Don't agree with the Ignatius dude.Miles Edgeworth said:"Give me the child for seven years,
and I will give you the man." - Ignatius Loyola
Don't agree with the Ignatius dude.Miles Edgeworth said:"Give me the child for seven years,
and I will give you the man." - Ignatius Loyola
ok i will later. I learned at church that he was the founder of the jesuits... the pastor used the above quote of his in a sermon....Miles Edgeworth said:Okay but I'd google him before you condemn him.
Julie Bishop said:The chaplaincy placement is a voluntary program. It's up to the school community to determine if they want the chaplaincy services and also, if they do, what sort of services do they want.
Some states have no chaplaincy services at all and in other states it's proven to be a very successful way of providing and supporting students' spiritual wellbeing and their pastoral care.
Julie Bishop said:Some states have no chaplaincy services at all and in other states it's proven to be a very successful way of providing and supporting students' spiritual wellbeing and their pastoral care.
Julie Bishop said:Parents are looking for values in their children's schooling. Schools already have extensive counselling arrangements. We're providing more choice so that if parents in a school community want to establish a chaplaincy service or enhance an existing chaplaincy service then we're providing them that opportunity.
http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2006/s1776399.htmJulie Bishop said:This is part of an overall approach that the Australian Government is taking to ensure that we have nationally consistent high standards in our schools. Now currently chaplaincy services are available to some schools, not all, and I believe it's the role of the Australian Government to ensure that we provide opportunities and choices to all schools across Australia.
Exphate said:Never thought I'd have to say this, but fuck.
A+ post sir.
A+ indeed.
Wait... What's so bad about the Jesuits...?*TRUE* said:ok i will later. I learned at church that he was the founder of the jesuits... the pastor used the above quote of his in a sermon....
I think the greatest need of anybody is to come in to a relationship with christ.Miles Edgeworth said:Are Chaplains more important than textbooks?
Yes yes yes, very well!Miles Edgeworth said:The yoof left to their own devices will fill the spirtual and intellectual void with the viewing of television and the pops music? Creating a classed society of the lettered elite versus the knuckle-dragging, cola-swilling proles?
What??????squeenie said:Wait... What's so bad about the Jesuits...?
umm i answered that i said textbooksMiles Edgeworth said:Please answer the questions. If a school has n dollars which would pay for a chaplain or textbooks they need for a class, should that money go to the chaplain or the textbooks.
Money is a fixed quantity, the amount that you have can be traded for goods and services, much like a bartering system but with a more easily transferred store of value. Unfortunately, as money is fixed, you are unable to spend it twice! Say I wished to trade a sheep for a stack of bibles off you, after having made this trade I cannot then trade the sheep for a stack of playboy magazines, as the sheep is yours!
So you see, in this way they cannot take the money and pay the chaplain and then take the same money and buy the textbooks! That money has become the chaplain's money and they are unable to do so.
I hope this clears up any problems you're having with the concept.
Yeah, I misread it...*TRUE* said:What??????
Who said anything bad about the Jesuits? Did you actually read what i wrote ?
I have immense respect for them in general. I disagreed with something that one of them said, that is all.
I just lightly disagreed with it. That is allsqueenie said:Yeah, I misread it...
But what was so bad about what Ignatius Loyola said? I thought it was a good quote..
Yeah. You have a really good point there. I'd rather have my kids listen to a chaplain than listen to some corporate crap. But I think if corporations would just behave themselves (which unfortunately, they don't), they wouldn't have to be seen as a threat.Iron said:Yes yes yes, very well!
I just dont want to see us fall backwards. Allowing the corporations to fill the void will only lead to a manchurian candidate in the White House. This unholy marriage of State and Business will be the downfall of the republic.
By pandering to satisfy our every base instinct, the corporate world is dehumanising us. The lowest common denominator is what ensues - a nation of "belly men" - with Simpsonesque gut urges and one dimension: simple consumers, like cows in a feild.
They can keep us tame and malleable and open to all other exploitation: so can the Church. The difference is that the Church was a much more class act. It praises our humanity and fires up our idealism. In the long run therefore, it's much better that children are moulded by Chaplains, then by barbaric, vulgar, paedophilic advertising being pushed by the market.