Daily Rome Shot 1259 – Moon

More from Sant’Ignazio.  The tomb of St. John Berchmans.

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  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.

Speaking of Jesuits…

Today the Firefly lunar lander Blue Ghost successfully (softly and in a stable, well-behaved way) touched down on the moon, the last stage beings entirely autonomous to avoid iffy terrain. The landing site is in Mare Crisium, which is visible from the Northern Hemisphere in the upper right of the full Moon. It is sometimes called the “Sea of Crises”. Some of you might know it from a story by Arthur C. Clarke. It is NE of Mare Tranquillitatis. A Soviet lander went there in 1976. Blue Ghost 1 launched on 15 January and is part of the CLIPS program, which pairs NASA up with companies making their own landers and payloads.

There is a fascinating connection between the name of the company and the place where Blue Ghost landed, but I’ll save that for News of the Church, which I want to do today, before Lent.

Here is a dramatic photo, one of the first to come back…

In chessy news… HERE

Here’s a good one. White to move and win material. There’s a mini windmill.

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Is papal authority over liturgy absolute?

The more vigorously the primacy was displayed, the more the question came up about the extent and and limits of [papal] authority, which of course, as such, had never been considered. After the Second Vatican Council, the impression arose that the pope really could do anything in liturgical matters, especially if he were acting on the mandate of an ecumenical council. Eventually, the idea of the givenness of the liturgy, the fact that one cannot do with it what one will, faded from the public consciousness of the West. In fact, the First Vatican Council had in no way defined the pope as an absolute monarch. On the contrary, it presented him as the guarantor of obedience to the revealed Word. The pope’s authority is bound to the Tradition of faith. … The authority of the pope is not unlimited; it is at the service of Sacred Tradition.

Joseph Ratzinger
in The Spirit of the Liturgy

US HERE – UK HERE

I am also reminded of what one of young Ratzinger’s mentors wrote on this topic.

Jesuit Fr. Karl Rahner was an immensely influential theological guru of a couple of generations of clerics and theologians.   He is the darling, venerated oracle of the catholic left and modernists.

Here is a quote from Karl Rahner.  This quote should be picked up and circulated widely.  Particularly in view of a potential upcoming special gathering.

From Karl Rahner’s Studies in Modern Theology (Herder, 1965, pp. 394-395) under the subtitle:

A Distinction: Legal and Moral Norms

[…]

Imagine that the Pope, as supreme pastor of the Church, issued a decree today requiring all the uniate churches of the Near East to give up their Oriental liturgy and adopt the Latin rite….The Pope would not exceed the competence of his jurisdictional primacy by such a decree, but the decree would be legally valid.

But we can also pose an entirely different question. Would it be morally licit for the Pope to issue such a decree? Any reasonable man and any true Christian would have to answer “no.” Any confessor of the Pope would have to tell him that in the concrete situation of the Church today such a decree, despite its legal validity, would be subjectively and objectively an extremely grave moral offense against charity, against the unity of the Church rightly understood (which does not demand uniformity), against possible reunion of the Orthodox with the Roman Catholic Church, etc., a mortal sin from which the Pope could be absolved only if he revoked the decree.

From this example one can readily gather the heart of the matter. It can, of course, be worked out more fundamentally and abstractly in a theological demonstration:

1. The exercise of papal jurisdictional primacy remains even when it is legal, subject to moral norms, which are not necessarily satisfied merely because a given act of jurisdiction is legal. Even an act of jurisdiction which legally binds its subjects can offend against moral principles.

2. To point out and protest against the possible infringement against moral norms of an act which must respect these norms is not to deny or question the legal competence of the man possessing the jurisdiction.

[…]

I recall that the late Michael Davies used this argument in one of his books in the wake of the Novus Ordo.

By this approach a Pope could have the raw power, the juridical authority, to suppress the TLM (pace fans of Quo primum), but he clearly would not have the moral authority to do such a thing.  It would be a…

“grave moral offense against charity”.

 

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World | Tagged ,
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I was told that the Left is telling people to boycott Amazon today. Therefore it is a great day to buy something from Amazon.  

I was told that the Left is telling people to boycott Amazon today.

Therefore it is a great day to buy something from Amazon.

Please use my affiliate links.  US HERE – UK HERE  WHY?  I get a small percentage of sales.  I can’t see who buys what.  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.

Here are a few suggestions:

Jesuit at Large: Essays and Reviews by Paul Mankowski, S.J.

US HERE – UK HERE

In the Beginning Was the Word: An Annotated Reading of the Prologue of John

US HERE – UK

 Ignatius Catholic Study Bible: Old and New Testaments  – WOW!

US HERE – UK HERE

The Exorcist Files: True Stories About the Reality of Evil and How to Defeat It

US HERE – UK

Martyrs of the Eucharist: Stories to Inspire Eucharistic Amazement.

US HERE – UK HERE

On The Demonic by Archbp. Fulton J. Sheen.

US HERE – UK HERE

No Apologies: Why Civilization Depends on the Strength of Men by Anthony Esolen

US HERE – UK HERE

 John Fisher and Thomas More: Keeping Their Souls While Losing Their Heads by Robert J. Conrad, Jr 

US HERE – UK HERE

Posted in ¡Hagan lío! |
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Daily Rome Shot 1258 – relics

HEY! a****n.w***h@erickson.com! My thank you note was kicked back as undeliverable. New email?

The Roman Martyrology says that today is the anniversary of the translation of the relics of St. Augustine of Hippo from Sardinia to Pavia in northern Italy about 20 miles south of Milan by King Luitprand king of the Lombards. His tomb is in the church San Pietro in Ciel d’Oro. Also in that church are the remains of St. Boethius, who wrote The Consolation of Philosophy.  Liutprand is also buried here.

Speaking of relics, I recently acquired 8 beautiful reliquaries for the Tridentine Mass Society of Madison (of which I am still President – in exile).  They arrived in Madison, have been assembled and are waiting for consecration and the placement of a reliquary theca in each one.  Here’s a shot.

I am grateful to everyone who has continued to contribute donations to the TMSM even in this time of persecution.   We are still involved in beautifying worthy sacred liturgical worship and waiting for happier days without the hypocritical oppression being carried on by Rome and some bishops.

Speaking more of relics, I am about to receive some new saints for my chapel.  I have in the past depended on the kindness of you readers to provide reliquaries.  I put the names of donors on a tag on the base to remember them when they are moved, which I usually do on their feasts.    I have put a few more reliquaries on my wishlistHERE

Here’s a puzzle for today:

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

White to move and win a piece.  This is a little tricky.

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Daily Rome Shot 1257 – Boris Spassky, RIP

Please… GO TO CONFESSION!

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  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 chessy news… as per above, Boris Spassky died. R.I.P.

Here is a puzzle from a game in 1952 between Viktor Korchnoi and Boris Spassky.

Black to move and mate in 3.
…Ra1+ Kc2 Rd2+ Qxd2 Qb3#
NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

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Bisextilis is not a Jesuit holiday, though it sounds like it. Otherwise, happy Feast of St Gabriel of the Sorrowful Virgin, patron saint of handgunners, marksmen, novices and seminarians

st gabriel of our lady of sorrows

“I want to break my own will into pieces, I want to do God’s Holy will, not my own. May the most adorable, most loveable, most perfect will of God always be done.”

St. Gabriel

Here we are near the end of the year’s shortest month. Since this is not a leap year (as was last year 2024) we can just cruise on into March without calendrical shenanigans.

What would they be, you ask.

Let’s digress for a while.

Among these shenanigans is when we would celebrate the feast of today’s saint, St. Gabriel of the Sorrowful Virgin. This is because in a leap year a day is added to February, but the liturgical dating according to the ancient Kalends (whence the word “calendar”) does not change.

This is most evident with the Feast of St. Matthias, Apostle, which we had the other day, 24 February. 24 February, in the ancient reckoning, is vi a.d. Kal Martii (the 6th day before the Kalends of March). However, in a leap year an additional vi a.d. Kal Martii, called Bisextilis… “second sixth”, is added, thus providing two 6th days before the Kalends of March. The Vigil of Matthias would be on the 24th (his feast had a vigil back when) and the Feast would be on the 25th (both being the 6th day before the Kalends in that ancient manner of counting during a leap year).

This all prepares us to understand why in a leap year St. Gabriel of the Sorrowful Virgin’s feast can be on 28 February instead of 27 February (as it is in this non-leaping year). St. Gabriel’s feast remains in each case on iii a.d. Kal. Martii in either case. However, in a leap year, because of Bisextilis… “second sixth”, he slides over from the 27th to the 28th. The important this to remember is that the ancient date according to the Kalends doesn’t change.

NOTA BENE: Tidal friction in the system of your planet and its Moon slows your planet’s rotation down so that a day is lengthened by some 1.4 milliseconds per century. In about 4 million years, we can stop with the Bisextilis correction. To which we should all respond, “Come, Lord Jesus!”

Other points:

  • Bisextilis is not a Jesuit holiday, though it sounds like it.
  • People born on leap days are called “leaplings”.
  • Most of the Apostles Feasts seem to be distributed through the year toward the end of the month. (I think Philip and James the Less are 1 May in the traditional calendar – which is pretty close to the end of a month).
  • Ash Wednesday has not yet fallen on a 29 February and it won’t until 2096.

st gabriel of our lady of sorrows 03And now something about St. Gabriel.

Today is the feast of St. Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows, Gabriel Possenti. 27 February is the day he died and was born into heaven in 1862, his dies natalis.

I visited his shrine beneath the great mountain Gran Sasso in Italy while I was in seminary.

Little Francesco Possenti came from a large family, 13 children, in Spoleto and was baptized in the same baptismal font as St. Francis of Assisi.

During a childhood illness he promised to become a religious if he were healed. This actually happened twice, but like many of us who make promises to God if He would only do something for us, Francesco forgot about it.  However, during a procession in honor of an image of Our Lady of Sorrows, Francesco finally felt strongly the calling to be a religious.  He took off for a Passionist house and novitiate on the eve of his engagement.

When Francesco made his vows he was given the name in religion of Gabriel adding of Our Lady of Sorrows.  Gabriel made a special promise to spread devotion to Our Lady of Sorrows. His writings are imbued with this devotion and a special focus on the Passion of the Lord.  He was known for his perfect observance of the rule of the Passionists.

While still young was contracted tuberculosis.  He remained always in good spirits, never quitting his harsh mortifications however.  Before he could be ordained a priest, he died embracing an image of Our Lady of Sorrows.

Gabriel was canonized by Pope Benedict XV 1920 and declared him patron of Catholic youth. In 1959, Pope John XXIII named him the patron of the Abruzzi region, where he spent the last two years of his earthly life. His is also invoked by seminarians and novices.

St. Gemma Galgani attributed to St. Gabriel the cure which led her also to her vocation as a Passionist.

Let us look at his Collect from the 1962 Missale Romanum.

COLLECT:

Deus, qui beatum Gabrielem dulcissimae Matris tuae dolores assidue recolere docuisti, ac per illam sanctitatis et miraculorum gloria sublimasti: da nobis, eius intercessione et exemplo; ita Genetricis tuae consociari fletibus, ut materna eiusdem protectione salvemur.

LITERAL TRANSLATION:

O God, who taught blessed Gabriel to reflect constantly upon the sorrows of Your most sweet Mother, and through her raised him on high by the glory of holiness and miracles: grant us, by his intercession and example; so to be joined to the tears of Your Mother, that we may be saved by her maternal protection.

Now here is the politically incorrect part of the story.  

st gabriel of our lady of sorrows 02From the Possenti Society:

In 1860, soldiers from Garibaldi entered the mountain village of Isola, Italy. They began to burn and pillage the town, terrorizing its inhabitants.

Possenti, with his seminary rector’s permission, walked into the center of town, unarmed, to face the terrorists. One of the soldiers was dragging off a young woman he intended to rape when he saw Possenti and made a snickering remark about such a young monk being all alone.

Possenti quickly grabbed the soldier’s revolver from his belt and ordered the marauder to release the woman. The startled soldier complied, as Possenti grabbed the revolver of another soldier who came by. Hearing the commotion, the rest of the soldiers came running in Possenti’s direction, determined to overcome the rebellious monk.

At that moment a small lizard ran across the road between Possenti and the soldiers. When the lizard briefly paused, Possenti took careful aim and struck the lizard with one shot. Turning his two handguns on the approaching soldiers, Possenti commanded them to drop their weapons. Having seen his handiwork with a pistol, the soldiers complied. Possenti ordered them to put out the fires they had set, and upon finishing, marched the whole lot out of town, ordering them never to return. The grateful townspeople escorted Possenti in triumphant procession back to the seminary, thereafter referring to him as “the Savior of Isola”.

Thus, some consider him to be the patron of shooters, marksmen, and handgun users.

For good reason. Thus endeth the lesson.

I think all you readers out there should consider concealed carry license courses and, afterwards, lots of training and practice.  Even if you choose, for one reason or another, not to carry – and for some people that is the reasonable, prudent, better choice – you will at least know something about firearms, laws, the training, and will also have received a heavy dose of how to de-escalate confrontations, avoid conflicts, increase your situational awareness, etc.  It is useful on many levels.  Don’t depend on the idiocies of the liberal media for your information about these things.  Get first hand and hands on experience.  Then you can have an opinion with weight.

Ask St. Gabriel to help you in the process.

Posted in Saints: Stories & Symbols, SESSIUNCULA |
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Daily Rome Shot 1256 – moving experience

From directly below…

When you walk diagonally across the nave while looking up, there is an optical illusion. It looks like the figures are moving.

Help also for life…

In other chessy news… HERE

Black to move and force mate in 4.

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ASK FATHER: Is still possible to gain indulgences during a papal interregnum?

From a reader….

QUAERUNTUR:

I was wondering if it is still possible to gain indulgences during a papal interregnum (i.e., praying for the Holy Father’s intentions being a requirement to gain the indulgence)? Also are there any traditional practices during this time in place of praying for the Holy Father? I imagine just praying for a good, holy man to be the new pope.

Yes, it is still possible to obtain indulgences during the papal interregnum.  When a Pope dies, almost all of the offices/positions in the Roman Curia are automatically vacated.  Almost all.  Two which do not cease are the Camerlengo (who has to organize the funeral and conclave) and the Major Penitentiary (usually a cardinal) in charge of the Apostolic Penitentiary.  This is not a prison.  It is the “senior” of the Church’s three tribunals, along with the Signatura and the Rota.

The Apostolic Penitentiary is competent in all matters regarding the internal forum and indulgences as expressions of divine mercy.  For the internal forum, whether sacramental or non-sacramental, it grants absolution from censures, dispensations, commutations, validations, remissions and other favors.

The Apostolic Penitentiary is charged with the granting and use of indulgences.

The role of the Major Penitentiary is so important that, if he is a Cardinal Elector (under 80, etc.) he is one of the only people who can communicate with the outside world during the conclave.  The other two are the Cardinal Vicar of the Diocese of Rome and the Cardinal Vicar of the Vatican City State.

The good of and the salvation of souls through the internal forum, the matter of censures, and the availability of indulgences is of such paramount importance that these functions remain in place even in an interregnum.

The Church has the authority to apply the merits of Christ’s Sacrifice and of the saints to relieve temporal punish due to sin through indulgences.  While individual bishops can grant some indulgences for his subjects, this is done for the universal Church through the Apostolic Penitentiary.

As for the second question, I suppose we could have Masses said for him and we can – and should – pray the Rosary and other prayers such as the Memorare for the intentions you infer, namely, when it is pretty sure that he is in extremis that he have a good and holy death and for the Cardinal electors to choose a holy man who is also highly competent.

It is also important for pray for Popes and others after they die as well.  Speaking of gaining indulgences!

Let us all pray for those who have gone to their judgment and not assume that they have automatically or quickly been admitted to the Beatific Vision.  It is an important work of mercy to pray for the dead.

Gain indulgences!

That also means…

GO TO CONFESSION!

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box | Tagged ,
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Daily Rome Shot 1255 – We’re doomed

GO TO CONFESSION!

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  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.

Sister DeDe is fantastic.

In chessy news… HERE

White to move and mate in 3.

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Dicastery for the Causes of Saints in Rome issues Decree naming Fr Emil Kapaun Venerable

Dicastery for the Causes of Saints in Rome issues Decree naming Father Emil Kapaun Venerable

The decree was published on the website of the Diocese of Wichita. HERE

Bishop Carl Kemme is pleased to announce that on February 25, 2025, Pope Francis authorized the promulgation of the Decree concerning the offer of life of Servant of God Emil Kapaun.

“As bishop of the Diocese of Wichita, where Father Emil Kapaun was ordained and served and where he is now entombed in the Cathedral, I join his family, our diocesan family, parishioners in Pilsen, his brother priests, men and women in the armed forces, past, present and future, and indeed every one of faith in giving thanks that Pope Francis has advanced his cause by declaring him to be Venerable. I encourage everyone to continue to pray for his intercession in every situation so that many more graces and divine favors will be received because of his powerful prayers. Venerable Emil Kapaun, pray for us!” Bishop Carl A. Kemme

This Decree is a formal recognition that, after a life of virtue, Kapaun freely and voluntarily made the supreme act of charity: offering his life for his fellow prisoners of war.  “Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends,” says Jesus (John 15:13).

The publication of the Decree opens the door for the investigation of alleged miracles needed as supernatural evidence to further the cause.  One miracle will need to be approved for beatification.  A second approved miracle, occurring after the beatification itself, will be needed for canonization as a saint.

Over the years we have received testimony of several instances of alleged miraculous intercession by Father Kapaun.  Some of these potential miracles date back nearly two decades, while others occurred very recently.  One or two will be sent in detail to the Dicastery for Saints in Rome for review by both theologians and medical experts before papal approval is given.  This process will likely take many years before beatification could happen.

Bishop Kemme and all of us here at Father Kapaun’s Cause are immensely grateful for your prayers and support.  This is a thrilling step, and we can now begin to address Father Kapaun as the Venerable Servant of God Emil Kapaun, or more commonly, “Venerable Emil Kapaun”.

Now, as much as ever, our work is to continue to pray and share Venerable Kapaun’s story.  We ask him to intercede for us, that we all may follow his example of hope, courage, and selfless sacrifice for God and the good of those around us.

To learn more about the offering of life, visit https://frkapaun.org/

To request a prayer card or to make a donation

Posted in Modern Martyrs, Saints: Stories & Symbols | Tagged
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