Every word he says is a lie, including “and” and “the”.

Today real marriage and true sexual identity was dealt a blow by one of the most dangerous institutions on the planet, the Supreme Court of these United States of America.

What was the reaction of “The First Gay President”?

Obama: I won’t make churches conduct gay marriages

President Obama, in his statement hailing the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn the Defense of Marriage Act, promised that he wouldn’t try to force religious institutions to conduct gay marriages.

“On an issue as sensitive as this, knowing that Americans hold a wide range of views based on deeply held beliefs, maintaining our nation’s commitment to religious freedom is also vital,” Obama said. “How religious institutions define and consecrate marriage has always been up to those institutions. Nothing about this decision — which applies only to civil marriages — changes that.”

[…]

Fr. Z responds:

To paraphrase the famous fight: Every word he says is a lie, including “and” and “the”.

This is the result of “creeping incrementalism”.

And it is not over.

Posted in Liberals, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged , , , ,
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ROME: Sacra Liturgia Conference – Day 2 – Part Duh… errrr… Deux

Lots of French this afternoon at the Sacred Liturgy conference. I follow French well but… with the jet lag and the first topic… damn! I had to walk around and find coffee for to stay wakeful. And I find lots of French tedious, after a while.

So, I spent time reading Latin inscriptions on the walls. Rome is great for that.

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Tonight there was what passes for a “solemn” Mass in the Novus Ordo. Card. Canizares Llovera was celebrant for a concelebrated Mass. I was in choir.

Sorry about blurry images. Something is wrong with my iPhone camera which leaves me feeling… what do you call it again… anger?

You may be tempted to ask if the celebrant stood for this prayer. Yes. He did.

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This Novus Ordo Mass was about as good as the Novus Ordo gets. The music was good. The ceremonies reverent. It was MC’d well.

However…

What irks and disappoints with the Novus Ordo – all the time – is that a celebrant will start singing and then THUD stop singing and just speak the next part, higgledy-piggledy. The musical parts are all available. Celebrants could sing them. But…. la la la and then THUD.

This is a fault of the celebrant rather than the Novus Ordo. But the NO lends itself to this nonsense.

Fathers… learn to SING THE WHOLE THING!

THUD is what happened tonight throughout.

Another view. Again, sorry about the blur.

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After Mass – which was CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC – GRRRR AGAIN – I saw this scruffy bunch whom I had met in Boston during a recent visit.

They let anyone come to these conferences. (But they won’t let anyone in for MASS who lacks a ticket.)

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Great guys.

Then supper.

Zucchini blossoms, stuffed with anchovy and mozzarella and then fried.

If you have a garden with zucchini and don’t know what to do with all of them, get out there in the morning early, before the new blossoms open. Pick blossoms (zucchini abortions, I guess) and wrap them in moist paper towels and put them in the fridge for later. You can make all sorts of great things from them.

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Mixed seafood thingy.

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Saltimbocca. So ubiquitous in Rome as to be boring. And, I must admit, this version was a little boring. It didn’t “jump” as promised. But I managed to fend off death by starvation again… again too well.

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And so, after a grueling day of listening to excellent talks on sacred liturgy in three languages which I understand quite well, and having negotiated shops and eateries in the local patois, I return to my short-let apartment to do laundry and force myself to sleep … perhaps by reading some Hans Urs von Balthasar. Never fails.

I leave you therefore with a poignant quote I heard today, citied by Tracey Rowland in her near perfect address. With a measure of irony, Yves Congar, not exactly a trad from 1960:

“But we need only step into an old church, taking holy water, as Pascal and Serapion did before us, in order to follow a Mass which has scarcely changed, even in externals, since St. Gregory the Great, or we may open our missals at the pages which give the Paschal Tridiuum…Everything has been preserved for us, and we can enter into a heritage which we may easily transmit in our turn, to those coming after us. Ritual, as a means of communication and of victory over devouring time, is also seen to be a powerful means of communication in the same reality between men separated by centuries of change and affected by very different influences. Both as a lived action and as a ritualized action, the liturgy preserves and hands on to us elements which are much more numerous than were realized by those men who performed and preserved the rites, and actually handed them on to us: many more, even, than we ourselves can know. The whole Eucharist is given to me in its celebration, I myself possess it in its entirety, although I understand and could express so little of it…The whole of our love is expressed in the liturgical kiss, even if we do not really attend sufficiently to what we are doing. The whole of our faith is in the most ordinary sign of the cross, and when we say ‘Our Father’ we already imply all the knowledge which will be given to us only when we embrace it in the revelation of glory.”

UPDATE:

My view for a while…

Pontifical Mass to begin soon!

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Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, On the road, The Feeder Feed | Tagged , , , ,
12 Comments

SCOTUS v Marriage

Dreadful news from the Supreme Court:

Supreme Court strikes down Defense of Marriage Act provision

The Supreme Court has struck down a federal provision denying benefits to legally married gay couples.
The 5-4 decision found the Defense of Marriage Act unconstitutional.

UGH

“The federal statute is invalid, for no legitimate purpose overcomes the purpose and effect to disparage and to injure those whom the State, by its marriage laws, sought to protect in personhood and dignity,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in the majority opinion. “By seeking to displace this protection and treating those persons as living in marriages less respected than others, the federal statute is in violation of the Fifth Amendment.”

Justice Kennedy delivered the court’s opinion, and was joined by Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Antonin Scalia and Samuel Alito all filed dissenting opinions.

We will be under serious attack soon.

 

Posted in One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, Pò sì jiù, Religious Liberty | Tagged , , , ,
122 Comments

ROME: Sacra Liturgia Conference – Day 2

Day 2 of the Sacred Liturgy conference in Rome is underway.

The first talk this morning was by Gabriel Steinschulte on sacred liturgical music. He is the nephew of the late, great Msgr. Johannes Overath (a friend and colleague of my old pastor and mentor Msgr. Richard Schuler). Alas, he spoke way too quickly for the simultaneous translator to keep up well, a usual problem with Germans at international conferences.

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The second talk was by Bp. Peter Elliott on are celebrandi. He was, as usually, informative and humorous. He paced his talk very well for the translators and even warned them along the way when he was condensing or moving to another page. Experienced and thoughtful!

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There was a nice break for coffee.

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We are back at work now, with a talk by Fr. Stefan Heid, about ancient Christian altars. My German is pretty good, but it is a bit rusty. I am alternating between viva voce and the translation device.

The twitter tag for the conference is #saclit

Stefan Heid dismantled the bad archeology and theology that drove the turning around of altars after the Council. It’s all fake. It makes me mad to think about all the money, the people of God’s money, wasted on a shame.

Tracey Rowland is up now. She is talking about how the Usus Antiquior can aid the New Evangelization and can be an antidote to secularism.
UPDATE

I’ll post some pics of well-known people, some of whom I have known for quite a while, some new a acquaintances.

Bp Schneider. He has made good suggestions for understanding better what Vatican II was about.

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Tracey Rowland, one of the best speakers so far.

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UPDATE

Waiting in choro for Mass to begin. Card. Cañizares Llovera celebrant.

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Posted in Brick by Brick, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, On the road, Our Catholic Identity, The future and our choices, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged , , , ,
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ROME: Sacra Liturgia Conference – Day 1

The long-awaited conference on sacred liturgy in Rome is underway.

We began with Vespers, sung in the Church of Sant’Appolinare near the Piazza Navona.

A shot from my angle.

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Tonight we begin with an introduction by Bp. Rey and an address by Card. Ranjith.

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Theme: The Sacred Liturgy, culmen et fons vitae et missionis ecclesiae.

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We are using Twitter tag #sacraliturgia or also #saclit

UPDATE

Michael Voris is stalking me.

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First Acton U, now here.

Following me around… hmmmm….

After the first session at a blognic, the first called, I think, by someone not-I!

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UPDATE

With my friend Jeffrey Tucker, chief of the New Liturgical Movement blog.

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Posted in Brick by Brick, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, On the road, Our Catholic Identity, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged ,
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Mystery Watch

What’s with this?

From the Daily Mail:

Mystery as century-old Swiss watch discovered in ancient tomb sealed for 400 years

Archaeologists are stumped after finding a 100-year-old Swiss watch in an ancient tomb that was sealed more than 400 years ago.
They believed they were the first to visit the Ming dynasty grave in Shangsi, southern China, since its occupant’s funeral.
But inside they uncovered a miniature watch in the shape of a ring marked ‘Swiss’ that is thought to be just a century old.

The mysterious timepiece was encrusted in mud and rock and had stopped at 10:06 am.
Watches were not around at the time of the Ming Dynasty and Switzerland did not even exist as a country, an expert pointed out.
The archaeologists were filming a documentary with two journalists when they made the puzzling discovery.

‘When we tried to remove the soil wrapped around the coffin, suddenly a piece of rock dropped off and hit the ground with metallic sound,’ said Jiang Yanyu, former curator of the Guangxi Museum.
‘We picked up the object, and found it was a ring.
‘After removing the covering soil and examining it further, we were shocked to see it was a watch,’ he added.
The Ming Dynasty – or the Empire of the Great Ming – was the was ruling dynasty in China from 1368 to 1644.

Doctor Hu?

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged
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QUAERITUR: Convoluted scenario involving “whiney trads”, priest shortages, Magic 8-Ball, and dragon teeth

From a reader:

I have a hypothetical question for you related to Summorum Pontificum and the Bishop’s obligation to make certain those who wish to have the TLM can do so by supplying a priest as it relates to priest shortages and whiney traditionalists.

Hypothetical Scenario:  [Why do I have the feeling that isn’t so very hypothetical?]
Latin Mass Community X has been established for a number of years with a diocesan priest, and despite the really bad priest shortage in the diocese, the Bishop continues to supply one to the detriment of larger NO congregations. Despite ongoing talks with Traditionalist Priest Group B, there are not enough resources to have such a priest serve the Latin Mass Community. Latin Mass Community members don’t really want diocesan priests for petty reasons X, Y, Z and complain about having such priests.

In such circumstance, would a bishop be justified in taking away their diocesan priest and leaving them with no priest, at least until they change their attitudes, or would this be against Summorum Pontificum?

For this one I consulted Magic 8 Ball, which came up with the answer: “It is decidedly so.”

Since this is a hypothetical (surrrre it is!) scenario, I’ll say, yes, hypothetically.  On the other hand, maybe not.

Summorum Pontificum does not require the impossible.  If there aren’t priests willing/able to celebrate the older form at this time, then there aren’t priests to celebrate the older form.  This is not rocket science.  The bishop is not Cadmus, after all.

Summorum Pontificum, and the very heart of what Benedict was urging, seek that everything be done cum serena pace… with a spirit of serene peace.  If the mix of the priest (we can be real jerks sometimes) and congregation (it’s usually just a few that spoil things) at St. Ipsydipsy is irremediably bellicose then the bishop should pull the priest. If there isn’t another priest available and the people aren’t willing to work with the guy they had… too bad for them. They made their choice.

That said, in charity steps should be taken – by the bishop – to remedy this shortage and, thereby, provide for greater flexibility and more options in the future.

One way to remedy the shortage is to do what the indomitable Bp. Morlino did in Madison: he told all his seminarians – and I heard this with my own ears – that he expected them to learn to say the older form of Mass before he ordained them.  HERE

Lay people (the abovementioned “whiney traditionalists”?) can be of great help also by sounding out priests who are willing to learn and then pay for them to go to a workshop at St. John Cantius in Chicago or held by the FSSP.

A note about “whiney traditionalists”.

There’s whiney and then there’s whiney.

If by “whiney” you mean constant snarky moaning about everything, then I have no sympathy.

If, however, you mean persistent, diplomatic, cordial, pressure, that’s another thermos of soup.

When liberals and progressivists and iconoclasts whined for something, they were given all manner of consideration for decades.  When traditionalists begged, pled, prayed for their legitimate aspirations (cf. John Paul II’s Ecclesia Dei adflicta) they were ignored, insulted, sent to the back of the bus for decades.

In this era of Summorum Pontificum – Benedict XVI’s Emancipation Proclamation – I am tempted to apply the concept of “affirmative action” (or “positive discrimination”) and say that the Novus Ordo parish should get the short end of the stick.

Have I mixed enough metaphors yet?

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Priests and Priesthood, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged , ,
28 Comments

New FSSP parish set up in Minneapolis!

I confess that I am a little shocked.

His Excellency Most Reverend John Nienstedt, Archbishop of St. Paul and (of my hometown) Minneapolis has entrust a parish that was to close to the FSSP!

Brick by brick! Parish by parish.

Here is Archbp. Nienstedt’s letter

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
I am happy to announce that the parish of All Saints of Minneapolis will have a pastor and an associate to serve you beginning next month.
minneopolis-all-saints5As you have likely seen and heard in parish communications over the past few months, the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter has offered to send two of its members to care for the parish of All Saints, which has been without a pastor for more than a year. After consultation with your parish trustees and your parish pastoral council, as well as the presbyteral council, a representative body of priests from across the Archdiocese, I have accepted the Fraternity’s offer.
Father Peter Bauknecht and Father Simon Harkins will begin their service at All Saints onJuly 3, 2013. Fr. Bauknecht will serve as pastor.
As you may know, the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter is a Catholic Clerical Society of Apostolic Life dedicated to providing Catholics access to the extraordinary form of the liturgy according to the liturgical books of 1962. You can find out more about the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter at their website: www.fssp.org. Mass in the extraordinary form will be offered at All Saints. Mass in the current form to which you are accustomed will be offered, as well. A Mass schedule will be established, in consultation with All Saints parish leadership.
Please join me in welcoming Father Bauknecht and Father Harkins. I will be praying for these priests as they begin service in your parish and I ask that you join me supporting their work through prayer, as well.
With every good wish, I am,
Cordially yours in Christ,
Most Reverend John C. Nienstedt
The Most Reverend John C. Nienstedt
Archbishop of Saint Paul and Minneapolis
Posted in Brick by Brick, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged ,
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The wussificiation of the priesthood and the Novus Ordo

I have in the past mentioned the comment made by Card. Heenan when he experienced the Novus Ordo for the first time.  The comment leads a longish piece posted at Rorate (which no longer links to this blog, btw) by Fr. Richard Cipolla in Norwalk, Connecticut (whom I have met).  He peels back, onion-like, layers of the Novus Ordo to expose problems with its core.  The whole thing is worth your time, but is too long to represent here, alas.  Some highlights.

He begins:

The correspondence between Cardinal Heenan of Westminster and Evelyn Waugh before the promulgation of the Novus Ordo Mass is well known, in which Waugh issues a crie de coeur about the post-Conciliar liturgy and finds a sympathetic, if ineffectual, ear in the Cardinal.[1]   What is not as well known is Cardinal Heenan’s comment to the Synod of Bishops in Rome after the experimental Mass, Missa Normativa, was presented for the first time in 1967 to a select number of bishops. This essay was inspired by the following words of Cardinal Heenan to the assembled bishops:

At home, it is not only women and children but also fathers of families and young men who come regularly to Mass. If we were to offer them the kind of ceremony we saw yesterday we would soon be left with a congregation of women and children.[2]
What the Cardinal was referring to lies at the very heart of the Novus Ordo form of the Roman Mass and the attendant and deep problems that have afflicted the Church since the imposition of the Novus Ordo form on the Church in 1970.[3]   One might be tempted to crystallize what Cardinal Heenan experienced as the feminization of the Liturgy. But this term would be inadequate and ultimately misleading. For there is a real Marian aspect of the Liturgy that is therefore feminine. The Liturgy bears the Word of God, the Liturgy brings forth the Body of the Word to be worshipped and given as Food. A better terminology might be that in the Novus Ordo rite of Mass the Liturgy has been effeminized. There is a famous passage in Caesar’s De bello Gallico where he explains why the Belgae tribe were such good soldiers. He attributes this to their lack of contact with the centers of culture like the cities. Caesar believed that such contact contributes ad effeminandos animos, to the effeminizing of their spirits.[4] But when one talks about the effeminization of the Liturgy one risks being misunderstood as devaluing what it means to be a woman, womanhood itself. Without adopting Caesar’s rather macho view of the effects of culture on soldiers, one certainly can speak of a devirilization of the soldier that saps his strength and resolve to do what a soldier has to do. It is not a put-down of the feminine. It rather describes the weakening of what it means to be a man.

This is the term, devirilization, that I want to use to describe what Cardinal Heenan saw that day in 1967 at the first celebration of the experimental Mass.

[…]

And…

This role of the vir of faith is radically different from the priest who believes his job is not to lead the people to the altar of Sacrifice but rather to dialogue with them and to make them “understand what is going on”. Then the Eucharistic Prayer with its altogether brief dialogue between priest and people becomes another extension of the priest’s dialogue-banter. Here there is no walking up the mountain together; [Like Abraham taking Isaac up the mountain: priest and victim.] there is no turning to the Lord together; instead there is the terrible and stultifying stasis of the condescending and overbearing mother trying to connect with her child and in the process destroying the child’s freedom to walk up to the mountain of God.[14]

Before turning to the important question of the continuity of the Novus Ordo rite with the traditional Roman rite from the viewpoint of the devirilization of the liturgy, I want to offer comments on two practical results of the devirilization of the liturgy and of the priest. The first is this: the music that the Novus Ordo has produced, both for Mass settings and songs to be sung at the liturgy, is at best functional, at worst sentimental junk that makes the old Protestant evangelical hymns sound like Bach chorales. When Mass is reduced to a self-referential assembly, then music becomes merely functional at best, at worst something to rouse the feelings of the people. This functionalism is a mark of the chilling, outdated and anti-liturgical stance of the liturgical establishment that still controls much of the liturgical life of the Church in the Roman dicasteries, in seminaries, in dioceses and therefore in parishes.

[…]

And…

The devirilized priest confuses detachment with arrogance or superiority or coldness or clericalism. Ironically quite the opposite is true. The post-Conciliar period has seen the rise of a clericalism that masks itself by claiming that the priest merely “presides” over the assembly but who in fact presides over everything. The priest must never be a presider, for this is like being a fussy wedding planner. [Do I hear an “Amen!”?] To love his people the priest must have this sense of detachment from them, lest he become another collectible Ken doll in a collar.

[…]

Heh… heh… that’ll win him some new friends!

I am glad he brought up “clericalism”.  I have in my reading lately noticed an uptick of the use of the term and I am left with a sense that it is being misused.  We priests need to build strong bonds and have our own healthy sub-culture.  Yes, there is a negative “clericalism”, but there is a positive as well.  I also will repeat what I have written so many times on this blog regarding a dreadful sort of clericalism, often seen in the context of the Novus Ordo.  A false notion of “active participation” drives many priests to devalue the dignity of lay people.  Priests – usually well-intentioned – wound the dignity of the laity when, in their largess, they grant to lay people permission to do something clerics should be doing.  The dumbing down of the priest’s role to that of a mere presider is the flip side of the same coin.

Some of Cipolla’s points are a bit over-played, but I’ll give them a pass.  In the balance, he makes a good argument.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, The Drill, The future and our choices, Vatican II | Tagged , , , ,
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“Francis”can learning curve

I have mentioned at various times since last March that Francis needs to learn how to be Pope and that we need learn how to let him be Pope.

I saw this in a Reuter’s piece (about the Empty Chair) by my old friend Phil Pullella.

“It took us by surprise,” said one Vatican source on Monday. “We are still in a period of growing pains. He is still learning how to be pope and we are still learning how he wants to do it.”

There is more, of course.  I think he exaggerates (it’s MSM after all), but take a look.

Holy Mother Church is never dull!

Posted in Francis, Linking Back, The Drill | Tagged , , , , ,
26 Comments