ROME 26/5– Day 51: munch

The Eternal City became noticeably brighter with the rising of the sun at 5:48. The light will diminish significantly at 20:26.

The Ave Maria Bell is in the 20:45 cycle right now.

It is Feast of St. Jean Baptiste de la Salle in the older calendar and of St. Isidore the Farmer in the newer.

I was out to supper with an FSSP priest from the USA the other night.  We were at a favorite place.

Not slimming.  I took a lot home for breakfast.

Today the guys were working on new lights for the little chapel up the street from The Parish™.

 

I stopped for some flowers.  Maybe the last batch?

I had advisors.

Lunch.

Black to move and mate in 4.

 

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Thoughts about the collision of the Holy See and the SSPX. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

I have had emails asking about my thoughts and predictions for the SSPX and Holy See debacle.

Firstly, I am deeply saddened.  I worked in the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei” from its early years.  I saw the birth and growth of “Ecclesia Dei” communities, the issuance of many celebret faculties, nasty fights with bishops and moving resolutions.  The Commission was despised by the rest of the Curia.  We were the “wailing wall” for traditional Catholics who had no shepherds who loved them enough, or were at least willing to obey what John Paul II wrote in Ecclesia Dei adflicta (1988).

John Paul, as I came to learn during my time, didn’t really understand why people wanted the old stuff.  Of course he came from Poland which was stable and strong in faith because of their persecution.  Even so, he commanded the world’s bishops by his Apostolic authority:  to be generous to people who had legitimate aspirations.

In my little opinion, it was wrong for Pope Leo to relegate a meeting with the SSPX’s Superior Fr. Pagliarani to Fernandez, his office notwithstanding.   But, then… relegate to whom else, Card. Roche?  Of course the main points for the SSPX are doctrinal more than liturgical, which is why the Commission was folded into the CDF back in the day.

I hope and pray that Pope Leo will find in his heart a little room for the legitimate aspirations described by John Paul, and open his heart to these sons of the Church. 

Leo’s arms bear the Augustinian Order’s “logo” of the heart aflame, pierced through with an arrow, resting on a book.  Augustine’s conversion came through a kind of piercing of his heart by the Word.  I note that in the Augustinian Order’s logo the book in modern times is usually – not uniformly –  open rather than closed.  I hope that the difference is not portentous.

There is still time for a meeting.

On the other side of things, I have gotten to know SSPX priests and learn about what they have done for regular diocesans priests in need.  I have talked with them, exchanged messages.  I’ve tried to understand what they are all about.   I have even had the pleasure of a long social evening with their Superior in a group of both SSPX and diocesan priests.  Since I speak Italian, we had lively conversation before and during our repast.

I understand things about the SSPX as a whole now that I did not understand lo those many years ago when I was with the Commission.    Moreover, I saw the unlikely agent of Francis help them in Argentina and then give them faculties for confessions and a way to witness marriages, which seemed to confirm that they are not suspended.  And as mentioned, I’ve seen what they have done for regular priests in need or mistreated by their bishops.

I was a bit dismayed by the Declaration that Fr. Pagliarani sent out.   It right away struck me as being obvious… smack you in the face obvious… that such a text was not going to be understood by the relevant parties in the Holy See, in the DDF.  The DDF types now may need a Rosetta Stone to decipher all those ideas, oddly familiar from some old book of yore.

However, one thing in the Declaration left me downhearted, the statement that baptism is the one means of being saved:

Consequently, every man must be a member of the Catholic Church in order to save his soul, and there is but one baptism as the means of being incorporated into her. This necessity concerns the whole of humanity without exception and embraces without distinction Christians, Jews, Muslims, pagans, and atheists.

This is something that the people in the DDF will simply freak out over.  Also, it is not entirely accurate because, as St. Augustine correctly described, we cannot place limits on whom God chooses to save.  When writing about the necessity of baptism Augustine affirmed the necessity of baptism while admitted that God can save whomever it pleases Him to save even though he, Augustine, didn’t know how.   Hence, I would have preferred to see a line in there like: “Without placing limits on God, who willed the Sacrament of Baptism as the means by which He desires… etc.”

Politically, Pope Leo would lose nothing by being generous and fatherly toward the SSPX, with some personal TLC.  I think the members of the SSPX would be willing to go to the wall for him and for the Church.   It’s amazing what a little water on a blazing hot sunny day will do for my pot of basil on my little Roman patio.

On the other hand, Leo would not lose anything politically by being harsh to the SSPX, because the 99% liberal bishops will fall in line like lemmings to the sea.  And the angels will weep.

That’s politics.  It would a tragedy of epic scope were this to be handled by the Holy See as a matter of politics, factions, points.

It’s a matter of the heart, now, not arguing.   Does Leo have that pastoral heart?   Do the priests of the SSPX have hearts of sons?

I mentioned, above, when I was in the Commission, fights with bishops and moving outcomes.

Will you allow a personal anecdote?  It’s about one of the most important things that ever happened to me in Rome and it has to do with the traditional Mass and with rigid positions.

When I was at “Ecclesia Dei“, early on, we had a really strained correspondence with an intractable American bishop, an infamous über-lib, who had a deadly feud going on with people in his diocese who wanted the traditional Mass.  The people got us involved, the bishop got angry.  It was awful.

Finally, the bishop wrote to us a letter that was seriously rude, even insulting.  I had had it.  “Basta!”  I drafted a response for the Cardinal that was going to END the issue by bringing in the weight of the office.

My dear late mentor and boss, Card. Mayer, the holiest man I’ve ever known, called me to his office, as usual, to go over various drafts of correspondence.  He had saved The Draft – my hammer on the bishop – until the end.  He said that what I had written was correct and proper (like the “Declaration” in a way).  “This is what we should write, of course.”

Then he asked about the first sentence.

“Here you wrote, X.  Do you think perhaps we could write Y instead?”

“Of course, Your Eminence!  It’s your letter”.

Changes were made in his carefully microscopic writing.

“And in this place, you wrote X.  Could Y work here?”

“Yes, Eminenza!”, I responded.

We continued that way until there was literally nothing remaining of my Draft – the hammer – but a couple of “ands” and “thes”.   We were actually laughing as my composition relentlessly disappeared under the black ink spiderweb of the Cardinal’s emendations, each one carefully and politely framed as a question, asking permission.

At last I said, “I obviously don’t have the right view of this.  Help me out.  Help me to understand how you want me to approach this.”

He paused a bit and looked at the crucifix on the wall of his office and said,

“At a certain point, we have to stop fighting and try to open up their hearts.”

With that, I went back to my desk and stared at the keys of the typewriter… yes, typewriter… and pondered.

“How do I open this bishop’s heart after all the bitter bridge burning?  One of us has to give, and clearly it has to be us.  Get off your high horse and keep it simple.”

I flashed out another draft and was back in the Cardinal’s office a few minutes later.  He looked at my new version, approved it, and out it went in the evening mail bag.

What, you might be asking, did I write in that second draft to that bishop?   It was not long.  It was not complicated.

I apologized to him for our part in making the correspondence so difficult and then said along this line,

“Your Excellency, so many good people in your diocese simply want to have access to Holy Mass according to the 1962 Missale Romanum.  Will you please, Your Excellency, not open your heart for them and give them what they want? They would be so happy.  Sending prayerful best wishes for, etc. etc.”

Some time later we received a note from one of the faithful in that bishop’s diocese who had been involved in the feud and tension.   He thanked us for what we did, and related that, not only had this über-lib, tradition-hating bishop given the required permission for the Traditional Mass, but he came to them and he said it himself.

I was stunned, but I don’t think the Cardinal was.

To this day, my heart gets chilly and I often fail in charity.  But I am, I trust, a work in progress.  But that was was an important life lesson.  I learned that, in the matter especially of the dynamics of tradition, the heart is an important lens through which to view complicated conflicts.  This is because, I am convinced, the Enemy knows that he cannot succeed if we succeed in renewing the life of the Church through a recovery of our traditional liturgical rites.

Hence, the Devil is going to fuel feuds, create strife, harden hearts.  Moreover, Old Scratch and demons are the ultimate lawyers.   If they can keep us quibbling and mired in the details, we are rendered ineffective.

Recovery of our identity is just as much a matter of the heart as it is a matter of stuff we can grind about in our heads.

I could tell story after story like the one above.  I also have many tales about the zeal of good SSPX priests whom we helped out at Ecclesia Dei, and whom I personally got to know.  What a lot of people today don’t understand is what the atmosphere of those times was like, especially in certain countries.  The hostility and vindictiveness of bishops and priests in positions of power was nothing short of diabolical.  It was far worse in Europe than it was in these USA back then.  And, these days, especially in these USA, the situation is now very much improved after Summorum.

Hence, it is really hard, especially for the young who haven’t been in the trenches, newcomers, as it were, to take in all these matters, and especially for lay people, to understand these matters from within.  Some whippersnapper pundits out there should put a sock in it for a little while.

Could you, please?

The situation of the SSPX is complicated.  It is anomalous.  It is evolving.

It is the beginning of the Pentecost Novena today.  Here’s a page with novena texts HERE

For my part, I will say daily before 1 July:

Flecte quod est rigidum,
fove quod est frigidum,
rege quod est devium.

Bend what is inflexible,
warm what is chilled,
correct what has gone astray.

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ASK FATHER: Question about the impacts of Excommunication

From a  reader…

QUAERITUR:

If Father Joe Schmoe were validly ordained a bishop, and then immediately excommunicated for having been illicitly so ordained, does he actually have any of the abilities/authorities that bishops are supposed to have?  If Deacon John Smith were to someday be ordained a priest by (then) Bishop Schmoe before the excommunication were lifted, would that ordination be valid?

Under normal circumstances a man who is – without the mandate of the Holy See – consecrated as a bishop incurs the automatic excommunication reserved to the Holy See.  The automatic excommunication would doubtless be confirmed with a declaration from the Holy See if it is a public matter. Once imposed or declared, can. 1331 §2 adds further effects, including invalid exercise of acts of governance.

That bishop validly, but illicitly, ordains to Holy Orders and confirms and celebrates Mass.  In fact, an excommunicated person cannot either celebrate or receive any of the sacraments.  He cannot even go to confession unless there is danger of death.   A confessor (i.e., a priest with faculties to receive sacramental confessions) cannot absolve him.  He would have to go through the process with the proper authority to have the censure lifted before he could go to confession.   In the case of an illicitly consecrated bishop, he would have to either himself go to Rome to the Apostolic Penitentiary (or to the Pope) and work with them or else have recourse to the Apostolic Penitentiary through the intermediary of a confessor.

A man ordained a priest by that excommunicated bishop is validly ordained, but he is suspended from exercising Holy Orders.   He says Mass validly, but illicitly.   Unless there is danger of death, he does not have the faculty to absolve sins.

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ROME 26/5– Day 50: It’s THURSDAY not Sunday

On this Ascension Thursday and the Feast of St Michele Garicoïts, the Sun rose at 05:49 and it will set at 20:25.

Pushed by the ever later sunset, the Ave Maria Bell, which you know know all about (more than you wanted to know) should ring for the Curia at 20:45.

I was sent a link to news that the heat death and total stillness of the known cosmos is now projected to happen in 1078 years rather than in 101100 years.   HERE   Entropy.

That would indeed someday be the fate of the cosmos if it were not for …

The Resurrection of the Lord put death to death.  Someday He will return, the cosmos will be unmade in fire, Christ will take to Himself all things and submit them to the Father and God will be all in all.

 

 

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“Declaration of Catholic Faith addressed to Pope Leo XIV by the Superior General of the SSPX

On the website of the SSPX we find a “Declaration of Catholic Faith addressed to His Holiness Pope Leo XIV by Fr. Davide Pagliarani Superior General of the Priestly Society of Saint Pius X”

It was posted today, 14 May 2026, Feast of the Ascension of the Lord (the feast of up-rising humanity united in Christ).


Most Holy Father,

For more than fifty years, the Society of Saint Pius X has endeavoured to set before the Holy See a matter of conscience in the face of the errors that are destroying Catholic faith and morals. Regrettably, all the discussions entered into have remained without result, and none of the concerns expressed have received any truly satisfactory response.

For more than fifty years, the only solution truly considered by the Holy See has appeared to be that of canonical sanctions. To our great regret, it seems to us that canon law is thus being used, not to confirm in the Faith, but to lead away from it.

In the text that follows, the Society of Saint Pius X is glad to express to You, filially and sincerely, its devotion to the Catholic Faith, concealing nothing, either from Your Holiness or from the Universal Church.

The Society places this simple Declaration of Faith in Your hands. It seems to us to correspond to the minimum indispensable to be in communion with the Church, and to truly call ourselves Catholics and, consequently, your sons.

We have no other desire than that of living and being confirmed in the Roman Catholic Faith.

“Thus, remaining firmly rooted and established in the true Catholic Faith, strive always to be worthy ministers of the divine Sacrifice and of the Church of God, which is the Body of Christ.

For, as the Apostle says: ‘all that is not of faith is sin’,1 schismatic and outside the unity of the Church.”2

DECLARATION OF CATHOLIC FAITH

In the Name of Our Lord Jesus Christ, divine Wisdom, the Word Incarnate, Who willed one sole religion, Who rendered the Old Covenant definitively null and void, Who founded one sole Church, Who triumphed over Satan, Who conquered the world, Who remains with us until the end of time and Who shall come again to judge the living and the dead.

He, the perfect Image of the Father, the Son of God made man, was appointed the sole Redeemer and Saviour of the world through the Incarnation and the voluntary offering of the Sacrifice of the Cross. Our Lord satisfied divine justice by shedding His Most Precious Blood, and it is in that Blood that He established the New and Eternal Covenant, abolishing the Old. He is therefore the sole Mediator between God and men and the sole way to come to the Father. Only he who knows Him knows the Father.

By divine decree, the Most Holy Virgin Mary has been directly and intimately associated with the entire work of Redemption; to deny this association — in the terms received from Tradition — is therefore to alter the very notion of Redemption as willed by divine Providence.

There is only one Faith and one Church by which we may be saved. Outside the Roman Catholic Church, and without the profession of Faith that she has always taught, there is neither salvation nor remission of sins.

Consequently, every man must be a member of the Catholic Church in order to save his soul, and there is but one baptism as the means of being incorporated into her. This necessity concerns the whole of humanity without exception and embraces without distinction Christians, Jews, Muslims, pagans, and atheists.

The mandate received by the Apostles, to preach the Gospel to every man and to convert every man to the Catholic Faith, remains binding until the end of time and responds to the most absolute and most pressing necessity in the world. “He that believeth and is baptized, shall be saved: but he that believeth not shall be condemned.”3 Therefore, to renounce the fulfilment of this mandate constitutes the gravest of crimes against humanity.

The Roman Church alone possesses simultaneously the four marks that characterize the Church founded by Jesus Christ: Unity, Holiness, Catholicity, and Apostolicity.

Her unity flows essentially from the adherence of all her members to the one true Faith, faithfully preserved, taught, and handed down by the Catholic hierarchy throughout the centuries.

The denial of even a single truth of the Faith destroys faith itself and renders radically impossible all communion with the Catholic Church.

The only possible path to restoring unity among Christians of different confessions consists in the urgent and charitable appeal addressed to non-Catholics to profess the one true Faith within the one true Church.

The Catholic Church can in no way be regarded or treated on an equal footing with a false form of worship or a false church.

The Roman Pontiff, the Vicar of Christ, is the sole possessor of supreme authority over the whole Church. He alone directly confers on the other members of the Catholic hierarchy jurisdiction over souls.

“The Holy Ghost was not promised to the successors of Peter that they might make known, by His revelation, a new doctrine, but that, by His assistance, they might inviolably keep and faithfully expound the revelation transmitted by the Apostles, that is, the Deposit of the Faith.”4

To a unique Faith there corresponds a unique form of worship, the supreme, authentic, and perfect expression of that same Faith.

The Holy Mass is the perpetuation in time of the Sacrifice of the Cross, offered for many and renewed upon the altar. Although offered in an unbloody manner, the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass is essentially expiatory and propitiatory. No other form of worship offers perfect adoration. No other form of worship that is not ordered to it is pleasing to God. No other means is sufficient for the sanctification of souls.

Consequently, the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass can in no way be reduced to a mere commemoration, to a spiritual meal, to a sacred assembly celebrated by the people, to the celebration of the Paschal mystery without sacrifice, without satisfaction of divine justice, without expiation of sins, without propitiation, and without the Cross.

The help afforded to souls by the Sacraments of the Catholic Church is sufficient in every circumstance and in every age to enable the faithful to live in a state of grace.

The moral law contained in the Decalogue and perfected in the Sermon on the Mount is the only one practicable for obtaining the salvation of souls. Every other moral code — founded, for example, on respect for creation or on the rights of the human person — is radically insufficient to sanctify and save souls. In no way can it replace the one true moral law.

Following the example of St. John the Baptist, true charity obliges us to warn sinners and never to renounce the means necessary to save their souls.

He who eats the Body of Our Lord and drinks His Blood whilst in a state of sin eats and drinks his own condemnation, and no authority can alter this law contained in the teaching of St. Paul and in Tradition.

Sins of impurity that are against nature are of such gravity that they always and in every circumstance cry to God for vengeance, and are radically incompatible with every form of authentic Christian love. Such a ‘lifestyle’ can therefore in no way be recognized as a gift from God. A couple practising this vice must be helped to free themselves from it, and can in no way be blessed — formally or informally — by ministers of the Church.

The submission of institutions and nations, as such, to the authority of Our Lord Jesus Christ flows directly from the Incarnation and the Redemption. Therefore, secularism of institutions and nations constitutes an implicit denial of the divinity and universal kingship of Our Lord.

Christendom is not a mere historical phenomenon, but the only order willed by God among men.

It is not for the Church to conform herself to the world, but for the world to be transformed by the Church.

It is in this Faith and in these principles that we ask to be instructed and confirmed by Him Who has received the charism to do so. With the help of Our Lord, we would rather die than renounce them. It is in this immutable Faith that we desire to live and die, in the hope that it may give way to the direct vision of the immutable eternal Truth.

Menzingen, 14 May 2026,
on the Feast of the Ascension of Our Lord

Davide Pagliarani

1 Rom. 14:23

2 Roman Pontifical, Admonition to ordinands to the subdiaconate

3 Mark 16:16

4 Pastor Aeternus, ch. 4

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The Devil makes pots, but not lids.

There is an Italian proverb.

Il diavolo fa le pentole ma non i coperchi.

The Devil makes pots, but not lids.

The truth will out. In the face of lies, deceit and acts of malice, truth and justice will prevail. The Devil’s pot of plots bubbles away, but because there is no cover, sooner or later everyone will see what the Enemy is cooking up.

Read Diane Montagna’s piece about the “testimony” section of the infamous, scandalous “Synod Report”. HERE.

I would embed it, but then I would have to look at a certain face when I come here to work for a couple of days. You too.

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WDTPRS: Ascension Thursday – Hope informs our trials

Let’s have a look at the Collect for the Mass of the Lord’s Ascension… on this THURSDAY.

COLLECT – (1962MR):

Concede, quaesumus, omnipotens Deus:
ut, qui hodierna die Unigenitum tuum Redemptorem nostrum
ad caelos ascendisse credimus;
ipsi quoque mente in caelestibus habitemus.

Our hard working Lewis & Short Dictionary can have a little rest today, I think.  There is nothing especially noteworthy in the vocabulary.  Let us therefore move on to a straight-forward…

LITERAL TRANSLATION:
Grant, we beseech You, Almighty God,
that we, who believe Your Only Begotten Son our Redeemer
to have ascended on this day to heaven,
may ourselves also dwell in mind amongst heavenly things.

Bl. Abbot Columba Marmion, OSB (+1923), wrote in Christ in His Mysteries (US HERE – UK HERE) that “of all the feasts of Our Lord … the Ascension is the greatest, because it is the supreme glorification of Christ Jesus.”

Then, speaking about the very Collect we are looking at today, Bl. Columba says,

“This prayer first of all testifies to our faith in the mystery in recalling the title ‘Only-begotten Son’ and ‘Redeemer’, given to Jesus, the Church shows forth the reasons for the celestial exaltation of her Bridegroom;—she finally denotes the grace therein contained for our souls. … The mystery of Jesus Christ’s Ascension is represented to us in a manner suitable to our nature: we contemplate the Sacred Humanity rising from the earth and ascending visibly towards the heavens.”

Of course it is not only Christ’s humanity but our humanity that ascended into heaven.

We Catholics know that what was not assumed, was not redeemed (St. Gregory of Nazianzus).  Our humanity, body and soul, was taken by the Son into an unbreakable bond with His divinity. When Christ rose from the tomb, our humanity rose in Him.

When He ascended to heaven, so also did we.

In Christ our humanity now sits at the Father’s right hand.

His presence there is our great promise and hope.  It is already fulfilled, but not yet in its fullness.  That hope informs our trials in this life.

Preaching on 1 June 444 St. Pope Leo I “the Great” said,

“Truly it was a great and indescribable source of rejoicing when, in the sight of the heavenly multitudes, the nature of our human race ascended over the dignity of all heavenly creatures, to pass the angelic orders and to be raised beyond the heights of archangels. In its ascension it did not stop at any other height until this same nature was received at the seat of the eternal Father, to be associated on the throne of the glory of that One to whose nature it was joined in the Son.”

Leo says in another sermon of 17 May 445,

“This Faith, reinforced by the Ascension of the Lord and strengthened by the gift of the Holy Spirit, has not been terrified by chains, by prison, by exile, by hunger, by fire, by the mangling of wild beasts, nor by sharp suffering from the cruelty of persecutors.  Throughout the world, not only men but also women, not just immature boys but also tender virgins, have struggled on behalf of this Faith even to the shedding of their blood.  This Faith has cast out demons, driven away sicknesses, and raised the dead.”

The knowledge that our humanity is now enjoying heaven can work wonders for us in the hour of need. Keep this in mind in time of trial.

When the Lord ascended to heaven He did not lose touch with us His people in this vale of tears.  St. Augustine in s. 341 talks about Christ’s presence in every word of Scripture as Word equal to the Father; or as the mediator in the flesh dwelling in our midst; or Christ as the Head and Body together as in a spousal relationship, Christ and His Church intimately bound.

This means that Christ is not insensible to our sufferings.  Our faith in this unbreakable bond of Head and Body calls us to be clean and worthy of this saving intimacy.

Allow me to get a little mystical for moment.

Another thing that this means is that Christ, as High Priest, is now at the heavenly altar eternally offering His Sacrifice to the Father.  This means that His High priestly action is in eternity and not just in points of historical, past time.

The immense implication of all of this is that, by having our High Priest in heaven and eternity, what He does is still present to us.  All the mystery of the Passion and Resurrection is still available to us, not bound by chronology or by geographical location.

The High Priest in Heaven now guarantees that we can have many Masses at many altars at the same time, many Communions, many people encountering the Mystery through the time that hurtles toward the summation of all things when Christ will take all things to present them to the Father so that God will be all in all.

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Ascension Thursday and Lordly Feet

There are many images of the Lord’s Ascension to heaven through history, and rightly so.  This is probably the greatest of all the Feasts of the Lord and for our own humanity.  Imagine!  Our humanity is seated – RIGHT NOW  – at the right hand of the Father.

The depictions I like the most are the medieval illustrations which show the Apostles, often with Mary, looking upward as a pair of lordly Feet at all that remains to be seen.

The Ascension of Christ, historiated initial ‘C’, Italy, 15C (State Library of Victoria, RARES 096 IL I)

Who better to turn to for some insight into this than Ratzinger?

From the site Ignatius Insight, providing an excerpt from “The Ascension: The Beginning of a New Nearness,” from Joseph Ratzinger’s Images of Hope: Meditations on Major Feasts (Ignatius Press, 2006 – UK HERE).  My emphases and comments:

You are surely familiar with all those precious, naïve images in which only the feet of Jesus are visible, sticking out of the cloud, at the heads of the apostles. The cloud, for its part, is a dark circle on the perimeter; on the inside, however, blazing light. It occurs to me that precisely in the apparent naïveté of this representation something very deep comes into view. All we see of Christ in the time of history are his feet and the cloud. His feet—what are they?

We are reminded, first of all, of a peculiar sentence from the Resurrection account in Matthew’s Gospel, where it is said that the women held onto the feet of the Risen Lord and worshipped him. As the Risen One, he towers over earthly proportions. We can still only touch his feet; and we touch them in adoration. Here we could reflect that we come as worshippers, following his trail, close to his footsteps. Praying, we go to him; praying, we touch him, even if in this world, so to speak, always only from below, only from afar, always only on the trail of his earthly steps. At the same time it becomes clear that we do not find the footprints of Christ when we look only below, when we measure only footprints and want to subsume faith in the obvious. The Lord is movement toward above, and only in moving ourselves, in looking up and ascending, do we recognize him.

When we read the Church Fathers something important is added. The correct ascent of man occurs precisely where he learns, in humbly turning toward his neighbor, to bow very deeply, down to his feet, down to the gesture of the washing of feet. It is precisely humility, which can bow low, that carries man upward. This is the dynamic of ascent that the feast of the Ascension wants to teach us.

Let’s have a few more, animi caussa!

From the Parisian Missal

With footprints on his blasting off pad.

And there is the more, “It’s a bird!  It’s plane!” style.

Note the reactions…

Getting a helping hand.  Christ is carrying a scroll.  What could be written on it?  It must mean something.

Here’s 15th c. Flemish version where we see Christ getting to the right hand of the Father.  Nice!

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ROME 26/5– Day 49: short

Sunrise in Rome was at 5:50 and sunset will be at 20:24.

The Ave Maria is in the 20:45 cycle.

It is the traditional Feast of St. Robert Bellarmine and the Feast of the Dedication of Santa Maria “ad Martyres” (the Pantheon) in 609.

Also, this is the Vigil of the Ascension of the Lord.

‘Tis also the Feast of Our Lady of Fatima.

Terrific news.

Rome trivia.

 

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13 May: Statement by Prefect for the Doctrine of the Faith about the 1 July SSPX consecration of bishops. Fr. Z makes a plea.

In today’s Bollettino there is “Declaration” from the one named as Prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Statement by His Eminence Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, Prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, 13.05.2026

Regarding the Priestly Society of Saint Pius X, we reiterate what has already been communicated. The episcopal ordinations announced by the Priestly Society of Saint Pius X do not have the corresponding pontifical mandate. This gesture will constitute “a schismatic act” (John Paul II, Ecclesia Dei, n. 3), and “formal adherence to the schism constitutes a grave offense against God and entails the excommunication established by Church law” (ibid., 5c; cf. Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, Explanatory Note, August 24, 1996).

The Holy Father continues in his prayers to ask the Holy Spirit to enlighten the leaders of the Priestly Society of Saint Pius X so that they retrace their steps regarding the very serious decision they have taken.

From the Vatican, May 13, 2026

A couple of points of Holy Writ pop into my mind.  But here is one we recently heard in church on Sunday from the Letter of James 1:

22 But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves. 23 For if any one is a hearer of the word and not a doer, he is like a man who observes his natural face in a mirror; 24 for he observes himself and goes away and at once forgets what he was like. 25 But he who looks into the perfect law, the law of liberty, and perseveres, being no hearer that forgets but a doer that acts, he shall be blessed in his doing.

26 If any one thinks he is religious, and does not bridle his tongue but deceives his heart, this man’s religion is vain. 27 Religion that is pure and undefiled before God and the Father is this: to visit orphans and widows in their affliction, and to keep oneself unstained from the world.

The “doer” goes to visit the orphans and widows.

As for “unstained”… what is that Synod Report but precisely a “stain”, which calls millennially settled moral teaching “emerging”, which seeks to wipe out the entirety of what the Church has held “everywhere, always, and by all”.

The 2nd Sunday after Easter in the Vetus Ordo is “Good Shepherd Sunday” and our minds go to John 10 but also the parable of the lost sheep in Matthew 18 and Luke 15.  The shepherd goes to the sheep.   In John 10 the shepherd knows his sheep.

Were Leo to call the leadership of the SSPX to come to meet with him, they would come, though perhaps the pattern might be closer to the Biblical ideal were he to extend himself to them.

In this time of the greatest novena from Ascension to Pentecost, we can ask the Holy Spirit concretely in this case of the Holy Father and the leadership of the SSPX to do what we pray for by singing the Pentecost Sequence:

Flecte quod est rigidum,
fove quod est frigidum,
rege quod est devium.

Bend what is inflexible,
warm what is chilled,
correct what has gone astray.

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