A bishop on voting and putting your soul in jeopardy

From AP via a priest friend, about His Excellency Most Rev. David Ricken of Green Bay.  Bp. Ricken was once Bishop of Cheyenne in Wyoming, and he was a true friend of Wyoming Catholic College.  I suppose he is now a fan of the Packers.

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — Green Bay Bishop David Ricken is urging parishioners to vote against candidates who support abortion or gay marriage.

Ricken recently sent parishioners a letter saying voting for candidates who support what he calls “intrinsically evil” positions could “put your own soul in jeopardy.”

Ricken’s letter says the Catholic Church has a responsibility to speak out on moral issues. His letter goes on to note principals parishioners should keep in mind when voting, including abortion, euthanasia, embryonic stem cell research, human cloning and gay marriage.

The Green Bay Press-Gazette reports the bishop’s letter does not specify who should get parishioners’ votes.

The Catholic Diocese of Green Bay has 304,000 members in 16 counties.

Posted in The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
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“Barack and Simone gazed at each other ….”

When the National catholic Fishwrap indulgences in its version of hagiography, the results aren’t pretty.

Their latest liberal panegyric is an attempt to transmogrify Sr. Simone Campbell, Democrat party activist, bus rider, into a progressivist’s alternative to Bl. Theresa of Calcutta.

Consider, for example, how in hagiography throughout the centuries we read of encounters between saints and blesseds… Francis and Dominic, Philip Neri and Ignatius Loyola, Benedict and Scholastica, Damien and Marianne, John Paul and Teresa, Teresa of Avila and John, Catherine of Siena and Raymond, … hey!…  the Lord during his Passion and Mary!

Holy collaboration!

The stuff of imagination and dreams and lofty aspirations.

Here is an excerpt from Fishwrap’s second nocturn:

One Saturday after the convention, working at NETWORK headquarters, she heard her cell phone ring. Glancing at it she read a message: “Restricted number.” Answering, a male voice said: “Can you hold for the president of the United States?”

For a split second she found herself suspended in disbelief. Then two seconds later she heard a familiar voice on the other end of the line, the voice of Barack Obama, who thanked her for her speech and for talking about poverty before the delegates.

Obama then thanked her for NETWORK’s important work organizing for the marginalized, Campbell recalled recently. The president went on to say, “You must be the most popular person in the United States.”

Campbell replied with a chuckle: “I hope I’m not more popular than you.”

Consider how, for the Fishwrap, the President met his Nun on the way to his November defeat. Barack and Simone gazed at each other and their looks became as so many arrows to wound those hearts which loved each other so tenderly … [Kneel… ooops… stay standing!]…

Why won’t Sr. Campbell – Bride of Christ – answer simple questions?

In the meantime, I think we have just seen NCR show their hand.

NCR’s next “Person of the Year!”

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Dogs and Fleas, Liberals, Magisterium of Nuns, Women Religious | Tagged , , , , , ,
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A picture worth a thousand warnings

A tip of the biretta to the best Catholic weekly in the UK, for a link to a piece by a priest friend, Fr. George Rutler at New Advent.

This must be the first photograph of two saints together…

By Father George Rutler

The canonization of Marianne Cope, along with Kateri Tekakwitha, on October 21, occasioned the publication of a stunning photograph showing Marianne standing beside the funeral bier of St. Damien in Kalaupapa, Molokai. That was in 1889, and the picture is so sharp that it could have been taken today. It must be the first photograph of two saints together. The holy friendships of Teresa of Avila with John of the Cross, and Francis de Sales with Jane de Chantal illuminated civilization before photography.

St. Damien’s body is scarred with leprosy but vested in the fine chasuble in which he used to offer Mass. St. Marianne, in her timeless religious habit, shows no sorrow for she obviously knows she is looking at a saint, not knowing that she is one herself.

Studying that photograph, one thinks of how hard they worked, not only among the outcast lepers, but all their lives. Damien, born Jozef de Veuster in Belgium, was a farm boy, and Marianne left school in Utica, New York, after the eighth grade to support her family by working in factories.

Not in the picture was their helper, Joseph Dutton, a Civil War veteran who was so traumatized by the ravages of war and his broken marriage that he became an alcoholic. He reformed his life, went to Molokai and worked with the lepers for 45 years — cleaning latrines, scrubbing floors, and binding sores — until his death in 1931. Their great happiness would have been clouded to see how much unhappiness there is in our land today.

As a typical eighteenth-century rationalist, Edward Gibbon was cynical about Christianity, but as an historian he analyzed the decline of once-great civilizations in terms of natural virtue: “In the end, more than freedom, they wanted security. They wanted a comfortable life, and they lost it all — security, comfort, and freedom. When the Athenians finally wanted not to give to society but for society to give to them, when the freedom they wished for most was freedom from responsibility, then Athens ceased to be free and was never free again.”

I expect that Gibbon would have understood modern saints no better than he did the early martyrs and confessors, but he would have seen in them a selfless energy that builds noble societies, and the neglect of such energy pulls them down. Our own nation is facing these realities as it decides what it wants to be. The present crisis in culture cannot be resolved if it is addressed only in terms of economics and international relations. The real leaders are not those who hypnotize naïve people into thinking that they are the source of hope. Those who can rescue nations from servility to selfishness are not on slick campaign posters, but in stark black and white photographs like that taken on Molokai in 1889.

Posted in New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Saints: Stories & Symbols, The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
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“straight and narrow is the path” … of the New Evangelization

Check out this video from CNS (I am still surprised to write those words).

Ralph Martin talks about our post-Counciliar context which the New Evangelization is supposed to address.

Posted in New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The future and our choices, Vatican II, Year of Faith | Tagged , , ,
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Bugatti by Bugatti

Remember that Veyron I was supposed to have won?  Never did get it.

Still want it, though!

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Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged ,
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Sunday B-Day Supper

小籠包 by 小籠包!

Chinese tonight.

Starting with Shanghai Juicy Buns!

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Pan-fried noodles.

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Beef and scallops on a sizzling plater.

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Duck! Shanghai style.

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And then…

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Well… up to this point …

 

Posted in What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged ,
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Sort of Sunday Supper…. sort of… and a fun blog suggestion

You may remember that I have posted about cooking some ancient and medieval dishes.

Today I discovered a blog dedicate to ancient cooking with a delightful name: Pass The Garum.

Garum, of course, is the ancient equivalent of ketchup.  It is the fishy sauce Romans put on everything.  A modern close equivalent is Vietnamese fish sauce.  By itself, dreadful.  On food, pretty good.  Also, don’t count out the wonderful S. Italian colatura. A reader here sent me some colatura and I have been addicted to it ever since.   Keep in mind that many modern sauces for meats developed from fermented fish concoctions.

The blog in question has great photos and worked out recipes along with comments on how successful they were.

My experience with cooking in an older style has been good and instructive.  There are many different combinations of flavors.  The techniques, usually slow, produce deeper layers of flavor.

Books I have worked with

The Roman Cookery of Apicius

One of the things I made HERE.

The Medieval Kitchen: Recipes from France and Italy

And there is the book of recipes of food mentioned in Patrick O’Brian’s Aubrey/Maturin series.

Lobscouse and Spotted Dog: Which It’s a Gastronomic Companion to the Aubrey/Maturin Novels

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Fr. Z's Kitchen, Linking Back, O'Brian Tags | Tagged , , , ,
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Happy 1700th Anniversary Milvian Bridge!

Some years ago I was sitting with a famous lion-like retired Cardinal and the topic of our birthday dates came up.  When I told him mine, 28 October, he pondered for a while.  Then he mentioned that it was also the date of the election of John XXIII.  Then he mentioned that it was also Cardinal Lercaro’s birthday.  Then he said, “Three disasters in one day!”

Today is also, however, the 1700th anniversary of the Battle of the Milvian Bridge!

For a great book on Constantine, get this.

The excellent Constantine: Roman Emperor, Christian Victor by Paul Stephenson. (Kindle version HERE. UK book HERE. UK paperback HERE.)   It is well worth your time.  The book was originally suggested to me by His Hermeneuticalness himself!

 

Posted in Just Too Cool, Linking Back | Tagged , , ,
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Hurricane Sandy: prayers from readers, tips

I know that many of you are in the path of the big hurricane, and it is possible that some of you will experience problems.

First, I ask all the readers here to say a prayer for an attenuation of the storm and safety of those in the way.

Second, be prudent and safe.  Take steps.

Third, if you are worried about losing electricity, perhaps you might consider turning your fridge and freezer down as low as you can right now, so that it will stay cold longer.  Also, you might think about filling your bathtubs and water containers.

Readers everywhere, do you part.  Support others with prayers.

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From the Archive: Card. Burke on the obligation to VOTE properly

From the Archive.

On this day in 2010, I posted this:

Remember how soon-to-be Cardinal Raymond Burke was, as liberals crowed, promoted to a Roman office in order to remove his influence on the American scene?

This is from CNA with my E and C:

Rome, Italy, Oct 28, 2010 / 12:15 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Cardinal-designate Raymond Burke stressed to Catholic voters in a recent interview that they have a “very serious” obligation to uphold the truth of “moral law” in the upcoming mid-term elections. He specifically cited protecting unborn children from abortion and defending traditional marriage.

The American Vatican official, who was recently named by the Holy Father as a future cardinal, spoke on Oct. 20 to Thomas McKenna, president of Catholic Action for Faith and Family, just hours after the Pope’s announcement.

Cardinal-designate Burke opened his remarks by saying that “as a bishop it’s my obligation, in fact, to urge the faithful to carry out their civic duty in accord with their Catholic Faith.” [Burke, as a Catholic bishops, is a bishop for the whole Church.] Clarifying that he does not endorse particular candidates, the prelate also spoke of his duty to relay “principles” to the faithful to help inform their vote.

Speaking on the contentious topic of abortion in the upcoming mid-terms, Cardinal-designate Burke said one [NB:] “can never vote for someone who favors absolutely the right to choice of a woman to destroy a human life in her womb or the right to a procured abortion.”

“You may in some circumstances where you don’t have any candidate who is proposing to eliminate all abortion, choose the candidate who will most limit this grave evil in our country,” he explained, “but you could never justify voting for a candidate who not only does not want to limit abortion but believes that it should be available to everyone.”

The Vatican prelate also addressed the issue of same-sex “marriage,” asserting that maintaining the definition of marriage as between one man and one woman is not unjust discrimination.

“Where there is unjust discrimination – for instance, where you say that a fellow human being, because of the color of his skin, is not a part of the same race as someone, say, who is a Caucasian, that is a kind of discrimination which is unjust and immoral,” he said.

However, he added, “there is a discrimination which is perfectly just and good, and that is the discrimination between what is right and what is wrong.” [This might be the bit idiots or the mendacious latch into.]

“Between what is according to our human nature and what is contrary to our human nature. So the Catholic Church, in teaching that sexual acts between persons of the same sex are intrinsically evil, [Idiots and the mendacious will claim that the Church (and Burke) says that the people who do these things are evil.] are against nature itself, [In other words, reason… common sense… informs us that such acts are intrinsically evil.  The Church also has revelation to support her teaching, but she also points to nature itself.] is simply announcing the truth, helping people to discriminate right from wrong in terms of their own activities.”

In his interview, Cardinal-designate Burke also urged Catholic politicians who have caused “scandal” by endorsing positions contrary to moral law to repent through a “genuine reform of heart.” [This is one of the most serious wrongs that Catholic pro-abortion politicians do when they support evil positions contrary to Church teaching: they cause scandal in a very public way.  The Church must defend the faithful against that damage.  First the Church must try to get the person who caused the damage to try to make amends and heal it.  Otherwise, the Church must separate that person from Communion with the hope that she will correct her views.]

“That’s done through the Sacrament of Penance,” he said, adding that political figures must publicly “renounce” their errors, recognizing and recanting the “evil” they have promoted.

Posted in Linking Back, Religious Liberty, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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