Fishwrap and excommunicated Australian are “shocked”

Yesterday I wrote (HERE) about the Australian now-former priest, Greg Reynolds, who received a decree of excommunication. The excommunication was issued under the aegis of Pope Francis.

This has sent liberals into a tail spin.

After all, isn’t Pope Francis supposed to be against rules?  Isn’t he the most wonderfulest and bestest and fluffiest Pope ehvur?  He’s so chill about, you know, like, stuff like … you know!

Today the Fishwrap (aka National Schismatic Reporter) is throwing a little nutty about the excommunication of former-Father Reynolds.  Let’s call it The Melbourne Ultimatum.

Here is a sample of their angst.

First, they are all shocked!

Fr. Greg Reynolds of Melbourne, Australia, told NCR by email late Monday night his initial reaction was “shock” upon learning of his separation from the church. Australian media have reported he is the first member of the Melbourne archdiocese excommunicated and the first priest from the area laicized for reasons other than pedophilia. [Lesson: There are grave problems you can get yourself into – which can be censured even with excommunication –  other than pedophilia. As a matter of fact, these other grave matters have been well-known for a long time.  Then again, he said an illicit Mass during which the Eucharist was given to a DOG.  Maybe that was it?]

The news came Sept. 18 through a canon lawyer for the Melbourne archdiocese, Fr. John Salvano, who invited Reynolds a few weeks earlier to meet “to discuss ‘some canonical issue,’ ” Reynolds said. The former priest said Salvano presented him the letter of excommunication and proceeded to read it to him, since Reynolds did not read Latin. [That didn’t occur in a vacuum.  In most cases people who are involved in these canonical procedures are advised along the way. But I am not privy to the back story here.  It is hard for me to imagine that this came like a bolt from the blue.]

Part of the shock stemmed from uncertainty with who initiated the excommunication and laicization process. During the meeting, Salvano told Reynolds that while Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart previously considered beginning the laicization process, he had not gone forward with that plan. Instead, unknown people had contacted the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which requested Reynolds’ file from Hart. [I don’t have any inside information about this, of course, but the CDF is able to initiate canonical processes on its own authority.]

[…]

Let’s go on to the core of the matter.

[…]

The letter, a copy of which NCR obtained and translated, accuses Reynolds of heresy (Canon 751) [What could that be?  Reynolds asserts that the Church can and should ordain women.  That is one point that could figure in that charge.] and determined he incurred latae sententiae excommunication for throwing away the consecrated host or retaining it “for a sacrilegious purpose” (Canon 1367). [He probably wasn’t selling or giving the Eucharist to Satanists.  However, if he, as a suspended priest without faculties, was illicitly celebrating Masses and then retaining and distributing the Eucharist to anyone at all, that could be a “sacrilegious purpose”. ] It also referenced Canon 1369 (speaking publicly against church teaching) in its review of the case. [Just check the internet for stories about him and what he has said and written in public.]

Pope Francis, Supreme Pontiff [He might refer to himself most often as “Bishop of Rome”, but he remains also “Supreme Pontiff”.] having heard the presentation of this Congregation concerning the grave reason for action … of [Fr. Greg Reynolds] of the Archdiocese of Melbourne, all the preceding actions to be taken having been followed, with a final and unappealable decision and subject to no recourse, has decreed dismissal from the clerical state is to be imposed on said priest for the good of the Church,” read the document, signed by Archbishop Gerhard Muller, prefect for the congregation, and his secretary, Jesuit Archbishop Luis Ladaria. [His dismissal is for the good of the Church, and the excommunication is for his own spiritual good.  These actions had to undertaken for he purpose of the salvation of souls, to avoid scandal, etc.]

[…]

Skipping down:

[…]

Reynolds told NCR that while he knew the pope had reiterated that the door to women’s ordination was closed, he said his hope was that it didn’t mean the door was locked, “or maybe there is a way in through an open window.”

“I am very surprised that this order has come under his watch; it seems so inconsistent with everything else he has said and done,” he said. [That means that he hasn’t been paying attention.]

[…]

So, Greg Reynolds joins fellow ex-priests such as Roy Bourgeois, who didn’t pay attention, who didn’t submit to the Church’s judgment concerning grave matters, and who decided to oppose the Church publicly and thus cause scandal.

This is sad.  We should stop for a moment and say a prayer for him.  We should then remind others who, like him, are sunk in error and defiance, that the possibility of censure awaits them as well.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged , ,
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Fr. Z asks a favor, prayers

Would you all, in your kindness, over the next 2 hours or so, say some prayers for something important that is about to happen?  At the time of this posting it is 9:34 CDT (1334 GMT) The Prayer to Saint Michael and the Memorare would be great.

Thanks!

 

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
50 Comments

A priest’s great idea for solidarity with Pope Francis

My friend Fr. Richard Heilman (whom I have featured before, HERE and HERE), had a great idea yesterday.

We were talking about how Pope Francis spends an hour before the Blessed Sacrament in the evening.

Why not coordinate exposition and adoration with him?

Thus, Fr. Heilman:

In the recent interview with Pope Francis, he admitted that his favorite time of day is in Adoration between 7:00 – 8:00 PM. Did you know that is noon for us in CST? [Central time in these USA]

Let’s get something going …

Fast and prayer for (with) Pope Francis …

… every noon hour.

See if your church will open their doors, and even possibly expose the Blessed Sacrament.

A good idea which I present to the readership for their opportune consideration.

I sometimes muse about how many ills are healed, how many burdens are lifted, and even how many chastisements are averted because of acts of reparation by the faithful, good Holy Communions which are offered up, and time spent in the presence of our Eucharistic Lord praying for many intentions.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Fr. Z KUDOS, Francis, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Mail from priests, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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What consequences should the Kenya terror attack bring about?

By now you all know about the horrific attacks in Kenya by Islamic terrorists against non-Muslims.

It saddens me, and alarms me, that several of the terrorists had US passports and that they were living in my native place.

Let us include the victims and their families in our prayers.

That said, I saw a piece on Politico that caught my eye:

Fox’s Beckel: No more mosques in America until Muslims ‘denounce’ Kenya attacks

Fox News co-host Bob Beckel went off on American Muslims on Monday, demanding that no more mosques be built until moderate Muslims “denounce” the recent mall attack in Kenya.

Islam is “not the religion of peace,” Beckel, the show’s relatively progressive co-host said. “They are the religion of Islamic [fundamentalism].”

“I will repeat what I said before: No Muslim students coming here with visas. No more mosques being built here until you stand up and denounce what’s happened in the name of your prophet,” Beckel continued. “It is not what your prophet meant as soon as I know. I don’t know his mother’s name and I don’t care. The point is, that the time has come for Muslims in this country and other people in the world to stand up and be counted, and if you can’t, you’re cowards.”

The right approach?

Sts. Nunio and Alodia, pray for us.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liberals, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , ,
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Dogma is still non-negotiable even through Francis is now Pope

Ed Peters (continue to pray for the complete recovery of his son Thom) has an interesting post at his place. You can check the full text and the whole context over there, but let’s focus on the guts of the entry:

[…]

Considering her age (+2,000 years), her membership (+1,000,000,000), and her range of concerns (eternal salvation and human civilization), the Catholic Church has a remarkably short list of non-negotiable assertions. Some of these non-negotiable assertions deal with dogma (e.g., Jesus is divine and human, or, there are exactly seven sacraments) and some of these non-negotiable assertions deal with doctrines (e.g., the Church has no power to ordain women to priesthood, or Thomas More is a saint) but in both cases, the assertion being made is, Catholics hold, being made with infallible certainty.

Now, among the assertions made by the Church with infallible certainty, I have argued, is this one: God made marriage to exist between one man and one woman. Catholics could debate, say, whether this assertion is a dogma to be believed or a doctrine to be held, or whether the assertion is knowable by reason alone or requires the gift of faith. Catholics could even debate whether civil unions of one sort or another between two persons of the same sex are good for society or bad. But Catholics cannot, I suggest, argue whether true marriage exists only between one man and one woman. To debate whether marriage can exist between two persons of the same sex is to imply that some Catholic non-negotiables can be negotiated by Catholics.

[…]

 

Posted in One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill | Tagged , , ,
40 Comments

NARAL screwed up big time over Pope Francis’ TBI, but they still “win”.

People are sending me a link which they found on Pewsitter.

The ultra-radical pro-big-business abortion group NARAL committed a massive blunder in posting to their Facebook page a “thank you” card to Pope Francis for his comments in TBI™ (aka The Big Interview) regarding the Church’s “obsession” about issues such as abortion.

Some bloggers are heaping derision on NARAL.  That derision is well deserved.  After all, the day after TBI, Pope Francis spoke in strong and clear terms in direct contradiction to NARAL’s most hallowed sacrament, abortion.

Here’s the problem.

Derision aimed at NARAL on this monumental screw-up, though amusing and proper, is really just a victory on points alone.

NARAL will arguably have done more harm with that ad than any embarrassment they suffer from how obtuse they are.

NO ONE knows about true content of the Pope’s speech the day after TBI.

EVERYONE knows about TBI through the distorted, or at best limited, coverage it received.

 

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Emanations from Penumbras, Liberals, Our Catholic Identity, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice, You must be joking! | Tagged , , ,
29 Comments

The fruits of my shouting at you and harassing.

This is the sort of note I live for:

I hadn’t been to Confession in seven months because I had an uncomfortable experience with the priest afterward the last time and was nervous about going back. However, your endless repetition of GO TO CONFESSION helped me to get off my rear end this morning and into the Confessional. Thank you!!!

Let’s re-cap.

GO TO CONFESSION!

Fathers, schedule confession times in your parishes.  Preach about confession.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, GO TO CONFESSION, HONORED GUESTS, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The Coming Storm | Tagged , ,
10 Comments

You may weep.

A reader sent me a link to a photo-story on HuffPo.

This is so sad.  You may actually weep with sorrow, anger, frustration.

The photo-story is of abandoned churches.

Even in their disheveled ruin they are still more beautiful than the monstrosities from the last few decades, “churches” that make municipal airports look gracious.

Here are a few of the photos. See the rest over there.

In Pennsylvania

In New York

In Pennsylvania

Coming to a neighborhood near you?

Grace and elbow-grease, dear readers.

There are many and various reasons why churches are closed. You can list them on your own.  Yes, people move away and demographics shift.  Yes, there are economic downturns.

That said…

  • When people value something, they pay for it.
  • When Catholics lose their Catholic identity, they stop valuing Catholic things.
  • When the Church’s pastors compromise Catholic identity in their preaching and, above all, liturgical ars celebrandi, people lose their Catholic identity.

Our Lord promised that Hell would not prevail against the Church.

He did NOT promise that Hell would not prevail over the Church where you live.

 

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Pò sì jiù, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
39 Comments

Nancy “The Theologian” Pelosi on Pope Francis

Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), abortion-absolutist and these USA’s prime candidate for the proper application of can. 915, has opined on Pope Francis!

I am sure you are with child to learn of her wisdom.

You may remember Nancy from her triumphant theological debut.  HERE and HERE

And remember her recent comment that abortion is “sacred ground”? HERE 

From CNS:

Pelosi: Pope Francis ‘Starting to Sound Like a Nun’

Nancy "The Theologian" Pelosi, Abortion-Absolutist, can. 915 Candidate, Democrat

(CNSNews.com) – Pope Francis is “starting to sound like a nun,” [Pope Francis warned nuns not to wind up being “old maids… zitelle and showed his disdain for “female machismo”.]said House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), a Catholic, when asked about some of the Pope’s recent remarks concerning issues such as abortion and homosexuality.In a Sept. 22 interview on CNN’s Situation Room, host Candy Crolwey asked Pelosi, “Before we go, Pope Francis is calling for a new balance between the chruch’s spiritual and political missions. He says the Catholic Church should not interfere spiritually in the lives of gays. [Is that what he said?  I think not.  His comment about “interfering” meant that the Church can propose, not force the will.  But let’s go on.] He also called for a larger decision-making role for Catholic women. We ask Nancy Pelosi , one of the nation’s most prominent Catholics, for her reaction.”

Pelosi said, “Starting to sound like a nun. The Pope is starting to sound like the nuns.” [She has probably gotten her information about Francis from HuffPo or Slate.]

[Laugh Line Warning!] “Now, his Holiness is obviously a very revered figure,” said Pelosi. “I was there for his inauguration. And I being Catholic believed that he was chosen Pope by the intercession of the Holy Spirit, so I pay attention to what he says. [LOL!  Pelosi pays attention to what Popes say?] And I can tell you that there is great joy among Catholics and friends of Catholics as to respect that his Holiness pays to all of God’s creation and members of the church and then beyond that. It’s really quite remarkable. It’s a source of joy to us all.” [The other day, Nancy, the Pope talked about the unborn babies who, though not yet seen in the light of day, have the face of the Lord.  YOU Nancy, are an abortion-absolutist.  Are you still paying attention to Pope Francis?]

When Crowley mentioned that the Pope’s remarks might not be “a source of joy to all Catholics because I’ve seen conservative Catholics express some reservations about it,” Pelosi said, “I don’t know about them because certainly when it was another Pope who had something else to say, they wanted to hold us all to it.”  [Hypocrite.]

[…]

UPDATE:

Over at American Catholic my friend The Motley Monk has posted about Ms. Pelosi’s track record.

He reminds us of what Card. Burke said:

Speaking truth to power, Cardinal Burke minced no words:

What Congresswoman Pelosi is speaking of is not particular confessional beliefs or practices of the Catholic Church. It belongs to the natural moral law which is written on every human heart and which the Catholic Church obviously also teaches: that natural moral law which is so wonderfully illumined for us by Our Lord Jesus Christ by His saving teaching, but most of all by His Passion and death.

To say that these are simply questions of Catholic faith which have no part in politics is just false and wrong. I fear for Congresswoman Pelosi if she does not come to understand how gravely in error she is. I invite her to reflect upon the example of St. Thomas More who acted rightly in a similar situation even at the cost of his life.

For this violation of Canon 915, Cardinal Burke asserted that Ms. Pelosi must be denied Communion.

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, Lighter fare | Tagged , , , ,
14 Comments

Loose cannon (now former) priest has been excommunicated

“Pope Francis is just, like, he’s just the most wonderfullest Pope, like, EHvur!”

So, the liberals gush, completely ignoring what Francis is about.

And so we turn out attention down-under, where a loose cannon of a priest ran amok for years, eventually to be suspended.  He has now received his decree of excommunication.

From The Age a whiny article by the perennial Church basher Barney Zwartz:

Dissident priest Greg Reynolds has been both defrocked [not a technical term] and excommunicated over his support for women priests and gays – the first person ever excommunicated in Melbourne, he believes. [But, we wonder, will he be the last?]

The order comes direct from the Vatican, not at the request of Melbourne Archbishop Denis Hart, and apparently follows a secret denunciation in the best traditions of the inquisition, according to Father Reynolds.  [OOOPS!  Not “Father” Reynolds anymore.]

The excommunication document – written in Latin and giving no reason – [The reasons have been made abundantly clear in previous correspondence.] was dated May 31, meaning it comes under the authority of Pope Francis who made headlines on Thursday calling for a less rule-obsessed church. [There we go again.  Francis talks about focusing less on “small-minded” rules, and suddenly liberals think there are no longer any rules… except the rules they impose.]

Father Reynolds, who resigned as a parish priest in 2011 and last year founded Inclusive Catholics, said he had expected to be laicised (defrocked), [Getting it wrong again.  “Laicized” is not a real term either.  He has been dismissed from the clerical state.] but not excommunicated. But it would make no difference to his ministry.  [It may not make a difference to the Reynoldian Church, but it may make a difference at his judgment.]

”In times past excommunication was a huge thing, but today the hierarchy have lost such trust and respect,” he said.

”I’ve come to this position because I’ve followed my conscience on women’s ordination and gay marriage.”

[…]

There is more about this sad train-wreck at The Age.

Let the record show that Pope Francis, the destroyer of small-minded rules, the leveler of right-wingers, the newly-minted hero of atheists and gays who has put aside all that medieval stuff about dogma in favor of luv, still knows how to sign a decree.

Remember, friends, Popes do not govern the Church through interviews.

When they want to teach or to govern, they know how to use the proper means.

Posted in Francis, Liberals, The Drill | Tagged ,
15 Comments