tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6714437334790446678.post7692032417739146695..comments2023-10-04T09:50:08.070-05:00Comments on Logismoi: St Methodius Thinks of Homer & the Prophet ElijahAaron Taylorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17775589009145031773noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6714437334790446678.post-40252900123935421452009-05-29T21:20:34.690-05:002009-05-29T21:20:34.690-05:00Dear Mr Claude Lopez-Ginisty,
I think perhaps you...Dear Mr Claude Lopez-Ginisty,<br /><br />I think perhaps you meant to comment on the St Brendan post rather than this one. But at any rate, I truly hope you didn't take that tongue-in-cheek comment about French seriously. I do not for a moment believe there is anything barbarous about the French language. To tell the truth, more than anything else I'm embarrassed that I don't read it! You are right, though, that it is a shame that no one has written an Akathist to St Brendan in English or Irish, and if I did know French I myself would love to translate yours. Thank you for your veneration of and labours on behalf of this wonderful Saint!<br /><br />In Christ,<br />AaronAaron Taylorhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17775589009145031773noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6714437334790446678.post-68509333305999972122009-05-29T17:14:48.568-05:002009-05-29T17:14:48.568-05:00Thank you for your nice comment about my akathist ...Thank you for your nice comment about my akathist to Saint Brendan written in the barbarous French language. I am a member of the ROCOR, I have written several akathist to Celtic saints, and I wonder why the smart English, Irish and Americans did not think of writing an akathist to St. Brendan in their own divine dialect.<br />In Christ,<br /><br />Reader Claude Lopez-GinistyClaude LOPEZ-GINISTYhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06534098604783149247noreply@blogger.com