o{]:¬)

Fr. Z is Moderator of the Catholic Online Forum and the ASK FATHER Question Box. The WDTPRS columns appear weekly in The Wanderer. Fr. Z lives in Rome, though he is often in the USA. He is available for retreats and conferences. E-mail


   Fr. Z on WDTPRS

↑ Grab this Headline Animator


Recent Posts
  • Let's get the famous quote right, please?
  • New Sabine guest! Oooo ... look at the colors
  • SCOOP: Milwaukee - Archbp. Dolan sets up a house for the ICK
  • PETRUS: Amazing interview with Card. Noè: Paul VI's "smoke of Satan" remark concerned liturgy
  • Octave of Pentecost PODCAzTs
  • L'OssRom: Personal parish for the Extraordinary Form set up - Card Castrillon comments
  • Ventura, CA: Misión San Buenaventura, Dominican Rite
  • QUAERITUR: disposing of Sacred Chrism

  • Recent Comments:

    • bear: Matthew: You beat me to the punch! Some of you have mentioned my other pet peeves, such as...
    • jaykay: Actually, “methinketh” would appear to be all right, at least according to this link:...
    • Cathy Dawson: Terth - I’ve been thinking about your post and wanted to respond, but haven’t had much time...
    • Clayton: Would somebody please return father’s goat? Thanks in advance.
    • jarhead462: Father has opened a can of worms, methinks! ;)

  • Visit the new WDTPRS Store!
    Buy WDTPRS stuff!

    Click below and vote !My site was nominated for Best Religion Blog!


    Calendar


    The Pilgrimage

    Subscribe to ...
    The Wanderer

    Subscribe to ... The Catholic Herald - UK






    This blog is hosted by

    Joyent


    Thanks for the support!


























    WINNER of...

    The 2007 Weblog Awards

















    Add to Technorati Favorites

    Add to Google Reader or Homepage

    Add to My AOL

    Subscribe in Bloglines

    Powered by FeedBurner

    4 March 2006

    Saturday after Ash Wednesday

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM, WDTPRS — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 9:47 am

    Today’s Collect was in the ancient Veronese and Gelasian Sacramentaries, and so it represents the best of the liturgical tradition of the early Church in Rome, formed out of the cultural, intellectual, spiritual milieu of the era.

    COLLECT:
    Omnipotens sempiterne Deus,
    infirmitatem nostram propitius respice,
    atque ad protegendum nos
    dexteram tuae maiestatis extende.

    There is an elegance to these ancient prayers which hard to capture in English without resorting to nearly archaic forms.  However, archaic forms do help us to separate both the content and intent of the prayer from the banal, ephemeral and commonplace.  I think this is necessary to do in liturgical prayer at all times, but especially today when a sense of the sacred needs to be recaptured.

    Words like maiestas hark to attributes of God such as Hebrew kabod, Greek doxa, and Latin gloriaMaiestas, with a pronoun, can also be construed as a title, such as "Your Majesty".   So, we could happily say, "stretch out Your Majesty’s right hand".

    Tortise formationThis right hand, God’s power and authority, was lent by Christ Himself to the Church He founded and entrusted to Peter and the Apostles in union with him.  Until the end of time, the Catholic Church excercises Christ’s authority to teach, govern and sanctify.  We who are weak can gain from this sheltering attribute of the Church, which sheild and protects us from error. 

    It might also happen, this same solider perhaps commits an error or a crime.  In normal circumstances, this might result in the penalty of death by flogging with the scourge.  The imperator, the commander in chief of the legion, extends his hand over the solider in a sign of forgiveness.  Extending a hand over a slave was also the sign of manumission, a formal symbol of setting a slave free, having juridical effect.  

    succor
    protection
    forgivenes

    When the hand of the priest is extended over us in the confessional, we are sheltered from the attacks of hell, the hideous heat that would consume us, the eternal bondage to the enemy which would for ever separate us from God’s sight.  When was the last time you sought out the right hand of God in the context of the confessional?  How long has it been since, after confession all your mortal sins in both number and kind, you have heard the words, "Deus Pater misericordiarum... God the Father of mercies…" 

    • • • • • •
    Powered by: Luke 5:1-11 and WordPress