Sudden, Unprovided Death and You

Pray for the victims of the killer at the Navy Yard.

Friends, this could be you.

Please! Develop the good practice of examining your conscience every day and going to confession regularly.

I implore you! Teach your children to examine their consciences and take them to confession, teaching them what to do and why.

Fathers, these people could be your parishioners.  You will be called to account for the souls entrusted to you.  Preach about sin, about the Four Last Things, about the Sacrament of Penance.

“A subitanea et improvisa morte… From a sudden and unprovided death, spare us O Lord.”

A sudden death can be a blessing.

A sudden and unprovided death – unprovided in the sense of having no recourse to the sacraments when you are not in the state of grace – is a horrifying prospect.

Make plans for, provide for, the needs of both body and soul for yourselves and those in your charge.

You don’t know when your death will come, natural or not.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, GO TO CONFESSION, Semper Paratus | Tagged , , ,
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Archbp. Broglio (Archd. Military) on the Navy Yard shootings

Click to send a donation to the Archdiocese for Military

From His Excellency Most Reverend Timothy Broglio, Archbishop of the Archdiocese for the Military Services.

WASHINGTON, D.C. – His Excellency, the Most Reverend Timothy P. Broglio, J.C.D., Archbishop for the Military Services, issued the following statement today on the shootings at the Navy Yard.

Archbishop Broglio said:

“With all people of good will, I am shocked and deeply saddened by the terrible loss of life this morning at the Navy Yard. I have often visited and celebrated the Eucharist there. It is a familiar place. I also prayed for the victims, the wounded, and their families at the noon Mass at the Archdiocesan Pastoral Center. Somehow we must restore the notion of respect for life into the fabric of the Nation. When the uniqueness of the human person created in the image and likeness of God is universally recognized, the possibility of a mass shooting is more remote.”

I am sure that you all, with me, will pray for the victims and their families.  Let us redouble our efforts to live holy lives and make Christ known and loved.

Posted in PRAYER REQUEST | Tagged , ,
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Pope Francis: Things will not return to how they were before.

Pope Francis went to the Basilica of St. John Lateran (his cathedral) to speak with the clergy of the Diocese of Rome.  He spoke, again, off the cuff.  He took questions.

Among the things he said:

“The defining aspect of this change of epoch is that things are no longer in their place. Our previous ways of explaining the world and relationships, good and bad, no longer appears to work. The way in which we locate ourselves in history has changed. Things we thought would never happen, or that we never thought we would see, we are experiencing now, and we dare not even imagine the future. That which appeared normal to us – family, the Church, society and the world – will probably no longer seem that way. We cannot simply wait for what we are experiencing to pass, under the illusion that things will return to being how they were before”.

“Se vogliamo che tutto rimanga com’è, bisogna che tutto cambi.”

Thus Tancredi to his father, the Duke, in Il Gattopardo.

“If we want everything to remain as it is, then everything needs to change.”

Reason #4 for Summorum Pontificum.

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California passes non-physician abortion legislation

Abortion is a sacrament of the liberal religion.  It is so important to liberals that steps are now being taken to eliminate the need to have doctors perform them.

From Townhall:

California to Legalize Non-Physician Abortions

Want an abortion in California? If a new law passes, a doctor will not even be necessary.

Bill AB 154 has passed both houses of the state legislature, and currently sits on Gov. Jerry Brown’s desk, where he is expected to sign it into law. The bill strips the requirement that an abortion be performed by a licensed physician or surgeon. Instead, a nurse practitioner, certified nurse midwife, or physician assistant would be allowed to do a suction aspiration or medical abortion on a woman.

[…]

The bill has been endorsed by the California Medical Association, and has been strongly supported by abortion advocates.

In California, if an animal needs an abortion, the procedure must be carried out by a licensed veterinary surgeon. It appears now that the State of California views humans as deserving a lower standard of care than a housecat.

They could set up centers at, say, those fast oil change places or at the shopping mall.

This is where “emanations from penumbras” leads.

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, Liberals, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, You must be joking! |
24 Comments

Your Sunday Sermon Notes

Was there a good point in the sermon you heard at Mass for Sunday?

Let us know what it is!

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
30 Comments

The Vatican II Crisis… applied.

More than one of you have sent links to an article in The New Republic wherein an interesting comparison is made in a discussion of the decline of American orchestras.

Here is a taste:

[…]

Dare’s comments were another contribution to a long argument about what classical music in America should be. For decades, the musical world has been going through its own protracted and painful Vatican II, initially driven by the assumption that the only thing that really ails the form is a superficial matter of liturgy and presentation. Conductors should turn away from the altar and face the congregants, speak in the vernacular, and forego white-tie-and-tails vestments. The service should be consumer-friendly. The process has liberated certain mavericks, and led to interesting experimentation. In the early 1970s, Pierre Boulez, then the music director of the New York Philharmonic, inaugurated his “rug concerts,” removing the seats from the acoustically inert Philharmonic Hall and inviting listeners to recline on carpets and cushions. “There is so much formality involved in the performance of music that we make it hard for audiences to get emotionally involved,” he said at the time.
But the same process also led to a severe dilution of the reverential aura surrounding music, and with it the implicit power of conductors to curate the concert experience. Like Vatican II, it brought on a severe crisis of confidence within the Church, and worse, it has not stemmed the decline in audience attendance or improved the financial bottom line. [BINGO!] One striking thing about the League’s annual navel-gazing in June was how many top orchestra leaders acknowledge that many of their innovations—educational programs, diversity and outreach efforts, musical healing events at hospitals and hospices, community concerts away from the orchestra hall—have not yielded anything encouraging when it comes to enticing new audiences. “But it’s the right thing to do,” they say, regardless.

[…]

The future of the American orchestra may well look like the Church after Vatican II, a contest between “progressives,” who believe, as Rosen suggests, that “the concert is not what it’s really about,” and traditionalists, who search out the rare High Mass of real music or retreat to their home stereos and isolation. The best hope for the latter is still big-city orchestras that must for now cater to an older, more traditional audience, which includes serious listeners. [There it is.] But even that category—serious listeners—is an uncomfortable one for almost all orchestra leaders.

[…]

Read the rest there.

The deadly erosion of the vestiges of decorum continues apace.

With the erosion of decorum comes the erosion of beauty and of truth.

I have made the comparison of baby food and adult food elsewhere.

Posted in Cri de Coeur, Pò sì jiù, Vatican II | Tagged , , , ,
32 Comments

QUAERITUR: Priest gives Host to woman holding a napkin.

From a reader:

Today I was at daily mass at a local parish. At communion, a lady came forward with a napkin and held it out to the priest who was distributing communion. He proceeded to place three or four (consecrated!) hosts on the napkin, and the lady put the napkin containing the hosts in her pocket. She went back to her seat to do who knows what with the hosts.

That is pretty bad.

The document Redemptionis Sacramentum speaks about sacred vessels.

117. Sacred vessels for containing the Body and Blood of the Lord must be made in strict conformity with the norms of tradition and of the liturgical books. The Bishops’ Conferences have the faculty to decide whether it is appropriate, once their decisions have been given the recognitio by the Apostolic See, for sacred vessels to be made of other solid materials as well. It is strictly required, however, that such materials be truly noble in the common estimation within a given region, so that honour will be given to the Lord by their use, and all risk of diminishing the doctrine of the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharistic species in the eyes of the faithful will be avoided. Reprobated, [!] therefore, is any practice of using for the celebration of Mass common vessels, or others lacking in quality, or devoid of all artistic merit or which are mere containers, as also other vessels made from glass, earthenware, clay, or other materials that break easily. This norm is to be applied even as regards metals and other materials that easily rust or deteriorate.

A napkin is not going to crack or rust.   But particles will adhere to the fibers.  Furthermore, a Host is too easily broken or crushed that way.

This is entirely unacceptable.

Alert the pastor of the parish about what you saw.  If that was the pastor of the parish, then alert the local bishop about what you saw.  If the practice persists, send copies of your correspondence to the Congregation for Divine Worship in Rome.

Since we are not in a Soviet Gulag or one of Pres. Obama’s future Reeducation Camps, we don’t yet need to smuggle Communion from the incarcerated priests around to fellow “patients”.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , , , , ,
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“My son has an assignment …”

From a helpful reader in the NYC area whom I have met with several times:

Had to share this with you. You are part of the reason these things happen, your witness to my witness to my sons. As you say, brick by brick; but also one person at a time.

My son has an assignment and part of it asks to describe and provide a picture if his hero. He chooses St Michael the ArchAngel. I also love that among the images he recognized the new statue in the Vatican gardens from the google search for images and chose to use that one!

He wrote: St Michael defends me in battles in faith. He is my safety against the wickedness of the devil.

My work for the day is done. Couldn’t be more proud.

Wow!  Good parenting and grace!  Grace and elbow grease.

Teamwork!

It takes a blog to raise a child?

No, that might be going a little too far.

Fr. Z kudos to the spring-off.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, HONORED GUESTS, Just Too Cool, Reader Feedback | Tagged
9 Comments

QUAERITUR: How to get a people to return to Communion on the tongue?

From a priest (edited):

During my retreat the subject of Communion in the hand while standing came up. We were told that we need to instill reverence. Our Lord is so mistreated today.

One of the priests said there is only so much we – as priests can do. Were he a Bishop, he said, he would rescind the indult for Communion in the hand in his diocese.

May a bishop – of his own authority – rescind the indult?

Someone said he can’t, because it is “enshrined” in the GIRM. I disagree.

I’m sure many priests would like to know the answer to this question. It would be good for bishops to know also, and take action without fear of the political consequences.

Francis doesn’t want us to be careerists. Here is the opportunity for a bishop to show that he isn’t interested in moving up to a fancier post.

As laudable as your sentiment is, Reverend and Dear Father, this is beyond the authority of the diocesan bishop.

The General Instruction (in fact it is a General Institution, not and “instruction”) of the Roman Missal mandates (GIRM 390) that it’s up to the Conferences of Bishops to propose adaptations to the “gestures and posture of the faithful” and “the manner of receiving Holy Communion.” If these adaptations are given the recognitio of the Apostolic See (and that’s the key), then they become law for the territory of that Conference.

A bishop of a diocese could not “opt out” of the norms promulgated for the Conference without specific permission from the Holy See. The Church desires, as much as possible, to establish uniform liturgical norms within a country, lest the faithful be confused.

Aside: I would like someone to tell me what the faithful are certain about right now.

In any event, I suspect that now is not the most opportune time – indeed, the most prudent time – to ask for a dispensation from this norm.

That caution having been added, it is probably within diocesan bishop’s authority to issue particular law requiring that Holy Communion, when distributed under both species, be given by intinction.  Intinction would oblige reception directly on the tongue only.  This has been used by some priests to break the Communion in the hand stranglehold.  Intinction could be a good way of “re-training” the faithful to receive in this fashion and to continue to do so even when both species are not distributed.

Another helpful tactic would be to mandate the use of patens by servers during the distribution of Holy Communion.  Patens could also probably steer the faithful toward reception on the tongue.

There are three other things that could help get people back on their knees with folded hands.  They are, in no special order:

  1. Catechesis
  2. Catechisis, and
  3. Catechesis

Constant preaching and teaching from the pulpit, in the bulletin, in parish talks, etc., what Holy Mass is, who Communion is (hint: it includes the King of Fearful Majesty), the importance of coherence between outward and interior participation, and the Four Last Things, could drive people to their knees again before their encounter with mystery.

Finally, there is the nuclear option (read: the best option).

Summorum Pontificum.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , ,
70 Comments

Summorum Pontificum: Deo gratias! (It’s a cute photo of a baby!)

I called for you to celebrate the anniversary of Summorum Pontificum going into effect.

Someone did Pope Benedict proud!

I direct your attention to Catholic Cuisine: Deo gratias!

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Benedict XVI, Just Too Cool, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged
4 Comments