My peeps left for the USA today. I am starting to catch up a bit.
Just a couple shots.
These good people wanted to have an ad here for their procession, but while I have been in Venice I have had infinite email problems. I couldn’t load their ad. Have a look at this!
Here is a GREAT video for the Great Marian Procession
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qAdIVuz9pUY&feature=player_embedded
Saturday, May 3, 2014
7:30 a.m. Arrive – East Lawn Cemetery, 4300 Folsom Blvd., Sacramento
8:00 a.m. Sharp – Procession leaves on 3-mile pilgrimage
10:30 a.m. Solemn Mass & May Crowning at the Cathedral
Note: Please bring a portable radio, tuned to 1620 am – Immaculate Heart Radio!
If you are Catholic and live on the West Coast, join the crowds for this EPIC 6th Annual Marian Procession, Mass and Crowning! The glorious statue of the Blessed Virgin of Fatima is led out from East Lawn Cemetery to the haunting sounds of drums and bagpipes. The statue is flanked by Knights of Columbus Fourth Degree Honor Guard. Boulevards and streets are closed-down by the Sacramento Police Department as the crowds make their 3.5-mile pilgrimage through the city, praying Our Lady’s Holy Rosary which is broadcast by Immaculate Heart Radio for the event.
You will walk through East Sacramento, Midtown and Downtown, passing in front of the State Capitol, then to Cathedral Plaza. Enter the majestic Cathedral of the Blessed Sacrament, where you will participate in the breathtaking Solemn High Mass in the traditional Latin form: the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite! Mass is sung by the famous accomplished Choir and Choristers of St. Stephen the First Martyr Parish, and served by the skilled members of St. Stephen the First Martyr Parish Altar Guild. Then immediately following Mass is May Crowning of our Blessed Lady.
From a reader…
QUAERITUR:
Back before Vatican II, and even in the years following Vatican II, daily Mass at most parishes, if not all, (it seems, according family members, and reading the lives of the saints) was early in the morning (ie: around 5:00-6:30 am; I have heard of places with TWO early morning Masses each day). Now it seems daily Mass is held at times when most people are either at work or school and can’t get to daily Mass. […]
I have brought this up to our priest who agrees that it would be a good idea, but when he brings it up to those who attend daily Mass, he is met with opposition from the home-schooling families (we are a Latin Mass community) who insist that it would be “too early” to get their kids out of bed to attend Mass. Personally, I think this is laziness and a lack of discipline, and should not be an excuse to have daily Mass later in the day. When I talk to people from our community who can’t attend daily Mass due to work and school, they say they would attend Mass daily if it was early enough in the morning that they could still get to work on time.
As a priest yourself, what would you suggest is trying to go about reviving early morning daily Masses?
I think that if people were to express an interest in early morning Masses, priests would schedule early morning Masses. But there would have to be some interest.
Ask the parish priest!
If Father already has a Mass or two, he isn’t likely to jump at the chance to say a second or a third (reversing the chronology) at, say, 5:30 a.m.
So, here is a little poll. Something like this might be done in a parish.
Pick your best answer. Yes, I know there could be other answers but these are the answers you get. The combox is open.

ACTION ITEM!
One of our regular readers here brought this to my attention.
I alert you to a survey put out by some folks who seem to want 1975 back.
You might want to help them people with their survey! They sent it out to their – say – half a dozen readers. I think we can do better. I hope that thousands of you will jump in.
The American Catholic Council… remember them? (click HERE)… wants your views. They write:
Pope Francis is offering all of us new hope in our beloved Church and he has called out many times for “dialogue, dialogue…” Some have called this the “Francis Revolution” because he is turning all expectations upside down. The American Catholic Council is joining this revolution in an active way and we invite you to help us discern the best way for all of us to engage and support the grassroots in creating change along with Francis.
We invite you to fill out our very short survey as a next step in our mission to support you and your dreams to change the Church. Toward that end, we hope you will also send this invitation and survey to a half dozen of your friends so that we can collaborate widely on planning next steps. Together, no matter how big our dream is, we can achieve much!
Survey will close on Monday, May 12th at noon EDT
Summary of results will be in the next ACC newsletter
If that survey doesn’t come up for you with the link, above, try HERE and then look for the link.
Here are my answers (numbered questions first):
1. We are interested in what it means to YOU to be Catholic in 2014, your vision of the Church. Francis gets a lot of media attention, what if there were a lot of positive buzz about your local Catholic community? If a 60 Minutes reporter visited your ideal local Catholic community, what three things would grab his/her attention and be a part of the story told on television? ( the answer boxes will expand to accommodate whatever you write)
2. Try a thought experiment: Imagine it is one year from today and there is trouble in your diocese and people are in the streets. Look back: what happened that woke them up and got them into action? Name three things. Please be as specific as possible (the answer boxes will expand to accommodate whatever you want to write)
You see, in the second point they are looking for things that interest their base enough that they – the half-dozen or so – might go out and protest. You know, relive the 60’s.
Help them out!
This is what my friend wrote for responses:
ad secundum:
Take a few minutes and help them out. Talk about it at home and over coffee and doughnuts at church. Forward it to your friends. Come up with some ideas.
¡Hagan lío!
ACTION ITEM BELOW!
Take a second and click HERE.
Over the last few weeks we have watched the developing circumstances surrounding the blog Protect The Pope, run by an English permanent deacon, and the Diocese of Lancaster. HERE Most recently I posted: A bishop kills a deacon’s Catholic blog
The Bishop of Lancaster has made a statement through a press release. In fairness to him, I must post it too. With my emphases and comments.
PRESS RELEASE FROM THE BISHOP OF LANCASTER
Bishop Campbell did not close down Protect the Pope [NB: It doesn’t bury the lead!]
BEGINS:
‘Back in 2010 Deacon Nick Donnelly set up the Protect the Pope website/blog, as a direct response to the campaign of hostility and ridicule from sections of the media and lobby groups against Pope (Emeritus) Benedict XVI’s historic visit to the UK in September of that year.
Protect the Pope was particularly successful at this time in articulating a strong defence of the Petrine Office, the Catholic Church, and its teachings against certain secularist and anti-Catholic activists. In the last couple of years, however, Protect the Pope appears to have shifted its objective from a defence of Church teaching from those outside the Church to alleged internal dissent within the Church. With this shift, Protect the Pope has come to see itself as a ‘doctrinal watchdog’ over the writings and sayings of individuals, that is, of bishops, clergy and theologians in England & Wales and throughout the Catholic world.
Protect the Pope makes it clear that the site is a private initiative and is in no way officially affiliated with the Diocese of Lancaster. The fact, however, that its creator and author is a permanent deacon of the Diocese of Lancaster and holding some responsibility here fosters in the minds of some people that Deacon Nick Donnelly is somehow reporting the views of the Diocese. [“Some people”? Really? It does? I’ve been at this for a while now and I don’t see that happen. Who takes the writings of a clerical blogger as if they were the official statements of the diocese? Unless, perhaps, the blogger is the diocesan bishop, and there are a few of those.]
It is my view that bishops, priests and deacons of the Church – ordained and ‘public’ persons – are free to express themselves and their personal views, but never in a way that divides the community of the Church i.e. through ad hominem and personal challenges. [Such as tossing out lines like “Repent!” or personal remarks like the Seven Woes, e.g., “Woe to you scribes and pharisees, hypocrites!”. Not challenging at all. Cf. Matthew 23. Or “Do not think that I have come to bring peace on earth; I have not come to bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to set a man against his father, and a daughter against her mother, and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law; and a man’s foes will be those of his own household.” Nothing divisive there. Look, it has been long day and I am just riffing on a theme. ] Increasingly I have felt that Protect the Pope, authored as it is by a public person holding ecclesiastical office (an ordained deacon), has, at times, taken this approach its own posts – but has also allowed for this by facilitating those who comment online.
I note that Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York, speaking at a media conference in Rome on 29 April, said: “We adhere to the best and highest standards”—indicating that this doesn’t only pertain to the latest in technological advancements which are “critically important,” but also to “the way we use that technology,” because “how we say something is just as important as what we say.”
Cardinal Dolan also noted the importance of never caricaturing or stereotyping those who oppose the Magisterium. He exhorted that even when confronted with those who attempt to distort what the Church says, or who issue “mean, vicious, and outward attacks,” we must “always respond in charity and love.”
On several occasions, I asked Deacon Nick, through my staff, for Protect the Pope to continue its good work in promoting and teaching the Catholic Faith, but to be careful not to take on individuals in the Church of opposing views through ad hominem and personal challenges. [The blogosphere hardly works that way. This isn’t a game of jacks, but… okay.] Unfortunately, this was not taken on board. Consequently, as a last resort, on 3 March 2014 and in a personal meeting with Deacon Nick Donnelly, I requested, as his Diocesan Ordinary, that Deacon Nick ‘pause’ all posting on the Protect the Pope website so as to allow for a period of prayer and reflection upon his position as an ordained cleric with regards to Protect the Pope and his own duties towards unity, truth and charity. The fact that this decision and our personal dialogue was made public on the Protect the Pope site and then misinterpreted by third parties is a matter of great regret. In fact, new posts continued on the site after this date – the site being handed over and administered/moderated in this period by Deacon Nick’s wife Martina. [Who isn’t a deacon.]
On 13 April 2014 Deacon Nick requested in writing that he be allowed to resume posting again from the date: Monday 21 April 2014. I did not accept this request as the period of discernment had not yet concluded. Again, the fact that this decision was forced, misinterpreted and then released publicly on the site – and miscommunicated by certain media outlets and blogs – claiming that I had effectively ‘closed’, ‘supressed’ or ‘gagged’ Protect the Pope was regrettable and does not represent the truth of this situation. To be clear: I have not closed down Protect the Pope. [NB]
I am certainly aware of the need of the Church and the Diocese of Lancaster to engage positively with the new media, social media, blogs, and the internet for the sake of spreading the Gospel to the people of our age. Indeed, our Diocese has a good track record of such engagement in reaching out to a much wider audience through our active use of the new communication technologies. I have a weekly blog myself. [Ah! Let’s go see! HERE ACTION ITEM! Dear readers, do click there and visit the bishop’s blog. I am sure that someone is watching his statistics for him.]
I am, of course, also conscious, that no bishop can ever ‘close down’ or suppress blogs and websites – such a claim would be absurd. [Yes. It would be.] Bishops can and must, however, be faithful to their apostolic duty to preserve the unity of the Church in the service of the Truth. They must ensure that ordained clergy under their care serve that unity in close communion with them and through the gift of their public office: preaching the Truth always – but always in love.’
ENDS
There will be no further comment from the Diocese of Lancaster on this matter.+Michael G Campbell OSA
Bishop of Lancaster 2 May 2014
God Bless Bishop Campbell in difficult mandate as one of the successors of the Apostles. We all know that bishops now, more than ever, need the support of prayer.
ACTION ITEM!
The bishop does not have a combox open, but you can go spike his statistics. It might be a good idea to show him that it is possible to reach a lot of people.
Whaddy say? Take a second. Click HERE.
This morning we had our Mass at Santo Stefano, quite beautiful though dark on this dark, gray, rainy day.
Some Tintoretto… you know… same ol’…
Okay, forget about the Tintoretto. It poured incessantly for the whole morning and way into the afternoon. Thus, we parked at a great restaurant near La Fenice and settled into to enjoy various courses and wait out rain and the lightening and the splitting thunder.
This risotto of herbs and mazzancolle has raised the bar a notch for me.
The view. This is one of the moments when the tourists couldn’t stand it. They all headed for cover. There are few things I detest more than walking around in the rain. No, seriously. Few.
The rain let up, however, and we dashed over to San Zaccaria. The body of the father of St. John the Baptist is here (lower) and the body of St. Athanasius, bishop and doctor, is above. Today is his feast day in both the new and the traditional calendar. I had to visit.
I said a prayer for readers of this blog while at the body of this courageous defender of the orthodox Catholic Faith. We must be inspired by him.
BTW… I will again say Mass for my benefactors when I return to Rome.
In San Zaccaria you find a main altar with these spiffy walls about it. I would very much like to build a church with one of these!
Another view of the tombs of the saints.
Across the way is a lovely Bellini. Not the drink.
I spotted this in a window of a pastry shop. Everything from mushrooms to mussels, sea bass to squid… all marzipan!
And nearby a €16K watch. I’ll take three, please.
Seriously… what does one do with a watch like this other than gaze at it in a dark cave while dodging orcs?
Those of you who watch the Catholic blogsophere closely may have seen items about the closing of Holy Innocents Church in midtown Manhattan in New York City.
I have written about Holy Innocents, a wonderful place, many times. HERE and especially HERE.
From what I can tell, Holy Innocents is a place where the New Evangelization is actually succeeding, and in its unique way! New Evangelization meets Summorum Pontificum. It is the perfect combination, and it is working. Over the year Mass attendance has been steadily climbing. There is constant traffic in and out of this church as a spiritual oasis. It’s location is ideal. Beautiful things occur at this church.
NB: I understand that the list of churches that has been circulated is a recommendation. This is not the official, final list. Again, I understand that it is only recommended that Holy Innocents and St. Michael’s (where Fr. Rutler is now, after his transfer away from Our Savior) be closed.
That said, I saw an article at National Review Online (my emphases):
Save the Tridentine Mass, or, ‘These Little-Town Blues’
Living in a global metropolis such as New York has its drawbacks, to be sure. But one of the key reasons so many of us choose to do it anyway is that we love being in a place where so many cultural riches are so readily available. Everyone knows about the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Metropolitan Opera, and the plethora of arthouse movie theaters where films from the whole world are on display (I would contend that for cinema lovers — as opposed to people in the movie business — Manhattan is better than Los Angeles).
But what few people from outside of New York realize is that this city also has an amazing diversity when it comes to the religious aspect of culture. For pretty much whatever religion you want to practice, you can find a house of worship here. And when it comes to Christianity specifically, just about every branch of every denomination has an outpost. It will comes as a further surprise to many that, within Protestantism, it is the conservative NYC churches that attract the largest crowds on Sunday. In many ways, the city conforms to its stereotype of Babylon-on-the-Hudson; but that’s far from the whole story of what goes on here.
This, as I said, is an important part of what makes many of us want to live here. So it was with a heavy heart that I learned that the Roman Catholic archdiocese of New York is considering going “small-time” — and closing one of the few parishes in the world that offers the pre-Vatican II Catholic Mass every day. According to this report, the archdiocese is considering closing Holy Innocents Church on West 37th Street.
I am — as NRO comboxers would hasten to point out — the farthest thing imaginable from a “Traditionalist Catholic.” But I have been been enriched by the Tridentine Mass at Holy Innocents — a Mass that, not incidentally, attracts an appreciable number of worshipers for a weekday service. But whether you are a Traditionalist Catholic, or a Catholic of any sort, or just someone who believes in the culturally conservative project of preserving one of mankind’s richest spiritual traditions, I urge you to contact the archdiocese at communications@archny.org. Let them know you oppose this parish closure — and that, at the very least, if the parish closure turns out to be unavoidable, whatever local parish Holy Innocents is folded into should continue offering the daily Tridentine Mass. It’s a beautiful thing, and there’s support for it, and if it doesn’t exist in what St. John Paul II called the Capital of the World, where can it exist?
NB: I did not know, before reading this report, that Eugene O’Neill, probably America’s greatest playwright, was baptized at Holy Innocents. He, too, was far from being a Traditionalist Catholic. One writer described O’Neill’s approach to faith as follows:
In Long Day’s Journey, Tyrone tells Edmund that he has the makings of a poet. “No, I’m afraid I’m like the guy who is always panhandling for a smoke,” the son replies. “He hasn’t even got the makings. He’s only got the habit.” The same could be said about O’Neill’s Catholicism. He turned his back on it as a creed and practice, but its habits of mind and thought stayed with him. His is a Christianity for a post-religious age. The human condition of sinfulness still applies, and man must still pass through the cross if he hopes to reach the resurrection.
In other words, he was a rebellious son of Holy Innocents, but no less a son for that. St. Eugene, help us keep the Iceman away from this priceless Manhattan institution.
In the wake of Sarah Palin’s remarks about water boarding terrorists as a kind of “baptism” (an image I think is at least tasteless and even verges on blasphemy) I received this interesting email:
While Palin’s comments were ill-advised and too cute for comment, let me put them in another context, less spiritual and more military. As a naval aviator (for 20 years), I was tortured and water boarded for my country, as a part of Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape (SERE) School. The purpose was to teach certain skills should they ever be needed. In the past, this training was highly classified but now has been spoken about in open Congressional testimony. Am I grateful for this training? Yes. Because I knew that should the time come I had learned some of the lessons of my fellow naval aviators who had paid a tremendous price when in the hand of our nation’s (and the Church’s) enemies. It was hard training yet necessary. It was hardly comparable to the experiences of the Apostles and St. Paul, or actually being a POW when death could be imminent. A
The Left and entities that push evil agendas will increasingly use bullying tactics and threats to silence all opposition, especially concerning Faith and morals.
From LifeSite:
Planned Parenthood ad shows up prominently in Google search for ‘Crisis Pregnancy Center’
MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA, May 1, 2014 (LifeSiteNews.com) – NARAL Pro-Choice America recently boasted that Google had taken down “deceptive” ads from crisis pregnancy centers allegedly posing as abortion providers. However, a Google search for “crisis pregnancy center” returned a Google ad for an unexpected business: Planned Parenthood.
The nation’s largest abortion provider ranked number three in the ads displayed during a search for crisis pregnancy centers, the pro-life centers that help young women get the medical and economic assistance they need to help them keep their babies.
The ad shows the words “Crisis Pregnancy Center,” followed by the URL “PlannedParenthood.org.” “Learn about pregnancy care and your options,” reads the descriptor text.
Planned Parenthood has been harshly critical of crisis pregnancy centers (CPCs), dedicating an entire webpage to attacking its pro-life competitors. “Deciding what to do about an unplanned pregnancy can be very difficult. It may be made even more difficult by so-called ‘crisis pregnancy centers,’” Planned Parenthood writes. “These are fake clinics run by people who are anti-abortion.”
The abortion giant warns these centers “may not give you complete and correct information about all your options — abortion, adoption, and parenting.” It also states that CPCs “may try to frighten you with misleading films and pictures to keep you from choosing abortion,” and “may lie to you about the medical and emotional effects of abortion.”
“These fake clinics often trick women with false advertising,” Planned Parenthood complained.
It is unclear why the billion dollar organization, which performed 327,166 abortions in 2012, would want to be confused with the humble, often volunteer-led organizations that refuse to perform or refer women for terminations of pregnancy.
A spokesperson for Google did not respond to LifeSiteNews’s question about whether the company considers the Planned Parenthood ad “deceptive,” or whether the case is comparable to the pro-life pregnancy center ads the company has reportedly blocked.
[…]
Read the rest there.
This morning I said Mass for us at San Moisè, which is convenient for the hotel. The sacristan is wonderful. He is as helpful and friendly as (most) Roman sacristan are… not. He was also interested in the older, traditional for of Mass, and stayed to participate.
Our altar, with a Tintorretto.
Tomorrow is the Feast of St Athanasius, whose body is here in Venice. I will stop at the church later to see if I can have his altar for Mass sometime during the day.
Meanwhile, here is a great food arrangement I saw.
A cruise ship was passing by S M della Salute.

For lunch I started with Sarde in saor. Yum.
Then…
A visit to S M del Rosario… once a Dominican church, decorated by Tiepolo and Jacopo Tintoretto.
This is magnificent.
This would be in an illustrated dictionary under “piety”.
Then to the Accademia.
Some power sitting and a Campari.