Monday, June 29, 2009

Southbridge Election

Tomorrow is the big day in Southbridge we stand at the open door waiting to walk through. Several seats are open on the Town Council as well as the School Committee. An interesting thing has happened. There is no one running for a seat on the Bay Path School Committee and some people have asked if they can write my name in for the seat. All that is needed is 6 votes to win but more would be nice.

So if you live in Southbridge please consider writing me in for the Bay Path School Committee, not the town school committee. You need to write in my name:

Peter M Preble

And color in the oval after my name or the vote will not count. The only reason I am doing this is because there is no one running and if a special election is needed it could cost the Town about $10,000. So please write me in.Check Spelling
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Sunday, June 28, 2009

Turkey to reopen Orthodox school shut 38 years ago: report

If this is true this is great news!

ANKARA - Turkey is planning to re-open a Greek Orthodox seminary that was shut down nearly four decades ago, Turkeys culture minister was quoted as saying Sunday.

The European Union, which Turkey is seeking to join, and the United States have long pressed Ankara to re-open the theology school on the island of Halki, off Istanbul, to prove respect for the rights of its tiny Christian minority.

Culture Minister Ertugrul Gunay said the government was inclined to re-open the school, even though a final decision was not yet made, the mass-selling Milliyet daily reported.

"Both my personal conviction and the general inclination I see is that the school will be opened," Gunay was quoted as saying.

"The school does not currently fit into our university system, but another formula will be worked out... There is no political problem," he said.

The minister explained the authorities were grappling with "the technical problem" on whether the seminary should have the status of a university or a vocational high school.

The century-old seminary was closed down in 1971, depriving the Eastern Orthodox Church, seated in Istanbul since Byzantine times, of its only facility to train clergy in Turkey.

The closure was the result of legislation bringing institutions of higher education under state control, an arrangement into which the seminary did not fit.

Gunay conceded that Turkish-Greek tensions over the island of Cyprus at the time were also a prominent factor behind the move.

"What happened in the past is left behind... We need to say new things now," he said.

Keen to boost its struggling EU membership bid, Ankara has in recent years moved to improve the rights of its tiny non-Muslim minorities, mainly Greeks, Armenians and Jews.
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Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Fr. Vakoc RIP

Believed to be the first military chaplain wounded in Iraq, Fr Tim Vakoc -- a priest of the Twin Cities serving as a major in the Army -- died Saturday at 49:

Father Vakoc... lost an eye and sustained brain damage when a roadside bomb exploded near his Humvee on May 29, 2004, as he was returning to his barracks after celebrating Mass for U.S. soldiers.

In recent years, Father Vakoc (pronounced VAH-kitch) had been showing signs of physical and cognitive improvement.

A June 11 entry on Father Vakoc’s CaringBridge site noted that he participated with family and friends in a special Mass June 10 celebrating the 17th anniversary of his ordination, five years of post-accident life and appreciation for all those who were contributing to his care.

“All of us in this Catholic archdiocese are grieving with the family of Father Vakoc,” Archbishop John Nienstedt said in a statement. “We are joined in that grieving, to be sure, by the men and woman whom he served as chaplain in Iraq and those who witnessed his extraordinary courage and faith at Walter Reed Hospital and here at our Veterans’ Hospital.”

Calling Father Vakoc “a man of peace,” Archbishop Nienstedt said “he chose to endure the horror of war in order to bring the peace of Christ to America’s fighting men and women. He has been an inspiration to us all and we will miss him.

“We ask everyone to remember him in prayer,” he added....

According to a National Catholic Register story printed just a month before his own accident, Father Vakoc flew to a combat surgical hospital to be with two soldiers who had just been injured in a roadside bombing in which two others had been killed. One died before he reached the hospital.

He prayed for the soldiers who died and with the injured soldier, and then prayed with the other soldiers in the convoy who were not injured, but “in the state of shock.”

Father Vakoc’s ministry — which earned him the rank “major” — also included presiding at a memorial service for a young man killed in a roadside explosion, who just days before had talked about faith with Father Vakoc and read at Mass.

“The bottom line in helping these soldiers through the grieving process is to be present to them and walk with them,”

Father Vakoc told the Register in an e-mail. “I prayed with the soldiers who died. I brought the sacraments of the church and the light and love of Christ into the darkness of the situations.”Father Vakoc called his ministry one of “intentional presence,” and it included counseling soldiers, ministering to Catholics and soldiers of all faiths, escorting the bodies of fallen soldiers, speaking with soldiers’ family members and keeping up morale.

“I live with the soldiers, work with them, eat with them, care for them, listen to them, counsel them,” Father Vakoc told the Register. “The soldiers know if you are real and genuinely care or not. The soldiers see me out there with them and that makes a difference.”

Thanks to Rocco for this post
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Iran Last NIght

Thanks to Andrew Sullivan of the Atlantic for this video.

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Sunday, June 21, 2009

Balanced Life

So I have decided that I need to have more balance in my life. How do I achieve this? Well for one I have been listening to Dave Ramsey on his radio show about money and how we get out of debt. I have a little debt left over from seminary and I have been struggling to pay it off. Well Dave has a plan that he talks about in his book the Total Money Makeover. First you put $1,000 in the bank as your emergency fund. Next you make a list of all your debts smallest to largest. This is called the debt snowball. Start paying the on the smallest one whilst still paying the minimum on all of the others. Pay off the smallest as soon as possible and then put that money along with the minimum towards the next one, and so on until they are all gone. If you listen to the show you hear person after person calling in. The other step is to cut up the plastic you don't need it.

After money weight and exercise is another plan. Another podcast I have been listening too has got me on the path. So first I am not on a diet I am changing the way I think of food and changing my lifestyle. So here is a typical days food:
Breakfast - Oatmeal and a yogurt
Lunch - 2 slices of 100% whole wheat bread, mustard,1 oz of turkey, 1 slice American cheese, slice of tomato and a bit of lettuce. Either an apple, yogurt or 1 oz of nuts.
Supper - a regular meal with the regular portions not the super size thing. usually a piece of chicken, rice and some veg.
Lots of water and at mid morning and mid afternoon a little snack. Either a yogurt, apple, or 1 oz of nuts. Not I use the apple cuz it's what I like but fruit is fruit.

Food is not enough, exercise is the other part of it. I need to walk everyday. I would like to get to running again and would like to be able to run a 5k by the fall. So how do we do that? A little surfing around the net and I found a plan. Start with walking 30 mins per day and one day do 40 mins, then 40 mins the next week and so on, the start to run a little at a time. More on this as I get closer to running. Anyone know of a 5k in Massachusetts in the Fall?

So that's it. Monday will be weigh in day and I will post all of that here or on facebook or both. Maybe you will want to join me, just let me know.
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Father's Day

Today was a great day at church! We had a small but mighty crowd and a nice extended coffee hour after the Liturgy. For the last three years Vasile has been our cantor. He has been here on a Visa from Romania that the church sponsors. He has run into a little snag and he has to return to Romania for a little time. Today at the coffee hour we wished him well and asked him to come back to us very soon.

They also surprised me with a birthday cake. My birthday is not for another week but we will be celebrating Liturgy with our friends at St. Nicholas Albanian Orthodox Church before their annual festival so we will not be having Liturgy at our place on Sunday. I know very confusing.

I continue to follow the events in Iran and will be speaking more about it on the radio show on Monday so tune in 970 am or www.fatherpeterlive.com
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Another View from Iran

I have to admit I am caught up in all of happenings in Iran. If you follow my tweets or my Facebook page you will know this for sure. But I have also been reading the blogs and today, thanks to Rod Dreher's blog Crunchy Con he has put me on to an Op-Ed in the New York Times written by Roger Cohen from the streets of Teheran. "A Supreme Leader Loses His Aura as Iranians Flock to the Streets" is a great article and I suggest you give it a read.
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Saturday, June 20, 2009

The President's Response

Andrew Sullivan of the Atlantic takes a look at President Obama's response to what is happening in Iran. Very interesting.

Check it out Here
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Another View

Brian McLaren, who I wrote about yesterday, has a great blog post about the situation in Iran. Check it out it is well worth the read.
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Amazed

I do not know why this still amazes me. I was in a conversation tonight and someone actually said the following, "the people who put Barack in office are getting what they deserve" I will never understand how people think. How can you not support the person who is the President of the United States? I don't approve of everything the President Obama has done nor did I support everything that President Bush did but the president deserves our support and our prayers by the way.

I will never understand the absolute hatred the the right has for the left and the left has for the right. How about we just all be Americans for awhile and see if we can get things going again. Stop blaming everyone for all of your problems and get off your ass and make your little part of the world a better place.

Right now people are dying in the streets of Iran to become free, or as free as they can get. They stopped sitting around complaining and they are doing. I am not saying we need to take to the streets in a bloody way, but if you don't like the way things are going in your town run for office, go to council meetings, write letters to the editor if your not willing to do that then just shut up I am tired of listening to you whine.
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Defiance


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Friday, June 19, 2009

I Love This


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The World is Starving

Brian McLaren is someone I have grown to respect over the last year or so and I have read many of his books and read his blog on a regular basis. Today he has a post on the new report that has been released by the UN on the fact that one in six people in the world is starving. This is an outrage and something that the rest of us should feel outrage about as well.

Here is a link to the report and a link to Brian's book Everything Must Change
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Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Bishops Run Amuck!

I usually do not wade into the inner workings of other diocese but this just takes the cake. It seems that the latest round of bishops that are unwilling to give up some power or to act like Christians have struck close to home. I have a good friend, I call him that because we went through some stuff together, he went to seminary and is now told that his ordination has been canceled.

A few years back I was in a diocese and the bishop did the same thing to me two weeks before I was to be ordained a deacon. So I know how he feels. This is just another in a long line of bishops not behaving very well. I am sure others feel they did the right thing but I feel otherwise. It is time that we have unity in the country or there will be nothing left to unify. Bishop are running amuck and things need to change.

Read the story here
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Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Iran Interview

Cross Posted from http://www.wesomorning.com/

Joining me on tomorrow's show during the 8:00 hour will be Jeff Addicott, director for the Center for Terrorism Law at St. Mary's University School of Law he will be on the show to explain the Iranian election system and what the results mean. “Iran's revolution in the late 1970's replaced a secular government with a religious dictatorship headed by Islamic mullahs. These mullahs control all aspects of the national life - legal, social, government. For example, the mullahs screen all candidates to determine who is even allowed to ‘run’ for any elected office. In short, any election is rigged from the very start.” Addicott says, “Ahmadinejad probably did win the popular vote but there is no doubt that all the counters’ were handpicked by his people. He is a dictator. The ‘election’ process is for domestic and international consumption - much like the ‘elections’ held for Saddam Hussein.”

So tune in tomorrow from 7-9am WESO 970 am or http://www.fatherpeterlive.com/ to listen online.
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Monday, June 15, 2009

Iran

I have not really been following all of the event going on in Iran but it looks like there is a change in the air. Last night it was announced that the present president had won reelection. Then there were the claims of fraud and now it seems that the head cleric of Iran is calling for an investigation into the election. I have also been following the people Twitter in on twitter.com about the situation. The folks in Iran are using twitter to communicate with the outside world. Twitter has changed their scheduled maintenance because of the use and is asking people to not use the names of folks in Iran when speaking of what is going on. You can follow all of the tweets by logging on to twitter.com and follow #iranelection. I found the icon on the left on a page on twitter and have changed my profile picture on both twitter and facebook to use this icon. Please feel free to copy it and use so the people in Iran will know that we stand with them and please pray for those involved in the protest that they will be safe and all will be well.
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Sunday, June 14, 2009

IV Pre-conciliar Pan-orthodox Conference

Thanks to The Orthodox Report Blog for this information as it says on the blog this is a rather hasty translation from the French but this is an important document for us here in the US Orthodox Church. We are part of the diaspora and I find it interesting that meetings are being held to decide out fate and we are not even represented at the meetings. Of course there are representatives from the various patriarchates at the meeting but, and please correct me if I am incorrect, there were no Americans at the meeting. I believe we need to pay very close attention to these meeting.

Here is a link to the communique.
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Thursday, June 11, 2009

We're a Church, Not a Lobby, Catholic Bishop Tells Ethics Probers

This is absolute rubbish and once again we see the state coming after the church we need to rise up and say we have had enough of this crap! Time for the REVOLUTION!

The bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport, Conn., says he's a man of God, not a lobbyist. But state officials say he's both.

According to the Connecticut Office of State Ethics, the diocese acted as a lobbying organization in March when it rented buses to transport people to a rally in Hartford — the state capital — to protest a bill that would have granted more power to parishioners regarding church finances.

Officials also are investigating whether the church acted as a lobbying organization on its Web site when it urged parishioners to contact lawmakers about the bill, which eventually was withdrawn amid public outcry, and about a another bill to legalize same-sex marriage, which was signed into law in April.

Now the ethics office is "evaluating" whether the diocese failed to register as a lobbyist — an investigation that Bishop William Lori says violates the diocese's First Amendment right to free speech and assembly.

"I don't know what the motive of the Office of State Ethics was or is, but I do know that their actions stem directly from our attempts to defend ourselves in the face of two pieces of legislation that were unfriendly to the day-to-day mission of the church," Lori told FOXNews.com on Thursday.

"We were simply seeking to fulfill our mission, to continue to be ourselves."

And the diocese is fighting back, bringing a civil lawsuit against two Office of State Ethics officials — Enforcement Officer Thomas K. Jones and Executive Director Carol Carson.

Connecticut law defines lobbying as "communicating directly or soliciting others to communicate with any official or his staff in the legislative or executive branch of government or in a quasi-public agency, for the purpose of influencing any legislative or administrative action."

Individuals or organizations must register as a lobbyist if they spend more than $2,000 per year lobbying. Each violation of the lobbying law is punishable by penalties up to $10,000.

The diocese acknowledges in its lawsuit that it coordinated transportation to the rally, and that it incurred expenses exceeding $2,000. But that, says the bishop, does not make the church a lobbying organization.

"It seems to me that by requiring a diocese or any other entity to register with the state before it can protest an unfriendly action by the state has a chilling affect," Lori said. "I don't think it's in anyone's interest that a protest rally be labeled lobbying."

Reaction to the church-state confrontation has been plentiful and polarizing. A local newspaper called on state government to focus on its "billion-dollar deficits," and a local Internet radio host wound up behind bars after he urged his listeners to "take up arms" against Jones, Connecticut state Rep. Michael Lawlor and state Sen. Andrew McDonald for their support of the finance bill.
"It is our intent to foment direct action against these individuals personally," the radio host, Harold Turner, wrote on his blog on June 2. "These beastly government officials should be made an example of as a warning to others in government: Obey the Constitution or die."

On June 3, the day after he wrote those words, Turner, 47, was arrested and charged with inciting injury to persons or property, a felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison, reports say. In his most recent post, he says he intends to intends to "confront" Connecticut officials with his attorney.

Lori said the church condemns "any type of violence or threat" made in connection to the ethics probe and civil suit. Diocese spokesman Joseph McAleer, meanwhile, said "a lot" of churchgoers in the state feel the church has been singled out. The diocese contains 87 parishes and more than 410,000 parishioners.

"People can only assume that people are out to get us," McAleer told FOXNews.com. "It feels like retaliation, that's the feeling amongst the Catholics of Fairfield County. Where is freedom of speech? Where is freedom of assembly? It's mind-boggling."

But Carson says the ethics office is just doing its job.

"We're content neutral," the Office of Ethics official told FOXNews.com. "It does not matter to us whether someone is for or against any issue. We're an independent watchdog agency and it's not the case that anyone in state government came to us and said, 'You need to look at this.'

"What's at issue for us is if you're lobbying, or seeking to influence executive action, and you spend more than $2,000, that the citizens of Connecticut will have transparency so they know who is spending to influence legislation."
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Tuesday, June 09, 2009

Personal Responsbility

I was planning to take today off and catch up on some reading and laundry and what not but I need to interrupt all of that to comment on a few local news stories that I talked about on my show this morning.

The first story, can be read here, is about two teens one 17 and the other one 15 who decided to break into cars in the Town of Dudley the other night. It would seem that these two upstanding citizens decided it is better to steal stuff then buy it for themselves. The residents of the street kept the under surveillance until the police arrived. They also found a car loaded down with stuff registered to a relative of one of the perps. Okay so they are not too bright either. All of this took place at 4:30am on a Sunday morning.

Another story, can be read here, is about two more upstanding citizens from the Town of Auburn who decided that they did not like the color of some of the cars in their area so they decided to spray paint them. Again one was 18 and the other one was 17. This also took place on Sunday from 2 - 2:45 am

The third story, not about teens this time but about someone just as stupid can be found here. You need to scroll down a bit to find the story. This gentleman decided he did not like the windows downtown and thought it was his roll to break them causing about $6,000 worth of damage.

Okay so on the first two stories I have to ask, where the hell were the parents and what in God's name were these kids doing out at 2:00am on a Sunday? When I was a kid I would not have dreamed of being out that late let alone do something like this. Rampant teen pregnancy, fools doing things like these idiots in these news stories, high school dropout rates being high, and spending more money on prisons then schools, the world is all screwed up and we need to take it back from the ones who seem to be running it.

Now I did not even talk about our great political figures who were indicted yesterday for taking some $57,000 to get the State to give a contract to some friends company. Keep in mind that this fine citizen was the Speaker of the House of Representatives in Massachusetts and the second one to be indicted for corruption. What is going on in this world. We need to take it back. It is time for the REVOLUTION!
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Saturday, June 06, 2009

D Day ~ We Can Never Forget




"I can't git no lower, Willie. Me buttons is in th' way."

On this 65th Anniversary of D Day let us pause and remember all of those involved in securing our freedoms around the world.

H/T to OrthoCuban for the photo above

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Thursday, June 04, 2009

Israeli government responds to President Obama's speech in Cairo

JERUSALEM, Israel (BNO NEWS) -- The Israeli government released the following statement in response to Barack Obama's speech to the Muslim world on Thursday.

"The Government of Israel expresses its hope that this important speech in Cairo will indeed lead to a new period of reconciliation between the Arab and Moslem world and Israel.

We share President Obama's hope that the American effort heralds the beginning of a new era that will bring about an end to the conflict and lead to Arab recognition of Israel as the homeland of the Jewish people, living in peace and security in the Middle East.

Israel is committed to peace and will make every effort to expand the circle of peace while protecting its interests, especially its national security."

Your Host notes: I am just now reading the speech and hope to post some thoughts latter on today.
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Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Eastern Christian New Media Awards - Go Vote!

This Blog has been nominated, if you can find it in your heart please take a moment to go and vote.

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Octuplets Mom Gets Reality TV Show

If you read these pages you will know that your host is a big fan of reality TV. Okay I know how stupid it can be and I do not watch the shows that try and match people up, but I do watch Survivor, The Amazing Race, the cooking reality show and some of the others. Now we see the Octomom getting her own show I find this totally outrageous. The only upside to this is that she will get off the welfare and get a real paycheck so good for her, but this has to be the stupidest thing ever.

The report says that a Dutch company has signed her to do the show but has not sold it to an American network yet, but I am sure that will happen soon. She has 12 kids! When is she going to have time to do anything?

Now as someone who is pro-life I should applaud this woman for what she has done, but there has to be a limit and she did it the artificial way, it is not like she ended up this way this was intentional!

I think it is irresponsible for TV to celebrate this type of thing, as I think it is wrong and the woman should actually loose some of the kids and the doctor who did the procedure should loose his license for being stupid, but if that was a requirement then where would we be.

Anyway, I will not watch but I am sure people will and I am sure it will be a hit!
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Monday, June 01, 2009

Anti-Abortion vs Pro-Life

As I mentioned in m last post there is a difference between the pro-life movement and the anti-abortion movement.

For me it is simple. Pro-life is support for life at any time on the spectrum of life. This would include the obvious things like abortion and capital punishment but should also include things like torture, poverty, lack of affordable health care, nutrition, war, and other things that diminish the divine spark of the image and likeness of God.

Fr. Z has a discussion going on over on his blog about this very subject. Surf on over and join in the conversation.
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