sparrow
Joined 3 years ago
Comment points: 263 Post points: 1287

Catholic encyclopedia: https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15614b.htm
 
Infogalactic: https://infogalactic.com/info/Pentecost
 
also I saw a few sites suggesting pentecost should be celebrated like easter and christmas are (with more traditions, get togethers, etc.) - is this something lacking in the culture?
 
I was thinking like bonfire get together to symbolize the fire of the Holy Ghost?
posted 2 years ago by sparrow in general (+5 / -0 )
and a lot of people may be deficient
This post is for anything related to the topic of sedevacantism: https://infogalactic.com/info/Sedevacantism
 
And then more specifically:
 
I think it was a year ago that the last known Pius XII era bishop died. In one sedevacantist interpretation, this means the episcopacy has gone vacant and that only a miracle could restore it (unlikely) or that the world is to end sometime soon. Others hold out hope some other person was consecrated and the lineage continues (I tend more towards this view, as some things don't seem all together yet for the world to end). If you have to be 35 to become a bishop, and Pius XII died in 1958 (it's been over 60 years), they'd have to be pushing 100 at this point if they were still alive. Which means that within the next few decades, some definitive answer seems to be forthcoming about sedevacantism and the status of Vatican 2.
 
The situation reminds me of the Babylonian Captivity which I thought lasted 70 years, a number we'll be soon approaching if sedevacantism were true: https://infogalactic.com/info/Babylonian_captivity
 
The Jews skipped honoring the Sabbath year for almost 500 years, so God allowed them to be exiled for 70 years, one year for each seventh year the Sabbath year wasn't observed (I'm not sure on the exact math or story, but it's something like this): https://infogalactic.com/info/Shmita
 
So too it seems Catholics have been deprived of an organized Church because of the increase of sins, or perhaps as a trial to test faith. Some have wavered in this trial and become orthodox in response, or atheist, etc.
 
And of course the Western Schism, which lasted 40 years, also comes to mind: https://infogalactic.com/info/Western_schism
 
That the Church is being pushed to an extreme does not surprise me given some of the open sin I see. Although personally I do not like the current culture of sports today as they sometimes promote irreligion or a worldly spirit, I witnessed or participated in many games that came down to scoring points right before the time ran out. So you couldn't expect to win or lose until there was no time left on the clock, even if you might be winning or losing by a lot of points the whole game. So likewise today I expect the Church will be pushed to a limit and look like it is "impossibly losing" and God will then aid it as it comes up to that limit. Possibly we are close to hitting that limit here within the next however many years, given some of the aforementioned constraints.
 
At some point with the Vatican, they will have to further cross the Rubicon and promote more open and direct heresy (rather than ambiguous heresies) to continue with the Vatican 2 project. One non-sedevacantist site notes Francis has already openly embraced the heresies of Lutheranism (they seem to correctly diagnose the problem without accepting the conclusion of sedevacantism that seems to follow): https://onepeterfive.com/recant-lutheran-heresy-francis/
 
> [Francis:] Nowadays, Lutherans and Catholics, and all Protestants, are in agreement on the doctrine of justification: on this very important point he was not mistaken
 
Luther believed man was justified by "faith alone", while Catholics believe that a man was justified by "faith and good works". Hence his statement is erroneous and supportive of the Lutheran heresy, from the Catholic view.
 
Apparently according to a recent (2017) poll, even many protestants seem to believe in this traditional Catholic view that faith and good works are necessary to salvation: https://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2017/08/31/poll-most-protestants-and-catholics-believe-faith-and-works-are-necessary
 
(As an aside, in practice, it seems certain Lutherans I've seen simply seem to conclude that those with "bad works" lack faith. So that actually faith and works go together anyway. So that the dispute is frequently more in the realm of philosophy and intellectual disagreement - not to trivialize the seriousness of the disagreement, though.)
 
The successor to Francis, and his successor, if these end up existing, will be interesting to see, and also people's reaction to the death of "Benedict XVI" (whom some people believe is "pope" still). Or the course will redirect to revert back to pre-Vatican 2 norms. Or a "breakaway" conclave might spring up from Pius XII era bishops, if they still somehow exist, which will give a true traditional pope. Probably God has in mind some interesting way to end this drama, although we can guess at what will happen because there are only so many likely possibilities of what can happen. But we can only either study to try to figure out if there is some human way to put an end to the Crisis (such as educating others about what has happened), or pray that God may intervene to end the Crisis.
 
What do you think will happen in the next few decades with what claims to be or is "Catholicism"?
makes me lol every time
Feast of the Ascension, Catholic Encyclopedia: https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01767b.htm
 
Wiki link: https://infogalactic.com/info/Feast_of_the_Ascension
https://humanurehandbook.com/
 
So while the discussions.app site is getting trolled with some "human manure" (humanure) posts, I thought I would mention that I think composting human manure is kind of an interesting and important topic.
 
It's kind of like manure from any other animal, full of nutrients. Figuring out how to compost it can close the loop and reduce dependence on a waste water treatment facility.
 
I think it just composts like other things, but you need to let it compost a lot longer to make sure harmful things are destroyed. And might want to spread it on something that's not a food source. Although anecdotally I've heard of people getting treated sewage fertilizer and it growing tall crops.
 
Relatedly I know there was something called "night soil": https://infogalactic.com/info/Night_soil
 
"Night soil is a euphemism for human feces collected at night from cesspools, privies, etc. and sometimes used as a fertilizer."
 
Humanure when dried can also be used as fuel I think.
 
idk how all this works entirely, just opening up for discussion since we had that "manure" theme on the forum
 
Any thoughts on how to compost or make use of human manure?
"Rogation Days" In Catholic Encyclopedia: https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13110b.htm
 
> Days of prayer, and formerly also of fasting, instituted by the Church to appease God's anger at man's transgressions, to ask protection in calamities, and to obtain a good and bountiful harvest
posted 2 years ago by sparrow in general (+2 / -0 )
So I've identified this is an issue off and on, my strategy for reducing the problem is to record things to search on a search engine to do at a later time if ever (instead of searching for it, opening up tabs, and then leaving them be accumulated). Or to bookmark open tabs and come back to them.
 
Anyone else run in to this problem and how do you manage it?
 
> tfw just cleared out a tab hoard
 
I wrote down the main ideas I search for, and discarded accumluated extra unneeded links
A Catholic Marriage Manual from 1958 states (p. 116):
 
(It's this book but you'd need an account to borrow it to check it: https://archive.org/details/catholicmarriage00kell)
 
> "Danger of the working wife [Section Title] ... In 1890, only 4% of married women in the United States were gainfully employed. By 1940, that number had increased to fifteen percent, and by 1956 thirty per cent of all married women held jobs outside the home. ... The wife should work outside the home only in cases of great necessity. Experience teaches that the path of the working wife is strewn with difficulties, both for herself and her family. ... In other cases, if the wife's income approximates or exceeds that of her hsuband [sic], his pride may be deeply wounded, and friction may easily develop over the question of who is head of the household. Work outside the home may also foster traits undesirable in a wife. She may become economically independent, and be less willing to make sacrifices and emotional adjustments to keep relations with her husband on a happy basis."
 
And so on. You get the gist. I am not aware of this teaching being formally rejected in any way and so many "Catholics" would be in violation of it today (?).
 
It also seems to imply the "house husband" arrangement is unthinkable, or a choice for a minority (?).
 
To me the rise of female breadwinners, and house husbands, stems from a rejection of Christian teaching and social norms.
 
Yes, no? What is to be thought of "house husbands" today?
DIY Soap Shoes (www.instructables.com)
posted 2 years ago by sparrow in general (+2 / -0 )
seems like an interesting monitor replacement idea
Kentucky Derby General (www.kentuckyderby.com)
posted 2 years ago by sparrow in general (+2 / -0 )
Today is Free Comic Book Day (www.freecomicbookday.com)
posted 2 years ago by sparrow in ConsumeProduct (+1 / -1 )
Consoom comics?
posted 2 years ago by sparrow in ConsumeProduct (+6 / -0 )
Mark your calendars
CONSOOM VEHICLES
 
So, the ranges on these can be limited on the electrical side, maybe 50 miles, so this can allow people to drive a short distance (like commute to errands or work) on electric, but then if you go further you can rely on gas or if you want to go on a long road trip you can make use of the gas engine. And the "plug in" part allows you to plug in at home (to the grid or solar panels, etc.).
 
Sounds like the best of both worlds, is there a catch?
 
What do you think of the debate on gas powered vehicles versus electric or what are good use cases for each?
 
Just like eating bugs, I see some conservatives are against EVs for various reasons but I'm not sure I agree with them. Bugs are just food, and EVs are just vehicles. For me, I like the idea of having some solar panels and being energy independent. I'm ok with burning gas (not worried about the environment particularly) but it makes you dependent on countries that you may not want to do business with, and hypothetically could run out at some point (so we don't know how long we could rely on gas). EVs run quieter and even if they rely on burning coal at power plants, can't those power plants have good filters on them so there are less emissions than gas exhaust being expelled by cars everywhere?
 
So don't EVs have distinct benefits, or do you think this is just a ruse for some kind of reason?
https://mises.org/library/misnamed-conflict
 
I guess my takeaway from reading articles like this over time is that slavery went away in many places without a war being fought, so it wasn't necessary for the North to fight the South to "free the slaves"
 
The Southern states in the U.S. legally seceded and so the war was in violation of their right to secede
 
A more optimal solution to the problem to give us the same outcome as we currently experience might have been to engage in negotiations to put an end to slavery by consent in the states, and to either allow the secession or negotiate an end to it. So many lives, so much freedom, and resources lost to ineffective conflict resolution.
https://infogalactic.com/info/Prime_(liturgy)
 
> Prime, or the First Hour, is a fixed time of prayer of the traditional Divine Office (Canonical Hours), said at the first hour of daylight (approximately 7:00 a.m.), between the morning Hour of Lauds and the 9 a.m. Hour of Terce. It is part of the Christian liturgies of Eastern Christianity, but in the Latin Rite it was suppressed by the liturgical reforms following the Second Vatican Council.[1]
 
> As the chronology of Cassian's works has recently been established fairly accurately, the institution of Prime must be placed towards 382.[4]
 
So from 382-1960s (?) this was observed but the Vatican 2 church broke from this tradition....
Practical question with regard to possible future food shortages, for people in survival situations like soldiers, but I was also curious if it was a way of identifying an optimal way for people to lose weight
 
Anyone know what is recommended? And if and how this might differ from people simply aiming to lose weight? (Because there are frequent disagreements about how people ought to lose weight, and still an "obesity pandemic" continuing, but I thought this was an angle I hadn't thought of this problem from)
 
I don't recall if the film or book of "The Road" had content I would caution against, but they were in a post-apocalyptic situation where they had a low food supply so I remember wondering what their strategy should be in such a scenario (eat a lot on a day, then skip days to eat? Eat every day? etc.)
How to troll this new holiday?
 
> The day white people freed the slaves
 
inb4 reeeeee
I know there's a pervasive message that all instant gratification is bad and all delayed gratification is good
  
  
But I've experienced delaying gratification and it only led to loss, and have been reflecting on how some instant gratification might fix certain problems I have otherwise "patiently" put up with
  
  
So I guess this is a reminder that delayed or instant gratification are to be balanced
  
  
There are a few articles on how instant gratification can be used for good, by giving you appropriate little rewards frequently
  
  
Something to think about: when can delayed gratification be harmful and instant gratification be good?
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