Ex cathedra… ad cathedram

A little fun with Latin. A reader sent this:

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged
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Blue Moon Followup

I went for a walk this morning and was able to get a last look at this year’s Blue Moon.

Other things, indeed people, around here are blue as well.   The tornado cleanup continues.  I am still reflecting on how very close a call this was.  The damage filed starts two houses away.

 

Posted in Look! Up in the sky! | Tagged
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QUAERITUR: Bilingual TLM hand missals in Latin and Spanish

From a reader:

I have a friend (she is learning to speak English) that attends our Tridentine Mass and needs a Complete Latin/Spanish Missal of the 1962 Mass. I want to buy one for her and I have been looking online, but I cannot find one. I cannot read Spanish and Google Translate is less than helpful. If you or someone that you know is fluent in Spanish, if a commenter can find one online could they post the link so that I can buy one for her? Our parish offers the little paperback ones for the Ordinary of the Mass but they do not have the readings or the Propers of the Mass. All I could find are the complete Latin/Spanish Missals for the Novus Ordo Mass. If they are not yet printing the complete Missals for the 1962 Mass in Spanish that is a crime, and whoever publishes one will corner the market!

I’ll leave this to you readers.

Posted in ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged , , , ,
17 Comments

Blue Moon… you saw me standing alone…

Blue moon
Now I’m no longer alone
Without a dream in my heart
Without a love of my own

From Spaceweather:

BLUE MOON: Tonight’s full Moon is the second full Moon this month. According to modern folklore, that makes it a “Blue Moon.” Strange but true: Most blue moons look red, pink or gray. On rare occasions, however, the Moon can actually turn blue. A video from NASA explains how.

Tell us, NASA, how does that happen?

[wp_youtube]4HRKl0fa2dg[/wp_youtube]

Posted in Look! Up in the sky! | Tagged ,
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A new Pontifical Academy for the Latin language? So it seems.

Given my response the other day, and the ensuing reactions, about seminaries and the TLM and the Latin language, the following is timely.

The intrepid Andrea Tornielli has a piece today in Vatican Insider about a theoretical document from the desk of Benedict XVI which aims at bolstering Latin studies.

Benedict XVI is to publish a motu proprio to establish the “Pontificia Academia Latinitatis”. In the Vatican, “e-mail address” has been translated as “inscriptio cursus electronici”

Andrea Tornielli

Foveatur lingua latina”. Pope Benedict XVI is keen to foster people’s knowledge of the language of Cicero, Augustine and Erasmus of Rotterdam not just in the Catholic Church but also in civil society and in schools. [Where there may be far greater likelihood of success.] Indeed he is about to publish a motu proprio to establish the new “Pontificia Academia Latinitatis”. So far, the Vatican body in charge of keeping the ancient language alive has been the “Latinitas” foundation, which has been under the aegis of the Vatican Secretariat of State but is now destined to disappear: [Because it was so visible before!] other than publishing “Latinitas” magazine [I used to subscribe.] and organising “Certamen Vaticanum” an international Latin poetry and prose competition, over the years, the foundation has also been in charge of translating modern words into Latin. [Neologisms. I suppose only the Catholic Church could have the equivalent of the Académie française.]

The imminent establishment of the new pontifical academy which will add to the eleven existing academies – including the most famous ones representing science and life – has been confirmed in a letter sent by the President of the Pontifical Council for Culture, Cardinal Gianfranco Ravasi, to Fr. Romano Nicolini, an Italian priest who is massively in favour of reintroducing Latin lessons in junior high schools. Ravasi recalled that the Academy’s initiative was “put forward by the Holy Father” and promoted by the Vatican dicastery for culture: its members will include “eminent academics of various nationalities, whose aim it will be to promote the use and knowledge of the Latin language in both ecclesiastical and civil contexts, including schools.” The cardinal concluded the letter by saying that the initiative was a way of responding to “the numerous requests we have been receiving from all across the world.”  [Contrary to popular belief, letters and petitions make a difference.]

It has been fifteen years [ehem… 50] since John XXIII promulgated the apostolic constitution “Veterum sapientia” on the eve of the Second Vatican Council, establishing Latin as the eternal language of the Church and stressing its importance, asking Catholic schools and universities to brink it back to life if it were ever abandoned or neglected. [And that was an Apostolic Constitution, the highest level document Holy Church issues.] The Second Vatican Council maintained Latin in certain parts of the mass, but the post-conciliar liturgical reform apparently removed all trace of it from common use. And so, whereas half a century ago prelates from all over the world were able to communicate in Caesar’s language and faithful came into contact with it weekly, today Latin is not fairing too well in the Catholic Church. [That’s one way to put it.] Instead, it is being promoted in other lay spheres, which are interested in keeping it alive.

Academics are hard at work [!] in the Holy See, coming up with neologisms to translate papal encyclicals and official documents. Translating Benedict XVI’s latest encyclical “Caritas in veritate” (July 2009) on social emergencies and the economic and financial crisis, into Latin, was no easy task. [I remember in Fr. Foster’s class I was called upon to do some simultaneous translation from a Time magazine article on the economy and was flustered by “marginal propensity to consume”.] Some of the choices made by the Holy See’s Latin experts were criticised by influential Jesuit magazine La Civiltà Cattolica, which questioned the use of the terms “delocalizatio”, “anticonceptio” and “sterilizatio”, but approved “plenior libertas” for liberalisation and “fanaticus furor” for fanaticism. Some of the stranger translations included the term “fontes alterius generis” for alternative energy sources and “fontes energiae qui non renovantur” for non renewable energy sources. [egads]

The Pope’s idea to establish a new Pontifical Academy is an important sign of renewed focus on the significance of Latin. Fr. Nicolini – who distributed ten thousand copies of a free introductory booklet to the Latin language in middle schools and is sending out an appeal for it to be included again in school curriculums – stated: “Latin teaches us to show respect for beautiful things and it also teaches us to value our roots.”

One of the men in charge of updating the Latin glossary which will make it possible to communicate even today in the language spoke by Cicero, is 47 year old Fr. Roberto Spataro, Professor of Ancient Christian Literature and Secretary of the Pontificium Institutum Altioris latinitatis (known today as the Faculty of Christian and Classical Letters) founded by Paul VI in what is currently the Salesian Pontifical University of Rome. “How would I translate “poison pen letter writer”? I knew that question was coming… Well, I would translate it as: “Domesticus delator” or “Intestinus proditor”, the priest said. He also explained how Latin neologisms are born: “There are two schools of thought. The first is what we may call the Anglo-Saxon school of thought, which holds that before a neologism is created, we need to sieve through all the texts that have been written in Latin – and not just classical Latin – throughout the centuries. The other school of thought, which for the sake of ease I will call Latin, holds that we can be freer in creating a circumlocution that properly conveys the idea and meaning of a modern word, whilst maintaining the flavour of classical Ciceronian Latin.”

At first I took this to be a kind of cruel “1 September Fool’s” joke.  It seems, however, that this was for real.   May the new Pontifical Academy be at least as influential as the Pontifical Academy of Fine Arts and Letters of the Virtuosi al Pantheon.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , , , , ,
20 Comments

NCFishwrap, out to get Bp. Finn (D. Kansas City – St. Joseph)

The National catholic Reporter (aka Fishwrap) is out to get Bishop Finn.

Fishwrap has been carrying on a jihad against Bishop Robert Finn of the Diocese of Kansas City – St. Joseph ever since he arrived.  Fishwrap’s offices are within that diocese.

A case in point.

Today I noticed on Fishwrap’s RSS feed and then on their site (red lines added):

On the web entry itself:

However, when you go to the Kansas City Star article itself (and the Star is no fan of Finn):

What does the Star article really say (my emphases)?

Testimony about bishop ‘misspoken’ in priest sex abuse case
Diocesan staffer had said Finn told her, “Boys will be boys,” in reaction to priest’s lewd photos.
By JUDY L. THOMAS and MARK MORRIS
The Kansas City Star

In sworn testimony made public Thursday, an employee of Kansas City’s Roman Catholic diocese reported that Bishop Robert Finn said that “boys will be boys” when told of lewd images on a priest’s laptop.

But late Thursday night the employee backed away from that testimony.

John Gromowsky, an attorney representing Julie Creech, the computer systems manager for the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph, said that she had “misspoken” in deposition testimony taken in a civil case and hoped to correct it.

In the Aug. 17 deposition, Creech said that Finn had said, “Sometimes boys will be boys,” when she raised concerns about how the diocese was handling the Rev. Shawn Ratigan, on whose laptop computer she had seen lewd photos of young girls.

“The statement Julie Creech attributed to Bishop Finn during her deposition that ‘boys will be boys’ is not consistent with her recollection of any conversations she had with the bishop concerning the Shawn Ratigan matter,” a statement released by Gromowsky said. “Following the deposition, Julie realized she had misspoken.

The statement gave no explanation for why Creech’s testimony differed from her recollections.

[…]

You can read the rest there.

I hope Fishwrap will issue an apology to Bp. Finn when they correct their story.

In the meantime, on this last day of the month, as you sip your Mystic Monk Coffee, irritate the Fishwrapers by sending me a donation.

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Clerical Sexual Abuse, Liberals, Pò sì jiù, The Drill | Tagged , , , , ,
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Our Catholic future and the war of attrition: an object lesson

It is interesting to compare dioceses for the numbers of their vocations to the priesthood.  Some swanky and tony dioceses have few.  Some fly-over dioceses have many.  What are they doing differently?  Which are the differentiating factors?  Is it something in the water?  Is it something in the air?  Are some dioceses just lucky?

I don’t think so.

I read something depressing at Rorate about the state of vocations to the priesthood in Ireland.

The website of the Irish Bishops’ Catholic Conference says that there are 12 – twelve – men to start their studies for the priesthood at Saint Patrick’s College Maynooth, the National Seminary for Ireland.

There are 26 dioceses in Ireland.  The starting number is nearly never the final number because of attrition.

But, gosh, what young man’s eye wouldn’t be caught by this image, used by the Diocese of Derry (I’m not making this up):

I’m moved.

We are in a race, a kind of war of attrition.

Will we as a Church revitalize our Catholic identity before our ranks are devastated to the point that we will lose even what we have left?

The Lord promised that Hell would not in the end prevail against the Church.

He did not promise that Hell would not prevail in Ireland.

Or the United States.

Or your diocese or town.

Think of the mighty ancient Churches of North Africa.

All gone.

The lesson of Ireland should remind us to be grateful for God’s gifts where we are.

We should also be reminded that our Church is guided by grace and by elbow grease.

We need a “Marshall Plan” to rebuild our Catholic identity.  Our liturgical worship of God is at the core of any plan to rebuild any aspect of our Church.

Posted in New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, The future and our choices, Year of Faith | Tagged , , , ,
22 Comments

Vatican to work with Apple, iTunes to produce e-books

From CNA:

Vatican publisher enters e-book market in Italiano
Posted on August 30, 2012 by Cindy Wooden

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican publishing house’s exclusive contract with Apple to market a series of books through iTunes made headlines in Italy, where it marked a real breakthrough.

For the first time, books published directly by the Libreria Editrice Vaticana (LEV), are available electronically.

The 13 e-books are only in Italian and only cover LEV’s illustrated thematic collections of Pope Benedict XVI’s weekly general audience talks on subjects including: praying with the Psalms; the Apostles; Paul and the first disciples; and the early fathers of the church.

LEV licenses other publishers around the world to release and market the collections in other languages, both in print and in electronic form. Ignatius Press offers both the printed and electronic versions of the audience collections in the United States. Father Costa said the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops also has the rights to the electronic version in English.

(The bishops’ conference publishing office already offers thematic collections of papal talks — on the Eucharist and on Mary, among other subjects — in e-book form through its online bookstore, iTunes and Amazon.)

Father Costa said LEV chose Apple for its e-book rollout because Apple was the first company to approach the Vatican about handling electronic versions of its books in Italian. While Italian collections of the pope’s audience talks will remain with Apple, he said LEV is likely to work with Amazon on producing other e-books in Italian.

[…]

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick | Tagged , ,
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Card. Dolan’s prayer at the end of the GOP convention

[wp_youtube]v8jPCE-EIM4[/wp_youtube]

From Card. Dolan’s blog, comes the text of his prayer at the end of the 2012 GOP convention.

Since I originally post this, more text was added to the Cardinal’s blog entry.  Welcome to the blogosphere to whomever it was that posted that first entry!   o{];¬)

With firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, let us pray:

Almighty God, father of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, and Jesus, we beg your continued blessings on this sanctuary of freedom, and on all of those who proudly call America home.  We ask your benediction upon those yet to be born, and on those who are about to see you at the end of this life.  Bless those families whose ancestors arrived on these shores generations ago, as well as those families that have come recently, to build a better future while weaving their lives into the rich tapestry of America.

We lift up to your loving care those afflicted by the recent storms and drought and fire.  We ask for the grace to stand in solidarity with all those who suffer.  May we strive to include your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, in the production and prosperity of a people so richly blessed.

Oh God of wisdom, justice, and might, we ask your guidance for those who govern us, and on those who would govern us:  the president and vice-president, the Congress, the Supreme Court, and on all those who seek to serve the common good by seeking public office, especially Governor Romney and Congressman Ryan.  Make them all worthy to serve you by serving our country.  Help them remember that the only just government is the government that serves its citizens rather than itself.

Almighty God, who gives us the sacred and inalienable gift of life, we thank you as well for the singular gift of liberty.  Renew in all of our people a respect for religious freedom in full, that first most cherished freedom. Make us truly free, by tethering freedom to truth and ordering freedom to goodness.  Help us live our freedom in faith, hope, and love; prudently, and with justice; courageously, and in a spirit of moderation.  Enkindle in our hearts a new sense of responsibility for freedom’s cause.  And make us ever-grateful for all those who, for more than two centuries, have given their lives in freedom’s defense; we commend their noble souls to your eternal care, as even now we beg your mighty hand upon our beloved men and women in uniform.

May we know the truth of your creation, respecting the laws of nature and nature’s God, and not seek to replace it with idols of our own making.  Give us the good sense not to cast aside the boundaries of righteous living you first inscribed in our hearts even before inscribing them on tablets of stone.  May you mend our every flaw, confirming our soul in self-control, our liberty in law.

We pray for all those who seek honest labor, as we thank you for the spirit of generosity to those in need with which you so richly blessed this nation.

We beseech your blessing on all who depart from here this evening, and on all those, in every land, who seek to conduct their lives in freedom.

Most of all, Almighty God, we thank you for the great gift of our beloved country.

For we are indeed “one nation under God.”

And “in God we trust.”

Dear God bless America. You who live and reign, forever and ever,

Amen!

Posted in Fr. Z KUDOS | Tagged , ,
41 Comments

A reminder about Rep. Paul Ryan from 2010

Someone sent me a reminder about a moment in 2010 when Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI), now the GOP VP candidate, was on Fox News Sunday across from Rep. Debbie Wasserman-Schultz (D-FL), debating Obamacare… ObamaTAX… and abortion.

She holds up “the nuns” (read: Magisterium of Nuns) as her catholic authority.  Ryan holds up the US bishops has the Catholic teaching authority.

[wp_youtube]u45IETzTqqQ[/wp_youtube]

Posted in Liberals, Linking Back, Magisterium of Nuns, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , , ,
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