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Showing posts from January, 2021

The Fourth Sunday in Ordinary Time

  On March 21, 2006, a Jack Dorsey did something no one had ever done before—and it had a profound impact on all of us. He sent out the first Tweet. “Just setting up my Twitter,” he wrote. The rest is history. As of this month, Twitter reports there are 500 million Tweets per day sent from around the world. There are 100 million daily active Twitter users. On March 21, 2006, a Jack Dorsey did something no one had ever done before—and it had a profound impact on all of us. He sent out the first Tweet. “Just setting up my Twitter,” he wrote. The rest is history. As of this month, Twitter reports there are 500 million Tweets per day sent from around the world. There are 100 million daily active Twitter users. Twitter is used by both by the famous and not so famous to communicate with the world in just 280 characters – for better or for worse!   Even Pope Francis is on Twitter and he has 40 million followers in nine different languages. We live in an age wh...

Feast of the Epiphany

I once read in a science magazine an article about stars.  Specifically, it explained what happens when they get really really old (like billions of years old) and they get get ready to die.  What happens is they suddenly collapse and explode.  All of the "stuff" that make up the stars (the gasses and chemicals) that make the stars twinkle twinkle in the sky don't disappear.  As a matter of fact all of that stuff travels through space and eventually they come to Earth.  That stuff gets in into the air we breath, the soil in which we grow our fruits and vegetables and the water we drink. Do you know what that means?  That means that we're all stardust!  We are all recycled stars! Just think about what that means!  That means that there is a possibility that some of us were a few of the stars that Galileo saw when he built one of the first telescopes.  It means that some of us were once the stars that famous navigators like Magellan or Columbus...