A few nice Christian Singles images I found:
Phillip Norman MacKay MACDONALD M.D.

Image by SandyEm
In loving memory of
P N M MACDONALD M.D.
Died November 19th 1923
Age 50
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1901 English census RG13 piece 3952 folio 146 page 1
Preston and County of Lancaster Royal Infirmary
Preston, Lancashire
Junior house surgeon
Aged 27
Single
Occu: Physician and Surgeon
Marriage 10 November 1908
Registration number 1908/3438
To Christina Blanche Mitchell VAUGHAN [note same name as woman who came out with them to NZ in 1923]
1911 English census RG14PN140 RD2 SD2 ED1 SN109
MACDONALD, Philip [sic] Norman MacKay
Address: 12a 13 Pembridge Square Notting Hill W
Boarder
Married
Aged 37
Medical Practitioner
Born: Nelson, New Zealand
27 people are listed as being in this ‘household’ on census night. Ladies in charge; servants and boarders. Among the boarders, most were of private means, a lady nurse, stock jobbers clerk, bank official and Frederick Charles William HILEY – Assistant Librarian British Museum.
Google link to address View Larger Map
1913 English medical register:
Address: Sampford Peverell, Tiverton, Devon
Registered: 7 Sept 1899 S
Qualifications: M.B.., Bac. Surg. 1899., Univ. Edin.
Dr P MacDonald born 1873 [calculated from age], his wife aged 51; Master P MacDonald aged 11 and Miss L Vaughan aged 21 [home duties] of Cheyne House, Upper Belgrave Road, Clifton, Bristol, England left 8 March 1923 on board ‘Tainui’ [ Master R A Kelly ] for New Zealand.
Found online reference to a 1910 postcard for the above house online at archives.bristol-city.gov.uk/DServeA/cgi-bin/CIdleTcl.exe…
Interesting thing is, it is in the Vaughan collection which is the name of the young servant that came to New Zealand with the doctor and his family. The house is listed as private hotel at 51 and 52 Belgrave Road.
References:
Full name and marriage sourced from www.bdmhistoricalrecords.dia.govt.nz/Home/]
Note different spellings of Christian name Phillip in different records.
Census, migration and qualification information:
findmypast.co.uk
Pelican in Piety

Image by Lawrence OP
"O loving Pelican! O Jesu, Lord!
Unclean I am, but cleanse me in Thy Blood;
Of which a single drop, for sinners spilt,
Is ransom for a world’s entire guilt."
- Adoro Te, devote by St Thomas Aquinas
The pelican was believed to shed its blood to feed its young and was seen by medievals as an image of the Eucharist in which Christians are given Christ’s Body and Blood.
Today, Thursday 7 June, is the Feast of Corpus Christi in the Universal Church. This feast celebrates the Lord’s gift of the Eucharist.