16 July 1969 – LIFTOFF!

16 July 1969 – 55 years ago

Before implementation of the Novus Ordo, btw, although changes were underway.

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UPDATED: Attempted assassination of Pres. Trump at rally in Butler, PA. Trump wounded. 13 July 1917… Third Secret. Just wondering….

UPDATE 15 July:

I just received this in my email:

Message Body:
Not sure if I can send you photos. I did some research. The Catholic Church that is across the street from the Butler fairgrounds has an outdoor grotto to Our Lady of Fatima and the visionaries. The statue of Our Lady faces in the direction of the fairgrounds. I don’t really believe in coincidence anymore.

Our Lady of Fatima, again.  I looked it up.  HERE


ORIGINALLY POSTED  Jul 13, 2024

UPDATE: I just remembered that, after Pres. Trump went to N. Korea in 2018 and met with King Jong Un, the former President stopped in Guam.  Our Lady of  Fatima showed up!   I wrote about it at the time, but I can’t find it. However, The Remnant has it HERE:

Last week President Trump received a scapular and a lesson on Fatima from Edward Baza Calvo, governor of Guam since 2011.

“About 165,000 people have taken a big sigh of relief since ten months ago the leader of North Korea was making pronouncements of the nuclear annihilation of our island,” says Gov. Calvo in the short clip below from PacificDailyNews.com. “And now we have, ten months later, a document paving the way–signed by both [Trump and Kim Jong-un]–to peace and denuclearization,”

A year ago, when this crisis was unfolding, the traveling Lady of Fatima had just come from Korea to Guam, and fifteen minutes after Trump signed the agreement with Kim Jong-un, the statue arrived at the house of Governor Calvo. Being Catholic, he said, “I don’t believe in coincidences.”

In gratitude to both Our Lady of Fatima and the U.S. President, Gov. Calvo handed Trump a scapular and told him that Catholics, such as Melania, would understand its significance.

Coincidence?


Surely you’ve heard the news about the assassination attempt, so I won’t recap it.

I was just hanging out in Pittsburgh with the priest who gave the invocation AT THAT RALLY.   He gave the invocation, told people around him to PRAY for the man because someone was going to try to shoot him.  20 minutes later….

That said, people started pinging me on phone and email about this immediately after I had read a story about the 3rd apparition of Our Lady of Fatima on 13 July 1917.  (As one does.)

This was the apparition with the vision of Hell and the the future role of Russia.   This is the apparition of the “Third Secret”, which would not be revealed until Sr. Lúcia wrote them down in 1941 at the request of the bishop.  The third part, the “Third Secret”, was only later sent to the bishop who sent it unread to Pope Pius XII.

In case you have never read it, or of it, here is what Lúcia wrote.  No, it doesn’t have anything to do with the assassination attempt, but it is a good moment to get you to read about the apparition and the Third Secret if you haven’t done so before:


A few moments after arriving at the Cova da Iria, near the holmoak, where a large number of people were praying the Rosary, we saw the flash of light once more, and a moment later Our Lady appeared on the holmoak.

“Lúcia,” Jacinta said, “speak. Our Lady is talking to you.”

“Yes?” said Lúcia. She spoke humbly, asking pardon for her doubts with every gesture, and to the Lady: “What do you want of me?”

I want you to come back here on the thirteenth of next month. Continue to say the Rosary every day in honor of Our Lady of the Rosary, to obtain the peace of the world and the end of the war, because only she can obtain it.

“Yes, yes.”

“I would like to ask who you are, and if you will do a miracle so that everyone will know for certain that you have appeared to us.”

You must come here every month, and in October I will tell you who I am and what I want. I will then perform a miracle so that all may believe.

Thus assured, Lúcia began to place before the Lady the petitions for help that so many had entrusted to her. The Lady said gently that she would cure some, but others she would not cure.

“And the crippled son of Maria da Capelinha?”

No, neither of his infirmity nor of his poverty would he be cured, and he must be certain to say the Rosary with his family every day.

Another case recommended by Lúcia to the Lady’s assistance was a sick woman from Atougia who asked to be taken to heaven.

Tell her not to be in a hurry. Tell her I know very well when I shall come to fetch her.

Make sacrifices for sinners, and say often, especially while making a sacrifice: O Jesus, this is for love of Thee, for the conversion of sinners, and in reparation for offences committed against the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

[First Part of the Secret – The Vision of Hell]

As Our Lady spoke these words she opened her hands once more, as had during the two previous months. The rays of light seemed to penetrate the earth, and we saw as it were a sea of fire. Plunged in this fire were demons and souls in human form, like transparent burning embers, all blackened or burnished bronze, floating about in the conflagration, now raised into the air by the flames that issued from within themselves together with great clouds of smoke, now following back on every side like sparks in huge fires, without weight or equilibrium, amid shrieks and groans of pain and despair, which horrified us and made us tremble with fear. (it must have been this sight which caused me to cry out, as people say they heard me do). The demons could be distinguished by their terrifying and repellent likeness to frightful and unknown animals, black and transparent like burning coals. terrified and as if to plead for succor, we looked up at Our Lady, who said to us, so kindly and so sadly:

[Second Part of the Secret]

You have seen hell, where the souls of poor sinners go. It is to save them that God wants to establish in the world devotion to my Immaculate Heart. If you do what I tell you, many souls will be saved, and there will be peace.

This war will end, but if men do not refrain from offending God, another and more terrible war will begin during the pontificate of Pius XI. When you see a night that is lit by a strange and unknown light [this occurred on January 28, 1938], you will know it is the sign God gives you that He is about to punish the world with war and with hunger, and by the persecution of the Church and the Holy Father.

To prevent this, I shall come to the world to ask that Russia be consecrated to my Immaculate Heart, and I shall ask that on the First Saturday of every month Communions of reparation be made in atonement for the sins-of the world. If my wishes are fulfilled, Russia will be converted and there will be peace; if not, then Russia will spread her errors throughout the world, bringing new wars and persecution of the Church; the good will be martyred and the Holy Father will have much to suffer; certain nations will be annihilated. But in the end my Immaculate Heart will triumph. The Holy Father will consecrate Russia to me, and she will be converted, and the world will enjoy a period of peace. In Portugal the faith will always be preserved…

[Third Part of the Secret – Congregation for Doctrine of the Faith, “The Message of Fátima”]

 

{After the two parts which I have already explained, at the left of Our Lady and a little above, we saw an Angel with a flaming sword in his left hand; flashing, it gave out flames that looked as though they would set the world on fire; but they died out in contact with the splendor that Our Lady radiated towards him from her right hand: pointing to the earth with his right hand, the Angel cried out in a loud voice: ‘Penance, Penance, Penance!’.

And we saw in an immense light that is God: ‘something similar to how people appear in a mirror when they pass in front of it’ a Bishop dressed in white; ‘we had the impression that it was the Holy Father’. Other Bishops, Priests, men and women Religious going up a steep mountain, at the top of which there was a big Cross of rough-hewn trunks as of a cork-tree with the bark; before reaching there the Holy Father passed through a big city half in ruins and half trembling with halting step, afflicted with pain and sorrow, he prayed for the souls of the corpses he met on his way; having reached the top of the mountain, on his knees at the foot of the big Cross, he was killed by a group of soldiers who fired bullets and arrows at him, and in the same way there died one after another the other Bishops, Priests, men and women Religious, and various lay people of different ranks and positions. Beneath the two arms of the Cross there were two Angels each with a crystal aspersorium in his hand, in which they gathered up the blood of the Martyrs and with it sprinkled the souls that were making their way to God.}

 

Remember, you must not tell this to anyone except Francisco.

When you pray the Rosary, say after each mystery: O my Jesus, forgive us, save us from the fire of hell. Lead all souls to heaven, especially those who are most in need.

“Is there anything more that you want of me?”

No, I do not want anything more of you today.

Then as before Our Lady began to ascend towards the east, until she finally disappeared in the immense darkness of the firmament.


UPDATE:

Is anyone else seeing Iwo Jima?

UPDATE:

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Daily Rome Shot 1078

Continued from yesterday…

Let’s see the text…

DISCE HOSPES AQVAE HVIVS PERENNITATIM
E SCATEBRA INEXHAVSTA
EA EST ANTONII CARDINALIS BARBARINI LIBERALITAS
DISCE SVAVITATEM
EAM APES PROFVNDVNT
SAPOR IN AQVIS CAETERIS VITIVM
IN HAC MEL ET NECTAR EST
NVLLA MELIOR INILVAT IN HORTOS AQVA
DVM APES PROPINANT
MELLEAM FLORES VSVRAM BIBVNT

D THOMAS MENTIVS ABBAS GENERALIS
GRATIAE REFERENDAE SITIENS P
A D M M DC XLII

Lovely!  Who would like to render this into accurate and yet smooth English?

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And… considering the ramp up of the demonic these days:

The Cross and Medal of Saint Benedict: A Mystical Sign of Divine Power edited by Fr. Robert Nixon, OSB.

US HERE – UK HERE

This is a handy volume with quotes from famous saints and writers about Benedict, a hagiographical account of his  life, a brief account of the Order and then a detailed look at the St. Benedict Medal.

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Opinion piece at NatCathReg about ‘Traditionis custodes’ three years on

I was made aware of a piece published last week by the National Catholic Register by Larry Chapp about Traditionis custodes three years on.  I was on the road, so I stashed it for a bit.

I was at first rather enthusiastic about Larry Chapp and his videos.  At a certain point I stopped watching them not just because they were a bit long, but also because he seems all too frequently to run down the Vetus Ordo and, by implication, those who wanted it.  It seemed that, for a while, every video got around to this even though the topic was entirely different.  Hence, he lost my regular attention and I only checked on him when his guest was of special interest.

That said, his offering at the NCReg is excellent, both in its points and in its phrasing. I’m sure you will agree.

Let’s go through this with my emphases and comments.

Pope Francis’ Latin Mass ‘Motu Proprio’ Has Generated Division, Not Unity

Three years after the promulgation of the motu proprio Traditionis Custodes, imposing severe restrictions on the celebration of the Mass in Latin, controversy over the use of the old Latin Mass is as strong as ever.

Therefore, if Pope Francis’ text was intended to bring some measure of peace to the liturgy wars by increasing liturgical homogenization around the Mass of Paul VI, it has been a failure. The rise of the popularity of the Mass of St. John XXIII (traditional Latin Mass) was caused, at least in part, by a strong sense of dissatisfaction with the Mass of St. Paul VI (or Novus Ordo) among a broad cross section of regular-Mass-attending Catholics. [And not just because of the externals or aesthetics, which of course flow also from the content of the texts.] And the move to suppress the Latin Mass has done nothing to change that entrenched reality, [“entrenched”… okay, there is a bellicose aspect to what is going on.  He probably intends this in the sense of “deeply committed”, but when people are shooting at you, you dig fox holes.] especially in light of the fact that the Vatican did nothing at the same time to reform the new liturgy in order to address in a truly pastoral way the legitimate sense of disaffection that many have.  [The incredible abuses that can occur so easily via the Novus Ordo are one thing, but there are aspects of the rite itself which can leave one puzzled.]

It is rarely a wise pastoral move to try and suppress via raw authority from above the spontaneous expressions of faith — expressions that are thoroughly orthodox and truly “from below” — since such exercises of raw authority absent a true engagement with those affected usually flounder.

The popularity of the traditional Latin Mass can be tied directly to its emphasis upon reverence, transcendence and supernatural verticality. And these are features that should be present in every Mass but are sorely lacking in many parishes. It is instructive that wherever the Mass of Paul VI is celebrated in deeply traditional and transcendent ways it is almost always successful, which only underscores the legitimacy of the desire of millions of devout Catholics for a Mass that is more profoundly reverent.  [It also underscores the fact that the more the Novus Ordo is celebrated like the Vetus Ordo, the better it seems to be.  That raises an obvious question.  Let me turn the sock inside out.  Benedict XVI wrote of ars celebrandi.  There are things learned from the predominance of the Novus Ordo which I believe have informed the ars celebrandi of most priests who celebrate the Vetus.  This is positive, perhaps in the sense of Tolkien’s eucatastrophe.]

Therefore, if the aims of Traditiones Custodes were primarily pastoral and not punitive, [then] it is a failure, since it did not in any way address this deep desire for tradition and reverence from so many Catholics. And since it ignored the needs and wishes of the faithful, [as a result] it created large pockets of open hostility toward the Vatican. This is understandable since the text was promulgated without any pastoral accompaniment with the affected groups or any sense that their liturgical preferences mattered at all on any level[Call to mind the pure contempt toward the people who want the Vetus Ordo exhibited by Andrea Grillo in that telling interview.]

Labeled as nostalgic “backwardists” and tossed out to the ecclesial peripheries, lovers of the Latin Mass were simply abandoned by this papacy and then vilified.  [Weren’t those on the peripheries supposed to be important?] Furthermore, the effective suppression of the older Mass went forward despite strong local support for its continuance from many diocesan bishops, which raises the question of how such an authoritarian move can be squared with all of the rhetoric from Rome about the need for a more synodal Church. [Not to mention subsidiarity.]

Where is the episcopal collegiality? Where is the much ballyhooed accompaniment? Where is the desire to “smell like the sheep”? And one can hardly see a synodal Church in play here when the Vatican went so far as to tell local parishes what they could and could not publish in their Church bulletins about Mass times for the old Mass. This is centralized Roman authority in the extreme and, therefore, Traditionis Custodes calls into question the sincerity of the entire synodal process.  [It leaves me puzzled how those who are in charge of things do not see this double standard.]

Pope Francis has repeatedly said that everyone is welcome in the Church (“Todos! Todos!” in Spanish), and he has made this call for radical inclusion in a variety of settings. The implication, of course, is that pastors must be tolerant toward human sin and the foibles of our fallen nature, ever aware of the woundedness of all of us. However, when it comes to those traditional Catholics who have been wounded by a Church insensitive to their needs, and often to the point of open hostility, there is nothing but a slap with the back of the Vatican hand[Am I wrong, or is there a silent implication that desiring the Vetus Ordo and then acting on that desire by going to it, is looked at as being worse than committing sodomy?  Recently, Card. Müller said he spoke with an official of the liturgy office in Rome who suggested that such people had psychological problems.]

There were, and are, problems in some traditionalist parishes with the acceptance of Vatican II, and many traditionalists on social media are often harsh toward the modern Church. [It would be helpful to have some terms defined.  Who is a “traditionalist” and what is the “modern Church”.] Nevertheless, one can clearly detect an increase in such attitudes as a direct response to the theological and pastoral confusions created by this papacy.

A Church that understands this human psychological factor would therefore also understand that the problem of truly radical traditionalism [Again, it could be helpful to have a description of what a “rad trad” is.  I think I know… but when I think more about such a critter, I wonder if I am on target.] is in many ways a beast of this papacy’s own making. Summorum Pontificum, the motu proprio issued in 2007 by Pope Benedict XVI, in allowing for a broad and free use of the old Mass, sought to build bridges. In contrast, this papacy seems to want to burn that particular bridge while building other bridges to different constituencies.  [My experience was that, after some years of Summorum Pontificum being in effect, people were starting to unclench, even those who had been so badly injured in the years before.]

Along these lines it becomes glaringly obvious that the Vatican now is far more concerned about the problems in traditionalist circles (and the problems are real) [What are the “real” problems?  Does he mean that there are some who don’t like Francis or who deny that he is Pope?  Do deny the legitimacy of Vatican II?  Are the problems that they don’t give to Peter’s Pence or diocesan drives any longer?  What is a “circle”?  My experience is that those who attend the Vetus Ordo are a pretty diverse group.] than it is with the problems within more progressive Catholic parishes and dioceses.  [Would those problems be along the lines of barely any time for confession, few people using that essential sacrament while still going to Communion?  Perhaps not believing in the Real Presence?  Not going to Mass?  Not marrying in the Church or teaching children the catechism?   Shall we talk about liturgy and preaching?] There is an obvious double standard in play. Furthermore, this double standard becomes more problematic when one realizes that the wing of the Church that openly dissents from settled Church teaching in moral matters is far more prevalent and far more influential in the Church than are the small pockets of cranky traditionalists. [Not all “traditionalists” are “cranky”.  I like Scott Hahn’s threefold “mad trads – sad trads – and glad trads”.    The vast majority of “trads” I know are “glad trads”.  They aren’t all that concerned with the old controversies and issues flowing from those halcyon days of the Council and after.]

Meanwhile, the Germans continue on unabated with their heterodox Synodal WayCardinal Jean-Claude Hollerich (who dissents from the Church’s teaching on homosexuality) is put in charge of the synod; Cardinal Robert McElroy is given a red hat despite his public dissent from Church teaching on the same; and Jesuit Father James Martin is given yet more photo ops with the Pope.  [This is a good paragraph.   The main issue is support of homosexuality.  It is likely that those who are entrenched in the homosexualist agenda hate and fear the Vetus Ordo and the people who desire it, because of the content of the orations and because of the happiness and normalcy of those who attend to them.] I am not claiming that Pope Francis agrees with these folks in all ways, because he clearly doesn’t. But he is also clearly far more sympathetic to them than he is toward those in his flock who seek nothing more than liturgical sacredness and sanity.  [He does surround himself with people who align with that agenda.  Didn’t he just name Msgr Maurizio Chiodi who has suggested that homosexual acts are not sinful and who is in support of contraception?  There’s Archbp. Paglia, whose artistic proclivities are known.   Fr. Spadaro is not editor of La Civiltà Cattolica and longer, but he is now an official of the Dicastery for Culture and Education.  He has a website dedicated to  Pier Antonio Tondelli.]

[Now a shift…] There is also a level of mischaracterization of the typical Latin Mass participant that can be detected as the motivation behind Traditionis. My experiences here are purely anecdotal, but most of my Latin Mass-going friends are not radical traditionalists. They are simply devout Catholics seeking a safe space to raise their children away from our pornified cultural septic tank, [!] and they are not in any way deeply concerned with Vatican II and all the debates around it.  [Again, I am not sure what “radical” means.  Does it mean that these people would strongly rather attend the Vetus Ordo or they refuse to attend the Novus Ordo?  I want to know.  In my anecdotal experience, which I suspect is somewhat more extensive that Dr. Chapp’s when it comes to mingling with people who seek out the Vetus Ordo, they are as the Doctor says: devout, earnest, and not heavily burdened by controversies.]

They don’t really care about pachamamaAmoris Laetitia, Archbishop Viganò or the Synod on Synodality. [I think they care when the topics come up, because they are horrified by idolatry, moral relativism, and punitive behavior.] In fact, most probably don’t even know what the synod is or what it is for and don’t really care one way or the other. [Heh… does anyone understand?] In short, they are not the ideologically driven pitchfork brigade of heresy-hunting reactionaries that the mischaracterizations would have us believe. Furthermore, in a truly synodal Church, it would seem that the few instances where such a radicalized element does exist should be dealt with by the local bishop involved[RIGHT?!?  If these people are such a problem then they need PASTORS not POGROMS.]

In many ways, therefore, Traditionis Custodes represents a solution for a problem that does not exist in any meaningful sense. It is a motu proprio oriented to combating a straw-man caricature of the angry and hostile traditionalists who are supposedly lurking around every corner[Well said.]

Finally, the promulgation of Traditionis took place after the Vatican received back the results of a questionnaire it had sent out to the bishops. But the results of that survey have never been made public, even with the names of the bishops redacted, which also calls into question the transparency of the entire process. [Just as transparent as the accord with a certain Asian regime.] If the problems among traditionalists that Traditionis seeks to address via suppression of the old Mass are widespread and metastasizing further, then one can only assume that this would have been brought up by many bishops in the survey results. And if that is true, then surely the Vatican would want to make those results known in order to give Traditionis a grounding in a more episcopally collegial manner.   [ERGO…]

Therefore, since the results were never published, the question of just how widespread the problems are in Latin Mass communities is left hanging. Indeed, the silence and lack of transparency give the definite impression that there is something the Vatican is trying to hide.

I myself do not attend the traditional Latin Mass and I have no particular attachment to it. [He should give it a shot, and not just a couple times.  It’s our patrimony.  It would help to grasp even more fully the rite of the Ordinariate and what is going on, and not going on, in the Novus Ordo.] Nevertheless, there are millions of devout and deeply sane Catholics who do love it. I see no reason why a pastoral Church that seeks out the peripheries would want to alienate them and push them away.  [One might conclude that those who are carrying on this alienation are not pastoral and don’t intended to be.] Thus, I think Summorum Pontificum was pastorally sensitive and wise. And I think Traditionis Custodes is pastorally insensitive and unwise, now and when it was first published three years ago.

This was a good piece by Dr. Chapp.  There are some loose ends.  That said, no limited essay can say everything or engage in explanations of every possible detail.

St. Pius V, pray for us.
Our Lady of Mount Carmel, pray for us.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged
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NEW BOOK: On The Demonic by Archbp. Fulton Sheen. BONUS: Wherein Fr. Z rants.

I bring to you attention a new book published by Emmaus Press, a branch of the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology.

This title will be released on July 17, 2024.  PRE-ORDER

On The Demonic by Archbp. Fulton J. Sheen.

US HERE – UK HERE (not yet)

The forward explains that, toward the end of his life, Sheen was ever more convinced that we are living in a demonic age and that we may be seeing the “first cells of the Anti-Christ”.

He wrote that he wanted to write a book about the demonic, but he passed away before he could accomplish it.   The editor of this book has gone through all of Sheen’s material and collated what he found about the topic.

The volume includes not only excerpts from known published works but also from Sheen’s own handwritten notes, kept in his archive, for conferences, etc.

This book is

the closest thing the world will ever see to the long-lost book that Fulton Sheen promised to write on the demonic, all in Sheen’s own words.

The editor stays true to what Sheen wrote adding, “I’m a purist. I don’t even like the addition of the designated hitter in baseball.”

DITTO!

Hence, while he includes helpful explanatory footnotes, he does not over edit.  He includes,

Commenting on Jesus’ intellect and ability to learn, St. Thomas Aquinas argues that there is a direct correspondence between higher forms of learning and the amount effort one has to put into obtaining such knowledge.

I can attest that that is true from my frustrating study of chess openings.  And that’s just chess.   But, as the editor says,

“There’s grace in wrestling with thoughts.”

Click for Z-Swag

This could be applied to the issue of our sacred liturgical worship since the Council’s reforms. 

The constant effort with the Novus Ordo has been to make everything immediately apparent, visible, audible, comprehensible.  One could say, it has been dumbed down.  The reformers and liturgists now have made it unnecessary to  “work”, contrary to the fact that the very word “liturgy” means “work” (Greek leitos from laos (people) and ergon (work, service)).  Moreover, it means “work for the people”, not “by the people”.  Apply that to overrun sanctuaries and versus populum misorientation.  Also, “hard” concepts like sin, guilt, and propitiation were systematically edited out of the orations in favor of emphasizing eschatological joy.  If you change the way people pray, over time you change what they believe and how they live – Lex Orandi – Lex Credendi.  Much of what we see going on in the Church today is a result of the erosion of our Catholic identity, resting on the foundation of liturgical worship (which is doctrine!).  Loss of identity creates an ever widening spiral of erosion which carries over to the influence of the Church in the public square.  If we don’t know who we are and what we believe, if we are not longer able or willing to enunciate it clearly and manifest it in life, then why should the wider world pay any attention to us at all, unless to mock or persecute.  The consequences of making everything easy in our worship has been devastating, leaving little or no opportunity for people to have a transformational encounter with mystery, the transcendent.

Also, the editor, a priest, at the beginning of the Forward gives a caveat about being overly interested in things demonic.  At the end he pens,

I ask that you do not read this book like some novel, just for entertainment.  I also ask that you do not read it like a school-book, just for information.  This book should be read in prayer, with your eyes on Jesus.

Do I hear an “Amen!”?

This would be a good book for priests and for bishops.  Especially for bishops, since they are truly the chief exorcists of their dioceses.   However, all priests can perform the minor exorcisms without additional permissions, including, privately, Ch. 3 of Title XI in the Roman Ritual.

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Daily Rome Shot 1077

In chessy news, the Biel Festival is underway.  Biel, Switzerland is a beautiful place.  It would be fun to participate in something like this.  Next year?   Hard.  It would be at the same time at the priests conference held by the St. Paul Center.

Nice people! Great service!

Fabiano Caruana won the Zagreb Rapid and Blitz and matched Magnus Carlsen’s 27 points record.  My guy Wesley So would up in a three-way tie for second along with MVL and “Puer””. Ian Nepomniachtchi had a rough go. A couple days ago, in a blitz with Wesley, he raised a fuss because he ran out of time (aka “flagged”). He blamed Wesley for having knocked over a couple of pieces and replacing them. However, the video shows that he just simply flagged. Nepo also accused Wesley of doing this before to him, as if it were a planned accident. Yesterday, when Nepo and Wesley played, Nepo – all caught on camera of course – purposely plowed into Wesley’s pieces, which had to be reset. Wesley smiled and then beat him.


White to move and mate in 2.

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

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VF, JL, MR, DVDH, DC, LG, MMcM, MH, SB, PG, HL, MM,

Meanwhile, David Bowie and Catherine Deneuve playing chess on the set of The Hunger in 1983.

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I’ve been indulging in something I haven’t done for quite a while.  (Yes, that’s click bait, but I think I am fully justified.)

I’ve been indulging in something I haven’t done for quite a while.

Today I watched some videos on YouTube of “scambaiters” torturing scammers, wasting their time, completely controlling their computers, screwing with the phone systems and frustrating them in their purely evil greed.

The scammers can get pretty violent in their reactions when they reach maximum frustration.

Usually the scambaiter will, in the end, reveal that this has been cat and mouse role reversal and then, perhaps far more kindly than I would, suggest they find something else to do.

In the meantime, I’ve learned a lot about the types of scams that are being run and their techniques.

As I have opined before, I wonder if we might not create an order of Cyber Knights – the Order of the Cyber Knights of St. Dismas – which would have Virtual Machines and VPNs by which scammers could be taken in and taken down.

Someone needs to fight back against this sheer evil industry.

Bottom line, just as you have to be avoid near occasions of sin, you have to be on your guard against scams.   They are clever and there are many approaches that they use.   Often they will want you to install a program like Anydesk on your computer and then go into your online banking.   Sometimes they will pretend you have a bill to pay.  Sometimes they will say that they made a mistake and gave you too much money back and then ask you to pay them back by buying gift cards.   There are more scams, too, and some of them quite sophisticated.   They even have one where they get you to call your real bank and then when you are being transferred, they take back the call and pretend to be an official from that bank.  Very slick.

Be careful.

Someone quite close to me got taken in by one of these slimy bastards.   I don’t want any of you to get taken.

UPDATE:

Funny.  I just received this.  Clearly, this is a scam. Screenshot of the email…

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes – 8th Sunday after Pentecost (N.O.: 15th) 2024

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 7th Sunday after Pentecost, or the 14th Sunday of Ordinary Time?

Tell about attendance especially for the Traditional Latin Mass.

Any local changes or (hopefully good) news?

A couple thoughts about the sign of the cross: HERE  A taste…

[…]

For the Christian, there is no way around mortification, acts of self-denial of the urges of the flesh, our appetites which are disordered because of Original Sin over which our will must seek control.  Moreover, our efforts at mortification must be conscious.  The determination to diet, for example, for the sake of losing weight is a good choice that requires the will.  However, that is not the same as mortification, which has a higher and more lasting goal.  In a sense, mortification through a strict diet, intentionally directed primarily for the sake of control of the flesh in view of life in Heaven, can result in a special kind of weigh gain.  As St. Augustine wrote in Confessions 13, “amor meus pondus meum… my love is my weight”.  Augustine understood by his 5th century science, which knew nothing of the force of gravity, that the weight of a thing was caused by an interior property constantly seeking to go to the place it belongs.  This is why hearts can’t be at peace when given over to any created thing, or as Paul would place it, the flesh.  Properly aligned hearts, indwelt by the Spirit, strive with all their interior weight to go to God.

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Daily Rome Shot 1076

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.

Welcome registrants:

Pattyz
Szarak

Hey! luc****.***go@gmail.com – Your email box is full!

In chessy news, the tournament in Zagreb continues in the blitz phase. Fabi has pulled away from the pack going into the final day with 4.5 points lead with 21. My guy Wesley is in second with 16.5, tied with MVL.

White can mate in 4.

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

The traditional Benedictines at Le Barroux make wonderful wine from the ancient vineyards of the Avignon Popes. Enjoy some and help them at the same time!

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Lastly, a note of thanks to some donors for my time in Rome in October. I haven’t started the fundraising posts yet, but some people have already availed themselves on the wavy flag and other means. Thanks to:

VF, JL, MR, DVDH, DC, LG, MMcM, MH, SB, PG, HL

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Daily Rome Shot 1075

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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.

White can mate in 3.

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

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Nice people! Great service!

In Zagreb, Fabiano won the Rapid portion and now they are on to blitz. My guy Wesley is in 2nd but is 3 points behind… a big margin.

In about 15 minutes, I am off to OTB, late but late is better than never. My expectations are low, but if you learn something, you win.

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Daily (not) Rome Shot 1074

From a friend at Lago di Garda.

Welcome registrant:

claddah76

Whenever I see the word “claddah” I think of an evening many moons ago when at a little dive in St. Paul I went to hear an Irish band with an unknown singer named Enya.

Black to move and mate in…. 5.

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

The third event of the 2024 Grand Chess Tour is underway in Zagreb, Croatia, the SuperUnited Rapid & Blitz. Format: 9 rounds of rapid, followed by 18 rounds of blitz. Fabiano Caruana is in 1st and my guy Wesley So is in 2nd. However, as I write, action is underway and I am on the road, typing in an airline lounge.

When you are travelling, you should wash your hands. But, heck, you should do that anyway, right?

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My View For Awhile: Domum

The last phase of the St Paul Center priests conference began this morning at 0500.

If you have to stay in a hotel near PIT chose the Hilton Garden not the Marriott.

In PIT there is a lot of construction for a new terminal. After checking in I was sent outside again for an alternate TSA. Pre check really helped. The regular line was enormous. Be advised.

One of the highlights was seeing the nearly vibrating excitement of a little boy seeing the T-Rex. I was reminded not only of my own puerile interest in dinosaurs but also the hilarious SNL video which explored the incontrovertible truth that men think of Ancient Rome at least 10 times a day. … … Probably more to be honest.

I wonder if I can find it while using my phone to post this. I’ll be right back.

There!

Posted in On the road, SESSIUNCULA, What Fr. Z is up to |
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Archbp. Cordileone writes in favor of the Traditional Latin Mass, Vetus Ordo

At the National Catholic Register, His Excellency Salvatore Cordileone, Archbishop of San Francisco, has penned a piece in defense not only of the Vetus Ordo, but of the people who desire it.  This is important.   The attacks on the Vetus Ordo are, yes, against the rite of Mass itself, but they stem also in large part for the antipathy help by some who have their hands on the gears of power for the people who desire the traditional forms.  They don’t like the people.  It is to the point that, as we heard lately from key players against the Vetus, such as Andrea Grillo and someone in the Dicastery with whom Card. Müller spoke recently, they see those who desire tradition as being rather thick and, indeed, perhaps sick in the head.

I won’t reproduce Archbp. Cordileone’s piece here, but here are some tastes.  BTW… he starts with the image of how people came together when Notre-Dame of Paris burned.  As I write, I read that the spire of the Notre-Dame in Rouen is burning.  (Coincidence?)  The Archbishop draws a comparison to how diverse groups came unified when Notre Dame burned and now how various people have unified in the UK to sign a letter in favor of preserving the TLM.   Why?  Because, inter alia, it is beautiful.

With my emphases he wrote:

[…]

I am concerned that a skewed impression of lovers of the Latin Mass has taken hold due to a few extremists on the internet. As this petition, and previous petitions, demonstrate, the Latin Mass has a curiously inclusive appeal.

Most who attend the Latin Mass also attend the Novus Ordo (known colloquially as the Mass of Vatican II). They know that to be Catholic means we must remain inside the barque of Peter, however stormy the seas. They plead not against the new Mass but for the form they love, that feeds and inspires them — indeed, to the point that they constitute a visible proportion of those who go on to become creators of new art and beauty in which the world shares and celebrates. This is why the Latin Mass has attracted the support of nonbelievers who understand its crucial role in the creation of Western civilization.

The signers of the most recent petition include many great classical musicians — singers, pianists, cellists, conductors and including, of course, Sir James MacMillan, who spearheaded this petition effort. MacMillan is the most celebrated and most performed Catholic classical music composer of our times. His Stabat Mater was commissioned by the Vatican and performed in the Sistine Chapel.

Other important artists include the celebrated novelist, screenwriter and film director Julian Fellowes, who has won the Academy Award, Emmy Award and the Tony Award. Fellowes is perhaps best known for his role as the creator of the long-running television series Downton Abbey. Another signatory, Andrew Lloyd-Webber, is perhaps the most successful creator of musicals of our age (including CatsEvitaJoseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dream Coat and the modern Passion play Jesus Christ Superstar).

The signers of the 1971 “Agatha Christie” petition also included celebrated artists and literary figures, such as poets Robert Lowell, Robert Graves, David Jones and England’s poet laureate Cecil Day-Lewis; novelists such as Graham Greene, Nancy Mitford, Djuna Barnes and Julian Green, as well as the most celebrated Argentinian short-story writer Jorge Luis Borges, whose literary work gave birth to the “magic realism” movement of the late-20th century among Spanish writers in the Americas. And beyond this, the signatories included even Anglican Bishops Robert Cecil Mortimer of Exeter and John Moorman of Ripon.

There was a similar petition in 1966, organized by Christine Campo, translator of Marcel Proust (another example of a lapsed Catholic who understood the value of the Latin Mass for preserving civilization even in a secular sense), and addressed to Pope Paul VI, asking that the Latin Mass be maintained at least in monastic communities. It gathered signatures from 37 writers and artists, including two Nobel Prize winners. Among the signers were W.H. Auden, Evelyn Waugh, Jacques Maritain, French Nobel Prize-winning novelist Francois Mauriac, composer Benjamin Britten and Gertrud von Le Fort, the author of the Catholic classic Dialogue of the Carmelites, which later formed the basis of an opera by Francis Poulenc.

The Second Vatican Council taught us to read the signs of the times. One sign staring at us right now in large block letters is: Beauty evangelizes.  

We live in an age when we need to leverage the power of beauty to touch minds, hearts and souls, for beauty has the quality of an inescapably real experience, one that is not subject to argument. The current cultural maxim, “You have your truth and I have my truth” leads to the refusal to recognize even obvious physical and biological reality, whereas beauty circumvents the cognitive process and hits directly to the soul. Sacred beauty lifts us out of the world of time and gives us a glimpse of that which transcends time, of what ultimately lasts, of what our goal and our final home is: the reality of God.

Take the example of filmmaker Martin Scorsese. Even with all of the criticism for his controversial depictions of religious themes, and even of our Lord himself, Scorsese is one modern artist whose imagination was formed by the contrast between what the Latin Mass conveyed and the tough-guy culture of New York streets. As a profile in The New York Times in 2016 put it:

“Inside the old cathedral, it became clear how literally Scorsese has never forgotten — not the splendor of the church, nor the presence of suffering and death, sin and redemption, nearby. The pastor pointed out the details of a renovation: the saints retouched in their original colors, the marble and brass altar fixtures restored to the way they were before a 1970 modernizing effort. Scorsese, who left the neighborhood in 1965, didn’t need a guide. He knew every inch of the place. ‘Picture an 8-year-old boy standing right here in a white cassock, reciting a prayer in Latin,’ he mused aloud. ‘That’s me.’ … I asked him to draw a connection between [his 2016 film] ‘Silence’ and what he was seeing in the old cathedral. He tapped his forehead with two fingers. ‘The connection is that it has never been interrupted. It’s continuous. I never left. In my mind, I am here every day.’

In an age of anxiety and unreason, beauty is thus a largely untapped resource for reaching people, especially young people, with the Gospel message of hope. There is much work to do, but honoring and encouraging the special calling of artists is a key part of this labor.

In a de-Christianized age that is becoming increasingly inhospitable to any traditional sense of religion, the Church needs to operate on all cylinders. The traditional Latin Mass and the beauty it inspires is one of those cylinders. That even nonbelievers can feel an attraction to it in itself proves this point.

Why suppress what is one, among others, successful means for connecting with souls far away from Christ and bringing them into the loving and saving encounter with him within the communion of his Bride, the Church?

I trust and pray that this cri de coeur from the artists and other prominent British figures will be heard and seen it for what it is: that, rather than dividing the world in the name of ideological purity, it is an opportunity to bring the world together for beauty — a path that eventually and inevitably leads to the Beauty ever ancient, Beauty ever new.

Posted in Fr. Z KUDOS, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice |
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PRIEST’S CONFERENCE – Day 3: Prophecy and Typology

The conference wrapped up today. In the morning there was a talk by John Bergsma about the Holy Spirit as “water”. A key concept impressed on us was that God placed types in creation itself so that they could later be used as types of spiritual realities and events in salvation history. Hence, the Holy Spirit is described as wind or breath, fire, and water. Today we went into the physical properties of water, a component sine qua non for the existence of life.

There was a panel discussion with all the speakers.

Into Steubenville for a meetup with a friend who is also a prominent streamer. Gyros at a not bad local dive diner.

At a nearby cigar spot we enjoyed some good conversation.

This was nice.  People donate cigars for priests.

Into Pittsburgh, where I am now, and furious.

I am at a hotel near the airport due to an early flight tomorrow.  I will NOT recommend Marriott “Bonvoy” which I think was or is Courtyard.   It’s grim, near nothing, and they force you to join their program to get internet and there’s an upcharge.   So, I tried to use my phone as a tether.   That wasted an hour of my life.   I hate Zuhlsdorf’s Law.   Not as much as I am hating this hotel.  And the staff at the desk here were not nearly as friendly and helpful as those at the Hilton Garden Inn a few days ago.  Thumb is stabbing downward, with force.  DOWNWARD!   DEORSUM!

And speaking of images of water, this is available to me at the hotel as I write.

What could be in there along with the water?   Diamonds?  Does it also give you super powers?  Is the cap perhaps an ancient artifact with a treasure map?

This is a normal sized bottle.

The conference was terrific.

 

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Daily Rome Shot 1073

Photo from the World’s Best Sacristan™.

Welcome registrant:

johnhuntercleland3

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.

In chess news, we had heard that Magnus Carlson had withdrawn from the tournament now going on in Croatia due to a family issue. I read today that Magnus’ mother passed away at the age of 61 from a long illness. Requiescat.

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PRIEST’S CONFERENCE – Day 2: Prophecy and Typology

Talks continued today. A friend of mine, retired chaplain, Navy Captain, remarked “Coming to the conference would have been worth it for this talk alone.” I agreed.

We had an excursion to the new building of the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology next to the Franciscan University in Steubenville.

The building has three stores, came in on budget and on schedule! Surely a sign that Someone likes this project. The space is bright and roomy, hi tech, thoughtfully laid out. And there is a tantalizing bookstore, as there is at the conference.

I liked this shelf.  Timely!

Scott staying hello to the first wave.

More books, but from the conference tables, not the Center store.

 

Scott holding the final draft of the new study Bible they’ve been working on since 1998, with something like 18K notes.

Books… right click to enlarge in a new tab.

 

The conference room

Outside my door this morning, a rat with hooves.

At the University.  It was nice to see “normal” trees and see “normal birds”.

More on the talk in a bit.

 

 

Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to |
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Daily Rome Shot 1072

Welcome registrant:

oremus23

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.

July 10 onward is the
SuperUnited Rapid & Blitz Croatia. I see Nepo, Fabi, Giri, Vidit, Gukesh, Levon, MVL, Saric, and my guy Wesley So, for whom I hope all good things. Right now Wesley is in a three way tie for first.

White to move and mate in 3.

Since the Tour de France is on….

Finally, some Days In Rome Oct ’24 donations have already come in via the wavy flag. I will shortly have a dedicated post on this. However, thanks…

VF, JL, MR, DVDH, DC, LG, MMcM, MH, SB, PG

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PRIEST’S CONFERENCE – Day 1: Prophecy and Typology

After a couple of interesting days in Pittsburgh my friend and I wended our way to WV for this annual conference held by the St Paul Center For Biblical Theology.

From last night Scott gave a dense talk on prophecy.

This morning John Bergsma on an aspect of the Holy Spirit.

First – overcoming ZUHLSDORF’S LAW.

Mike Aquilina on types and the Fathers and Jewish feasts.

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Daily Rome Shot 1072

Welcome registrants:

katherine2cor318
A. Smith

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9 July: St. Veronica Giuliani – amazing saint – MOVIE

Today is the Feast of a saint about whom, when Padre Pio learned of her and her writings, said, “Someone who understands me.”

This is in Italian with subtitles. You will be riveted, so that’s okay.

This is super hard identity Catholicism.

Posted in Saints: Stories & Symbols |
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