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Celtic’s “Humility”.


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18 minutes ago, Bill said:

Relax. All this is proof of how much pain we’ve inflicted on Celtic over the years. They’ve long been damaged goods. 

We should probably be flattered by it all - we're in their every waking thought, haunting their dreams as well.

 

And it proves that - as my dad says - "it's all about the Rangers".

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The CBC scandal should be brought up every time that shower get on their high horse.

 

Regardless, in the first ten minutes on Sunday you could sense an unease in their end until their players started to get a grip. Everyone knows that their 'Superiority Complex' is about as solid as a baby's first bowel movement.

 

1 hour ago, Frankie said:

One would think the events of the last week or so will have motivated our players and others involved with the club but I'm not convinced.

I think you might be right Frankie, but I obviously hope that you are wrong as you no doubt do too. We won't have long to find out on that count. 

 

Ever the optimist (probably misplaced), let's hope they get their collective fingers out a week on Sunday.

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Sidenote:

 

From that above, a quote about the club who re-wrote its history:

 

 

The Glory and the Dream - The History of Celtic FC 1887 - 1986 by Tony Campbell and Pat Woods; Mainstream Publishing, 1986

Chapter 2, aptly named Catholic and Irish, states on page 17 ...

 

It was manifestly clear that Celtic was a Catholic club. Founded largely through the determination of a Marist Brother, its first patron was Charles Eyre, "His Grace the Archbishop". Its revenues were earmarked for Catholic charities, its players, officials, members, and commitee men overwhelmingly Catholic, as were the vast majority of its support.
While his prinicipal reason for founding a football club was to raise money to help feed and cloth the poor of the east end parishes, Brother Walfrid had other concerns. He was haunted by the fear that the Protestant soup-kitchens recently set up in Glasgow to combat distress might be means of luring Catholics into apostasy; he was equally worried about the danger to the faith of young Catholics when they first started work and associated with Protestants. ...

... Indeed, up to the present time the club continues the admirable tradition of admitting clergymen of any denomination into the ground free of charge; it would be safe to assume, however, that most of those clerics are Catholics."

 

But, as we all know, it was Rangers being set up as a sectarian club etc. pp. ...

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4 hours ago, der Berliner said:

Sidenote:

 

From that above, a quote about the club who re-wrote its history:

 

 

The Glory and the Dream - The History of Celtic FC 1887 - 1986 by Tony Campbell and Pat Woods; Mainstream Publishing, 1986

Chapter 2, aptly named Catholic and Irish, states on page 17 ...

 

It was manifestly clear that Celtic was a Catholic club. Founded largely through the determination of a Marist Brother, its first patron was Charles Eyre, "His Grace the Archbishop". Its revenues were earmarked for Catholic charities, its players, officials, members, and commitee men overwhelmingly Catholic, as were the vast majority of its support.
While his prinicipal reason for founding a football club was to raise money to help feed and cloth the poor of the east end parishes, Brother Walfrid had other concerns. He was haunted by the fear that the Protestant soup-kitchens recently set up in Glasgow to combat distress might be means of luring Catholics into apostasy; he was equally worried about the danger to the faith of young Catholics when they first started work and associated with Protestants. ...

... Indeed, up to the present time the club continues the admirable tradition of admitting clergymen of any denomination into the ground free of charge; it would be safe to assume, however, that most of those clerics are Catholics."

 

But, as we all know, it was Rangers being set up as a sectarian club etc. pp. ...

That is very, very interesting!

 

Funny how history is rewritten, eh?

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