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
LOGIN


   Fr. Z on WDTPRS

↑ Grab this Headline Animator


Recent Posts
  • LA STAMPA: Hans KÜNG on Pres. Bush and Pope Benedict XVI
  • Mundelein Liturgical Institute (Chicago): required course on TLM
  • ALERT
  • UK: Petition to bishops for the TLM
  • An interesting Curial shift coming up
  • Loomes Bookseller: sold!
  • A new journal
  • QUAERITUR: advice for a wymynpryst wannabe

  • Recent Comments:

    • QC: The wailing and gnashing of teeth of one left alone in the darkness…
    • Calleva: Definitely a candidate for the sour grapes picture. As Warren says, this has all the hallmarks of a cry for...
    • Not this time...: Fr. Kung reminds of a certain type of academic: someone who is absolutely certain of his own...
    • I am not Spartacus: (Sorry. I dodnd’t have the original link anymore) Following is the translated text of an...
    • Purgatorian Guild: I agree with Deusdonat: Stuff and nonsense! People like Kung are dinosaurs, still stuck in the...

  • 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


    Where Fr. Z will be:
  • Upcoming Events:
  • Events
  • 26 July 2007

    26 July: Sts. Joachim and Anna, parents of Mary, Mother of God

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 11:59 am

    Today is the feast of Sts. Joachim and Anna, the parents of the Blessed Virgin Mary, grandparents of the Savior. 

    Here is their entry from the Martyrologium Romanum.

    Memoria sanctorum Ioachim et Annae, parentum immaculatae Virginis Dei Genetricis Mariae, quorum nomina ab antiquis traditionibus christianorum ex Iudaeis servata sunt.
    In the chapel of The Sabine Farm I have relics of both Joachim and Anna.


     

    Also sharing the reliquary are St. Nicholas (yes, Santa Claus) and St. Paul, the Apostle, and St. Blaise, of throat blessing fame.

    Maybe someone would like to render the Latin of the MartRom entry into perfect, smooth English?

    • • • • • •

    Andrea Tornielli interviews Msgr. Gänswein

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 11:30 am

    The reliable Andrea Tornielli of the Italian daily Il Giornale has an exclusive interview with the Holy Father’s segretario particolare Msgr. Georg Gänswein.

    Here are the highlights.

    • During his vacation, the Pope is reading, writing, taking walks, playing the piano, listening to Classical music, and in the evening watching the news.  He is playing Mozart, Chopin, Schubert, others.
    • Benedict brought a suitcase of books with him and is working on the second part of Jesus of Nazareth.
    • The Pope is working on an encyclical.
    • Benedict remains a bit surprised by the great affection people show him, but he has started to get used to it.  He never seeks applause.
    • The Secretary of State is keeping the Pope up to date on happenings around the world.  They have all the necessary means of communication at hand.
    Here is the section about the Motu Proprio
    Q: Is the Pope concerned about some of the negative reactions with which the "Motu Proprio" was received?

    "Following closely the press summaries and public reactions to the ‘Motu Proprio’ I noticed with a little bit of surprise, that there really weren’t any negative reactions.  I don’t recall explicitly negative reactions, the few critical voices I could hear are really rather normal and acceptible in the concert of voices that made themselves heard.  Rather, I took it that the text and the Pope’s accompanying letter to the bishops were received with great comprehension and ibjectivity.  We hope that the reception brings good fruits and the desidered outcomes."

    • • • • • •

    Fr. Z to appear on HWTN! (Motu Proprio Edition!)

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 11:01 am

    Check out the fuller schedule over at the Whappers.

    Holy Whapping Television Network (HWTN): The Motu Proprio Edition

    Monday


    9:00 AM. Traddietubbies. Finally, some quality children’s programming. Four freakish creatures apparently made of felt watch archival footage of Pius XII’s coronation on TV monitors inset into their bellies and coo in delight. Then fifteen minutes of saying goodbye, consisting of intoning "Benedicamus Domino" intermixed with a good deal of baby gibberish. By the way, that’s a maniple, buster, not a purse, so get it right.

    ***

    8:00 PM. Five Simple Rules of Engagement for Dating the Church’s Eldest Daughter. Fr. Z has a whole lot of trouble on his hands when he’s appointed the spiritual director for an orphanage of giggly French traditionalist girls with a predilection for sneaking off on dates after curfew and gloating about the superiority of the Extraordinary Form to their heathen boyfriends.

    8:30 PM. Bridezillas. Tonight’s special episode deals with the care and feeding of your wedding planner and is guest-hosted by the Rev. George William Rutler with the assistance of a bullhorn, a Kevlar vest, and a very large net.

    Tuesday

    8:00 PM. Seinfeld. Kramer and Newman’s private association of the faithful threatens to report Fr. Curtis to Ecclesia Dei for substituting "Yadda, yadda, yadda" for "in saecula, saeculorum, amen" allegedly to save time.

    Yah… there’s a lot more where this came from.

    • • • • • •

    Bishop of Memphis on the Motu Proprio

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 10:43 am

    In the newspaper of the Diocese of Memphis, the West Tennessee Catholic, we find the statement of His Excellency, Most Reverend J. Terry Steib, S.V.D.

    Take a deep breath.

    My emphases and comments. 

    This Far By Faith

    Finding a Way…

    By Most Rev. J. Terry Steib, S.V.D.

    The Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI, has recently caused headlines with two announcements. The first announcement was an Apostolic letter (Motu Proprio) issued by His Holiness to bishops throughout the world [Newsflash!] reminding us that the Tridentine Mass is a part of our Catholic tradition [Newsflash!] and that Catholics who seek to have this Tridentine Mass as an expression of faith, should be able to do so. The second announcement was a statement approved by the Pope and issued by the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith [UGH!  Cong. for the DOCTRINE of the Faith] reminding us again of what was clearly taught in the Second Vatican Council _ namely, that the fullness of truth is to be found in the Catholic Church.  [Okay… why are we sticking with the term "Tridentine" withour explaining what is really going on?]

    The Tridentine Mass is basically the Mass which many of us knew as children. It was offered in Latin with the priest facing east, [okay] which meant that the people gathered were behind him and outside of the sanctuary. During the Second Vatican Council, the bishops of the Church, together with his holiness, Pope Paul VI, decreed that the Mass could also be offered in the language of the people, and that it would [ARGH!] be offered with the priest facing the community.

    The Mass as we know it today in most of our parishes here in West Tennessee is celebrated in this way. However, for Catholics who cherish the Latin Mass, [ARGH!] it is offered in two parishes: Blessed Sacrament Church and Church of the Nativity. What the Pope told us bishops was that he wanted to re-emphasize the continuing tradition of the Tridentine Mass without in any way casting doubt on the importance of the Second Vatican Council’s work with the liturgy. The Pope said the Mass from the Roman Missal in use since 1970 would remain the ordinary form of the Mass, while celebration of the Tridentine Mass would be the extraordinary form. [Finally we get the explanation, but we are still with the "Tridentine" terminology.]

    Here in the Diocese we are already doing what Pope Benedict reminded us of.  [The Party Line] Nonetheless, our Diocesan Office of Worship and Spiritual Life is reviewing the document and our presbyterate will be reflecting on the document in upcoming meetings. However, should members of our faith communities believe that a Tridentine Mass should be offered in their parishes, please understand that there will need to be a substantial number of people asking for it, [That is NOT what the provisions of the Motu Proprio say.]  and a priest in the parish who is able to celebrate the Mass in Latin. Our priests are extremely hard working; in fact, they are often overworked. But most have not been trained in Latin, or in the gestures, style and language of the Tridentine Mass. So, if there are to be more Tridentine Masses offered in the Diocese, both large numbers of people requesting  [That is not in accordance with Summorum Pontificum.  The group or coetus need not be large at all.] it and priests able to celebrate it in a meaningful way [Huh?  A "meaningful way"?  What would that be?] will be the criteria by which it should be judged whether to celebrate the Tridentine Mass or not.  [This is also not in keeping with the Motu Proprio.  What is required is that the priest be idoneus, which always means having the minimum qualifications, not that he be expert.]

    There are some in the ecumenical community who are upset about the document issued by the Congregation for the Defense of the Faith [Okay… I give up.  Who really wrote this?] about the nature of the Catholic Church. True ecumenism demands that we who are involved in the dialogue should understand the ground on which we stand. As Catholics, we have to know precisely and concisely what the Church teaches. In this way, we are better equipped for a meaningful dialogue when both sides know what the other faith teaches.  [Yes!  This is exactly right.  I wish that such accuracy might also be reflected in a reading of Summorum Pontificum, etc.]

    Consequently, when we as Catholics enter into dialogue with our Protestant and Orthodox brothers and sisters, it is essential that Roman Catholics proclaim what we believe about what `Church’ means. So, when the Vatican document says that Protestants are not "Church" as Catholics understand it, the document is only re-stating what the Protestants themselves say. In helping to explain the document, Cardinal Kasper, secretary [ARGH!  Wrong again.  President] of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, is also careful to say that Catholics consider Protestants to be Church in another sense, that they possess means of grace and salvation, and we as Catholics do not object to calling them churches, even if they are not the fullness of the ecclesial reality we claim to possess. In other words, the recent document touches on matters that are a restatement of truths that have long been taught by our church.

    So, what are we to do as Catholics? I would urge [the "episcopal subjunctive"] that we all recognize the wonderful gifts of the Second Vatican Council in giving us a liturgy in which we are reminded that we are a priestly people, in which we can participate more fully and whose language we can understand.  [That sound you hear may be my back teeth grinding.] The Vietnamese communities celebrate the Eucharistic liturgy in their own tongue, as do those among us who are Spanish speaking. English speakers enjoy the prayer that is the center of our faith in our own language. [So, here are three Masses at which, unless everyone mentioned is tri-lingual, would effectively "exclude" linguistic comprehension of the other two groups.  Latin, on the other hand, would be inclusive, since each person could participate with his own translation in one common prayer.] Should there be some among us who find the Eucharistic liturgy in Latin meaningful, liturgies are currently being celebrated to meet that need. [The Party Line: we are already doing enough.] What we can pray for is that we will all assist at the Eucharistic liturgy in a way that will deepen our relationship with God and place us gently but firmly [?] in the death and resurrection of Jesus which we celebrate each time the Eucharist is offered.

    It is also important for us to recognize that there is a deepening need for all Christian Churches to search for unity. We will continue to urge our Protestant [Not a Church.] and Orthodox [Certaintly a Church] brothers and sisters to dialogue with us so that we can bring about that unity for which Jesus prayed when he said, "That they all may be one father as I am in you and you are in me." Such a unity is possible when we know the theological positions on which we stand and can work together to harmonize those positions in a way that will bring forth the unity for which Jesus prayed. 

    • • • • • •

    Saskatchewan’s Catholic Prairie Messenger on the Motu Proprio

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 9:57 am

    I haven’t heard too much about the release of Summorum Pontificum from Canadian sources.  However, here is an editorial from the Prairie Messenger, the weekly Catholic newspaper printed in Humboldt, Saskatchewan.

    My emphases and comments.  

    Peter Novecosky, OSB

    Tridentine Mass


    The papal document loosening the restrictions on the use of the Latin Tridentine Mass has been anticipated for a long time. It was finally released July 7 and it has stirred up reactions from those who are interested in the real and symbolic meaning
    [Hmmm…. I wonder if there is a difference?] of the pope’s gesture to reach out to those who feel an attachment to the old mass.

    However, for the vast majority of Catholics it won’t make much of a difference.
    [Aha!  The Party Line right off the bat.]  Many don’t participate regularly in Sunday services;  [And are therefore sinning mortally.] others prefer mass in the vernacular; and in many dioceses the option for the Tridentine Mass is already available. [The second part of The Party Line: "We’ve already done enough for these people."] “People have already made their choices, with the vast majority preferring” the newer mass, said Msgr. Kevin Irwin of the Catholic University in Washington.  [So, let’s recap… people either don’t go to Mass at all (therefore none of this makes a difference), people want the vernacular (so, none of this makes any difference) or they are already relegated to their little ghetto (so, none of this makes any difference).]

    Some Catholics have the mistaken notion that the choice is between mass in Latin or mass in the vernacular. The Tridentine Mass cannot properly be called the “Latin Mass”
    [YES!  Thank you thank you thank you!] since the mass Pope Paul VI approved after the Second Vatican Council is also in Latin, though few parishes or pastors have opted for that language. They prefer the vernacular.

    After every ecumenical council there are some Catholics who find it hard to accept the renewal that the council calls for. The Old Catholic Churches,
    [I really don’l like the direction this is going.  Making a comparison with the Old Catholics is truly unfair, since they hold to some very unCatholic things.  I don’t think you can claim that desiring the older form of Mass is unCatholic.]  for example, had their origin in Europe in the 1870s, after the First Vatican Council. They reject the authority of the pope and their priests are married. They claim 300,000 members, and their headquarters are in Utrecht, Netherlands. The Polish Church was established in the 1890s with headquarters in Scranton, Pennsylvania. It also took issue with the results of Vatican Council I.

    The main dissenter from the teachings of the Second Vatican Council was Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre.
    [Hang on here.  I don’t think this is right.  I don’t think he was the "main" dissenter at all.  I think we could make a strong argument that the "main" dissenters were on the other side, were the progressivists who, sometimes ignoring the documents of the Council completely, went off in their own directions chasing the chimeric post-Conciliar "spirit".]  He eventually founded the Society of St. Pius X, centred in Switzerland. It has 600,000 members worldwide and more than 400 priests. Lefebvre was excommunicated in 1988 when he ordained four bishops in defiance of papal orders.  Shortly after his election, Pope Benedict XVI met with Bishop Bernard Fellay, current head of the Lefebvrite society. With his recent document Pope Benedict wants to heal the 20-year-old rift, but first indications are not encouraging.

    In a July 7 statement, Fellay thanked the pope for his openness to the Tridentine rites. However, he also wants  the pope to withdraw the excommunication decrees against the four bishops. He still has issues with the church’s stand on ecumenism, religious liberty, interfaith dialogue and collegiality. The issues for the Lefebvrites are much deeper than language or liturgy; 
    [This is very true.] they involve some of the central points of renewal [?] in the church brought about by the Second Vatican Council.

    One of the changes in attitude brought about by the Second Vatican Council is illustrated by the prayer used in the Good Friday liturgy.
    [Not again…. will this never end?]  The Jewish community worldwide has objected strenuously to the return to the former Tridentine prayer. [I strenuously, but respectfully, object to the fact that they have not accepted Jesus as the Messiah.]  The memory of the Holocaust [So, let’s just cave into the the accusations of their wacky radicals that the Catholic Church was responsibile?]  and centuries of persecution by Christians are still too real for them.

    The Good Friday prayer in the present Roman Missal that Catholics have grown accustomed to calls the Jewish people “the first to hear the word of God.” It prays that “they may continue to grow in the love of his name and in faithfulness of his covenant.”

    This is quite a change in attitude from the prayer used for centuries, until 1970. The old Roman Missal prays “for the conversion of the Jews.” It asks God to “take the veil from their hearts” and free them from “blindness . . . so that they may acknowledge the light of your truth, which is Christ, and be delivered from the darkness.” And before Pope John XXIII changed it in 1958, the prayer contained the phrase, “Oremus et pro perfidies Judaeis” (”Let us pray for the perfidious Jews.”)

    Abraham H. Foxman, US director of the Anti-Def