Closely related to the biretta…

For your Just Too Cool file.

I noticed this during the stomach turning broadcast of the President’s inauguration, but here is a post with a photo.  Check out First Things:

Kevin Walsh of the University of Richmond School of Law writes:

The twitterverse is alive with tweets about Justice Scalia’s headgear for today’s inauguration. At the risk of putting all the fun speculation to an end . . . The hat is a custom-made replica of the hat depicted in Holbein’s famous portrait of St. Thomas More. It was a gift from the St. Thomas More Society of Richmond, Virginia. We presented it to him in November 2010 as a memento of his participation in our 27th annual Red Mass and dinner.

Wearing the cap of a statesman who defended liberty of church and integrity of Christian conscience to the inauguration of a president whose policies have imperiled both: Make of it what you will.

GREAT!

 

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged , , ,
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How’s the preaching where you are?

I was informed that recently His Eminence Daniel Card. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston delivered the annual Carl J. Peter Lecture at the Pontifical North American College. His topic: “Preaching With The Fathers Of The Church”.

This, of course, is of great interest to me, for that is my field and His Eminence obtained an STL from my school, the Augustinianum.

He makes a good point at the onset:

The Fathers of the Church are significant. We should read them. Let us be candid. We read more about them than actually read and study them and their writings. The weight of seminary curricula and requirements among those studying for the priesthood sometimes truncate a more prolonged study or leisurely reading of these ancient Christian authors.

Amen.

Did you know that there is a document from the Congregation for Catholic Education (which governed seminaries) requiring that major seminaries must have a in its curriculum  classes in Patristic Theology? Yes! And they must be separate from history, etc.  Alas, in the Vatican’s website the document is only in Italian.  HERE.  I think it has been ignored.

If, as I claim, no effort in the New Evangelization (when did the Old one end, again?) will succeed unless we revitalize our liturgical worship of God, close behind must be a renewal of preaching. We need sound preaching.

That is one reason why I invite you each week to post a comment with good points from the sermon you heard on Sunday. Many people are inflicted with really lousy preaching. Getting a good point even second hand is better than nothing. Furthermore, I am also trying to establish a patter of listening carefully and trying to remember what was in the homily so that you can post something here. But I digress.

  • Dignified, vertically oriented liturgical worship
  • More confessions
  • Better preaching

These three would take us a long way.

Thus, I hope all seminarians and priests out there will take a moment to read Card. DiNardo’s talk.

Also, I hope you will chime in and talk about the quality of preaching where you are, but in general terms. I urge you NOT to bash priests or deacons by name or identify them by parish or role. I suppose if you want to compliment them you can identify them, but don’t vilify. I will be tempted, if you defy this caveat, to block you from ever posting again.

So, how’s the preaching? Has it started to improve with a new generation of priests? Do you hear references to the Fathers? Is it based always on the Sunday readings? Do you get the red-meat of the Church’s moral teachings on key issues?

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, Seminarians and Seminaries, The Drill, The future and our choices, Year of Faith | Tagged , , , , , ,
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Fr. Z asks favors

I have a few favors to ask.

1. If you are so inclined, please consider leaving some voicemail which I might … might… be able to use in PODCAzTs.  I resolved with the new year to make more.  It is fun to include other voices.  There is information on the sidebar.

2. I had a recent setback and I am facing a couple big … changes, for which I must prepare.  That donation button on the sidebar and your frequenting Mystic Monk Coffee or my swag store are all the more welcome.  Thanks in advance and thanks to everyone who has used both. BTW… if you scroll down to the bottom of the blog, there is a way to “subscribe” to donate monthly. That’s a good way to remain often on my list of benefactors for whom I pray and periodically offer Holy Mass.

3. I ask your prayers for three personal intentions.  Material help and spiritual as well?

4. Along these lines, please also check out the URGENT PRAYER REQUESTS, where you can help each other out.

Thanks to all.

UPDATE 20 Jan 0236 GMT:

Thanks to everyone who are sending donations!  It is a real moral boost, lemme tell ‘ya. Life has been interesting lately and the Enemy has been active.

Also, thanks to the person out there who sent me the sutures from my wishlist.  Yes, sutures.  For practice.  Sometimes I get some and practice on a piece of raw meat before I cook it.  You never know.  I’ll keep them on my list for a while. Also, thanks to the kind person who sent the Glock rear slide cover plate inscribed with the famous phrase in ancient Greek. Very festive. I think the “Veritas Aequitas” plate would also go well. I also have received lately a couple amazon gift cards, which I used right away for a necessary thing.

BTW… in line with the suture thing, I have a CPR class coming up as a prereq for a emergency medicine course. I wrote about that elsewhere. You see, it is not just shooting with SWAT and concealed carry weapon classes.

UPDATE 22 Jan:

Thanks to the kind soul who sent the amazon gift card and also GSC for the book from my Kindle wishlist.

Posted in What Fr. Z is up to |
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Feedback like this makes it worthwhile

From a reader:

I want to quickly let you know how much I appreciate you constantly pushing confession in your blog. I made my first confession in nearly two and a half years last night, and was finally able to receive our Lord while in a state of grace. Thank you again!

OORAH!

Thanks. Notes like this keep me going.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, GO TO CONFESSION, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , ,
9 Comments

Liz Trotta’s great commentary about abortion on FNC

A few minutes ago I switched on the TV and saw on Fox News an amazing commentary piece by Liz Trotta about “pro-choice”, “pro-life”, the ramifications of abortion.

Holy Cow!

Please keep your eyes peeled for the online video of that commentary.

UPDATE 21 Jan 1530 GMT:

Someone sent me the transcript:

Tuesday marks the 40th anniversary of the Roe vs. Wade decision by the U.S. Supreme Court. For the feminist left in 1973 it was a crowning achievement. Abortion, they concluded, was here to stay…enshrined in the nation’s law. You can be sure their aging saints will be available this week for interviews when the media, that loves abortion, trots them out for worship and remembrance.

Four decades later, however, there’s a note of whistling past the graveyard in the run-up to the anniversary. Even Time Magazine, or what’s left of it, said of the pro-abortion activists on its latest cover, “They’ve been losing ever since”. At the state level, they point out, anti-abortion or pro-life activists and lawyers have succeeded in winning important restrictions on the federal law – enough to make a roll back of Roe seem within reach.

Shame and stigma, their code words for how single mothers are regarded, are still part of the outmoded talking points, yet there’s talk of shedding the “pro-choice” label in favor of a more inclusive term that would cover gay rights and childcare. That is, if there are any children left to take care of….

The abortion debate still revolves around numbers and the motives of those collecting them. Nevertheless, there’s little change in the polls over the years. A majority of Americans say they don’t want Roe overturned, and at the same time, 47% say abortion is “morally wrong”. That’s ambivalence. Support for Roe does not mean that abortion supporters think the procedure is free of guilt.

How many abortions have been performed in the forty years since Roe is not disputed. In the United States more than 55 million babies have been surgically or chemically dissolved. Roughly one child per thirty seconds.

One is tempted to consider the deserved attention given to the slaughter in Newtown, Connecticut against the ‘business as usual’ holocaust of the unborn.

The arguments for abortion have not changed, emphasizing a woman’s right to control her own body – as if any of us but God really can. The activists of the 1970s and their younger versions still speak of “reproductive rights” and “public health”, myopically concentrating their focus on women, not the murder of children.

Perhaps this is why the abortion issue is still an unhealed wound in the moral life of the nation. It also makes it more difficult to argue for abortion when science, and its miracle of ultrasound, now allows us, and mothers, to get a look inside the womb to see a living breathing person. The activists have fought this mightily, a testament to their raw disregard for both mother and child.

Planned Parenthood, the motherlode of abortion providers, is under attack while American taxpayers pay for half its budget -$542 million dollars according to its latest annual report. Planned Parenthood insists that it exists to provide for the health of women. But privately, even its own members speculate that their real aim is to provide contraception.

There is a strong argument to be made for holding the radical leftists of the abortion movement responsible for the coarsening of our culture. Promiscuity, degradation of women, suicide, abuse of children born, contempt for morality and religion, rampant cynicism and vulgarity. When you hold life cheap, there is little to protect.

So when the marches start and the parade of abortion’s wonder women begins, who will remember the silent wail of 55 million children who died to make it more convenient for their mothers?

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras | Tagged , ,
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“Sisters for Obama?” Oh… that’s not… right… no….

My stomach turned as a I saw on the site of WaPo some photos of the preparation for the inauguration of the President – you know the one – tomorrow.

'Sisters for Obama' ( Brendan Smialowski / AFP / Getty Images / January 13, 2013 ) A pin with a nun on it is seen at the official Presidential Inaugural Committee's gift shop in Washington, D.C.

No no no.  That’s just wrong.

I’d like to know who paid for these and how they are being distributed like this by the Presidential Inaugural Committee.

UPDATE:

I was reminded in a comment, below, about the great scene in Galaxy Quest.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=i8lrfRwNlfs

Posted in Liberals | Tagged , ,
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Stan the Man – R.I.P.

I learned just now that Stan “the Man” Musial died, at the age of 92.

Today it seems no one stays in one place anymore, as Joni might put it.  That holds true for baseball players and pastors of parishes.  But Musial spent his entire career of 22 years with the St. Louis Cardinals.

He was an amazingly consistent hitter, having exactly, imagine it over 22 years, the same number of hits on the road as at home, 1815!  He had 1951 RBIs and 1949 runs. He never struck out more than 50 times in a season. He led the NL in at least one category each year. He made the All-Star team 24 times. When he retired he had 55 records.

On his final day, Musial hit one past shortstop Pete Rose, who 18 years later broke Musial’s own record of 3630 hits.

One could go on and on about Stan Musial, but above all he was know as a Catholic gentleman. I remember watching the TV coverage of John Paul’s visit to St. Louis in 1999 and seeing the great reverence Musial, also Polish, demonstrated when he met the Pope.  As a matter of fact it is said that His Holiness had Musial and his wife Lil to supper with him when they visited Rome and Musial was instrumental in getting the Pope to come to St. Louis.

In his biography by Joseph Stanton, we read,

“Stan, by all accounts, adored his wife Lil and pointedly refused any and all offered opportunities to be disloyal to her. Many have noted his dedication to church attendance. He was (ed. is!) a Catholic who did not think it acceptable to miss Mass. One of Stan’s children reported to Giglio that among the few things their father could be stern about were instances when family members wanted to allow sleepiness to get in the way of getting up for church. Musial’s disciplined concentration was, no doubt, undergirded by his faith. Not overtly religious outside of church, Stan was, nonetheless, spiritually disciplined at the bat and in his life. Concentration was always key.

Stan was married to Lil for almost 72 years. She died at 91 in May 2012.

Consistency, concentration, Catholicism.

Requiescant in pace.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Four Last Things | Tagged ,
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Big Roman Numerals

I recently saw that someone had listed his phone number in Roman numbers, probably to avoid spam-calls.  Creative!

Also, not entirely easy to do, especially when the last four digits are pretty high.

Ancient Roman numerals don’t go very high.  The ancients had a hard time imagining big numbers.  A Roman would say that a countless bunch of things was “600”.  Today, on the other hand, the Obama Administration has the opposite problem, but with trillions.

So, just as we solved the problem of symbols for liturgical texts, versicle and response, HERE, how about some of the Roman numerals from the Medieval period, such as the V with a bar over it to signify 5000?

For example, in the famous song there is the number

867-5309

One way would be: DCCCLXVII-MMMMMCCCIX  – clunky with all those M’s, or … well… I don’t know the code for the character that looks like a V with a bar over it, but for backward C Perhaps U+2184 – (࢈) A number like the one in the other song, 777-9311 could be a real mess. We need a symbol for 10,000 such as 2182 (ࢆ) – thus with 2182 DCCLXX-M(&#2182)CCCII. No? And that other one with 2181 could be shorted to (&#2181)CCCIX. No? They are not displaying for me.

Any ideas?

UPDATE:

Second try…:

Perhaps U+2184 – ࢈ A number like the one in the other song, 777-9311 could be a real mess. We need a symbol for 10,000 such as 2182 ࢆ – thus with 2182 DCCLXX-MࢆCCCII. No? And that other one with 2181 could be shorted to ࢅCCCIX. No? They are not displaying for me.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Lighter fare | Tagged
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VIDEO: Altar Boys

My friend Fr. Stephen Reynolds in Sugar Land, Texas has been doing some great things.

Here is the latest in some videos about worship and the life of the parish.

[wp_youtube]EXIWMh7v3Kg[/wp_youtube]

Fr. Z Kudos to Fr. Reynolds!

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Fr. Z KUDOS, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , , ,
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Is Pont. Comm “Ecclesia Dei” building a bridge to the SSPX?

Our friends at Rorate picked up something from Riposte Catholique (in French).  Apparently, the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei” sent a letter to the General House of the SSPX in Menzingen, Switzerland.  The letter is signed by the PCED’s Vice-President Archbishop Augustine DiNoia, OP.

A taste:

Abp. Di Noia therefore proposes a new, spiritual, approach. He asks both parties to move forward, each one for their part, to an examination of conscience focused on humility, docility, patience, charity. [Do I hear an “Amen!”? – On both sides, by the way.] The SSPX considers that this cannot exclude, considering the doctrinal questions at stake, the strict confession of faith. Especially considering that the dismantlement of faith, catechesis, sacramental practices adds weight to their considerations. Conversely, it is true, one could say that the continued degradation of the situation of the Catholic faith is a pressing invitation [to the SSPX] to leave their splendid isolation, and join the official rescue corps in the very spot of the accident. [As I have been hoping for years.]

An outline of the concrete solution is left, surely on purpose, somewhat uncertain by Abp. Di Noia. He recalls en passant that Rome expects from Bp. Fellay a response to the document that was given to him last June 14. But, besides that, he proposes to the SSPX a process that could be qualified as transactional:

– On the one hand, the SSPX would find anew the positive charism of the first years at Fribourg and Écône (it would try to reform what can be [reformed], first through the formation of traditional priests and by preparing them for a teaching in conformity with their formation). [They could be helpful, but I suspect they also have a lot of catch-up reading to do.]

– On the other, the SSPX still considering that certain passages of the teaching of Vatican II cannot be reconciled with the preceding Magisterium, it could discuss it, as long as it: [here goes…]

– abstains as a matter of principle from [discussing them in] the mass media; [good]

– does not establish itself as a parallel magisterium; [like the Magisterium of Nuns!]

– always presents the objections in a positive and constructive manner [good]

– bases all its analyses on deep and wide theological bases. [good]

More will come forth about this, but this is positive.

Benedict XVI is the Pope of Christian Unity.

And @Pontifex means “bridge builder”.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Benedict XVI, Brick by Brick, Magisterium of Nuns, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, SSPX, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The future and our choices, Vatican II, Year of Faith | Tagged , , , , ,
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