liturgies and prayer on camino
Michael P. Barham
mpb5aDUKE.EDU
Sun Apr 1 21:19:57 PDT 2001
Thanks for the information. I struggle with this, as (a divinity school
student, I am trained to question all these things I probably shouldn't
worry about). I don't want to offend by holding back, but also don't want
to give and outward sign of believing in something I don't believe, such as
the doctrine of transubstantiation. I figure God will lead me to do at the
right moment what God wants me to do for that particular moment.
Thanks again,
Michael B
----- Original Message -----
From: Rosina Lila <BlaroliaAOL.COM>
To: <GOCAMINOaPETE.URI.EDU>
Sent: Sunday, April 01, 2001 9:59 AM
Subject: Re: liturgies and prayer on camino
> Hi Michael,
> My sister in law is Episcopalian and she bicycled the entire Camino last
> year. She frequently went to church and never missed Mass on Sundays.
> Logically, the churches were Catholic, but she tells me that she felt
welcome
> and at home in all of them. At the end of the Camino when we finally
> reunited in Santiago, she, and two other Episcopalians, one from England,
> were even more enthusiastic than I, a Catholic, about not missing the
> pilgrims Mass at the Cathedral every one of the six days that we were
> there. It seems that the Camino itself itself manifests ecumenicalism.
> Fond greetings,
>
> Rosina
>
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