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Twenty-ninth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Matthew 22:15-21 + Homily
16 Minutes 08 Seconds
Link to the Readings:
https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/101820.cfm
(New American Bible, Revised Edition)
From the parish bulletin of Sunday 18 October 2020:
Some of those dining before the gilded statue in Rockefeller Center in fair weather and skating there in the winter may not know that the glistening figure is Prometheus, one of the Titans who preceded the gods of Mount Olympus. He stole fire from Zeus, who then condemned Prometheus to everlasting torment by an eagle eating his liver, which was renewed each day. The liver was thought to be the seat of human emotion, and the agony expressed the consequences of overreaching in attempts at seizing power. Prometheus gave mankind gifts of the intellect, and so over the Rockefeller statue are words of Aeschylus, which perhaps do not command the attention of many diners and skaters: “Prometheus, teacher in every art, brought the fire that hath proved to mortals a means to mighty ends.”
By Fr. George William RutlerTwenty-ninth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Matthew 22:15-21 + Homily
16 Minutes 08 Seconds
Link to the Readings:
https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/101820.cfm
(New American Bible, Revised Edition)
From the parish bulletin of Sunday 18 October 2020:
Some of those dining before the gilded statue in Rockefeller Center in fair weather and skating there in the winter may not know that the glistening figure is Prometheus, one of the Titans who preceded the gods of Mount Olympus. He stole fire from Zeus, who then condemned Prometheus to everlasting torment by an eagle eating his liver, which was renewed each day. The liver was thought to be the seat of human emotion, and the agony expressed the consequences of overreaching in attempts at seizing power. Prometheus gave mankind gifts of the intellect, and so over the Rockefeller statue are words of Aeschylus, which perhaps do not command the attention of many diners and skaters: “Prometheus, teacher in every art, brought the fire that hath proved to mortals a means to mighty ends.”