[Faith-talk] question about hymnals in braille
Maureen Pranghofer
maureensmusic at comcast.net
Thu Feb 6 16:12:52 UTC 2014
Hi Lisa
If you can give me the nameof a particular hymnol I would be willing to find
it, say at the library and using the index could locate lyrics from the
internet which I would be willing to Braille for you. It wouldn't have the
notation but lyrics. I do transcribing for a living and I did transcribe
one which I have called the Mount Carmel Song Book.Maybe writing to me off
list might be better, maureensmusic at comcast.net Maureen
-----Original Message-----
From: Lisa McManus
Sent: Thursday, February 06, 2014 6:40 AM
To: faith-talk at nfbnet.org
Subject: [Faith-talk] question about hymnals in braille
Hi all,
I found this list and I was wondering if anyone knew the answer to this
question. I was wondering if anyone knew if there is a Catholic hymnal in
braille. I have seen Methodist, Baptist hymnals, and so on in braille, but
I have done lots and lots of research on the internet and so on and can not
find any Catholic hymnals.
I was just wondering if anyone knew of any braille Catholic hymnals. Any
help would be appreciated. Thanks very much.
Lisa
----- Original Message -----
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To: <faith-talk at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Thursday, February 06, 2014 7:00 AM
Subject: Faith-talk Digest, Vol 79, Issue 6
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> Today's Topics:
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> 1. Daily Thought for Wednesday, February 5, 2014 (Paul)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Wed, 5 Feb 2014 14:46:11 -0500
> From: "Paul" <oilofgladness47 at gmail.com>
> To: <iccshare at yahoogroups.com>
> Subject: [Faith-talk] Daily Thought for Wednesday, February 5, 2014
> Message-ID: <AE235C5F5F8E439C9D7A8C3B8E1F8F98 at paul>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
>
> Hello and good day once again to all my loyal readers on this hump day,
> the middle of the week at least in most of the world. I hope that, by
> God's matchless grace and His providential care, that you all are doing
> well.
>
> Peter Lundell today provides a somewhat sobering article that we all
> should take to heart in one way or another. It's entitled "Seeing Past
> Our Reflections" and is rendered as follows:
>
> Jesus said that if we see Him, we see the Father. Yet seeing Jesus can be
> like walking up to a bank. Every time I go to a bank, I approach a glass
> door. When I look through the glass, I see people inside. But I also see
> my reflection in the glass. And on a bright day, I see my reflection more
> than the people inside.
>
> Sometimes that happens with how we see Jesus. Imagine Jesus standing in
> front of us. Effects of two thousand years of doing church can subtly
> become like that glass. We can see Jesus, but when our focus strays to
> busy activity, church agendas, or assuming that Jesus will fit into our
> expectations, we begin to see ourselves more than we see Him. We assume
> we see Jesus, when we may actually see reflections of ourselves
> superimposed over the real thing.
>
> Is it any wonder that the church's expansion in modern, wealthy nations
> leveled off long ago? It happens when we remodel God into our own image.
> We rationalize a materialistic lifestyle and even ask God to bless us with
> more stuff. We act as if God gets riled about the same issues we do--and
> ignores the same ones we do. Go anywhere and you'll find people putting
> their values and assumptions, or their ethnic and national identities,
> ahead of the faith they profess.
>
> Some of us have been looking at our own reflections a long time. And some
> of us have found how liberating it is to see beyond them. Seeing past our
> reflections can change our lives.
>
> How might you have mistaken your own reflection for Jesus? And how have
> you seen Him, the real thing? May you see Him, really see Him.
>
> And there you have Brother Peter's short but poignant article for today. I
> hope that it, in the words of every "Unshackled" radio broadcast, made you
> "face yourself and think."
>
> And now may the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob just keep us safe,
> individually and collectively, in these last days in which we live. Lord
> willing, tomorrow there will be another Daily Thought message for you.
> Your Christian friend and brother, Paul
>
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>
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> End of Faith-talk Digest, Vol 79, Issue 6
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