WDTPRS: 21st Sunday of Ordinary Time – When “virtues” are replaced by “values”.

Let’s look at the Collect for the 21st Sunday of Ordinary Time:

Deus, qui fidelium mentes unius efficis voluntatis, da populis tuis id amare quod praecipis, id desiderare quod promittis, ut, inter mundanas varietates, ibi nostra fixa sint corda, ubi vera sunt gaudia.

A master crafted this prayer.  In the 1962 Missale Romanum we use it on the 4th Sunday after Easter. It is also in the ancient Gelasian Sacramentary.  Listen to those “eee”s produced by the Latin “i”. Savor those parallels.

Varietas means “difference, diversity, variety.”  It is commonly used to indicate “changeableness, fickleness, inconstancy.”  I like “vicissitude”.  The adjective mundanus is “of or belonging to the world”.

LITERAL RENDERING:

O God, who make the minds of the faithful to be of one will, grant unto Your people to love that thing which You command, to desire that which You promise, so that, amidst the vicissitudes of this world, our hearts may there be fixed where true joys are.

CURRENT ICEL (2011):

O God, who cause the minds of the faithful to unite in a single purpose, grant your people to love what you command and to desire what you promise, that, amid the uncertainties of this world, our hearts may be fixed on that place where true gladness is found.

Let us revisit that id…quod. We can accurately say “love that which you command,” or “love what you command”, but that strikes me as vague.  Can we be more concrete and say “love the thing you command… desire the thing you promise”?

We are called to love and desire God’s will in concrete situations, in the details of life, especially when those details are little to our liking.  We must love God in this beggar, this annoying creep, not in beggars and creeps in general.  We must love Him in this act of fasting, this basket of laundry, this ICEL translation. I said it was a challenge!  We must not reduce God’s will to an abstraction or an ideal. “Thy will (voluntas) be done on earth as it is in heaven”… or so it has been said.

Lest we forget why we needed new translation….

OBSOLETE ICEL (1973):

Father, help us to seek the values that will bring us lasting joy in this changing world. In our desire for what you promise make us one in mind and heart.

Good riddance!  “Values”.  Very slippery.  Typical of the obsolete translation.

To my ear, “values” has a shifting, subjective starting point. In 1995 Gertude Himmelfarb wrote in The De-Moralization of Society: From Victorian Virtues to Modern Values that “it was not until the present century that morality became so thoroughly relativized that virtues ceased to be ‘virtues’ and became ‘values.’”

In this post-Christian, post-modern world, “values” seems to indicate little more than our own self-projection.

John Paul II taught about “values”, but in contradiction to the way “values” are commonly understood today.  For example, we read in Evangelium vitae 71 (emphasis added):

“It is urgently necessary, for the future of society and the development of a sound democracy, to rediscover those essential human and moral values which flow from the very truth of the human being and express and safeguard the dignity of the person: values which no individual, no majority, and no state can ever create, modify, or destroy, but must only acknowledge, respect, and promote.”

In his 1985 letter to young people Dilecti amici 4, John Paul II taught:

“Only God is the ultimate basis of all values…. in Him and Him alone all values have their first source and final completion… Without Him – without the reference to God – the whole world of created values remains as it were suspended in an absolute vacuum.”

Benedict XVI taught about the threats we face from the “dictatorship of relativism”, from the reduction of the supernatural to the natural, from caving in to “the world”.

Christ warned His Apostles about “the world”, saying said: “The world cannot hate you, but it hates me because I testify of it that its works are evil” (John 7:7).  He spoke about this world’s “prince” (John 12:31; 14:30 16:11).  St Paul wrote: “Do not be conformed to this world but be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that you may prove what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect” (Romans 12:2).

If what “the world” offers gets priority over what God offers the world through His Holy Church, we produce the situation Paul VI described on 29 June 1972, the ninth anniversary of his coronation:

“Through some crack the smoke of Satan has entered into the temple of God.”

Our Collect today asks God to grant that His will be the basis of our “values” in concrete terms, not in mere good intentions or this world’s snares.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, WDTPRS | Tagged , , ,
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Question for Readers: Again about Spanish resources for the Traditional Roman Rite

I posted HERE a question about Spanish language resources for the older forms of the Roman Rite.

A priest reader has written to ask if there is a Latin/Spanish version of a condensed Roman Ritual along the lines of the old Collectio Rituum.

Anyone?

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Linking Back, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Mail from priests | Tagged , , , ,
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UPDATE: Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate and restrictions on the TLM

You will remember the hang-wringing and anxiety prompted by the restrictions on the use of the provisions of Summorum Pontificum placed on the Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate by the Congregation for Religious.

Reminder: The friars had been using the Usus Antiquior a great deal.  A minority didn’t like that.  They squealed to the Holy See.  The Congregation imposed a Apostolic “Commissar” and restricted the friars right to use the older form, because the older form had become a point of division.  That’s the basic sketch.

In a time when Pope Francis is calling for a less “clerical” attitude toward lay people, the Congregation’s move was deeply insensitive to the lay people who frequented the Masses celebrated by the friars.  As a result, I suspect that the Apostolic “Commissar” will grant lots of permissions to the friars once things settle down.

I have news about positive developments.

First, the Apostolic “Commissar” granted permission to the friar who is chaplain to the Franciscan Sisters of the Immaculate in Lanherne, England.  Also, a permission was granted at the pilgrimage site at Campocavallo, Italy.

Also, a reliable source passed along to me (and I don’t have a way to verify this from a second source, so … take it as it is), that the restrictions on the use of the Usus Antiquior, established by the Congregation’s decree, were desired by Pope Francis to assure that:

1) there is no compulsion to use the Usus Antiquior;
2) this choice of the Usus Antiquior is not motivated by an ideological rejection of the Novus Ordo.

The Pope’s moves were not motivated by any animus against the Usus Antiquior.  He is not against Benedict XVI’s legislation.  Francis desires, once the above-mentioned conditions are verified, that permissions be granted to the friars who request to use also the Usus Antiquior.  These points were made by the Holy Father to “a high-ranking Prelate in a recent personal conversation.”

I can only guess at the name of the Prelate.

So, if any of you are still out there on the ledge ready to thrown yourselves off to the pavement far below, breathe deeply and crawl back in through the window.  You are going to be okay.  It’s all going to be okay.  As I have been saying all along, Francis is not going to abolish Benedict XVI’s provisions in Summorum Pontificum.

UPDATE 25 August:

I received a note today that helps with additional information (edited):

The friars near Binghamton, NY received permission to continue offering the Extraordinary Form in a parish. This has been a highly attended TLM in the area.  An FFI priest will celebrate a Missa Cantata today. [Sunday]

The word is that after 30 August things will become clearer. Obviously neither the Decree nor Fr. Fidenzio are against the Extraordinary Form, since permissions have already been granted ad experimentum until 30 August.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Francis, Linking Back, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Priests and Priesthood, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged , , , ,
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QUAERITUR: Electronic devices during Mass

20130824-112834.jpgFrom a reader:

I attend the Extraodinary Form regularly. I noticed yesterday a man using a tablet as his Missal. I’m not sure what to think about this.

My own thought is that a tablet also can (and does) display immoral pictures and words even “accidentally” as it is used for other purposes at home etc. Should something which “allows” this to occur have a place in Church? I’m conflicted. Your thoughts?

A hand-held device is just a tool. There is nothing good or bad about it in itself.

However, our prevailing impressions about these devices has not completely shifted yet, especially for people who are older. When we use them in church, some people of a certain age may think you are “playing” with the thing, instead of using it.  That could scandalize and distract them.  It seems to me that we should avoid using them a great deal during Mass, even to follow readings.

A better approach could be to familiarize yourself with the readings before Mass, so that you can listen to the actual words of Mass with attentive interior participation and active receptivity, even when they are in Latin. This applies also to the use of hand-missals. Yes, I think people should have hand-missals for the Extraordinary Form, and bring them to Mass, and consult them when appropriate, but that they should do their homework, churchwork, ahead of time as well.

The hand-help device also presents other problems. If you use a book, you have only the content in the book. A hand-held device can bring in just about anything. When used in church, it would be best to have the device on “airplane mode” (unless you are a doctor on call, or someone who must be reached in emergencies), and then have the content already downloaded to your gizmo before Mass begins. Don’t run the risk of inadvertent distractions. Don’t run the risk of truly scandalizing a neighbor even by an “accident”.  Don’t even allow yourself the temptation to stray outside of the moment of Mass and your full, conscious and active participation by surfing around or checking your messages, etc.

I think we should use the devices sparingly when in church during the sacred liturgy of Holy Mass.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged , , , ,
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Video message from a Bishop to Catholic teachers as the school year begins

Here is a video message from His Excellency Most Reverend Robert C. Morlino to Catholic teachers in the Diocese of Madison.

As teachers workshops wind up around the country, and as schools begin again, and as this Year of Faith continues, how many Catholic school teachers receive a message like this?

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Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Mail from priests, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Year of Faith | Tagged , , ,
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Something about immigration reform

Catholics (and all people of truly good will) cannot disagree about the evil of abortion, but we can disagree about immigration.  The former is intrinsically evil, the latter is dealt with through contingent moral choices.  We can disagree about the best way to handle the questions surrounding immigration.

Meanwhile I direct the readers attention to the document Apostolos suos, which says that the conferences of bishops – as conferences – much less committees of the conferences do NOT have a mandatum docendi.

23. The very nature of the teaching office of Bishops requires that, when they exercise it jointly through the Episcopal Conference, this be done in the plenary assembly. Smaller bodies —the permanent council, a commission or other offices—do not have the authority to carry out acts of authentic magisterium either in their own name or in the name of the Conference, and not even as a task assigned to them by the Conference.

Here is a piece from the Washington Times:

The Catholic Church [HUH? Or the Catholic bishops in these USA, perhaps?] has put the word out to the faithful: Come September, the papacy [okay… the writer doesn’t have a clue…] will be pushing for a widespread and comprehensive immigration reform package on Capitol Hill that will open the doors to citizenship to roughly 11 million illegals.

The church [again] announced the plans last week. Starting Sept. 8, services at participating churches around the nation will include a pulpit-generated push for amnesty, including a call for pew members to get involved, the New York Timesreported.

“We want to try to pull out all the stops,” Kevin Appleby, the director of immigration policy at the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, told the Times. [Finally some clarity… it’s the administration of the USCCB, it isn’t even all the US bishops.] “They have to hear the message that we want this done, and if you’re not successful during the summer, you’re not going to win by the end of the year.”

Among the church’s [ugh] plans are scheduled marches and telephone blitzes to the offices of 60 Catholic House Republicans, demanding immigration reform. Speaker of the House John Boehner, along with nearly 130 other members of the legislative body, are Catholic.

At the community level, bishops and priests across the nation are planning to coordinate their Sunday services to include immigration reform throughout September, the Times reported.  [Some priests and bishops, maybe.]

At least a dozen [a dozen which? priests? bishops? priests and bishops?  This is muddy.] already have agreed to hold special Sunday masses in September dedicated to pushing immigration reform as Congress returns to session.

But one Catholic said the church [again] may be wasting its time.

“There are some issues that the church [again] speaks authoritatively on, such as abortion, in protecting life,” said Rep. Dan Lipinski, Illinois Democrat. “And then there are prudential judgments that are made, informed by Catholic theology, but it’s not something that Catholics are required to follow.”

What a mess.

Posted in Liberals, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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I am not making this up: There’s a fun new campaign for women’s ordination!

I promise that I am not making this up. I couldn’t if I tried.

This is a perfect example of self-parody, direct from the pages of the National Schismatic Reporter (aka The Fishwrap).

This is from one of the darlings of the LCWR, the Fishwrap’s very own Jamie Manson. You may recall that she was mentored by Sr. Margaret Farley.

I don’t even have to add any emphases or comments this time.

Women’s ordination movement takes interfaith approach
Jamie Manson

“You’re not alone” isn’t a message members of most prophetic movements are accustomed to hearing. But in the struggle over the ordination of women, a new interfaith collaboration seems to be emerging.
On Monday, women and men from multiple faith traditions will gather in Washington, D.C., and Salt Lake City for a day of prayer called “Equal in Faith: Women Fast for Gender Justice.”

After a day of fasting, participants will gather at St. Stephen and the Incarnation in Washington and at the Salt Lake Buddhist Temple for an interfaith service of prayer for the equal treatment of women in all faith communities.

“While women have access to spiritual authority in a growing number of religions, far too many women are still being denied equal participation and leadership in their faith traditions,” said Erin Saiz Hanna, executive director of the Women’s Ordination Conference, the largest and oldest organization advocating for the ordination of women in the Catholic church. The conference is one of the principal sponsors of the event.

Those who can’t be in either city Monday are still invited to participate through the event’s Facebook page.

“Our supporters can be in solidarity wherever they are,” Hanna said in an interview earlier this week. “They can pray with us and, if they are able, fast.” Messages of encouragement and hope can also be added to the Facebook page.

The use of Facebook in this action is especially appropriate since the interfaith collaboration was initially born out of social media.

Late last year, Women’s Ordination Conference staffers and friends produced and posted to YouTube a humorous music video called “Ordain a Lady” that advocated for the full inclusion of women in the Catholic church. Not surprisingly, the video elicited strong reactions from both supporters and detractors of the women’s ordination movement.

[…]

You can read the rest there.

I did not make that up and it is not from some spoof site. I double-checked.

Just in case you don’t remember that powerful, moving video Jamie mentioned, here it is. If I were a proponent of women’s ordination I would strangle the people who made the video. How embarrassing is this?  You almost feel bad for them.

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Another reminder that we live in a fallen world.

Posted in Crackit Gaberlunzie, Liberals, Lighter fare, You must be joking! | Tagged , ,
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St. Mary’s is getting a Continuity Makeover – VIDEO

My friend Fr. Greg Markey has gotten a spectacular renovation project going at his parish in Norwalk, CT.

St. Mary’s is getting the “Continuity Makeover”.

Another angle of the New Evangelization.

Gosh!  I wonder if, once it is done, they’ll invite me to come sing a Mass sometime?  I believe I would be free that day for Mass and a blognic.

How many parishes experienced the secularizing, banalizing vandalism of the spirit of Vatican II?  Altars stripped, statues and vestments and … you name it… dumpsterized for the sake of ephemeral notions.  How much money was WASTED in the name of that rubbish?  How many gifts of the people of God, often poor, hard-working immigrants, were scrapped for naught?

I am so glad to see that Fr. Markey is working to heal this church.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Just Too Cool, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
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REVIEW: Folding altar cards for travel Mass set, including Requiem Mass cards

The nice people at SPORCH… yes, SPORCH, sent me – some time ago mind you – their newly revised Roman Rite folding, travel altar cards (for the Extraordinary Form).

SPORCH is the Society for the Preservation of Roman Catholic Heritage.  Click HERE

I had written about the first version of their cards them some time ago, but they have in the meantime improved them.  Here are some pics.

I have used their first set when travelling.  I really liked them.  These are better.

The cards followed me around a bit until they finally reached my proper address. The letter they came with indicates a price of only $69 and there is a bulk discount. I don’t know how many “bulk” includes.

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The first improvement I noticed is that, instead of having a bit of velcro as a closure, they now embed a fairly strong magnet.

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The two outer wings fold in, over the two side altar cards, mounted on heavy board (like the cover of a hard-bound book) and over two additional cards with the prayers at the foot of the altar and at the end of Mass.

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I wonder if they include a version with prayers for the Queen, which those of you in the UK could use.

I prefer a less busy type-face, but these are nevertheless easily legible.

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Now for the Requiem cards.  For comparison… with a common tea spoon as a reference for size.

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They seem sturdy and durable.

These would be a great gift to seminarians and all priests. They are perfect for a travelling Mass set.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Priests and Priesthood, REVIEWS, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged , , , , ,
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The Feeder Feed: Chicago Edition

I had a way too brief visit to Chicago’s Institute of Art. I hadn’t been for a while and I was eager to refamiliarize myself with the collection.

During the visit, I spied this, which I am sure will interest you as much as it did me.

Here is an unattributed triptych of the early 16th c. from S. Germany.  It depicts Madonna and Child with Saints.  I was happy to see her yesterday, Our Lady’s Feast, and you can see that she is indeed crowned as Queen of Heaven.

She, the Christ Child, and the Saints, are in a garden, calling to mind both paradise and the hortus conclusus.  St. Ursula is in the left part, doing a great imitation of a Schutzmantel Madonna, and the wonderful St. Agnes is on the right.  They are both martyrs.

Atop the fencing posts are different species of birds, carefully detailed.  I suspect the painter worked from the real thing and was a fan.  This is unattributed.  I’d like to think that this was painted by a cloistered sister, or at least a woman, who watched birds and had a bit of a naturalist streak.

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Let’s get closer.

Notices that the flowers on the lattice are “pinks”, which in Italian portraits are sometimes associated with marriage.  They are also seen in paintings of Mary in the garden.  There are quite a few examples from both Italy and N. Europe wherein carnations or “pinks” appear.

She is pointing to the piece of fruit in Christ’s hands, an apple, a symbol of paradise and the loss of grace in Original Sin.  Christ is the Second Adam.  But, who is that closest to her head?

 

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This is our old friend the Christological Goldfinch, who today is rather freer than usual.  Usually, the Child is crunching Finchy in one of his pudgy fists.  Here is is, however, the closest of the birds to Mary’s crown, which is not a Crown of Thorns, but which was won through His Thorny Crown.  Newcomers here should know that this European finch got His read face, as legend has it, when he tried to relieve Christ’s suffering on the Cross by plucking thorns from his Head.

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There is plenty going on in this not-really-all-that-great painting, which is good for a devotional object as this triptych surely was intended to be.  And it is nice to see our old pal the Christological Goldfinch.

Since the painting is not attributed, it could be fun to make up a short story about the painter.  I must do that someday with some paintings.   I once saw a great though small exhibit at the National Portrait Gallery in London.  The exhibit included portraits of who-knows-who, people never identified.  Then the clever people who put the exhibit together asked some writers to concoct stories tied to the paintings, true to their period, venue, clothing, depiction, etc.  Fascinating and memorable.  But I digress.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, On the road, The Feeder Feed, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged , , ,
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