Pres. Obama’s problematic proclamation for National Day of Prayer (3 May)

In the wake of Pres. Obama’s direct attacks on the 1st Amendment both in its religious liberty clause and freedom of speech clause, in the wake of the Pres. Obama’s bungling of the Chen Guangcheng Affair, I read this on

CNA:

Religious freedom expert faults Obama’s prayer proclamation
By Michelle Bauman

Washington D.C., May 3, 2012 / 04:06 am (CNA/EWTN News).- A legal expert in religious freedom believes that President Barack Obama’s recent prayer proclamation reflects a wider problem of viewing constitutional protections for religious liberty as being limited to “mere belief.” [Remember that Pres. Obama, when quoting the Declaration of Independence, has left out the clear reference to our rights coming from God and that his administration has tried to reframe “freedom of religion” to “freedom of  worship”.]

“I don’t know that the president intentionally wrote it in this fashion,” [uh huh] said Robert Tyler, general counsel for the non-profit legal group Advocates for Faith and Freedom.

However, he explained to CNA on May 2, the wording of the proclamation “reflects a real problem” in the understanding of religious freedom.

On May 1, President Obama issued a proclamation declaring May 3 as a National Day of Prayer in the United States.

Since 1952, every U.S. president has signed a National Day of Prayer proclamation calling on Americans to give thanks for their blessings and seek divine guidance for the future.

In his proclamation, Obama offered thanks for a “democracy that respects the beliefs and protects the religious freedom of all people to pray, worship, or abstain according to the dictates of their conscience.

Religious freedom has become a hotly-debated issue after the Obama administration issued a mandate that will require employers to offer health insurance plans that cover contraception, sterilization and drugs that can cause early abortions, even if doing so violates their religious beliefs.

Critics of the mandate argue that the Obama administration is failing to respect the right to religious freedom, treating it as though it is merely a right to worship, but not to live out one’s beliefs. [Freedom of mere worship doesn’t allow for you to act on your religious beliefs in the public square.]

Tyler explained that the American founders “absolutely” intended for the First Amendment’s religion freedom protections to apply to actions as well as beliefs. This view was carried down throughout most of America’s history, he said.

However, in 1990, the Supreme Court held in Employment Division v. Smith that laws which burden religion are acceptable as long as they are “neutral and generally applicable,” he said.

This ruling “has created quite a problem for the free exercise of religion in America today,” explained Tyler, observing that it has led to the idea that religious freedom merely means “believing whatever you want to believe” and does not extend to cover conduct.

As a result, he said, there have been increasing attempts in recent years to burden the free exercise of religion.

But for two centuries before prior to the ruling “basically everybody understood” religious freedom as a broad liberty that extends to actions as well as beliefs.

This view is illustrated in the 1963 Sherbert v. Verner case, in which the Supreme Court held that laws imposing a burden on the free exercise of religion are subject to the highest level of scrutiny, he said.

This previous understanding, which was present throughout the vast majority of American history, is “much more consistent” with what the American founders meant, Tyler explained.

He observed that the First Amendment was written to provide a “really vast” protection for religious freedom.

Tyler also asserted that several members of the Supreme Court – including Justice Antonin Scalia, who wrote the majority opinion in Employment Division v. Smith – probably did not intend for the decision to be used in the way it has been.

He believes that if given the chance, the Supreme Court would likely attempt to “curtail the impact” of the 1990 case.

Obama’s National Day of Prayer proclamation, he said, reflects the “errant decision” of the Supreme Court in 1990, which should be abandoned in favor of a fuller and more accurate understanding of the First Amendment.

Posted in Dogs and Fleas, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged , , , , , , , , ,
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SSPX German District Superior: “If Rome now calls us back out of exile…”

In the April Mitteilungsblatt (newsletter) of the SSPX in Germany, the District Superior (former Superior General) of the SSPX, Fr. Franz Schmidberger, wrote:

[…]

Wenn Rom uns nun aus dem Exil zurückruft, in das wir 1975 mit der Aberkennung der Approbation und noch mehr 1988 mit dem Exkommunikationsdekret verstoßen worden sind, dann ist dies ein Akt der Gerechtigkeit und zweifellos auch ein Akt echter Hirtensorge Papst Benedikts XVI. Und dafür sind wir dankbar.

[…]

If Rome now calls us back out of the exile into which (in 1975 with the withdrawal of approval and even more in 1988 with the decree of excommunication) we were cast, then this is an act of justice and undoubtedly also an act of the real pastoral care of Pope Benedict XVI. And we are grateful for it.

Benedict XVI is the Pope of Christian Unity.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Pope of Christian Unity | Tagged , ,
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Bp. Sample on Liturgical Reform – audio of interview

His Excellency Most Reverend Alex Sample, Bishop of Marquette, has something to say about liturgical reform. This is an interview from Catholic Answers.

Bp. Sample stresses a “hermeneutic of continuity”.

I am not entirely on board with His Excellency (an old friend of mine) about the idea that what Summorum Pontificum established that the Ordinary and Extraordinary Form are actually the same rite. Summorum Pontificum gave a juridical solution to the matter of priestly faculties for the use of both forms. However, Summorum Pontificum did not close off discussion about whether they older and newer forms are historically, theologically, liturgically the same rite. There is a lot more to say about that.

Bp. Sample speaks about his discovery of and his discoveries through the Extraordinary Form.

He speaks about the benefits of Summorum Pontificum, including what I call the “gravitational pull” that the Extraordinary Form will exert on the newer form of Mass.

He stress that if we do not understand that Holy Mass is a Sacrifice, we do not understand what Mass is.

The question of the calendar comes up. A caller has a question of whether priests can celebrate ad orientem in the Novus Ordo. (The answer is YES! His Excellency hits a triple on this one. It would have been a home run but for one nuance.) He gets a question about whether the new translation was really necessary. He gets into the confusion caused in some cases (not all) by Communion services on weekdays (Inter alia he says, “It shouldn’t look like a Mass!”). He talks about the Offertory Prayers of the Extraordinary Form. If he hit a triple on ad orientem worship, he hits a three-run homer on kneeling for Holy Communion!

BTW… kudos to the interviewer. He gets it.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
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An idea for the upcoming LCWR assembly in St. Louis

My years in Italy exposed me to the incredible phenomenon of the small town bands which would be part of processions through the streets.

They were uniformly dreadful and delightful!

However, the Italian banda cittadina‘s got NUTHIN on these guy from Poland!

Here, friends, thanks to a kind reader is, for your enjoyment …

A Funeral March from somewhere in Poland!

[wp_youtube]FbdG4bx5V7I[/wp_youtube]

If they weren’t all male (or so I assume) we might take up a collection and fly them in to help with the liturgies of the LCWR Assembly.

Posted in Lighter fare, Magisterium of Nuns | Tagged ,
26 Comments

Yet another Chinese food post!

I went to a great Chinese restaurant recently and they gave me crabs!

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Soft-shelled crabs, of course.

They were both crunchy and soft at the same time. Sometimes they are prepared with Five Spice. These were heavy on the garlic.

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Yum.

There was also a nice platter of seafood stir-fried with asparagus.

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Pea tips.

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Platitude cookie alert!

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Posted in On the road | Tagged
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The Platteville Food Fight: Fishwrap weighs in! (Fr. Z makes a SUGGESTION.)

Please use the sharing buttons!  Thanks!

National catholic Fishwrap has now picked up on the ecclesial food fight going on in Platteville, WI (D. MadisonBp. Morlino), about which I have posted before (HERE).

You will be shocked to learn that Fishwrap’s reportage – in a less than subtle way – stresses their Congregationalist party-line.

Here, however, is the money quote from the Fishwrap article:

Neither Morlino nor anyone from the diocese would respond to a request for an interview. A spokesman from the diocese wrote in an email, “We have no hope that assisting NCR with a story will result in a just reporting of the facts regarding the sad situation in Platteville.

WDTPRS kudos to the spokesman.

UPDATE:

I just got a fundraising email from NCR (Fishwrap) using this story!  They write:

This morning we posted a story about a Wisconsin bishop to deny the sacraments of Communion, confession and burial to Catholics who are speaking publicly against unwelcome changes in their parish.

[…]

Nowhere else can you get this kind of church coverage … [Thanks be to God!]

Here is a link so that you can send a donation to the Diocese of Madison.  May I suggest that you all make a donation of, perhaps $1 to show a sign of support?  $1?  You can do more, of course.  But if the bishop were to hear that a large number of folks from all over the place made a little donation, that would be a real shot in the arm.

And using this, you can send a donation to me!

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Biased Media Coverage, Dogs and Fleas, Fr. Z KUDOS, Linking Back, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, The future and our choices, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , ,
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June 25-July 1, 2012 Sacred Music Colloquium in Salt Lake City

There will be a spiffing Colloquium on Sacred Music in Salt Lake City. June 25-July 1, 2012

It will be held at the Cathedral of the Madeleine in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Check out the website and look at the line of up speakers (no, I am not on it).

You will also find the schedule and registration information.

Pay attention in the video especially at about 14:15 in the video, and listen to the comments made by a gentleman being interviewed. He nails perfectly some themes that I have hammered at relentlessly on this blog, in my columns and in talks I give at conferences. First, note his comment about “active listening” and participation. Then note his comment about being his experience being “terrifying”. Then note “listening to the silence”. He gets the true sense of active participation as “active receptivity”, about liturgical worship that is both alluring and frightening, and about an encounter we must have with mystery in the spaces between the signs, the apophatic dimension of our liturgical worship.

Also, at 41:45 Dr. William Mahrt gets to another point I have pushed here about the “idiom” of music. Some types of music are not appropriate for liturgical worship because the idiom is wrong.

Posted in The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged
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Never Say Die

From CNA:

Argentinean ‘Miracle baby’ continues to improve

Buenos Aires, Argentina, May 1, 2012 / 04:02 pm (CNA).- Luz Milagros, the baby who was found alive after spending twelve hours in a morgue in Argentina, continues to improve and gain weight although she is still on a respirator.

According to an April 30 report by CNN, Luz now weighs two pounds and is no longer receiving inotropic drugs.

Although her condition is still serious, the progress she has made in recent days has given hope to her mother, Amalia Bouget, the rest of the family and the staff at Perrando Hospital in the province of Chaco.

According to the news agency, Luz’s three siblings are “anxiously awaiting” her at home to accompany her on the final stage of her recovery.

Amalia Bouget gave birth prematurely to Luz at 26 weeks of pregnancy. After being declared stillborn by doctors, the baby spent 12 hours in the freezing cold temperatures of the morgue with no food or clothing, before she was found alive.

Bouget later returned to the morgue to take a picture of her daughter, who doctors said had no vital signs when she was born.

“A woman came up to my husband who was waiting to go to the morgue to see her as well, and she told him, ‘She is crying.’ My husband thought she was talking about me, but it was my daughter who was crying,” Bouget said.

“I’m a believer. This was all a miracle of God,” she said.

Posted in Just Too Cool, Pray For A Miracle | Tagged ,
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SSPXers examining their consciences

Be sure to check out this post on Rorate. It seems that priests within the SSPX are doing some self-examinations.

From the May 2012 issue of Seignadou, the newsletter of the chaplaincy of the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX) for the schools of the Traditional Dominican Sisters of Fanjeaux (France):

Whatever the state of Rome may be, of all that still remains that is disturbing in Rome, plain common sense and honesty should lead us to consider the current situation with different eyes than those of 1988! Recalling the saying of one of our bishops, we cannot be “eighty-eighters”! We are neither in 1975 with Paul VI nor in 1988 with John Paul II, but in 2012 with Benedict XVI. [Do I hear an “Amen!”?] It can be said as much as one may wish to that the state of the Church is still of great concern, that our Pope has a theology that is at times strange, etc… we have said it enough, it seems to me; but let it not be said that the state of things is the same as in 1988, or worse. This is contrary to the reality and to the truth, and it cannot but be the effect of a more or less secret refusal of any reconciliation with Rome, perhaps of a lack of faith in the holiness of the Church, composed of poor sinners but always governed by her head, Jesus Christ, and sanctified by the Holy Ghost. The Society of Saint Pius X is not the Church, [Well put.] and it can only “respect its founder’s heritage” by preserving his spirit, [Which includes unity with Peter.] his love for the Church and his desire of serving her as a loving son, with faithfulness to her founding blessings.

Benedict XVI is the Pope of Christian Unity.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Our Catholic Identity, Pope of Christian Unity | Tagged , ,
100 Comments

The Pope of Christian Unity’s most recent concrete gesture

Back when, we knew that something was going on within the CDF for Anglicans who desired closer unity with Peter, but we didn’t know what.  There was a sense that the Holy Father must really want something important to happen for them and the CDF was locked down as tight as a drum.  And they moved with, for Rome, lightning speed to get the Ordinariate set up in England.

Benedict XVI, Pope of Christian Unity, really wanted it to happen.

Since then, the Anglican Ordinariate seems to be moving forward well, though I had heard that they were struggling with money.  The sun also rises at dawn.

Now I read that Benedict XVI, Pope of Christian Unity who really wanted to welcome Anglicans into Communion with Rome, has done something that ought to send a signal to the bishops conferences both in England and Wales and in the United States, where there is also a new Ordinariate.

This is a press release from the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham.

PERSONAL ORDINARIATE OF OUR LADY OF WALSINGHAM
1 MAY 2012

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

POPE DONATES $250,000 TO ORDINARIATE

Pope Benedict XVI has donated $250,000 to support the work of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham. The gift will help establish the Ordinariate as a vibrant part of the Catholic Church in England and Wales.

The news from Rome came to Monsignor Keith Newton, the Ordinary of the Personal Ordinariate, and read “The Holy Father has benevolently permitted a donation of $250,000”.

Responding to the gift, Mgr Newton said, “I am very grateful to the Holy Father for his generosity and support. This gift is a great help and encouragement as we continue to grow and develop our distinctive ecclesial life, whilst seeking to contribute to the wider work of evangelisation in England and Wales”.

The Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham was established in January 2011 to enable Anglicans to enter into the full communion of the Catholic Church whilst retaining essential elements of their heritage and tradition. It comprises around 1200 lay faithful and 60 clergy spread across the United Kingdom.

The Apostolic Nuncio, His Excellency Archbishop Antonio Mennini, was instrumental in securing the Holy Father’s assistance. On the announcement of the gift the Archbishop said, “The Holy Father’s gift of $250,000 is a clear sign of his personal commitment to the work of Christian Unity and the special place the Ordinariate holds in his heart. I pray for the continuing success and development of the Ordinariate”.

Speaking of the need for further fundraising the Nuncio said, “I urge all those who share our Holy Father’s vision to lend their spiritual and material support to the Ordinariate, especially in these early days”.

Mgr Newton, in response to the remarks of Archbishop Mennini said, “The support and encouragement given to us by the Apostolic Nuncio has been very significant. We were very pleased to welcome him as the Principal Celebrant of our Chrism Mass: a clear sign of our deep desire to remain closely united the Holy Father”.

The Ordinariate welcomed over 250 new members this Easter. Bishop Alan Hopes will ordain deacons for the Ordinariate in Westminster Cathedral on 26 May 2012 at 10.00 a.m., and two men in their twenties were ordained to the Sacred Priesthood in London earlier this month.

Benedict XVI gets to describe the parameters of Christian Unity.

Posted in Pope of Christian Unity, The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
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