Benedict makes change to the inaugural Mass of the next Pope

I am in general a nihil innovetur kind of guy, but here is a change I can believe in.

From CNS:

Pope Benedict changes rituals for new pope’s inauguration

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Benedict XVI has ordered several changes to the Masses and liturgies that will mark the inauguration of the next pope’s pontificate.

Rites and gestures that are not strictly sacramental will take place either before a Mass or in a ceremony not involving Mass, Msgr. Guido Marini, master of papal liturgical ceremonies, told the Vatican newspaper Feb. 22.

One of the most visual changes, he said, would be the restoration of the public “act of obedience” in which each cardinal present at the pope’s inaugural Mass comes forward and offers his allegiance.  [Excellent!  I hated what was done to that in 2005.  And they need to be reminded in a concrete way, in the eyes of the whole world, of who their captain is.]

When Pope Benedict celebrated his inaugural Mass in 2005, 12 people were chosen to represent all Catholics: three cardinals, a bishop, [As a matter of fact he was my bishop, Bp. Erba of Velletri-Segni.  The newly elected Pope had been the Cardinal Bishop of Velletri-Segni and he had real affection for the place.  Thus, he chose Bp. Erba to represent all the diocesan bishops of the world.  I have a great photo of the moment.] a diocesan priest, a transitional deacon, a male religious, a female religious, a married couple and a young man and a young woman recently confirmed.

Msgr. Marini said Pope Benedict personally approved the changes Feb. 18; they include offering a wider choice of traditional Mass prayers in polyphony and chant, rather than the new musical repertoire composed for the 2005 book.  [GOOD!]

After having personally experienced the liturgical rites drafted by Msgr. Marini’s predecessor — and approved by Pope Benedict immediately after his election — the pope suggested “a few changes aimed at improving the text” of the rites for the beginning of a pontificate, formally known as the “Ordo Rituum pro Ministerii Petrini Initio Romae Episcopi.”

Mini-buttons available also!

The changes, Msgr. Marini said, “follow in the line of the modifications made in papal liturgies” over the course of Pope Benedict’s papacy.  [RE-ELECT RATZINGER! ]

The previous edition of the ritual handbook also called for the new pope to visit the basilicas of St. Paul Outside the Walls and St. Mary Major within two or three weeks of his installation.

The new book, Msgr. Marini said, leaves it up to the new pope to decide “when it would be most opportune, even at some distance from his election, and under what form he judges best, whether it be a Mass, a celebration of the Liturgy of the Hours or a particular liturgical act” like the one found in the 2005 ritual book.

On the other hand, in an email response to questions, Msgr. Marini told Catholic News Service that no significant modifications had been made to the “Ordo rituum conclavis,” the book of rituals, Masses and prayers that accompany the conclave to elect a new pope.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged ,
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“nothing was required of me but to pray”

At Ignitum Today there is a entry by a gal who attended a “Traditional Latin Mass” for the first time in years.

The first part of the piece:

[…]

This Sunday by happy accident (no one could find the 3 year old’s shoes until past the time for us to leave) we ended up at the local TLM church instead of our regular Novus Ordo parish. This  Mass was a different experience altogether.  I’ve been before, but I don’t know how I missed the silence.  I don’t know how I missed the calm and the peace. Before the Mass, there was no talking at all.  No chatting at all, there were just respectful silence and a swiftly moving line of penitents at the Confessional.  (There was Confession before Mass.  Not at 3:30 on a Saturday and only for half an hour, but beforeMass began)

Once the processional began, I realized that, to my delight, nothing was required of me but to pray.  The squirmy baby in my arms usually distracts me as I try to follow along.  Sunday I just prayed.  The Mass washed over me in a soothing stream of Latin.  The chanting of the priest was met by the soaring voices of the choir.  The boys at the altar were serious about their duties and obviously joyful in the doing of them.  The whole of the Celebration was as smooth and as beautiful as a well-rehearsed dance.  I watched it all in appreciation, and then bowed my head and prayed.

[…]

Thank you, Pope Benedict, for Summorum Pontificum.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged , , ,
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On the feast day, congratulations to the Anglican, Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Peter!

In these USA there has been established – due to the provisions in Anglicanorum coetibus approved by the Pope of Christian Unity (presently reigning) – a Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of Peter!

Fr. Z kudos to all those who made it possible for this Ordinariate to be established and all those who have joined it.

It would be great if some of its members chimed in to say how things are going.

Posted in Fr. Z KUDOS, Just Too Cool, Our Catholic Identity, Pope of Christian Unity | Tagged ,
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Nuns and Ohio voter fraud

A priest friend sent me this. I wonder Sr. Simone Campbell thinks about this.

From Cincinnati.com:

A Greater Cincinnati nun is suspected of illegally casting a ballot for another nun who died before last November’s election, a new case of alleged vote fraud that emerged as local officials move to wrap up their investigation into election improprieties last fall.

Sister Rose Marie Hewitt, 78, died Oct. 4 after a 59-year career as a Sister of Charity [My priest friend calls this a “prototypical LCWR type of congregation”…] that included service in schools here and across the country, as well as in various other positions in Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky.

Although her death occurred before absentee ballots had been mailed to voters throughout Hamilton County, a completed ballot was returned to the elections board in Hewitt’s name.

Officials believe the ballot was sent by another local Sister of Charity who was a friend of Hewitt and is registered at the same Delhi Township address. That person cast her own vote at her polling place on Election Day.  [Who thinks they voted GOP?  Raise your hands!]

In a Feb. 19 letter to elections board members, county Prosecutor Joe Deters said a preliminary investigation has turned up “sufficient information … to determine that there is probable cause to believe that criminal activity has occurred.”

The Enquirer left messages Wednesday but did not hear back from the second individual, who is a dean at the College of Mount St. Joseph.

Elections board staffers have been aware of the matter since earlier this month. But details were concealed until The Enquirer this week pressed for public release of documents outlining what occurred in it and other cases.

When dozens of alleged cases of double-voting and other alleged improprieties emerged after last November’s presidential race, election officials routinely made records relating to those episodes available to the news media.

[…]

This is how the whole of the Magisterium of Nuns works.

 

Posted in Liberals, Magisterium of Nuns | Tagged , , ,
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Interesting papal trivia

At the improving Catholic News Service there is an interesting papal trivia post. Check it out HERE.

As with baseball, the accumulation of small pieces of information can be of critical importance in that moment of greatest need!

Here is the second part of the fun-facts:

FAMOUS LASTS

Piazzoni also provided a list of “lasts”:

— The last pope who was not a cardinal yet when elected was Pope Urban VI in 1378.

— The last who was not even a priest yet was Pope Leo X.

— The last born in Rome was Pope Pius XII, elected in 1939. (He was also the last serving Vatican secretary of state elected.)

— The last African was Pope Gelasius, elected in 492.

— The last native of Dalmatia, an ancient Roman province, was Pope John IV in 640.

— The last Frenchman elected was Pope Gregory XI, in 1370.

— The last Greek was Pope Zachary in 741.

— The last Englishman was Pope Adrian IV in 1154.

— The last Italian was Pope John Paul I.

— The last Dutchman was Pope Adrian VI in 1522.

— The last Palestinian was Pope Theodore in 642.

— The last Pole was Pope John Paul II in 1978.

— The last Portuguese was Pope John XXI in 1276.

— The last Syrian was Pope Gregory III in 731.

— The last Spaniard was Pope Alexander VI in 1492.

— The last German was Pope Benedict XVI, elected in 2005. It had been 950 years since a German — Pope Victor II — had been elected.

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged , , ,
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Papal spokesman on SSPX, last minute gesture from Pope Benedict

There has been some chatter about the possibility that before 28 February Pope Benedict would do something for the SSPX. An 11th hour sign of benevolence, perhaps.

I doubted that.

Today the papal spokesman, Fr. Federico Lombardi, SJ, mentioned this in his briefing, saying:

“given the extraordinary circumstances the provisions for the reconciliation of the Priestly Society of St Pius X have been entrusted to the next Pontificate”.

One more time, …

I have written time and again that the SSPX was going to wake up one day and experience the business end of the stick.

The membership of the SSPX should converge on Rome this week.  They should, all together, crawl on hands and knees across St. Peter’s Square and beg the Pope to admit them to his presence.  They should implore the Pope to let them kiss his shoe, accept their promises of obedience, and the regularize them before he resigns.   Regularize them one by one or as a group.

Never mind a gesture from the Pope.  Make the gesture to him.

As I have been saying since 22 October 2009… Benedict XVI is still the Pope of Christian Unity.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Linking Back, Our Catholic Identity, Pope of Christian Unity, SSPX, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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Re-Elect The Pope gear “in the wild” – BUTTONS AVAILABLE

The Committee To Re-Elect The Pope was formed on the day Pope Benedict announced his resignation.

We all, I think, want a man who stands in continuity with Benedict and understands and share his vision about a range of things, including the dire threats to our Catholic identity.

So, there are available not only car magnets and stickers to thank Pope Benedict (a lot of you have gotten those – they turned out really well) but also re-election things (HERE and HERE)… to make a point about the man we hope will be chosen.

One of the readers sent a great shot of the yard sign!

Get out there and campaign, everyone!  Buttons coming soon.

UPDATE:

Buttons are here!

There are buttons and round magnets.

You can get them individually or in pack to hand out to friends.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Lighter fare | Tagged ,
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Question to readers for clarity’s sake: Girl Scouts and Planned Parenthood – What’s up?

I have found that when I place a question here to the readership, experts (and non-) come out of the woodwork.

So, I put a question to the readers.

Do you know what the situation is right now with the Girl Scouts in these USA and their relationship (or non-) with Planned Parenthood?

There was a dust-up about this a few months ago.   I also read that a committee of the USCCB was looking into what relationship the Girls Scouts might have, nationally or at the local levels, with that big-business abortion-for-profit killing machine.

I ask because I have had more than one question about the propriety of allowing the sales of Girl Scout cookies at parishes.

What is the state of affairs?  Anyone?

If there is a connection between the groups, we should know.  If there isn’t we should know that too.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, The Drill | Tagged ,
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Wherein Fr. Z considers doing something questionable

I am – horribile scriptu – considering subscribing to the online New York Times (aka Hell’s Bible) for the duration of all the papal stuff going on. Know your enemy, after all.

Even as I think about this, I keep in mind the quote of St. John Chrysostom about 2 Cor 19,3:

“Do you see not how much others give to prostitutes? Give at any rate the half to Christ of what they give to prostitutes.”

Hell’s Bible wants $8.75 per week.

I need to think about a charity to which I can give $4.38.





Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged , , ,
63 Comments

Blog problem today. Coincidence?

The blog was down in a strange way today.  It would not load.  Perhaps one of the web processes had a problem.  Server reboot.  Fixed.

However, both Free Republic and Drudge were down today too.

And now that the blog is loading again, the podcasts (LENTCAzTs) won’t play.

UPDATE:

Okay… that got sorted out.

I understand that the Catholic Herald in the UK had problems yesterday as did Drudge and a few other sources.

 

Posted in Lighter fare |
13 Comments