LENTCAzT 2026 – 42: Tuesday of Holy Week – Peter’s Passion

A 5 minute daily podcast to help you in your Lenten discipline.

We hear about Santa Prisca on the Aventine Hill, the Roman Station. The identity of St Prisca is uncertain. One tradition claims that she is identical with Priscilla, who is mentioned in the New Testament. Fr. Troadec speaks of Jesus silence during the Passion. Fr. Parsch describes Peter’s Passion after his denial.

Yesterday’s podcast – HERE

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ASK FATHER: Judas and the 300 denarii v. the 30 pieces of silver

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

A blessed Holy Week to you!

I noticed that in the Gospel Judas complained that the ointment could have been sold for 300 coins. Are those the same coins with which he was paid later? Is there a special meaning to the coins/amounts used?

Tomorrow is “Spy Wednesday”, but… hey!… let’s drill into this.

In John 12:5, Judas values the ointment at “three hundred denarii.” In Matthew 26:15, he is later paid “thirty pieces of silver.” The Gospel wording itself differentiates between them.

A silver denarius was a typical day’s wage for a laborer.  The “pieces of silver” may have been the Temple’s preferred currency which was the The word used in Matthew 26:15 (argýria) simply means “silver coins”,  tetradrachms of Tyre, called Tyrian shekels which were 14 grams of 94% pure silver, higher than most coins (cf. Gresham’s Law).  Roman coinage was only 80% silver, so the 94% pure Tyrian shekels were required to pay the Temple tax in Jerusalem. The money changers referenced in the Gospels exchanged Tyrian shekels for common Roman currency.

Hence the texts do not present them as the same currency, and still less as the same actual coins. The ointment’s value is roughly a laborer’s annual wage, while the betrayal price of 30 pieces of silver is a separate negotiated sum.

BTW…I did some calculations.  14g of 94% silver at today rate is $29.44 x 30… Judas sold the Lord for $883.20 in today’s value (31 March 2026).

As to meaning of the numbers, the 300 denarii of value in John 12 underscores how lavish Mary’s act was. Judas frames her devotion as “waste,” and John immediately unmasks him: he spoke this way because he was a thief and had charge of the money bag. St. Augustine comments in his Commentary on John 50 Mary’s act became “a sweet savor unto life” for the good but for Judas it was “unto death” for he was already corrupt before the betrayal money was ever paid. St. John Chrysostom likewise treats the episode as evidence that avarice had already mastered him.

The 30 silver pieces carry much more obvious biblical resonance. Matthew’s Passion account links them with the prophetic pattern of Zechariah 11:12–13, where thirty pieces of silver are weighed out and then cast in the house of the Lord for a potter. Matthew 27:9-10 later explicitly connects Judas’s silver and the potter’s field to that prophecy.

There is also the old connection with Exodus 21:32, where thirty shekels of silver is the compensation paid for a slave killed by an ox. That is why many Christian readers have seen in Judas’s price a deliberate note of contempt: the Lord is appraised at the price of a slave.

As for the Fathers:

Augustine, on John 12, does not dwell on a symbolic contrast between 300 and 30 so much as on Judas’s inward rot. He says Judas “was already a thief” before the bribery, so the later betrayal money reveals rather than creates his corruption.  Chrysostom, on Matthew 26, stresses the shame of the bargain itself: Judas betrays Christ “for money, and for such a sum of money,” a sign of how completely covetousness had blinded him.

Origen, in the tradition preserved in the Catena on Matthew 26, treats the thirty pieces morally and allegorically: Judas is the paradigm of the man who accepts worldly gain in exchange for handing over the Word. The same Catena also preserves an Augustinian allegory in which the thirty signify a carnal, worldly valuation of Christ (the 5 senses times the 6 ages of the world – 30).

So the short answer is this: no, not the same coins, but, yes, the amounts matter.

The 300 denarii accent the extravagance of Mary’s loving anointing and expose Judas’s hypocrisy. The 30 silver pieces evoke prophecy, contempt, and the “price of a slave,” thereby deepening the deep horror of Judas’ betrayal.

Is there a take away from this?

Judas knew the price of the ointment and he haggled over the price of the Lord. That is what greed does. Greed teaches the soul to count coins and stop counting blessings. Mary, on the other hand, doesn’t think of the cost at all.  While Judas measures everything by utility and profit, rather like a conference of bishops or diocesan chancery, Mary pours out what is precious in love.  One heart is lavish toward Christ. The other sells Him cheap.

We might ask ourselves: Have I treated prayer, reverence, sacrifice, liturgical participation as a waste? Love does not penny pinch with God. The Christian stops asking, “What will this cost me?” and begins asking, “Who is Christ to me?”

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WDTPRS – Tuesday in Holy Week: Our grasp on Christ, His grasp on us

[A special note for priests alone at the end.  Nobody else look! o{];¬) ]

COLLECT (1962MR & 2002MR):
Omnipotens sempiterne Deus,
da nobis ita dominicae passionis sacramenta peragere,
ut indulgentiam percipere mereamur.

This prayer was in the 1962MR on Tuesday of Holy Week.  It was in the Hadrianum and Paduenese of the ancient Gregorian Sacramentary for the same day, when the Station is at Santa Prisca.  So, it seems that today we have a prayer which The Redactors of the Novus Ordo didn’t fiddle around with.  They left it on the same day as it had always been, and didn’t change or cut out any words.  That’s rare.

The verb perago means, according to the dark blue bound Lewis & Short Dictionary, in its fundamental sense, “to thrust through, pierce through, transfix”.   It can then come to mean by logical extension “to drive about, harass, disturb, disquiet, agitate, annoy a person or thing”.  However, in our context here, it is probably “to carry through, go through with, execute, finish, accomplish, complete”.    However, I ought to remind readers, as well as myself, that “Mentio non fit expositio!” as one of my old profs used to shout.  I cut now to the chase with Blaise/Dumas who says perago is “célèbrer” as in “célèbrer les mystères de la Passion du Seigneur”.

The verb percipio is “to take wholly, to seize entirely”.  Often when you see a prepositional prefix per on verbs, you get an intensification of the concept of the verb.  At the same time percipio is “to perceive, observe” and “to feel” and “to learn, know, conceive, comprehend, understand, perceive”.    Blaise/Dumas gives us “recevoir (l’eucharistie)”.  I think this gets us close to the meaning for our prayer.

So we have perago and percipio.

SLAVISH LITERAL VERSION
Almighty everlasting God,
grant us so to celebrate the mysteries of the Lord’s Passion,
that we may merit to grasp pardon.

The words peragere and percipere underscore the intensity with which we ought to participate in the sacred mysteries especially during this Holy Week.

The per prefix suggests to us a thoroughness of our participation, the one per leading to the other per through the connect of the itaut.   The peragere is an invitation to us to participate in the mysteries of Holy Week in a way that is “full, conscious and active”, especially in the interior sense.  In this way we can more completely grasp in all senses of that word what the Lord has to offer to us.

As the Council document Gaudium et spes 22 tells us, and this was a contribution of the young bishop Karol Wojtyla, the Second Person of the Trinity took up our human nature and came into this world to reveal man more fully to himself.

Our participation in the sacred mysteries at all times of the year help us to grasp and perceive many things.  “Grasp” contains both “receive” and “perceive”.

We learn about ourselves, we learn about the magnalia Dei, we grasp and perceive the fruits and graces of the Eucharist and the other sacraments, we deepen our grasp of the Faith’s content.

That content is both things we can learn and contemplate and, more deeply, the divine Person of the Lord Himself.  One of the most important things we grasp, as our prayer reminds us, is pardon for our many and black sins which merit Hell.

By strengthening our grasp on Christ, and His grasp on us, His merit becomes our merit and thus we can receive the saving pardon He grasped for us on the Cross.

It might be a good idea to meditate a bit on the 1 Cor 11:29-31, in which Paul talks about “discerning” the Body and Blood of the Lord before reception.

The Greek verb diakrino for “discern” doesn’t quite match in exact meaning the force of percipio but there is a conceptual connection between discerning verbs.  In any event, this verse came to mind and it is good to examine ourselves carefully in this regard.

NEW CORRECTED ICEL VERSION:
Almighty ever-living God,
grant us so to celebrate
the mysteries of the Lord’s Passion
that we may merit to receive your pardon
.

OBOSLETE ICEL:
Father,
may we receive your forgiveness and mercy
as we celebrate the passion and death of the Lord
.

Think about the rubbish people had to endure for decades in church.

SUPER DOUBLE TOP SECRET NOTE FOR PRIESTS

Think again about that verb percipio.  Then think about the prayer we, many of us at least, say before our own reception of Communion during Holy Mass.

LATIN TEXT (2002MR):
Perceptio Corporis et Sanguinis tui, Domine Iesu Christe, non mihi proveniat in iudicium et condemnationem; sed pro tua pietate prosit mihi ad tutamentum mentis et corporis et ad medelam percipiendam.

1962 Missale Romanum version:
Let not the partaking [perceptio] of Your Body, O Lord Jesus Christ, which I, unworthy, presume to receive [quod ego indignus sumere praesumo] turn out to be unto my judgment and condemnation: but by Your goodness, may it become a protection of soul and body and remedy to be grasped/received [percipiendam] .…

The older version stresses the priest’s, our, unworthiness.

Our hands and eyes and mouths, Fathers, are close to the Eucharistic species on the altar.

Our breath touches them as we recite this prayer.

We are speaking not just to Christ present in the Host and chalice under the humble appearance of bread and wine, but beyond them and in them and through them to the High Priest Christ glorious and reigning in heaven.  Alter Christus in Christi persona. Even that per-sona refers to the sound moving through the ancient actor’s mask to characterize and amplify the sound.

Baptism washed away our sins, Fathers, but it didn’t remove the wounds to our souls and bodies.  We say this prayer bent down as sinners in need of a Savior, not as the “lords” of what done at the altar or Who is on the altar inches before our eyes.

In this prayer, with its conclusion, we priests must be mindful of our fallen and sinful state even as we – not allowed even to lift our eyes – hope for glory to come, the very purpose of our Mass.

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ROME 26/3– Day 07: Monday in Holy Week

If you were up and watching from the high ground, the Roman sun appeared at 06:55.

No matter how low you may have been… no comment… the Roman sun set at 19:35, 5 minutes after the place where I pick up amazon packages. I am experimenting with having them delivered to my place, but years in Italy before such things has left me a little … jaded.

The Ave Maria Bell is listed in the 20:00 cycle.

Yesterday a French priest brought a gaggle of school girls in cure birretes.   I label this shot with the pastor in the middle, either rosa inter spinas or spina inter rosas.

The hideous eyesore in front of the Chiesa Nuova for the Metro Station.  I’m guessing… 10 years?

Walking to Gammarelli today, I realized that event the lions know that it is artichoke season.  Okay… okay… it’s a pine cone. Same thing…. not… sort of… not.

Here’s a serious lion with a pine cone.

I went to Gammarelli today to sort out an order I put in last October and nothing was done.  Today it got sorted.   I wanted a red pianeta made with their “griffon” fabric.  And now they have wider “column” trim in gold, which will be spectacular.  Some of the over flow from the fund raiser will take care of the difference in the elevation of the trim.

Meanwhile, in the window, a rare cotta gricia.

But look at that beautiful lace.  What an amazing thing to know that women made these things by hand, patiently, lovingly.  Lost skills?  I think in Belgium they are preserved.

I had another surprise today, of which I will write when the time is right.  Words are lacking now.

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LENTCAzT 2026 – 41: Monday of Holy Week – All tenderness

A 5 minute daily podcast to help you in your Lenten discipline.

We hear about Santa Praessede, the Roman Station, and also the former Station, connected to Peter when he fled Rome. Fr. Troadec has a beautiful reflection on the woman with the alabaster jar.

Yesterday’s podcast – HERE

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ROME 26/3– Day 06: Palm Sunday

For this Palm Sunday, European “Daylight Savings has kicked in.  We lost an hour, but we are back in usual sync with the USA.

Today the sun rise in Rome was, therefore, 06:56, rather than 05:56.  Sunset is al 19:34, not 20:34.

The Ave Maria bell… here’s the test of the calendar… is listed at 2000, which is correct if they got the change from 18:45 to 19:45 correct yesterday (and I have my doubts).

I’m feeling a little better today.

The Candidates Tournament begins today in Cyprus. The winner will challenge Gukesh for the title of World Champion… the “title”, if not the reality. Speaking of Magnus, there is about to begin a “freestyle” (“Fischer Random”) tournament in Germany which will lead eventually to a world title.

Some Palm Sunday images.  I think there will more from The Pro™, Barbara.

Singing the Passion, yours truly sang Christus.

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And… I think my dear late friend (deacon) Harold Hughesdon might have been in this shot but inside the church on the other side of the door. A few years later, he’d be flying a fighter in the RAF. Requiescat, old friend.

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Tradition … “safeguard the faith and combat error”

Msgr. Gherardini was one of our profs at the Pontifical Lateran University.

Check out this piece at One Peter Five, in which Gherardini’s thought about Tradition and the 1988 consecrations by Archbp. Lefevbre is briefly exposed.

[…]

I will not enter into the details of the relations and difficulties between the Holy See and the Society of Saint Pius X. I stick to the common theme of Tradition and I observe that “safeguard the faith and combat error” should be the ideal and commitment as much of the Church as of her sons. In the light of this, it is difficult for me to understand how the reproach of an “incomplete and contradictory Tradition” formulated by John Paul II in 1988, could have any real grounds. What I understand is that it has nothing to do with the ‘spirit of Assisi’.

[…]

 

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What the Bishop of Charlotte is doing – UPDATE

UPDATE: A commentator pointed out…

The photo in that first Tweet is not from the Diocese of Charlotte, though it is related to altar rails.
https://www.facebook.com/groups/preservationsummorumpontificum/posts/979114669745334/

Apparently, Bishop of Boise, Idaho, ordered the disuse of altar rails in 2023 and had them ripped up from the floor of the cathedral. Martin may be the most boisterous of these bishops, but he’s certainly not alone.

 

So more people know.

and…

 

He is hurting people, lots of people, and hiding behind a thin canard while doing it.

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LENTCAzT 2026 – 40: Palm Sunday – GO TO CONFESSION

A 5 minute daily podcast to help you in your Lenten discipline.

We hear about St. John Lateran, the Roman Station. I rant for a little while.

Yesterday’s podcast – HERE

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ROME 26/3– Day 05: staying in

The sun was up before I was, at 05:58 and it will set before I will, though I’d rather like to beat it, at 18:33.

The Ave Maria Bell is, as indicated in the curial calendar, now in its 1900 cycle. Hmmm. I thought the 18:45 cycle stretched from 20 March to 2 April. Now “ora legale” hits, so we lose an hour of sleep, which is what I need right now.

I stayed close to home today because I was feeling… odd. It’s been awhile since I’ve been ill, so I don’t want to take chances. Rest and hydration today, so I can be on my toes tomorrow for Palm Sunday.

Meanwhile, shots from the Campo yesterday.

Snacky things at Ruggieri.

It’s ARTICHOKE season!

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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.

And something different…

Yes, Leo was in Monaco. Next stop, Grand Duchy of Fenwick.

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