This morning I am trying to draft a homily for Sunday. In saving the file, however, a problem arises. Now that I have preached through the three years of the Sunday lectionary cycle, when I go to save my document as "28th Sunday in Ordinary Time, B" I find that there is already a file with this name, containing my first Sunday homily as a transitional deacon three years ago.
So what do I call this second homily to be preached on the same liturgical day? "28th Sunday, B-2"? "28th Sunday, B2, 'Keep on the Borderlands,'"? "The 28th Sunday of Year B Strikes Back"?
Well, in hearkening back to mathematics, one of several loves lost in the course of giving my life to this religious quest, I have decided that the file will be named "28th Sunday in Ordinary Time, B′," to be read, "Twenty-eighth Sunday in Ordinary Time, B prime."
4 comments:
I have a degree in computer science so I usually over-analyze stuff like this, but I would suggest a scheme that uses a combination of calendar year, liturgical year, and liturgical occasion. In the case you presented, how about week28_B_2009? Using two digits for the week would also keep them sorted in the correct order. For example, week01_B_2009 would always come before week28_B_2009. Just a thought.
Good idea! By using the two digits for the week I would never have to use 'bogo-sort.'
I think I'd always keep the year you first preached that sermon in the file title. I second bucks' idea of YYYY-AWW where WW is the week number, and [A] is a single letter code like O for Ordinary, E for Easter, L for Lent, A for Advent, and C for the Christmas season. :-)
W
I, er, just advocate subfolders. Only practically. As far as an anecdote, I like your original solution.
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