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Source: (consider it) Thread: Eccles: Holy Women Holy Men 2009
PD
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I think we started having too many minor commemoratons in the Church of England c.1980, and the ECUSA (as it was then) probably went over the top in 1973. I actually prefer the idea of keeping only major and a few locally significant saints, and otherwise using a daily Eucharistic lectionary.

PD

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Spiffy
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I finally got around to skimming through the SCLM Blue Book in its entirety (and skimming real fast through Rachel's Tears portion as it's hitting a wee bit too close to home lately) and I noticed in the appendix on pg 563 (p. 379 of the PDF) that they are recommending for future consideration one Thomas A. Dorsey, composer/musician, which tickles me pink.

[ETA to add the color I am tickled and the fact it's not really a double post.]

[ 04. December 2009, 16:55: Message edited by: Spiffy ]

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Swick
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The collects in HWHM are clearly collects, since they do follow the recognizable pattern of a collect. That said, I confess that I do find the collect for Ini Kopuria pretty awful:

"Loving God, we bless your Name for the witness of Ini Kopuria, police officer and founder of the Melanesian Brotherhood, whose members saved many American pilots in a time of war, and who continue to minister courageously to the islanders of Melanesia. Open our eyes that we, with these Anglican brothers, may establish peace and hope in service to others, for the sake of Jesus Christ; who with you and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns, one God, for ever and ever. Amen."

The seniments expressed are okay, but is sounds a bit like a history lesson and the English style seems pretty tortured. I don't know why, but "police officer" just sounds. A composition that cries for revision.

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Angloid
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That sounds like a modern equivalent of the English Missal spoof (by Cyril Tomkinson, vicar of All Saints, Margaret Street, 'in honour of a well-known and spiritually haughty director of souls') quoted by Harry Williams in his autobiography:
quote:
O God who hast given unto thy servant John Briscoe a proud look and a high stomach, mercifully grant that as we have been chastened by the rod of his correction, so we may be aided by his condescending intercessions.


[ 04. December 2009, 21:48: Message edited by: Angloid ]

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Choirboy
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Priceless.

We've really lost it with this one, not because I will necessarily disagree about the worthiness of candidates, but because we have just made a list of really cool people. I doubt there are any local parishes, never mind dioceses, that had any celebration of these worthies before petitioning for their inclusion in the c/k-alender (honestly people: whatEVah!).

And that is where we are losing the concept of saint. Deciding who is commemorated has always contained some degree of 'making a statement'. However, it feels like here we're limiting the commemorations to some sort of political statement (albeit one I might agree with) rather than connecting it to the life of the church through prayer.

I am relieved to read at the end of the book that you have to wait so many years after someone's death before they make it into the calendar (although I think they bent that rule for MLK Jr.). But I would really like to see so many years of commemoration at a local or diocesan level in addition, rather than just coming up with lists to make everyone feel included.

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Fr Weber
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quote:
Originally posted by Choirboy:
Priceless.

We've really lost it with this one, not because I will necessarily disagree about the worthiness of candidates, but because we have just made a list of really cool people.

ExACTly.

Not to put too fine a point on it, but it reminds me of the "dancing saints" mural at St Gregory of Nyssa in San Francisco. It's beautifully executed, but it stretches the definition of "saint" so far as to make it meaningless.

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The Silent Acolyte

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quote:
Angloid shares with us:
quote:
O God who hast given unto thy servant John Briscoe a proud look and a high stomach, mercifully grant that as we have been chastened by the rod of his correction, so we may be aided by his condescending intercessions.

Can the ignorant ask what is meant by a high stomach? With all the ulcers, tubes, acid, cancer, cramps, aneurysms, back pain, Pilates, et al., Google fails to give me what I'm looking for.
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Angloid
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quote:
Originally posted by The Silent Acolyte:
Can the ignorant ask what is meant by a high stomach?

Don't ask me what it means, but cf Psalm 101 v 7 (Coverdale version): 'Whoso hath also a proud look and high stomach, I will not suffer him.'

I tend to think of generously-proportioned and well-dined bankers. Not so many stomachs like that amongst the church hierarchy these days, probably because they're always rushing off to meetings and confirmations instead of sitting down to lavish dinners.

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Mamacita

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A search on the etymology of "high stomach" suggests that "stomach," in Middle English use, could also mean "desire" or pride.

The 1928 BCP Psalter renders this verse as "Whose hath also a haughty look and a proud heart * I will not suffer him."
The NRSV has "A haughty look and an arrogant heart * I will not tolerate."

That would make "proud look" and "high stomach" essentially the same thing and thus consistent with the pattern of repetition and echoing that we find in the psalms.

[ 05. December 2009, 16:25: Message edited by: Mamacita ]

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Angloid
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I'm sure you're right, Mamacita. But letting the imagination roam a bit is much more fun than accurate scholarship.

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Mama Thomas
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quote:
whose members saved many American pilots in a time of war, and who continue to minister courageously to the islanders of Melanesia
Can they please name one they saved please. Unsupported statement. The only story I heard was that they saved the lives of several Japanese pilots. (And not just the Brothers, the villagers did this as well.) This prompted an American officer to complain to Bishop Baddeley to explain about the missionaries teaching the people to "love their enemies" and all that. Of course, the natives were dying to get out of the control of the British, who considered them "theirs", but the Masing Rul is never mentioned.

Why not rather mention the seven young Melanesian Brothers who were murdered on Guadalcanal in 2003? They stood up against the tyranny of the warlords who were distroying the country at the time. Much like the victims of Cd. Juarez in the past few years.

I love Ini Kopuria very much, and Dr. Charles Fox whose names escapes the c/kalendar, but his younger followers also deserve mention. Fanny with her Blessed Assurance deserves a place, what what about CF Alexander? whose poetry has touched more people than Franny Crosby. At least as much as her great nephew Bing. At least Tommy Dorsey is coming (actually, an old lady in my parish called and told me Tommy Dorsey would be on channel 12 at six pm today, but I don't get that channel for some reason. Too bad. Mrs. Alexander was inspired in many ways. But not Dag Hammerskjold? What about the guy in town who has been serving ribs to the homeless for decades. (AMEZ Church). Or the Episcopal couple who get destroyed--ripped open--bags of dog food from a kindly Wal-Mart manager to feed to strays in an abandoned area of town. There's a lot of good.

An Anglo lady and her Mexican maid came in volutarily to clean up the church of their own free will the other day.
There is a lot, a lot, a very lot of under-reported good going on in the Episcopal Church. Always had it, always will.

But if Lambeth 58 is to be followed, other than ordinary grace is needed before being canonised "made part of the list, by applying a rule to measure the visible holiness in a person". Is it heroic, like Joan of Arc or the three Portuguese shepherds in 1917? Or ordinary like Father Talbot, who heroically found colic medicine in a small town for a nest of sick trailer babies in the early 80s? In the rain. And all the pharmacies/chemists closed?

What about Dorothy Day? They've got the anti- Semite Saint Jerome in their anyway. But what about the great Sufi's? Great Lama's? New Age heroes? I cannot get the criteria for saintliness in this volume.

One has expected America to take a lead in such things. But since the 80s, the crown has passed back to other provinces, bless 'em!

Canada's "For All the Saints" beats LF&F hands down as does the CofE's.

Rome's, produces in these things as always, is mediocre at best, being high-falutin' and therefore incomprehensible at best, and chicken fat at the other, more popular end. (I've seen things down there, about Brown Scapulars and things that made my hair curl. (Thank you, Infant of Atocha!)

Please before they publish an embarrassment, with lessons repeated ad nauseam, and particularly vile collects for worthies unknown to the world, cannot voices be raised so that the standard can be raised? Can anyone link a petition or a form for these ivory tower liturgical committee people who look after Harvard classes and upper middle class parishes when not working on national church issues?


Also, I am intrigued by the re-introduction of the eightfold office, but no equivalent to Matins, either after Compline. Middle night prayer is good. But will there be Psalm prayers? Antiphons for the Psalms and canticles? More than an handful of canticles?

Something needs to be done to spice up our daily office life. I love the RC intercessions, even better than the CofE's suggested topics. Good, but got boring around 1984 in Alternative Worship. Thought they'd have had more variety by 2005.

My meaningless advice would be to cull, check for evidence of real holiness (miracles through intercession perhaps?). Are we reducing saintliness with being poster boys or girls for causes and all these without out gays and lezzies except that Cistercian guy.

Odd choices. May God have mercy on their souls as they pray for us and rise in glory.

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churchgeek

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quote:
Originally posted by Spiffy:
quote:
Originally posted by Angloid:
quote:
Originally posted by Quam Dilecta:
Outside of religious houses and the relatively few parishes which can offer a daily mass, there has long been a practical need to choose which commemorations to observe on those weekdays when sevices are held. A much-expanded list of worthies will only complicate the choice.

But all Anglican churches, surely, observe the Daily Office.
[Killing me]

Dude, my parish is lucky if we get a service on Sunday. The rest of the week, the doors to the sanctuary are locked tight. I think the only place in the entire diocese where you can get a daily Daily Office is the Cathedral, and even then it's just Evening Prayer.

(Now, I've been arguing for a couple years that my poor, cranky, losing-members-like-wild parish should institute a DO, and I've even offered to show my happy hippy behind up and do it 6 days a week, but I've been basically told to sit down and shut up so many times on this and other matters that I'm seriously contemplating shaking the dust from my feeties and bailing.)

Pray the Daily Office in the parking lot. Sorta like a pray-in. [Big Grin] [Two face]

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churchgeek

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BTW, here's another link:
HMHW / LFF Kalendar
It helpfully puts the new commemorations in brackets and indicates when a date has been moved.

I share the general sentiments on this thread - we seem to have now a list of people based on some criteria other than any recognizably theological criteria.

It should be noted that HWHM is "for trial use" - can we get any official eyes over here to this thread to see some of the feedback?

I suspect a lot of the mess does arise from our broad church ("big tent") spectrum. For some (like myself), more Catholic criteria would be desirable; for others, the Kalendar is apparently a tool for stretching our concept of sainthood/saintliness. I can see some good in that, but I don't think the Kalendar ought to be used for that. There is always Sunday School, after all.

I would be in favor of a tiered or regional system where various saints are on offer to be commemorated as seen fit by each diocese, but some other set (like the "Prayer Book Feasts", perhaps plus some others that are agreed on by the whole ECUSA) we should all observe. After all, if the whole thing is left to regional discretion, the Kalendar loses its formative aspect (i.e., we make the Communion of Saints over to look like us, rather than the other way around).

Some peculiarities I've noticed so far:

I'm very happy to see Teilhard de Chardin added to our kalendar; but he's on the same date as William Law (April 10). Are they meant to be celebrated together? There seem to be a lot of these lumping together of various folks. The commemoration in December of Ralph Adams Cramm and a couple other architects/church building artists is similarly strange. (I'm not convinced we should commemorate someone just because they made pretty buildings for us to worship in).

Dates being moved - sometimes it seems arbitrary; sometimes it even moves someone off the day they actually died.

Renaming: e.g., the Martyrs of Lyons to "Blandina and her companions" - I would bet this renaming is because Blandina was both female and a slave, but is there a reason to single her out more than "her companions"?

ETA: Oops! I forgot the reason I sought this thread out in the first place.

For those of you who are instituting the use of HWHM in your place (whether against your will or not), how are you handling it? My understanding is there are more readings being given than there had been in LFF (i.e., 2 lessons and the Gospel, v. one lesson and the Gospel) - and I haven't seen additional lessons supplied for the old LFFs. Are you picking one of the two proposed readings, or using both? And any other practical matters to do with implementation... Thanks!

[ 06. February 2010, 22:26: Message edited by: churchgeek ]

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The Silent Acolyte

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Wasn't part of the English reform to clear the kalendar of saintly detritus? We seem to be moving now in the opposite direction.
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Yerevan
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quote:
Who are we to tell the Baptists who their saints are?

Quite. But....

quote:

2) By Anglican lights, Baptists are heterodox. Isn't it problematic to insist that paedobaptism is normative on the one hand and then to elevate to sainthood a person who denied it and (if she was in agreement with her church) thought that baptizing infants was at best silly and at worst sinful?

Accusing Baptists of heterodoxy is a bit rich given some Anglicans' theological lassitude. People in glass houses and all that?

I admire lots of people on the list without really seeing the point of it. Things like this are always going to end up being 'political'. Have we got enough women? Is it multi-ethnic enough? Have we kept all different interest groups happy? Have we got a nice even balance of Catholics and evangelicals. Blah blah...

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Mama Thomas
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Noticed Phoebe was on the list. Isn't her only claim to fame the fact that Paul said "say hello to Phoebe for me"? Why not Lois and Eunice too?
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dj_ordinaire
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quote:
Originally posted by Mamacita:
A search on the etymology of "high stomach" suggests that "stomach," in Middle English use, could also mean "desire" or pride.

The 1928 BCP Psalter renders this verse as "Whose hath also a haughty look and a proud heart * I will not suffer him."
The NRSV has "A haughty look and an arrogant heart * I will not tolerate."

That would make "proud look" and "high stomach" essentially the same thing and thus consistent with the pattern of repetition and echoing that we find in the psalms.

I think this might relate back to the old ideas connecting various bits of ones innards to the emotions. 'Stomach' was the source of pride, 'Spleen' referred to misery (and was used in this sense in Pride and Prejudice), 'Arm' was 'strength', 'Heart' was connected to affection - a link which we will be making come Valentine's Day, even though we know perfectly damn well that hearts have nothing to do with this. [Smile]

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the Ænglican
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IIRC, Blandina makes it for something more interesting than the vague PC possibility above. The venerable professor of a great many things at General Theological Seminary, J. Bob Wright, has for several years been a great champion of Blandina because of the specific wording of the account of her martyrdom. I haven't read it myself so I'm not sure what exactly, but he claims that it uses fundamentally priestly language to describe her suffering and that this item should be part of the debate on the acceptability and Early Church views on the ordination of women.

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the Ænglican
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quote:
Originally posted by churchgeek:

For those of you who are instituting the use of HWHM in your place (whether against your will or not), how are you handling it? My understanding is there are more readings being given than there had been in LFF (i.e., 2 lessons and the Gospel, v. one lesson and the Gospel) - and I haven't seen additional lessons supplied for the old LFFs. Are you picking one of the two proposed readings, or using both? And any other practical matters to do with implementation... Thanks!

My implementation is solely in terms of the Office. AFAIC, all of the readings listed in LFF/HWHM are for masses and not Offices. And, since *all* of the HWHM are to be used at the same level of commemoration, that's all I give 'em--a commemoration. Thus, I use the provided collect after the Collect of the Day in MP. That's it...

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Fr Weber
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quote:
Originally posted by Yerevan:
Accusing Baptists of heterodoxy is a bit rich given some Anglicans' theological lassitude. People in glass houses and all that?


I didn't mean it polemically. The official Anglican position allows--hell, it *encourages*--the baptism of infants. In light of that position, refusing to baptize infants is, technically, heterodox.

Point taken about the theological laxity of some Anglicans, and the fact that some evangelical Anglicans oppose paedobaptism also complicates the issue. The point was that the Anglicans wanting to canonize a Baptist seems weird to me, and a bit like talking out of both sides of one's mouth.

But then, St Gregory's in SF has iconized Malcolm X, Bucky Fuller, and Paul Ehrlich. *shrug*

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--Sr Theresa Koernke, IHM

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LA Dave
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Well, I don't have dog in this hunt anymore, but the commemoration of Ralph Adams Cram would seem to be as justified as the commemoration of Anglican musicians. Cram, along with Bertram Goodhue, was the most important architect of Episcopal Church architecture in the last part of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th, creating such important buildings as Calvary Church, Pittsburgh, St. Paul's Cathedral in Detroit, the chapel of the Society of St. John Evangelist in Cambridge, St. Thomas Fifth Avenue, the nave of St. John the Divine. He also designed some of the most important Presbyterian neo-Gothic structures, such as Fourth Presbyterian in Chicago and the Cathedral of Hope in Pittsburgh. He also designed much of the Princeton campus, including the chapel.
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Yerevan
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quote:
Originally posted by Fr Weber:
quote:
Originally posted by Yerevan:
Accusing Baptists of heterodoxy is a bit rich given some Anglicans' theological lassitude. People in glass houses and all that?


I didn't mean it polemically. The official Anglican position allows--hell, it *encourages*--the baptism of infants. In light of that position, refusing to baptize infants is, technically, heterodox.

Point taken about the theological laxity of some Anglicans, and the fact that some evangelical Anglicans oppose paedobaptism also complicates the issue. The point was that the Anglicans wanting to canonize a Baptist seems weird to me, and a bit like talking out of both sides of one's mouth.

But then, St Gregory's in SF has iconized Malcolm X, Bucky Fuller, and Paul Ehrlich. *shrug*

Fair enough. It just raises the issue of where you draw the line. Who is or isn't heterodox from an Anglican POV? Is there an agreed Anglican POV (almost certainly not).
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churchgeek

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quote:
Originally posted by the Ænglican:
IIRC, Blandina makes it for something more interesting than the vague PC possibility above. The venerable professor of a great many things at General Theological Seminary, J. Bob Wright, has for several years been a great champion of Blandina because of the specific wording of the account of her martyrdom. I haven't read it myself so I'm not sure what exactly, but he claims that it uses fundamentally priestly language to describe her suffering and that this item should be part of the debate on the acceptability and Early Church views on the ordination of women.

Thanks for that! It's good to know.

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My article on the Virgin of Vladimir

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churchgeek

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quote:
Originally posted by LA Dave:
Well, I don't have dog in this hunt anymore, but the commemoration of Ralph Adams Cram would seem to be as justified as the commemoration of Anglican musicians. Cram, along with Bertram Goodhue, was the most important architect of Episcopal Church architecture in the last part of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th, creating such important buildings as Calvary Church, Pittsburgh, St. Paul's Cathedral in Detroit, the chapel of the Society of St. John Evangelist in Cambridge, St. Thomas Fifth Avenue, the nave of St. John the Divine. He also designed some of the most important Presbyterian neo-Gothic structures, such as Fourth Presbyterian in Chicago and the Cathedral of Hope in Pittsburgh. He also designed much of the Princeton campus, including the chapel.

(The high altar of the Cathedral Church of St. Paul, Detroit can be seen in my avatar!
[Big Grin] )

I think it's nice we want to hold up the arts - all of them - but I want to know more about these individuals' lives and what should make us call them saints. I assume they were paid for their architectural work; we don't normally saint people just for the paid work they did that we happen to like. That's not to say these folks may not be saints indeed - it's just there has to be more of a reason for it than that they did their jobs well.

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Lou Poulain
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quote:
Originally posted by The Silent Acolyte:
Wasn't part of the English reform to clear the kalendar of saintly detritus? We seem to be moving now in the opposite direction.

No. Cranmer's issue was the mandatory commemorations and how that complicated the structure of daily prayer, and destroyed any flow or continuity. Hence his comments in the preface to the 1549 BCP regarding "the pie," essentially the Ordo in use at that time to regulate the praying of the Divine Office.

Commemorations on the calendar are voluntary and do not interfere with the continuity of the Office in any way.

In general I like the changes, although some of the additions seem a bit puzzling. But there is a nice blend of missioners, teachers, contemplatives, artists and folk who exhibited "heroic virtue" in the face of trial and danger. I am inspired often by the stories, and because my wife is deaf, I am always pleased when the commemoration of Thomas Gallaudet rolls around in August.

Posts: 526 | From: Sunnyvale CA USA | Registered: Oct 2001  |  IP: Logged
Olaf
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[bumpity bump bump...]

Does anybody know if Holy Women, Holy Men contains the two-year daily eucharistic lectionary?

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steady
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What about Brother Roger of Taizé? I never saw a more saintly person in my life.

--------------------
O that the world might taste and see the wonders of His grace,
The arms of love that compass me would all mankind embrace.

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