Spirituality

Community Invited To KofC Lenten Fish Fry At IHM Friday

KofC News:

The community is invited to attend the Knights of Columbus Lenten Fish Fry dinner, which begins this Friday in the Parish Hall at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church, 3700 Canyon Road.

Dinner is 5-7:30 p.m. and will be served each Friday through April 7.

Note: On Friday, March 17, in recognition of St. Patrick’s Day, the Knights of Columbus will be serving Corned Beef and Cabbage.

The Lenten Fish Fry dinners and the St. Patrick’s Day Corned Beef and Cabbage dinner cost $20 for adults and $10 for children. Read More

Fr. Glenn: The Old And The New

By Fr. Glenn Jones:

I always enjoy reading the Jewish Torah—what Christians often term the “Pentateuch”: the first five books of the Bible. Given the Judeo-Christian influence on much of the eastern hemisphere—and virtually all of the western hemisphere—even the non-believer can find even historical insight there.

For those of Judeo-Christian faith it’s much of our religion and religious history, having many simple, direct moral norms to follow … many of which are still believed by many Christians as still binding. In fact, one of the things Jesus emphasized when asked how to enter the Kingdom Read More

All Shall Be Well … Even For Otto

Clergy from left, Deacon Cynthia Biddlecomb, retired; Pastor Nicolé Ferry, Assistant Rector Lynn Finnegan and Pastor Deb Church. Courtesy photo

By DEACON CYNTHIA BIDDLECOMB aka Cinema Cindy
ELCA

Thanks to the new business in town, SALA Event Center, I was able for the first time in a couple of years to watch a first-run movie in this town where I live. I am grateful. Coincidently, that film, “A Man Called Otto,” is about gratitude. It’s also about neighborliness and the family we create around us. It’s what this town has been for many folks over the decades, when your own family might live in another Read More

WRPC Hosts Ash Wednesday Blessing & Service Feb. 22

Courtesy/WRPC

WRPC News:

Feb. 22 is Ash Wednesday and the community is invited to receive ashes and a blessing at White Rock Presbyterian Church (WRPC) at 310 Rover Blvd., next to Rover Park.

Pastor Deb Church will be available 11:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. in the WRPC sanctuary. Everyone is invited to stop by at their convenience to receive an individual imposition of ashes and a blessing.

There also will be a worship service at 7 p.m. at WRPC with a time of sharing songs, scripture and silence, and an opportunity to receive the imposition of ashes in community.

“For dust you are, and to dust you shall return.”  Read More

Fr. Glenn: The Accusing Mirror

Fr. Glenn Jones:

As we look across the news landscape of this nation, we often hear of otherwise very good people being criticized for some fault—sometimes for an even relatively minor one. This is most prevalent perhaps in the arena of politics, where rivals will attack any weakness in the other—often supported (or not) by media coverage. And, of course, social media has ramped up criticism ability exponentially—a never-ending stream of champions and critics screaming at one another across the electronic abyss.

But even in private lives, we often will overlook all the good that a person does, Read More

Saint Job of Pochaiv Orthodox Christian Church To Host Blini Breakfast Saturday Feb. 25

Courtesy photo

Saint Job of Pochaiv News:

Saint Job of Pochaiv Orthodox Christian Church will host Blini Breakfast Saturday, Feb. 25. Traditional blini, a type of thin pancake, will be served in the traditional style with smoked salmon, herring, butter, and sour cream. Vegetable caviar, eggs, cheese and a variety of berry preserves will be available as well.

Blini are traditionally served in Slavic households during the week before the beginning of the Lenten Fast. The thin crepe-like pancakes are eaten together with fish, sour cream and butter in order to consume all these foods before the Read More

Unitarian Church Of Los Alamos Hosts Second Sunday Forum Featuring Rev. Dr. Leona Stucky-Abbott Feb. 12

Unitarian Church News:

The Unitarian Church of Los Alamos’s next Second Sunday Forum is Sunday, Feb. 12.

The topic will be:

  • Dobbs, and Abortion Today: A Ruling Without Empathy

The speaker will be Rev. Dr. Leona Stucky-Abbott, and the forum is 11:45 a.m. in the church Sanctuary. 

Rev. Stucky-Abbott will discuss key considerations that were both left out of the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, and mostly missing from public discussions of the abortion issue. From a perspective of women’s health and from research about the religious objections to abortion that have entered the Dobbs decision, Read More

Fr. Glenn: Inextinguishable Light

Fr. Glenn Jones:

Driving around New Mexico, there sure seems to be a lot of crumpled guardrails these days. I don’t remember as many prior to cellphones and texting; maybe an unintended (and undesired) consequence of constant communication. Goodness knows we have to wait longer at traffic lights at times waiting on people to look up from texting. “Please proceed, sir” … or similarly-themed motivational expressions. 😉

But it seems that there’s a lot of metaphorical “guard rails” getting blasted right through these days as well. So many extremes, whether in politics, diet fads, exercise, social Read More

Fr. Glenn: To Be Like God

By Fr. Glenn Jones:

I had a text the other day describing a rather bittersweet moment for any parent: the young daughter wanted to ski without her parents nearby or in sight, she beginning to exhibit that budding streak of independence and self-identity. It’s good to have the young stretching out on their own, and yet stings that their son or daughter will soon no longer be their little boy or girl as they mature into adulthood over several years. And the worries increase: will she sure turn out for the best? Will she follow the good as her independence grows? Will she find a path to happiness? A parent Read More

All Shall Be Well: Words Have Power…

Clergy from left, Deacon Cynthia Biddlecomb, retired; Pastor Nicolé Ferry, Assistant Rector Lynn Finnegan and Pastor Deb Church. Courtesy photo

The Rev. Nicolé Raddu Ferry
Bethlehem Lutheran Church
Los Alamos

“Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me.” This statement that my parents taught me as I was growing up had good intentions, but it was a lie. The phrase was used as a defense against name-calling and verbal bullying, intended to increase resiliency, avoid physical retaliation and to remain calm and conflict free. This phrase was first sited in 1862 and I know Read More