Prayer for the SSPX and Leo

On this last day of the month dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Our Lord, day before the Feast of the Most Precious Blood, I offer this petition to the Most Holy Trinity.

Mindful that the SSPX church in Paris, Saint Nicholas du Chardonnay is the seat of Our Lady Queen of the Clergy, I ask Our Lady to place her protective mantle over her sons, Leo and all the priestly members of the SSPX.

I ask our Lord, with His High-Priestly Heart wide open, to pour down His Most Precious Blood on Leo and the priests of the Fraternity.

May Christ’s Precious Blood and our Lady’s mantle purge and repel every demonic influence, any and all spirits of discord and pride.

Let the work of the Holy Spirit soften what is hard and move what is stubborn in their hearts and minds.

May the Holy Apostle Martyrs, Sts. Peter and Paul, Vicar of Christ and the Apostle of the Gentiles, petition from the Almighty the gift of abundant courage for both Leo and the Fraternity in this critical moment, courage to be generous, courage to postpone.

I raise this prayer with confidence to the Most Holy Trinity, God Three and One in the Most Holy Name of Jesus.

God the Father, have mercy on us.
God the Son, have mercy on us.
God the Holy Spirit, mercy on us.
Mary, Queen of the Clergy, pray for us.
Sts. Peter and Paul, pray for us.

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Leo wrote to the SSPX. The SSPX wrote back. Fr. Pagliarani’s response.

Leo XIV wrote an impassioned letter to the SSPX. I posted it HERE. Leo wrote with a plea not to go forward. He hinted at dialogue.   NB: I turned off comments here and posted this as an update also with Leo’s letter to the SSPX, which seemed appropriate.  Discussion can continue there.


Letter from the Superior General in Response to His Holiness Pope Leo XIV

The Superior General
To His Holiness
Pope Leo XIV

Ecône, 30 June 2026

Most Holy Father,

Thank you very much for the letter that Your Holiness so kindly addressed to me.

I have been deeply touched by Your paternal solicitude.

For a long time, I had hoped to have the opportunity of meeting You in person, in order to express to You directly our sincere desire to serve the Church. Unfortunately, that opportunity has not presented itself.

I ask only that You consider the sincerity of this intention, which is in no way feigned. Paradoxically, in the present circumstances, we believe it to be our very duty to do everything possible to mend Christ’s seamless garment, torn by forces and pressures incompatible with a truly Catholic spirit. I ask only that You consider the authenticity of this intention before making a decision concerning the Society of Saint Pius X. It is not yet too late.

Far be it from us to separate ourselves from the Roman Church. We desire, on the contrary, to serve her by means that are extraordinary, as one would assist a mother in distress who requires particular help, even if such help is not understood by everyone. Yet I am certain that the Holy Father could understand it.

The Holy See has shown itself capable of understanding very complex situations and of allowing time for discernment.

May I therefore filially ask Your Holiness to take the time necessary for that discernment.

If my own words are not sufficient, I would ask You to reflect upon two very simple facts. First, in 1988 the Society was already declared schismatic, for reasons and in circumstances entirely analogous to those of today. Yet, after so many years, we are speaking together as a father and his son. Your Holiness is paternally urging me to avoid a schism which, theoretically, has already taken place. Does not Your very attitude—whose paternal concern I deeply appreciate—constitute proof that the Society is neither schismatic nor hostile to the Church?

Secondly, some years ago, the Holy See entrusted two bishops of the Church with the task of engaging in dialogue with the Society of Saint Pius X: Bishop Vitus Huonder, then Bishop of Chur, now deceased, and Bishop Athanasius Schneider, Auxiliary Bishop of Astana. Both, after taking the necessary time for discernment, recognised the profoundly Catholic spirit of the Society and bore public witness to it.

Above all, however, I venture to address Your Holiness in the name of the thousands of souls who have rediscovered the Catholic faith and the practice of religion through the apostolate of the Society. This is a fact of which Your predecessors themselves took note. These souls have but one desire: to attain salvation through this instrument which Divine Providence has placed at their disposal. They have suffered, and they are sincere. I am confident that Your paternal heart as universal Shepherd will be moved by this very particular situation. One day, all the difficulties between the Holy See and the Society will be resolved. A gesture of understanding on Your part, far from harming unity, could only manifest before the world and before all Christians Your concern for unity and Your goodness as a father.

I leave all this to Your consideration. I renew my prayers for Your Holiness.

For a long time, even before Your election, I have been praying to Saint Rita for the present situation. I saw in the election of an Augustinian Pope a sign of hope. I am certain that the Saint will intercede. It is never too late.

Please give us Your blessing.

I take this opportunity to remain, with the deepest devotion in Our Lord,

Don Davide Pagliarani

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Daily Rome Shot 1653: Procession with the chains of St. Paul

Yesterday there was a procession at St. Paul’s outside the walls with the chain that held St. Paul in his captivity.

The reliquary was borne by members of the Archconfraternity of the Most Holy Trinity of the Pilgrims and Convalescents, which St. Philip Neri founded at The Parish™.  They were specifically requested to participate.  Their reputation grows.

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance, utilities, groceries, and now also my late mother’s place.  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.  

 

A few days ago, I posted a Mom’s Stuff Page. You readers know a LOT about a LOT. Hence, I want to tap your knowledge. And if you see something you want, let me know. Since then, two people have reached out interested to purchase something in the photos. I’ll post more photos soon. I’ll have to move nimbly with this process and I really have no idea what I am doing. I’ve gotten some good advice, however. The last piece of hard news was that the inspector said the roof needs to be replaced on my mom’s house. Please keep me in your prayers and please say a prayer for my late mother as well, 11th hour convert, mother of a priest.

Black to move. Mate in … ?

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

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ASK FATHER: Frequency of confession and confession of venial sins

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

During confession recently the priest told me I don’t have to confess venial sins, because receiving the Eucharist takes them away. He also said I don’t have to go to confession more than once a month (it was two weeks since my last confession). Are these things true? I’d like to hear your perspective on this. Thank you.

Venial sins are sins and they are valid matter for the Sacrament of Penance. The priest is correct in saying that venial sins can be forgiven through reception of Communion in the state of grace, along with other means as well.

Regarding the priest’s “advice” about going “more than once a month… that seems to me to be a bit imprudent to tell a penitent. People should go to confession as often as they need to go.

That said, I don’t know you and I don’t know that priest. That priest isn’t a mind reader and neither am I.

It may be that he sensed in you – whom I do not know at all – a whiff of scrupulosity because you confessed venial sins. Again, I don’t know.

Strictly speaking, you are not obliged to confess all or any venial sins, although they may be confessed. Sometimes it is salutary to go to confession even when you are not aware of a mortal sin, because one of the effects of the sacrament is to strengthen you in regard to temptations. In a case like that, venial sins are valid matter for confession. In such a case, one might say to the priest that you desire the strengthening of the sacrament against some temptation.

Since we are on the topic, and I mentioned “other means as well”, we could review ways in which venial sins can be forgiven. I don’t intend this to be completely exhaustive.

Venial sins are forgiven by any grace-moved act that turns the soul back toward God and away, at least implicitly, from the disorder of the sin. St. Thomas Aquinas’ key principle is that venial sin does not destroy sanctifying grace, as mortal sin does. Instead, it “clogs” or hinders the soul’s movement toward God. Therefore, it is removed by a movement of grace or charity, with at least virtual displeasure for sin. It need not involve explicit recollection of each venial sin.

The principal means by which venial sins are forgiven are these:

1. Sacramental confession. Venial sins may be confessed validly and profitably, though they are not required matter for confession as mortal sins are. The Council of Trent says venial sins “may be rightly and profitably” declared in confession, yet may be omitted without guilt and “can be expiated by many other remedies.”

2. Holy Communion, as the priest in question said. The Eucharist remits venial sins in those properly disposed. Trent calls it an “antidote” by which we are freed from “daily faults” and preserved from mortal sins. The Roman Catechism teaches that the Eucharist remits “lighter sins, commonly called venial,” though this presumes no obstinate attachment or prevailing delight in those sins.

3. All sacraments received fruitfully. Since the sacraments confer grace, St. Thomas says that “by all the sacraments of the New Law without exception” venial sins are remitted, insofar as grace is conferred and the soul is moved toward God.

4. Acts of contrition, charity, and penance. An act of contrition, an act of love of God, sincere sorrow, fervent prayer, or any real movement of charity can remit venial sin. St. Thomas Aquinas says no fresh infusion of habitual grace is required. A movement proceeding from grace is sufficient.

5. The Confiteor, striking the breast, and the Our Father. St. Thomas explicitly lists general confession, the beating of the breast, and the Lord’s Prayer, especially because in the Our Father we ask, “Forgive us our trespasses.”

6. Sacramentals and reverent devotional acts. The use of Holy Water, receiving episcopal blessings, prayers said in a dedicated church, and similar sacramentals remit venial sins, not mechanically, but insofar as they stir reverence, penance, and charity.

7. Fasting, prayer, almsgiving, works of mercy, reconciliation, and bearing suffering. These are the traditional penitential works and works of mercy. The Roman Catechism, following Scripture and the Fathers, names fasting, prayer, and almsgiving as principal forms of penance, and also mentions reconciliation with one’s neighbor, tears of repentance, charity, reading Scripture, reciting the Roman Breviary or Liturgy of the Hours, and sincere worship as contributing to forgiveness.

A couple points. First, venial sins are not forgiven while the will remains attached to them. Second, the guilt of venial sin may be remitted without all the temporal punishment being remitted. Aquinas makes this distinction explicitly. These acts remove guilt, but the remission of punishment depends on the fervor of charity aroused.

In sum, venial sins are forgiven by confession, Holy Communion, fruitful reception of the sacraments, acts of contrition and charity, the Our Father, penitential works, and sacramentals, provided there is at least implicit repentance and no actual attachment to the sin.

Everyone…

GO TO CONFESSION!

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Leo XIV has written to the SSPX: “I plead with you and ask you with all my heart: please turn back!”

Leo XIV has written to the SSPX.

UPDATE: Fr. Pagliarani’s response to Leo HERE


 

LETTER OF POPE LEO XIV
TO THE SUPERIOR GENERAL
OF THE PRIESTLY FRATERNITY OF SAINT PIUS X

___________________________________

To The Reverend
Davide Pagliarani
Superior General
of the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X

With a paternal heart, and aware of the responsibility entrusted to me by the Lord as the Successor of the Apostle Peter, I address you and, through you, the bishops, priests, seminarians and faithful connected to the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Pius X.

The Church recognizes the devotion to liturgical life, commitment to priestly formation, apostolic zeal and desire for fidelity to Tradition that characterize many people and communities connected to your Fraternity. This has motivated the attentive and generous attitude that my Predecessors have consistently shown to you.

In this spirit, and filled with Christian affection, I plead with you and ask you with all my heart: please turn back! I urge you to consider carefully the spiritual good of the faithful, because the schismatic act you are about to undertake would deprive them of the licit and, in some cases, even valid reception of the Sacraments, which they love and seek for their sanctification.

The Church is open to a path of dialogue and understanding that the Holy Spirit can make possible and fruitful.

I pray for you, because to tear the seamless garment of Christ is a sin of extreme gravity. May the Lord enlighten your consciences and awaken your hearts. With a sorrowful yet hopeful heart, I feel it is my duty, through the authority received from Christ, to ask you to desist from your intended act. I entrust these intentions to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, Mother of Good Counsel.

From the Vatican, 29 June 2026

Solemnity of the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul

LEO PP. XIV


UPDATE:


Letter from the Superior General in Response to His Holiness Pope Leo XIV

The Superior General
To His Holiness
Pope Leo XIV

Ecône, 30 June 2026

Most Holy Father,

Thank you very much for the letter that Your Holiness so kindly addressed to me.

I have been deeply touched by Your paternal solicitude.

For a long time, I had hoped to have the opportunity of meeting You in person, in order to express to You directly our sincere desire to serve the Church. Unfortunately, that opportunity has not presented itself.

I ask only that You consider the sincerity of this intention, which is in no way feigned. Paradoxically, in the present circumstances, we believe it to be our very duty to do everything possible to mend Christ’s seamless garment, torn by forces and pressures incompatible with a truly Catholic spirit. I ask only that You consider the authenticity of this intention before making a decision concerning the Society of Saint Pius X. It is not yet too late.

Far be it from us to separate ourselves from the Roman Church. We desire, on the contrary, to serve her by means that are extraordinary, as one would assist a mother in distress who requires particular help, even if such help is not understood by everyone. Yet I am certain that the Holy Father could understand it.

The Holy See has shown itself capable of understanding very complex situations and of allowing time for discernment.

May I therefore filially ask Your Holiness to take the time necessary for that discernment.

If my own words are not sufficient, I would ask You to reflect upon two very simple facts. First, in 1988 the Society was already declared schismatic, for reasons and in circumstances entirely analogous to those of today. Yet, after so many years, we are speaking together as a father and his son. Your Holiness is paternally urging me to avoid a schism which, theoretically, has already taken place. Does not Your very attitude—whose paternal concern I deeply appreciate—constitute proof that the Society is neither schismatic nor hostile to the Church?

Secondly, some years ago, the Holy See entrusted two bishops of the Church with the task of engaging in dialogue with the Society of Saint Pius X: Bishop Vitus Huonder, then Bishop of Chur, now deceased, and Bishop Athanasius Schneider, Auxiliary Bishop of Astana. Both, after taking the necessary time for discernment, recognised the profoundly Catholic spirit of the Society and bore public witness to it.

Above all, however, I venture to address Your Holiness in the name of the thousands of souls who have rediscovered the Catholic faith and the practice of religion through the apostolate of the Society. This is a fact of which Your predecessors themselves took note. These souls have but one desire: to attain salvation through this instrument which Divine Providence has placed at their disposal. They have suffered, and they are sincere. I am confident that Your paternal heart as universal Shepherd will be moved by this very particular situation. One day, all the difficulties between the Holy See and the Society will be resolved. A gesture of understanding on Your part, far from harming unity, could only manifest before the world and before all Christians Your concern for unity and Your goodness as a father.

I leave all this to Your consideration. I renew my prayers for Your Holiness.

For a long time, even before Your election, I have been praying to Saint Rita for the present situation. I saw in the election of an Augustinian Pope a sign of hope. I am certain that the Saint will intercede. It is never too late.

Please give us Your blessing.

I take this opportunity to remain, with the deepest devotion in Our Lord,

Don Davide Pagliarani

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Daily Rome Shot 1652: tiara

From St. Peter’s Basilica from The World’s Best Sacristan™.

Here is something interesting at The Parish™.  For extra credit, who can explain this?

White mates in 4.

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

 

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ASK FATHER: If God love us infinitely why does He not speak to us directly?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

At another Catholic site I saw this question and I was wondering how you would answer it. How can it be said that God loves us infinitely when He never speaks to us directly or shows Himself to us directly?

Okay, the pressure is on! Firstly, I don’t want to compete with anyone in questions like this, because they are hard and we can approach them in differing ways, just as we can view the twinkle of a finely cut gem from varying angles.

Let’s break this down.

“How can it be said…”.

It can be said because in the first place God’s love is considered by what God is, not by the degree to which we presently feel or perceive Him.

God does not “have” love as a passing affection. God is love: Deus caritas est (1 John 4:8).

God’s act of loving is identical with His own infinite being.

There is a philosophical adage that guides us here: that which is received, is received in the manner of the one receiving… quidquid recipitur in modo recipientis recipitur. When God loves a creature, the creature receives that infinite love in a finite way, according to its finite capacity. But the divine act from which it comes is not finite. Analogy: a cup receives only a cupful from the ocean, but the ocean is not thereby reduced to a cup.

Now we come to the meat of the question, probably the motive behind the question.

“…when He never speaks to us directly or shows Himself to us directly?”

There is longing in this question, which we should all have.

For the sake of brevity, we leave apart special, rare instances when God seems directly to communicate in clear terms with one of us, such as seems to have been the case with, for example, St. Margaret Mary.   Some people experience powerful interior locutions, etc.   In the normal course of the developing spiritual life, God “speaks” to us apophatically in silences and seeming distance, in mental prayer, by mediation, etc.

Why does infinite love come to us so often through silence, distance, obscurity, and mediation?

God will not overwhelm us with the unveiled vision of His essence. Even in the Transfiguration Christ did not reveal His divinity to Peter, John and James: He revealed only a tiny bit of His divinity.  Scripture gives the reason: “Man shall not see me and live” (Exodus 33:20). The direct vision of God belongs to glory, to the Beatific Vision.  Even then, the vision of God will be infinitely beyond our grasp.

In this life, however, we are strangers and sojourners, pilgrim soldiers. We know God through faith, grace, sacraments, Scripture, conscience, providence, transcendentals like beauty, along with suffering, and charity. These are mediated forms, but mediation does not make love unreal.  A mother’s love may be signaled, mediated through the food she prepares, her sacrifices, giving correction, in letters during absences, and the self-giving labor of years. The child may not always feel loved, yet the love may be most real precisely where it is least dramatic.

God’s hiddenness preserves the conditions of faith and love.  There is an old saying in theater: everything is nothing.  That is, if the entire set is red and costumes are red without contrasts, if the music is always fortissimo and relentless, people simply tune out.  If God were constantly manifest with irresistible clarity, obedience might become compulsion, repentance panic, worship self-preservation. He gives enough light to seek Him, enough obscurity to make seeking a free act. “We walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Corinthians 5:7).  We continue to peer through that “dark glass”, like Moses who peered through the crack in the rock hoping to see God pass.

Finally, the Christian answers that God has in fact spoken and shown Himself directly, above all in Christ.

“In many and various ways God spoke of old to our fathers by the prophets; but in these last days he has spoken to us by a Son” (Hebrews 1:1–2). And again: “No one has ever seen God; the only Son… he has made him known” (John 1:18). The Incarnation is God’s direct self-disclosure accommodated to human weakness.

I think it was St. Hilary of Poitier who describes the eternal Son as the perfect invisible image of the invisible Father and describes the incarnate Son as the perfect visible image of the invisible Father.  In all that Christ said and did, He reveals God, shows us God.

The Christian answer is the Cross. “God shows his love for us in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8).

Infinite love is not demonstrated chiefly by private voices or visible apparitions. It is proven by the Son of God giving Himself for us, then drawing us toward the vision where silence will end and …

“We shall see him as he is” (1 John 3:2).

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes – 4th Sunday after Pentecost (N.O.: 12th Ordinary) 2026

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 5th Sunday after Pentecost in the Vetus Ordo (13th Ordinary Sunday in the Novus Ordo)?

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.  I wrote about the 2nd Sunday after Pentecost but related it to the great feasts nearby.

[…]

St. Augustine, speaking from the deepest restlessness of the human condition, confessed: “quia fecisti nos ad te et inquietum est cor nostrum, donec requiescat in te … for Thou hast made us for Thyself, and our heart is restless until it rests in Thee” (conf I, 1, 1). The Collect’s desiderium is that restlessness baptized, purified, and directed toward the invisible goods. The Christmas Preface gives the same motion: “ut dum visibiliter Deum cognoscimus, per hunc in invisibilem amorem rapiamur … so that, while we know God visibly, through Him we may be snatched up into invisible love.” Through the Incarnate Word, visible to the eyes of men, we are caught up to invisibilia. Love becomes the eye. Richard of Saint Victor, channeling an Augustinian impluse, says: “amor oculus est, et amare videre est … love is the eye, and to love is to see” (Tractatus de gradibus caritatis, PL 196, 1203). The one who loves God begins to see the neighbor as God sees him, even when the neighbor wounds, vexes, slanders, or fears us.

[…]

 

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Daily Rome Shot 1651: MAMBO!

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance, utilities, groceries, and now also my late mother’s place (which needs a roof).  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.  

This is too good not to share.  As it turns out I’ve seen almost all of these paintings.  More about the title, below.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Hello, friend.
What joy, you grow dizzy with emotion.
Your gaze gives us life,
it sets our hearts on fire.

So many boring months
on the museum wall.
But you come, and I revive;
in your pulse, I see myself.

Mambo of the oil paint,
mambo of color,
art breathes
through your great love.

Mambo of the canvas,
heavenly rhythm.
Thank you for your Stendhal syndrome.

Whether I weep, whether I sweat,
you are dying for my brushstroke.
Come out of your silent fainting spell;
we send you an embrace.

The painter gave us form,
color, and structure.
But you break the rule.
You give life to the painting.

Mambo of the oil paint,
mambo of color.
Art breathes
through your great love.

Mambo of the canvas,
heavenly rhythm.
Thank you for your Stendhal syndrome.

If you grow dizzy, dance.
If you are overcome with emotion, rejoice.
For the painting is alive,
and life is a rose.

Mambo of the oil paint,
mambo of the oil paint,
mambo of color.

It breathes
through your great love.

Mambo of the canvas,
heavenly rhythm.
Thank you for your Stendhal syndrome.

Thank you, friend.
Painting.

Hola, amigo.
Qué alegría te mareas de emoción.
Tu mirada nos da vida,
nos enciende el corazón.

Tantos meses aburridos
en la pared del museo.
Pero vienes y revivo,
con tu pulso yo me veo.

Mambo del oreo,
mambo de color,
el arte respira
por tu gran amor.

Mambo de lienzo,
ritmo celestial.
Gracias por tu síndrome deendan.

Que si lloro, que si sudo,
tú te mueres por mi trazo.
Sal de tu desmayo mudo,
te mandamos un abrazo.

El pintor nos dio la forma,
el color y la estructura.
Pero tú rompes la norma.
Tú das vida la pintura.

Mambo del doreo,
mambo del color.
El te respira
por tu gran amor.

Mambo el lienzo,
ritmo celestial.
Gracias por tus sídrome desenda.

Si te baleas, baila.
Si te emocionarás, goza.
Que la pintura está viva
y la vida es una rosa.

Mambo del odio,
mambo del odio,
mambo del color.

De respirar
por tu gran amor.

Mambo de lienzo,
ritmo celestial.
Gracias por tus extern.

Gracias, amigo.
Pintura.

The “Stendahl” thing.  What’s up with that?   Stendahl (+1842) is best known for his books The Charterhouse of Parma and, especially, The Red and the Black.  Every seminarian and every young priest should read The Red and the Black.

I think the video is referring to something Stendahl experienced in Florence in the Church of Santa Croce.  He related in a book of travels, a common genre then:

As I emerged from the porch of Santa Croce, I was seized with a fierce palpitation of the heart (that same symptom which, in Berlin, is referred to as an attack of the nerves); the well-spring of life was dried up within me, and I walked in constant fear of falling to the ground.

US HERE – UK HERE

Every seminarian and every young priest should read this book.

Stendahl was in Rome.   The photo at the top shows where he stayed, now the prestigious Hotel della Minerva, recently redone inside… wow.  On the street, you can see the inscription:

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.

 

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WDTPRS – Collect of the 13th Ordinary Sunday (Novus Ordo): the sticky goo of error and the freeing splendor of the truth. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

At work in the Collect for the 13th Sunday of Ordinary Time are themes of divine adoption, the liberation of the children of God, the peril of error, and the splendor of Truth.

Here is the Collect:

Deus, qui, per adoptionem gratiae,
lucis nos esse filios voluisti,
praesta, quaesumus,
ut errorum non involvamur tenebris,
sed in splendore veritatis semper maneamus conspicui.

A LITERAL VERSION:

O God, who willed us, through the adoption of grace,
to be children of light,
grant, we beg,
that we may not be wrapped up in the shadows of errors,
but that we may remain always conspicuous in the splendor of truth.

CURRENT ICEL, 2012:

O God, who through the grace of adoption chose us to be children of light, grant, we pray, that we may not be wrapped in the darkness of error but always be seen to stand in the bright light of truth.

This is a beautiful prayer. It is also compact. Collects are like that. They are polished theological jewels, miniature sermons.  This one was new for the Novus Ordo, but it seems to have a root in the Sacramentarium Bergomense (11th c.).  I couldn’t find it.

Let’s drill into the Latin.

Deus, qui… voluisti… praesta…

Classic Collect structure. First, God is addressed, then a relative clause recalls what God has done, or what God has willed. Then comes the petition. In other words, we begin with God not with ourselves. We petition because God has already acted.

Per adoptionem gratiae is a dense phrase. The genitive gratiae can be heard as adoption brought about by grace, belonging to the order of grace, impossible by nature alone. We are sons in the Son. We are not “children of light” by optimism, therapeutic affirmation, or niceness. We are such by grace.

Lucis nos esse filios voluisti. Notice the order. Lucis comes before filios. Literally, “of light children.” The Latin places “light” forward. Light is the atmosphere of the whole petition. The prayer begins with light and ends with splendor. Between those two bright poles lurk the tenebrae errorum, the shadows of errors.

There is an architecture here: lucis… tenebris… splendore. Light, darkness, splendor. The Collect moves in a threefold visual drama. First, God’s will: we are made children of light. Second, the danger: we can be enveloped in the darkness of errors. Third, the desired state: we remain visible, shining, conspicuous in the splendor of truth.

The phrase errorum… tenebris is strong. That tenebris is plural. Plural can often be rendered thought of as a singular notion, but literally it is “darknesses, shadows, glooms”. The plural errorum is also important. This error is not merely a single intellectual mistake, like getting the date of Lepanto wrong. Errors spread, multiply. It is as if they link arms in the service of darkness. One error about God leads to another about man, which leads to another about sin, which leads to another about freedom, which leads to another about the body, marriage, worship, priesthood, death, judgment, heaven, hell. Soon the poor errant soul is not merely mistaken: he is wrapped up like a mummy.

That brings us to involvamur. From involvo, it means “to roll in, wrap up, envelop, cover, surround, entangle”.  I mentioned a mummy.  Think of a man trapped in a net, or a fog bound traveler who no longer discerns road, ditch, or cliff. The verb is passive: non involvamur, “may we not be enveloped.” Error does something to us. It’s not neutral. It acts on the mind and will, and muffles perception. It has the subtle power of making slavery feel like freedom.

At the other end is the splendid conspicui. From conspicio, “to look at, behold, perceive,” conspicuus means “visible, manifest, striking, distinguished, remarkable”. It is opposed to the hidden, the concealed, the furtive, the occult. The Christian is not supposed to be a moral smudge, a grey blur whose Baptism makes no visible, outward difference. The Christian, by grace, is to be conspicuus, seen in the light, not of our own accord but rather by splendor.  The prayer says in splendore veritatis. The sphere in which we are visible is the splendor of truth. Truth has splendor. Being the divine attribute, Truth has radiance. Truth is active because Truth is finally personal: Ego sum via et veritas et vita (John 14:6).

This Sunday’s Collect hums with St. Paul’s “children of light” (Ephesians 5:8, and Galatians 4:5, Romans 8:1-15). The moral implication is unavoidable. Adopted sons must live like sons. Children of light must not crawl back into the cellar.

St. Augustine, preaching on the Song of Songs, links noonday brightness with truth and charity:

Annuntia, inquit, mihi, ubi pascis, ubi cubas in meridie, in splendore veritatis, in fervore caritatis…. Tell me, he says, where you pasture, where you lie down at noon, in the splendor of truth, in the fervor of charity.” (s. 295, 5.5).

There it is: splendor veritatis with fervor caritatis … the light of truth and the fervor of charity belong together.

Centuries later St. Bonaventure (+1274) developed the same spiritual grammar:

Splendor veritatis animam illuminat, reformat et Deo assimilat; fervor caritatis animam perficit, vivificat et Deo iungit… The splendor of truth illuminates the soul, reforms it and assimilates it to God; the fervor of charity perfects the soul, vivifies and joins it to God” (Breviloquium V)

That is a retreat in one sentence. Truth first illuminates and then it reforms, and then it assimilates to God. Charity perfects and vivifies. Then it joins to God. This is the opposite of the zombie-state of habitual self-deception. Grace makes the soul vivid, alert, God-facing, flame-bearing, light shedding.

The phrase splendor veritatis should ring a bell. Pope St. John Paul II’s 1993 encyclical Veritatis splendor took aim at dangerous tendencies in moral theology, especially those which detached freedom from truth, conscience from law, and choice from the objective moral order. The last, almost 15 years saw a systematic attack from those who ought to know and act better precisely against that encyclical.  They sought to erode and then erase it through appeals to “lived experience” and “current magisterium” and historicism, that is, changes in context, like the passing of time, means that ideas that were believed in one historical period don’t hold the same truth as they do today.  As the devious Card. Kasper poured into someone’s ear, teachings of Jesus in Jesus’ time might have been true for Jesus’ time, but in our historical context and lived experience, they aren’t necessarily true in the same way for us today.

So much damage has been done.  A great deal repair and renewal, redirection of the instruction in sound philosophy and theology is needed, urgently.  The German/Kasperite/Rahnerian approach replaces the philosophical grounding of theology with politics (majorities can determine truth, and that might diverge from what people thought in the past). Truth changes according to shifting mores, values, etc. To hell with reason (e.g., syllogisms). Because those like Kasper substituted politics for philosophy, we were even being told that people cannot be held to what are widely perceived as impossible ideals, such as sexual continence.  It’s a sticky, black tarry mess imbued with a sentimentalism that can eventually “involve” you.

I’m reminded of the folktale from Ghana, not unlike the Uncle Remus story about B’Rer Rabbit and the Tar Baby.  A clever spider named Anansi made a figure out of tar to trap villagers.  He did indeed trap one, and Anansi moved in for the kill.   However, unlike B’Rer Rabbit who convinced his captor to throw him into the briar patch, Anansi the spider got himself caught in the tar with his victim.  Ultimately, error will not prevail, though it will take many victims in its tarry grip.

Today’s church spiders place their traps of black tar shot through with sentimentality, soft words of self-confirming affirmation, and plain old lies, all in the name of being pastoral and in accompaniment.

This stands in stark contrast to what Benedict XVI taught in Caritas in Veritate:

“Only in truth does charity shine forth, only in truth can charity be authentically lived. Truth is the light that gives meaning and value to charity” (op. cit. 3).

Charity without truth becomes mere feeling, or worse, permission to leave people in darkness. On the other hand, truth without charity can become a cudgel. The Collect gives us the Catholic synthesis: splendor veritatis. In that splendor we become visible as children of light.

Tracking back to the Collect, that errorum… tenebris surrounds involvamur like darkness closing over the verb. We are begging not to be entombed in falsehood. Then comes sed… BOOM!…  sed in splendore veritatis semper maneamus conspicui. The phrase bursts outward. In splendore describes the illumination and veritatis identifies the source. Semper and maneamus point to perseverance, staying put. Conspicui lands at the end with force. In fact, had I written this, I would have been tempted to write conspicui maneamus, to get that nice singable clausula.  But that final “ui” (“oooeee” sound) has force.

Holy Church puts this prayer on our lips this Sunday via the priest’s mediation. She teaches us to beg not to be wrapped up in darkness. She teaches us to ask to remain in the splendor, visible, steady, brightly rightly conspicuous.

This has consequences.

Parents must teach children the truth. Priests must preach the truth. Bishops must defend the truth. Catechists must not replace doctrine with projects. Teachers must not deceive with slogans. Fathers of families must not outsource moral clarity to screens. Mothers must not underestimate the splendor of truth spoken calmly and repeatedly in the home. Lay people in offices, shops, classrooms, legislatures, hospitals and road crews must be brightly conspicuous in word and deed to visible enough in this increasingly foggy world to be as attractive as children of a guiding light.

Visible doesn’t mean loud. Conspicuous doesn’t mean obnoxious.

Today’s Collect gives us a hard examination of conscience. Am I wrapped up in some error? Have I grown accustomed to a darkness because everyone around me calls it normal? Have I chosen shadow because light would require confession, restitution, conversion, humility? Do I prefer the approval of the wrapped-up to the freedom of the children of light?

By the merits of Christ’s Sacrifice, through His sacraments, by the teaching of Holy Church, we can be unwrapped. Lazarus came forth, but the Lord still commanded, “Solvite eum et sinite abire …. Unbind him and let him go”.

GO TO CONFESSION.

 

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