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25.01.2022 Today’s Saint: CHARLES DE FOUCAULD Feast Day: December 1 Beatified: November 13, 2005... Charles was raised by his grandfather in Strasbourg, France, after his parents died in 1864, when he was six. He was baptized and made his First Communion, but never really believed in the Christian life. He became an officer in the French army. After his grandfather died, Charles inherited his fortune. He left the army and spent his money foolishly. Charles moved to Paris. He rented an apartment near his cousin, Marie, a young woman who was a faithful follower of Jesus. She was such a good example for Charles that he returned to the Church and devoted himself to living for Christ. His first step in this journey was to begin studying to become a Trappist monk. After several years, Charles felt a strong calling to visit the Holy Land. He supported himself by working at a convent, but otherwise he led a quiet life of prayer. The mother superior of the nuns suggested that Charles could best serve God by becoming a priest. He returned to France and was ordained in 1901. Father Charles moved to Algiers to become a hermit in the desert. He wanted to be among those who were the furthest removed, the most abandoned. He wanted all who drew close to him to find in him a brother, a universal brother. He dreamed of establishing two religious ordersthe Little Brothers and the Little Sisters who would live their lives imitating Christ. This dream did not become a reality until after Charles’ death. Charles built a hermitage, a private house devoted to prayer, in a village in the Sahara. He wore a white robe and greeted everyone he met with Christian love. He did not try to convert the local people, choosing instead to be an example of Jesus for all. The people called him the holy man. All during his years away from the army, Charles had remained friends with some of the soldiers. He allowed them to store their weapons in his hermitage. Some people suspected Charles of being a spy because they saw soldiers stopping at the hermitage. Rebel forces went to the hermitage and killed Father Charles in 1916. On Nov. 14, 2005, Father Charles de Foucauld was beatified by Pope Benedict XVI. Charles once wrote a famous prayer called the Prayer of Abandonment. You can honour Blessed Charles de Foucauld by praying it and trusting God to lead you closer. The Prayer of Abandonment: Father, I abandon myself into your hands; Do with me what you will. Whatever you may do, I thank you: I am ready for all, I accept all.
25.01.2022 From todays Gospel reading: My friend...what if I wish to give this last one the same as you? Or am I not free to do as I wish with my own money? Are you envious because I am generous? Thus, the last will be first, and the first will be last. Reflection:... Each of us stands in need before God. Some are looking for forgiveness; others for healing from past injuries. During these pandemic days some may need courage, perseverance, hope, or relief. We are like the day laborers, we stand in need and hope we are chosen. The One in charge has noticed us and wants to be generous, beyond what we think we should receive. Our best response to Gods generosity is gratitude and the desire to be generous to others in similar need. So we ask ourselves: How aware am I of Gods generosity to me in my life? Can I name some gifts I have received from God that I am sure I didnt earn or deserve? To whom must I be as generous?
25.01.2022 Todays Saint: St Finbar He was the son of an artisan and a lady of the Irish royal court. Born in Connaught, Ireland, and baptized Lochan, he was educated at Kilmacahil, Kilkenny, where the monks named him Fionnbharr (white head) because of his light hair; he is also known as Bairre and Barr. He went on pilgrimage to Rome with some of the monks, visiting St. David in Wales on the way back. Supposedly, on another visit to Rome the Pope wanted to consecrate him a bishop but wa...s deterred by a vision, notifying the pope that God had reserved that honor to Himself, and Finbar was consecrated from heaven and then returned to Ireland. At any rate, he may have preached in Scotland, definitely did in southern Ireland, lived as a hermit on a small island at Lough Eiroe, and then, on the river Lee, founded a monastery that developed into the city of Cork, of which he was the first bishop. His monastery became famous in southern Ireland and attracted numerous disciples. Many extravagant miracles are attributed to him, and supposedly, the sun did not set for two weeks after he died at Cloyne about the year 633. His feast day is September 25th. See more
25.01.2022 Blessings for all you do.
23.01.2022 For those who wondered if the blood of St Januarius liquified yesterday on his feast ...
23.01.2022 Advent prayer... Pray until something happens
23.01.2022 Migrant and Refugee Sunday. Multicultural Mass
21.01.2022 Sunday Mass with Fr Morgan
21.01.2022 MERCY DAY. To all the Sisters of Mercy and their Affiliates and Mater Hospitals - blessings. Mercy Day is the feast day which unites Mercy people across the world. Its origin dates back to 24 September 1827, when the House of Mercy on Baggot Street, Dublin was opened by Catherine McAuley as a school for the education of poor women and girls. Today Mercy has spread to 46 countries around the world.
21.01.2022 Jewish New Year of 5781
20.01.2022 BURLEIGH BYTES Our Lady of the Way Community, Palm Beach Local History In 1873, Henry Jordan, a Queensland parliamentarian and sugar planter living in the Logan area, selected much of the coastal land between Tallebudgera and Currumbin Creeks. Gradually, Jordan added to his block until the property encompassed what became known as the suburbs of Palm Beach, Elanora, and Currumbin Waters.... During the 1880s, William Wood, a retired railway worker and early land speculator, acquired 400 acres of Jordan’s coastal block. It appears that Mr Wood leased portions of his land during his time as an owner. During World War One, a tenant of Mr Woods, Mr John Crimp, occupied a homestead and grazed cattle on the property. Wood had numerous properties in South East Queensland and, despite having a connection with the coastal property for sixty years, appears to have chosen to live at Palm Beach, known as Beechwood Estate, only towards the end of his life in 1948. Photo: Gold Coast Libraries - Palm Beach from Burleigh Heads See more
20.01.2022 Wednesday Art blessings:
19.01.2022 Todays Feast: Our Lady of Walsingham The statue of Our Lady of Walsingham, the Slipper Chapel, Walsingham, Norfolk, England (photograph by Thorvaldsson, 2008). ... The shrine of Our Lady at Walsingham in Norfolk was one of the great pilgrimage centres of mediaeval times. The lady of the manor of Walsingham, Richeldis de Faverches, had a vision in which the Virgin Mary instructed her to build in her village an exact replica of the house in Nazareth where the Annunciation had taken place. According to tradition this vision occurred in 1061, although the most likely date for the construction of the shrine is a hundred years later. The original shrine was destroyed at the Reformation, but in the 19th and 20th centuries, pilgrimage to Walsingham was revived not only for Catholics but also for Anglicans. See more
18.01.2022 World Day of the Poor - the poor are our global responsibility. Reflect with Pope Francis on this 4th World Day of the Poor Message
18.01.2022 Today’s Saints: Saints Andrew Dng-Lc and his Companions The evangelization of Vietnam began in the 16th century and was formally established with the setting up of two Vicariates Apostolic in 1659. There are now about 6 million Catholics in Vietnam, some 10% of the population. This growth comes partly from the fact that since the earliest times the seed of the Faith has been watered by the blood of the martyrs of Vietnam the missionary clergy, the local clergy and the... ordinary Christian people. They have all shared the labour of apostolic work and have together faced death to bear witness to the truth of the Gospel. In the course of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries no less than 53 decrees, signed by the lords and emperors of the country from 1625 to 1886, launched one persecution of Christians after another, each one more savage than the last. Over the whole territory of Vietnam about 130,000 Christians were killed in these persecutions. Over the centuries the names of most of them have been lost, but their memory is still alive in the Catholic community. Since the beginning of the 20th century 117 of these heroes (those whose sufferings were cruellest and best documented) were beatified, in four groups. They were all canonized together by Pope John Paul II on 19 June 1988. Each one of them was a soul individually created and loved by God, with a life and gifts uniquely his or her own; but with such a huge crowd one can only classify. By nationality, there were 96 Vietnamese, 11 Spanish and 10 French. By status, there were 8 bishops, 50 priests, and 59 laymen and women. By mode of death, 75 were beheaded, 22 strangled, 6 burned alive, 5 torn to pieces while still alive, and 9 died of torture in prison. See more
17.01.2022 Art Wednesday feature...
16.01.2022 Parish Funeral Mass for Audrey Lollback. May she Rest In Peace
16.01.2022 BURLEIGH BYTES Our Lady of the Way Community, Palm Beach The first Mass celebrated in the Our Lady of the Way Church was by Fr Frank Shine the following Monday after the opening.... Irene Stamper and Eleanor Snee made all the Altar cloths as well as the tabernacle veils. Members of the CWL donated the carpet for the sanctuary. IN 1963 the Holy Family Parish at Indooroopilly was opening a new church and wanted to hand on their church ware. The parish bought the pews (straight edged front ones), altar, pulpit, tabernacle, Stations of the Cross, crucifix, and the Mary and Jesus plaster statues from Holy Family. The cross on the outside road facing wall seems to be an ever changing one. Originally brown painted, it was then painted white, then an aboriginal motif was painted on it, then painted white. Nothing is known of the history of these changes, or about the history of the Aboriginal motif cross.
16.01.2022 Daily Mass with Fr Jacob
16.01.2022 A contextualisation for the first reading this Sunday
15.01.2022 BURLEIGH BYTES Our Lady of the Way Community, Palm Beach Jesus & Mary Statues: After the closure of the Holy Name Cathedral crypt in the Valley, Brisbane in 1985 the wooden Jesus and Mary statues were brought to Palm Beach Church.... Madonna Della Strada - the Italian for Our Lady of the Wayside, or Our Lady of the Good Road is the name of an image of the Blessed Virgin Mary, enshrined at the Church of the Gesù in Rome, mother church of the Society of Jesus religious order of the Roman Catholic Church and is a variation on the Eastern basilissa (imperial) type of icon. The name goes back to a shrine established in Rome in the 5th century by the Astalli family, originally known as the Madonna degli Astalli, at a crossroads along the ceremonial route of the popes. The 13th-14th century fresco (a wall painting done on damp plaster) was originally painted on the wall of Saint Mary of the Way in Rome, the church of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits), given to Saint Ignatius by Pope Paul III in 1540. Tom Pettit and Family donated the Our Lady of the Way Statue at Palm Beach. This statue came from Italy and is made of wood and has a small reservoir of linseed oil implanted inside. The statue was restored for the 50th Jubilee. The stations of the cross have been in the church since they were acquired from Holy Family Indooroopilly in 1963. They were repaired in 2019 by artist Daniela Talassi and paid for by kind donation of John and Margaret Costigan The crucifix at present looks a bit disfigured it is because it was smashed one night and repaired locally but not to its original dimensions it too is an original to the Holy Family purchase of 1962 and placed in the Church by donation in memory of Margaret and William Saunders 1963.
14.01.2022 Welcome to Burleigh Bytes. We hope to give an explanation of some of the significant images and hardware in each of our parish churches. Some of the history has been lost or is unknown in the Parish Office. So each week enjoy and if you can add photos or knowledge or corrections please let us know. So we start over the next few weeks with Calvary Church Miami. ... CHURCH BUILDING Fr Frank Shine an ex-army Korean War veteran chaplain MBE was appointed Parish priest 1959 to 1976. In 1963 he realised the parish needed another church besides the Burleigh Infant Saviour Church. With the help of Brian Purcell and Max Smales real estate agents they came upon Crown land being sold at Miami only two blocks at a time could be purchased. And with Brian Murphy the land was bought for 12,000 and Mr Murphy penned the design. Fr Frank Shine said he wanted a beautiful, durable, light building with plenty of air flow. What he got Fr Frank said was a rugged beauty. With Mr Brian Murphys design and Mr Brian Harris and company builders the plans allowed the roof line to block the oppressive western sun while being open to the sea breeze from the east the beach is about 300 ms away. The building almost looks like a wave upon the shore and no its not an A frame church that would do well in snow conditions. The project cost about 15,000 pounds. Mr Brian Murphy and others took as their starting point nearby Nobbys Hill that reminded them of Calvary hence the name of the Church. Further Frank Shine being an ex-veteran chaplain asked for the Church to gain funds through the commonwealth War Memorial Funds saying he hoped to arouse young people to a better appreciation of what their forefathers had given them. The stark white revolutionary design church attracted visitors who came to the Gold Coast during their day coach visits. Even today the church is a peaceful sanctuary for many parishioners and visitors. The Church was blessed and opened by Archbishop Duhig on the 22Decemebr 1963 it was the last church that Archbishop Duhig ever consecrated in the Brisbane Archdiocese. More churches were built in Queensland between 1955-1965 than in any other decade prior or since. At the conclusion of the opening Archbishop Duhig said Nothing has been done in any other diocese to excel what has been done on the Coast. Christ has been brought to the people here I can assure you in Gods name that every sacrifice you make will be blessed by Him. In 1995 the church underwent another interior renovation where Vatican II design elements saw the sanctuary moved from the Miami School north end wall to the middle western back wall of the church and the pews placed in an arc around the altar. So the people again gathered as the Body of Christ to celebrate their lives in Christ.
13.01.2022 This Sunday is Migrant and Refugee Sunday
13.01.2022 Blessings to all who suffer and those who work in this field.
12.01.2022 Burleigh Heads Catholic Parish
12.01.2022 Calvary Church, Miami nativity scene . O come Emmanuel
12.01.2022 Todays Saint: St Morgan (360-? ) St. Morgan of Wales is more commonly known by his Latin name Pelagius Britto -- indicating his association with the sea and Celtic British origins. He was born around 360 A.D. in South Wales in Bangor-is-y-coed or Caerlleon-ar-wsyg near the Severn estuary. He came from a Christian romanized Celtic background, the son of a decurion. Morgan received a Latin education and was taught Holy Scriptures, inheriting the Celtic tradition which had link...s with the Church of Gaul and the Eastern Church. An emphasis was placed on faith and good works, on the holiness of all life, and on the oneness-of-all. In 380 Morgan went to Rome to study law but soon abandoned his law career for the Church, becoming a monk. In doing so, he was to become the first-known major Celtic writer and theologian. Morgan was a big, enthusiastic man -- strong, broad-shouldered and stout. His physical stature was compared to that of Milo the wrestler. He had a ram-like jutting forehead and a preference for going bareheaded. He walked with a slow, plodding gait, "at the pace of a turtle." While his opponents portrayed him in uncomplimentary language their descriptions reveal a man of deliberateness, confidence, and keen mind. It was Morgan's habit of strolling from crossroads to street corners in public squares throughout Rome, talking to people and exhorting them to follow better ways. With an astute knowledge of Holy Scriptures he would discuss theology, ethics, and doctrine with everyone he encountered -- from the lowliest of work-women to the most educated men. He openly proclaimed that women should be taught Holy Scriptures. Morgan became the spiritual advisor to many and moved about successfully in Roman Christian circles, emerging as a theologian of note and as a man of personal sanctity, moral fervour, and charisma. He became a major religious and intellectual force of his time, pointedly showing that his ideas had solid foundation in the Holy Scriptures and in the writings of the Church Fathers.
11.01.2022 Prayer, high five? Users confused over folded hands emoji's meaning. Some say it means prayer, others say high five, however history may provide more insight into matter Umar Farooq explains: Emojis -- ideograms or smileys -- used in electronic messages have become part of many people's everyday lives across the globe. They are used frequently in messaging and in social media....Continue reading
11.01.2022 Today’s Saint: Blessed Clementine Anuarite (1939 - 1964) Nengepeta Anuarite was born in North Zaire on 29 November 1939. In 1955 she joined the Religious Institute of the Holy Family (Jamaa Takatifu) where she became known as Clementine. She trained as a primary school teacher and for a few years, was the matron of a boarding school. In 1964 she, and the whole community, were kidnapped by the Simba rebels. Anuarite was killed on 1 December 1964 having refused to be the wife of the Colonel.
11.01.2022 Gods natural blessings- living Laudato Si
10.01.2022 Pope Francis appeals to us all to start a new dialogue about how we are shaping the future of our planet. Climate change is a complex social and environmental... problem that the Pope says demands an integrated approach to combating poverty, restoring dignity to the excluded and at the same time protecting nature. Will you use your Queensland State Election vote to benefit our planet and all people? You can find out more about the issues you might reflect on when you cast your vote at https://bit.ly/2FXOF2g
10.01.2022 Its an amazing news article about an amazing request. Participants on rides have been asked to scream inside their hearts rather than outside with their voice where they could project the covid virus. For all those screaming on the inside may God protect your coming and going.
09.01.2022 From today’s Gospel reading: Jesus told this parable to his disciples: "A man was going on a journey He called in his servants and handed his funds over to them according to each person’s abilities..... After a long absence, the master of those servants came home and settled accounts with them."... Reflection: Discipleship isn’t a holding back for fear of making a mistake, or looking like a fool. Judging from today’s parable, it requires a spirit of risk and boldness, sometimes in big matters, but mostly in small daily occurrences. Whatever the "risky business" we use in our service of the Lord, we are encouraged in today’s parable by a Master who trusts his servants to "give it a try" so that when he returns we will hear him call us "good and faithful servants." So we ask ourselves: Do I treat my faith as something fragile, keeping it close and protected as if it will break if brought out into the open? In my daily life, how venturesome before others am I with my faith? Do I show mercy?
08.01.2022 Happy Diwali to our Hindu brothers and sisters! Read "MESSAGE ON THE OCCASION OF THE FEAST OF DEEPAVALI 2020: Christians and Hindus: Rekindling Positivity and Hope during the Covid-19 Pandemic and Beyond" here: http://www.vatican.va//rc_pc_interelg_doc_20201106_deepava
08.01.2022 Todays Saint: St Pio of Pietrelcina (1887-1968) (Padre Pio) He was born in the small village of Pietrelcina in southern Italy, and joined the Capuchin friars at the age of 16. He became a priest seven years later, and spent fifty years at the monastery of San Giovanni Rotondo, where he was very much sought after as a spiritual advisor, confessor, and intercessor. Many miracles were popularly ascribed to him during his lifetime. He died a few days after the fiftieth anniversary of his receiving the stigmata, and over 100,000 people attended his funeral.
07.01.2022 Padre Pio feast day today - blessings
07.01.2022 Our prayers go out to the world during the COVID Pandemic. Someone in Europe dies every 17 seconds from coronavirus according to WHO
07.01.2022 This is great news.
06.01.2022 Burleigh Parish Multicultural Masses. Each Mass this weekend we will celebrate in some way our multicultural life highlighting Migrant and Refugee Sunday. Wear your national/ ancestral dress or your Burleigh shirt.
05.01.2022 BURLEIGH BYTES Our Lady of the Way Community, Palm Beach The silver Holy Water stoops were presented by Mr Timothy O’Dwyer there is also one copper holy water stoop present in memory of Kennedy Family this stoop looks similar to the ones from Calvary Church crafted by Erwin Guth. Nothing is known of the history of the Infant Prague Statue at the front door. The Infant Jesus of Prague or Child Jesus of Prague is a 16th-century Roman Catholic wax-coated wooden statue of the c...hild Jesus holding a globus cruciger, located in the Discalced Carmelite Church of Our Lady Victorious in Malá Strana, Prague, Czech Republic. The History of the present Paschal Candle Stand and Bible stand is that it is donated by Dianne and Tom Rolfe and crafted by Tom himself. You can notice that the altar rails were removed - probably around the time of the Vatican Council renovations. The large Mary statue was removed to Miami Church and the Sacred Heart Statue is in storage damaged. The old Altar and pulpit are unknown as to their whereabouts. The present day Altar, Ambo and presider’s chair are really temporary structures crafted in 3 ply by Mr Joe Zabor. The side altar on which the Mary statue sat is now used as the communion table at the back of the Church. The church brass ware is all in storage at present awaiting restoration.
04.01.2022 The Archdiocese of Brisbane Catholic Campaign collection is this Sunday.
04.01.2022 Todays Saint: St Maurice and the Theban Legion (d. 287) A statue of St Maurice (later 13th century) at Magdeburg Cathedral, Germany. Maurice (a name which means black) was a native of Thebes in Lower Egypt. When he was young, he was conscripted into the Roman army together with many youth of his area, and sent, for military service, to Switzerland. Before battle, the emperor ordered his soldiers to offer sacrifice to the Roman gods but the Theban Legion, headed by Maurice, refused. They remained steadfast even after being asked several times to apostatize. Their allegiance to Christ earned them the crown of martyrdom in the year 287.
03.01.2022 Everyone deserves a full life. Right now, aged care and support for older people in our community is subject to greater scrutiny than ever before. Governments m...ust provide for sustainable aged care services, improve regulatory frameworks to ensure the quality of care and provide older people and their families with real choice and control over the services they receive. How will you use your Queensland State Election vote for the benefit of people of every age in our community? Consider the Common Good on October 31. You can find out more about the issues you might reflect on when you cast your vote at https://bit.ly/35NXlD8
03.01.2022 BURLEIGH BYTES Calvary Church Miami CHRIST FALLS THE THIRD TIME SCULPTURE... On the Northern Miami School end wall, where the altar use to be until 1995, was placed in 1964 above the then altar a large 24ft maple wood sculpture of Christ falling on his way to Calvary. The cost of the sculpture was 760 or $21750 in todays monetary terms. The artist Erwin Guth, before migrating to Brisbane in 1951 from Saarland West Germany, belonged to the prestigious Berlin Academy of Fine Arts and a teacher of the German Ministry of Public Worship and Instruction Office. Some other notable works by Erwin Guth are the sculptures on the outside of the Indooroopilly Holy Family Catholic Church and numerous commissions around Queensland. The Christian cross, seen as a representation of the instrument of the crucifixion of Jesus, is the best-known symbol of Christianity. It is related to the crucifix and to the more general family of cross symbols. The cross is one of the earliest and most widely used Christian symbols. In the broadest sense, a cross symbolizes the religion of Christianity. More specifically, it represents and memorializes Christ's death. There are a variety of crosses, some with specific symbolic meaning and others that have simply become culturally associated with certain groups. Of course, the crosstwo bars which intersect one another at right anglesis an ancient symbol found in many cultures predating the Christian religion, and in Christianity, there are several forms which each have a variety of meanings. The symbol without a corpus (body) is called a cross and the symbol with a corpus is called a crucifix. So what would this sculpture be called? National Archives of Australia retrieved from https://www.destinationaustralia.gov.au//photograph-7502010
02.01.2022 Ah. We all need Morgan wisdom.
02.01.2022 World Cashew Day is celebrated annually November 23. This day is to celebrate a popular nut for partying and simple snacking. Cashews are a popular nut and also provide excellent sources of antioxidants and minerals. Living Laudato si
02.01.2022 38 million people world wide are currently living with AIDS.
02.01.2022 Podcast link below to Padre's homily on this Sunday's 2nd reading - "Life to me is Christ".
01.01.2022 Sunday 15 November 2020 33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time Readings at Mass ________...Continue reading
01.01.2022 Todays Saint: St Matthew, Apostle and Evangelist He was born in Capernaum, and was working as a tax-collector when Jesus called him. He is thought by some scholars to have written an early version of his gospel in Aramaic, a precursor to the Greek version we now have. He is also said to have preached in the East. Matthew, the Evangelist who wrote the Gospel that appears first in the New Testament, was different from the other Apostles. He was not a popular man. Many people f...elt that he was unworthy to be a chosen as a follower of Jesus. Matthew worked for the Romans as a tax collector. The Romans ruled Palestine and the Jewish people in the time of Jesus. They forced the Jewish people to pay taxes to them. Many of the tax collectors cheated the people by charging more taxes than required and keeping the extra money for themselves. The Jews considered tax collectors to be traitors. In Chapter 9 of his Gospel, Matthew tells a story about how Jesus called him to follow him and how the Jewish people felt about tax collectors. You can read it in Matthew 9:9-13. In this story, the Pharisees, a group of Jews who strictly followed all the laws of their religion, call tax collectors sinners." Jesus knew in his heart that Matthew was not a sinner or a cheat. Matthew wrote his Gospel for Jewish people who had become followers of Christ. He wanted his audience to know that Jesus was the Messiah that God had promised to send to save all people. Matthews Gospel makes clear that Jesus is the fulfillment of everything said by the prophets in the Old Testament. Matthew is also the only Evangelist who shares the eight Beatitudes with his readers. His Gospel faithfully reports how Jesus described who will be truly blessed by God in the Kingdom and the attitudes and actions that are required for those who follow the new Law Jesus came to bring. After Jesus Ascension, Matthew preached the Gospel, as Jesus asked his disciples to do. It is believed that he established Christian communities in Ethiopia - not the country but the area near present day Armenia. Tradition tells us that he died as a martyr. The symbol for Matthews Gospel is a man with wings. Matthew wrote about Jesus Incarnation and his Gospel makes clear that Jesus was true God and true man. Matthew is the patron saint of bankers, because he dealt with money as a tax collector. But anyone who reads Matthews Gospel knows that money was not important to him. What was important was believing in and living as a follower of Christ. Matthew helps us to remember that it is our faith in Jesus that makes us truly rich! St. Matthew is the patron saint of accountants. Saint Matthew and the Angel (1661) by Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669), Musée du Louvre, Paris.
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