
“Let all the faithful, whether men or women, when early in the morning they rise from their sleep and before they undertake any tasks, wash their hands and pray to God; and so they may go to their duties. But if any instruction in God’s word is held that day, everyone ought to attend it willingly, recollecting that he will hear God speaking through the instructor and that prayer in the church enables him to avoid the day’s evil; any godly man ought to count it a great loss if he does not attend the place of instruction, especially if he can read. . . . But if on any day there is no instruction, let everyone at home take the Bible and read sufficiently in passages that he finds profitable.” (Hippolytus of Rome, The Apostolic Tradition, Part IV.35)
- Podcast Feed (right click/long press to copy)
- The Axehead Circular on Spotify
- The Axehead Circular on Apple Podcasts
- The Boniface Group on X
- “The Case for Working With Your Hands,” Matthew B. Crawford; New York Times, May 2009
- “The Rise of Anti-Humanism,” Matthew B. Crawford; First Things, August 2023
- Volvo 122S (Wikipedia)
- “The Order of Matins,” The Lutheran Hymnal (St. Louis: Concordia, 1941), 32-40
- “The Ancient Babylonian Origins Of Modern Time,” Klockit, October 2014
- “Matins and Vespers in the Life of the Church,” Charles L. McClean; Church Music, Vol. 75, Issue 2; 1975
- The Apostolic Tradition, Hippolytus of Rome, trans. Burton Scott Easton; Project Gutenberg; c. 220/1934
- “O Come, Let Us Bowdlerize,” Matthew Bray; The North American Anglican, May 2018
- The Restored Venite (Psalm 95), vv. 8-11 set by David Schotte
