Michael Markey
Veteran
Words aren`t failing you Larry …. very honest ,thoughtful post .
What I "was seeing" was the "it's just a building" comments.
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"A time to be born, and a time to die;" Yes, yes, true enough, but is that all there is to it?
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People who have such a reaction like that have an extraordinarily limited mind. Notre Dame was an incredible work of art, engineering, and vision.
I would be very very sad to be unable to appreciate the majestic accomplishment and now loss of this great building.
When I saw Notre-Dame burning on CNN I was a bit sad, but it is just a building in the end. The hyperbole about it is almost out of control. I was thinking, the building is made of stone, so like, it ain't gonna burn. I used to live in Paris, and I wasn't that put off by the fire. Kinda sad, but the building has been rebuilt many times. It isn't all 800 years old. In fact it has been semi derelict for a lot of that time, but you know, facts are inconvenient sometimes. In the end it will be rebuilt, perhaps even better than it was. No one died. I imagine all of the art was/will be saved. No windows were ruined from what I have seen. Kinda feel sorry for some of those gargoyles though. I mean, it musta been pretty toasty up there...
There are laws in France limiting the government from giving money to religious institutions and I can't imagine the Vatican not owning that property. Where that 700 million goes should be interesting although we will never find out.
What I learned today is that the French government actually owns the cathedral..........
PF
I was thinking, the building is made of stone, so like, it ain't gonna burn.
Kinda sad, but the building has been rebuilt many times. It isn't all 800 years old. In fact it has been semi derelict for a lot of that time, but you know, facts are inconvenient sometimes. In the end it will be rebuilt, perhaps even better than it was.
700 million Euros donated so far by rich benefactors to restore a beautiful building full of riches and history.
...or help the poor and destitute of France and beyond.
What a dilemma. Perhaps we should ask, “what would Jesus do?” ;-)