Tag Archives: priest

Martin Scorsese (b. November 17): “I just wanted to be an ordinary parish priest…”

17 Nov

scorsese

“My whole life has been movies and religion. That’s it. Nothing else. I just wanted to be an ordinary parish priest.”

~ Martin Scorsese, b. 17 November 1942

pinterest.com/pin/39406565463146395/

 

Martin Scorsese (b. November 17): “I just wanted to be an ordinary parish priest…”

17 Nov

scorsese

“My whole life has been movies and religion. That’s it. Nothing else. I just wanted to be an ordinary parish priest.”

~ Martin Scorsese, b. 17 November 1942

pinterest.com/pin/39406565463146395/

 

Martin Scorsese (b. November 17): “I just wanted to be an ordinary parish priest…”

17 Nov

scorsese

“My whole life has been movies and religion. That’s it. Nothing else. I just wanted to be an ordinary parish priest.”

~ Martin Scorsese, b. 17 November 1942

pinterest.com/pin/39406565463146395/

 

Martin Scorsese (b. November 17): “I just wanted to be an ordinary parish priest…”

17 Nov

scorsese

“My whole life has been movies and religion. That’s it. Nothing else. I just wanted to be an ordinary parish priest.”

~ Martin Scorsese, b. 17 November 1942

pinterest.com/pin/39406565463146395/

 

Martin Scorsese (b. November 17): “I just wanted to be an ordinary parish priest…”

17 Nov

scorsese

“My whole life has been movies and religion. That’s it. Nothing else. I just wanted to be an ordinary parish priest.”

~ Martin Scorsese, b. 17 November 1942

http://www.pinterest.com/pin/39406565463146395/

 

Martin Scorsese (b.Nov 17): “I just wanted to be an ordinary parish priest…”

17 Nov

scorsese

“My whole life has been movies and religion. That’s it. Nothing else. I just wanted to be an ordinary parish priest.”

~ Martin Scorsese, b. 17 November 1942

http://www.pinterest.com/pin/39406565463146395/

 

Booknote: The Power and the Glory, by Graham Greene

5 Jan

the power and the gloryOver the years, I’ve read all of Graham Greene’s books. His writing is impeccable, and his characters are often trapped in some backwater of life, whether literal or figurative, in which faith struggles against despair.

This novel centers on a “whisky priest”, hunted and hounded by Marxist “Red Shirts” in the service of an anti-clerical Mexican government that in certain states has driven the Catholic Church into hiding. This sounds like SF, but actually happened in the mid-1930s.

As do many Greene characters, the nameless priest carries a heavy load of guilt. In his case, it’s the illegitimate child he fathered during the years when priests were de-celibatized and made to act like real men. Now he’s escaped into the jungle, running from the Red Shirts and administering baptisms, confessions and last rites to faithful peasants.

It’s a bit of an allegory, with the priest as Christ, a peasant Judas and a Marxist lieutenant as Pilate. The novel moves as slowly as an anaconda on a heavily humid day, but the language is deft and the story is as old and rich as the Bible.

~ Alan, Toronto, 5 Jan 2013

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