I guess he rolled doubles three times in a row
So…. Ali Agca gets to go back to jail for killing a Turkish journalist and for other crimes in Turkey.
Slavishly accurate liturgical translations & frank commentary on Catholic issues - by Fr. John Zuhlsdorf o{]:¬)




























So…. Ali Agca gets to go back to jail for killing a Turkish journalist and for other crimes in Turkey.

COLLECT:
Omnipotens sempiterne Deus,
qui infirma mundi eligis ut fortia quaeque confundas,
concede propitius,
ut, beatae Agnetis martyris tuae natalicia celebramus,
eius in fide constantiam subsequamur.
The most interesting word in this prayer is natalicius, -a, -um and adjective meaning, according to the mighty Lewis & Short, “of or belonging to the hour or day of one’s birth, birthday, natal”. A natalicium is “a birthday present”. The glossary by Souter is says natalicium is a the festival days of a saint and “of martyrs, anniversary of day when they entered upon real life”. Blaise is for natalicia as a neuter plural, which is clearly what it is in this prayer for St. Agnes.
This was in the 1962MR is based
on a prayer in the Veronese Sacramentary for another virgin martyr of Rome, CeciliaLITERAL TRANSLATION:
Almighty eternal God,
who choose the weak things of the world so that you may confound whatever things are strong,
propitiously grant,
that we who celebrate the festal day of the martyr Saint Agnes
may closely follow her steadfastness in faith.
Tommorow, in her honor, I will put my webcam on the church all day long. In fact, I think I will start right now!
I can’t help myself. I simply must plug this guy’s fascinating blog.
To put myself through grad school I worked among other things as a cook. I was in grad school to learn Latin and Greek. So, when I find a blog dealing with Latin texts about food and cooking, well, ... I am completely hooked. Since I am in the throws of learning Chinese as well and am addicted to GOOD Chinese food, I simply had to share this from the blog called Sympotica graecolatina.
Did you know that the Latin word for a chopstick is, according to one 16th c. Jesuit missionary, paxillus or paxillulus?
