In Rome the sun rose at 06:58 and it set at 18:51.
The Ave Maria in reality is in the 19:15 cycle. The calendar guys finally got it right.
It is the feast of the “second founder” of the Jesuits, St Giuseppe Pignatelli. I had a fun post about him (and a very non-saintly Card. Pignatelli) last year when at this date I was still in Rome.HERE Otherwise it is the Feast of St Albert the Great, Doctor.
Yesterday was quiet. In the evening however another of the diocese came over and we had supper out. The Italian place we went to (which happily had not-even-American-Italian options) had a whimsical Sicilian Eggroll, a fusion sort of idea which was pretty good with the sweet sour sauce. The cook got the wrapper to the perfect crunch without it being oily. Not always easy.
Right now I’m on the road to LGA and proving once again the incontrovertible rule of the universe that no one beats the Van Wyck.
More later. The driver is finding every possible pothole and uneven edge and metal plate. He seems to be steering toward them.
UPDATE
The driver – who had been given through the app that I had to go to Terminal C, and then reminded verbally, started merge over to Terminal B. At this point he heard a rather different tone and volume. Having made it to the correct terminal from that point on I literally directed where he should drive because the enormous bright red LED “PRIORITY” sign and big number 5 on the number 5 door could have confused him. Slowest Uber ever… but I got here.
Security was a goat rodeo.
I used Clear with PreCheck. All the different formats were interwoven by the beribboned people chutes. By the time we got to TSA there was a literal crisscrossing of lines, 5 or so poor souls taken from the simple pugatorial line sent through our line and directed way beyond our position. Then they processed a few of us. There must be a better way
10 minutes to get into the lounge.
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NEW: Bishop Schneider to https://t.co/QvPSQph9vG on #Vatican restricting Latin Mass in Diocese of Tyler: “The Holy See is really persecuting the Latin Mass & good Catholics…It will go down in history, for sure, as a great injustice from those holding the power in the Holy See” pic.twitter.com/Hh32xeUEcH
Florida firefighters were stunned after witnessing an unexpected incident. While a furnace was on fire and the fire was supposed to cause the fire to spread, they noticed the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe painted in wood.
Our place has good, but not great Xiao Long Bao. I really miss my old place where they were exceptionally. They went to the zoo after covid theatre and change things around and completely lost the path of wisdom… and good soup dumplings.
Singapore Rice Noodles in honor of the upcoming chess battle.
I think they called this “dry pepper chicken”. It was crunchy and hot.
Cumin Lamb. Yeah.
This was the disappointment. Eggplant and green beans. None of us liked this one. It seemed simply to have been woked without any interest in some neutral oil in which it swam. Negative reception.
Prawns with walnuts in mayonnaise. Crispy with a nice unctuous sauce that had also a hint of the honeyed walnuts. To our happy surprise there were chunks of pineapple underneath.
This was needed after Rome.
In churchy news, … I haven’t been paying much attention. This caught my eye.
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Thinking about your Advent Wreath? The sisters make candles.
Meanwhile, Canada… damn! Really?!?
No this isn’t a Monte Python skit. It’s the perfect representation of Canada after 9 years of Liberal virtue signaling and DEI hiring practices. This clip has been viewed worldwide now. pic.twitter.com/R6C699WABx
I posted a while about a new series on a few saints by Martin Scorsese. I understand that the first episode is out. PLEASE don’t post spoilers here. When I get a chance to view it, I’ll post separately.
Gen Z is converting to Catholicism in record numbers
St. Agnes Church (St. Paul, MN) offers a free online course in Latin taught by Deacon Nathan Allen. No prior knowledge of Latin is required. The course will assist one in following the Church’s liturgy and prayers in the Church’s official language. https://t.co/3qTsKGP3Fm
Back in Rome, the sun was supposed to rise at 06:56 and set at 16:53, the two ends of the day clamping in on the residents like a Death Star dumpster.
The numbskulls who are in charge of the Roman Curia calendar still haven’t changed the Ave Maria from the 17:30 to the 17:15 cycle.
Thank you, Lord, for this 318th day of the year.
For my first meal back, I try to get a cheeseburger. This particular pub does a great job with everything. The onion rings were every bit as good as they look, bun buttered and grilled, cooked to exactly the point I requested. You’ve gotta love a bar that has a beer called “Delirium Tremens”.
It’s aways hard to leave Rome, but this softens the landing. Hit the spot.
And… the election cycle is over!
YAY!
Please remember me when shopping online. Thanks in advance. US HERE – UK HERE These links take you to a generic “catholic” search in Amazon, but, once in and browsing or searching, Amazon remembers that you used my link and I get the credit.
The calendar still has the Ave Maria at 17:30. Grrr.
Thank you for this day, Lord.
It is the Feast of St Juan Diego. The story of his canonization and miracle is amazing.
On my way to Mass.
UPDATE:
The process of getting to the airport went smoothy, little traffic (for Rome) going out at 8:30. Check in, passport, security, to the lounge took about 20 minutes. This was the case the last time I took this flight back to these USA at this time. Gotta remember that.
In the lounge I recognized a well-known Jesuit theologian – a good one- and we had a good chat before our respective flights.
The flight itself. In the row behind me and in the middle section was a couple with a toddler who alternatively went -duh duh duh duh duh and then shrieked for several minutes… for the first six hours. After a respite… started up again. Gotta think there’s something wrong there. Another passenger was realllllly creepy. An old woman, one might say a crone, with dyed blond hair that went out at a 45 degree angle to he shoulders. Her hair on top was – how to describe – pulled wound into a vertical cone, like a spike, sticking up from the middle of her head, tightly bound up. I had on a polo shirt for the flight, no collar this time (I usually do fly in black but all my clothes needed washing). When I made my way to the head, her face shot towards me a locked on me with a look of real hatred. “Uh huh,” quoth I, “That’s about right”. I continued, “Dear Jesus pour your Most Precious Blood down on her”. The next time I got up, no evil stare.
At JFK there was hardly anyone waiting for passport control. Luggage came in about 10 minutes and ride in another 10.
Things could not have been smooth except for the either challenged child and the the wicked witch of the west.
Sights from the first evening. The Verrazzano costs $13 each way. Think about that for a daily commute.
On this my last full day in Rome the sun rose at 06:53. It set at 16:55.
They are still screwing up the Ave Maria Bell on the calendar. Telling.
Thank you, Lord, for this day. Thank you for tomorrow.
The Feast of St. Martin is heavily laden with remembrance and anticipation, past losses and a new season.
Today is mostly packing and shifting things which remain here to a safe place. It is lovely day, but alas I am inside. Later in the evening, when I had my chores done, I wanted a walk and a bite out. That didn’t happen. I’m too tired.
Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links. US HERE – UK HERE WHY? This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc.. At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.
The sun rose behind clouds at 06:52. I hope we will have clear skies when it sets at 16:56.
The Ave Maria should ring in its 17:15 cycle and the Vatican calendar has still got it wrong. I double checked: 4-20 November @17:15, 20 Nov- 28 Dec 17:00.
In the Novus Ordo it is the 32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time and it is the 5th resumed Sunday after Epiphany in the Vetus. It is the Novus Feast of St. Leo the Great (+461).
There are 52 days left in this calendar year.
The 1st Sunday of Advent is 1 December. Whew! Tempus fugit.
Thank you, Lord, for this day.
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Lunch with The Great Roman. One of the most honorable men I’ve ever known. I say that on the birthday of the Marine Corps.
In churchy news….
Once again we see what “pastoral concern” means to some. Bp. Joe Vasquez, the Administrator of the Diocese of Tyler, TX, which was where Bp. Strickland was before he was so ungraciously sacked, has cancelled the celebration of the Traditional Latin Mass at the diocesan cathedral and other churches, segregating those people into a single place where the FSSP serves. I learned of this first via a blistering Tweet/X from Fr. Mawdsley HERE. Now that I check around, others have this too such as Diane Montagna and Raymond Arroyo and Michael Matt, etc. In fact, it is all over the place and there is not a lot of joy.
Rorate reminds us that this happen ONE YEAR after Rome sacked Bp. Strickland. (Actually one year less one day, Strickland was sacked on the Feast of St. Martin, 11 Nov.)
Still, the proximity is telling.
Meanwhile,…
Cardinal Sarah: “Banning or suspending the Extraordinary Form can only be inspired by the devil. I am of the opinion of Benedict XVI. What was holy and sacred yesterday cannot be condemned to disappear today. What harm does the Traditional Mass cause? What harm? pic.twitter.com/5njLcvKZDN
An allegory (what you don’t see in this depiction, are the rats chewing the ropes and eating the stores).
Allegorical depiction of the Church as a ship, marvelled at and fought against by people from outside, filled with the great Communion of Saints. The mast is the cross of Jesus Christ, at the top the symbol of the pelican feeding its little ones with its own blood. On the keel is… pic.twitter.com/AyRq1T9RJr
Something I sent as Provincial to our Sisters today in the USA province:
Glory be to the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus
Today’s office of readings had a beautiful passage, “Come to him a living stone, rejected by men but approved, nonetheless, and precious in God’s eyes.”
I… pic.twitter.com/LG26DUbj8b
Today at Mass for this Feast of the Dedication of the Lateran Basilica I was struck by the beauty of the orations and imagery. First, there was the collect, which I mention elsewhere. The first reading is from the Book of Revelation that has the line which, transposed in Gibson’s movie of the Passion at the moment in the Via Crucis the Lord meets His mother never fails to close my throat. The The Gospel reading initially seems odd, but winds up being apt with a profound celebrant’s “of course!”
Turning for insights to Schuster, the late, great Blessed Ildefonso, liturgist, Benedictine and Cardinal Archbishop of Milan, I found rich veins of sacred ore. I’ll share some.
Schuster (1890-1954) had a deep liturgical sensibility. As a result he lamented the modernist trend in worship, architecture, matters liturgical. The essence of modernism after all is the reduce the supernatural to the natural. What Schuster would have said about the Novus Ordo… I can imagine.
Getting back to the Feast of the Dedication of the Lateran, here is something of what Schuster had to say. Edited.
My emphases and comments. First, consider how some will say that is is enough to pray privately. Hence…
It is not the same thing to pray in private, or to pray in the sacred sanctuary and to take part in the rites of Catholic Liturgy. By reason of its consecration the Church is the throne of God’s mercy, the place chosen by him, and where he chiefly condescends to work our salvation. [Similarly, isn’t it enough just to tell God you are sorry? It’s a good start. However, He gave us a sacrament precisely for this, which means that use of that sacrament is God’s own will, His desire for us, that we use it for forgiveness of sins.] Here we know he listens to our prayers ; here Jesus is pleased to receive from the assembly of believers that solemn, public, and united adoration which is due to him. [This has to do with the virtue of Religion. In Justice we give to human beings what is due. But God, though a Person, is a qualitatively different Person. Hence, there is a different virtue, like Justice, for God.]
[…]
As a lightning-conductor by attracting the lightning protects the inhabitants of a building, so the Church, through the efficacy of the consecration of a sanctuary, raises up in every place an altar of propitiation where the anger of God is placated, where his heart is ever present, and the power of his adorable name is felt. [Did you get that? And altar of propitiation. It isn’t mainly a table for the “meal” and of “welcoming” and that stuff. It is for propitiatory sacrifice. The concept of propitiation was contentiously edited out of the orations of the Novus Ordo.] For this reason, our ancestors never failed to consecrate an altar, and to dedicate solemnly every church or oratory, no matter how small. We know that St Charles Borromeo consecrated fifteen churches within less than three weeks, and Pope Benedict XIII, who consecrated many hundreds of altars both in Rome and elsewhere, exhorted the bishops to consecrate at least all the parish churches in their dioceses.
At the present time, through an exaggerated desire to simplify everything, old altar stones are inserted into new altars, and modern buildings dedicated to the worship of God are often opened after having been merely blessed by a priest. [Let’s not even get into what they look like.] This seems to denote want of faith and of religious enthusiasm, and many do not realize that it is not altogether desirable that the same edifice should serve as a place of worship and a parish hall. All this is not in keeping with the spirit of the Church. It not only deprives the people of the special graces and efficacy attached to consecrated buildings and altars, but causes them to lose the sense of devotion due to the house of God.
The office for the consecration of a church is not only magnificent, but very instructive. [Remember how I rant that “liturgyis doctrine!”? Look at this…]If, in our day, the populace ignores the sacredness of the holy place, it is that it no longer hears the voice of the Liturgy which in former years expounded the catechism. Legem credendi lex statuat supplicandi. We have travelled a long way since the days of faith when veneration for sacred things was so great that the cloths which covered the altar were used as relics.
[..]
The name given to the church or house of prayer, domus orationis, should help us to understand the theological importance of the Liturgy, the public prayer of the Church. Besides the private prayer which each of us in cubiculo, clauso ostio, makes to his heavenly Father, there exists another prayer, public and collective, which Christian society as a public body raises to God. This public prayer so often recommended by Christ and his apostles, is of so much importance and is so sacred that it pervades with its sanctity the place where it is celebrated, and therefore the house of God is called domus orationis, the house of prayer. [We are our rites. Our rites shape our beliefs and actions. The design arrangement and decoration of a church, reflects and then shapes those who enter.]
Post-Communion : ” We beseech thee, almighty God, to lend the ears of thy lovingkindness to all who pray to thee in this place which we, all unworthy, have dedicated to thy name.”
It is well to consider attentively the classic conception of the dedicatio.
We moderns, absorbed by the idea of practical utility, erect places of worship chiefly because the needs of the population require it. They are inaugurated with a religious rite, suggested by the ritual, but this is often regarded as a secondary matter, and though it is not omitted is certainly not the primary consideration. [This is great…] The Church—we are apt to think—exists for the people. In the eyes of the ancients the position was quite different. The Church existed for God. [!] Without any thought of public utility, the altar and the temple were votive gifts offered to the divinity through a sacred and official rite which dedicated them to him—Dedicatio. [Hence, buildings were the best they could offer!]
In many classical temples the people did not enter into the sanctuary inhabited by the divinity, and the altar of sacrifice stood outside at the top of a flight of steps. In the early Middle Ages at Rome, Ravenna, Milan and Bologna, several basilicas were grouped together or at a short distance one from another, as was especially the case in Benedictine Abbeys. The number of these holy places did not arise from any need on the part of the population, they merely had a votive character. The Lombards multiplied churches and oratories all over the country, and to this day there are to be found in the ancient cities of Italy a quantity of religious buildings which were certainly not erected for the convenience of the population, for the limited proportions of some of these chapels did not admit of the presence of many worshippers.
The founders of these oratories could only have had one object in view. This was the ancient intention of making an offering, a dedicatio. All those sacred buildings, altars and chapels represent munera, monuments or votive gifts presented to the majesty of God in thanksgiving for his benefits, or in memory of some saint. [munera… so richly laden a word!]
[…]
Soooo much going on in there.
Have you ever heard some modernist-trained liturgist or other say that “liturgy” comes from the Greek for “the work of the people”? Therefore, El Pueblo has to be brought into doing physically active things in “the liturgy” (never call it “Mass”, because that’s sacrificial sounding).
Since I am in Rome, it is appropriate to post about the Feast of the Dedication of the Papal Archbasilica of the Most Holy Savior and St John the Baptist and St John the Evangelist, which we call St John Lateran.
Rome’s Cathedral was solemnly consecrated on 9 November 324.
The Lateran Basilica is “omnium urbis et orbis ecclesiarum mater et caput… the Mother and Head of all the Churches of the City and the World”.
The original basilica was constructed by the Emperor Constantine. The Bishop of Rome’s cathedra, or throne, is there, the symbol of his teaching authority. The nearby baptistery is the ancient place of Christian initiation for the Church of Rome.
We are not sure why 9 November was chosen for the dedication. Perhaps the date was chosen to bring its dedication within 10 days to other Roman basilicas, Sts. Peter and Paul (Nov 18). The Romans had a “thing” about their dead and a nine-day period called a “novendialis”. In fact, this observance is still an important part of the death of a Pope and the preparations for a Conclave.
Also, a death day is known in Latin as “dies natalis… birthday (into Heaven).
On the dedication of a church, the day itself or annivesary, we celebrate solemnly the day a church is “born”.
Every person has a “name day” and a “birthday”. So too a church. Our churches are dedicated or consecrated in honor of saints or mysteries of the Faith. The celebration of the dedication recalls the sanctity of the place which, as a consecrated building, has been removed from the temporal order and given entirely to God.
Church buildings should be rich in sacred symbols. This includes a sanctuary with its altar, the sacred space within the sacred space mirroring the Holy of Holies in the Temple of Jerusalem. The prayers for the solemn consecration of a church, especially in the older, traditional Roman Rite, connect the earthly church building to the heavenly Jerusalem of the life to come, described in Scriptures especially in the Book of Revelation.
There are parallels in the rites of the consecration of a church and the rites of Baptism. There are exorcisms. The is washing with water, anointing with Chrism and naming. Alphabets are given in the church as the “opening rites” are given in baptism. And so forth. More on this below.
The rite of consecration and the annual feast of its dedication reflect that the church building is a house of prayer and the place of sacrifice. It is a foreshadowing of the heavenly Jerusalem. It is the microcosm of the Church Universal, the nuptial chamber of the Spouse and the Bride, the way to Calvary and the Garden of the Tomb.
In the beautiful Mass formulary for the dedication, the Gospel reading starts out curiously with the reading in Luke 19 about the rich short guy Zacchaeus climbing a tree to see the Lord. Christ spots him and says that he is going to go to his house: “Today salvation has come to this house,” says the Lord. That’s why this reading was chosen, for sure.
A church must reflect its awesome purpose. It is a place where a soul peers through the cleft in the rock at God’s back as He passes by (Exodus 33), where he searches for the beloved in the palace (Song of Songs), where he gazes through the dark mirror (1 Cor 13). This is where the soul simultaneously expands in worship and shrinks down in awe at mystery’s encounter.
When Pope Sylvester dedicated the Lateran Basilica he called it the “Domus Dei … House of God”. A church building reflects that we are to be like the “living stones” who build up a holy spiritual Church (1 Peter 2:5). Over the doors of many old churches you find the phrase “House of God and Gate of Heaven”. In Genesis 28, Jacob awakes from his vision of the angels ascending and descending the ladder betwixt heaven and earth. Trembling, Jacob says: “How terrible is this place! This is no other but the house of God, and the gate of heaven.” “Terribilis est locus iste!” is the opening chant for the Mass of the Dedication of a Church.
The rite of consecration and texts of the dedication feast recall that, not just the building, but the Christian’s soul belongs to God and is to be holy.
The consecration of the church building is much like a baptism. In the traditional Roman rite there is an exorcism with “Gregorian Water”, a mixture of ash, salt, water, wine used exclusively for special purifications of churches and altars. The altar is “clothed” as with baptismal robes. Its walls are anointed with chrism, as we were in baptism and confirmation. There is the lighting of candles and their solemn placement at the points where the walls were anointed. At the beginning of the traditional rite of baptism, the one to be baptized is interrogated, “What do you seek?” He responds, “Faith” (not “Baptism” as in the post-Conciliar ritual). Then, “What will Faith give you?” “Eternal life”, he says. A church must reflect in every way not only the splendor of God’s gift of Faith, enabling us to embrace what is mysterious, but also the goal of Faith: eternal life. A church should reflect the splendors of our Catholic Faith and give us a foretaste of heaven.
Let’s see the first of the two Collects in the Novus:
Deus, qui de vivis et electis lapidibus aeternum habitaculum tuae praeparas maiestati, multiplica in Ecclesia tua spiritum gratiae, quem dedisti, ut fidelis tibi populus in caelestis aedificationem Ierusalem semper accrescat.
O God, who from living and chosen stones prepare an eternal dwelling for your majesty, increase in your Church the spirit of grace you have bestowed, so that by new growth your faithful people may build up the heavenly Jerusalem.
We are conscious of this world, but our prayer directs us to heaven, not to an earthly utopia.
In the Vetus:
Deus, qui nobis per síngulos annos huius sancti templi tui consecratiónis réparas diem, et sacris semper mystériis repæséntas incólumes: exáudi preces pópuli tui, et præsta; ut, quisquis hoc templum benefícia petitúrus ingréditur, cuncta se impetrásse lætétur.
O God, who for us bring each year the day of consecration of this Your holy temple, and always bring us back safely into the sacred rites, hear the prayers of Your people and grant that whoever enters this temple to pray for blessings, may rejoice in in all he had sought.
Over Rome the sun brought new light at 06:51. That light will greatly diminish at 16:57.
The Ave Maria is really in the 17:15 cycle but the Vatican calendar still gets it wrong at 17:30.
Today is the Feast of the Dedication of the Lateran Basilica, the Mother Church of the City and of the World. It is the Cathedral of the Diocese of Rome.
For this days, Lord, I give you praise and thanks.
Breakfast with The World’s Best Sacristan™ and The Parish Priest™.
This is something new at The Parish™.
The General Postulator of the Carmelites as confirmed that this manikin came from the Carmelite Monastery in Lisieux and that it was used by St. Thérèse the Little Flower.
It was a nice surprise to see this connection to St. Thérèse in the sacristy of The Parish™.
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Clams last night. This is after several hours of purging in sea salt water.
Sant’ Andrea after visiting the fishmonger.
I stopped and thanked St. Joseph for something. Thank you, St. Joseph.
In churchy news…
Bells sounded from the belfry of the basilica of Notre Dame in Paris on November 8, for the first time since the cathedral was ravaged by fire on August 19, 2019. https://t.co/z98vx1pEhb
At the National Catholic Register, Ed Pentin has a piece about why the Walking Together about Walking Togetherity was silent about the Traditional Latin Mass. Even though there is a demographic sinkhole opening up under the Church in developed countries precisely because of the choices of her pastors for the last 50+ years, and even though (still) small communities of more traditional Catholic are burgeoning, … no! no! … don’t talk about it! [FINGERS IN EARS AND HUMMING] “Not listening!”
Honestly, you would think they’d rather have a smoking crater than a happy parish with the TLM and young families active in the Church.
The canonization process of a Pakistani Catholic boy who sacrificed his life to prevent an Islamist suicide bomber from entering a crowded church moves forward.
The Vatican has approved the diocesan inquiry into the martyrdom of Akash Bashir, a 20-year-old Catholic who… pic.twitter.com/MY0lD75OIG
I write to alert you to a book to be released on 19 November – now available for pre-order at 25% off – by my friend Fr. Carlos Martins, whose apostolate with relics Treasures of the Church is well-known to you. Right now he is taking the arm of the Apostle St. Jude around the country.
Here is the new book, forward by Card. Burke. It’s comprehensive and instructive about angels, demons, all manner and level of demonic attacks, exorcism, etc.
I want to look at this list from the book. Look at it carefully.
Did you read that? Really? Perhaps integrate it soon as an element of an examination of conscience for confession (which you should be doing on a DAILY basis).
Let’s go on.
I wrote a longer review of the book, but I won’t trouble you. GET IT.
Get a copy for your priests.
It is worthwhile even from the account of Alessandro Serenelli, St Maria Goretti’s murderer. Believe me.
A personal note.
Over the years I have had problems with my left leg. Always my left. Multiple fractures, etc., chronic pain. Also, for a couple years, I could not keep my left shoe or boot tied. Double-knots, tucked in military style. Several times a day I had to retie. I mentioned this to a long-time reader and daily Mass stream viewer visiting Rome from Ireland and she said she would pray for my boot problem. It went away.
Fast forward to present day. Some time ago, Fr. Martins sent the PDF of his book. Of course he wanted me to help promote it, which I am delighted to do because it is a great. The next day my left leg, knee especially, was killing me and I had to tie my darn shoe. Coincidence? Remember my problem during Mass with the demon next to The Parish™ on those two recent Sundays? (Recounted elsewhere… you really should be paying attention.)
Also, you will perhaps have seen the video interview with Fr. Martins about the demonic vexation that Tucker Carlson experienced and related elsewhere. HERE
It is often the case that, no matter how far people may stray, faith is the last thing to flicker out.
Martin Scorsese has coming out a streaming series on four saints: John the Baptist, St. Sebastian, St. Joan of Arc, St. Maximilian Kolbe.
The trailer is intriguing, but I am apprehensive.
I refused to see his movie version of the ghastly novel by Shusaku Endo’s book Silence. I wrote about that HERE.
There is a hollywood tendency. If something or someone is holy, they have to do knock it down. It’s as if they can’t stand that something simply be good. They have to besmirch in some way, as Peter Jackson did in his LotR with Aragorn and Faramir. So, I am apprehensive about what Scorsese has down to these saints.
John the Baptist
Sebastian
Joan of Arc
Maximilian Kolbe
All four are martyrs. Is there another common thread?
Morning sun movement became visible at 06:47. It will disappear from view at 17:00.
Thank you for this day, Lord.
The Ave Maria rings at – according to the errant curial calendar – 17:30. But that’s wrong. It should now be in the 17:15 cycle.
On this dies non I said a Daily Requiem for Poor Souls. As a matter of fact, I just got that intention yesterday, so I brought it to the head of the line.
The Requiem Mass is so beautiful with the Dies Irae.
Quaerens me, sedisti lassus:
Redemisti Crucem passus:
Tantus labor non sit cassus.
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The tail end of some “premium content” sent out to Roman Donors. I am so grateful to them.
In churchy news…
Catholics voted for the President-elect over VP Harris by a margin of 56% to 41%. pic.twitter.com/8tV5NoneZg
In Florida the abortion amendment was defeated! HERE I know that a great many churches – and there are a lot (of different kinds, splinters) – had NO! signs out.
The late, former Exorcist of Rome, Fr. Gabriel Amorth, said that demons try to possess politicians. HERE Well… duh! Shall we talk about leaders in the CHURCH?
At National Catholic Register, there is a piece about the mainly American (I think) phenomenon of moving priests so often, allowing a man to be pastor for maybe 12 years and then shoving him out. HERE In the Latin Church’s Code of Canon Law, can. 522 says,
Can. 522 – Parochus stabilitate gaudeat oportet ideoque ad tempus indefinitum nominetur; ad certum tempus tantum ab Episcopo dioecesano nominari potest, si id ab Episcoporum conferentia per decretum admissum fuerit.
So…“A pastor must enjoy/have stability and therefore is fitting that he be appointed for an indefinite period of time”. However, in the next part: “He can be appointed by the diocesan bishop only for a specific period if the conference of bishops will have permitted through a decree.”
The clear intent of the law is that pastors, “the parish priest”, in normal circumstances have a long time in his parish.
Most of the priests I talk to think this appointment for 6 years, with another 6 possible years is terrible. They are just getting into the place and they get moved. When they get to baptize the children of the children they baptized… then they’ve gotten settled. Will some have other opinions? Sure. Are parishes different from each other? Sure. Are there bad fits that have to be adjusted? Sure. But you get the idea.
Most priests I know think that this term limiting of pastors is also a dodge that bishops use so they don’t have to work things through with pastors who are perhaps “troublesome” for them. They just wait them out and move them.
Most priests I know think that moving priests so often over time gives people the idea that the priest isn’t really in charge. They come and go. The lay staff is the stable element.
Therefore, there is no “father” in the parish. This is also part of a war on men and boys, which manifests also in the sanctuary.
Take a look at that piece.
At a substack called WM Review, there is a provocative piece about whether or not, because of the change to the rites of ordination after the Council, we will have validly consecrated bishops in the future.
This question comes up once in a while because it is an important issue and there were significant changes to the rites of ordination of priests and of bishops under Paul VI. The changes to the ordination for priests were concerning enough that John Paul II in 1990 put things back into the rite that Paul VI took out. Rites should make explicit exactly what they are supposed to do. For example, the post-Conciliar Book of Blessings has “blessings” that don’t explicitly bless things with a constitutive blessing (as opposed to an invocative blessing). The forward to the Book of Blessings states that it is trying to eliminate the distinction. Change the rite, you just might change the effect. And WE ARE OUR RITES. How we pray impacts what we believe and, hence, how we live, and vice versa in a complete intertwined loop of influence.
The rites of ordination were significantly changed after Vatican II, so it is entirely normal that one might wonder about them.
HOWEVER… in view of the ordination of priests the late great Michael Davies wrote a book called Order of Melchisedech: A Defence of the Catholic Priesthood – US HERE Davies tackles the changes to the rites after the Council, pointing out the problems. However, he argues that the rites DO ordain validly despite the changes. That said, he also brings up the issue of the intent of the ordaining bishop. Folks… I am working from my memory about Davies’ book, which I read a long time ago. If I put my foot wrong there, please correct me. Davies argues (I think) that so long as the bishop has the correct theology of priesthood, ordination, etc., then the rite is just within the bounds of valid. However, if over time the theology of priesthood and ordination is eroded through modernist machinations – and believe you me that is EXACTLY what they tried to do to us in seminary in the 1980’s! – then all bets are off. In any event, the WM Review pieces comes down on the side of invalidity. I don’t agree.
However, this is a question that will not go away easily. Why? I mentioned my seminary in the USA. I did two years of hard time at the hell-hole that was the Saint Paul Seminary in the late 80’s. I finished in Rome. However, we were not to use the word “priest” (which we called “the P word”), because we are all “ministers”, some ordained and some non-ordained. In our class which was supposed to be on Priesthood and Eucharist, but which was called something like Ministry and Symbol, we were told, that – I am not making this up –
“when the ordained minister says the words of institution [not consecration] over bread and wine no real change takes place – they become a symbol of the unity of the community gathered there in that moment.”
Yup. Really.
How many things are wrong with that?
I objected. I asked how that jived with transubstantiation. The heretic priest – who left the priesthood to shack up with a female seminary faculty member after celebrating the invalid marriage ceremony of disgraced musician David Haas – replied that the Church no longer teaches transubstantiation. I asked when that happened. Vatican II. I asked why Paul VI, after Vatican II, wrote in his 1965 encyclical Mysterium fidei said the opposite and that we have to use “transubstantiation”. He became furious. He said I was locked up in irrelevant Aristotelean categories, blah blah blah. I responded: “I grew up Lutheran. Even Lutherans believe more than you.” Soon after, the rector had a heart attack. This heretic became rector. He threw me out the next day. It was after that, on the advice of a priest friend, that I pray to the Little Flower St. Thérèse for help. The next day I received signs of roses all day long. That night, the Auxiliary Bishop (now a retired Archbishop) called me with the news that I was not being thrown out. (This is why I have a wreath of roses on my chalice.)
But did you get what that heretic said? For him, the Eucharist symbolized, but not in a real way, the unity of the community (not the Body Blood Soul Divinity of Christ), gathered there (just localized) in that moment (not in an enduring way such that you would reserve it in a tabernacle). That’s worse than Rahner’s bizarre ideas about sacraments celebrating pre-existing realities!
But that’s not all! What danger could these heretic jerks have had for the knowledge and faithful of future priests and future bishops?
Channeling his inner Schillebeeckx, there are no priests in the sense of sacramentally ordained. The community calls forth presiders for their “eucharist” (see above for what he believed about eucharist!) who embody who the community is. As the community changes, or the one called forth changes, that person returns to the assembly and another is called forth to preside.
THAT’s what we got in seminary in the 1980’s.
So … is there any reason ever to wonder about the intention of some men who were formed for priesthood in those years?
Yes. However, those notions I wrote above are so weird, so far out, that very few men indeed would buy them and remain a priest for any length of time after ordination. Very few. And it would be unlikely that men believing that complete crap would be made a bishop.
It certainly has happened that there were some – maybe now are – some bishops with such screwy ideas. I have in mind one in the Amazon…. and I don’t mean my wish list. But are there bishops who have zero connection to authentic Catholic theology of priesthood and ordination. It would have to be demonstrated to me with solid proofs and not just claims because the bishop is … sub-optimal in some ways.
Jesus founded our Church. Jesus will take care of our Church. That doesn’t mean that the Church will survive “woke” in the USA or in the Amazon or in Rome! It means that Jesus will maintain the Church in some form with valid sacraments – valid Holy Orders – no matter what is inflicted on her from without or from within. Christus vincit! Christus regnat! Christus imperat!
9. There are, however, Venerable Brothers, a number of reasons for serious pastoral concern and anxiety in this very matter that we are now discussing, and because of Our consciousness of Our Apostolic office, We cannot remain silent about them.
False and Disturbing Opinions
10. For We can see that some of those who are dealing with this Most Holy Mystery in speech and writing are disseminating opinions on Masses celebrated in private or on the dogma of transubstantiation that are disturbing the minds of the faithful and causing them no small measure of confusion about matters of faith, just as if it were all right for someone to take doctrine that has already been defined by the Church and consign it to oblivion or else interpret it in such a way as to weaken the genuine meaning of the words or the recognized force of the concepts involved.
11. To give an example of what We are talking about, it is not permissible to extol the so-called “community” Mass in such a way as to detract from Masses that are celebrated privately; or to concentrate on the notion of sacramental sign as if the symbolism—which no one will deny is certainly present in the Most Blessed Eucharist—fully expressed and exhausted the manner of Christ’s presence in this Sacrament; or to discuss the mystery of transubstantiation without mentioning what the Council of Trent had to say about the marvelous conversion of the whole substance of the bread into the Body and the whole substance of the wine into the Blood of Christ, as if they involve nothing more than “transignification,” or “transfinalization” as they call it; or, finally, to propose and act upon the opinion that Christ Our Lord is no longer present in the consecrated Hosts that remain after the celebration of the sacrifice of the Mass has been completed.
12. Everyone can see that the spread of these and similar opinions does great harm to belief in and devotion to the Eucharist.
Have you PRAYED for a good outcome? The best possible outcome that will benefit the nation spiritually and materially (if that is what God wills)?
Have you also prayed to ask the Holy Angels to prevent interference from the fallen angels when it comes to anything electronic used in the election results? Demons are really good with electronic things.
I didn’t see it take place, but assuredly the sun rose on Rome at 6:46. It will set at 17:01.
The Vatican calendar is again screwed up. My records show that the Ave Maria was to change from its 17:30 cycle – 22 Oct – 4 Nov) yesterday to its 17:15 cycle (4-20 Nov). What to do? What to do about a bell that ought to ring, but never does… except at Ss Trinità – aka The Parish™?
Thank you for this day, O Lord.
If you are paying attention also to the auxiliary calendar in the back of the Traditional Missal, in the section for propers “in some places… aliquibus locis” there is a Mass today for the Feast of All Relics. It is certainly relic seasons, given the proximity to All Saints and All Souls and the theme of November being the Four Last Things.
Relics be the instruments of miracles, physical and spiritual. They are sacred. Poor care of a reliquary with a relic in it is sacrilege. Relics must not be sold. That’s a serious sin.
I am mindful today and grateful for the apostolate of my good friend Fr. Carlos Martins, whose Treasures of the Churchhas brought countless thousands of people into contact with holy relics, resulting in conversions and healings. At present he is taking a major relic of St. Jude the Apostle to different parishes in the United States, a real labor of love.
At The Parish™ we had a solemn displaying of the relics preserved there. I made a video. It’s a lovely event. In a way it is like looking at our Family Album together, for they are already in the family of Heaven and they are waiting for us.
All the parishes used to do in Rome once upon a time. No one does it anymore. I thought it was unique in Rome other than in Lent when in St. Peter’s many relics are exposed and the Veil of Veronica is displayed. However, I found some music written for Ostentatio Reliquiarum by one Cardinal Albrect Brandenburg. So, it was done elsewhere. Makes sense.
Speaking of family, yesterday at The Parish™ we had a Solemn Requiem for the 30th day from the burial of our friend and confrere in the Archconfraternity, Gian Carlo Ciccia. After the Mass we sand Vespers… and Matins… and Lauds…. it was really long. The music for the Mass was splendid, the Requiem for 6 voices by Tomás Luis de Victoria (+1611). There were also instruments.
Nice people! Great service!
Friends, taking this is was like being transported back to the early 17th century to see precisely what they would have done. The Guardiani of the Archconfraternity were in their habits and in the sanctuary, where they received Communion. The music was period and appropriate for the ritual and architecture. Victoria also spent time as a musician in Rome, so it was a Roman venture. Would you like to participate in a bit of it? Perhaps the Requiem?
The repetition of the ritual, so long used, so finely tuned and thought through by our forebears is a sacred action, an act of Religion, which brings great solace. The traditional Requiem Mass might be ornamented with more or less magnificent vestments, in a more or less magnificent setting, for a more or less famous person, rich or poor, powerful or small. We come into the world the same way and we go forth as well. All alike, we go before our Creator, the Just Judge, the King of Fearful Majesty. The older form of the Requiem doesn’t have lots of options, as the Novus Ordo does. The Novus Ordo, full of options, aims at being adapted, tailored, to make it express what we want to express. The Vetus Ordo reflects what Holy Church – the greatest expert on humanity there has ever been or will be – know what we really need, what it best for us, in particular for the person who is deceased: prayers for the person’s soul, relief from Purgatory, swift access to Heaven. That is the point of a Requiem: the deceased. The deceased is the point, but we are not excluded. We know that, with the older Rite, in our own time we will be prayed for in this most power and efficacious way. We know that we will receive what the Church knows what is best for us in that state: prayers, penances, indulgences.
It’s a matter of priorities.
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In churchy news….
Eccles posted the WINNERS of the 2024 World Cup of Synod Jargon. HERE
GOLD MEDAL for “forgiveness in the name of all the baptised for the sins against synodality”
SILVER for “the principle of circularity that animated the whole synodal process” https://t.co/tw0Di0aBtg
I wonder what the Holy See gets from the China deal that hasn’t been disclosed.
Also, because the Indonesian bishop declined to be made a Cardinal, Archbishop Battaglia of Naples has been chosen. Why he wasn’t chosen in the first place is a little baffling… it’s NAPLES after all, and not the one in Florida. The new Cardinal-elect has a reputation of being quite anti-mafia. Meanwhile, the Archbishop of Los Angeles is not a Cardinal. And I am not a Monsignor. Heck, I’m 65 now! There should be a world-wide movement.
The monks of Le Barroux in S. France make excellent wine. Help them and you help yourselves!
Let’s remember all who are ill, who will die soon, who have died recently, who have lost their jobs, who are afraid.
I get many requests by email asking for prayers. Some are heart-achingly grave and urgent.
As long as my blog reaches so many readers in so many places, let’s give each other a hand. We should support each other in works of mercy.
If you have some prayer requests, feel free to post them below.
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In your kindness continue prayers for my mother, who has been diagnosed with something grave and incurable.
Pray for me, for my circumstances and wisdom in my decisions.
Also, I received this note:
I also humbly ask for your prayers for [our 8 year old son] Patrick. He has a lesion on his brain and is at the Children’s Hospital.
Patrick loves all things military and firefighters. For All Hallow’s Eve he wanted to be God’s GI Joe: Chaplain Emil Kapaun. This was his second time to learn about and dress up as Fr. Kapaun.
We are asking you to join us in asking Servant of God Chaplain Emil Kapaun to walk this journey of unknowns with Patrick and if it be in God’s Holy Will to heal Patrick, we ask this through the intercession of Fr. Kapaun. I cannot link the website with the novena to Fr. Kapaun, but there is one on his website.
Thank you.
We appreciate all prayers for Patrick and our family.
All for Jesus, Amen!
Please stop and pray here and now for this little boy.
For Your glory and praise, Almighty and merciful God, and to increase faith in You and Your Church, through the intercession of Servant of God Emil Kapaun, I beseech You, that You grant a sudden, complete and lasting miraculous healing for little Patrick, suffering from a lesion on his brain and for whatever other ailment by which he may be affected. I ask this in the Most Holy Name of Jesus Christ, Your Son, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, ever one God, world without end. Amen.
When the sun rose at 6:43 , I was already up. I will still be up at 17:04 when it sets.
Today the Ave Maria would ring at 17:30. IT RANG AT THE PARISH PRECISELY AT 17:30!
It is the 4th Sunday remaining after Epiphany resumed to fill the gap of Sundays at the end of the liturgical year.
Lord, thank you for this Sunday.
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For centuries the Archconfraternity of Ss.ma Trinità dei Pellegrini e Convalescenti, founded by St. Philip Neri, on the first Sunday of the month conducted full Forty Hours Devotion. As the Archconfraternity is being renewed, the members on 1st Sundays have begun spending an hour of Adoration before the Blessed Sacrament exposed, using prayers from Forty Hours. Brick by brick. Today was also a day when food and money was collected to feed the poor.
You can see some of them in red habits. It is also a treat to hear the extremely rare little 17th century portative organ which was discovered in a cubbyhole and lovingly restored.
Also, this occurred in first 8 days of November, and so the church is arranged for prayers for the Poor Souls, which includes absolution of the catafalque and Masses for the Dead.
From lunch on All Saints with The Great Roman™. (He had to finish it). Rigatoni and sauce of coda alla vaccinara.
Like these photos? Thank DM for the new phone and better camera.
An Italian Army band was getting ready for something this morning. Piazza Farnese on my way to The Parish’s™ Solemn Mass.
Before Mass.
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Let us continue to pray for his safety and release. He offered himself in place of two seminarians who were about to be kidnapped, during evening prayers. Such great love from Fr. Thomas. https://t.co/SOBpsF2qWN
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“This blog is 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
I'm finishing up a batch of Mass intentions right now. I'll have room in my register for more while I am in Rome. Also, I regularly say Mass for my regular benefactors and special Roman Sojourn Donors. HERE for the form I use.
Everyone, work to get this into your parish bulletins and diocesan papers.
The most evident mark of God’s anger and the most terrible castigation He can inflict upon the world are manifested when He permits His people to fall into the hands of clerics who are priests more in name than in deed, priests who practice the cruelty of ravening wolves rather than the charity and affection of devoted shepherds.
St. John Eudes
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“Until the Lord be pleased to settle, through the instrumentality of the princes of the Church and the lawful ministers of His justice, the trouble aroused by the pride of a few and the ignorance of some others, let us with the help of God endeavor with calm and humble patience to render love for hatred, to avoid disputes with the silly, to keep to the truth and not fight with the weapons of falsehood, and to beg of God at all times that in all our thoughts and desires, in all our words and actions, He may hold the first place who calls Himself the origin of all things.”
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“He [Satan] will set up a counter-Church which will be the ape of the Church because, he the devil, is the ape of God. It will have all the notes and characteristics of the Church, but in reverse and emptied of its divine content. It will be a mystical body of the anti-Christ that will in all externals resemble the mystical body of Christ. In desperate need for God, whom he nevertheless refuses to adore, modern man in his loneliness and frustration will hunger more and more for membership in a community that will give him enlargement of purpose, but at the cost of losing himself in some vague collectivity.”
“Who is going to save our Church? Not our bishops, not our priests and religious. It is up to you, the people. You have the minds, the eyes, and the ears to save the Church. Your mission is to see that your priests act like priests, your bishops act like bishops.”
“The modern habit of doing ceremonial things unceremoniously is no proof of humility; rather it proves the offender's inability to forget himself in the rite, and his readiness to spoil for every one else the proper pleasure of ritual.”
- C.S. Lewis
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As for Latin…
"But if, in any layman who is indeed imbued with literature, ignorance of the Latin language, which we can truly call the 'catholic' language, indicates a certain sluggishness in his love toward the Church, how much more fitting it is that each and every cleric should be adequately practiced and skilled in that language!" - Pius XI
"Let us realize that this remark of Cicero (Brutus 37, 140) can be in a certain way referred to [young lay people]: 'It is not so much a matter of distinction to know Latin as it is disgraceful not to know it.'" - St. John Paul II
Grant unto thy Church, we beseech Thee, O merciful God, that She, being gathered together by the Holy Ghost, may be in no wise troubled by attack from her foes. O God, who by sin art offended and by penance pacified, mercifully regard the prayers of Thy people making supplication unto Thee,and turn away the scourges of Thine anger which we deserve for our sins. Almighty and Everlasting God, in whose Hand are the power and the government of every realm: look down upon and help the Christian people that the heathen nations who trust in the fierceness of their own might may be crushed by the power of thine Arm. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, who liveth and reigneth with Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost, God, world without end. R. Amen.