To counteract to wyrdwymynpryst thing, how about listening to some Don Camillo stories?
Priests are MEN!
1) The Little World
2) A Confession
3) A Baptism
4) On the Trail … and ![]()
5) Night School
6) Out of Bounds …
7) The Treasure
Part IV
To counteract to wyrdwymynpryst thing, how about listening to some Don Camillo stories?
Priests are MEN!
1) The Little World
2) A Confession
3) A Baptism
4) On the Trail … and ![]()
5) Night School
6) Out of Bounds …
7) The Treasure
Part IV
“This blog is rather like a fusion of the Baroque ‘salon’ with its well-tuned harpsichord around which polite society gathered for entertainment and edification and, on the other hand, a Wild West “saloon” with its out-of-tune piano and swinging doors, where everyone has a gun and something to say. Nevertheless, we try to point our discussions back to what it is to be Catholic in this increasingly difficult age, to love God, and how to get to heaven.” - Fr. Z

Thanks, Fr Z, for these great recordings. You are doing a stellar job and have a true gift for regaling God’s people with the best of Catholic Faith and culture.
Thanks for sharing the beautiful gift of your vocation.
Sadly very few priests these days are “men” by Dom Camillo’s standards. Perhaps the story where he gets a young curate would be more appropriate today?
Those old movies are fabulous! Priests must be men (but not necessarily manly!). [Wrong.]
Speaking of “priesthood = manliness” may I recommend a podcast interview by (the now defunct?) Heartland Catholic of Fr. Christopher Pieroni?
The fact that many priests have been the almost limp-wristed Alan Alda ‘sensitive male’ is
part of the problem. Who the heck wants to follow some wishy-washy metrosexual man? Real leaders (and our priests are just that, our spiritual leaders) are true to who they are,
not some vanilla pudding caricature.
A vigorous, forceful, masculine priest in love with our Lord is a gift. I’m sure our
Savior was not some feel-good hippie. Witness his reaction to the moneychangers in
the temple. No wimp was He.
Please bring us more Don Camillo!
This is the first I had heard.
Reminds me of Fr. Christoforo (Manzoni’s) with perhaps a wee bit more Irish in him.
The current issue of the Episcopalian magazine “Forward in Faith” includes a quote from an Episcopalian “priest” named Carter Hayward on the subject of abortion which speaks for itself:
“Abortion would be a sacrament if women were in charge. Abortion should be a sacrament even today. I suspect that for many women today, and for their spouses, lovers, families and communities, abortion is celebrated as such, an occasion of deep and serious and sacred meaning.”
This shows just how ridiculous this whole “women priest” thing can get.
Sorry. Carter Hayward isn’t a “priest.” She’s a “priestess.”
Sandro Magister has a article about this: http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/articolo/206091?eng=y
He documents the nuanced dissent of about 40 US bishops to Ordinatio Sacerdotalis .
Curiously, he frequently refers to women as “ordained” (c.f. “In Rome, in fact, the fear is that the number of ordained women will continue to increase”) rather than the more correct option: ‘number of women claiming to have been ordained will …’. Magister does, however, early in the article point out the issue of invalidity though from that point on, focuses on the canonical penalty of excommunication rather than the validity (or lack thereof).
In terms of pray 4 priest, there is the crusade for priests, that has a whole prayer book for praying for priests. In terms of priests should be men, I know some priests who joke about women who should be priests. I find that joke offensive, but apparently they find it amusing.
Father Z – I haven’t yet had the time to listen to your podcast on Don Camillo (mea culpa) but I’m actually procrastinating a bit, since they are unfortunately going to bring back some potentially repressed bitter-sweet childhood memories and emotions (I know, TMI). Needless to say, they are very close to my heart as I remember them from my earliest childhood (not all that rosey).
Can you help me here? Which story is the one where Don Camillo gets arested by the Commie mayor and comes out of the jail and rips a book in half in front of him to show he hasn’t lost his strength while encarcerated? That is by far my favourite.
I think the links are repaired now.
Same for me….with FF 3.01