Author Archives: Gerry Lynch

Holy Cross Church, Vilnius

The history of the little church of Holy Cross, Vilnius, dates back to 1543, when a chapel was built on the site to commemorate the martyrdom of a group of Franscians in the 14th Century. In the 16th century, a … Continue reading

Posted in Photography, Travel | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Holy Cross Church, Vilnius

The Bright Field

Late on a summer evening, as I took photos from the summit of Divis (478m above sea level) the highest of the Belfast Hills towards Lough Neagh, suddenly a shaft of sunlight broke through and illuminated the fields on top … Continue reading

Posted in Anglicanism, Christianity, Northern Ireland, Photography, Poetry, Reflection | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on The Bright Field

Blogging Staggers Day Three: Sunset Skies

Truly spectacular sunset skies at St Stephen’s House this evening. This is, like, where I actually live and stuff. The church is St John the Evangelist, Iffley Road.

Posted in Anglicanism, Christianity, Photography | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Blogging Staggers Day Three: Sunset Skies

Blogging Staggers Day One: Praying With the Lepers

The Bartlemas Chapel – a name that sounds like something out of Dickens, and the chapel felt like something from a disappeared world as well. A few hundred metres down a laneway from the noise and bustle of the Cowley … Continue reading

Posted in Christianity, Reflection | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Blogging Staggers Day One: Praying With the Lepers

St Aldegundis, Emmerich

Difficult to photograph close in due to its dense inner-city site, some say that St Aldegundis is on the site of the original mission church in what later became Emmerich am Rhein, founded by St Wilibrord around 700. That is … Continue reading

Posted in churchcrawling, Germany, Photography, Travel | 1 Comment

St Pancratius, ‘s-Heerenberg, and the ‘Gestapo Window’

St Pancratius (de Pancratiuskerk) in the little Dutch market town of ‘s-Heerenberg (population 8,000) and literally a ten minute stroll from the German border. At first blush – another pretty, ornate, but unexceptional post-Vatican I church in the south eastern … Continue reading

Posted in Europe | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on St Pancratius, ‘s-Heerenberg, and the ‘Gestapo Window’

What Is A Man? The Question Asked by a Memorial to Forgotten Wars

The memorial to the fallen of the 1860s Wars of German Unification in the Rheinpark in Emmerich (Kriegerdenkmal, Emmerich). Emmerich is a sleepy little river port on the Rhine, literally within a casual afternoon stroll of the Dutch border.   Completed … Continue reading

Posted in Art, Germany, Travel | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on What Is A Man? The Question Asked by a Memorial to Forgotten Wars

The Opioids of the People

Crossposted at Slugger O’Toole… The United States government has launched a new anti-opioid campaign featuring true stories of people so desperate that they inflicted gruesome injuries on themselves to get another prescription. Such stories have already been more effectively told in … Continue reading

Posted in Global, USA, World Politics | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on The Opioids of the People

Presbyterians, Salvation, and God

Cross-posted at Slugger O’Toole. We cremated my friend James on the freakishly warm Friday before St Patrick’s Day, between the two bouts of even freakier snow. We did this after a celebration of the Supper of the Lord Jesus Christ … Continue reading

Posted in Anglicanism, Christianity, LGBT, Reflection, UK | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Presbyterians, Salvation, and God

St Nicolai, Kalkar

St Nicolai’s Church in the town of Kalkar (115km north of Cologne, 150km SE of Amsterdam) on the German Lower Rhine – a wonderland of woodcarving from the late 15th and 16th Centuries, where a remarkable cast of woodcarvers found … Continue reading

Posted in Europe, Germany, Photography | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on St Nicolai, Kalkar