ASK FATHER: Can we eat meat on Friday in the Octave of Easter? (Hint: YES!)

First, allow me to say that I am making a steak for myself tonight, Thursday.

I could also enjoy it tomrrow, Friday in the Octave of Easter.  That said, I think I might pick up a whole mess of clams and make spaghetti alle vongole… not because its Friday, but because I really want that.

From a reader, classic question…

QUAERITUR:

My wife and I recently returned to the traditional Friday abstinence from meat year round.

Traditionally, would the Friday abstinence from meat also apply during Fridays of the whole Easter season?

What about just the octave?

Congratulations for wanting to adhere to the traditional practices.  Kudos.

You’ve asked a good question.

Here is canon 1251:

Can. 1251 Abstinence from meat, or from some other food as determined by the Episcopal Conference, is to be observed on all Fridays, unless a solemnity should fall on a Friday. Abstinence and fasting are to be observed on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.

From the General Norms for Liturgical Year and Calendar, 24

24. The first eight days of Easter Time constitute the Octave of Easter and are celebrated as Solemnities of the Lord.

The days of the Octave of Easter are celebrated as Solemnities (in the Novus Ordo calendar, which is the Church’s “general” calendar).

Therefore, there is no obligation for Catholics – even if they follow only the Vetus Ordo for Mass – for the Friday abstinence on this coming Friday.

Note well that the other Fridays of Eastertide are not Solemnities.  The relief from abstinence applies only to the Friday in the Octave of Easter.

BTW… this does not apply to the Octave of Christmas, for those days of that Octave are not counted as “Solemnities” as are those of the Easter Octave.

This is how the 1983 Code of Canon Law handles Friday in the Octave of Easter, and this applies also to those who prefer the Extraordinary Form (which did not have “Solemnities”).

As far as other Fridays are concerned, outside the Octave of Easter or some other Solemnity, you can ask your parish priest to dispense you or commute your act of penance.

Can. 1245 Without prejudice to the right of diocesan bishops mentioned in can. 87, for a just cause and according to the prescripts of the diocesan bishop, a pastor [parish priest] can grant in individual cases a dispensation from the obligation of observing a feast day or a day of penance or can grant a commutation of the obligation into other pious works. A superior of a religious institute or society of apostolic life, if they are clerical and of pontifical right, can also do this in regard to his own subjects and others living in the house day and night.

Abstinence from meat has good reasoning behind it. For some, however, abstinence from other things can be of great spiritual effect.

And… order some super good beer.

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ROME 26/3– Day 17: Itadakimasu

The clock started on Rome’s day when the sun rose at 06:38.

The celestial chronographer will click the stop button at 19:46, giving us each day a few more minutes.

The Ave Maria is still to be rung in the 20:00 cycle.

On this Thursday in the Octave of Easter, the Roman Station is at XII Apostoli.   I would have mentioned it in a podcast, but I decided not to do more.  Those were perhaps the last hurrah.

Happy Feast of St. Liborius.

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Last night we happy few went to a Japanese place recently opened in Rome. It seems that it is a high class “chain” and these restaurants are all over the world: Nobu. I had not heard of them.  We had a very pleasant evening in the beautiful, somewhat Art Deco decor. The food’s presentation was splendid and it was deeply enjoyed. Our host knows these restaurants well from his travels and was familiar with the menu, so he chose everything for the whole table, lots of selections which we shared. Here are some of the options.

I think you can see from the decor in the bar why I thought of Art Deco.

Some of my shots were rather from a distance and quick.

Crispy Rice with dips and tuna which had a delicate spring onion touch.

Our soup choices divided between Miso and Mushroom.

This was great: Yellowtail with jalapeno.

Beef tartare, caviar and egg white.

Little shrimps and sauces.  Excellent.

Black cod in miso.

Duck breast in miso with oranges.

Oh my, this one was good.  Creamy spicy crab.

Lobster something-or-other.

At the end there were desserts.  A basil and … something… sorbet was my favorite.  I tried also an Umeshu.   Umeshu is a fermented fruit drink.  It had sweet sour citrus quality and was worth trying.

One of the desserts was slight shifted around by the waiter on delivery.  No, it is not lower denture.  Don’t think of a denture.

While I would have preferred a sake or range of sake our host’s wine choice – Luigi Felluga Sharis – was terrific and married up well with everything we had.

My meals will seem a little dull after this.  However, I am happy to have access to wonderful things that I can’t get at home.  That’s a plus.

It was a great evening out and a great way to say farewell to our Stateside friends, also a member of the Archconfraternity at The Parish™.  They came for Holy Week and got a whole lot of church and, as a bonus, simply beautiful weather.  From damp cold and windy on Good Friday and Saturday, we switched into warm sunshine, gentle breezes and blue skies.

I’ve been so busy I haven’t kept up with the Candidates or the “Freestyle” event in Germany.  It seems that after 9 Rounds young Jakovir Sindarov is still dominating.  Anish beat Fabi yesterday and is in 2nd.  Hikaru has struggled.   In Germany, Vincent Keymer took the prize.  He is really good at Fischer Random. Magnus tied for 3rd.

White to move and mate in 4.

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Meanwhile… one cannot possible admire the Hawthorne Dominicans enough.

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ROME 26/3– Day 16: chores

As predicted, the sun rose over the Eternal City at  06:39.

About 13 hours and 6 minutes later the sun will officially be down (except the Gianicolo is sort of in the way) at 19:45.

The “Ave Maria”, if we are sticking to the easy cycle calculation, would ring at 20:00.

It is Wednesday in the Octave of Easter and it is the 98th day of the calendar year.

It is the anniversary of the assassination of Caracalla in 217 and in 1974 Hank Aaron hit his 715th home run.

In 2014 Microsoft stopped supporting Windows XP, which means that I have to maintain an older computer running Virtual Machine so I have access to a spectacular database on virtual CD-ROMs of classical and patristic and ecclesial texts.  Grrrr.

It’s chore day.  I am tidying up the apartment.  I did laundry and put it out in my miniscule courtyard (court… stamp) to dry.  I’ve handled an Amazon order for a visiting friend here and received a delivery of some things I purchased yesterday.  Internety things are on the slate and I have listened to a podcast that has made me pretty mad for a moment or two until I consigned it to proper basket.   I will try to edit together a short walking video as some premium content for Roman donors.

Speaking of which, I said Mass for the intention of all my Roman Donor benefactors on Easter Sunday.  On Monday Mass was for donors, Tuesday for  the family of SW.  Today for MB+ from MP.

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I thought there was one unique expression of the Roman Rite, such that, the pre-Conciliar Roman Rite, in use for a thousand years, must be suppressed.

I’m slated to go out tonight with friends from the States in town (last night) and the Great Roman™ with the Great Roman Spouse™.  Japanese.  More later on that.

White to move and mate in 4.

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From “The Private Diary of Bishop F. Atticus McButterpants” – 26-04-03 – Aftermath of foot washing

April 3rd, 2026

Dear Diary,

McSwiney* set me up. I am so pissed off I could do something.

That Irish Setter kept going on about “reaching the peripheries” and proposed, the son of bitch, that I wash the feet of twelve quadriplegics. A “bold sign,” he called it. A “prophetic gesture.” Fr. Tommy tried to warn me to think through the mechanics before I agreed. McSwiney floated serenely above such concerns, as usual, wrapped in jargon and self-approval.

There they were. Wheelchairs, aides, braces, tubes, blankets, family members. Footrests and straps everywhere. The choir droned on and I saw that the whole thing was impossible, and that McSwiney KNEW it was impossible. He wanted me out there in public, stooping and fumbling while he stood off to the side looking grave and pastoral. There was a frantic whispered conference. Tommy had the expression of a man watching a train wreck arrive exactly on schedule.  He whispered “hands”, just as McSwiney saw Tommy coming.  The swine came up and mumbled something about maybe “hands”, realizing that Tommy beat him to it.  He wanted credit for the solution.

After Mass, I was still furious.  M came up with that sly little look and said, “Bishop, if you want, you and Tommy could hear some confessions now that the boxes are all cleaned out and working.”

So that was it. Revenge. He still has not forgiven me or Tommy for the confessional business, and this absurd Mandatum debacle was his way of paying me back.

I believe McSwiney has reached his own periphery.

Tomorrow is Good Friday, which at least imposes some order on the soul. One must think of the Passion, of the silence of the Church, of the abasement of the Lord, of the Cross that stands over every petty vanity and clerical intrigue. All very sobering. Also, if I am honest, one must think of fasting, which is less elevating when one knows in advance one is going to be hungry by about ten-thirty in the morning. A day of penance is a day of penance, of course. Still, I see no reason why the Resurrection should not be greeted properly. I’ll survive McSwiney, the liturgies, and the fast. I will make a substantial recovery at Razzo’s.


*Rector of the Cathedral, liberal.

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ROME 26/3– Day 15: foods and views and shoes

The sunrise in Rome was at 6:41.

The sunset was at 19:44.

The “Ave Maria” rings in the 20:00 cycle.

There are 269 days left in this calendar year and it is Tuesday in the Octave of Easter.

Happy Easter!

I love this. We were talking about Nutella today at lunch, and about its special quality of getting on everything no matter how hard you try.

This is a sample of what we were eating…

  

Then, I had an errand in Trastevere.  Poor ol’ Belli.  He got so sharp that he has a restraining order now.

Look how black the dome of St. Peter’s is now.  Wow.

This is a slipper of Bl. Pius IX.  Full documentation. There is a project being developed for its care and its display along with other items of Pius IX, who was an active member of the Archconfraternity at The Parish™.  He used to come and wash the feet of pilgrims.

People will a little bit of money they are hoping to put to a good cause, might drop me a line.  I’m not sure how to do this yet (raise some money to help with the cost) but I have an idea along the lines of what we did for vestments.  More about this 2nd class relic along the way.

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Black to move and mate in 4.

[NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.]

In chessy news, the Candidates is on but I’ve been too busy to follow. It seems the young Uzbeki Javokhir Sindarov is in sole lead. Also, there is a Fisher Random tourney going on in Germany with mobs of players, but also some top rated super grand masters such as Carlson, Nepo and Keymer.

And speaking of the Moon mission….

ADDENDUM

Remember how, during COVID Theatre, at the behest of a reader that I recite all of Shakespeare’s Sonnets on Twitter because Sir Patrick Stewart was doing it? Well, I did it. I recited all of them and some other poems as well. Now I see this.

Frankly, my renderings and comments were better than quite a few of Sir Patrick’s back then. Surely his new versions will be quite good.

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ASK FATHER: Can the “Dies Irae” be used in the Novus Ordo Requiem Mass? Wherein Fr. Z rants.

From a priest… I think…

QUAERITUR:

Preparing for a funeral Mass in the near future;
Is it permissible to chant the Dies Irae sequence in a Latin requiem Mass using the ordinary form? Didn’t see it anywhere in the copy of 1979 graduale simplex I have.

Of course you didn’t find the Dies Irae in the Graduale Simplex.  You won’t find it in the Novus Ordo Graduale Romanum or the Missale Romanum either.   That’s because the brain-trusts of the Concilium with the approval of Paul VI expunged it from the Church’s Novus-Ordoy prayer life.  And, since “we are our rites”, over time and the constant use of white vestments and happy happy happy celebration of lives with balloons and weepy eulogies, what were funeral Masses intended to pray for the souls of the dead have morphed into informal canonizations.

Back to the question: Can you use the Dies Irae in a Novus Ordo funeral Mass.  The short answer is “Sure!”.   The longer short answer is, “Sure! But it might not be licit.”   Another little longer answer might be, “Sure, but you might catch hell for it.”

See what I did there?

There is language in the introduction to the Novus Ordo Graduale Romanum – and I’m going on memories that reach back 40 years or so now – that just barely allows for the option of substituting one contextually appropriate chant for another.

There is no question that the Dies Irae is appropriate, though the progressivists will deny that to their death.

However, this is a question not so much of substituting another chant as inserting between the Gradual/Tract and the Gospel.

One can make a case that that is pastorally appropriate. Given the malleable rigidity of the Novus Ordo (whereby a despotic bishop can stretch and bend one option among many legitimate choices to force people into a lockstep uniformity alien to the entire ethos of the Roman Rite because –  you know – Befehl ist Befehl – right?) just about anything goes.   Sure, yes, of course now on paper it is absurdly claimed that there is one unique expression of the Roman Rite, which everyone knows is a lie.  Heck, on Sunday here in Rome just up the street where I live there is a church used by the Congolese.   I can’t describe what I heard and saw going on in there and I don’t have a video.  It was a unique expression alright.

In fact, quaeritur, how many unique expressions of the Roman Rite can there be until there isn’t a unique expression anymore?

There is the serious issue of what to do in the Novus Ordo when you want to have a classical musical setting of the Requiem… which can be done contrary to to the wishes of Oregon Catholic Press…. which makes me think of something a priest friend sent today…

… I digress.

Mozart’s Requiem has a Dies Irae.  It is one of the most important, known bits of his Requiem.  So, get the choir and orchestra ready (along with their checks) and then … what?… omit the Dies Irae?   That would be just plan stupid.  I would argue that if something is just plain stupid – like passing in front of a tabernacle and the Blessed Sacrament and ignoring it – as the Novus Ordo bids – ignore the rubric and do something that makes sense.   Ergo, you sing Mozart’s Dies Irae in a Novus Ordo Requiem and you genuflect before the Presence of GOD when you walk in front of the tabernacle.

This was my old mentor Msgr. Schuler’s position all those years after the Council. There was no one who knew the legislation and the intent of the legislation about sacred music better than he.  Period.   Each year when 2 November came around the Twin Cities Catholic Chorale (still exists) and members of the Minnesota Orchestra did Mozart’s Requiem with the Dies Irae because you just can’t leave it out.  That would be stupid.  But we are to take seriously some yoyo who claims that it isn’t appropriate and that it is VERBOTEN?   That type shouldn’t be allowed to make decisions about ordering soft drinks much less governing sacred liturgical ars celebrandi.

I am reminded of the great scene in the movie Amadeus, about Mozart (sort of).  The Emperor forbade ballet in opera at the advice of people who hated Mozart.  So, Mozart has a rehearsal without the music for the dancing and the Emperor shows up.

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BTW… the Dies Irae can be found in the Novus Ordo liturgical books, but chopped up into pieces in the Liturgy of the Hours.  So, technically, it is still in the Novus Ordo and, technically, available for “substitution” purposes in a Requiem.

Those were dark time, dear readers, and we are still suffering the effects.  We are especially suffering the effects now because that “we are our rites” principle, that lex orandi – credendi – vivendi principle, takes time to take shape, as Bugnini/Lercaro/understood in one way and Ratzinger/Benedict understood in another.

The liturgical progressivist excludes the Dies Irae and claims he is obeying the Council’s explicit principle for funerals: the burial rites were to express “more clearly the paschal character of Christian death.” That phrase from Sacrosanctum Concilium became one of the master principles for revising the funeral rites. On that reading, a funeral liturgy ought to foreground Christ’s victory over death, baptismal incorporation into His Passover, and the hope of resurrection more emphatically than the older Requiem did.  Nota bene: that is an admission that the TLM does highlight victory, joy, etc.

This is a key problem with the Novus Ordo: it emphasizes eschatological joy, which is okay, but it doesn’t tell you how to attain it.  The TLM does.

The lib liturgist/terrorist would say that the Dies Irae places too much affective weight on terror, doom, and forensic dread. Bugnini’s own summary is the classic evidence here: some reformers judged texts like Dies irae and Libera me to reflect a “negative spirituality inherited from the Middle Ages” and to “overemphasize judgment, fear, and despair,” so they preferred texts that urged Christian hope and expressed faith in the resurrection more effectively. That is the nearest thing to an explicit programmatic rationale from the reforming camp.

Again, how do you attain the Beatific Vision?  By having a steady and balanced dose of the Four Last Things and not a little dread of the loss of Heaven and the pains of Hell.

The lib liturgist would argue that the funeral liturgy is for the consolation and catechesis of the living as well as intercession for the dead. Well, maybe not so much about that last depressing bit.  Therefore, the rite should speak in a register pastorally intelligible to modern congregations, many of whom are only tenuously catechized. You know, balloons and sing-along jingles about the flapping appendages of raptors.  In that frame, a lengthy medieval poem centered on cosmic dissolution, strict judgment, trembling and fear might be seen as pastorally counterproductive.  Instead of petitions about saving the Earth from greenhouse gases, plastic bottles and ICE agents, “Graciously grant that I be not burned up by the everlasting fire” could cause a few puzzled looks, especially at a parish where not a single word has been spoken about Hell or the Sacrament Penance for the last 60 years.

The Council’s broader rationale for revising sacramental rites was precisely that some features inherited from the bad old days (read: Tradition) had come to obscure their nature and purpose for people of the present day.  Remember the recent business about the “recent magisterium”?   Life really began anew at that Second Pentecost, 1965!  Never mind that people do not change, essentially, from age to age.  They are still human beings with impulses do to Original Sin and the good qualities of being wrought in the image of God.  But the progressivists think that people have evolved out of such dire things like, for example, it really is possible that you can go to Hell and that, having been all grown up, we stand for Communion and stick our hand out to take rather than to receive.

“But Father! But Father!, the now-awakened libs moan, you are distorting everything about the new springtime we are in!  The reform did not suppress echsta…. extraol… that ology stuff. It relocated and rebalanced it with and within and around the unspoken metatext between the printed lines of the Über-Council!  The current and unique is rooted in resurrection hope.  We are now an Easter People, an Alleluia Assembly not a Dies Downer!  HA!   But you … you and your kind … you must be forced into solitude and silenced because … because we… we…because we have to Council harder!  More, not less, Council.  But you don’t conform, no no… because you HATE VATICAN III…. er…. VATICAN II!”

I don’t hate Vatican II.  What has been done in the name of Vatican II makes me immensely sad.

At the same time, I am more and more convinced that God truly is in charge of the Church because of what we have seen in the wake of Vatican II.  There’s no other explanation and that fills me with resolve.

So, use the Dies Irae.  You might catch some flack for it.  Be ready.

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ASK FATHER: Grounding for the “harrowing of Hell”

In a comment elsewhere on the blog…

QUAERITUR:

Father, since the Gospels do not record Jesus harrowing hell, where did that phrase of the Creed come from? Is it based on the writings of any of the Early Church Fathers? If so, which ones? It would be interesting to trace the development of this doctrine.

I recently wrote about the harrowing of Hell HERE.  There, find CCC references which have footnotes.  But I can help you with your homework.

The Church’s teaching about the “harrowing of Hell” rests on two things taken together.

First, the New Testament witnesses that Christ truly entered the state of the dead and proclaimed his victory there. Second, the Church’s interpretation of “hell” in the Creed points to the realm of the dead, not the Hell of the damned. The Catechism states this explicitly: Christ “descended into hell” means that, in his human soul united to his divine person, he went to the abode of the dead, and he did so “not to deliver the damned” but “to free the just who had gone before him.”

The damned cannot be delivered.  Ever.  Forever.  Go to confession.

Scripturally, the locus classicus is 1 Peter 3:18-20, wherein Christ, put to death in the flesh and brought to life in the spirit, goes to preach to the “spirits in prison.” Closely joined to that is 1 Peter 4:6, “the gospel was preached even to the dead,” which the Catechism cites as a reason for the descent. Peter’s Pentecost sermon in Acts 2:27 and 2:31 is also crucial, because Psalm 16 is applied to Christ in terms of not being abandoned to Hades, which presupposes a real descent to the realm of the dead. Romans 10:7 refers to the “abyss” in connection with bringing Christ up from the dead, and Ephesians 4:9 speaks of his descent into “the lower regions of the earth”.

Hence, the biblical case is cumulative rather than dependent on a single unambiguous verse.

Acts 2 gives the language of Hades; 1 Peter gives the strongest picture of Christ’s saving proclamation to the dead; Romans 10 and Ephesians 4 contribute supporting imagery. Christ truly tasted death, entered the condition of the dead, and extended the efficacy of his redemptive work to the righteous who had died before his Passion. That is the precise doctrinal shape of the “harrowing.”

Magisterially, the most basic grounding is the Creed itself. The Apostles’ Creed, in the form used by the Church, explicitly professes: “He descended into hell; the third day he rose again from the dead.” The Catechism treats this credal article as dogmatically normative. It explains its meaning in paragraphs 631-637. The Compendium of the Catechism repeats the same teaching and clarifies that this “hell” is “different from the hell of the damned”; it is “the state of all those, righteous and evil, who died before Christ,” and Christ went down “to the just in hell who were awaiting their Redeemer.”

The Catechism’s doctrinal precision matters. It says that the frequent New Testament affirmations that Jesus was “raised from the dead” presuppose that he first sojourned in the realm of the dead. It then defines the term: “hell” here means Sheol or Hades, the abode of the dead deprived of the beatific vision. It further states that the descent is the final phase of Christ’s messianic mission, by which the reach of his redemption is extended to all the saved of every time and place. That is why the teaching belongs not to pious legend alone, but to the Church’s formal exposition of the Creed.

See also can. 1 of Lateran IV which is especially important because it states the matter in a compact doctrinal form: Christ, “being dead, descended into hell, rose from the dead, and ascended into heaven,” adding the classic clarification that “He descended in soul, arose in flesh.” That formula is a strong magisterial anchor because it specifies the mode of the descent in relation to Christ’s true death.

There is also a liturgical grounding. The Church’s Holy Saturday liturgy preserves and transmits this doctrine in the Office of Readings, whose ancient homily portrays Christ descending to the dead and awakening Adam. While that ancient homily is not, by itself, a dogmatic definition, its inclusion in the Roman liturgy shows that the Church publicly receives and hands on the descent into the abode of the righteous dead (not of the damned) as part of the Paschal mystery.

In summation, the doctrinal content is this. Christ really died. In his human soul united to his divine person He descended to the abode of the dead. He proclaimed there the Good News of salvation. He liberated the just who had awaited Him. He did not empty the Hell of damnation or grant a second chance to the damned.

The chief supports for the above are Acts 2:27-31 and 1 Peter 3:18-20; 4:6, with Romans 10:7 and also Ephesians 4:9. Magisterially, the doctrine is grounded above all in the Apostles’ Creed and expounded authoritatively in Catechism 631-637.

Following the Creed, Fathers of the Church support the doctrine of the harrowing of Hell, as described above.

For example, St. Irenaeus in Against Heresies 5.31.1 he says that Christ “tarried until the third day in the lower parts of the earth,” and speaks of his descent to those who had died, tying it to Ephesians 4:9 and the “heart of the earth.”   St. Cyril of Jerusalem in Catechetical Lecture 4.11 he says Christ “went down into the regions beneath the earth, that thence also He might redeem the righteous,” and he names David, Samuel, the prophets, and John the Baptist among those awaiting redemption.

Rufinus in his Commentary on the Apostles’ Creed notes a historical point: the clause “He descended into hell” was present in the creed known at Aquileia, though not then in the Roman form. That matters because it shows the doctrine is older than the universal stabilization of the wording.

Consequently, the doctrine is older than the universal credal wording. The descensus clause was not present in every early local creed in the same form, but the underlying belief is already attested in the Fathers and later receives authoritative credal and conciliar expression.

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From “The Private Diary of Bishop F. Atticus McButterpants” – 26-03-28 – A bold statement for foot washing

March 28th, 2026

Dear Diary,

They’ve been after me for weeks about “reaching the peripheries” again. I swear that phrase follows me around like Chester when I open a bag of jerky. It’s like Francis is back from the grave in spades.  Every meeting, every memo, every pastoral planning session. Peripheries peripheries peripheries. I asked at one point, “How far out do the peripheries go exactly?” Nobody laughed except Msgr. Tommy.

Anyway, McSwiney* said that for Holy Thursday I should make a statement of inclusion and accompaniment by washing the feet of twelve quadriplegics. “A prophetic witness! The paper will eat it up! It’s synodal!  Think what Caccia** will say!”  A chance to be synodal and get in good with the new Noonce. I said yes of course.  It’ll be terrific!

I met with seminarians today.  We had lunch.  It’s great to see them eat.  They’ve come back from wherever they go when they’re not here for Holy Week services with me at the cathedral.  There aren’t all that many of them but they all seem to be impressed with Fr. Msgr. Tommy.  The VD doesn’t think that’s a great idea because all them have birettas because of Tommy and some blog or other.  He hasn’t liked Tommy for a long time.  It’s just a hat, right?  As long as they are happy, I guess.   And it’s worth seeing McSwiney turn purple.  The cassocks and surpluses almost gave him hives last year, stuff about the old days.  He dresses all those girl servers for his Masses in sort of flour sacks with twine, or whatever, ‘cuz “the poor”.  The old ways seem better if that’s all we get instead.


*Msgr McSwiney is rector of “Spirit and Truth” Cathedral.  Nickname: “The Irish Setter”
**The new Apostolic Nuncio to these USA.

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ROME 26/3– Day 12-13-14: whew (lots of photos)

The Roman sunrise….was… ah, forget it!  I’ve been busy.

Some photos from the last couple of days.

Some lunch on Holy Saturday in Trastevere.

What everyone needs.

Roman artichoke.

Cannelloni

Lamb.

Crossing the Tiber.
 

Before the Vigil.

       

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes – Easter Sunday

Too many people today are without good, strong preaching, to the detriment of all. Share the good stuff.

Was there a GOOD point made in the sermon you heard at your Mass of obligation for this Easter Sunday?

Tell us about attendance especially for the Traditional Latin Mass.

Any local changes or (hopefully good) news?

A taste of what I offered at 1 Peter 5 this week:

The pastoral edge of the text is impossible to ignore in any age, and present circumstances make it all the more urgent. When public and manifest grave sinners present themselves within the Eucharistic assembly, and when shepherds refuse to address the scandal, the damage extends beyond the individual. Scandal instructs. It de-catechizes by example. It tells others that what is plainly contrary to the Gospel and the law of God may safely coexist with sacramental communion. Paul will have none of it. “Drive out the wicked person from among you.” He is speaking of those inside the Church. The community has duties toward its own members. This is not contrary to charity. It is one of charity’s hard forms. It serves the sinner’s good and protects the Church from contagion.

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