18 Dec: St. Malachi, Prophet

Some people may not know that Holy Church considers many Old Testament figures to be saints.

The liturgical book called the Roman Martyrology contains brief “bios” of saints and blessed celebrated on each day of the year. Some of these even rather obscure figures might not be on the Church’s universal calendar for Holy Mass. However, the Martyrology states that when there is no other feast we could chose to commemorate a figure listed in the same Martyrology.

Today we celebrate the Old Testament prophet Malachi, which in Hebrew means “messenger”.

Perhaps you can work up your own flawless English rendering of the entry in the Martyrologium Romanum.

1. Commemoratio sancti Malachiae, prophetae, qui, post transmigrationem Babylone diem magnum Domini eiusque adventum in templum nuntiavit semperque et ubique mundam oblationem nomini eius offerendam.

 

Posted in Linking Back, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Saints: Stories & Symbols |
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POLL: 2013 March For Life in Washington D.C (25 January).

How many readers here are going to participate in any or all of the events surrounding the 2013 March For Life in Washington D.C., on 25 January.

I understand there is a TLM being sponsored by a Juventutem group after the March.

I am starting to think about going this year.  If I go, we might try to have a D.C. blognic.

2013 Washington DC March for Life Participation

View Results

UPDATE:

I am now seriously thinking about going.

Posted in POLLS, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged ,
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SUPER-ULTRA-HYPER-URGENT EMERGENCY ACTION ITEM!

Can you help?

The CD of Advent music by the Benedictine Nuns in the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph, the Benedictines of Mary, Queen of Apostles, is doing well on the charts.

I have mentioned them before HERE.  I did a review of their Christmas CD HERE.

At Billboard it is #9 in Christian Albums and #6 in Classical Albums.

But on Billboard’s Top 200, …. LOOK!

Don’t let the sisters down.  I have a soft-spot for ol’ Deano, but don’t let them be beaten by vermin.

Buy the disk:

US disk HERE.
US mp3 HERE.
UK disk HERE.
UK mp3 HERE.

About the backstory on the disk.  HERE.

Sample:

Posted in ADVENT, Lighter fare, Linking Back | Tagged ,
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QUAERITUR: Celiac Disease revisited

From a reader:

My husband has Celiac Disease. The communion is wheat. What is he to do?

You have options.

First, you can tell the priest(s) at the parish about the condition and ask if your husband could receive only the Precious Blood.

Otherwise, you if the priest would consecrate a gluten-free host (or low-gluten), obtained from an approved maker, in a small separate pyx, for your husbands Communion.

I did this at a Mass on Sunday morning, as a matter of fact.  A woman explained the problem and had a pyx with a gluten free host.  No problem.  She came up first at Communion.  After she received, I went back to the altar for the ciborium with the normal Hosts.

If you explain the situation to the priest(s), I am confident that some accommodation will be made.  Go ahead and call the priest at your parish for an appointment to talk about it.  You could offer to buy the hosts, if the parish does not have them already.

It may be that others in the parish have this condition and some arrangement has already been worked out.

You might also want to point out this information from the USCCB on the matter.  Another of my posts on this and also low-alcohol altar wine HERE  In that, there are addresses for places which make gluten free or low gluten hosts.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged , ,
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Injustice! Why can’t men become women priests too?

From the amusing Eye of the Tiber comes this:

Medford, OR––Speaking at a Women’s Rights group at the home of fellow parishioner Florence Hensley of Medford, Oregon this week, 58-year-old Roger Shannahan complained that the group was being sexist for unjustly excluding men from the group’s hopes of a female priesthood. “I mean, you could see in the early Church numbers of male figures that held positions of authority,” Shannahan told the group. “St. Paul was a man, for instance. He had authority, right? So, if St. Paul was a man and had authority, why wouldn’t I be able to have it?” Hensley, who hosts the weekly Women’s Rights group, told Eye of the Tiber after the meeting that men cannot be considered, not because men are unequal, only because it is not in a man’s nature to become a female priest. But Shannahan believes otherwise, telling Eye of the Tiber that the group has always overlooked men simply because of the group’s own insecurities. “I’m sick and tired of sitting on the sidelines. I too have a voice.”

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged , ,
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O!

O AntiphonsToday we begin the final days of Advent, which bring with them the beautiful O Antiphons, or “Great Antiphons”.

Years ago I made a page about these antiphons. I have intended (for years) to update the last couple days.

The O Antiphons developed during the Church’s very first centuries. The writer Boethius (+525) mentions them. By the 8th century they were in use in Rome. There are seven of these special antiphons, and their texts spring from the Old Testament Hebrew Scriptures, the Prophetic and Wisdom Books. They are found in the Liturgy of the Hours or older Roman Breviary, which clerics, religious, consecrated virgins, and others use for daily prayer.

The O Antiphons are short prayers sung before and after the Magnificat, the great prayer of Mary in Luke 1:46-55 when coming visit to Elizabeth her cousin the Virgin praised God for His favor wondrous deeds. The Magnificat is sung during Vespers, evening prayer. The O Antiphons begin on 17 December, seven days before the Vigil of Christmas (24 December). The seventh and last antiphon is sung at Vespers on 23 December. They are called the “O Antiphons” because they all begin with the letter-word “O”: they address Jesus by one of His Old Testament titles. They are fervent prayers asking Our Lord to come to us.

Advent is about the many ways in which the Lord comes. He came historically at Bethlehem in the fullness of time. In the liturgical year he comes to us sacramentally. He will come again at the end of the world as Judge of the living and the dead. Christ comes to us also in the two-fold consecration of the Body and Blood of Christ by the priest at Holy Mass and, in a special way in a good Holy Communion. He comes in the person of the priest, who is alter Christus, another Christ. He comes in the words of Holy Scripture. He also comes in the person of our neighbor, especially those who are in need of the spiritual and corporal works of mercy.

During Advent, John the Baptist has been reminding us in the liturgy to “make straight His paths”. When we come to the Lord in death, or He comes to us in His Second Coming, He will make straight the path whether we have during our earthly lives done our best to straighten it ahead of time or not. Let us now, while we may, make straight the paths by which Christ Jesus comes.

Here are two additional notes about these O Antiphons.

The first is not apparent in English, but it can be seen clearly in the official language of the Roman Catholic Church: Latin. The Latin versions of each of the titles of the Messiah are: Sapientia (Wisdom), Adonai (Lord), Radix (Root), Clavis (Key), Oriens (Dawn), Rex (King), and Emmanuel (Emmanuel). Take the first letters of each of the titles, starting with the last and working back to the first. You spell: EROCRAS or “ero cras… I will be (there) tomorrow”.

The song “O Come, O Come, Emmanuel” is simply a reworking of the seven O Antiphons. When you sing it, you are joining yourself to a vast throng of Christians stretching back across centuries and spanning the whole of the earth who prayed as all Christians do, “Come, Lord Jesus!” (Rev 22:20)

Posted in ADVENT, Just Too Cool, Linking Back, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The Drill |
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WDTPRS POLL: Did you see Rose vestments on “Gaudete” Sunday?

Here is a little poll for your 3rd Sunday of Advent.

Please choose an answer and add a comment in the combox.

At my Roman Rite Mass for "Gaudete" Sunday the vestments I saw were

View Results

 

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, POLLS | Tagged , ,
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QUAERITUR: Catholic funeral for a Lutheran?

From a reader:

My grandmother recently died. She was a Lutheran, but we, her descendents, are Catholic. Who, then, should do the burial? A Lutheran minister, or our Catholic priest? Thank you, and please pray for her soul.

Canon 1183.3 states,

“In the prudent judgment of the local ordinary, ecclesiastical funerals can be granted to baptized persons who are enrolled in a non-Catholic Church or ecclesial community unless their intention is evidently to the contrary and provided that their own minister is not available.”

In this situation, it seems the grandmother’s minister is available.

Since grandma did not convert prior to her death, it seems imprudent to go against her wishes and deny her a funeral in the ecclesiastical community of which she was a member.

Turning the sock inside out for a moment, we often hear of tragic cases in which a good Catholic person dies, but because the children are no longer practicing, she is denied the benefits of a funeral.  Yes, funerals benefit the dead!  The poor dead person might be given a prayer service at the funeral home or buried without ceremony.

In former ages, respecting the last wishes of the deceased was something that was sacrosanct.

So, unless the Lutheran minister is not available, inquire of the pastor about having the funeral at grandmother’s church. Go, pray for her (do not receive communion at the Lutheran funeral, even if invited), bury her.

Masses can be offered for the deceased, even those who are not Catholic.  You can later have a Mass or Masses offered for her, even a Requiem Mass if your pastor is available and amenable.

Everyone, pray for the dead.  Do not forget to pray for the dead.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged ,
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Fr. Z’s 20 Tips For Making A Good Confession

Fr. Z’s 20 Tips For Making A Good Confession o{]:¬)

We should…

1) …examine our consciences regularly and thoroughly;
2) …wait our turn in line patiently;
3) …come at the time confessions are scheduled, not a few minutes before they are to end;
4) …speak distinctly but never so loudly that we might be overheard;
5) …state our sins clearly and briefly without rambling;
6) …confess all mortal sins in number and kind;
7) …listen carefully to the advice the priest gives;
8) …confess our own sins and not someone else’s;
9) …carefully listen to and remember the penance and be sure to understand it;
10) …use a regular formula for confession so that it is familiar and comfortable;
11) …never be afraid to say something “embarrassing”… just say it;
12) …never worry that the priest thinks we are jerks…. he is usually impressed by our courage;
13) …never fear that the priest will not keep our confession secret… he is bound by the Seal;
14) …never confess “tendencies” or “struggles”… just sins;
15) …never leave the confessional before the priest has finished giving absolution;
16) …memorize an Act of Contrition;
17) …answer the priest’s questions briefly if he asks for a clarification;
18) …ask questions if we can’t understand what he means when he tells us something;
19) …keep in mind that sometimes priests can have bad days just like we do;
20) …remember that priests must go to confession too … they know what we are going through.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ADVENT, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity |
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The Holy Father’s message after the Connecticut murders

From News.va:

The following Telegram was sent to the Diocese of Bridgeport on behalf of Pope Benedict XVI when he was informed of the horrific shooting attack in Connecticut in which a gunman killed 26 people, including 20 children.

“The Holy Father was promptly informed of the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown and he has asked me to convey his heartfelt grief and the assurance of this closeness in prayer to the victims and their families, and to all affected by the shocking event. In the aftermath of this senseless tragedy he asks God, our Father, to console all those who mourn and to sustain the entire community with the spiritual strength which triumphs over violence by the power of forgiveness, hope and reconciling love.”

Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone
Secretary of State

Posted in Benedict XVI |
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