Pres. Obama has promoted abortion 241 times. Do you want him to choose two more Supreme Court Justices?

If re-elected, Pres. Obama would probably get to nominate two more Supreme Court Justices.

Think about that.

No vote at all is a “yes” vote for Obama.

Now read this from Life News:

President Obama’s Abortion Record: Promoting Abortion 241 Times

Dear LifeNews.com Readers,

We truly appreciate the generous response from LifeNews readers to help us with our campaign to educate and inform people about President Barack Obama’s pro-abortion record.

The election is now down to the final two full weeks before Election Day.

We know many of you are spending countless hours telling voters about the differences between President Obama and Mitt Romney on abortion.

Mitt Romney has campaigned on a pro-life platform — overturning Roe v. Wade and appointing the right kind of judges to reverse that horrible case, de-funding the planned Parenthood abortion business, stopping taxpayer funding of abortions, signing pro-life laws that will continue providing legal protection for unborn children, and doing everything possible to reverse and repeal pro-abortion Obamacare.

But President Obama continues to ad dto his pro-abortion record: Did you know he has taken 241 actions to promote abortion or destroying human life via embryonic stem cell research?

These actions range from bill signings to speeches, and the include major appointments and placing pro-abortion judges on the Supreme Court and other important courts. Many of them involve using your tax dollars to pay for or promote abortion or pro-abortion groups like Planned Parenthood. 241 times! Virtually every month President Obama has been in office, he has done something to promote abortion.

[…]

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , ,
111 Comments

Quislings for Obama

Phil Lawler at CWN picked this up:

On the web site of Catholics for Obama [Quislings for Obama] right above the story blasting critics of the Plan B contraceptive—you’ll find a photo of Cardinal Timothy Dolan, roaring with laughter, with a smiling President Obama beside him, at the Al Smith dinner. (You won’t see Mitt Romney; he’s cropped out of the photo.)

Gee, that wasn’t predictable!

 

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Liberals, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , ,
13 Comments

When your cat gets stuck somewhere, who knows what you’ll find!

From The History blog:

On the night of Tuesday, October 16th, 25-year-old bartender Mirko Curti left his apartment building at 196 Via di Pietralata in the Tiburtina neighborhood of Rome with his friend Raimondo Turnu in search of a missing cat. They heard meowing and followed the sound to an aperture that, due to heavy rains, had recently appeared in a low volcanic tufa cliff nearby. It was the entrance to a cave. Inside they found a number of human bones and a wall of niches called a columbarium which once held the ashes of Roman dead. “It was impressive,” said Curti. “I felt like an explorer. You go behind your house and you end up feeling like Indiana Jones.”

You might think this sort of thing happens all the time in a city as ancient and layered as Rome, but it really doesn’t, hence their elation. Tiburtina is within the current boundaries of the city, not in the historic center. It’s a relatively modern residential neighborhood, outside of the pomerium, the ancient sacred boundary that marked what was Rome and what was just land Rome owned. It was prime real estate for burials, though, since by law people could not be buried inside the pomerium. Plenty of archaeological finds have been made in the area (especially along the ancient Roman road), but you wouldn’t expect to stumble on one while looking for your cat behind your building.

[…]

Read the rest there.

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged , ,
3 Comments

The vigil of a great feast for all Fr. Z readers!

ALERT!  I hereby dispense any and all of you reticent about shopping on Sunday so that you can go forth to gather celebratory provisions for tomorrow’s glorious feast.

Tomorrow, 22 October, is the Feast of…

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia!

Perhaps paella would be appropriate?

I’d sure like to have some paella…. and Mystic Monk Coffee.

More later.

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged
7 Comments

FANON! Wherein Fr. Z rants, opines, predicts.

I did everyone a big favor today.

This morning I decided to leave the computer off and simply say my Office, say Mass, have some breakfast without concerning myself with any news or voicemail or email. Whenever I do this, something big happens.  So, I guess liberals can blame this on me.

Pope Benedict used the fanon today during the Mass and canonization of St. Kateri Tekakwitha.

So, what is the fanon?  Why is this important?  What does it portend?

The fanon, used since at least the 8th century, is a shoulder-length silken cape, striped in white and gold, that is worn on top of the pontifical vestments, though beneath the pallium. Only the Roman Pontiff may wear it. John Paul II used the fanon once, early in his pontificate, at a Mass celebrated at Santa Cecilia. I knew the rector of that basilica and heard all about the battle that occurred over that Mass! The expression on the face of then-MC Msgr. Magee, later the unhappy bishop of Coyne, says what the liturgical establishment thought of the fanon.  Think of what the Fishwrap or Pill would say and will say.

Today, however, Benedict XVI looked like this for the canonization and Mass.

Liberals will sneer and claim that this is yet another imposition of this Pope’s own liturgical preferences.  The usual suspects will proffer, again, that this is mere aesthetics.  They will insinuate that there is something wrong with people who like this sort of thing.   FAIL! Their attacks will again reveal that they are either a little stupid or, more likely, that they know they are losing everything the now-aging hippies worked to impose on worship. For decades they wrenched and disrupted and twisted us away from our Catholic tradition and our identity.  A new generation, guided by Benedict XVI, is now sweeping aside their flotsam and jetsam and the liberals don’t like it one little bit.

“But Father! But Father!”, some of you will say. “The use of the fanon is not that big a deal! Why are you so … I dunno… intense about this?”

Sure, the fanon is not as big a deal in the minds of some as, say, the collapsing global economy or the rise of anti-Western, anti-Christian Islam.

I will stick to the mantra “Save The Liturgy – Save The Word”.

We all know that some more traditionally minded people are really into the old vestments and gear and that is about as far as it goes.  The more thoughtful, however, see that the use of the older, traditional things has a deeper significance.

Our liturgical rites make a difference.  Even small things have their influence.  If we really believe what we say about what happens during Mass, if we we really believe that the Office is the Church’s official prayer, Christ the High Priest acting and praying through our words and gestures, then how can what we do, liturgically, not have a ripple effect through the whole Church (ad intra), through the whole world (ad extra)?

The virtue of Justice orders all our relationships so that we give to each what is his due. God is at the top of the hierarchy of all our relationships. God is qualitatively different from all other persons with whom we have a relationship. Thus, giving to God what is God’s due concerns its own virtue, the virtue of Religion. The first one to whom we owe something is God and the first thing we owe to God is worship, both as individuals and collectively. If we screw up our relationship with God, all our other relationships will be disordered. If we do not worship God and worship Him properly, we have a hard time living properly in relation to everyone else. Because we are wounded by Original Sin, it is hard for us to fulfill the virtues of Justice and Religion. And because we are limited mortals, we cannot offer God the worship that is His due. Our worship of God is, itself, a gift from God. God makes it possible for us to worship Him in a way that is pleasing to Him. One of the great gifts He gave us is Holy Church, upon whom He bestowed His own authority to determine how we, the members of the Church, worship Him and, therefore, order our lives properly. Christ, God man, the one mediator, the true Head of the Church, founded His Church on Peter, upon whom He bestowed the special role of exercising the highest authority in the Church in teaching and in worship.

Where Peter goes, we follow.

Peter, in the person of Benedict XVI, is teaching us – now during a special Year of Faith – about how to recover and reorder that which has been lost. We are disordered. In order to be better ordered again as a Church and as individuals, we must bring our worship of God into continuity with the way we have always, as Catholics, worshiped God.

The use of the fanon is, itself, a small gesture. The return to use of the ferula was a small gesture. The use of older forms of vestments was a small gesture. The white mozzetta during Easter season, a small gesture. Small gestures matter. They pave the way for larger gestures. The return of the Holy Father to a more worthy manner of distribution of Communion was a large gesture. The rearrangement of the altar with the Cross at the center, corpus toward the celebrant, is a large gesture. Summorum Pontificum was a huge gesture. More huge gestures will come, along with the small and the larger.

The Holy Father used the fanon today in a context.

First, use the fanon during a canonization. Canonizations had their own particular traditions. Some of those were restored today. For example, in the old days the Roman Pontiff was petitioned three times to enroll hitherto Blesseds in the “album of the saints”. Benedict XVI, and most theologians, have not considered beatifications to be infallible acts. Canonizations, however, are. The Pope has preferred delegate the celebration of beatifications to other prelates and also to have them celebrated in a local Church, since generally only local Churches or institutes recognize beati at the altar. The canonization has a different theological importance for the Church. Benedict has underscored the difference between beatification and canonization by the return of traditional gestures in the rite and by the use of the fanon.

Second, he used the fanon during the meeting of the Synod of Bishops in the Year of Faith. Benedict does not teach by imposition. In his writing for decades, when talking about the damage to our Catholic identity that occurred with the imposition of an artificial, cobbled-up liturgy and the abuses of it, he also cautioned against abrupt corrections. Pain and chaos was caused by the ripping apart of altars and the turning around of the focus during Mass. We mustn’t cause pain and chaos by an abrupt return to ad orientem worship even though it is superior. For example, Benedict has tried to lead by example, rather than by imposition, in the matter of ad orientem worship. The so-called “Benedictine arrangement” is an intermediate measure on the way to a wider return to ad orientem worship. He hasn’t with his own pen removed the permission to distribute Communion in the hand, but he has clearly shown what he thinks is the better way by his own example. He has hoped that prelates and priests would be with Peter in this, too, and not just give lip service to their unity. Today, with all the participants of the Synod of Bishop present, the Holy Father used the fanon. They cannot use the fanon, but they can pick up on the spirit of what he is trying to do: restore continuity to our worship of God for the sake of the right ordering of our relationships within the Church (ad intra) and with the wider world (ad extra). The participants of the Synod will have now something to reflect on as they return home.

Pope Benedict teaches by example.

For Benedict, gestures like the restoration of the fanon have layers of meaning.  His liturgical choices, even details such as pontifical garb, are not simply personal preferences.  They are polyvalent signs that point to deeper things.

The other day in Detroit I told Bishop Sample that I thought that Benedict would make a dramatic gesture during the Year of Faith.   No, I don’t think the fanon is that gesture.

However, it may be a propaedeutic for something big.

Paul VI in 1967-68 had a special year to commemorate the centenary of the martyrdom of Sts. Peter and Paul.  During that year all hell broke loose. The young Joseph Ratzinger was deeply influence by the upheaval he witnessed that year.  During 1968 Paul VI issued Humanae vitae – in a gesture that confirms those few historic moments when we have a confirmation that the Holy Spirit will not allow Peter to err in a disastrous way.  At the end of that special year, Paul issued the great “Credo of the People of God”.

During this Year of Faith, when all hell is again breaking loose, I think Benedict will issue an encyclical on Faith.  He has written already on Charity and Hope.  However, I don’t think that predictable encyclical will be the big gesture for the Year of Faith.

I sense, however, that the use of the fanon is a small teaching gesture that points to what that big gesture may be.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Brick by Brick, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, My Favorite Posts, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The future and our choices, Vatican II, Wherein Fr. Z Rants, Year of Faith | Tagged , , , , , , , ,
63 Comments

UN election monitors at US polling places?

If this is true, and not some urban legend, I shall be very cross.

This sounds also like a foreign policy matter that could be a topic of discussion at the presidential debate.

Did the White House get the UN involved in our election process? I’m just askin’.

From The Hill:

International monitors at US polling places draw criticism
By Alexander Bolton

United Nations-affiliated election monitors from Europe and central Asia will be at polling places around the U.S. looking for voter suppression activities by conservative groups, a concern raised by civil rights groups during a meeting this week. The intervention has drawn criticism from a prominent conservative-leaning group combating election fraud.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), a United Nations partner on democratization and human rights projects, will deploy 44 observers around the county on Election Day to monitor an array of activities, including potential disputes at polling places.
Liberal-leaning civil rights groups met with representatives from the OSCE this week to raise their fears about what they say are systematic efforts to suppress minority voters likely to vote for President Obama.

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, the NAACP and the ACLU, among other groups, warned this month in a letter to Daan Everts, a senior official with OSCE, of “a coordinated political effort to disenfranchise millions of Americans — particularly traditionally disenfranchised groups like minorities.”

The request for foreign monitoring of election sites drew a strong rebuke from Catherine Engelbrecht, founder and president of True the Vote, a conservative-leaning group seeking to crack down on election fraud.

“These activist groups sought assistance not from American sources, but from the United Nations,” she said in a statement to The Hill. “The United Nations has no jurisdiction over American elections.”

[…]

Read the rest there.

Posted in Dogs and Fleas, I'm just askin'..., Liberals, The Drill, The future and our choices |
36 Comments

Friar by friar.

Friar by friar.

Here’s something to cheer the heart.

The Official Studentate Photo for the Dominican Province of St. Joseph

These are the men in the Easter Province of the USA.

Vocations.  It’s not rocket science.

Speaking of vocations…

[CUE MUSIC]

… how about supporting even more vocations by refreshing your supply of Mystic Monk Coffee?

Okay.  Dominicans aren’t monks.  They are friars.  But, hey!  I’m trying to sell some coffee here!

Think of it this way, I am sure that many of you like your coffee black, right?  Dominicans wear black, right?  And white?  Think…. milk or even cream!

Okay, the addition milk just confirms that coffee isn’t black after all.  It’s brown.  But work with me here.  Brown… think… Carmelites… as in the Wyoming Carmelites whose coffee you ought to be buying in huge quantities.  Why huge?  To support their way of life and… wait for it… even promote vocations.

See how easy that was?

Mystic Monk Coffee!

It’s swell!

PS: Okay…. I know that Carmelites aren’t monks.  They, too, are friars.  But, hey!  I’m just trying to make a living, okay?  And so are they, okay?

Posted in Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool, Vocations | Tagged , ,
50 Comments

Tablet: “Don’t let anyone tell you the Council didn’t change much!”

The Pill… aka The Tablet… does it again!

On 5 October the American journalist Robert Kaiser, who covered the Council for Time magazine, gave an address for the annual evening of self-affirmation and pre-Conciliar Church bashing for the liberal London Catholic bien-pensant.

Yes, Robert Kaiser gave the 2012 Tablet Lecture!

The talk was entitled “Stories of Vatican II: The Human Side of the Council”. It can be summarized as “Pre-Council, bad. Post-Council, good.” The talk is salted with witticisms such as, “The Council Fathers did not follow the example of Trent. They followed the example of Jesus.” Trent v. Jesus. Get it? And: “Before the Council, we were sin-obsessed. It was even a sin to eat a hamburger on Friday night after the game.” Tom, the bishops in England and Wales reinstated Friday abstinence in 2011. And: “Before the Council, we thought we were miserable sinners when we were being nothing but human.” The Council, apparently, did away with personal sin.

But note that The Tablet described Kaiser’s talk as: “Don’t let anyone tell you the Council didn’t change much”.

Let’s drill into what The Tablet and Kaiser think about that.

During his talk, Kaiser insisted:

Please note that most of these changes did not come about because the Fathers of Vatican II revamped what we had already professed believing in the Apostles Creed. They didn’t change our faith, they didn’t come up with a new understanding of God. Still one God, two natures, three persons. Only in this sense can I agree with Pope Benedict XVI when he keeps insisting on something he calls ‘the hermeneutic of continuity.’

I have to agree with him when he says the Council didn’t come up with anything new. No, no new dogmas.

Hmmm….

“Still one God, two natures, three persons.”

“Still one God, two natures, three persons.”

“Still one God, two natures, three persons.”

Still.

That’s the problem with Vatican II.   In its wake, especially with the help of the Tablistas, people screw up even the most basic tenets of our Faith.

Liberals no longer remember that it’s, watch carefully…

  • God has one essence, in three divine Persons.
  • Christ, the Second Person, has two natures.
  • God has one nature, a divine nature.

But, as Kaiser and The Tablet say, “nothing changed” in regard to the faith.

The Council did not, in fact, change the basic tenets of the Faith.  It’s just that some people don’t care what they are anymore.

Posted in Liberals, The Drill, Vatican II | Tagged , , ,
23 Comments

Bp. Olmsted removes “Catholic” status from another Phoenix hospital

Bp. Olmsted is reinforcing Catholic identity again.

As I wrote some time ago: We’ve seen this movie before, and it ain’t The Bells of St. Mary’s.

I saw this at azcentral.com:

Bishop strips Mercy Gilbert Medical Center of Catholic status

By Michael Clancy
The Republic

Mercy Gilbert Medical Center, a 212-bed hospital that served about 85,000 patients last year, mostly from the East Valley, has been stripped of its Catholic status.

Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted of the Catholic Diocese of Phoenix temporarily revoked the Catholic status of the hospital on Thursday. Mercy Gilbert had been the last Catholic hospital in the Phoenix area.

Officials from the diocese would not comment, but Olmsted said in a statement that the hospital has not met his criteria to be considered Catholic.  [I wonder if other US bishops have criteria and if they are examining Catholic hospitals.]

Diocese spokesman Rob DeFrancesco declined to address the nature of the criteria, but he said nothing specific happened that concerned the bishop.  [In other words, the woman religious administratrix didn’t approve abortions?]

The revocation is reminiscent of the bishop’s decision in December 2010 to revoke the Catholic status of St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix. Both St. Joseph’s and Mercy Gilbert are part of Dignity Health, a California company.

Paul Szablowski, vice president of marketing, communications and public relations for Dignity Health Foundation East Valley, said the hospital wants to retain its Catholic identity.

We think we have a clear picture of what it will take to satisfy the bishop,” Szablowski said.

Julie Graham, the hospital’s public-relations and marketing director, later said that they believe the bishop was only warning them and that they still have the Catholic status.  [Ummm…. Julie… what part of “revoked” was unclear?]

The diocese statement said that at this time, Olmsted could not guarantee that the hospital’s care fully conforms to Catholic teaching.

The Catholic Church details its positions in a 43-page document called Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services. It includes the church’s opposition to contraception, abortion and euthanasia. It calls for consultation with the bishop under certain circumstances.

Two years ago, in the St. Joseph’s controversy, Olmsted declared the hospital to no longer be Catholic after talks failed to resolve differences that stemmed from a medical procedure at the hospital.

[Watch this…] A pregnant mother of four was ill with pulmonary hypertension, and doctors determined that surgery was needed to save her life. They also claimed the procedure met the terms of the directives.  [Was that spin?]

Olmsted concluded the surgery was an abortion, not permitted under the directives.

In discussions with the hospital, he demanded more oversight, required the hospital to provide education about the directives to medical staff, and obliged the hospital to acknowledge his authority.

The hospital said it could not legally or ethically comply with Olmsted’s demands.  [And, therefore, Olmsted was right to revoke their Catholic status.]

Officials at St. Joseph’s have said that, other than Olmsted’s declaration that Mass may no longer be celebrated at the hospital, nothing has changed as a result of his position.  [Maybe “officials” at the non-Catholic hospital have said that, but the rest of the world knows that if a hospital is going to call itself Catholic, it has to be in line with criteria that the local bishop has the right to set and review.  Furthermore, St. Joseph’s, formerly Catholic, became the hissing shame of the Catholic world for a time because of their decision.]

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, Fr. Z KUDOS, Linking Back, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , ,
8 Comments

ORIONID METEOR SHOWER TODAY

From Spaceweather

ORIONID METEOR SHOWER–TODAY! Earth is passing through a stream of debris from Halley’s Comet, source of the annual Orionid meteor shower. Forecasters expect ~25 meteors per hour when the shower peaks on Oct. 21st. No matter where you live, the best time to look is during the dark hours before sunrise on Sunday morning. Observers in both hemispheres can see this shower. [video] [full story] [NASA Chat] [meteor radar]

On Oct. 19th, as Earth was making first contact with the debris stream, NASA’s All-sky Fireball Network recorded 10 Orionid fireballs over the southern USA.

A video from NASA:

[wp_youtube]_zy4DVdfdsw#![/wp_youtube]

Posted in Just Too Cool, Look! Up in the sky! | Tagged ,
2 Comments