WDTPRS POLL: Universae Ecclesiae

Here is a little poll about the new Instruction.  I have written a post about it.  I have made a PODCAzT so you can listen to it.

Give your considered answer, having first read it or listened to it and then having carefully weighed the pros and cons.

If you wish, add a comment in the combox.

I thought I would encourage you to comment.  I know how reticent most of you are about giving an opinion about anything to do with liturgy.

All in all, I rate my satisfaction with Universae Ecclesiae, at...

View Results

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PODCAzT 119: Instruction “Universae Ecclesiae”

In this PODCAzT we listen to the Instruction issued by the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei” on the implementation of Summorum Pontificum of Benedict XVI.

At the beginning I have an introduction to give us some context.  I read in Latin only title and the very first paragraph, to get a sound of the “incipit”, which gives the Instruction its title.  I give you some points to listen for along the way.  I then read the whole Instruction Universae Ecclesiae, with the references, but not reading the footnotes.  I have a wrap up with addition observations about juridical force of the Instruction, and the date of its implementation.

There are mini-rants along the way.

NOTA BENE:

I will have to correct a point in the PODCAzT.

As far as the juridical force of the Instruction is concerned: I had thought originally that, since there is no precise date indicated for it going it force (Summorum Pontificum explicitly stated 14 September) it had to be in the Acta Apostolicae Sedis and it would go into effect in 3 months, the usual vacatio, after promulgation.  However, since this is an Instruction, it falls under the norms of canon 34.  As such, this Instruction requires no promulgation, or vacatio legis – it binds immediately, from the moment of its notification, according to the norms of canons 54-56, and specifically, canon 54, 2: “for a singular decree to be enforceable, it must be made known by a lawful document in accordance with the law” – this Instruction has already been sent, in written form, to the Bishops of the Latin Church, this it is in force NOW.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, PODCAzT, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Drill, Universae Ecclesiae | Tagged , , , ,
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30 years ago today

John Paul believed that the Blessed Mother, on her feast day as Our Lady of Fatima, saved his life.

30 years ago today.

The moment of the shot was 1717 Rome time, 1317 EDT.

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The Feeder Feed: Wild Red-head Edition

I was at the oars today, writing.  I have a good view of the feeders.  As I was working, I caught out of the corner of my eye a shape and set of colors that grabbed my attention and … slowly… I went for the camera.

Only once did I see him here, last year, I think.  First, time this year.

He is coming in and picking up nuts and then flying away in the same direction each time.  Hopefully he is stashing or nesting nearby.

Behold:  Melanerpes erythrocephalus.
Red-headed Woodpecker

The wary Red-headed Woodpecker.

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CLARIFICATION: Universae Ecclesiae and my sports analogy

I am driven to issue my own Instruction.

Let’s call it

Inter lusorum coronas

or else…

Summorum ludentium….

I have seen in the combox and had email analysis upon analysis of my using the analogy of a no-hitter for Universae Ecclesiae.

“But Father! But Father!”, people have written to me.  “Why a defense accomplishment?!?  What does that meeeeean? Why not an offense analogy?!!???!!  Are we being beaten?  Is there something to worry about?  What does this meeeeeeen?!?!?”

Okay… let’s try again.

This isn’t a grand-slam, its more like an inside the park home run, a “leg” home run in the lame-duck ICEL version, which in the new, corrected more Latinate translation would be called a “quadruple”.

Okay?  Better?

The problem with a baseball offense analogy is that, in baseball, the objective of the offense is to put the ball out of control, beyond the control of the defense, rather than control the ball and run around with it.  The defense is trying to keep the ball under control.

Well… “lame-duck” with its limping element hardly suggests the speed… GAH!  Now you have ME doing it too!  Enough!

There… now you can wonder about that one.

I would ask what the Cricket equivalent of a triple-play is… but…

Posted in Linking Back, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, Universae Ecclesiae |
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Preliminary observations and mixed metaphors about the Instruction “Universae Ecclesiae”

The text of the Instruction is under an embargo until Friday 1200 noon Rome Time (1000 GMT, 0600 EDT).  I must respect that as far as the blog is concerned.

I will put something together about it and post it here at that time.  I have also read the Latin version.

Again, to use my sports analogy from the divinely-favored game of baseball, this document is not at the level of a perfect game, but it is a no-hitter.   For analogies with cricket, results vary.  Perhaps the follow-on?   The point is that, while a no-hitter is really good and fairly uncommon, a team whose pitcher has a no-hitter can still lose.  It’s ultra-rare, but it has happened.

To use another analogy, in the television advertisements of pharmaceutical companies, when they desire to show you the effect of some cure using animation, they always leave a tiny representation of the problem remaining.  They don’t claim that that the cure is 100%.

Universae Ecclesiae won’t smooth all the obstacles thrown before those who desire the older, traditional forms (and all that goes with them).  It will, however, smooth many of the obstacles.

When it comes to the Holy See’s juridical documents, everything depends on the willingness of the Holy See actually to implement them.  The Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei” can waste this no-hitter if they simply sit on their hands and dither.  But it was ever so.  Nihil novi.

Be, therefore, of good cheer.  Many of the traditional mind will be happy with this while all of the liberal bent will be irritated.

While I suspect that there was no conscious effort to associate this document with the Feast of Our Lady of Fatima, it nevertheless is being issued on the Feast of Our Lady of Fatima.  It strikes me that when it comes to Our Mother and all that had to do with Fatima, Divine Providence seems to have a heavier hand.

Also, some have observed to me that Friday the 13th is surely nefas and a bad day for this document.  Sorry, folks.  In Rome it’s Friday the 17th which is considered back luck.  That black cat don’t hunt.

Furthermore, there is a misconception which needs some correction.  Universae Ecclesiae is not a papal document.  It is a document from the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei“.  It was approved by the Pope and its publication was ordered by him.  It isn’t the Pope’s own document, but its già molto as the Romans say: it’s already a lot.  It is Pope Benedict’s indirectly, of course.  And it is juridical.

Within it we see more clearly the mens of the lawgiver, Pope Benedict.

That’s a lot, too.

Posted in SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, Universae Ecclesiae | Tagged , , ,
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Of Railways

Another lighter story.  I can hear the comparison’s with the Hogwart’s Express now.

From CNA:

Vatican City, May 12, 2011 / 10:52 am (CNA/EWTN News).- It’s a little known Vatican fact but the Pope has his own train station. Thing is, it’s been dormant for years – until now. May 21 will see a 1930s steam train leave the Vatican City Station for a trip to the Italian countryside. And it’s all to raise money for the Holy See’s official charity, Caritas. [Some readers, less inclined to the Potter Analogy will surely consider that it is portentous that this starts one week after the release of Universae EcclesiaeThink about it.]

“It’s a rare opportunity and certainly a very joyful way to come together ahead of our General Assembly and reflect on who we are and where we are going,” Monsignor Robert J. Vitillo, head of the Caritas International delegation to Geneva, told Vatican Radio May 11.

The event coincides with Caritas’s 19th International Assembly being held in Rome as well as their 60th anniversary.

It total, five passenger carriages will be pulled by steam engine. The train is being nicknamed the “Caritas Express” for the day and each engine will be dedicated to a particular patron saint of the poor and vulnerable. Seats are still available to the general public.

The day will also see the huge iron gates that mark the border between Italy and the Vatican opened for the first time in years.

And their destination? The historic city of Orvieto in Umbria, about 60 miles to the north of Rome.  [The former bishop of the Diocese of Orvieto-Todi was one of the three bishops removed this year (so far) from governance.  Portentous.]

The Vatican City State Station was built under the Lateran Treaty of 1929 which normalized relationships between the Holy See and the Italian State. When he saw it under construction, Pope Pius XI described it as “the most beautiful station in the world.

Pope Pius XI never traveled on the line himself and his planned papal train was never built. It was Pope John XXII who became the first pontiff to travel on line, using the Italian presidential train, in 1962. He made the trip between the Vatican City Station and Assisi. Pope John Paul II also traveled on the line in 1979 and 2002.

In the past, emergency relief supplies have also been loaded at the “Pope’s Platform” onto special Caritas trains for delivery to flood victims in northern Italy and elsewhere.

The Caritas Express will pull out of the Vatican State Railway Station at 10 a.m. on May 21. It will return to Termini Station in Rome at 7:30 p.m.

Anyone interested in making a donation and wishing to request a seat on the train should email express@caritas.va

QUAERUNTUR:

How do you get to the track?  For the Hogwarts Express you have to run at a spot in the wall at Paddington… No!  King’s Cross. The bear… thing… Pope Benedict’s coat-of-arms… also portentous.   But since people have been battering themselves against the walls of the Vatican bureaucracy for years, that seems an unlikely method.

Once you get to Orvieto, is there a free transfer for the funicular railway to get you to the top of the town?

Is there a club or dining car?

Is there any connection between the moving of the offices of the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph – and the inevitable shift of the Vortex – and the opening of the Vatican’s railway doors?

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Notes about today’s Fishwrap

First, the following people were added – since last time – for the Wednesday Mass for benefactors following the Fishwrap Protest.

JV, MM, TM, JS, JM, MG,
SK, DL, DS, MB, NG, KR,
BF, DS, MK, AB, SN, ST, ACO

My deep gratitude.

In the meantime, I note several things about Fishwrap.

First, I think Fishwrap has not mentioned – at least I don’t see it – anything about the Instruction on Summorum Pontificum.  They will eventually get to it.  I predict they will say that this Instruction means nothing, it’s no big deal, it is only for a few disgruntled troglodytes.  Blah blah blah.  I respond saying that, if it isn’t an earthquake, it is surely a rumble.  And it means that, among other things, the three year study period critics of the Motu Proprio set their hopes on is overrrrrSummorum Pontificum is here to stay and it was not weakened.

Second, Fishwrap writes favorably about Presbyterians lifting a “ban” on homosexual clergy while writing with disapprobation about Card. Meisner removing the canonical license to teach from a homosexual activist who has, among other things, written offensive things about the Holy Father.

Third, I listened today to a talk today Fishwrap‘s nearly ubiquitous John L. Allen, the only writer they have worth his salt – how I wish he wrote for some other publication.  It was pretty good.  I don’t agree with all his points, but he makes a reasonable argument.  Here.  Also, Allen had an interesting piece about “retired” Card. Sodano.

But we must still PROTEST.

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Houston, we have a problem.

Things were going too well.

The computer that runs the Z-Cam simply will not turn on.

I shall have to get out the trephine, I’m afraid, and rouse out its brains.

I needed this like a hole in the head.

UPDATE:

I can now get the power to turn on.  Every peripheral is unplugged.  The power comes on when I press the power key.  After a couple seconds it goes off and then, by itself, restarts.  It sounds as if the hard drive wants to do something, then.. the rest is silence.

Wondering: should I pull the hard drive and try to put it into another box.   Hmmm….

UPDATE:

I just can’t get it to boot.  Power comes on when I press the power button.  Goes off.  Comes back on.  It sounds like it is checking the drives.  Nothing.

Dunno… video card?  No peripherals are plugged in.

Also, to the readers in the know… is there such a thing as a USB enclosure for an internal HDD which I could use to get everything off this drive and onto another ‘puter?

And if no one cares about the Z-Cam I may not bother.

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For a change, a Catholic media agency’s look at the tumult in Toowoomba

There are virtually always many sides to the story when it comes to the bad governance of a parish or diocese, heck, any human endeavor.

Here is another view of the Diocese of Toowoomba, whence Bp. William Morris was recently removed as ordinary.

This one is from a Catholic news agency, rather than from the National Catholic Fishwrap, against whom we PROTEST.

From CNA with my emphases and comments.

In Toowoomba, legacy of ‘Bishop Bill’ is confusion and one new priest in 18 years
By David Kerr

Toowoomba, Australia, May 11, 2011 / 11:38 am (CNA).- Norm and Mavis Power moved to Toowoomba back in 1959, not long after getting married. The attractions of the Queensland city were obvious for a young couple hoping for a family – good schools, a pleasant climate and so many green spaces and parks it’s known across Australia as “the Garden City.” But that wasn’t all.

“Most importantly, we wanted our children to be brought up in the Catholic faith,” explains Mavis.

“At that time there was a monastery right in the middle of the town run by the Blessed Sacrament Fathers. It was a real center of prayer and activity. In fact, all the city’s Catholic churches were full. The life of the Church was so vibrant. Now, though, the monastery is closed and those same churches are empty. It’s so, so sad.”

Catholic life in Toowoomba changed – and changed radically – back in 1993. [I suspect it started to change even before 1993.] That was the year the city got a new bishop. Father William Martin Morris was a 49-year-old parish priest from the nearby Diocese of Brisbane. Styling himself as “Bishop Bill,” his innovations were very radical, very visible and instantly applied. [What?  No long process of wide consultation with the faithful and lots of dialogue?]

Out went clerical dress. Instead the bishop wore shirt and tie emblazoned with a diocesan crest. Each priest was issued with one as well.  [Let me absorb that: He.Gave.Neckties.To.Priests.  Okay… got it.]

Out went individual confessions. In came collectivized penance services in which participants are granted “general absolution.[That happened in a lot of places, but generally before 1993.  It was starting to go out in the USA, I think, by then.  Sure, it was still rampant, but I think they tide had turned.  But Australia was much farther behind and farther gone.] Under Church law, general absolution is to be used in extreme circumstances. Under “Bishop Bill” the rare exception became the ordinary rule.

Out went the traditional model of governance by a Catholic bishop. In came a form of administration by committee — including committees appointing priests. [A reading from the Book of Z: “For God so loved the world, that He did not send a committee.”] In fact, Bishop Morris’ tenure began with a service held in a local retreat center. There he asked the priests of the diocese to sign his letter of appointment from Rome “to indicate their acceptance” of him as their bishop. [And if they didn’t sign?  The priest might need that tie after all.  It is interesting that liberals like to talk big and open and new and collegial.  When they are crossed they punish with the Old Law.]

Out went the traditional understanding of priesthood. Many parishes started to be run by nuns and lay people with priests only used to administer some sacraments some of the time.

And out went a traditional understanding of the authority of the Church.

So when the Vatican asked Bishop Morris to desist with the practice of general absolution, he responded by carrying out a survey of parishioners on the issue before responding to Rome.

For many ordinary Catholics like the Norm and Mavis Power, life became pretty tough and very upsetting.

“The bishop would tell people what they wanted to hear, not what the Catholic Church teaches,” says Mavis, a mother of five who went on to work with disabled people later in life. Norm, a retired telecoms engineer, agrees.

Instead of individual confession people would be told to come up in a line, write their sins on a piece of paper and put it in a jar. Plus, an inappropriate form of lay participation was promoted everywhere. So on a Sunday if a priest was away for the weekend they would no longer get a neighboring priest but would, instead, ask lay people to lead the service and give out communion on the grounds that they’d ‘want to keep the community together.’”

For the likes of the Power family this isn’t just a matter of arcane rules or abstract dogma. For them, the teachings and practice of the Catholic Church provide the wellspring for a good and happy life and – for that matter – a better world too. So to withhold or subvert those teachings is viewed as both cruel and abusive[There it is, friends.  It is a form of cruelty.]

“It’s been pretty difficult. Really upsetting actually,” says Mavis, “and whenever we wrote to the bishop about any of these things we were always told it was us who were in the wrong.”

In November 2006, though, everything changed. Suddenly unhappiness with Bishop Morris went global. No longer did he just have to placate the Power family of Toowoomba. He now had to explain himself to powers-that-be in Rome. The reason? A pastoral letter written to his entire diocese.

In it Bishop Morris promoted the idea of ordaining women and married men as well as allowing Anglicans, Lutherans and other religions to preside at Mass[I am still trying to wrap my mind around that fantasy.  Unless he simply no longer believed in the Church’s teachings about the sacraments, how could he have for an instant thought that a Lutheran minister could have anything to do with Mass. It boggles the mind.  I guess he was entirely bound up in the “church with a human face” rubbish pushed by Schillebeeckx.  That’s what we had in seminary in the late 80’s.]

Again, all this flew in the face of Catholic Church teaching and tradition. This marked the beginning of the end for Bishop Morris.

In December 2006 the Vatican asked him to visit Rome as soon as possible in order to discuss his views. Bishop Morris told them he couldn’t possibly make the journey — for, at least, five months. [Cunctando regitur mundus.] Clearly surprised by this answer, the Vatican wrote again, only a month later, with a similar request.

Again, Bishop Morris said “no.” [So much for dialogue.]

“The whole thing was incredible. The flight from Brisbane to Rome takes about 12 hours and there at least one flight a day,” a senior Australian cleric told CNA. “Yet here’s this bishop telling the Vatican that he can’t make that trip at all for nearly half a year! That reaction was little short of scandalous. [No.   It is scandalous.] Any bishop worth his salt would hasten to Rome as quickly as possible. To be honest I think Bishop Morris was hoping that if he strung things out for long enough Rome would just forget all about it. That was never going to happen.”

Rather than wait, the Vatican sent in the well-respected [Not by Fishwrap.] American Archbishop Charles Chaput, OFM Cap. of Denver to review the happenings in Toowoomba. He visited the diocese in April 2007 speaking to all sides involved. In September Bishop Morris was asked to resign.

According to the senior Australian cleric, who asked that his name be withheld, the process again moved very slowly. [Because Rome will do nearly anything to avoid removing a bishop.]

“It took Bishop Morris, wait for it, four months to say ‘no.’ He was then, again, asked to resign in February 2008. This time he took a grand total ten months to, again, finally, reply ‘no.’”

Bishop Morris even managed to secure a meeting with the Pope. This took place in June 2009. The message from the pontiff to him was the same – resign. The reply from the bishop, this time five months later, was also the same – no. [Imagine now what Morris might have done to a priest in Toowoomba who simply implemented Summorum Pontificum or went a bit beyond and stopped using the Novus Ordo.  A priest who didn’t want to wear his damn tie!  D’ya think that Bp. Morris would have told the priest to stop what he was doing?  Perhaps even remove the priest?  And the priest did a Pfleger and said “no”, do you think the bishop would have suspended that priest?  D’ya think?   This is all supposition, of course.  A tie-wearing, tie-giving bishop who just wants to be called “Bill” would never do that!]

The endgame, however, came earlier this year. In a compromise move, Rome told Bishop Morris that he could retire rather than resign. [One of Caesar’s principles of warfare is that you should always leave an honorable escape route.  After that, if your opponent doesn’t take it, overwhelm with irresistible force.] Bishop Morris agreed. Both sides then set a date of May 2 for the announcement. Bishop Morris then made it public on April 27, five days early. The news quickly divided Australia.

The temple police get their man,” opined journalist Michael McKenna in The Australian newspaper. [HURRAH FOR THE TEMPLE POLICE!]The Catholic Church’s worst enemy resides in the Vatican,” [LOL!] claimed columnist Barney Zwartz in The Age newspaper.

Meanwhile, Bishop Morris has repeatedly taken to the television and radio airwaves [And the more he talks, the clearer the situation becomes.] claiming he was “denied natural justice due to a lack of process” by the Vatican. He also claims that his meeting with the Pope was, “like the Inquisition. He was immovable. There was no dialogue.[Sorry.  I used to talk with Joseph Card. Ratzinger all the time.  He was patient and asked questions and answered questions and explained and permitted more questions, and listened, and explained…. get the point?]

Others, however, see things differently.

“The reality is that if Bishop Morris of Toowoomba had been working for a commercial organization covered by the Trades Practices Act,” wrote columnist Kate Edwards on the ABC News website, “he would surely have been liable for prosecution on the grounds of false and misleading advertising. He represented himself as teaching the Catholic faith – but was not in fact doing so!”  [Caution.  Don’t let anyone frame this in terms of a bishop being a mere branch manager or employee of the Vatican.  That is what the Church’s enemies will try to do.]

“Morris’s removal sends a clear message to bishops, in Australia and around the world. The Holy See’s patience is not, as it long seemed, limitless,” wrote journalist Christopher Pearson, again in The Australian. “The more realistic, liberal bishops are going to have to kiss goodbye to any lingering fantasies they clung to in the 90s of ordaining nuns, or at least keep it to themselves.”  [And the biological solution is at work as well.]

The row in the secular press reflects a similar division within the Catholic community. In fact, Vatican officials have been so worried by the dominance of unorthodox belief and practice in large parts of Catholic Australia that in 1998 they summoned the country’s bishops to a meeting.

The result was a “Statement of Conclusions” which offered a blunt critique of where the church in Australia was falling short in terms of Catholic orthodoxy.  The stakes are high.

The next few years will be crucial for the future of Catholicism in Australia with many big, important dioceses falling vacant – Brisbane, Hobart, Perth. The whole hue of the episcopal conference could be made over in the next two years. That gives added significance to the fall-out from events in Toowoomba,” says another senior Australian priest who spoke to CNA.  [Do you recall my explanation of what I think was a point of John Paul II’s and now Benedict’s pontificate?  Target the heartland of the USA to change the episcopate.  A new type of bishop will emerge from that central core.  Eventually the English speaking Church will be affected.]

Meanwhile back in Toowoomba, the job of rebuilding begins.  [Brick by brick, perhaps?  Reason #757630 for Summorum Pontificum?]

The Diocese of Toowoomba spans more than 188,000 square miles and has a Catholic population of roughly 66,000 served by 35 parishes.

Bishop Brian Finnegan of Brisbane has now been appointed an administrator until a new bishop can be found. Whoever gets the job will have their work cut out, sources tell CNA.

I don’t think there’s been one priestly vocation in all the years Bishop Morris was in charge. Perhaps one – and he was a late vocation. And there are no young people. [Lord have mercy.] Take a look at their website – their ‘Ministry for Young People’ has no staff because they have no young people. It’s all old folk in dwindling number. Most of their priests are over-65 and their youngest priest is in his late forties!

That situation compares miserably to other Australian diocese where a revival in Catholic orthodoxy had led, in recent years, to a revival in vocations and parish life.

As for the Powers, they’ve now got 13 grandchildren to help bring-up in the Catholic faith. They say they’ll keep praying for a good new bishop – and for their previous bishop too.  [I am glad that last part was added.]

So.. I ask… Fishwrap‘s versions or CNA‘s?

Posted in Brick by Brick, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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