Catholic Info

Traditional Catholic Faith => Computers, Technology, Websites => Topic started by: Stubborn on March 17, 2016, 05:06:35 AM

Title: Seeing Green
Post by: Stubborn on March 17, 2016, 05:06:35 AM
Ahhh, I missed that!

Happy St. Patrick's Day!
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: MaterDominici on March 17, 2016, 01:20:26 PM
F5 to see green  :jumping2:
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: Matthew on March 17, 2016, 01:28:57 PM
 :cowboy:

 :smile:

 :smirk:
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: cassini on March 17, 2016, 03:46:27 PM
Greetings from Ireland on this St Patrick's day.

At Mass this morning we all got blessed shamrock to wear in our lapels in memory of St Patrick.

For those of you who may not know the shamrock is a little plant with three leaves and thus represents the Trinity.

There are other such little plants called clover, but only the shamrock is pure green. Others similar three--leaf stems have white inside them. Kind of like one true Church and many other pretenders. As kids we knew the real thing from the blemished ones.

St Patrick's day over here now has been hijacked by secularism and the saint's Catholicity is never mentioned anymore.

Now that St Patrick's day is celebrated all over the world, even in China now, the last thing they want to celebrate is his Catholic zeal.
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: Matthew on March 17, 2016, 04:32:35 PM
Here on CathInfo I always turn the site green on St. Patrick's Day, and usually keep it that way for the rest of March (sometimes partway into April! hahaha)

Because on my father's side, we came from Ireland. My father's ancestors lived in Wisconsin for a few generations after immigrating from Ireland.

I hope to keep alive the Irish spirit of fighting for the Faith against great odds. I also hope to promote in myself and others the Irish love of truth, frankness, and honesty.

My ancestors must have all stayed Catholic, or else my grandfather and father wouldn't have been Catholic.
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: stgobnait on March 17, 2016, 04:46:44 PM
In a vision, Saint Patrick saw the Light of Faith almost disappear from Ireland, But not completely, Saint Patrick, come to our aid, in our battles take part.....
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: Maria Regina on March 17, 2016, 06:18:44 PM
Quote from: Matthew
Here on CathInfo I always turn the site green on St. Patrick's Day, and usually keep it that way for the rest of March (sometimes partway into April! hahaha)

Because on my father's side, we came from Ireland. My father's ancestors lived in Wisconsin for a few generations after immigrating from Ireland.

I hope to keep alive the Irish spirit of fighting for the Faith against great odds. I also hope to promote in myself and others the Irish love of truth, frankness, and honesty.

My ancestors must have all stayed Catholic, or else my grandfather and father wouldn't have been Catholic.


Aha!

I thought the kelly green bars had something to do with St. Patrick's day.

Yes, my family line goes back to County Cork, Ireland.
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: Prayerful on March 17, 2016, 07:28:14 PM
Quote from: Matthew
Here on CathInfo I always turn the site green on St. Patrick's Day, and usually keep it that way for the rest of March (sometimes partway into April! hahaha)

Because on my father's side, we came from Ireland. My father's ancestors lived in Wisconsin for a few generations after immigrating from Ireland.

I hope to keep alive the Irish spirit of fighting for the Faith against great odds. I also hope to promote in myself and others the Irish love of truth, frankness, and honesty.

My ancestors must have all stayed Catholic, or else my grandfather and father wouldn't have been Catholic.


Thank you Matthew.

There is an old superstition that 'green is for grief' but to me it's the nicer colour. I'm biased being Irish, but maybe keep the green.
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: Maria Regina on March 17, 2016, 10:29:41 PM
Thank you, Matthew, for sharing the green.
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: poche on March 17, 2016, 11:14:10 PM
Happy St Patrick's day
 :cowboy: :cowboy: :cowboy:
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: cassini on March 18, 2016, 03:58:21 PM
These are actual vocal recordings of kids at school in Dublin. Enjoy a time when kids left primary school young theologians.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0q-_gWOYjY


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xtEHYQvu_c4
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: AlligatorDicax on March 28, 2016, 12:30:25 PM
Quote from: Matthew (Mar 17, 2016, 5:32 pm)
Here on CathInfo I always turn the site green on St. Patrick's Day, and usually keep it that way for the rest of March (sometimes partway into April! hahaha)
 

The Web site for the local independent Catholic church shows its Lenten purple (d.b.a. "violet") theme on the date of the saint's feast, because Ash Wednesday always falls between February 4 and March 10 (inclusive), and Lent never ends earlier than March 22.  Sigh.

Quote from: Matthew (Mar 17, 2016, 5:32 pm)
[...] on my father's side, we came from Ireland.  My father's ancestors lived in Wisconsin for a few generations after immigrating from Ireland.

Attracted by seeing a map locating a place named "Green Bay"?

'Twas many decades before science would show that the modern population of Ireland has the world's highest percentage of genetic tolerance for dairy products (or to take the rare opportunity to flaunt the Latinate--thus overtly more Catholic--word newly learned this year from Canon Law: lacticinia), notably including cheese.

I can claim no better than 1/8 Irish blood, calculated unscientifically as having 1 pureblood-Irish great-grandmother, who, altho' born in a Yankee state during the War Between the States, was the very devoutly Catholic daughter of native Irish, and was married post"Reconstruction" in a neutralized border state (i.e.: one south of the Mason-Dixon Line, but north of the Deep South).
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: AlligatorDicax on March 28, 2016, 03:49:11 PM
Quote from: Matthew (Mar 17, 2016, 2:28 pm)
:cowboy: (No need for a cow-poke to go west to Cali-for-nee, begorrah, there's gold raht hyar!)    :smile:    :smirk:

Ah, yes.  I see that the shamrocks flanking the CathInfo logo are actually part of it.  So much for the temptation to simply, um, borrow them.

I'm curious about how well equipped CathInfo's readers are with Unicode.  That's relevant to this topic because it provides 2 single-symbol substitues for an actual image of a shamrock such as Matthew uses.  On this special occasion, I'm specifying an overly large character size that's almost always too large to be appropriate for all but the rarest text on an Internet forum:
· 'SHAMROCK' at U+2618 (decimal 9752): ☘
· 'BLACK CLUB SUIT'
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: Desmond on March 29, 2016, 02:16:43 PM
Little green goblins (or whatever they are) are blasphemous and unbiblical.
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: Nadir on April 01, 2016, 12:59:13 AM
 :mad:I've never heard a leprechaun blaspheme; besides we are not protestants here.
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: Desmond on April 01, 2016, 08:24:02 AM
Quote from: Nadir
:mad:I've never heard a leprechaun blaspheme; besides we are not protestants here.


It starts with "harmless" "cute" woodland creatures and then you end up LARPing Lord of the Rings in the woods dressed up as a she-elf with a bunch of fat Wiccans.
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: AlligatorDicax on April 01, 2016, 03:20:23 PM
Quote from: Desmond the Bible-Thumper (Mar 29, 2016, 3:16 pm)
Little green goblins (or whatever they are) are [...] unbiblical.

Sigh.  So where is it that you see them depicted in a religious context?  E.g.: inside a church or shrine?

If you believe that it would benefit the Catholic Faith to organize a crusade against creatures that're unbiblical, but abundant in a religious context, you need to look no farther than the winged nude infants that are customarily misidentified as "cherubs", which are the same creatures as the Hebrew plural "cherubim".  They've infested religious paintings and sculpture, including numerous great churches of Christendom, for many centuries, at least as far back as mediæval times.  Quite a lot of devout Marian art depicts such winged infants, typically with a degree of modesty more like Botticelli's "Venus" than a Blessed Virgin.

That the customary images are plainly unbiblical should be clear after reading the 1908 article "Cherubim", by  Arendzen in the Catholic Encyclopedia: <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03646c.htm>.

Quote from: Nadir the Garlic Eater (Mar 31, 2016, 13:59 am)
:mad: [...] besides we are not protestants here.

At times I wonder.  We seem to have several neopuritans here.  Not having seen the recent exchange until today, I quickly looked to see if Desmond's posting was dated as April Fools' Day: Nope.
Title: Seeing Green
Post by: Desmond on April 02, 2016, 03:29:26 PM
Quote from: AlligatorDicax

Sigh.  So where is it that you see them depicted in a religious context?  E.g.: inside a church or shrine?


No, their very existence is.

Quote
If you believe that it would benefit the Catholic Faith to organize a crusade against creatures that're unbiblical, but abundant in a religious context, you need to look no farther than the winged nude infants that are customarily misidentified as "cherubs", which are the same creatures as the Hebrew plural "cherubim".  They've infested religious paintings and sculpture, including numerous great churches of Christendom, for many centuries, at least as far back as mediæval times.  Quite a lot of devout Marian art depicts such winged infants, typically with a degree of modesty more like Botticelli's "Venus" than a Blessed Virgin.


I wholeheartedly agree and support your crusade. What can we actually do about it?
Cherubs are basically pagan cupids and therefore abominable.

Quote
That the customary images are plainly unbiblical should be clear after reading the 1908 article "Cherubim", by  Arendzen in the Catholic Encyclopedia: <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03646c.htm>.


Very interesting, I'll try to read it soon.

Quote
At times I wonder.  We seem to have several neopuritans here.


What's wrong with being figurative neopuritans anyway?

Quote

 Not having seen the recent exchange until today, I quickly looked to see if Desmond's posting was dated as April Fools' Day: Nope.


Why? Because I and others do not use the "whatever hey we're catholic" excuse to indulge ourselves both in mind or body with thoughts and activities God surely disapproves of?

Because we do not "play the game" and try to be as lenient as possible and do the littlest effort possible to assure our Salvation?

I'm betting many people will have a very shocking and brutal awakening when their time comes...