Do you have liturgical dance where you are?

Do you have liturgical dance where you are?

You probably shouldn’t.

Rorate picked this up from a post on a blog in the Philippines, Pinoy Catholic.

Click

Liturgical dance… ugh.

There are some pretty funny stories about liturgical dance.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged
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QUAERITUR: We have to have Communion under both kinds and, therefore, extra lay ministers

From a reader:

I have read about valid and invalid motivations for the multiplication of EMHCs. [Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion.] The diocesan advisor at my university’s Newman center gave me one which I had not heard before: that without at least one EMHC, the faithful would not be able to communicate in both species, there being only one celebrant at our Masses. Now that I think of it, this seems like an obvious problem. How can the norm in U.S. dioceses be to receive in both species when it is relatively rare for a Mass to have multiple concelebrants? When there is only one celebrant, are they asking us to add EMHCs, or should we be given only the Bread?

The US Bishops encourage frequent recourse to the distribution of Holy Communion under both species. There is no law or provision which mandates the practice.  Nor is the Communion under both kinds encouraged for EVERY celebration of Mass.

In their 12 March 2002 decree (approved by the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments states:

“In practice, the need to avoid obscuring the role of the priest and the deacon as the ordinary ministers of Holy Communion by an excessive use of extraordinary minister might in some circumstances constitute a reason either for limiting the distribution of Holy Communion under both species or for using intinction instead of distributing the Precious Blood from the chalice.”

Even if we use a broad interpretation, there are times when distribution under both species ought not be done.  Otherwise, if the priest insists on offering both species at every Mass, let his distribute, alone, by intinction.

A third option, sadly seldom seen these days, is to invite non-concelebrating priests and deacons who are around, to come over to the chapel to assist in the distribution of Holy Communion. Most rectories have some sort of a sound system connection to the church. Priests who may have celebrated an earlier Mass and are afterward – without question – engaged in prayer, study, or edifying conversation, could listen from the rectory and  know when dash over to church, toss on a surplice and stole over their cassock (the priest’s proper garb), and then assist with the distribution of Holy Communion.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged , ,
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Benedict XVI speaks of the “profound crisis” of marriage as a “crisis in faith”

His Holiness addressed the crisis of marriage as a crisis in faith in his sermon to open the Synod of Bishops and to proclaim St. Hildegard of Bingen and St. John of Avila as Doctors of the Church.  The Synod is to focus on The New Evangelization for the Transmission of the Christian Faith as the Year of Faith also begins on 11 October.

Let’s look at what the Pope said about marriage with my emphases and comments:

[…]

The theme of marriage, found in the Gospel and the first reading, deserves special attention. The message of the word of God may be summed up in the expression found in the Book of Genesis and taken up by Jesus himself: “Therefore a man leaves his father and his mother and cleaves to his wife, and they become one flesh” (Gen 2:24; Mk 10:7-8). What does this word say to us today? It seems to me that it invites us to be more aware of a reality, already well known but not fully appreciated: that matrimony is a Gospel in itself, a Good News for the world of today, especially the dechristianized world. The union of a man and a woman, their becoming “one flesh” in charity, in fruitful and indissoluble love, is a sign that speaks of God with a force and an eloquence which in our days has become greater because unfortunately, for various reasons, marriage, in precisely the oldest regions evangelized, is going through a profound crisis. And it is not by chance. [Which suggests also intelligent planning, diabolical activity.] Marriage is linked to faith, but not in a general way. Marriage, as a union of faithful and indissoluble love, is based upon the grace that comes from the triune God, who in Christ loved us with a faithful love, even to the Cross. Today we ought to grasp the full truth of this statement, in contrast to the painful reality of many marriages which, unhappily, end badly. There is a clear link between the crisis in faith and the crisis in marriage. And, as the Church has said and witnessed for a long time now, marriage is called to be not only an object but a subject of the new evangelization. …

Posted in Benedict XVI, New Evangelization, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , , ,
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Archbp. Nienstedt and the Marriage Amendment in Minnesota

Minnesota is ground zero right now for defense of true marriage.

The Church and right thinking people (in the matter of marriage) have a steep hill to ascend.  The mainstream media is in control of the “topics” (a technical term from rhetoric), the matters we discuss and how and when we discuss them.  The MSM effectively controls the conversation and even the popular imagination in regard to homosexual behavior.  The MSM promotes homosexuality as if it were normal.  The Church can barely get a toe hold on the edge of the hill in this matter.

I read a story HERE that, on American TV:

The number of gay and bisexual characters on scripted broadcast network TV is at its highest-ever level in the season ahead, according to the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation. The total on cable television is also going up.

The 17th annual “Where We Are on TV” report, released Friday, found that 4.4 percent of actors appearing regularly on prime-time network drama and comedy series during the 2012-13 season will portray lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender characters. That is up from 2.9 percent in 2011, which saw a dip in what had been a growing annual trend.

This is purposeful. They are trying to change how people think.

The Church cannot compete with the MSM in a head-to-head struggle with the MSM. We are not without resources and paths to follow, but I wonder how many leaders in the Church have the will to follow them. We have the promise of the Lord that Hell would not prevail. He did not promise that Hell would not prevail in the USA.

Archbp. Neinstedt recently did some Q&A by email with the press from Rome.  HERE.

With that as a preamble, here is an article from the STrib about my native place.  Note especially the beginning and the end, with my comments:

On a cool April evening, over dinner and drinks, [?!? Why this detail? You’ll see!] Twin Cities Archbishop John Nienstedt gathered a group of non-Catholic clergy leaders at his St. Paul home to begin forging an alliance to persuade Minnesota voters to pass a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage.  [Some offer that if a state can define marriage then a state can redefine marriage. Nevertheless, let this amendment pass.]

“He’s reached out to us and we’ve reached back to him,” said Carl Nelson, president of Transform Minnesota, a network of nearly 160 evangelical churches in Minnesota.

Working aggressively behind the scenes, the 65-year-old Nienstedt has emerged as a key financial and political force for passage of the marriage amendment, which will be on the Nov. 6 ballot and is the most contentious issue in the state this election season.  [Catholic leaders, the Church’s shepherds, have the right to speak in the public square.]

He has committed more than $650,000 in church money, stitched together a coalition [So, that term “church money” is vague.] of leaders from other faiths and exerted all his power within the church to press Minnesota’s million-plus Catholics to back him.

“We wouldn’t have gotten very far without him,” said Frank Schubert, campaign manager for Minnesota for Marriage, the lead group pushing the amendment. “What the archbishop is doing in Minnesota is what the pope asked him to do. It’s hard to overstate his importance.”

But Nienstedt’s central role in the campaign has also brought blistering criticism from the faithful. [Not just criticism, but “blistering” criticism.  LOL!]

“I just see that this is terrible. This is not how Christ would have spent this money,” said Pauline Cahalan, 67, a lifelong Catholic from Roseville. [I submit that Pauline has no idea how Christ would have spent money.]

“It’s very concerning to me when someone says you have to think like I tell you to think.” [Again, Pauline hasn’t a clue.]

Nienstedt strongly defended his stance in a written response to Star Tribune questions last week. He said he sees no problem enshrining a religious belief about marriage in the state Constitution.

Marriage defined as a union between one man and one woman is a reality that predates any government or religious denomination,” Nienstedt said. “Marriage is meant for children and children flourish best with a mother and a father.

When asked whether a loyal Catholic could vote against the amendment, Nienstedt said: “It would be difficult to comprehend how a person could not believe that marriage is anything but a union between one man and one woman. On this point, Catholic teaching is clear.” [Do I hear an “Amen!”?]

The Vatican is keeping a close eye on the outcome of the marriage amendment vote. In March, Pope Benedict told Minnesota bishops visiting in Rome that the preservation of traditional marriage must be a top priority. Bishops who fought to uphold the definition of marriage in other states have been rewarded with promotions. [Watch the cheap shot now…] For an ambitious archbishop, the marriage amendment offers the potential for advancement in the Catholic hierarchy.

The political fight has pushed Nienstedt onto the campaign trail. Last month he joined nearly 40 evangelical and other leaders on the steps of the State Capitol to make a public appeal for the amendment. [The “campaign trail”?  It is a 15 minute walk from the archdiocesan chancery and residence to the steps of the Minnesota capitol!  But the writer, who just suggested that Nienstedt is “ambitious”, is framing this in political terms.]

I explain and defend the teaching of the Church because I have been ordained to do so and I believe those teachings with all of my heart,” he said.

Clear priority for years

Nienstedt is not a new disciple to the traditional marriage campaign. In 2006, as bishop of the diocese of New Ulm, he mobilized Catholics to send postcards to lawmakers urging them to support a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage.

Not long after he was promoted to archbishop in 2008, Nienstedt ordered an end to the gay pride prayer service at St. Joan of Arc Church in Minneapolis. Before the 2010 election, he led a move to send DVDs opposing same-sex marriage to 400,000 Catholics in Minnesota, in which he gave a six-minute introduction.

Jason Adkins, executive director for the Minnesota Catholic Conference, the public policy voice of the Catholic Church, said Nienstedt’s campaign sprang from a 2003 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that legalized same-sex sexual activity and “gave tremendous impetus to the movement to redefine marriage throughout the country.”

Schubert, a longtime political strategist who has won marriage-related campaigns in California and other states, said he first met Nienstedt in 2010. Same-sex marriage opponents were worried at the time that the DFL-controlled Legislature was going to take a run at the state’s marriage laws. Activists contacted the National Organization for Marriage, a group Schubert was working with. The group reached out to Nienstedt and found an ally.

Nienstedt worked with Schubert to produce the DVDs and to put his views in writing. In a December letter to clergy, Nienstedt wrote that “the institution of marriage and family life are unraveling before our very eyes due to no-fault divorce, widespread cohabitation and promiscuous sexual activity.” Amendment opponents, he said, seek “to eliminate the need for marriage altogether.”

Many Catholics have welcomed hs activism.

“I am glad he is taking this particular role because marriage is in crisis,” said the Rev. Thomas Dufner, [A friend of many years and great priest.] pastor of Church of the Epiphany in Coon Rapids, one of the largest Catholic parishes in the Twin Cities. “His voice was the first to stand out.”

But others have rebelled. Protesters have sent the DVDs back to the archdiocese. The church should be fighting poverty, not engaging in secular politics, some say. Parents of gay children have appealed for conciliation. [We have to find a way to stress the Church’s moral teaching in this regard with an ear tuned to how it may sound to people who have loved one’s with same-sex attractions.  They have a hard time reasoning when it comes to this topic.]

Undeterred by the criticism, Nienstedt has raised the stakes. To a mother who pleaded for acceptance for her gay child, he wrote: “I urge you to reconsider the position that you expressed. … Your eternal salvation may well depend upon a conversation of heart on this topic.”  [OORAH!  Well… that makes the stakes rather high, doesn’t it.]

To clergy, he issued orders that no “open dissension” would be allowed. He wrote one outspoken priest, the Rev. Mike Tegeder, that if he persisted, “I will … remove you from your ministerial assignments.” [Why this dimwit, Tegeder, wasn’t suspended YEARS ago I cannot fathom. Perhaps it is because everything he writes demonstrates that he must have everything explained to him several dozen times. Had I been Archbishop….]

“He silenced his priests under the order of obedience,” said Ed Flahavan, a member of Former Priests for Marriage Equality, a group that went public in May with the names of 80 former Minnesota Catholic priests against the amendment. [Emphasis on “former” – ergo – Who gives a damn what they think?] “It’s the first time in my experience or knowledge that kind of blanket order has been given” in this archdiocese.

Individual Catholics have seen their parishes directed to form committees to work for passage of the amendment. The archdiocese also appointed married couples to talk up marriage at Catholic high schools. Nienstedt asked priests to recite a “marriage prayer” during mass.

But thousands of Minnesota Catholics angered by the church’s campaign have joined the opposition, said the Rev. Grant Stevensen, faith leader for Minnesotans United For All Families, [What a slithery name.] the lead group working to defeat the amendment. Signs proclaiming “Another Catholic Voting No” sprouted on lawns.

One priest who spoke on condition on anonymity [coward] because he feared censure by Nienstedt said he’s concerned about the “massive amount of resources” the archbishop has spent on the marriage amendment.

“There are some priests for whom he is a wonderful crusading figure,” the priest said. But on the other hand, he said, “The fact that the archbishop seems to present this way of voting as a loyalty test is very problematic to other priests.” [I remind that craven priest that before he was ordained he put his hand on the Bible and swore to uphold the Church’s moral teaching.]

‘More than anybody’

Nienstedt is not the first or only U.S. bishop to combat same-sex marriage. But in many ways, “Nienstedt’s done more than anybody,” said Jamie Manson, [A lesbian with the coveted MDiv from Yale, who was “mentored” by Margaret Farley] who writes about gender and sexual orientation issues for the National Catholic Reporter. [aka Fishwrap.] “No one has been more public … and has used quite as many strategies as Nienstedt has.”

Manson noted that U.S. bishops who have recently fought against same-sex marriage — including Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone in San Francisco, Archbishop William Lori in Baltimore and Archbishop Charles Chaput in Philadelphia — won promotions afterward. Nienstedt would be well-positioned for promotion to a larger diocese, she said. [Again, the insinuation of ambition.]

“Clearly, [perhaps to her bemuddled mind] there’s a precedence here. There’s a reward system at work,” Manson said.

State Rep. John Lesch echoed that sentiment at a Friday campaign event for Catholics opposed to the marriage amendment.

“This archbishop has done his best to make a name for himself making this a political issue,” said Lesch, a Catholic DFLer from St. Paul. [It is NOT, at root, a political issue.] “That rift will take a long time to heal. Unfortunately, I think many members of the flock here in Minnesota will just wait until that bishop goes away, and then we can begin to heal.” [Boo hoo!  *sniff*]

The Rev. Michael Becker, a friend to Nienstedt and rector at St. John Vianney College Seminary in St. Paul, said Nienstedt’s goal is clear and simple: “to protect marriage and family life.”

“Whether the amendment passes or not, the Vatican will view Archbishop Nienstedt with gratitude, that he is a shepherd that leads the flock … to truth and love,” Becker said. [This was my argument from the very beginning of this controversy.  Whether or not the amendment passes, the Catholic Church must must must take part in the fight and, once into the fight, not step back a single step, not slow down, not ease up one bit.  Only by fighting hard to the very end the Church retains her moral capital.]

“If the Vatican chooses to appreciate what he’s doing for marriage and give him another office in another archdiocese, they may do that. That’s not motivating him, not in the least.”

Nienstedt said he finds it “regrettable” that people attribute ulterior motives to his advocacy on the marriage issue. He said his commitment is deeply held and not part of any political maneuvering for promotion within the church.

“I do not see myself going to another diocese,” he said. “I believe I have already passed the age for doing so.”  [And that, ladies and gentlemen, is how the article ends: on the topic of Neinstedt’s supposed ambition.  Given that people scan the beginning and the end of articles, that is how the MSM cleverly guides the “topics”.  We begin with a description of Nienstedt forging a coalition “over drinks” and end with how ambitious he is.]

Say a prayer for Archbishop Nienstedt and for the success of the Marriage Amendment in Minnesota.

Since hardly anyone is undecided about this issue, everything… everything… depends on getting out the vote in favor of the amendment.

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Liberals, New Evangelization, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, Religious Liberty, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , , , ,
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FOLLOW UP: Priest missing in Greece located, safe

I had posted a story, asking your prayers, about a American priest in Greece who was feared to be in danger or dead. He has been found and he is safe.

From Fox 29 WXIN:

An Indiana priest feared to be in danger or even dead was located, the family told Fox59 Monday.

The family said Father Christian Kappes made contact with them and made it safely out of the country.

For the past three years, Father Christian Kappes has been pursuing doctoral studies in Athens on behalf of the Vatican. However, last Saturday, the family reported Kappes frantically called them, stating there was escalating violence involving his friend and translator.

Kappes’ father, Virgil Kappes, recalled a conversation with his son, who called him from the U.S. Embassy in Greece. It was a conversation Virgil said haunted the entire family.

“He said, ‘They won’t let us stay. If I walk out of here I am dead dad. If you don’t hear from me in 12-24 hours, I’m dead,'” Virgil Kappes said.

Kappes’ family told Fox59 the priest and his translator attempted to get out of the country last Monday and fly to Indianapolis. However, they did not make it on a plane and no one heard from the two.

Since then, the family has worked tirelessly to find their loved one. They contacted the U.S. Embassy, the U.S. State Department and Greek authorities.

Posted in Linking Back | Tagged
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WDTPRS POLL: Do you pray the Rosary and add the “Fatima Prayer”?

Let’s return to an oldie-POLL for today’s beautiful feast.

First, a commercial: Years ago an acquaintance who participated on the old Compuserve Catholic Forum started her own online rosary business.  She made the most beautiful – and also strongest – rosaries I had ever seen.  She suspended her business for a while, but I am happy to report that she has reopened her store and is working again.  Queen of Peace Rosaries – Fr. Z endorsed!  Wonderful gifts.

The Holy Rosary of the Blessed Virgin Mary is prayed according to different methods in different parts of the world. For example, in Italy it will usually include a litany at the end. In Germany you will sometimes hear a line about the mystery being prayed interjected into the Hail Mary.

And… to my point… in the English speaking world you will not rarely hear after the Gloria following each decade the addition of a little prayer associated with Fatima:

“O my Jesus, forgive us our sins, save us from the fires of hell, lead all souls to Heaven, especially those in most need of Thy mercy. Amen.”

However, not everyone adds this. I, for example, do not.

What I am curious about is… do you add the Fatima prayer when you say the Rosary? This may be in individual or public recitation.

It may be that you do it own way when alone or with one group, and another in other instances.

Just pick then which you prefer.

Please make a choice and add your comment to the combox, below.

When I pray the Rosary, after each decade ...

View Results

Posted in POLLS | Tagged , , ,
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Another hurtful article by Nicole Winfield of AP about the SSPX

In his interview with the National Catholic Register, posted online in two parts on 2 and 4 October, the Prefect of the CDF, Archbishop Gerhard Müller said of the dealings of Rome and the SSPX:

“I believe that these problems will be resolved in the long term.”

Nicole Winfield of the Associated Press, however, has issued an article which distorts the SSPX situation (purposely?).

Here’s a screenshot of the headline:

This is now all over the internet and will be in every paper and news outlet in the USA.

The problem is, she distorted the actual situation.  Let’s leave aside the perennial and amateurish mistake of referring to “THE VATICAN” when it is a matter of an official of one dicastery.

By they way, the other day Winfield also wrote a cheap-shot piece about the papal butler trial.  HERE.

Winfield seems to be working solely with other people’s reports about the interview Müller did with the German radio station NDR.  That interview was reported on 4 October but was not aired until 6 October.

In the interview Müller said some tough things about the situation with the SSPX.  He indicated that he thought the back-and-forth talks about points of Conciliar documents and doctrine were concluded.  He said that the faith is not negotiable.

However, Archbp. Müller also said:

“In einem pastoralen Sinn ist die Tür immer offen… In a pastoral sense, the door is always open.”

There are also factual errors in Winfield’s piece along with the indications that she was just cribbing European coverage rather than doing her own checking.

Let’s have a look.

VATICAN CITY (AP) — The Vatican’s new doctrine czar[Note the use of political language.] says negotiations to bring back a breakaway group of traditionalist Catholics are dead and that no new talks are planned.  [This doesn’t mean that the Holy See isn’t going to continue to communicate with the SSPX. Even if what Müller said was his hardened position – and ultimately the Pope gets to make these decisions – this would only point to back-and-forth discussions of doctrinal points arising from the Council’s and post-Conciliar documents.  I think we have a case of a Prefect saying too much to the wrong people.  We will see his position gently walked back, even though the hard-core on each end of the spectrum will have nutty in the meantime.]

Reconciling with the Society of St. Pius X – thus ending the only formal schism [It is NOT a formal schism.  Some dispute that and the question is foggy, and it might look a lot like one, but there hasn’t yet been a formal statement from the Holy See that there has been a formal schism.] created since the 1962-65 Second Vatican Council – had been a priority of Pope Benedict XVI since his tenure heading the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

That office’s new chief, Monsignor[Every English-speaking writer – especially those who have worked in Rome – should know that you don’t call an Archbishop “Monsignor” when writing in English.  That is an Italianism.] Gerhard Ludwig Mueller, told Germany’s Norddeutscher Rundfunk broadcaster, however, that “the talks are closed and I don’t believe there are new ones.” [He did not say “dead”.]

“We couldn’t of course expose the Catholic faith to negotiation,” he said. “There are no compromises.’ [And?]

The late Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre founded the society in 1969, opposed to Vatican II’s introduction of Mass in the vernacular and outreach to Jews. [I suppose this frivolous comment guarantees her story will be in the New York Times.] In 1988, the Vatican excommunicated Lefebvre and four bishops after he consecrated them without papal consent.

Benedict has spent nearly his entire seven-year pontificate [?!?  “nearly”?  She makes it sound as if he has been doing nothing else.] seeking to accommodate the society, restoring the use of the old Latin Mass favored by the society’s members, removing the bishops’ excommunications and allowing them two years of theological dialogue with the Vatican.

Aside from being sympathetic to the society’s point of view, Benedict fears the growth of a parallel church that is even more conservative than his own. [“even more”? She gets to the crux of it now: she/AP doesn’t like “conservative”. A more thought observer of the Church, however, will repost that Benedict’s church is not “conservative”.  Benedict may be conservative in some ways, but it is a stretch to say that “his” “church” is.]

But the society, which boasts 550 priests and 200-plus seminarians, refused to sign off on a core set of doctrinal points required by the Vatican to come back into the fold.

“The brotherhood [German: Bruderschaft] for us is not a negotiating partner, because they don’t believe in negotiations,” Mueller said. [This quote smells bad.  What did Müller actually say in his NDR interview? “This fraternity is no partner for negotiations for us, because there is no negotiating the faith.” (“Diese Bruderschaft ist für uns kein Verhandlungspartner, weil es über den Glauben keine Verhandlungen gibt.” )  Again, she didn’t check.]

Mueller is no newcomer to the issue: In 2009, he told the Catholic news agency Zenit that he wanted the society’s seminary in his diocese shut down and the four bishops to resign to live as simple priests “as part of the reparation for the damage that the schism has caused.” [Given the quote above, I wonder if that is what he actually said.]

Given Mueller’s negative view and after the talks broke down earlier this year, the pope named a trusted adviser, Monsignor[AGAIN?  She cribbed European pieces.] Augustine Di Noia, to take charge of negotiations with the society. From Mueller’s comments, however, it appears there’s not much to negotiate.

The society’s most notorious member is Bishop Richard Williamson, who made headlines in 2009 when he denied that any Jews [Again with the Jews?  Okay, Nicole, this will be seen by the NYT.] were killed in gas chambers during the Holocaust. His comments were a major scandal for Benedict since they were broadcast on the same day the decree lifting Williamson’s excommunication was signed.

The Simon Wiesenthal Center on Saturday welcomed the suggestion that talks with the society had broken down and said it hoped the society’s members “will eventually give up their theology of anti-Semitism and Holocaust denial.”

The society has distanced itself from Williamson.

Williams’ piece was irresponsible and hurtful.

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, SSPX | Tagged , , , ,
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Uhhh… “Demosthenes”!

A sent me the following, with email subject line: “Demosthenes”.

[wp_youtube]ue_WQcFJd8U[/wp_youtube]

Look.  Any public speakers can have off moments are resort to vocal pauses and fillers.  But I am weary of hearing people talk about what a great orator he is.

He is NOT a great orator.

Without a teleprompter, he is one of the worst speakers I have ever heard.  His odd speech quirks, once you identify them (e.g., final unvoiced consonants) will make you run from the room.

His reputation as an orator is undeserved.  It always was.  It is now.  It will in the future be wholly undeserved.

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged ,
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1st Sunday of October: Plenary Indulgence – Supplication to the Madonna of Pompeii

The first Sunday of October is one of the two days of the year for the plenary indulgence by reciting the Supplication to the Madonna of Pompeii. The other day for this is 8 May.

For more about the indulgence and prayers go HERE.

Brief background:

This devotion was started by Bl. Bartolo Longo, who had once been a Satanist “priest”.  He converted, did penance, and became a lay Dominican. In 1872, Longo, a lawyer, went to Pompeii see to the affairs of Countess Marianna Farnararo De Fusco. He started there a Confraternity of the Rosary.  They obtained a picture of the Blessed Virgin from a monastery, which before that was in a second hand store, before which they could recite the Rosary every day.  It showed Mary with Sts. Dominic and Catherine of Siena.  In 1875 Longo received permission to build a church.  Miracles were reported and pilgrimages began.  The picture has been restored several times since then.  Longo also saw to the building of complex for works of mercy with orphans and prisoners.  Pope John Paul II beatified Bartolo Longo in 1980.  Some of his writings form the basis of the Luminous Mysteries of the Rosary.

You reach the sanctuary easily by walking just a few minutes out the back gate of the ancient ruins of Pompeii, famously destroyed  by the eruption of Vesuvius in AD 79.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool | Tagged , , ,
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It’s 2013 Ordo time!

It is October, and therefore time to start thinking about getting a new Ordo for the 2012-13 liturgical calendar… for the Extraordinary Form, of course!

I returned to the USA from my travel abroad to find waiting for me a copy of the FSSP’s new Ordo for 2013.  You can buy one HERE.

You can see that it is the usual, practical no-frills presentation.

20121006-110037.jpg

It lies open, flat.

20121006-110128.jpg

Helpful information about abstinence and fasting regs.

20121006-110133.jpg

There are appendices with useful documents, including a translation of the rubrics for Mass and the important De defectibus.

20121006-110139.jpg

All priests should have a copy of the Ordo for their Rite.  That means, for Roman priests, Latin Church priests, also for the Extraordinary Form of their Rite.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged , ,
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