Pilgrim Traveller

thoughts on life’s journey…

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Particular Problems with Pilgrimage and Pilgrim Places

Posted by David Ward on 16/07/2010
Posted in: Books/Articles, Pilgrimage, Theology. Tagged: Council of Chalon-sur-Saone, Desert Fathers and Mothers, Gregory of Nyussa, Jerome, John Davies, Maurice de Sully, Pilgrimage, places, Theology. Leave a comment

The practice of pilgrimage has its roots in the period following Constantine’s Edict of Milan in 313. It became fashionable to visit the places associated with the birth, life and death of Jesus in Palestine.

It was also adopted as part of the ascetic discipline of the Desert Fathers and Mothers.

But, early on, voices of dissent questioned the purpose and necessity of making a pilgrimage, of the notion of sacred places and of the relics that were often to be found at the destination of a pilgrimage. Here are a small selection of pre-reformation quotes:

“I do not presume to limit God’s omnipotence or restrict to a narrow strip of earth him whom the heavens cannot contain…Access to the court of heaven is as easy from Britain as it is from Jerusalem…the places which witnessed the crucifixion and the resurrection profit only those who bear their several crosses, who day by day rise again with Christ.”

St Jerome (c347-420)

“Going on a pilgrimage is not something required by Christ…the grace of the Holy Spirit is not more abundant at Jerusalem than elsewhere…Rascality, adultery, theft, idolatry, poisoning, quarrelling, murder, are rife.”

Gregory of Nyssa (c335-395)

Celtic monk

“To go to Rome is much trouble, little profit. The king whom you seek there you will not find, unless you take him with you.”

Ancient Irish quatrain.

The Council of Chalon-sur-Saone, in 813 tried to regulate pilgrimage by condemning certain sorts of pilgrim:

  • Clerics who think they will be able to purge their sins by going on a pilgrimage and at the same time escape from their pastoral duties.
  • Laity who think they can sin wit impunity simply by frequenting such places of prayer.
  • Powerful folk who exact payment from the rest of the company under pretence of protecting them.
  • Poor people whose motive is solely to have better opportunities for begging.
  • Wanderers who go on one pilgrimage after another in the belief that simply to see a holy place will purge their sins.

Maurice de Sully, bishop of Paris from 1160 to 1196, and founder of the cathedral of Notre Dame, said:

“God has no regard for the works of a bad Christian, for neither he nor his works pleases him…What profit can it be to go on a pilgrimage and travel far from his village if he does not travel far from sin and vice

An excellent book on the history, theology and practice of pilgrimage is John Davies, ‘Pilgrimage Yesterday and Today’, SCM Press, London 1988.

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Another desktop blogging tool

Posted by David Ward on 13/07/2010
Posted in: Blogging. Tagged: Blogging, free software, images, software, Zoundry Raven. Leave a comment

Zoundry Raven.pngI discovered one more tool today, Zoundry Raven, which is an updated version of some desktop blogging software that’s been around for some time. I thought I’d put it through its paces by making this post,m so we’ll see how well it works.

The initial configuration wizard was quite simple. It seems to have good tools for placing, aligning and giving border to images, which I think is quite important. The posting interface is very straightforward. There are one or two buttons which do things I haven’t learned yet, but I don’t imagine that will be a problem. Lots of people complain about the lack of support for this sort of software, but I think you have to accept that (especially if it’s free) and not be afraid to play around with it. If it doesn’t do what you need you can soon scrap it and use a different one.

One feature I like is that it downloaded both the main page of the blog and any subsidiary pages, and enables you to post to any page you choose.

raven-logo.png

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Blogging tools for your desktop

Posted by David Ward on 13/07/2010
Posted in: Blogging. Tagged: application, Blogging, Blogjet, desktop, free software, software, Windows Live Writer, Word 2007, WordPress. Leave a comment

Windows Live Writer ScreenshotIts useful to be able to write for my blog without needing to be on line. I don’t really have money to spend on software at present, but if I did I would definitely purchase Blogjet. I tried out all sorts of free and pay-for applications, and Blogjet is way out in front.

My experiment with posting using Word 2007 worked too…I used the ‘New Document → Blog’ facility, which cuts out a lot of the awkward formatting that makes  posting from Word tricky (although I notice that WordPress has import tools to sort that out).

One of the problems with Blogger is that it doesn’t have its own photo upload facility, so pre-written entries can’t be uploaded to Blogger from a desktop app. That was the reason I scorned Windows Live Writer, but I now have it installed and it works really well with WordPress – give it a try.

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