The Celtic Christian Tradition

The Celtic Christian Tradition Celtic Christians are known for their burning and evangelical love for the Bible. You might call it a specific outlook rather than a whole other faith.

~Fáilte~ This concerns Celtic Christianity and how it's relevant and alive today. ~"There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female: for ye are all one in Christ Jesus."~ -Galatians 3:28 Also they are known to seek a depth of spiritual life and stillness … a radical commitment to the poor and to God's creation and a deep respect for learning. Celtic

Christianity is often called Insular Christianity and it evolved on its own without the heavy influence of Rome. Celtic Christianity is one school of thought within that whole. Early Insular Christianity is a term used to cover Christianity in Great Britain and Ireland during the post-Roman period. It splits into two strands:

Celtic Christianity (5th to 8th centuries), the Christianity surviving from the Roman period in the Celtic areas of Britain and Ireland (e.g. Ireland, Wales, Scotland) and spread to parts of Anglo-Saxon England by the Hiberno-Scottish mission
Anglo-Saxon Christianity (7th to 11th centuries), the Christianity imported from Rome by Augustine of Canterbury in 597. The Synod of Whitby of 664 forms a significant watershed in that King Oswiu of Northumbria decided to follow Roman rather than Celtic practices, but the two rites co-existed for another century, Wales observing the Celtic Easter date until 768. The Anglo-Saxon mission in the 7th to 8th centuries spread Christianity to the Continent, as had the earlier Celtic missions. When we look at the world around us, with its many serious problems, including poverty, injustice, war, and environmental degradation, it is all too easy to become angry and frustrated or even despondent and apathetic. These responses are not effective at bringing about change, they are part of the problem . In order to bring about positive change in the world we need not only seek engagement with the outer world, but also engagement with our inner world. If we want to see greater awareness in the world, we have to cultivate awareness. If we want to see greater harmony and less strife we need to learn to become more adept at handling our emotions and learn to respond to frustrations with more patience and kindness. Jesus is our druid. He is our spirit guide. "And when he was demanded of the Pharisees, when the kingdom of God should come, he answered them and said, The kingdom of God cometh not with observation: Neither shall they say, Lo here! or, lo there! for, behold, the kingdom of God is within you." -Luke 17:20-21 (King James Version)

10/18/2022
The Kingdom of God...
10/15/2022

The Kingdom of God...

Feed my Sheep
10/15/2022

Feed my Sheep

All Souls Prayer
10/15/2022

All Souls Prayer

10/15/2022
10/15/2022

Blessing to Open the Ear

That as we wake
we will listen.
That as we rise
we will listen.
That before our first words
of the day
we will listen.
That when we meet
we will listen.

That at noontime
we will listen.
That at dusk
we will listen.
That at the gathering
of night
we will listen.
That entering sleep
we will listen still.

—Jan Richardson

___

Good morning.

May today be a day of listening for you

(for all of us).

10/14/2022

Goodnight everyone 🙏🏻

10/14/2022

George MacDonald's Christmas stories range from the realistic to the marvelous; and from obvious "stand alones" to little gems hidden away for years in his longer works. In this new collection, six of these assorted tales are drawn together, along with ten festive poems: each of them embracing th...

10/14/2022

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