Fishwrap’s Michael Sean Winters viciously attacks Bp. Paprocki

The National Schismatic Reporter’s Michael Sean Winters continues that non-Catholic site’s onslaught on orthodox bishops.

Here is a sample:

My colleague Brian Roewe reported yesterday on an interview given by Bishop Thomas Paprocki of Springfield, Illinois. There is much that is – how to put this as kindly as possible – jarring about the bishop’s comments. His comparison of the situation of the Church today in America to that of the early Christians in imperial Rome was histrionic to say the least: Whatever one thinks of Obama, he is not Nero or Diocletian. [Indeed.  He is not.  Nero and Diocletian were already living in a pagan culture of death.  Obama is actively promoting the conversion of our nation to a pagan culture of death.] Paprocki’s comments on homosexuality exhibited a fifth grade understanding of the issue. [What did Paprocki really say? “Homosexuality and same sex relationships have been around for centuries. There is nothing new in that. What is new is argument that somehow that it is a good thing and that it somehow should be celebrated rather than it being seen as somehow sinful.”  Is is that MSW thinks that it should be celebrated?] But, what was most alarming were the bishop’s remarks about the sex abuse crisis. Those who criticized the Church’s handling of the issue are dismissed as anti-Catholic bigots. [What did Paprocki really say?  He was was asked about a mendacious and nasty jab at the Catholic Church made on TV by David Letterman, namely, “I am telling you if there is anything kids can’t get enough of it’s a 76-year old virgin. Come on, world youth day, or as the Vatican calls it, a salute to altar boys.”  Paprocki said in reaction to that: “You ask what else could it be other than anti-Catholic bigotry – well, it certainly is that. What else could it be? It certainly is ignorance. Profound ignorance for anyone to make comments like that. For one thing it shows the ignorance of someone who identifies the Catholic Church and, particularly the priesthood, with sexual abuse. Certainly, we have had our unfortunate share of scandals and sin and the church is dealing with that.”  He goes on to say that the Church has addressed the sexual abuse issue well and that there are other institutions that need yet to address it.  In the interview he shifts the interviewer’s proposal that “bigotry” causes such nasty remarks over to “ignorance” as the probable cause.] Many bishops have forthrightly confronted the issue of clergy sex abuse, to be sure. Others, not so much. And the Holy See has so far failed to establish a procedure for removing bishops who do not enforce the canonical norms that have governed the Church’s response since 2002. Bishop Robert Finn is still the Bishop of Kansas City-St. Joseph. Archbishop John Myers is still the Archbishop of Newark. [Remember that MSW defended LA’s former auxiliary Gabino Zavala. “Nothing we learned yesterday, nor anything we are likely to learn in the days ahead, can detract an iota from Bishop Zavala’s record as one of the outstanding bishops in the United States. “]  By refusing to admit any wrong-doing, [?] but sweeping everything under the proverbial rug, [?!? Did he actually do those things?] by blaming the media for its coverage, Paprocki looks like no one so much as the tobacco executives who once insisted that smoking cigarettes had nothing to do with causing cancer. Paprocki is an embarrassment, not to me, but to his brother bishops and his cavalier comments and histrionic casting of aspersions [Look in the mirror.] on everybody else undermines the hard work of those bishops who really have tried to right the wrongs that were done and put the Church on a better path. He is like a character out of an opera – “the gods are against me!” – except, of course, this is not an opera, or even a stage, it is the Church. [Yes, the image of the diva does come to mind.]

Read for yourselves the interview Bp. Paprocki gave.  HERE

Make up your own minds.

Posted in Green Inkers, Liberals, One Man & One Woman, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , , , , ,
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Be the…

MAQUIS!

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Bp. Egan of Portsmouth: TLM in every parish “wonderful, but it’s not enough.”

The best Catholic weekly in the UK, The Catholic Herald, has an interview with the Bishop of Portsmouth, Most Rev. Philip Egan.

Bp. Egan has been, rightly I think, identified with a new wave of bishops who were being appointed during the last part of the pontificate of Benedict XVI through the intermediary of the current Apostolic Nuncio, Archbp. Antonio Mennini.  It is an open secret that the band of liberal bishops in England and Wales sometimes called “The Magic Circle” have their crosshairs on Mennini.  Now that Francis is Pope, they sense they have an opportunity to rid themselves of this troublesome Nuncio.

Back to The Catholic Herald.  Read the whole thing, but I found this of particular interest:

CH: In your episcopal ordination address you spoke of the need for Catholics to make converts.

EGAN: I spoke about the need for evangelisation. Making converts? Yes, in the total sense. I suppose traditionally the term “converts” makes one think of people coming from other Christian communities. I spoke about evangelisation. I think that’s the central theme of what the Holy Spirit is calling us to do.

Why do you think that, according to figures compiled recently by the Latin Mass Society, the number of conversions to Catholicism in England and Wales peaked in 1959 and is now just a third of that level?

I think the fact that 5,000 people convert, or are received in the Church, each year is a wonderful thing, because the whole culture has been radically altered since 1959. OK, we can look at internal weaknesses within the Church, but the critical and crucial thing has been the emergence of a post-modern, secularised society. I’d say that the reason there are less converts today is not because the “product” is defective. The key thing is that people can’t hear that call in a comfortable, affluent, consumerist, totally secularised culture.

The great thing of the Latin Mass Society is the tradition of the Church, but I actually believe that we don’t need more tradition. We need more creativity to respond to the challenges of the secular culture.

So you are saying that the sole answer to this problem wouldn’t be to have a Latin Mass in every parish?

That would be wonderful, but it’s not enough. [Do I hear an “Amen!”?] Making available the Catholic tradition is a wonderful thing, but I think the time has come to put all the Church’s resources – its spiritual tradition, the 2,000 years of ascetical theology, the lives and example of the saints – at the service of helping people to pray and discover God at work in their lives. Because I think that from there will come the basis for the new ardour, the new passion for the Lord. It will catch on like wildfire.

[…]

You can see why The Magic Circle and libs in England would be worried.

He is open to the traditional expression of the Roman Rite in every parish.  At the same time he pushes an ascetical theology and service.

I will part company just a tad with His Lordship.  I think we do need more “tradition”, in the sense that we need a revitalization of our Catholic identity which necessarily includes a reintegration of our Catholic tradition.  At the same time, Bp. Egan is calling for – if I understand him correctly  – for what I have been pushing to the screen for “traditionalist” reflection.  Traditional forms of liturgical worship are helpful, necessary even, but also necessary are sincere and charitable works of mercy done for love of Christ and neighbor.

The combination of tradition and works of mercy in unbeatable.  I suspect that Bp. Egan and I agree on this, though he placed the emphasis on “ascetical theology”.

Finally, Fr. Blake in Brighton is under attack right now.  HERE and HERE  Blake has been promoting both traditional worship and service of the poor in concrete ways.  Priests and bishops who bring these two elements together are going to be attacked savagely both from within the Church and from without, in the press.

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The Battle For Britain

Sirens are blaring. The low rumble of enemy bombers fills the night sky.  The Blitz is on.

I have to pull myself away from fighting for truth, justice and the American Way.

Not since Lend Lease has it been so necessary for us Yanks to send help to Ol’ Blighty.

An alert reader sent me a link to a Sunday bulletin for the parish for Oxted and Warlingham in the Diocese of Arundel and Brighton.

I’ll share the parish priest’s (USA: pastor’s) blurb on the front of the bulletin:

A Call to Action (A.C.T.A).

A simple movement to keep alive within the Church of England and Wales the vision and spirit of Vatican 2. It has been growing momentum over the past twelve months, and its aim is to support the Bishops who are still hard at work implementing Vatican 2. Unfortunately many of the aberrations are becoming the rule – e.g. Family Sunday Mass is in the extraordinary form and in Latin – you must kneel for communion – no communion in the hand – even you must go to Confession before receiving communion. [Confession before Communion?!? The horror!] There is an open meeting on Saturday 28 September from 2 till 5 at the Sacred Heart Church, Caterham and the guest speaker will be Fr. Tom O’Loughlin – a priest of our diocese who has a degree in liturgy and is in the Theology Department at Nottingham University. Go along to hear more and make your views known. [YES! Do.] The Arundel and Brighton group of A.C.T.A would like to listen to what you have to say.

Father John

The “Father John” in question is Fr. John Olliver.

This is, in part, an attack on good priests such as Fr. Ray Blake, Fr. Olliver’s diocesan brother.

Such courage!

Where were these guys when Benedict was Pope? All this courage … now? Where were they when the Soho Masses were being shut down? Where were they when Bp. Davies and Bp. Egan were being appointed?

Now that Benedict is gone, they are jumping up and waving their arms around.

Courage such as this we haven’t seen since The Bench sided with Henry VIII.

My note to Fr. Olliver: The “Church of England” already exists as a separate entity. They pretty much own the name.  How ’bout letting them keep it?

But since your heart seems to be over there, perhaps you could take the rest of yourself along.

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Blatteroons, Francis, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Lighter fare, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Mail from priests, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, Vatican II | Tagged , ,
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When you hear talk of Liberation Theology, don’t be fooled.

You, like I, have been hearing a lot these days about a Church of “the poor” and a rehabilitation of Liberation Theology.  This has caused concern for some who are doctrinally coherent and orthodox and elation for liberals.

The following article has bias we need to watch out for.  At RNS Alessandro Speciale wrote:

Liberation theology finds new welcome in Pope Francis’ Vatican

VATICAN CITY (RNS) A progressive theological current that emphasizes the Catholic Church’s closeness to the poor and the marginalized but was subject to decades of hostility and censure is now finding increasing favor in the Vatican under Pope Francis.

Francis, who has called for “a poor church for the poor,” will meet in the next few days with the Rev. Gustavo Gutierrez, a Peruvian theologian and scholar who is considered the founder of liberation theology.

The meeting was announced on Sunday (Sept. 8) by Archbishop Gerhard Ludwig Mueller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican’s doctrinal watchdog, during the launch of a book he co-authored with Gutierrez.

It’s a remarkable about-face for a movement that swelled in popularity but was later stamped out by the conservative pontificates of John Paul II and his longtime doctrinal czar, Benedict XVI.

[…]

This sure sounds like another example of pitting Francis against Benedict, no?  Francis v. Benedict and John Paul.

I direct you to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith’s Instruction on Certain Aspects of the “Theology of Liberation.

In the preamble to the Instruction, we find this paragraph… from the horrible old docrinal “czar”… Joseph Card. Ratzinger:

This warning should in no way be interpreted as a disavowal of all those who want to respond generously and with an authentic evangelical spirit to the “preferential option for the poor.” It should not at all serve as an excuse for those who maintain the attitude of neutrality and indifference in the face of the tragic and pressing problems of human misery and injustice. It is, on the contrary, dictated by the certitude that the serious ideological deviations which it points out tends inevitably to betray the cause of the poor. More than ever, it is important that numerous Christians, whose faith is clear and who are committed to live the Christian life in its fullness, become involved in the struggle for justice, freedom, and human dignity because of their love for their disinherited, oppressed, and persecuted brothers and sisters. More than ever, the Church intends to condemn abuses, injustices, and attacks against freedom, wherever they occur and whoever commits them. She intends to struggle, by her own means, for the defense and advancement of the rights of mankind, especially of the poor.

Pretty repressive, huh?

Theologians such as Gustavo Gutiérrez are not the problem.  Not every strain or aspect of Liberation Theology is unacceptable.  So say both Card. Ratzinger and B. John Paul II.  In fact, every sound theology is a “theology of liberation”.  As a shorthand way of thinking about this, Liberation Theology without Marxism can fairly be called “Catholic Social Teaching”.

Be alert when you see discussions of Liberation Theology in the future.

The sort of Liberation Theology that Pope Francis eventually became interested in is not the strain that involves Marxism.  This is a good opportunity to “Read Francis Through Benedict”.

The Left will try to use this opening, the renewal of interest in Liberation Theology, to rehabilitate notions that are not acceptable.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Benedict XVI, Francis, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liberals, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , ,
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So, a couple of lesbians walk into an Anglican church…

Over at CMR there is a story about how a couple of Lesbians brought a child to an Anglican vicar asking for baptism for the child.

The Lesbians wanted to be, both of them, listed as “mother”.

The vicar refused.

(I know you know what comes next.)

The Lesbians went to the press!

(I know you know what comes next.)

The Anglican Church reversed the vicars decision!

CMR adds the conclusion:

If you’d like to know why the Anglican Church is dying, here it is.

 

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
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GUEST POST: First Extraordinary Form “Missa Cantata” or “Take the RED pill!”

I say, “Invite your friends to take the RED pill!

From a happy reader:

I attended my first EF High Mass yesterday in the Diocese of Trenton.

I was left in a state of awe, really. And all I can think about today is that, at 42 years old, and having only been exposed to the felt banner Catholicism my whole life, I feel kind of cheated.  [You aren’t alone.  A couple generations and more have actually been cheated.  Some of them are figuring that out.]

But, I am so grateful that I now know where to go and be a part of this beauty and reverence. Your blog has inspired me in countless ways. Thank you and may God always bless you.

I am attaching a link to the electronic bulletin. Maybe it’s not perfect, but I think this congregation in Trenton is onto something. HERE

My work here is done.

Don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good, friends.

Get something going where you live.

Support and encourage priests.

Be inviting to your neighbors.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, HONORED GUESTS, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged , , ,
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A teen talks about the Traditional Latin Mass – VIDEO

She is dead on about where the focus of the TLM is.  She also gets that true liturgical worship is hard.  Indirectly, she touches on the point I am constantly making about how Mass must bring about an encounter with mystery.

I suggest to her that, as she continues to attend the TLM, she hold in mind during Holy Mass that the true Actor is Christ the High Priest.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Youthful intensity!

PS: I don’t condone the use of “Latin Mass” for the Extraordinary Form or (pick your term). “Latin Mass” should also apply to the Novus Ordo.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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Altar Boy Stats FOLLOW UP (and fun photo)

Remember the post about the number of altar boys increasing when there are no girls on the team? HERE

A reader sent this:

I’ve attached as proof a “sacristy selfie” the rascally rascals (including our #2 son) took yesterday ~ when our pastor saw it on FB, he said “This is what happens when I’m praying.” LOL  I told him he could either install a baby monitor (the one-way video kind) or a pinball machine like the Vatican. ;o)

On another happy note, I realized yesterday that at least 7 priests in our diocese now celebrate the EF regularly! Priest by Priest!  [Do I hear an “Amen!”?  I’ll bet they are on the young side, too.]

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ACTION ITEM! International Buy a Priest a Beer Day! (The Octave Continueth)

At the blog of The Catholic Gentleman:

International Buy a Priest a Beer Day!

Did you know that this coming Monday, September 9, is International Buy a Priest a Beer Day? On this festive day, faithful Catholics all over the world take their priests out for a beer and get to know them better. It’s a beautiful Catholic tradition that goes back to the time of St. Hopswald of Aleyard, the first man to take his priest out for a beer.

Okay, if you’re getting suspicious by now, there’s a good reason. Buy a Priest a Beer Day is not a real holiday. But I would argue that it should be! [Do I hear an “Amen!”?]

Believe it or not, priests are real people, and they enjoy socializing over good food and drink as much as anyone. They also have a thankless and difficult job, a job that we couldn’t get to heaven without. Priests are the lifeblood of the Church, and they deserve some appreciation.

So with that in mind, I would challenge you to do something concrete to show appreciation to your priest in the month ahead. Yes, it could be taking him out for a beer, or it could be inviting him over to share dinner with your family. Be creative if you want, but give back to your priest somehow, and let him know that his ministry is making a difference.

Of course, your priest may be insanely busy and unable to schedule a time for a lengthier visit. That’s okay. You could offer a rosary or a holy hour for him and his intentions (or better yet, more than one), and let him know that you are regularly praying for him. At the very least, express to him your gratitude, in person or via a note, for his faithful ministry and his answering God’s call to the priesthood.

I fully expect there to be a lot of happy, encouraged priests by the end of the month. If you want to participate, leave a comment saying, “I’m in!” Ready, set, go.

My correspondent who sent me the link and alerted me to this sacred event, wrote:

Apparently, amazon doesn’t sell beer, so I dropped a $20 into your tip jar so you can pop out and choose something interesting.

;o)

I like that idea.

Here’s my donation button!

 

UPDATE:

Something fun happened. One of the gals who looks after us here (cleaning, laundry, finding useful stuff, reading my blog, etc.) came with a basket of clothes and …

20130909-104944.jpg

And it’s cold!

UPDATE Monday 2020 GMT:

So far I have been given only ONE real, physical, beer.

However, I have been getting some donations and some have messages.  Here’s one:

Enjoy your beer, Father! God bless you and your work. My family (siblings,parents,husband) and I check in on a regular basis to see what trouble you are stirring up. Keep it up. We could use more trouble makers, and I mean that in the best possible way. May Our Lady protect and bless you, always

And:

Specially for the “Buy a priest a beer day”. Greetings from Germany.

I assume that some of the others for for IBAPABD too.  When you send a donation, send a message/comment, too!

Posted in Fr. Z KUDOS, Lighter fare, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged ,
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