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01/21/2010

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I like the image of prayer being "holy thread wrapped around you". I feel those prayers as I am missing mom; searching for others to care for the Earth. The whole world needs to be wrapped with holy threadl

"Holy energy" is a great term! I like to think we are channels of that energy (which some might also call grace, love, wholeness, or care); that it is rather like a beam of comforting light; that it originates in God, of course, and that our prayers are a focusing of it to where we see a need. And yes, Patty, we need to encompass the whole Earth in it!

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Father Ron

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  • Your thoughtful comments will make a visit to e-phiphanies a richer experience for everyone. By clicking on the "Comments" link beneath each post, you can read the remarks others have written or add your own. If you leave a question, I will respond in the journal. In order to maintain the integrity of this blog, all comments are reviewed before being published on line.

Church of the Good Shepherd in Lexington, Kentucky

  • The Ordination of Three Priests - December 2010
    Images from my ministry as Rector-in-the-Interim at the Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd in Lexington, Kentucky. Also, here is a link to a slide show with other photos from my Interim in Lexington: http://s1100.photobucket.com/albums/g405/Ron_Pogue/My%20Interim%20at%20Good%20Shepherd%20-%20Lexington%20KY/?albumview=slideshow

Trinity Episcopal Church in Lawrence, Kansas

  • Trinityreddoor
    Scenes from my year as Interim at Trinity Episcopal Church in Lawrence, Kansas

Our Historic Galveston Home

  • The Smith-Rowley House in Galveston
    Noted Galveston leader R. Waverly Smith commissioned architect George Stowe to design and build this house in 1896. The house survived The Great Storm of 1900, the 1915 Hurricane, Hurricane Carla, and, more recently, Hurricane Ike. We have lived here and loved this place for ten years. If houses can love people, she has certainly loved us! Enjoy this album of some photos we've taken to share with people like you.

Photos: Ike Survivors in Our Galveston Garden

  • Galveston Garden_1254
    In the early morning hours of September 13, 2008, Hurricane Ike struck Galveston Island. The storm surge from the back side of the island inundated a large portion of the island. Twenty-four inches of salt water covered our lawn and gardens. This album contains photographs depicting the resiliency of the trees, shrubs, and other plants in our garden eight months after the storm. Ron Pogue Rogationtide 2009

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