POPULARITY
ReferencesMaxwell, JC. 1873. A treatise on electricity and Magnetism I. Oxford.Acta Neuropathol Commun . 2014 Jan 23;2:9J Neurosci. 2012 Dec 5;32(49):17909–17920.Guerra, DJ 2025 Unpublished lecturesMozart, WA. 1791."Ave Verum Corpus transcribed by Liszt.https://open.spotify.com/track/696mXatDdT9KNJ7qKbaqGj?si=821c45a65bc948e3
This summer I'm returning to a series first published in 2022, in which I model a variety of styles of contemplative prayer. I hope it's a blessing to you. If you'd like to connect with me, find me on Instagram, at my website, or on Substack. If you'd like to help support this podcast financially, there's a way to do just that on my page at buymeacoffee.com! Thanks for sharing, subscribing, rating, and reviewing, as this helps our community to grow. Thanks as always to my friend, Peter Vaughan-Vail, for providing the beautiful harp music you hear in this and every episode. Here are some resources to help you dig into this week's topic on your own: 1. Ave Verum Corpus, written by William Byrd and performed by Voices of Ascension Chorus 2. Ave Verum Corpus, written by Mozart and performed by Choir of King's College, Cambridge 3. Ave Verum Corpus by William Byrd: text, history and translation by Choral Public Domain Library Primer on contemplation with lots more helpful resources: Raised Catholic episode 78: Contemplative Summer
“Ave Verum Corpus" by W. A. Mozart. Presented as the prelude to worship by select singers and String Ensemble with Gavan Mcvey Gavan Mcvey conducting on 23 June 2024 at First UMC - Gainesville, FL.
What was your favourite arcade game? Email in and let us know! Also tell us what you thought of Barbie and/or Oppenheimer! While you do that, Dan and Simon discuss the events of a recent party, their thoughts on one of the best films of the year, and exporting baked beans to the Middle East. Yes, Swedish Wikicastians. Baked. Beans. Time Crisis 2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Crisis_II Game Sound: An Introduction to the History, Theory… https://direct.mit.edu/books/book/2460/Game-SoundAn-Introduction-to-the-History-Theory DCPOTW Byrd: The 3 Masses; Ave Verum Corpus https://open.spotify.com/album/2isntM6n993DCFiliH9A7F?si=kq_8AibPSSubafluy1B4CQ Our Instagram (feat Dan): https://www.instagram.com/thewikicast/ UAP hearing https://oversight.house.gov/hearing/unidentified-anomalous-phenomena-implications-on-national-security-public-safety-and-government-transparency/ Life and Death of St Kilda https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1815942.The_Life_and_Death_of_St_Kilda The Anarchy https://www.waterstones.com/book/the-anarchy/william-dalrymple/9781408864395 Si Mon Sci Comm Con https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/si-mon-sci-comm-con-tickets-667020374897 Ross from Hat Films screaming Rocket League https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A4yizifWndU Game Grumps reacting to songs made from their videos https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZdJeqt9oZs Our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thewikicast -------- Email us at: spongyelectric@gmail.com Follow us on X/Threads: @DanielJMaw @simonoxfphys This week's article:
Wij beginnen het muziekprogramma in de religieuze sfeer met een “Tantum Ergo” van Maurice Duruflé,- het “Ave Verum Corpus” van W.A.Mozart,- een “Pange Lingua” van Anton Bruckner,- een “Exultate Deo” van Da Palestrina en ter ere van Johannes de Doper het “Sancte Joannes Baptista” van Philipus De Monte uit Mechelen. Daarna volgt de intergrale versie […]
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozarts Motette "Ave verum corpus" ist eine Musik, die mit wenigen Takten eine Aura des Friedens verströmt. Mozart komponierte das Stück in seinem Todesjahr 1791. Peter Dijkstra, der musikalischen Leiter des Chores des Bayerischen Rundfunks, spricht über das "Ave verum".
A lecture given at L'Abri Fellowship in Southborough, Massachusetts. For more information, visit https://southboroughlabri.org/ by Adam Kurihara Choral music for Holy Week is saturated with a dissonant beauty that reflects the affliction of Chris. We will walk through several key pieces listening and learning about what makes this music so compelling. Learn how musical rhetoric (communicating concrete ideas through musical themes), structure and form, and melody and harmony draw us into the story of Jesus' crucifixion. Our time will be spent primarily with Bach's St. Matthew Passion, as well as Victoria's "O Vos Omnes" and Mozart's "Ave Verum Corpus". Join us for this listening party as we explore choral music for Holy Week. The Copyright for all material on the podcast is held by L'Abri Fellowship. We ask that you respect this by not publishing the material in full or in part in any format or post it on a website without seeking prior permission from L'Abri Fellowship. ©Southborough L'Abri 2023
As we explore a variety of methods of contemplative prayer this summer, week one is all about contemplating music. As you choose your music and draw near to God this week, I pray that you will have a fruitful encounter with God who is crazy about you. If you'd like to connect with me, find me on Instagram or on my blog. If you'd like to help support this podcast financially, there's now a way to do just that, and thank you - visit me on my page at buymeacoffee.com! Thanks as always for sharing, subscribing, rating, and reviewing, as this helps our community to grow! Here are some resources I hope will help you to engage with this week's topic in a deeper way for yourself: 1. Ave Verum Corpus, written by William Byrd and performed by Voices of Ascension Chorus 2. Ave Verum Corpus, written by Mozart and performed by Choir of King's College, Cambridge 3. Ave Verum Corpus by William Byrd: text, history and translation by Choral Public Domain Library Primer on contemplation with lots more helpful resources: Raised Catholic episode 78: Contemplative Summer
«Ave verum Corpus» – Himno en honor del Santísimo Sacramento – Canto Gregoriano --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jlio4/message
Ave Verum Corpus - Canto gregoriano --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jlio4/message
Doğum günün kutlu olsun #Mozart!
Christa Pfeiffer, soprano, Tina Harrington, alto, Dr. Stephen Main, piano
Our pope this week was a pontiff in exile – the whole Roman Curia was in those days – who everyone thought would be near death, but he ended up sticking around for 10 years and set about cleaning up the clerical riff-raff, leaving us with one of the greatest hymns ever written, and hiring a bloodhound in a red hat to prowl around Italy and gain back what was rightfully Peter's. PATREON: https://patreon.com/thepopecast FB / Twitter / Instagram: @thepopecast EMAIL: popecastmc@gmail.com NEWSLETTER: https://popes.substack.com
This piece of sacred music, composed by Doctor Robert Lau and played by Doctor Ralph Kneeream, was commissioned by Mary Queen of Peace Catholic Community to honor their priest. It is titled "Reflections Gregorian" and was inspired by two of Father James' favorite plainsongs "Te Deum" and "Ave Verum Corpus."
Fathers' Day theme. Readings from School House and the Grove. Beautiful setting of Ave Verum Corpus from the choir.
Diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder at the age of eight, Camilla Pang struggled to understand the world around her; in fact, she asked her mother if there was an instruction manual for humans that could help. Twenty years on – after taking her PhD in biochemistry and embarking on a career as a scientist – Camilla has herself has written that manual. She’s called it “Explaining Humans” and it won the Royal Society Prize in 2020 for the best science book . A highly original blend of scientific theory and personal memoir, it gives a real insight into what it’s like to live with autism. In a fascinating conversation with Michael Berkeley, Camilla Pang talks about how she’s learned to thrive in a world which can seem very overwhelming. One of the issues for her is the sensory overload that people with autism spectrum disorder can experience. She’s very sensitive to certain sounds, and the morning commute to work can jangle her senses to such an extent that it takes much of the morning to recover. Music, on the other hand, restores mental calm. Camilla sings and plays the piano; although she has never learned to read music, she can “catch” a tune after hearing it only once. She did this first as a very young child, hearing her mother’s favourite Michael Nyman track and reproducing it straight away on her toy xylophone. Camilla shares the music that has sustained her over the years; we hear Hubert Parry’s great coronation anthem “I was glad”; Michael Nyman’s music for The Piano; William Byrd’s “Ave Verum Corpus”; Debussy’s “Clair de Lune”, and Teardrop by Massive Attack. Produced by Elizabeth Burke A Loftus Media production for BBC Radio 3
Join us for our Maundy Thursday Holy Eucharist with the Rev. Melanie W. J. Slane celebrating and the Rev. Gary Lubin preaching. Thomas Heidenreich on the organ and Kathryn Albertson, Krista Scott, and Lauren McAllister singing Ave Verum Corpus by R. Wheeler.
Renascer pode muitas formas e significados conter, mas aquilo que deixamos de viver e vivemos, não significa renascer. Escute meu podcast essa semana em conjunto com a obra Ave Verum Corpus de Mozart. Obrigado. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/edmundonesi/message
Music from the liturgy at Chavagnes, the leading international boarding school for boys. http://www.chavagnes.org
Plymouth's choir offers Mozart's "Ave Verum Corpus."
On this week's programme Lorraine shares with us some thoughts on the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ, which we know better as Corpus Christi. Lorraine begins by taking us through a history of the feast which owes its existence to Blessed Juliana of Liege, who began devotion to the Blessed Sacrament in around 1230. Largely through her insistence, in 1264 Pope Urban 1V commanded its observance by the universal church. While the Church celebrates the Institution of the Eucharist at the Last Supper on Holy Thursday because it falls within the solemn and reflective time of the Easter Triduum, Juliana wanted to encourage a joyful celebration of this great gift of our Divine Master to the Church and to the world. The Feast sums up three important confessions about our Faith. First is that God became physically present in the person of Christ, True God and True Man. Secondly, God continues to be present in His people as they form the Mystical Body of Christ in his church. And thirdly, the presence of God under the form of bread and wine is made available to us on the altar at Mass and preserved there for our nourishment and worship. Lorraine also reflects on why the Real Presence of Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament is so important to us through the Eucharistic hymns of the Tantum Ergo, Ave Verum Corpus, and Godhead Here in Hiding (Adoro Te Devote). We also have our usual celestial guides and reflection on the Sunday Gospel.
On this week's programme Lorraine shares with us some thoughts on the Solemnity of the Most Holy Body and Blood of Christ, which we know better as Corpus Christi. Lorraine begins by taking us through a history of the feast which owes its existence to Blessed Juliana of Liege, who began devotion to the Blessed Sacrament in around 1230. Largely through her insistence, in 1264 Pope Urban 1V commanded its observance by the universal church. While the Church celebrates the Institution of the Eucharist at the Last Supper on Holy Thursday because it falls within the solemn and reflective time of the Easter Triduum, Juliana wanted to encourage a joyful celebration of this great gift of our Divine Master to the Church and to the world. The Feast sums up three important confessions about our Faith. First is that God became physically present in the person of Christ, True God and True Man. Secondly, God continues to be present in His people as they form the Mystical Body of Christ in his church. And thirdly, the presence of God under the form of bread and wine is made available to us on the altar at Mass and preserved there for our nourishment and worship.Lorraine also reflects on why the Real Presence of Jesus in the Blessed Sacrament is so important to us through the Eucharistic hymns of the Tantum Ergo, Ave Verum Corpus, and Godhead Here in Hiding (Adoro Te Devote).
Show Notes “I was like, ‘God, I don’t want to be a priest,’ but I knew to do good discernment I had to be open to everything. I had to be open to being a priest; I had to be open to being married; I had to be open to whatever God wants for me.” Every good Catholic boy hears from his parish priest and the Church ladies, “I think God is calling you to a priest.” Run away! Run away! Resist! There are instances in life for all of us where it may feel like God is calling us to something we don’t want to do. What do you do when you fear you’re called to something you don’t want to even consider? The ever-droll Taylor Schroll (see what I did there?) of the Forte Catholic Podcast is a lifelong Catholic who defiantly resisted his potential calling to the priesthood for years. We discuss important aspects of discernment: moving your feet instead of waiting for absolute certainty, honesty with God (especially when you’re angry with him!), and surrendering to him before you know the answer. In Taylor’s story, he reveals how his future wife moving across the country to discern religious life actually enabled their relationship. BONUS: at the end listen to an Ave Verum Corpus chant- simple and lovely and a great way to end the episode with a little love for Jesus. Topics Discussed My brilliant business strategy for Taylor that is going to make him $millions$ Can you discern multiple vocations at once? A practical tool to discern what you really want Resources Forte Catholic Podcast Taylor’s YouTube channel You Don’t Have a Soulmate blog post
ENO Community Choir's Spring Concert 2019. At the New St Pancras Church in Euston, Wednesday 27 March. Choir Leaders Murray Hipkin and Caroline
Tina Harrington, alto, Christa Pfeiffer, soprano, Dr. Stephen Main, piano
We answer a listener's question about Vestries. What are they? Where do they come from? What do they do? What don't they do? To support our show, go to wordandtablepodcast.com and click on the '$' symbol. We are coming up on our first full year of broadcasting and hosting and licensing costs are looming. Your support will ensure there is another year of Word & Table! Music: "Ave Verum Corpus" by Richard Proulx and the Cathedral Singers from Sublime Chant. Copyright GIA Publications.
We discuss all things regarding ordination: how ministers come to be ordained, the rite itself, the meaning behind bishops' clothes, and why deacons, priests, and bishops exist in a religion that is also a priesthood of all believers. Email us your questions! Music: "Ave Verum Corpus" from Sublime Chant by Richard Proulx and the Cathedral Singers. Copyright GIA Publications.
Här är den, Den röda tråden del 56, och det är Mirka Kettunens tur att hålla i spakarna. I det här avsnittet tar han dig på en tur som börjar med stjärnskådning, åker via greker och navigering, för att slutligen landa i globaliseringens början. Med på resan är Kike Bertell, som hoppar in på sidospår då och då. I avsnittet kan höras korta bitar av följande musikstycken: Titelmusiken från Star Trek the original series, "Ave Verum Corpus" av Mozart, "Messiah" av Händel, "Earth Song" av Michael Jackson, "Grand Valse Brilliante" av Chopin, "Blues Solo" av Yngwie Malmsteen, "Better Days" från Bensound.com.
Summary of today's show: The Chrism Mass on Tuesday of Holy Week each year is one of the biggest single gatherings of the priests of the Archdiocese of Boston each year and in it Cardinal Seán often gives a very strong homily to encourage his priests. Scot Landry and Fr. Chris O'Connor were joined today by Fr. Bill Kelly and Fr. Joe Scorzello to talk about the importance of the Mass to the priests and Cardinal Seán's reflections on the conclave and comparing it to the openness required of priests who give themselves over to the Holy Spirit. Also, Scot talks to the boys from the Archdiocesan Choir School about their experience singing at the Mass. Listen to the show: Watch the show via live video streaming or a recording later: Today's host(s): Scot Landry and Fr. Chris O'Connor Today's guest(s): Fr. Bill Kelly and Fr. Joe Scorzello Links from today's show: Today's topics: The Chrism Mass, the Choir School, and Cardinal Seán's homily 1st segment: Scot Landry welcomed everyone to the show from the Cathedral of the Holy Cross where Cardinal Seán celebrated the annual Chrism Mass with the priests of the Archdiocese. the Cardinal gives a significant homily to the priests and consecrates new holy oils for all the parishes. Scot said this year many Catholic schools were invited to attend the Mass, including The Archdiocesan Choir School. 2nd segment: Scot welcomed the boys from the choir school and music director John Robinson. He asked John where the boys have been singing in this their 50th anniversary year. He said they sing a range of events, including Christmas concerts in Salem, Norwell, Newport, Rhode Island, and even Carnegie Hall. Today the choir school was to sing the Gloria, an Ave Verum Corpus and another, alongside the Cathedral Festival Choir. Christian Landry, Scot's son who is part of the choir, said it was a great honor to sing for the cardinal's Mass. He said singing for all the priests of the archdiocese is a little bit of a nerve=wracking experience but will prepare them to sing for large audiences later in life. Christian said he loves the teachers and students. Another student, Thomas Potts, said the teachers push them to succeed and learn. Scot asked John about what it's like to be the only Catholic choir school in the country. John said it's an amazing responsibility because they're training the future tenors and cantors and even boys who will become priests. It's a model that Europe has shown to work over many centuries. They're showing it works by the way the boys sing and are being educated. Scot said the school's annual gala will be June 1. John said it's a very important evening financially for the school, but it's great fun as well because the boys are singing in a light jazzy style as well. John said having come into the Church with his wife as an adult, the Chrism Mass is very special for him and especially this year with the Cardinal having come back to us in Boston. 3rd segment: Scot welcomed Fr. Chris O'Connor to the show. Fr. Chris said it was a beautiful Mass that showed the unity of priests, bishops and laity. Scot welcomed Fr. Joe Scorzello who said it's one of the largest Chrism Masses he can remember with many older and younger priests gathered together in a sign of unity and a boost for morale. Fr. Bill Kelly, pastor of St. Mary Parish in Dedham, was welcomed by Scot. Fr. Bill said the Cardinal was at the front door greeting each priest as they came in and it was moving for many of them who haven't been able to see him since the conclave. Fr. Bill said this year the anointing of the oil of the sick was moving for him this year as he recalled all the sick he goes to in hospital and nursing homes, including his own father recently. He said they probably use the anointings more than 100 times per year, including more and more recently to people's homes. Fr. Chris said in this Mass all of the oils used for all of the sacraments throughout the Archdiocese this year were consecrated today. The men to be ordained in May carried the oils up to Cardinal Seán. All of the catechumens to be welcomed into the Church on Saturday and all the babies to be baptized will have those oils used to anoint them. Another moving moment was when Bishop Robert Deeley read the names of all the priests who died this year, reminding that the bonds of the priesthood never die. The unity among them exists not just among the priests, but among the parishes too. This is a Mass about unity between all and their bishop. All of the priests also renew their vows and stay committed to their promise to remain faithful to the Lord and faithful to the bishop. Fr. Scorzello said the lists of names take even greater meaning as he gets older. He's known many of them for years and some he was even an altar server for. He said the Mass is usually celebrated on Holy Thursday and by exception on another day and is focused on the presbyterate as Holy Thursday is as well. Scot said outside of ordinations, it's the largest gathering of priests. Fr. Bill said the Mass and the renewal of vows recalls for him his original vows at his ordination. Like any promise, you don't know how living those promises will be lived out and so saying it again makes him reflect. He said the closing hymn, “Oh Good Beyond All Praising” talks of all the joys and challenges we have as Christians and has the great line, “yet strive to follow still.” He said he finds it consoling knowing that he will die and is being asked to live his life serving as a priest. Scot said having all the Catholic school kids there made it much like the whole church from young to old and he thought of all the young boys who may one day be priests and one of them may one day be reading the name of Fr. Bill or Fr. Chris or Fr. Joe. Fr. Chris said he was struck by the young woman who did an incredible job proclaiming the Second Reading at Mass. Fr. Bill said the faces on the kids reflected all the hundreds of priests and how they realized that the Catholic Church is so much bigger than they imagined. Fr. Chris said as he saw all the priests and all the young people gathered, he was struck by the Psalm “Forever I will sing of the goodness of the Lord”, particularly for priests to be reminded to proclaim the Good News of Jesus Christ and to tell people even in their darkest hour of the goodness of God. Scot said Cardinal Seán might work on this homily as much as he does on any homily all year. He said Cardinal Seán started with some humor reflecting on the conclave: The whole pre-Conclave atmosphere where I was leading in the Italian polls was quite surrealistic. I thought of St. Patrick who was of a Roman family living in Britain. Patrick was an Irish wanabee, he was actually an Italian kidnapped by Irish pirates. I was worried that the Italians were trying to get even. Actually, I was very touched by the Italian people's enthusiasm for your Archbishop. Needless to say, I am very happy and relieved to be back home in Boston. The whole experience of the Conclave was extraordinary. I felt very close to all of you. I knew that we were united in prayer, praying that the Holy Spirit guide our Church in this important decision. Like the first Christians praying intensely before choosing St. Matthias to be an apostle, to fill the vacancy and to pass on the office of Apostle. Scot said it's Cardinal Seán's first mention of the enthusiasm for him in Italy. He said his own experience in Rome was that the regular folk were all for him. Scot noted that Cardinal Seán told reporters he was most looking forward to going home to celebrate the Chrism Mass. Fr. Scorzello said the theme of the Cardinal's homily was one of continuity, whether it was the continuity of the papacy or the continuity of the Church in Boston. He also spoke of the continuity of the formation and growth of the priest throughout his life. He said Metropolitan Methodius' words at the end of Mass was the fulfillment of that continuity. Scot said the Greek Orthodox Metropolitan expressed his hope for unity between West and East. Here in Boston, we must see ourselves as the continuation of the Church of the Acts of the Apostles, with so many dramatic challenges, we must cultivate a deep trust in the abiding presence of the Holy Spirit to guide and unite us. As we work to implement the Pastoral Plan, it cannot be just about strategy or techniques, but about our own deep awareness of God's loving presence in our Church. All of our discussions and planning, like the work of the pre-Conclave Congregations and the Conclave itself, needs to take place in that atmosphere of prayer and trust in God's love for us. Scot said as he was hearing that, he thought that he wants the awareness of the palpable presence of the Holy Spirit to be part of everything we do in the Archdiocese of Boston. Fr. Bill said when you're coming to the work of the Gospel from a sense of poverty, you're depending wholly on the Holy Spirit. It's easy to get caught up in the mechanics of pastoral planning, but this homily brings us back to the sense of hope and trust and if we do commit ourselves to where the Holy Spirit leads, these other things will get worked out. There's a deeper power to what the Church has to do. Scot said Cardinal Seán reflected on the uncertainty facing priests with the pastoral plan compared to the uncertainty of the cardinals entering the conclave. As my brother Cardinals and I entered the Conclave, we did not know what the outcome would be or what the future would hold. We were called to make ourselves available for the mission of the Church. Our pastors in the first phase of pastoral planning have likewise been called to make themselves available for mission, without knowing what the outcome would be as once again they responded, “adsum”. The Archdiocese is greatly blessed by their dedication, commitment and example of selfless service as we embark on the journey of rebuilding our parishes and welcoming the faithful back to active participation in the life of our Church. We want our Pastoral Planning, like the Conclave in Rome, to be a Pentecost moment in this Year of Faith. Scot said we like to know that our leader knows what it's like to walk in our shoes and the cardinal knows that uncertainty. Fr. Chris said the Chrism Mass is usually on Holy Thursday because it's the day that Christ instituted not only the Eucharist but also the priesthood. When the man to be ordained to the priesthood lies prostrate on the cathedral floor, he is giving himself completely to whatever the Church needs of him, whether parish priest or pope. Scot said it's tough sometimes for priests to focus on what they know they need to do, but have difficulty finding time to do. Fr. Joe said it's easy to get busy in the parish, but there has to be time set aside each day for prayer, reflection of Sacred Scripture and study of the sacred sciences. That's continuing formation that makes them receptive to the Holy Spirit and receptive to receive the will of God as spoken through the Church's needs. A thing is received according to the ability of the recipient to receive them. Fr. Bill assisted Cardinal Seán in ongoing formation of priests before becoming pastor of St. Mary's. Scot asked what parishioners can do to help priests work on their ongoing formation. Fr. Bill said encouragement is key. The parishioners who work closest with the pastor who recognize the need of the priest to step back. People need to be understanding of the need of the pastor not to be responsive at every moment. He said he knows a priest who every year those closest to him tell him that he needs to go on retreat. Working in a parish can give you tunnel vision and you need someone to help you see what you need to make time for. Scot said he'll remember the analogy made by Cardinal Seán between a husband kissing his wife each day with a priest kissing the altar each day, as in celebrating the Mass. Fr. Chris said it brings home to the layman the commitment of the priest to the Church. He liked as well that he referenced the fact that not only is kissing the altar is a public reality, but it's also a very private reality. The Eucharist should be the fire, zeal, energy for the priest to go out and do his ministry. Once a priest, you're always a priest. The most important thing a priest can do is reverence the altar and begin the celebration of the Mass. Scot said Cardinal Seán also talked about the priest being a model of the Church's preferential option for the poor. Fr. Joe said concern for the poor is an Evangelical virtue. It comes out of the celebration of the Eucharist and what it means, the giving over of oneself for everyone. Looking back on the election of Pope Francis and the Italians' love of St. Francis, what was Francis' focus but the love of the poor and God's love of the poor. Francis reminded us of the poverty that Christ accepted when he accepted human nature. We can poor both materially and spiritually. Christ came to save the human person, body and soul. We have to be attentive to all aspects of the person, body and soul. Cardinal ended by imploring all the priests to be unified, not to mention the call for unity with Metropolitan Methodius. We need to continually state the need for unity. Fr. Bill said the Gospel of John reminds us of Jesus' prayer that we all may be one. That's not just for ecumenical work, but also within the Church. The idea of the priestly life flowing from the altar holds everything together. Love is unitive. Scot asked what else happens after the Chrism Mass. Fr. Chris said there's the reality of seeing all their brother priests, working in all places, in all sizes, shapes, colors, and ages, but all called with their unique gifts to serve Christ as priests. Fr. Scorzello spoke of this mother who is 93 years old and he carries the oils of anointing with him all the time because he never knows when she might need him to anoint her. There's a unity in the sacraments of the Church through these oils. Fr. Bill said he's a choir school graduate and the song they sang after Communion was the song he was singing when he received his call to the priesthood, “Greater Love” by John Ireland. Fr. Chris said Holy Week is the best week every year.
The Rev. Dr. Robert Allan Hill preaches a sermon entitled "The Secret is in the Dirt." The Marsh Chapel Choir sings "Almighty and Everlasting God" by Orlando Gibbons and "Ave Verum Corpus" by William Byrd along with service music and hymns.
The Rev. Dr. Robert Allan Hill preaches a sermon entitled "The Secret is in the Dirt." The Marsh Chapel Choir sings "Almighty and Everlasting God" by Orlando Gibbons and "Ave Verum Corpus" by William Byrd along with service music and hymns.
The Rev. Dr. Robert Allan Hill preaches a sermon entitled "The Secret is in the Dirt." The Marsh Chapel Choir sings "Almighty and Everlasting God" by Orlando Gibbons and "Ave Verum Corpus" by William Byrd along with service music and hymns.
The Rev. Dr. Robert Allan Hill preaches a sermon entitled "The Secret is in the Dirt." The Marsh Chapel Choir sings "Almighty and Everlasting God" by Orlando Gibbons and "Ave Verum Corpus" by William Byrd along with service music and hymns.
The castaway in this week's edition of Desert Island Discs is Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Kent. After a lifelong devotion to music, she will be whittling down her choice of eight records with great difficulty. Now Patron of the Leeds Piano Competition and the Yehudi Menuhin School, as well as President of the Royal Northern College of Music, the Duchess of Kent studied music herself until she was twenty-five. Her Royal Highness will be talking to Sue Lawley about her love of music, her Yorkshire childhood and her prolific work for charity.[Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Ave Verum Corpus by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Book: A do-it-yourself manual Luxury: Lamp with solar batteries
The castaway in this week's edition of Desert Island Discs is Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Kent. After a lifelong devotion to music, she will be whittling down her choice of eight records with great difficulty. Now Patron of the Leeds Piano Competition and the Yehudi Menuhin School, as well as President of the Royal Northern College of Music, the Duchess of Kent studied music herself until she was twenty-five. Her Royal Highness will be talking to Sue Lawley about her love of music, her Yorkshire childhood and her prolific work for charity. [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Ave Verum Corpus by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Book: A do-it-yourself manual Luxury: Lamp with solar batteries