demands a spine in believers. And that’s why – at least for a Christian -- hope sustains us when the real answer to the problems or hard choices in life is ‘no, we can’t,’ instead of ‘yes, we can.’"
 
Why are so many ready and willing to assume the worst of our soldiers??:sad2: It seems anyone can throw out accusations, and there are those who take them simply at their word.:sad2:

I don't know, but I'm sick and tired of it. I think of what DH has done around the world for people when he has been deployed and it makes me so sad that people just assume our military is just a bunch of pigs. :sad1:
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

New Posts


Disney Vacation Planning. Free. Done for You.
Our Authorized Disney Vacation Planners are here to provide personalized, expert advice, answer every question, and uncover the best discounts. Let Dreams Unlimited Travel take care of all the details, so you can sit back, relax, and enjoy a stress-free vacation.
Start Your Disney Vacation
Disney EarMarked Producer






DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter

Add as a preferred source on Google

Back
Top Bottom