07/29/08Rural Nebraska Tour
Last weekend James, a seminarian from the Archdiocese of Omaha, invited seven of us on a tour of rural Nebraska churches. We headed out on Saturday morning from Omaha and drove through a few small towns. The churches in those small towns are beautiful. I believe we stopped in Fremont, Albie, Ericson, and a few other places. James' parents hosted us for dinner on Saturday evening and breakfast on Sunday morning. The food was great. Sunday afternoon we went "tanking." Tanking involves throwing a huge plastic cattle water tub in the river, putting a picnic table in it, and riding it downstream. The eight of us climbed into two tanks and enjoyed 3 hours or so of fun on the river. In the picture above, we're just getting ready for our ride down the river. From left to right: Brian, Brandon, Tim, James, Preston, Mike, Bo, and myself. Click the photo above to see the rest of my pictures from the weekend. In other news, tomorrow I leave Omaha and head back to North Dakota for a few weeks before returning to school in Saint Louis. -Jason 07/28/08Oh no ... not St Joseph!
![]() Today I had some time to read the news, so I visited KYFR-TV's web site to watch yesterday's news over the Internet. This is something I do every now and then to keep up to date while I'm far from home, as I usually am. I cringed when, in the first few seconds of the video clip, I saw one of those Saint Joseph "home-selling kits" on the screen. There is a Catholic tradition, in case you haven't heard, of burying a statue (upside down, no less!) of Saint Joseph in the yard of a home you want to sell. This is supposed to make the sale go faster. While Catholics do believe in the power of intercessory prayer and prayer to the communion of saints, burying St Joseph has always seemed superstitious to me. I thought "Oh, great! This is just what we want our fundamentalist Christian brothers to see - Catholics burying statues for good luck." This sort of thing only reinforces the (completely incorrect) notion among Protestants and Fundamentalists that we Catholics are idol worshipers who put faith in superstition and luck. Jimmy Akin, a well known Catholic apologist from Catholic Answers, has this to say about the practice: While it is reasonable to ask St. Joseph for his intercession in helping buy or sell a home (finding housing for the holy family being one of his duties as head of the holy family), the idea of burying a statue of him upside down has no plausible connection to any patronly interest he might have in housing. My advice: Don't waste your money on a statue of St Joseph. In prayer, maybe ask St Joseph for help. But, I think more importantly, pray for patience and understanding. And anyway, if you don't dig a big hole in the yard you won't have to explain that no, you have not buried your pet hamster in the buyer's new yard. Disclaimer: The actual news story wasn't included in the webcast so I did not see it, but it was mentioned in the introduction so I assume the story aired. -Jason 07/21/08A Visit to the Omaha Zoo
Last week, Father Ken was passing through Omaha. For the fun of it, we met up and went to the famous Omaha Zoo (http://www.omahazoo.com). It was very impressive, and we only saw part of it despite being there for four hours. Click on the photo above to see my pictures from the day. If you're ever in Omaha, you need to see the zoo! -Jason :: Next Page >> |
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