Was there a good point in the sermon you heard for your Sunday Mass obligation?
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My friend Msgr. Charles Pope in Washington DC sent me a video of a practice of Thomas Tallis’ Spem in alium for 40 voices. He wrote:
Below is a link to some video snips from the music workshop and performance of Thomas Tallis’ Spem in Alium done at the Parish today. The translation of the Latin text is:
I have never put my hope in any other but in You, O God of Israel who can show both anger and graciousness, and who absolves all the sins of suffering man. Lord God, Creator of Heaven and Earth be mindful of our lowliness
This comes from an era of Church music that was so beautiful that it almost hurts to listen to it today.
Here is a polished recording by the Tallis Allstars… Tallis Scholars. It isn’t performed very often because it requries – you know – 40 voices.
From a reader…
QUAERITUR:
Hello, Father! As a high school religion teacher, our department has been discussing the impact talking in church has made on our young people. On an average Sunday morning, most people mill about the church building, talking to friends and neighbors with no discernable difference in the way they speak anywhere else. I think our students see this, because they do the same thing after school Masses. This to me also seems connected to the students’ lack of zeal in prayerful participation at Mass – if our experience of the divine is nothing more than an on/off construct of our own imagination and initiative, the objective reality of God’s Real Presence in the Blessed Sacrament seems to be lost, no matter what kind of catechesis I do in the classroom, or the amount of piety or personal devotion I recommend the students to partake of. Am I wrong? How do we get the kids to not only “be quiet” but also engage in the spiritual realities our Church passes on? How can we build up this culture in our school and church?
Thank you, Father! I greatly enjoy your blog and use it frequently.
Thanks for that.
The beset catechesis on sacred worship, liturgy, is sacred worship itself.
Therefore, I renew what I say often: We need more and more celebrations of the older, traditional form of Mass.
Lack of liturgical decorum? Young people don’t know what’s up? Reason #8 for Summorum Pontificum.
Classroom? Give them the straight stuff! Give them the basics of hard identity Catholicism. Make the memorize, too: it sinks in that way.
Teach them about what Sacraments are. Teach them that Mass is first and foremost SACRIFICE and what that Sacrifice did for us. Teach them about the distinction of the sacred and the profane/secular. Teach them what Sacramentals are, and what blessing and consecrations do. Teach them that the church building itself is a sacred place. Talk to them about mystery and the transcendent. Find stories and saying of the saints about Holy Mass.
Teach the basics, stuff that every Catholic needs to know.
That’s the classroom.
That said, clearly the way Mass is celebrated in both forms is a huge contributing factor here.
In the older or newer forms, the way Father says Mass has incalculable effect… a knock-on effect. The priest’s ars celebrandi will have a lasting effect on the way people in the congregation participate. This must, per force, expand outward into their overarching perception of the sacred, which must also come to embrace a recognition that there are sacred things, people, times and places. A church is a sacred place. We must not behave in church in the same way we behave in our living room or at a public swimming pool.
At the same time, as their elders behave, so too shall the young. Lack of decorum is rampant now. We are all children of our times and these times are marked by a cretinous lack of attention to dignity and behavior that rests on the good, true and beautiful. It cannot be helped.
That said, I think that preaching and direct catechesis can help. Friendly reminders in the bulletin and from the pulpit are in order. The good examples of congregants can contribute. But decorum in church depends a great deal on the choices made for the ars celebrandi of the place. Therefore a great deal depends on the priest himself.
If Father is a rube and celebrates Mass as if he were David Letterman, if the music is unworthy of a circus calliope, if the vestments, vessels, decorations, gestures betray the premise that what is being done there isn’t about the transcendent in contact with the human, but rather is all about the horizontal, the human merely, then… good luck with decorum in church, friend.
Reason #8 for Summorum Pontificum, that valuable tool for the New Evangelization.
Want decorum? ¡Vaya lío! Work for the implementation of Summorum Pontificum where you are.
I was struck deeply by this photo from Kiev posted with an article at Real Clear Politics:
Politics aside, it’s hard to deny that the images beamed to the world from the opening of the Sochi Games were anything short of stunning.
[…]
At the same moment, other images — at times smuggled to viewers from Maidan Square in the neighboring capital of Kiev — were telling an unscripted story in stark contrast to the orchestrated optics of Sochi.
Among the most powerful were of priests, standing in the icy breach between masses of protestors and government forces, each straining the leash-limits that keep Ukraine from the nightmare of civil war.
To Western eyes, these blokes, of long beard and foreign vestiture, might seem eccentric. Who are they, why is their presence tolerated, and what are those things they carry?
[…]
It looks as if they are on a bit of a raft/platform, because of all the water, probably from water cannons.
Pretty soon, I suspect, we could see something like this in our own streets.
Some will go to town square, some will have to go underground, some will be disappeared.
His Holiness Benedict XVI made a public appearance during the consistory this morning, Feast of the Cathedra of St. Peter, when Francis gave the news Cardinals their new stuff.
This is clearly the “dress rehearsal” for the canonization of John Paul II in April: how to have a public appearance… test the reaction.
Some captures from CTV:




Lots of photos at La Stampa HERE, including images of cardinals removing their zucchettos and kissing his ring. The “Benedict is still Pope!” crowd may lose their minds.
Home again home again…
My Kindle is fired up (thanks to a kind reader) and I have already spilled coffee on myself on the way to the airport. Situation normal.
Meanwhile, you can guess which of these was mine – last night after my talk and supper with Legatus.
UPDATE:
The Long LSD Psycho Trip Tunnel Of Doom!
We had problems recently with my overly paranoid anti-spam blocker, that was blacklisting everyone like Hal 9000 on steroids.
I had to switch it off.
When I did, the attack began. I have had zillions of fake registrations… very pesky.
I am trying a new solution as of now!
I hope this works. I have it set, I hope, to target registration and not comments.
UPDATE:
It seems to be doing its job! Good registrations this morning and only one questionable one: too little info in that “about” field for me to make a good judgment.
Also it seems that the comment form isn’t overly paranoid anymore.
So far, so good.
For those of you who may wonder why some posts have “The Feeder Feed” in the title, this idiosyncratic practice stems from the time when I had lots of bird feeders across from the windows of my office. I miss them, and so when I visit museums, I continue the practice of posting bird photos.
I am in Indianapolis. And because I am in Indianapolis (to talk to a Legatus chapter), I had the chance to visit the Indianapolis Museum of Art. My host knows one of the conservators (a devout Catholic) of the institute, and so we had a bit of a tour, which was a real treat.
Alas, I can’t show you the things they were working. However, among them….wayyyy in the back, are two polychrome wood and plaster (I think) angels in need of cleaning and restoration. The robes of the angels still show traces of the gilded patter applied when it was made: glue in a patter and then gold leaf stuck to it. What was interesting that next to the statues was a copy of our guides Magnificat magazine that had on the cover a painting with similarly applied tracery/embroidery. I’d show you the photo of her holding the Magnificat next to the statues, but then I would have to hunt you all down and make you sign forms or something.
In lieu of that, however, I can show you this shot of a large cart upon which they haul around big canvasses.
The conservation section is very interesting, since they “do it all” there. They can work on painting, sculptures, paper and fabrics. It was a truly fascinating visit and I am grateful for the opportunity.
In the gallery, however, I noticed this right away. Here is an allegory, a Still Life with the Four Elements by Jacques Linard (+c. 1645)
Guess who gets to embody Air.
I can’t help but think that there is some holdover of the Christian in this choice for Earth.
And here is a depiction of The Sense of Taste, from the workshop of Jan Brueghel the younger. It is a riot, a nice variation of one of those packed salon paintings, a painting of paintings. Hard to see in this, but there is a lot going on. At the top and center is a painting of Adam and Eve and the fatal apple, so this painting has a moral quality.
The monkey with the martini glass was my favorite bit.
It was a short visit and there was more to see, but after the monkey and the martini, and an allegory of taste, we figured it was time for lunch.
This is a good thing.
From CWN:
Bishop criticizes Catholic politician who flip-flops on abortion
Bishop Richard Malone of Buffalo has publicly criticized a Catholic state senator for abandoning his pro-life position. [He has gone after Gov. Andrew Cuomo and his “Get Out” manifesto. HERE]
“When I first arrived in Buffalo, I was encouraged to learn of Senator [Timothy] Kennedy’s [Democrat] pro-life position,” he said. “Today, I am extremely disappointed and deeply concerned about his turnaround on this most critical issue, the protection of pre-born human life.” [And in the state of New York, too… where Catholic who are pro-life are not wanted, according to Gov. Cuomo. Maybe Cuomo’s people got to him?]
Kennedy (who is not related to the Massachusetts-based Kennedy clan) said that although his position on abortion has “evolved,” he continues to cherish the Catholic faith and is raising his children as Catholics. [Quisling catholic!] Bishop Malone took issue with that claim.
“For anyone to say that he or she is a faithful Catholic and to be pro-abortion/pro-choice rights is totally inconsistent with Catholic teaching,” he added. “Practicing Catholics who claim they are nurturing their children in the faith must teach their children that abortion is intrinsically evil, that human life must be respected and protected absolutely from the moment of conception. From the first moment of his or her existence, a human being must be recognized as having the rights of a person, among which is the inviolable right of every innocent being to life.”
I am please that Bp. Malone made this statement.
Now, let’s see about can. 915.
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Registered or not, will you in your charity please take a moment look at the requests and to pray for the people about whom you read?
Continued from THESE.
I get many requests by email asking for prayers. Many requests are heart-achingly grave and urgent.
As long as my blog reaches so many readers in so many places, let’s give each other a hand. We should support each other in works of mercy.
If you have some prayer requests, feel free to post them below. You have to be registered here to be able to post.
Finally, I still have a pressing personal petition.