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This book explores many examples of how Darline Joseph Marianathan, his colleagues and his parishioners, managed to cope themselves, and to help others to survive the challenges of the COVID 19 pandemic. In March 2020, as the Covid 19 pandemic was taking hold, Catholic priest Darline Joseph Marianathan travelled from India to Britain and back to his parish. His mother wasn’t happy about it but he promised to return, a promise that took more than a year to fulfil. Back in Okehampton and Chagford, he took his church online to broadcast to a congregation, and to connect one-to-one, both locally and globally. Darline Joseph Marianathan physically and mentally survived five isolations and catching the virus, going on to hold Zoom masses and to spread Pope Francis’ idea of the ‘creativity of love’ through preaching and writing articles for the media. And that was just the beginning.
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Each year 11 million people trek to the Louvre to gawk at the Mona Lisa. Many visitors clutch guide books in hand describing the painting. For some, it’s the experience of a lifetime, one they’ll talk about with friends and family for decades. Yet some modern researchers say that the vast majority of people will never recognize the hidden messages in this painting. That’s because those hidden messages are subliminal. Buried below the threshold of conscious awareness, Da Vinci used techniques people never notice. Not only don’t people know what they’re seeing, they would be shocked to find out. A surprisingly large number of famous paintings fall into the same category. That is, the...
Thomas Sutton's reputation as the wealthiest commoner in England at the time of his death in 1611 was matched by the scale of the charity which he founded at the Charterhouse in Clerkenwell. This work examines the Charterhouse's significance as England's leading charity and the support and opposition that it attracted.
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"In this comprehensive study interrelating religious thought, history, and the topical literature of the Victorian period, Royal W. Rhodes examines more than 130 religious (and some nonreligious) novels by major and minor writers set in early Christian centuries. These Early Church novels were employed by churchly writers of the Victorian period to treat contemporary religious questions under the disguise of antiquity and are thus important sources for the study of Church history." "As various parties within the Anglican Church, Dissenters, and Roman Catholics exploited this subgenre of Victorian fiction for polemical purposes, churchmanship played a critical role in how the novelists re-cre...