REQUEST for the Novena before Pentecost

Dear readers,

Since it is Ascension THURSDAY, when the first novena of prayer before Pentecost began for the Lord’s Blessed Mother and His Apostles, I have it in mind to start a novena of my own for two personal and important intentions.

Will you, during this novena before Pentecost, also say a daily prayer for my intentions?

Here is a link to a novena to the Holy Spirit which could be used.

DAY ONE:

I suspected that,when I defended and asked for prayers for Bp. Finn, something bad would happen.  Something bad has happened.   So, I ask your prayers for the period of the novena leading up to Pentecost.

DAY TWO:

Looking for support of prayer still, as I keep my own courage up.  Also, I ask for a prayer for a priest acquaintance who is in the hospital with some serious problems: Fr. RH.

DAY THREE:

Satan presses.

DAY FOUR:

Please keep up your prayers.  Please do.

DAY FIVE:

About all I can say is that I persevere.  And do pray again for Fr. RH who is not doing well at all.

DAY SIX:

Please continue with a prayer for my intentions.

DAY SEVEN:

If your attention span has lasted this long, please pray for my two important personal intentions.

DAY EIGHT:

Please do not forget.

DAY NINE:

Hoping for some necessary results from this novena.

Posted in Pray For A Miracle | Tagged ,
78 Comments

The Feeder Feed: Hummingbird Edition

There are zillions of humming birds this year.

Here are few shots.

Posted in The Feeder Feed |
10 Comments

Does this seem to you to be a new journalistic low?

I haven’t ever heard of anything like this, except in my sometime-interest in astronomy, when people were recruited to monitor big listening arrays or perhaps help map the genome.

The Washington Post has asked for 100 volunteer readers to go through some 24K emails from Gov. Sarah Palin’s tenure as Governor of Alaska.

Can we imagine they are looking for the good things she did as Governor with the purpose of praising her?  Surely there will be some.  If they find those things will they report them?  Do we expect stories about how, as Governor, she – say – helped a vet get a new wheelchair?

My initial reaction is one of contempt.  And I am pretty sure I would have the same reaction were this about a politician whose career I find loathsome, such as an aggressively pro-abortion “catholic”.

Enlist volunteers for this?

Does this seem to you to be a weird journalistic low?  Am I wrong?

Posted in Biased Media Coverage | Tagged , ,
38 Comments

D. Kansas City-St. Joseph: press release about controversies

The secular press in Kansas City, MO and the ultra-liberal, doctrine-dissenting, KC-based National catholic Reporter have been busy trying to tear the guts out of the diocese and Most Rev. Robert Finn, bishop, but not yet martyr.

From the site of the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph.

[wp_youtube]Wa8w1kWnDHs[/wp_youtube]

Also, read this, from the site of the Diocese.

Bishop Finn Initiates Sweeping Changes and Reviews

Jun 9th, 2011

Five-Point Plan in Effect

Diocese engages Todd Graves, former U.S. Department of Justice child exploitation expert and former U.S. Attorney

(KANSAS CITY, MO, June 9, 2011)  –  To immediately fulfill his “call for change,” Bishop Robert Finn, of the Diocese of Kansas City ~ St Joseph,  today announced the first immediate five points of a sweeping plan to deal with recent alleged sexual misconduct in the diocese.

The diocese said further initiatives will be announced in the coming weeks.

The Initial Five-point Plan

1. Immediate appointment of former national co-chair of the Department of Justice Child Exploitation Working Group and former U.S. Attorney to conduct an independent investigation of events, policies and procedures,

2. Appointment of an independent public liaison and ombudsman to field and investigate any reports of suspicious or inappropriate behavior,

3. Reaffirmation of current diocesan policy and immediate commencement of an independent review of the policies for Ethical Codes of Conduct and Sexual Misconduct,

4.  An in-depth review of diocesan personnel training regarding the Ethical Codes of Conduct and the policy on Sexual Misconduct,

5. Continued cooperation with local law enforcement.

Bishop Finn stated, “These are initial steps. Other actions are forthcoming.”

Former U.S. Attorney Engaged

Former U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Missouri Todd P. Graves will conduct an independent review of all issues regarding the Ratigan matter, as well as lead an independent and complete review of the diocesan Ethical Codes of Conduct and Sexual Misconduct policies, procedures and training.

From 2001 to 2005, Mr. Graves served as the national co-chair of the Department of Justice Child Exploitation Working Group. As U.S. Attorney, he established state and federal task forces to investigate exploitation of children through the Internet and was instrumental in locating a Regional Computer Forensics Laboratory in Kansas City. Throughout his career, Mr. Graves has been at the forefront in enforcing laws against those who abuse children.

Bishop Finn said the review will bring clarity out of the “shame, anger, and confusion” surrounding the May 19 arrest of Father Shawn Ratigan, who faces charges of possession of child pornography.

“In addition to our ongoing and full cooperation with law enforcement, this review will help us to determine the effectiveness of diocesan policies and procedures in a very troubling situation,” the Bishop explained.

At the conclusion of the review, Mr. Graves will issue a report.  The report will be made public. The review is estimated to take approximately 30 to 45 days.  Bishop Finn pledged the complete cooperation of all diocesan personnel.

Appointment of Public Liaison and Ombudsman

In the coming weeks, Bishop Finn will appoint a public liaison and ombudsman as the receiving agent and initial investigation point for any reports of misconduct by a diocesan priest, deacon, employee or program volunteer.

The public liaison and ombudsman will screen and investigate any reports on complaints made and consult with law enforcement as appropriate. The ombudsman will be available to anyone who wishes to report a concern through a confidential telephone number and email address.

“This immediate action will ensure all concerns are addressed confidentially, respectfully, promptly and appropriately,” said Bishop Finn.

Reaffirmation of Current Diocesan Policies

While awaiting recommendations for changes resulting from the independent internal investigation, Bishop Finn reaffirmed current diocesan policies that guide the response to reports of abuse. Members of the clergy and diocesan employees have been advised to review the Ethical Codes of Conduct and the policy regarding Sexual Misconduct.

As early as 1988, the diocese adopted a formal policy for responding to allegations of sexual abuse. The policy established a Diocesan Response Team to provide support for persons making complaints. The policy required full cooperation with the laws of Missouri for reporting child sexual abuse. By 1993, diocesan practice reflected growing lay involvement with the creation of an Independent Review Board.

Diocesan Policies Require

• protecting children in all church, school and program settings,

• pending a full investigation, removing ministers and employees from service when reasonable suspicion exists,

• counseling and pastoral support for persons making a complaint,

• advising people making complaints of their rights to go to civil authorities or the media, and,

• ensuring that lay professionals respond to and give advice about complaints and fitness for ministry.

In 2002, the diocese mandated multi-jurisdictional criminal background screening and safe environment training for all adults working or volunteering with children. The Protecting God’s Children program identifies the warning signs of abuse and teaches strategies for maintaining safe environments for children. By May 2011, this program had reached more than 20,500 people.

“The best way to deal with a problem is to prevent wrongdoing,” said Bishop Finn. “We believe that, when adults who interact with children increase their awareness of child sexual abuse, they form a shield that protects children,” he said.

As a companion to the adult safe environment training, the diocese implemented developmentally appropriate personal safety training for all children and youth in 2006.  Through Catholic schools and parish programs the diocese reaches some 16,000 children each year.  Circle of Grace is an ongoing part of the curricula for all Pre-Kindergarten through eighth grade, and Called to Protect reaches all high school aged students.

Apology

The Bishop concluded with the words he delivered to the diocese this past Sunday:

“As bishop, I take full responsibility for these failures and sincerely apologize to you for them. Clearly, we have to do more,” said Bishop Finn. “While we must deal with these difficult and trying issues, we also must give thanks for the daily accomplishments of our lay faithful, priests and others for the many good works that continue on behalf of neighbors, sick or poor, young or old.”

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Clerical Sexual Abuse, The Drill, The Last Acceptable Prejudice, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , ,
26 Comments

NCFishwrap’s little problem with the Extraordinary Form and “altar girls”

NCFishwrap today surfed the little server girl issue over its mosh pit.

catholic reporters that that are, they left off attacking Bp. Finn for a minute or two to post – at long last- the news that the PCED has “ruled” that females may not serve Mass in the Extraordinary Form.

Universae Ecclesiae 28 made that clear, but in the face of challenges the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei” explained what UE 28 means.

The best comment so far over at Fishwrap is, and I am not making this up:

I guess when you’ve been slam dancing for a long time, you can get a little distracted.

To be fair, the comments here are not always uniformly perfect or elevating either!

On that note, rather than just post something in the combox below along the usual lines (“Those people are so …. uhhhhh …. !  What a bunch of poopy-heads!”), it might be good just to protest 1) by sending me a donation and 2) by making well-reasoned comments here below on the reasons why women properly don’t and/or should not serve at the altar in the Roman Rite.

UPDATE:
Another really good comment from the Fishy Mosh Pit:
Posted in Lighter fare, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, Throwing a Nutty, Universae Ecclesiae | Tagged , , , ,
28 Comments

Archbp. Nienstedt and the defense of true marriage

In this week’s number of The Catholic Spirit, the newspaper and site of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, His Excellency Most Rev. John Nienstedt has a column about the Minnesota Marriage Amendment, that is, a defense of real marriage, which can only – by God’s design evident in our human nature – be between one man and one woman.

Marriage amendment deserves our support

June 9, 2011 10:53 am
Archbishop John C. Nienstedt

Our state House and Senate have placed a constitutional amendment on the November 2012 ballot that will define marriage in the State of Minnesota as the union between one man and one woman.

Regrettably, the media and some secular commentators have chosen to mischaracterize this measure as anti-gay, mean-spirited and prejudicial. This is not the case or the intent behind the initiative.

Good reasons

The Minnesota Catholic Conference, made up of the seven Catholic bishops from the state, support this amendment not for prejudicial or political reasons, but rather for reasons that are theological, biological and pastoral.

Theologically, the definition of marriage predates any government or religious denomination. As we read in the Bible, it reflects God’s plan for man and woman to share in his creative power of bringing new life into the world (Genesis 1:27-28). This is ratified by Jesus himself in Matthew 19:8-9. It is a truth that is also evident in light of the natural moral law, which grounds our understanding of the dignity that belongs to each human person.

In addition, the very biological, not to mention spiritual, complementarity of the two sexes defines the reproductive nature of their relationship which, in turn, enhances the well-being and joy of that union. The enfleshed oneness of a man and a woman is indeed a communion of life and love.

Pastorally, children flourish best in the context of having both a mother and a father. Every scientific study confirms this reality. We know that many single parents strive mightily to raise children in as normal a context as possible — and many do an excellent job at this.  Nevertheless, it is a proven fact that boys and girls develop better with the influence of a mother and a father, living in the same home.

It should also be remembered that the teaching of the church is always meant to uphold and enhance the inherent dignity of the human person as a son or daughter of God.  In this regard, I publish here with his permission an article written by Archbishop Timothy Dolan of New York. His argumentation is hard to refute:

‘Marriage: the core of every civilization’

It was one of the more uncomfortable moments in my life.

Outside of St. John the Evangelist Cathedral in Milwaukee, where I, as archbishop, was celebrating Sunday Mass on an otherwise magnificent Wisconsin autumn day, were a couple dozen very vocal protesters, representing some off-brand denomination, shouting vicious chants and hold­ing hateful signs with words I thought had gone the way of burning crosses and white hoods.

This frenzied group, taunting the people as they left Mass, were rabid in criticizing the Catholic Church, especially her bishops, for our teaching that homosexuals deserve dignity and respect.

To be more precise, this group was yelling at us because, they objected, the Catholic Church was so friendly, welcoming, and defensive of gay (they used other foul words) people.

They waved placards explicitly quoting and condemning #2358 of the Catechism of the Catholic Church, which affirms the dignity of those with same-sex attraction, and warns against any form of prejudice, hatred or unjust discrimination against them, and insists that homosexual acts, not persons, are not in conformity with God’s design.

Never have I faced such a vitriolic crowd, blasting the church for simply following the teaching of Jesus by loving and respecting people regardless of anything, including their sexual orientation.

When a reporter asked me for a comment, I replied, “They’re right: we do love and respect homosexual people. These protesters understand church teaching very well.”

I’ve been recalling that episode often of late, because now I hear Catholics — and, I am quick to add, Jews, other Christians, Muslims and men and women of no faith at all — who have thoughtfully expressed grave disapproval of the current rush to redefine marriage, branded as bigots and bullies who hate gays.

[Here’s the key.] Nonsense! We are not anti-anybody; we are pro-marriage. The definition of marriage is a given: It is a lifelong union of love and fidelity leading, please God, to children, between one man and one woman.

History, natural law, the Bible (if you’re so inclined), the religions of the world, human experience and just plain gumption tell us this is so. The definition of marriage is hardwired into our human reason.

To uphold that traditional definition, to strengthen it and to defend it is not a posture of bigotry or bullying. Nor is it a denial of the “right” of anybody. As the philosophers remind us, in a civilized, moral society, we have the right to do what we ought, not to do whatever we want. Not every desire is a right.

To tamper with that definition, or to engage in some Orwellian social engineering about the nature and purpose of marriage, is perilous to all of us. If the definition of marriage is continually being altered, could it not in the future be morphed again to include multiple spouses or even family members? [Pets?]

Nor is it “imposing” some narrow outmoded religious conviction. One might well ask just who is doing the “imposing” here: [a] those who simply defend what the human drama has accepted from the start, a belief embedded in nature and at the core of every civilization — the definition of marriage — [b] or those who all of a sudden want to scrap it because “progressive, enlightened, tolerant culture” calls for it.

Sadly, as we see in countries where such a redefinition has occurred, “tolerance” is hardly the result, as those who hold to the given definition of marriage now become harassed and penalized.

If big, intrusive government can re-define the most basic, accepted, revealed truth that marriage simply means one man + one woman + (hopefully) children, in a loving family, then, I’m afraid, Orwell’s works will no longer be on the fiction shelf. As someone commented to me the other day, “Wouldn’t it be better for our government to work on fixing schools than on redefining marriage?”

And resistance to this rush to radically redefining the ingrained meaning of marriage cannot be reduced to an act of prejudice against people with a same-sex attraction.

God love you!

WDTPRS KUDOS to Archbishop Nienstedt.

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , , , ,
16 Comments

An Arizona Analogy

A friend sent this.

People will surely have differing views on the Arizona illegal-immigrant legislation, but you have to hand it to Gov. Jan Brewer for this response.

Arizona governor vs. Phoenix Suns owner – I’d say she makes a
pretty good case with her analogy!!

The owner of the Phoenix Suns basketball team, Robert Sarver,
came out strongly opposing AZ’s new immigration laws.

Arizona’s Governor, Jan Brewer, released the following statement
in response to Sarver’s criticism of the new law:

“What if the owners of the Suns discovered that hordes of people
were sneaking into games without paying? What if they had a
good idea who the gate-crashers are, but the ushers and
security personnel were not allowed to ask these folks to
produce their ticket stubs, thus non-paying attendees couldn’t
be ejected.

Furthermore, what if Suns’ ownership was expected to provide
those who sneaked in with complimentary eats and drink? And
what if, on those days when a gate-crasher became ill or injured,
the Suns had to provide free medical care and shelter?”

– Arizona Gov. Jan

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged , ,
34 Comments

Tip of the Day

Check all the pockets before you wash clothes.

No.  Really.

[CUE MUSIC]

It also helps to have lot’s of hot Mystic Monk Coffee.  This morning I was listening to Bill Bennett’s radio show – and doing laundry – and in the first hour Dr. Bennett was talking about Mystic Monk Coffee!  It seems the Wyoming Carmelites sent some to them.  Bennett talked about them through the morning and even played a clip of Gregorian chant… between the Gorden Lightfoot tunes.

FWIW, the Monks seem still to be selling a lot of their Pascha Java.  Perhaps the word “bourbon” in the description has something to do with its popularlity?

Or tea!  It makes great sun tea.  It looks like Earl Gray is trending right now.

It’s swell!

(Today I am using my “Save The Liturgy” mug.)

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes | Tagged
32 Comments

Digital camera, memory card, and wifi

Any of you readers into digital photography?

I was wondering about a way to transfer photos from my camera, a Canon EOS 20D, to my computer wirelessly.

Looking around a bit I found a cool flash memory card with integrated wifi called Eye-Fi Pro X2.

My camera – I believe – is too old to handle this new and very cool card.

Any other ideas?

Otherwise, I suppose one of these days I will need to deal with my camera, which has some … well… duct tape involved.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes | Tagged , ,
11 Comments

Ribs that stick to your supper

I simply had a hankering for some pork ribs and sour kraut.

This is stimulated by, among other factors, the absurdly low sale price on the spare ribs.

So… some juniper berries, kraut, tarragon and rosemary, an onion, ribs.

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Brown your ribs on both sides.

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Remove the ribs to a plate and brown your onions.

Add well… well-drained kraut, the berries, the herbs.

You have to drain the kraut really well, or this gets soupy.  You can replace the moisture with something more interesting.

I add either dry white wine or hard cider.  Tonight, cider.

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Don’t forget to put the ribs back in.

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I put the lid onto the French oven and put it into the oven at 325 F for about a half hour and then lowered the heat to 285 F for another hour and a half.

I started this at about 4:30 pm and ate at about 7 pm.

My garnish was some mustard I whipped up from dry, powered mustard from Penzy’s.  Zippy stuff.

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They fell apart.  The bones just slide away.

This is so flexible.  You can use just about any amount of kraut and onion.  Go a bit easy with the juniper till you get to know it.  Juniper and pork team up very well.  I have often used gin to deglaze a frying pan in which I have done pork chops.   Just as pork is good with fruit, such as apples, so too it is good with browned onions.  Onions have a lot of sugar in them, which caramelizes as you brown them. If you are entertaining, this is a good main course.  Just keep the temperature low.  They could even be better the next day.

The cooking time can be long and patient.

So, some comfort food, and it isn’t even a cold winter night!

Posted in Fr. Z's Kitchen | Tagged , , ,
30 Comments