Wear the black, wear the red, and then pray in front of abortion clinics.

There is a great photo on the blog of Philip Gerard Johnson, for whom I have sometimes requested your prayers.

These are seminarians of the Pontifical Seminary called the “Josephinum”. Because it is a Pontifical Seminary, and because it dates to the time when the USA was under Propaganda Fide, they use the cassock of Propaganda College in Rome.

Here are the seminarians praying the rosary in front of an abortion clinic.

OORAH!

Now if we could also get them to go pray in front of the White House or Health and Human Services.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, Emanations from Penumbras, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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Summit “Soap Sisters” Sighting on TV. Involves also the Shroud of Turin. No. Really.

On FNC there was a great spot about the Soap Sisters in New Jersey, the Dominican Sisters of Our Lady of the Rosary.

I have written about the “Soap Sisters” quite a few times and I have link to them on the sidebar. I like their soap well enough that I have sent some to my mother.

Posted in Just Too Cool, Lighter fare | Tagged , , , , ,
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Your Sunday Sermon notes

It was a complicated Sunday!  Any good points from the Mass? From the homily?

Clue us in.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged
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Pope Benedict’s sermon for Palm Sunday 2012

Pope Benedict XVI’s sermon for Palm Sunday. First, His Holiness gives us context and then he gives us some classic Ratzinger. My emphases and comments.

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

Palm Sunday is the great doorway leading into Holy Week, the week when the Lord Jesus makes his way towards the culmination of his earthly existence. He goes up to Jerusalem in order to fulfil the Scriptures and to be nailed to the wood of the Cross, the throne from which he will reign for ever, drawing to himself humanity of every age and offering to all the gift of redemption. We know from the Gospels that Jesus had set out towards Jerusalem in company with the Twelve, and that little by little a growing crowd of pilgrims had joined them. Saint Mark tells us that as they were leaving Jericho, there was a “great multitude” following Jesus (cf. 10:46).

On the final stage of the journey, a particular event stands out, one which heightens the sense of expectation of what is about to unfold and focuses attention even more sharply upon Jesus. Along the way, as they were leaving Jericho, a blind man was sitting begging, Bartimaeus by name. As soon as he heard that Jesus of Nazareth was passing, he began to cry out: “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” (Mk 10:47). People tried to silence him, but to no avail; until Jesus had them call him over and invited him to approach. “What do you want me to do for you?”, he asked. And the reply: “Master, let me receive my sight” (v. 51). Jesus said: “Go your way, your faith has made you well.” Bartimaeus regained his sight and began to follow Jesus along the way (cf. v. 52). And so it was that, after this miraculous sign, accompanied by the cry “Son of David”, a tremor of Messianic hope spread through the crowd, causing many of them to ask: this Jesus, going ahead of us towards Jerusalem, could he be the Messiah, the new David? And as he was about to enter the Holy City, had the moment come when God would finally restore the Davidic kingdom?

The preparations made by Jesus, with the help of his disciples, serve to increase this hope. As we heard in today’s Gospel (cf. Mk 11:1-10), Jesus arrives in Jerusalem from Bethphage and the Mount of Olives, that is, the route by which the Messiah was supposed to come. From there, he sent two disciples ahead of him, telling them to bring him a young donkey that they would find along the way. They did indeed find the donkey, they untied it and brought it to Jesus. At this point, the spirits of the disciples and of the other pilgrims were swept up with excitement: they took their coats and placed them on the colt; others spread them out on the street in Jesus’ path as he approached, riding on the donkey. Then they cut branches from the trees and began to shout phrases from Psalm 118, ancient pilgrim blessings, which in that setting took on the character of messianic proclamation: “Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord! Blessed is the kingdom of our father David that is coming! Hosanna in the highest!” (v. 9-10). This festive acclamation, reported by all four evangelists, is a cry of blessing, a hymn of exultation: it expresses the unanimous conviction that, in Jesus, God has visited his people and the longed-for Messiah has finally come. And everyone is there, growing in expectation of the work that Christ will accomplish once he has entered the city. [What occurs to me as I read this is that I, too, am so often “there”, saying “Hosanna!”, but like the multitude will in a few days, I, by sinning, also betray the Lord.]

But what is the content, the inner resonance of this cry of jubilation? The answer is found throughout the Scripture, which reminds us that the Messiah fulfils the promise of God’s blessing, God’s original promise to Abraham, father of all believers: “I will make of you a great nation and I will bless you … and by you all the families of the earth shall bless themselves” (Gen 12:2-3). It is the promise that Israel had always kept alive in prayer, especially the prayer of the Psalms. Hence he whom the crowd acclaims as the blessed one is also he in whom the whole of humanity will be blessed. Thus, in the light of Christ, humanity sees itself profoundly united and, as it were, enfolded within the cloak of divine blessing, a blessing that permeates, sustains, redeems and sanctifies all things.

Here we find the first great message that today’s feast brings us: the invitation to adopt a proper outlook upon all humanity, on the peoples who make up the world, on its different cultures and civilizations. The look that the believer receives from Christ is a look of blessing: a wise and loving look, capable of grasping the world’s beauty and having compassion on its fragility. Shining through this look is God’s own look upon those he loves and upon Creation, the work of his hands. We read in the Book of Wisdom: “But thou art merciful to all, for thou canst do all things, and thou dost overlook men’s sins, that they may repent. For thou lovest all things that exist and hast loathing for none of the things which thou hast made … thou sparest all things, for they are thine, O Lord who lovest the living” (11:23-24, 26). [This reminds me a bit of an image I use occasionally: to look at others through “resurrection glasses”, that is, to imagine them as God intends in the resurrection.]

Let us return to today’s Gospel passage and ask ourselves: what is really happening in the hearts of those who acclaim Christ as King of Israel? Clearly, they had their own idea of the Messiah, an idea of how the long-awaited King promised by the prophets should act. Not by chance, a few days later, instead of acclaiming Jesus, the Jerusalem crowd will cry out to Pilate: “Crucify him!”, while the disciples, together with others who had seen him and listened to him, will be struck dumb and will disperse. The majority, in fact, was disappointed by the way Jesus chose to present himself as Messiah and King of Israel. This is the heart of today’s feast, for us too. Who is Jesus of Nazareth for us? What idea do we have of the Messiah, what idea do we have of God? It is a crucial question, one we cannot avoid, not least because during this very week we are called to follow our King who chooses the Cross as his throne. We are called to follow a Messiah who promises us, not a facile earthly happiness, but the happiness of heaven, divine beatitude. So we must ask ourselves: what are our true expectations? What are our deepest desires, with which we have come here today to celebrate Palm Sunday and to begin our celebration of Holy Week? [I like this.  What do we intend to receive from participation in Holy Week?  Active participation is founded in active receptivity.  But we should always examine our expectations.  This means we have to have something clear in our understanding by which we can measure our expectations.  No?]

Dear young people, present here today, [Palm Sunday is, if I am not mistaken, an important day for the World Youth Day … thing.] this, in a particular way, is your Day, wherever the Church is present throughout the world. So I greet you with great affection! May Palm Sunday be a day of decision for you, the decision to say yes to the Lord and to follow him all the way, the decision to make his Passover, his death and resurrection, the very focus of your Christian lives. It is the decision that leads to true joy, as I reminded you in this year’s World Youth Day Message – “Rejoice in the Lord always” (Phil 4:4). So it was for Saint Clare of Assisi when, on Palm Sunday 800 years ago, inspired by the example of Saint Francis and his first companions, she left her father’s house to consecrate herself totally to the Lord. She was eighteen years old and she had the courage of faith and love to decide for Christ, finding in him true joy and peace.

Dear brothers and sisters, may these days call forth two sentiments in particular: [1] praise, after the example of those who welcomed Jesus into Jerusalem with their “Hosanna!”, and [2] thanksgiving, because in this Holy Week the Lord Jesus will renew the greatest gift we could possibly imagine: he will give us his life, his body and his blood, his love. But we must respond worthily to so great a gift, that is to say, with the gift of ourselves, our time, our prayer, our entering into a profound communion of love with Christ who suffered, died and rose for us. The early Church Fathers saw a symbol of all this in the gesture of the people who followed Jesus on his entry into Jerusalem, the gesture of spreading out their coats before the Lord. Before Christ – the Fathers said – we must spread out our lives, ourselves, in an attitude of gratitude and adoration. As we conclude, let us listen once again to the words of one of these early Fathers, Saint Andrew, Bishop of Crete: “So it is ourselves that we must spread under Christ’s feet, not coats or lifeless branches or shoots of trees, matter which wastes away and delights the eye only for a few brief hours. But we have clothed ourselves with Christ’s grace, or with the whole Christ … so let us spread ourselves like coats under his feet … let us offer not palm branches but the prizes of victory to the conqueror of death. Today let us too give voice with the children to that sacred chant, as we wave the spiritual branches of our soul: ‘Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord, the King of Israel’” (PG 97, 994). Amen!

Posted in Pope of Christian Unity | Tagged , , , , ,
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Religious Liberty

1 April… and I’m not foolin’.

Pres. Obama isn’t foolin’.

The US bishops are NOT foolin’ either.

Biretta tip: Sword of Peter!

 

 

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Artist Daniel Mitsui’s VERY COOL new art, including a “Four Last Things”. (Fr. Z rants a little.)

The artist Daniel Mitsui, in his newsletter, indicates that he has new art, including a representation of the Glorious Mysteries (a nice gift to a priest after Easter) and – this really caught my eye – the Four Last Things!

I wonder if in a future version the two nasty hell critters (bottom left) corresponding to the musical heavenly angels (bottom right), shouldn’t have… I dunno… an accordion and kazoo, or maybe a vuvuzela.  Here is a close up of the print I received today.

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Does the critter on the left have a bagpipe?  I think the other one could be hiding an ordination tambourine.

In any event, the print makes its point.

The words on the Four Last Things print are: “Ex verbis enim tuis iustificaberis, et ex verbis tuis condemnaberis.” Matthew 12:37. “For by your words you will be justified, and by your words you will be condemned.”

We live by God’s grace and, please God, die in His grace, but because of our free will, a great deal of our fate really is in our hands.

When you got to Mr. Mitsui’s website, keep in mind that our computer screens seldom give the right sense of the vibrancy of colors.

I receive three prints this morning, and the colors pop right out.

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Alas, my phone camera doesn’t do them justice.

Note the clock in the center of the Memento Mori.

Tick… tick… tick… you are all going to die.

To my eye, some of Mitsui’s work recalls the famous Kelmscott Chaucer.  Whaddya think?

Here’s a detail of the “Death” panel (not, not the Obama Administration’s future “death panel”):

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Ah, Death!  Oooo… the Devil wants your soul with him in Hell!  Happily, the moribund has received the last rites (candle) and his angel is praying for him.

Come to think of it, that might be a pretty good rendition of Obama Administration’s upcoming “death panels”.  Just substitute a few of the characters.

Another print I received depicts in a Japanese “fusion” style the Archangel Raphael (you can tell from the fish… think Tobit).

The Mary and Child is described by Mitsui as influenced by Byzantine iconography and the English Arts and Crafts movement, together with Japanese woodblock prints.

I will add that the print of the Four Last Things is just the right size for your prayerbook or for a small frame at eye level near your bedroom prie-dieu.

A great gift to a priest or, especially, a bishop for his breviary.

Finally, I hope Mr. Mitsui will one day do something with the Christological Goldfinch!

WDTPRS kudos.

Posted in Four Last Things, Fr. Z KUDOS, REVIEWS, The Campus Telephone Pole, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
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QUAERITUR: Act of Contrition in Latin. Okaaayyy.

Every once in a while I get an email asking for the Act of Contrition in Latin.

I am not sure why one would want to say her Act of Contrition in Latin.  It seems to me that the Act is better spoken in one’s own tongue or, if possible, in that of the confessor.  Even when confessing in Latin, which I am comfortable doing when necessary, I have usually said my act of contrition in English or Italian unless the confessor was innocent of either.

The purpose of the Act of Contrition is to express not to yourself, but to the priest confessor both attrition (sorrow for sins because of fear of God’s displeasure – sufficient for absolution) and contrition (sorrow because of love of God) along with a firm purpose of amendment.

And, no, the use of the vernacular during Holy Mass is not analogous.

When you enter the confessional, you are entering a tribunal in which you are your own prosecutor.  Some old confessionals (oh how I wish I had a photo of those I have seen!) even have something like “TRIBUNAL IUSTITIAE” over the door.  In the confessional, you should be concise and clear and precise to convey everything that needs to be revealed in your self-accusation.  If your goal is to express attrition/contrition and purpose of amendment to the confessor, then I wonder if Latin will best serve your purpose if you and the confessor are not truly well-versed.  Maybe it will.  In most occasions your mother tongue will be clearer.

Confession isn’t a game or an opportunity to impress the priest with how smart or pious or traditional you are.  I bring this up not as a rebuke to anyone who with sincerity finds it useful to use a Latin Actus Doloris.  I bring this up only as a prompt to examine carefully the real motive behind the desire to use Latin with a confessor who speaks your native tongue.

Moreover, there are various forms of an act of contrition or of sorrow.

In any event, here is an Act of Contrition from the official Ordo Paenitentiae published by the Holy See:

Deus meus, ex toto corde me paénitet ac dóleo de omnibus quae male egi et de bono quod omísi, quia peccándo offéndi te, summe bonum ac dignum qui super ómnia diligáris. Fírmiter propóno, adiuvánte grátia tua, me paeniténtiam ágere, de cétero non peccatúrum peccatíque occasiónes fugitúrum. Per mérita passiónis Salvatóris nostri Iesu Christi, Dómine, miserére. Amen.

And here’s another version, slightly more familiar to Anglophone penitents of a traditional bent.  This is the Latin of the English form I use when making my own confession in English:

Deus meus, ex toto corde paénitet me ómnium meórum peccatórum, éaque detéstor, quia peccándo, non solum poenas a te iuste statútas proméritus sum, sed praesértim quia offéndi te, summum bonum, ac dignum qui super ómnia diligáris. Ideo fírmiter propóno, adiuvánte grátia tua, de cétero me non peccatúrum peccandíque occasiónes próximas fugitúrum. Amen.

Keep in mind that, in a pinch, a person can even say something as simple as “My Jesus, mercy” or “Lord, forgive me, a sinner.”  The point is that the confessor at some point should be able to detect in you that you are sorry and that you intend in that moment to change your ways.  Once he is convinced of your sincere sorrow – and the bar isn’t very high! – the confessor is not to delay absolution once you have confessed all your sins.  This is why when the pentitent gets to the point in the traditional form, “and I detest all my sins because I dread the loss of heaven and the pains of hell…”, some priests (I include myself) will start reciting the formula of absolution right away even before you are finished with the act.  Why?  The expression of attrition is sufficient and Father doesn’t have to wait to hear the rest.  Father will then usually wait till you have finished the Act and then in a somewhat louder tone say the “meat”, the conclusion of the form, “et ego te absolvo“, etc.

Finis.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, GO TO CONFESSION, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The Drill | Tagged , , , , , ,
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2012 About.com Awards: We are the winner, in the best blog category

Many thank to all of you who voted for this blog in the About.com awards. We prevailed in the Best Catholic Blog category. I am also glad that so many other good blogs and sites and publications were highlighted during the time of the voting. Everyone wins when we use well the new media.

I am grateful for your continuing support.

During the contest, I was glad to get to know the blog Roman Catholic Spiritual Direction.

I am also impressed at the fact that the readers over there use their social media sharing buttons to great effect! Perhaps you readers here might… how to put it… take a hint?

The other blogs in our category are already, I am sure, known to you.

Best Catholic Blog Results:

  • Fr. Z’s Blog: 57 percent
  • Roman Catholic Spiritual Direction: 26 percent (visit blog)
  • Catholic and Enjoying It!: 7 percent (visit blog)
  • Conversion Diary: 5 percent (visit blog)
  • Catholic Fire: 1 percent (visit blog)
Posted in Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool, Lighter fare, Non Nobis and Te Deum, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged , , , ,
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Card. Dolan’s video about Holy Week and Easter

I received a note from the Communications office of the Archdiocese of New York about Card. Dolan’s video containing a short message about Holy Week and Easter.  It seems to be aimed at young people. Have a look and pass it along:


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‘Massive’ credit card data breach involves all major brands

From CNN: ‘Massive’ credit card data breach involves all major brands
From FNC: MasterCard warns of possible security breach, Visa also reportedly affected

Fr. Z’s Litany for the Conversion of Internet Thugs (2.0)

 

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