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The House of the Virgin Mary

 

The 'Cult of Mary' gained new predominance in the 16th century due to a post-Lutheran need to distinguish Catholics from Protestants.  This sectarian rift was soon deepened with the adoption of the 'Rosary' for Marian Prayers (anathema to Protestants as contrary to scripture) and then by 'Marian Apparitions'.

Mary had appeared to some of the faithful since the early days of the Church, yet not a lot had been made of these 'apparitions'.  But in in 1531, ten years after the excommunication of Martin Luther, Our Lady of Guadalupe appeared to a converted Indian (indigenous person) in Mexico and, after an initial doubt, the miracle was confirmed by the local Bishop.

 

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The miraculously created Our Lady of Guadalupe icon
in the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City   (my photos from 2012)

 

Mary appeared again in 1608, this time holding the baby Jesus, at Šiluva in Lithuania, on the site of buried documents that showed that land, now claimed by Calvinists, rightfully belonged to Catholics. 

Soon the Roman Inquisition endorsed several other apparitions, some historic. While Protestants looked on incredulous more apparitions followed. Now over thirty Marian Apparitions, many quite recent like Lourdes (1858/1862) and Fátima (1917/1930) have been verified by the Inquisition to further fortify the faithful. They mostly occur in Catholic and, to a lesser extent, Coptic communities around the world and have been increasing in frequency - many of them last century.

Notwithstanding Mary's affiliations with Ephesus, unsurprisingly, none of these sightings had been in Muslim Turkey.

This would soon be remotely rectified. Around 1819 the visionary and stigmatist Saint Anna Katharina Emmerick wrote, as a result of a vision in her cell in Germany, that Mary had lived out her mortal life with St John at Ephesus in a forest house in a remote mountainous spot, near a holy spring.

From her description the spot was found in 1881. It was 7 km out of Selçuk in the forest up a steep, winding, mountainous track.

 

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The House of the Virgin Mary

 

While several of the Saint's visions, that include unicorns that survived the Flood in the Himalayas, are dismissed, this holy site has been given credibility by several Papal visits, including those of Paul VI in 1967 (see above); John Paul II and Benedict XVII (Ratzy).

When we likewise graced the small chapel, that now stands on the site, there was a plastic wizard (from Harry Potter?) standing on the altar. I was offended - one can't go around mixing religious icons like that! I said as much to the woman guarding the chapel against illicit photography. She refused to remove it. So I found a young priest outside and explained the outrage. He rushed to fix it and subsequently came up to me full of thanks, having removed the offending icon. My good deed for the day!

But I did wonder aloud, when descending the precipitous winding road, how the elderly John and Mary fed themselves in such a remote and rocky place - perhaps John was a hunter?  At least Snow White had the dwarves to go to the market for flour; and an occasional visit from an old woman carrying fruit.

 

 

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Travel

USA - middle bits

 

 

 

 

 

In September and October 2017 Wendy and I took another trip to the United States where we wanted to see some of the 'middle bits'.  Travel notes from earlier visits to the East coast and West Coast can also be found on this website.

For over six weeks we travelled through a dozen states and stayed for a night or more in 20 different cities, towns or locations. This involved six domestic flights for the longer legs; five car hires and many thousands of miles of driving on America's excellent National Highways and in between on many not so excellent local roads and streets.

We had decided to start in Chicago and 'head on down south' to New Orleans via: Tennessee; Georgia; Louisiana; and South Carolina. From there we would head west to: Texas; New Mexico; Arizona; Utah and Nevada; then to Los Angeles and home.  That's only a dozen states - so there are still lots of 'middle bits' left to be seen.

During the trip, disaster, in the form of three hurricanes and a mass shooting, seemed to precede us by a couple of days.

The United States is a fascinating country that has so much history, culture and language in common with us that it's extremely accessible. So these notes have turned out to be long and could easily have been much longer.

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Fiction, Recollections & News

The Craft - Preface

 

 

 

Preface: 

 

The Craft is an e-novel about Witchcraft in a future setting.  It's a prequel to my dystopian novella: The Cloud: set in the the last half of the 21st century - after The Great Famine.

 As I was writing The Cloud, I imagined that in fifty years the great bulk of the population will rely on their Virtual Personal Assistant (VPA), hosted in The Cloud, evolved from the primitive Siri and Cortana assistants available today. Owners will name their VPA and give him or her a personalised appearance, when viewed on a screen or in virtual-reality.

VPAs have obviated the need for most people to be able to read or write or to be numerate. If a text or sum is within view of a Cloud-connected camera, one can simply ask your VPA who will tell you what it says or means in your own language, explaining any difficult concepts by reference to the Central Encyclopaedia.

The potential to give the assistant multi-dimensional appearance and a virtual, interactive, body suggested the evolution of the: 'Sexy Business Assistant'. Employing all the resources of the Cloud, these would be super-smart and enhance the owner's business careers. Yet they are insidiously malicious, bankrupting their owners and causing their deaths before evaporating in a sea of bits.  But who or what could be responsible?  Witches?

Read more: The Craft - Preface

Opinions and Philosophy

Losing my religion

 

 

 

 

In order to be elected every President of the United States must be a Christian.  Yet the present incumbent matches his predecessor in the ambiguities around his faith.  According to The Holloverse, President Trump is reported to have been:  'a Catholic, a member of the Dutch Reformed Church, a Presbyterian and he married his third wife in an Episcopalian church.' 

He is quoted as saying: "I’ve had a good relationship with the church over the years. I think religion is a wonderful thing. I think my religion is a wonderful religion..."

And whatever it is, it's the greatest.

Not like those Muslims: "There‘s a lot of hatred there that’s someplace. Now I don‘t know if that’s from the Koran. I don‘t know if that’s from someplace else but there‘s tremendous hatred out there that I’ve never seen anything like it."

And, as we've been told repeatedly during the recent campaign, both of President Obama's fathers were, at least nominally, Muslim. Is he a real Christian?  He's done a bit of church hopping himself.

In 2009 one time United States President Jimmy Carter went out on a limb in an article titled: 'Losing my religion for equality' explaining why he had severed his ties with the Southern Baptist Convention after six decades, incensed by fundamentalist Christian teaching on the role of women in society

I had not seen this article at the time but it recently reappeared on Facebook and a friend sent me this link: Losing my religion for equality...

Read more: Losing my religion

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