Ethics group says babies are not “actual persons”, and killing them is fine.

In a straight line from Epicurus to Machiavelli to Descartes to Hobbes to Rousseau to Mill to Darwin to Sanger to your front door….

Killing babies no different from abortion, experts say

Parents should be allowed to have their newborn babies killed because they are “morally irrelevant” and ending their lives is no different to abortion, a group of medical ethicists linked to Oxford University has argued.

By Stephen Adams, Medical Correspondent1:38PM GMT 29 Feb 2012

The article, published in the Journal of Medical Ethics, says newborn babies are not “actual persons” and do not have a “moral right to life”. The academics also argue that parents should be able to have their baby killed if it turns out to be disabled when it is born.

The journal’s editor, Prof Julian Savulescu, director of the Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, said the article’s authors had received death threats since publishing the article. He said those who made abusive and threatening posts about the study were “fanatics opposed to the very values of a liberal society”.  [Those are the values of a “liberal society”.  Okay.  Now we know.  Is Pres. Obama a member of that Ethics group?  He advocated infanticide as a state senator.]

The article, entitled “After-birth abortion: Why should the baby live?”, was written by two of Prof Savulescu’s former associates, Alberto Giubilini and Francesca Minerva. [Interesting.  A Romanian and two Italians.  Notice how they redefined the term “infanticide” as “post-birth abortion”.]

They argued: “The moral status of an infant is equivalent to that of a fetus in the sense that both lack those properties that justify the attribution of a right to life to an individual.”  [And they get to decide that.  They decide who is worthy of life.]

Rather than being “actual persons”, newborns were “potential persons”. They explained: “Both a fetus and a newborn certainly are human beings and potential persons, but neither is a ‘person’ in the sense of ‘subject of a moral right to life’.

And this will obviously apply to the injured or elderly… or people with inconvenient ideas.

If you don’t think this is where Obamacare and the HHS mandate and the left and the political arm in the party of death are taking us… then you are a fool.

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, New Evangelization, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, Religious Liberty, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , , , ,
81 Comments

A sermon explaining what Pres. Obama is doing.

A good sermon on 5 February 2012 by Fr. Sammie Maletta at St. John the Evangelist Parish in St. John, Indiana.

You will not regret the 11 minutes you spend.

[wp_youtube]ltTd81XpDnc[/wp_youtube]

Good job, Father.

WDTPRS kudos.

Posted in Dogs and Fleas, Our Catholic Identity, Religious Liberty, The Drill, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged , , , , ,
20 Comments

Reason #9636 for Summorum Pontificum

I don’t have even the slightest doubt that the Brazilian priest is a good fellow, diligent in his pastoral duties, and well-meaning.

But priests shouldn’t do this in church.  Really shouldn’t do this during Mass.

This was, apparently, during a Mass in Brasilia.

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Fr Joachim Andrade, SVD, performed this Indian dance at the opening Mass of the penultimate day of the Seminar for Consecrated Religious Life, sponsored by the Conference of Religious of Brazil. Fr. Andrade is the Superior of the SVD Province of South Brazil.

C’mon, Padre.

I can understand wanting to affirm one’s culture, even in a sound sense of inculturation – that fascinating interaction between the Church and the world – but…. damn.

It is not that this is silly. These cultural things aren’t silly, even if they are foreign to us.

But churches are consecrated places, and priests are consecrated persons, and Mass is not the place for these things.

What I hope might result is a thoughtful discussion of inculturation.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged
59 Comments

REVIEW: St. John Cantius (Chicago) instructional DVD for “Sacred Rites and Ceremonies”

I recently received a couple instructional DVDs produced by the canons at St. John Cantius in Chicago and I have had a chance to look at “Sacred Rites and Ceremonies of the Roman Rite, featuring the use of the 1962 Liturgical Books of Blessed John XXIII“, meaning of course, the Liber Usualis (BUY), Rituale RomanumRituale Romanum (BUY) and Missale Romanum (BUY).  The canons also have great online resources.

This DVD in is their online store.

The DVD includes instructions for doing, in the traditional form, Baptism of an Infant, Penance, Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, Solemn Vespers of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Requiem Missa Cantata with Absolution over the Catafalque.

There isn’t anything particularly slick about these videos. They are just … useful. They would help a priest who doesn’t have much experience with the older forms to learn what to do. That’s enough!  This is the sort of thing priests can do in parishes.

Too bad there wasn’t a section on performing a marriage and Mass (with its variants).

In the parts on baptism and penance, the priest instructor/narrator essentially reads to the camera from a text with occasional appropriate stills or video clips to illustrate his points, texts popping up on the video from time to time. Some useful pointers are added, such as, during the part on hearing confessions in the older form, the good comment that while priests can hear the confessions of men anywhere they should hear the confessions of women only in a confessional and that this is the only sacrament the priest administers while sitting, because he is also in the role of a judge. There was a rather amusing continuity in that section: in describing how, after absolution, the penitent can go to perform HIS penance, the camera follows a nice young lady with a chapel view to a pew. Opps.

In the part about the Requiem Missa Cantata, with absolution of the catafalque, you basically watch a Mass. There is a a little sermon. The most interesting part starts at about 57 minutes, when the priest goes to the sedilia and changes from the chasuble to the cope and then continues with the absolution.

A choir director would find this section in case he has to learn how to sing for a Mass like this.

The baptism video starts with the blessing of water from the Roman Ritual.

It shows how to get everything ready beforehand. (Don’t forget the bread and lemon!)


It makes good recommendations about more solemn baptisms.

It speaks of a deacon doing a baptism with the pastor’s permission. There is an instruction about sponsors.

There is cute and occasionally unhappy baby.

A Benediction service is filmed. There are text overs. You can see clearly what is done. Spectacular music. beautiful bells, by the way.

The section on Vespers could be very helpful for a priest and choir, with a group of lay people, trying to build up this beautiful example of our liturgical worship. Vespers is simply filmed.

If you have your book to follow, the Liber Usualis, you can then watch the movements in the sanctuary to know what to do and when, make your notes and then recreate the service. What I would NOT recreate is the pace of their chanting of the psalms, etc. Far to slow. But that is a detail. The video is still useful

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, REVIEWS, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged , , , ,
13 Comments

ASTEROID! We’re all going to DIE!

Yes, we are all going to die.  One day in the not too distant future, your heart will cease to beat, you will stop breathing, and you will go before your Judge.

And then there is the possibility that an asteroid will hit the earth and we will all die at pretty much the same time.

From ABC:

Asteroid Threat in 2040? Scientists Watch 2011 AG5
By NED POTTER
48 minutes ago

There is an asteroid called 2011 AG5, and if it follows the orbit scientists have plotted for it so far, there is a small, small chance that it could hit Earth in February 2040. [“Small”!  HAH!  I’ll bet.]

Don’t quit your job and sell your house just yet. Astronomers, who have been tracking the asteroid since January 2011, say it is in an elliptical orbit that could bring it somewhere near Earth in 2040. Earth is about 8,000 miles in diameter; the asteroid appears to be about 450 feet across.

The problem is that having watched it for only about half an orbit around the Sun, the scientists cannot say for certain where it will be 28 years from now. So, for the moment, NASA’s Near Earth Object Program says the odds are about one in 625 that it could hit us in that still-distant future.

“We have a good opportunity to observe it next year and again in 2015,” said Donald Yoemans, who heads the program at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “We fully expect that the odds will go way down, most likely to zero, by then.”  [That’s what they always say.]

[…]

It isn’t too late to make a donation!

I am sooooo close to hitting my monthly goal for the first time in… I can’t remember.
Soooo close.
Finally, this is a good opportunity to remind you to go to confession…. before 2040.How about this week?

Posted in Global Killer Asteroid Questions, GO TO CONFESSION | Tagged , ,
11 Comments

Priest denies Communion to lesbian at her mother’s funeral. Anger ensues. Can. 915 hell breaks loose.

From WaPo:

D.C. archdiocese: Denying Communion to lesbian at funeral was against ‘policy’

By Michelle Boorstein

Deep in grief, [We start with emotion and an image by which it is clear that the priest involved must be condemned, no matter what.] Barbara Johnson stood first in the line for Communion at her mother’s funeral Saturday morning. But the priest in front of her immediately made it clear that she would not receive the sacramental bread and wine.  [She was sad.  Of course she was sad at the death of her mother!  Rightly so.  But being sad isn’t necessarily a justification for reception of the Eucharist no matter what.]

Johnson, an art-studio owner from the District, had come to St. John Neumann Catholic Church in Gaithersburg with her lesbian partner. The Rev. Marcel Guarnizo had learned of their relationship just before the service. [He didn’t have long to think about it.  That is an important point.]

“He put his hand over the body of Christ and looked at me and said, ‘I can’t give you Communion because you live with a woman, and in the eyes of the church, that is a sin,’?” she recalled Tuesday.

She reacted with stunned silence. Her anger and outrage have now led her and members of her family to demand that Guarnizo be removed from his ministry.  [She was sad.  Therefore, the rules didn’t apply to her.  Now she is angry, and that is the basis for her getting her way.  She is angry, therefore ruin the guy.]

Family members said the priest left the altar while Johnson, 51, was delivering a eulogy [Hmmm… I wonder what she said.  And should there have been a eulogy?] and did not attend the burial or find another priest to be there. [Perhaps the priest had reason to be worried about what might happen at the graveside?]

“You brought your politics, [Again, the liberal reduction of the Church’s teachings to “politics” or a “policy”.] not your God into that Church yesterday, [She is apparently psychic as well.] and you will pay dearly on the day of judgment for judging me,” she wrote in a letter to Guarnizo. “I will pray for your soul, but first I will do everything in my power to see that you are removed from parish life so that you will not be permitted to harm any more families.” [Nice.]

[…]

Read the rest of the ugly story over there.

You can see what not applying can. 915 in the past is now causing. Now can. 915 must never be applied.

The priest is now under fire from the chancery as well.

I don’t think any WDTPRS reader out there will think that I am anything other than hawkish on the use of can. 915.

can. 915But can. 915 has to be applied properly.

A priest can’t just learn something which may or not be true or may or may not be public knowledge and then simply decide minutes later that Ms. X doesn’t get Holy Communion.

Here is the canon in one translation:

Can. 915 Those upon whom the penalty of excommunication or interdict has been imposed or declared, and others who obstinately persist in manifest grave sin, are not to be admitted to holy communion.

The second part of the canon would most likely apply in this situation, since it seems as if the woman wasn’t excommunicated, etc.

The priest assumed she was in the state of grave sin and therefore didn’t give her Communion.

The problem here is two-fold.

First, there is a question of how “manifest” this grave sin was.  He had just learned about it himself.  If he didn’t know, perhaps others don’t, even family members at the church for the funeral.  Nancy Pelosi and Kathleen Sebelius are very public figures and their words are actions are highly visible and publicized.  Their errors are unquestionably manifest.  This woman at the funeral is nearly at that level of notoriety.

Also, the Ms. X has to be “obstinate”.  That means that the person has to have been instructed, approached, admonished, warned, what have you, and still persist.  It is unlikely in the extreme that that woman at the funeral didn’t know the Catholic Church’s teaching about homosexual actions.  Surely she knows and doesn’t care.  She may know something about the ramifications about Communion, though given the shoddy catechism Catholics have had and the lackadaisical attitude of priests and bishops over the last decades who knows what she knows.  But the priest in question certainly hadn’t had the opportunity to instruct or admonish and provide for the instruction to sink in and for the woman to mend her ways.

In this case, from the way it was reported, the priest both didn’t have a clear knowledge that this woman’s lifestyle was manifest and that she was herself being obstinate.  It seems to me that to apply can. 915 to that woman at that moment was an improper rush to judgment, well-meaning, but wrong, zealous for the Lord and Holy Church’s doctrine, but premature.

When a law in Canon Law places a burden or restricts a person in some way, the law has to be interpreted as strictly as possible so that the person’s rights are protected.  That means that those concepts of “manifest” and “obstinate” really have to be taken seriously and worked through carefully before making a decision under can. 915 that a person must be denied Communion.

If Nancy Pelosi shows up at the Communion rail, I think priests are obliged by can. 915 to deny her Communion.  Her actions are words are very public and she has never made any public statement to put them right or say she has changed her mind.  Her actions and thoughts are manifest and she is obstinate in them.  Ms. X, who isn’t a public figure like that, isn’t such a clear example.

I have a hard time assigning much blame to the priest, however.  He should be thanked for taking his role seriously and for wanting to uphold the Church’s teaching and even perhaps use tough love in a “teaching moment”.  Perhaps the timing was really bad, but his action was not wimpy.  He hit that wall running and left a priest shaped hole, just like in the cartoons.

Many priests have received inadequate training in these matters of law and have been given even worse example by bishops who ought to be applying can. 915 in genuine cases of applicability.  Confusion reigns.

Furthermore, from the newspaper report – and let’s not for a moment think that WaPo is going to report the priest’s side fairly in this – it sounds like this couple was pretty aggressive, as if they were ready for a fight.  The “partner” was all too happy to say she was a “partner”.  There was something about a eulogy.   I think we are lacking part of the story.

What we get a strong does of is that the woman was sad, and therefore she should be given a pass to do anything she wants.  Later she is angry, and therefore she should get her way.

Furthermore, her lifestyle is now a matter of public record.  Perhaps her bishop should admonish her now about the ramifications of living openly and obstinately in the state of grave sin.

Finally, while I have your attention, please go buy some can. 915 stuff.

UPDATE 29 Feb 1658 GMT:

The Canonical Defender, Dr. Ed Peters, has opined.

I think we are in the same way of thinking… which is a relief to me!

Posted in 1983 CIC can. 915, Biased Media Coverage, New Evangelization, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, The Drill, The future and our choices, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , ,
107 Comments

“In the formation of their consciences, the Christian faithful ought carefully to attend to the sacred and certain doctrine of the Church.”

From Dignitatis humanae, the Declaration on the Right of the Person and of Communities to Social and Civil Freedom in Religious Matters (1965):

13. Among the things that concern the good of the Church and indeed the welfare of society here on earth—things therefore that are always and everywhere to be kept secure and defended against all injury—this certainly is preeminent, namely, that the Church should enjoy that full measure of freedom which her care for the salvation of men requires.[1] This is a sacred freedom, because the Only-begotten Son endowed with it the Church which He purchased with His blood. Indeed it is so much the property of the Church that to act against it is to act against the will of God. The freedom of the Church is the fundamental principle in what concerns the relations between the Church and governments and the whole civil order.

In human society and in the face of government the Church claims freedom for herself in her character as a spiritual authority, established by Christ the Lord, upon which there rests, by divine mandate, the duty of going out into the whole world and preaching the Gospel to every creature.[2] The Church also claims freedom for herself in her character as a society of men who have the right to live in society in accordance with the precepts of the Christian faith.[3]

In turn, where the principle of religious freedom is not only proclaimed in words or simply incorporated in law but also given sincere and practical application, there the Church succeeds in achieving a stable situation of right as well as of fact and the independence which is necessary for the fulfillment of her divine mission.

This independence is precisely what the authorities of the Church claim in society.[4] At the same time, the Christian faithful, in common with all other men, possess the civil right not to be hindered in leading their lives in accordance with their consciences. Therefore, a harmony exists between the freedom of the Church and the religious freedom which is to be recognized as the right of all men and communities and sanctioned by constitutional law.

14. In order to be faithful to the divine command, “teach all nations” (Matt. 28:19-20), the Catholic Church must work with all urgency and concern “that the word of God be spread abroad and glorified” (2 Thess. 3:1). Hence the Church earnestly begs of its children that, “first of all, supplications, prayers, petitions, acts of thanksgiving be made for all men. … For this is good and agreeable in the sight of God our Savior, who wills that all men be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth” (1 Tim. 2:1-4). In the formation of their consciences, the Christian faithful ought carefully to attend to the sacred and certain doctrine of the Church.[5] For the Church is, by the will of Christ, the teacher of the truth. It is her duty to give utterance to, and authoritatively to teach, that truth which is Christ Himself, and also to declare and confirm by her authority those principles of the moral order which have their origins in human nature itself. Furthermore, let Christians walk in wisdom in the face of those outside, “in the Holy Spirit, in unaffected love, in the word of truth” (2 Cor. 6:6-7), and let them be about their task of spreading the light of life with all confidence[6] and apostolic courage, even to the shedding of their blood.

The disciple is bound by a grave obligation toward Christ, his Master, ever more fully to understand the truth received from Him, faithfully to proclaim it, and vigorously to defend it, never—be it understood—having recourse to means that are incompatible with the spirit of the Gospel. At the same time, the charity of Christ urges him to love and have prudence and patience in his dealings with those who are in error or in ignorance with regard to the faith.[7] All is to be taken into account—the Christian duty to Christ, the life-giving word which must be proclaimed, the rights of the human person, and the measure of grace granted by God through Christ to men who are invited freely to accept and profess the faith.

[1] Cf. Leo XIII, letter Officio Sanctissimo, Dec. 22, 1887: AAS 20 (1887), p. 269; idem, letter Ex Litteris, April 7, 1887: AAS 19 (1886), p. 465.

[2] Cf. Mark 16:15; Matt. 28:18-20, Pius XII, encycl. Summi Pontificatus, Oct. 20, 1939: AAS 31 (1939), pp. 445–46.

[3] Cf. Pius XI, letter Firmissimam Constantiam, March 28, 1937: AAS 29 (1937), p. 196.

[4] Cf. Pius XII, allocution, Ci Riesce, Dec. 6, 1953: AAS 45 (1953), p. 802.

[5] Cf. Pius XII, radio message, March 23, 1952: AAS 44 (1952) pp. 270–78.

[6] Cf. Acts 4:29.

[7] Cf. John XXIII, encycl. Pacem in Terris, April 11, 1963: AAS 55 (1963), pp. 299–300.

Posted in Dogs and Fleas, Emanations from Penumbras, Religious Liberty | Tagged , , , , ,
3 Comments

One of the best, attention-grabbing headlines I have see in a long time.

An alert reader pointed me to a post at the UK’s Daily Telegraph with one of the best, attention-grabbing titles I have see in a long time.

I’d go to church just to reduce the probability of spending eternity in Hell with Richard Dawkins

Posted in Four Last Things, GO TO CONFESSION, Lighter fare | Tagged , ,
11 Comments

WaPo bigot attacks Rick Santorum’s Catholicism

The unhinged lefty liberals are having a spittle-flecked nutty about Sen. Rick Santorum.

Liberal hack Richard Cohen of the WaPo:

Mullah Rick has spoken.

He wants religion returned to “the public square,” is opposed to contraception, premarital sex and abortion under any circumstances, wants children educated in what amounts to little red schoolhouses and called President Obama a “snob” for extolling college or some other kind of post-high school education. This is not a political platform. It’s a fatwa. [Liberals control the education system, of course.  It is a chief method of indoctrination.  Liberals want to make sure that all kids are under their aegis for as long as possible.  That way they can suck kid’s brains out and pump their skulls full their lefty … detritus.]

But that’s not all. On the Sunday shows, he even lit into John F. Kennedy’s 1960 speech to Protestant ministers, in which he called for the strict separation of church and state. Santorum said the speech sickened him.  [In regards to his Faith, Kennedy was a faithless traitor.  Of course the writer would like him.]

“What kind of country do we live in that says only people of nonfaith can come into the public square and make their case?” Santorum asked on “This Week.” “That makes me throw up.” Earlier, he said, “I don’t believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute,” not noticing that he was speaking from what amounts to the public square. [Apparently the writer doesn’t realize is that the White House is trying to shift the notion of freedom of religion to freedom of worship.]

Kennedy’s speech is actually a sad document, a necessary attempt to combat the bigoted and ignorant notion that a Catholic President might take orders from the Vatican. [That was the writer’s attempt to make you think he himself is open-minded.]

Oddly, the assurances that Kennedy offered that day are ones that I would like to hear from Santorum. He, too, is a Catholic, although not of the Kennedy variety. [A little less adultery, perhaps.  But the writer apparently has a certain affinity with adultery.] Santorum is severe and unamusing about his faith, and that is his prerogative. But he has shoved his beliefs in our faces, leaving no doubt that his presidency would be informed by his extremely conservative Catholicism. [That’s it, folks.  The writer is freaked out that Santorum actually believes what the Church teaches.  But the writer is also lying to you.  Santorum has given NO indication that he would “take orders from the Vatican”.  The Know Nothing writer is simply trying to scare liberals into hating Santorum more than they do already.]

This is a perilous and divisive approach. We have all of world history to warn us about what happens when religion takes too prominent a role. The public square gets used for beheadings and the like. While that is not likely to happen now — zoning rules and such forbid it — we do know that layering religion over politics is dangerous.  [Beheadings?  Really?  Repeat after me: spittle-flecked nutty.]

Santorum cannot impose — and should not argue that — his political beliefs come from God. That closes all debate and often infuriates those who differ. [Because … why?  Because… God doesn’t exist?]

This belief that religion has been banished from public discussion is a conservative trope that is without foundation. New York City is now recovering from a frenzy of celebratory publicity regarding the elevation of Timothy Dolan to cardinal. We have applauded the feats of Tim Tebow, the so-called praying quarterback. As any European can attest, the American public square is soaked in religion or religion-speak. [Moronic.  Those are flashy blips on the screen.  Real religion in the public square shapes how people think and live.  The fact that Dolan is now a Cardinal or that a quarterback prays is lana caprina.]

Santorum’s views on the place of religion and his quaint ideas about education are so anachronistic they would be laughable. But whenever I start to giggle a bit, I find that some absurd statement resonates with Republican primary voters. [“Boy, those Republicans sure are stupid.  Aren’t they amusing?”  This is how liberals think.]

For nutty ideas, Santorum is a one-man band. His intellectually abhorrent defense of what might be called blue-collar culture — no education past high school — is a prescription for failure. [Liberals hate men like Joe the Plumber. ] What he calls blue-collar “desires and dreams” is a sucker’s game: Welcome to an economy that can provide few if any jobs for the minimally educated. [The flaw in what he is saying here is that the education system doesn’t actually provide an education.  Kids come out of school stupider than they were when they went in.  But they do get that lefty cant shoved down their throats on a daily basis, I guess.] And his gibe at Obama for wanting to do something about it is not politics as usual — it’s just plain irresponsible.

Rick Santorum is not, as some would have it, the Republican Party’s problem. The GOP is half the political equation, and so its inability to offer candidates of sound views and judgments is everyone’s problem. We have to vote for someone after all. [Useless paragraph.  That’s a few seconds of my life I’ll never have back.]

But when I mull Santorum’s views on contraception, the role of women, the proper place for religion and what he thinks about education, I think he’s either running for President of the wrong country or marooned in the wrong century. The man is lost.  [And the writer is a leftist loon.]

cohenr@washpost.com

Bigot.

I suspect Cohen hates Catholics because he is pro-abortion and pro-homosexuality.

Posted in Dogs and Fleas, Our Catholic Identity, Religious Liberty, The Last Acceptable Prejudice, Throwing a Nutty |
23 Comments

REVIEW: New 3-volume (Extraordinary Form) Roman Breviary in Latin and English from Baronius Press

Have you wanted to use the older form of the office, the Roman Breviary, but haven’t been able to do it because your Latin isn’t strong enough or you couldn’t figure out how to do it?

You are in luck.

Today I received from the nice people at Baronius Press the new set of the three volume Roman Breviary, Latin and English translation in side by side columns.

I think they cost $400. Click HERE.

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There are accompanying cards, printed on card stock, which have commonly used prayers either during the day or at certain times of the year.

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They seem pretty durable, though I may laminate to be sure.

One of those items, by the way, is a small booklet with common prayers for the day, canticles and so forth.

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The title of this book, which came with the set, is self-explanatory.

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Each volume has a slip cover.

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The front is stamped, but this is not embossed.

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I like the way Baronius Press handles their leather covers.  Their Extraordinary Form hand missal is done this way too.

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The paper, endpaper, makes a difference in a book you look at several times a day every day!  It better be nice!   This is.

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General page layout and two of the six ribbons.

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There are explanatory, interpretive notes in English along the way.

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The colors of the ribbons.

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The book lies open pretty well just out of the box, except when open to a page near the beginning or end.  That is to be expected.  The bind will loosen up.

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The great Bishop Bruskewitz is the culprit!  WDTPRS kudos to Bp. B!

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There is a good explanation of the genesis of the set.

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Beautiful books, reminiscent of a better age of liturgical books.

From the Baronius Press website comes this list of the features

A new edition of the Roman Breviary 1961 in English and Latin. An invaluable set of books for all those attached to the traditional Roman Breviary, in the form approved by Pope Benedict XVI in Summorum Pontificum.

Summary of features:

  • 6,064 pages printed in black and red, text of all hours in Latin and English with rubrics in English.
  • Concordat cum orginali [sic] – meaning the Latin text is approved by the Church for liturgical use, Imprimatur and foreword from Bishop Fabian Bruskewitz STD of Lincoln.
  • [NB] Based on the popular three-volume Breviary published by Collegeville in 1963.
  • St. Jerome’s traditional Gallican Psalter from the Vulgate is used throughout. [Not the Pius XII psalter.]
  • English version of Psalms thoroughly revised to match the Gallican Psalter.
  • Follows rubrics promulgated by Blessed Pope John XXIII – the form of the traditional Breviary approved in Pope Benedict XVI’s Summorum Pontificum.
  • Scriptural texts in English follow the Confraternity translation (a 1940s revision of Challoner’s Douai-Rheims Bible), which have been revised where necessary to conform to the Vulgate text.
  • Contains Penitential Psalms and the Office for the Dead.
  • Full texts of national feasts for the USA included in the Proper of Saints. National feasts for England & Wales, Scotland and Australasia indicated in the Proper on the dates they occur.
  • English versions of hymns in the acclaimed translation of the Rev. Joseph Connelly.
  • Thirty engravings throughout, which have been selected from traditional liturgical books, carefully scanned, and re-mastered – correcting any defects in images where necessary.
  • Extracts from the Rituale Romanum (including the most commonly used litanies) given in Latin with English rubrics in an Appendix.
  • Full text of relevant motu proprio (Pope John XXIII’s Rubricarum Instructum and Pope Benedict’s Summorum Pontificum) in Latin and English.
  • Thirteen Cards with commonly used prayers in Latin and English.
  • All texts of the Cards also gathered in a handy booklet – in addition to being on the cards.
  • Booklet containing common texts and basic instructions for praying for the Day Hours of the Breviary. Both booklets are sized to conveniently fit at the back of each volume.
  • A free copy of Learning the Traditional Breviary is included with all orders.
  • Flexible cover, leather bound with edge stitching for extra durability.
  • Printed on light cream Bible paper.  [Nice paper, btw.]
  • Beautifully printed endpapers
  • Gold gilt page edges and rounded corners.
  • Six soft ribbons.
  • Slipcase provided for each volume for additional protection

Did you know that Sacrosanctum Concilium says that those who are bound to say the office must do it in Latin?

I just toss that in because that FACT is interesting.

This set of the reworked “Collegeville” breviaries could be a huge help to someone whose Latin isn’t that strong, or who doesn’t want to fight with some of the harder bits during Matins, etc.

Click HERE.

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