Monday, April 13, 2009

Getting Blog Title Ideas from Key Word Suggestion Tools



Happy Easter to everyone!

Web development articles

This blog post has two extra bonus articles on web development to
help you get a good start with your web development studies. The
first article is the fourth a series of seven articles on
Effective Blog Title Ideas for a Catholic Blog. This article
suggests the use of free online key word suggestion tools, so that
you can research on popular Catholic key phrases that will help
you compose an effective Catholic blog title.
learn more

The second article in an introduction to the Web-based computer
language, JavaScript. After HTML, JavaScript is the next easiest
computer language to learn. But even though many programmers say
it is an easy language, it will be only easy after we learn the
basics. Once we however learn the basics, we can use embedded
JavaScript in our static HTML pages to make them more interactive.
learn more

The third article is one that you may also be really interested to
know: 4 Basic Steps to Create an Email Form with PHP. It took me
a long time to create an email form with PHP script on our
Catholic web site. I realized that the key to make PHP script work
is to persevere in a trial and error process, until you finally
get the right combination of tags, variables, formats, message
string, and other important script details.
learn more

Pope Benedict XVI's Easter Message

During his Easter Morning mass in St. Peters square, Pope Benedict
called on us to open our spirit to Christ, who has died and is
risen in order to renew us, in order to remove from our hearts the
poison of sin and death, and to pour in the life-blood of the Holy
Spirit: divine and eternal life. Below is a video clip of this
Easter message:




A Good Friday reflection and meditation by Fr. Al
Lauer


Good Friday invites us to reflect deeply on the Christian life.
This Good Friday reflection by Fr. Lauer helps us to understand
the cross of Jesus better and how it relates to our Christian
life.




Blog posts for the Easter Season

After Holy Week, Easter season is the liturgical season of the
Church with the message that Christ is truly our Savior - One who
helps us to be victorious over sin and death. Easter season helps
us to reflect that whatever our past is, with its false goals, its
selfish intentions, its wrong paths, and the darkness which sin
produces in our soul, can now be purified and renewed by Christ's
Light and bring us to a new life in the Spirit - one that brings
anew peace, joy, and generosity.

There are three blog posts which can help you in your reflection
on the great love God has for all humanity and creation - a self-
sacrificing love that is expressed in giving His only Son to be
crucified on a Cross, so that all of us who look upon Him may
realize our sinfulness, convert from our sinful ways, return to
Him, and live a new life given to the service of the Church and
others.

The End is Really the Beginning

Many of us may feel that it is already the end when we go through
the Good Friday service. Because of the solemnity of the service
we are immersed in, we sense the reality of death, a reality that
also involves our own very lives. But the reality of death is
really a beginning to something more eternal.
learn more

The Lamp of Life Renewed

This blog post suggests a book by Fr. Roger Swenson. The book can
be a good daily meditation guide for the Easter season. It gives
a unique format. Each daily meditation is composed of four basic
parts: a reference from the readings of the day; the meditation
proper; a poem which expresses the gospel message for the day; and
a prayer that gives thanks to God for the gift of new life in
Christ.
learn more

Reflection on the Resurrection Story in John

The resurrection story in John tells us of an empty tomb. It was
Mary Magdalene who discovered the empty tomb. She reported this
to Peter and John, who both ran to find out what happened. As both
entered the tomb (with Peter entering first), John believed what
he saw from what Jesus had told them before Jesus went through His
passion and death. This gospel account helps us to reflect on how
we may have responded to the reality of Jesus' resurrection, if we
imagine ourselves to also there in that scene. Are we like Mary
Magdalene who reports to the others what she has discovered? Or
are we like Peter who carefully observed what was found in the
place of the empty tomb? Or are we like John, who simply saw the
empty tomb and believed?
learn more

New! - Revised eBook

I have just finished revising our free Catholic eBook which can be
downloaded from the web site. The contents of the eBook is a
general guide on how to build a Catholic web and blog site network
and be part of the Catholic lay evangelical mission on the Net.
learn more

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