Daily Rome Shots 1086 – book

My thanks again go out to donors who are switching from Continue to Zelle or Wise.

I bring to you attention a new book published by Emmaus Press, a branch of the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology.

On The Demonic by Archbp. Fulton J. Sheen.

US HEREUK HERE (not yet)

The forward explains that, toward the end of his life, Sheen was ever more convinced that we are living in a demonic age and that we may be seeing the “first cells of the Anti-Christ”.

He wrote that he wanted to write a book about the demonic, but he passed away before he could accomplish it.   The editor of this book has gone through all of Sheen’s material and collated what he found about the topic.

The volume includes not only excerpts from known published works but also from Sheen’s own handwritten notes, kept in his archive, for conferences, etc.

In chessy news, chess.com’s Speed Chess Championship is underway … blitz and bullet… the strongest speed chess players in the world.

Black to move and mate in 4.

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HERE – UK HERE  WHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

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26 July: Fr. Jacques Hamel, martyred 8 years ago in France

I strongly suspect that Fr. Jacques Hamel, killed in his church at Mass by an Islamic murderer in N. France, is a martyr. The murderer was pledged to ISIS.

However, just as the Church has procedures when promulgating laws and teaching definitively, so too the Church has procedures when determining if a slain Catholic was martyred. “Martyr” is also a technical term for someone who was killed precisely for hatred of Christ, the Faith, or some aspect of the Faith that is integral to it.

Churches are being attacked and destroyed all over France… and elsewhere.

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, pray for us.
St. Lawrence of Brindisi, pray for us.
St. Pius V, pray for us.
Martyrs of Otranto, pray for us.
St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle.
Our Lady of Victory, intercede for us with your Divine Son.

Posted in Modern Martyrs, SESSIUNCULA |
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Daily Rome Shots 1086 – Clerical Guayabera Shirts

Hey sa*****@*********king.ws !  My email note was kicked back as undeliverable.  New email address?

In chessy news, I read that lots of dosh has been raised to fund more “freestyle” tournaments (aka 960 aka Fisher Random).  Also, Liem Le prevailed in Biel.  In St. Louis there is a US Senior and Junior Championship underway for the top 10 players across three divisions – juniors, girls, and seniors – competing for more than $135,000 in prizes.

I, on the other hand, spent some time with the pesky King’s Gambit yesterday.

Black to move, win material and a winning position.

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Priestly chess players, drop me a line. HERE

I’ve been working a little more with my Federated build of “Element”, which is a sort of Zoom substitute. Zoom, as you might now, is AI mining everything… everything you say. Federated has replacements for all sorts of SaaS (Software as a Service) for a great deal less money and your data is YOURS. I’ve been using YouTube for daily Mass streams and I’d like to move away to a more secure mode, thus I am looking more at Federated’s “Element”. Yesterday I got it working with OBS. Brick by brick.

If you have a business or web presence and you are paying mucho denaro for SaaS, I’d look in Federated.  Frankly, every parish and even dioceses should get the heck away from all the popular services which are expensive and mining data for AI.

Hey Fathers!  How about a clerical Guayabera shirt for the hot summer days?  I have one.  Super practical and cooler in more ways than one.  All sorts of lay clothes and hats, too.

Our Price: $58.50 – Reg Price: $90.00

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We’ve now had decades to study the map….

In geometry, when two lines diverge from the same point, the farther they extend, the farther apart they get.

In a journey, if you take a road leading the opposite direction of your destination, the farther you go from it.  If you are smart, and you really want to get to your goal, you have to turn around, go back, and find the correct road.

If you are smart.  Or … if you are at least not perverse.

Errare est humanum.  Perseverare est diabolicum.

A false road was purposely created for our naive feet by the City of Man’s diabolical civil engineers and we were lead astray.

But we’ve now had decades to study the map….

Are we on the path of the Church?  On the path of the world?

I read at the National Catholic Register that the 412-year uninterrupted presence of the Discalced Carmelites in a monastery in Lucerna, Spain will end.

The community of Discalced Carmelites of San José monastery in Lucena in Spain’s Córdoba province, to whom Pope Francis sent several messages because of his friendship with a former prioress, is being forced to leave after the order’s presence of more than 400 years in the city due to lack of vocations.

Mother Mary Magdalene of St. John of the Cross, prioress of the small community, explained in a statement that “with great pain and great sadness, because there are only three nuns left, the scarcity of vocations and being requested by another Carmel in need, we saw that it is God’s will that our mission here had concluded,” reported the Iglesia en Córdoba (The Church in Córdoba), a weekly newspaper of the Spanish diocese.

Thus the 412-year uninterrupted presence of the Discalced Carmelites in the Lucena monastery will end. The nuns arrived there in 1612 from the city of Cabra, where the community was founded in 1603.

According to the newspaper ABC, the death of the former prioress, Mother Adriana of Jesus Crucified, in September 2023 left the community below the minimum number of five nuns. However, the community was granted a special status that had the support of Pope Francis and the bishop of Córdoba, Demetrio Fernández.

With the recent departure of another sister, the future of the community was sealed. The three nuns will soon move to a community located in the Diocese of Salamanca to which they are joined by a “long and close relationship of sisterhood.”

[…]

Lack of vocations.

I do not believe there is a lack of vocations.  There is a lack of vocations realized, responded.

On the other hand…

At the Catholic Herald of the UK I read an interview with the Abbess Cecilia of Gower Abbey, motherhouse of now multiplying daughter houses of the Benedictines of Mary, Queen of Apostles. They are poised to take over an empty abbey, founded by Saint Thomas More’s great great-granddaughter, in Colwich, England. They are traditional Benedictines, busting at the seams with vocations, and expanding.

Posted in The Drill, The future and our choices, Women Religious |
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Fr. Z warmly SUGGESTS – Discount on All-Access Membership with the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology

Did you know that Rev. 22:1

Then the angel showed me the river of the water of life, as clear as crystal, flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb

can be a Scriptural support for the Filioque clause of the Creed?  I didn’t, until John Bergsma mentioned it in a talk about the Holy Spirit under the images of water, air and fire.

Did you know that Isaiah 44:3 is an example of a synonymous bicola?  Why do so many passages in the Old Testament seem to repeat themselves?

For I will pour water on the thirsty land,
and streams on the dry ground;
I will pour my Spirit upon your descendants,
and my blessing on your offspring.

This is an “emblematic parallelism” in which the 1st part gives an image and the second part makes it explicit.  Again, Bergsma taught me that.

Did you know that Jesus breathing on the Apostles so they could forgive sins was foreshadowed in God breathing life into Adam’s nostrils?   Adam could then procreate, bring life into the world. Jesus “recreated” the Apostles so that they could “recreate” sinners.   In given absolution for sins bishops and priests “remove death”, they recreate us.  In that way, Holy Orders are a fulfillment of Baptism, making priests God’s “first-born sons”, “natural vicars” of the Father.   Guess where I heard that?

For some years I have attended conferences for priests held by the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology (SPCBT… Scott Hahn, John Bergsma, et al.).  These conferences have changed the way I approach Scripture.  A common comment I have made and I have heard from other priests who attend is, “I wish we had had these resources when I was in seminary!”

To be clear, the St Paul Center is not geared solely for priests.  Anyone can benefit from they offer, and they offer a lot.  Their website is packed with programs and lectures and materials.

Right now, the SPCBT is offering a discount on their All-Access Annual Membership. 

I have one of these memberships because I attended their recent conference.  They wanted the priests to have it so parishes can benefit from their preaching and teaching.  However, they want parishes to benefit in their individual members as well.

I don’t have a typical parish but you, dear readers, are like a huge parish.  Therefore, I want you to know about the SPCBT’s parish offering.

With an All-Access Membership, you’ll receive:

• All-Access to Exclusive Content
• 15% off all Emmaus Road Publishing titles, plus free shipping on domestic orders (this in itself is attractive considering the amazing title they publish)
• Enroll in a Scripture course with one of today’s leading Catholic scholars
• Receive 25% off all Journey rough Scripture Guides
• Weekly Scripture reflections with Scott Hahn and John Bergsma
• A monthly “Breaking the Bread” newsletter mailed directly to your home
• Deepen your understanding of the Scriptures with St. Paul Center flagship Bible Studies
• Exclusive promotions on select pilgrimages

If you’re interested and would like to learn more, visit StPaulCenter.com.

You can give All-Access Annual Memberships as GIFTS, for example to your own priests at your parish.  That could be gift to the whole parish if their preaching is affected (and it will be if they use it).

This discount – for annual memberships – is available until 1 October. Use code

PCJULY2024

For more information write here and tell them Fr. Z sent you.

customerservice@stpaulcenter.com

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Daily Rome Shots 1085

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HERE – UK HERE  WHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

My thanks to those who are taking steps to switch from Continue to Zelle.  Thanks thanks thanks!

In chessy news, I lost a long battle yesterday against one of the strongest players in the club and I won a decisive game that was never in question.

Black to move and mate in 3.

I have to share this.  I must.

Play
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From devastation to renewed life.

There is a piece at Rorate from a couple days ago which addresses a massive problems in Italy with paltry vocations, unstaffed churches, and declined church attendance.  They are hitting the pot of strong coffee that we in these USA have been staring at with perhaps more realism.  In Italy, however, much of the infrastructure and the clergy are sustained by the state through taxes.

The Rorate piece starts with a a focus on the area of Tortona, which once had as a bishop, the infamous Bp. Viola now in the “Dicastery” (Congregation) for Divine Worship (who wears Bugnini’s episcopal ring).  He is the clerical side of the team with the layman Mr. Cricket who, under Roche, are trying to kill off the traditional Roman Rite and eliminate from the life of the Church the people who desire it.  Remember, its just as much about the people as the Rite they desire.  They don’t like the people.

The article explains that where Viola was once bishop there is ecclesial devastation.

All over Italy there are efforts to redraw parish lines, consolidate.  This is even going to extend to dioceses.  Italy has quite a few small dioceses, some of them already merged into hyphenated entities.

Here’s the last part of the piece with my emphases and comments.  The mention of Ratzinger is an earlier reference to he prediction about a smaller Church and its reemergence.

A new geography made up of new boundaries is being redrawn, in an Italy of churches that first empty and then close. Man will experience “indescribable loneliness,” Ratzinger warned, and “having lost sight of God, he will ”feel the horror of poverty.”

The structural crisis is also felt outside the circle of diocesan priests. “Of the 43 Augustinian convents of the 1990s, today there are 20 left. There were 230 of us in 1996. Today there are 106 of us left,” explains Father Francesco Giuliani, pastor of the Shrine of Santa Rita in Milan. “We also have the dilemma in our order: put one in each convent and thus give minimal service or rather to come together and close places? I believe that more than organization we should have the courage to call the process by its own name: reduction. And it is better to look straight into the face of reality, without shame, without unnecessary guilt.” [NB…] The patterns of the past no longer hold, just as the traditionalism of the past provided a structure that no longer has the numbers to sustain it, despite the consternation of the faithful who have remained frightened by the changes. [It makes you pound your head on the table.  If what you are doing now and for the past decades doesn’t work… try what did work.  I am reminded of my old pastor Msgr. Schuler upon reading the “new diocesan ‘five year plan’  to deal with the shrinking numbers of priests without doing anything to change their approach toward vocations.  Comparing the situation to the famine in Ireland (apt because Irish clergy with mainly in control), he said, instead of planting different crops let’s all sit around and plan how we are going to starve to death.] “We in the diocese of Tortona,” Fr. Paolo continues, ”like others before us, have raised the issue of giving proper dignity to the liturgies. [Hence, it has been lacking?  Whose fault is that?] With few faithful maintaining the high standard is difficult, there is a shortage of volunteers at the reading during the celebration, [?!?  So what?  What are priests for?] catechists for the children, not to mention the choir that would be an important element of the liturgy and is now a mirage.” [Brick by brick my man.  Look at the enormous success of Ss. Trinità in Rome and other places – even in Italy – where the Vetus Ordo is used.] Father Giuliani also agrees: “Because of the reduction in staffing not all churches are able to hear confessions; [Keep throwing the traditional-leaning men out of seminaries and you get what you created.] rather, it is necessary to join forces.  Just as Ratzinger said, according to whom Christianity will be communities that are no longer large, but small, with an almost family-like flavor, in which people will participate not so much out of duty as is perhaps done today in some cases, but out of true conviction. And we will have gained in quality.”  [GAH!  I remember how, decades ago, the vocations people in LA crowed that its program was a huge success focused on quality of candidatesTheir screening process was so effective that they didn’t have a single man enter that year.]

It still comes back to him, to the young Bavarian theologian on the run from Tübingen, a refugee in the quieter Regensburg from which he looked out to interpret the future. It was from there that he assured the radio microphone, “It will be a long process, but when all the travail is over, great power will emerge from a more spiritual and simplified Church.” The process seems to be only halfway through.

Halfway or quarterway… it’s on the way.  There is a demographic sinkhole opening up.  And where it is worse there is a kind of blinkered lemming-like forward dash to the cliff.

About that last part, “when all the travail is over, great power will emerge from a more spiritual and simplified Church”.

This is what I have been saying.  My recent attendance at the priest’s conference held by the St. Paul Center confirmed it for me through my conversations with priests.  My email confirms it.  Of course the plural of anecdote is data.

As I see it, as the sinkhole swallows larger number because of the unwillingness of church leadership to find a new path, there will remain

When the demographic collision happens, and it will, only the strong and disciplined will survive.

Right now, who are the strong?  Traditionalist Catholics, for sure, and probably also those of a more charismatic bent. Yes, some nasty critters will survive, too. They always do.

Those who are attracted to traditional worship are strong, hard-identity Catholic.  They are young and they are having lots of children.  Also, strong, are those next-generation young people who have inherited a saner and sounder charismatic approach.  They pray the Rosary and attend Eucharistic Adoration.  They are informed and they love the Faith.   Converts are coming into the Church, often from a background that grounded them well in Scripture and works of mercy.  Among seminarians these days still a high percentage are open to or eager for tradition, even to the point where the bumfuzzled swotters on the Left are ringing their hands.  The religious orders still attracting postulants are imbued with Tradition.

NB: I’ll add here that these groups will out of necessity have to work together in a smaller, demographically and financially devastated Church.  There will be frictions, but the fruits could be amazing.  Catholics with a stronger grounding in Scripture, with zeal fueled by the Holy Spirit, on the foundation of traditional worship.  Holy cow.

Some years ago I wrote this.  I trot it out in honor of the anniversary year of the death of the Professor:

In these USA, we as a Church are like band of adventurers on the march towards a long-desired destination.  We have swamps and storms and enemies to face at every turn.  Sometimes we are forced on horribly high and perilous paths only to find tenuous bridges over chasms heading towards tunnels filled with orcs or forests with hypnotic spiders.  The voyage takes its toll on our numbers.

And, soon, a big drop in numbers will result when the inevitable battle takes place.  A heavily-armed force named Demographics is coming at us from the other direction.  We will soon collide.

The number of people saying they are or pretending still to be Catholic will soon plummet.  The number of diocesan priests and religious will shrink as the Biological Solution catches up to presbyterates and orders.

This is the state of the question after decades of both purposeful and systematic corrosion of Catholic identity as well as erosion through neglect and incompetence.  Europe is worse and Latin America is incomprehensible.

When the demographic collision happens, and it will, only the strong and disciplined will survive.

 There are also market forces at work here.  As demographics shift in the Church, lots of people who have written books and speak and teach see what’s going on and they adapt.  I am in no way suggesting insincerity.  They are genuine and they are learning and being influenced by what they learn.  Believe me!  As a convert – and the impact of converts on the Church today is huge – I get it.  And by convert I mean both formal and interior, reverts and those who have had ongoing deepening of the gift they were given from their families.  Conversion must be ongoing if it is truly conversion and not just role-playing (aka hypocrisy). It takes a long time to convert.  As a matter of fact, it lasts until your final breath.  And there is a great deal to discover in Holy Church’s treasuries.

Coming into the Catholic Church, or recommitting, is like coming into a vast store of riches, like finding the hoard hall under Erebor, the Lonely Mountain.  Imagine the time it takes to explore it and benefit from new discoveries.  A small band, converts all in the large sense, enter in wonder.  Some track in one direction in the great cavern and find this or that treasure while others clamber off in another direction.  Eventually, after one awesome revelation after another, they come together again and point and say to each other simultaneously:

“You have GOT to see what I found over there!”

And mutual enrichment begins.

The treasury, by the way, has been guarded by a dragon who wants to keep it away from all of us.

Let’s beat the dragon, claim the treasure, and together build what it can build.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Be The Maquis, Our Catholic Identity, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices |
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Daily Rome Shots 1084

Rome has been hot, some 40ºC or 104ºF and it has been muggy, Italian “afa” making it worse.  A cool drink in the late afternoon when one hopes the heat will begin to abate is a consolation.

Welcome registrants:

Durango ME
TolkienFan

 

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HERE – UK HERE  WHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

Fr. Z kudos to a few of the monthly donors who cancelled at Continue and moved over to Zelle.   A few have cancelled and not yet moved, and I look forward to seeing them pop up.  My gratitude to you donors is a matter of daily prayers.

Also, thanks to wishlist users RK and AV for sending the refreshing eye wash and a gift card.

In chessy news, in OTB today I won the continuation of a game my opponent and I had adjourned.   He pretty optimistic that he had me beat.  I demurred, so we agreed that we should pick it up at the next opportunity.  This is the shot of the position at the moment we adjourned.   I’m black.  White, who is in check, has the move.  My last move was

How would you continue?  Post your next move: How does white get out of check and what is your continuation?

Nice people! Great service!

In the CrunchLab Masters, my guy Wesley was pushed out by Magnus.  I’ve lost interest in that tournament for now.

I just learned that the 45th Chess Olympiad will be in Budapest shortly before my Roman sojourn is to begin!  GRRR… I wish that I had known.

Today I have a Requiem Mass for the father-in-law of a friend who just died.  Please consider stopping and saying a prayer for him.

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ASK FATHER: Home Chapel How To’s – consecrated chalice and paten? Wherein Fr. Z rants

I’ve been getting notes about, and seeing chatter about on the interwebs, people setting up home chapels just in  case.

I think it is good to have one anyway, not just in case.

In any event, while it is relatively easy to acquire the various accoutrement for Holy Mass in the Vetus Ordo (even easier for the Novus), it isn’t always easy to obtain a chalice and paten that are consecrated.

Remember: When some sacred object that isn’t in itself sacred (like a relic) it loses its consecration.   If a previously consecrated chalice is sold, it is “desecrated”, that is, it loses its consecration.  It doesn’t mean that it was defiled in a serious way as in misused.   When you regild (replate) a chalice or paten, it has to be reconsecrated.  If an altar is changed in a major way, e.g., previously fixed down or the mensa was detached for any reason, it must be reconsecrated. So, substantial changes or sales require reconsecration.

I think I have a solution for that.  If you are in a situation where the local bishop has refused to consecrate your chalice and paten with the older form in the Pontifical, you might drop me a line.

And I, frankly, don’t go for the line that all you have to do is use the chalice and paten once for it to be consecrated.   I hold an unconsecrated chalice used for Mass may thereafter be considered sanctified in some way but it is not consecrated. A chalice that is consecrated and then used for Mass is also sanctified. By consecration a chalice is formally, by special rites, set apart for a particular use.

“But Father! But Father!”, some of you are pewling. “This is just merciless nitpicking.  You are nitpicking merciless nitpicker!  You hate mercy and compassion and all those…. those… errrr… things that Pope Francis talks about … like… the Earth’s climate and fairness and … and you hate Vatican II!”

We have to make the distinction.  Qui distinguit bene docet.

And, quaeritur, why not consecrate the chalice with the special rite that Holy Church provides?  Why not?

I’ll tell you “why” since you are asking.

My I rant a little?

One exorcist I have had contact with suggested that multiple problems in the Church result from improper sacred liturgical worship.  Part of the problem is that things being used for Holy Mass (vestments, chalices, candles, linens, etc.) have not been duly consecrated.

What is consecration?

This world, as Jesus said, has its Prince.  The created realm fell in the fall of our First Parents and came under the domination of the Enemy.   Consecration rips things away from the Enemy and hands them over to God alone.  There are consecrated things, places and persons.  Harming them or using them wrongly is not just vandalism or assault or theft, etc.  It is also the sin of sacrilege.  Steal a consecrated chalice and, when you go to confession (if you are lucky) you have to confess not only the theft, but also the sacrilege.

It makes sense that everything used for sacred liturgy should be properly consecrated.

How is it that we lost sight of this?  It makes sense, right?   If I am not in a gulag, I want to do it right… with the right rite.  We are our rites!

Modernism has infected large swathes of the Church, including clergy.  Modernists (whether they know they are or not) reduce the supernatural to the natural (whether they know it or not).

Now think about what it means to say that we don’t have to, under normal circumstances, use blessed and consecrated things for Holy Mass.

Think about the ripple effect that has in the Church.

You might remember a school experience with a wave table, where you create waves of certain frequencies.  Then you create waves with a matching or harmonic frequency from another direction.  They cancel out.

That happens to priests too, by the way.  They get cancelled by priests and bishops who are going the opposite direction.  Believe me.  I know.

Thus endeth the rant.

UPDATE:

BONUS ROME SHOT:

Here is a shot of the late Card. Pell, re-consecrating my chalice from my ordination.  He passed away soon after.  I treasure the chalice and paten, consecrated by two great men, Card. Mayer and Card. Pell.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , ,
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Your Sunday Sermon Notes – 9th Sunday after Pentecost (N.O.: 16th) 2024

Too many people today are without good, strong preaching, to the detriment of all. Share the good stuff.

Was there a GOOD point made in the sermon you heard at your Mass of obligation for this 9th Sunday after Pentecost, or the 16th Sunday of Ordinary Time?

Tell about attendance especially for the Traditional Latin Mass.

Any local changes or (hopefully good) news?

A couple thoughts about the sign of the cross: HERE  A taste…

[…]

On that Palm Sunday Jesus went to the Temple.  Surely people thought that he was going to take His role as the Davidic priest-king.  There He found the Courtyard of the Gentiles encroached with vendors of sacrificial animals and with moneychangers.  Coins with images couldn’t be used for sacrifices, so they had to be exchanged.  With a whip of cords the Lord drove them out, one of His motives being that the Gentiles were left with no place to worship the one true God.  Commenting on this dramatic moment, St. Jerome (+420) remarked that this was perhaps the Lord’s greatest miracle, considering their numbers and the way enemies were arrayed against Him.  St. Jerome opined that something of His divine authority must have shined forth in that moment which could not be withstood.

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