St. Ambrose: silent reader, admired by St. Augustine

St. Ambrose of MilanToday’s first entry in the Martyrologium Romanum says:

1. Memoria sancti Ambrosii, episcopi Mediolanensis et Ecclesiae doctoris, qui pridie Nonas aprilis in Domino obdormivit, sed hac die potissimum colitur, qua celebrem sedem adhuc catechumenus gubernandam suscepit, cum civitatis praefecturae officio fungebatur.  Verus pastor et doctor fidelium, maxime in omnes caritatem exercuit, libertatem Ecclesiae ac rectae fidei doctrinam adversus arianos strenue defendit et commentariis hymnisque concinendis populum pie catechizavit.

How about you readers providing your own flawless yet elegant rendering?

St. Ambrose of Milan (+4 April 397), a titanic figure of the late 4th century who changed the shape of Church and State relations for a thousand years, who brought much of the wisdom of Greek writings to the West, and who helped to bring St. Augustine of Hippo into the fold.

Would that we might see his like again in the great capitals of the world.

There are too many interesting things about Ambrose for them all to be shared here, but we have space for a couple.

There is a famous moment recounted by St. Augustine in his Confessions (Bk VI) about visiting St. Ambrose.

Augustine walked into the room where Ambrose was sitting and saw him staring at a book! Ambrose was reading and not even moving his lips!

Augustine was so impressed by this that slipped silently out of the room without saying anything to Ambrose, lest he disturb him.

Augustine was very impressed by Ambrose and had wanted to talk to him about various problems and doubts. Because of all the people pressing around Ambrose, who was tremendously important and sought after, Augustine was never able to get near him in public.

Let’s read the text and hear about it from Augustine himself!

Remember, at this point Augustine is a hot property in Milan and not yet Christian, though interiorly twisting on the spikes of difficult doubts and problems.

Augustine wasn’t really praying yet and he he still was considering things in very worldly terms.

6,3. Nor had I come yet to groan in my prayers that thou wouldst help me. My mind was wholly intent on knowledge and eager for disputation. Ambrose himself I esteemed a happy man, as the world counted happiness, because great personages held him in honor. Only his celibacy appeared to me a painful burden. [Augustine was not chaste at the time and he was angling for a politically favorable marriage.] But what hope he cherished, what struggles he had against the temptations that beset his high station, what solace in adversity, and what savory joys thy bread possessed for the hidden mouth of his heart when feeding on it, I could neither conjecture nor experience.

Nor did [Ambrose] know my own frustrations, nor the pit of my danger. For I could not request of him what I wanted as I wanted it, because I was debarred from hearing and speaking to him by crowds of busy people to whose infirmities he devoted himself. And when he was not engaged with them—which was never for long at a time—he was either refreshing his body with necessary food or his mind with reading.

Now, as he read, his eyes glanced over the pages and his heart searched out the sense, but his voice and tongue were silent. Often when we came to his room—for no one was forbidden to enter, nor was it his custom that the arrival of visitors should be announced to him—we would see him thus reading to himself. After we had sat for a long time in silence—for who would dare interrupt one so intent?—we would then depart, realizing that he was unwilling to be distracted in the little time he could gain for the recruiting of his mind, free from the clamor of other men’s business. Perhaps he was fearful lest, if the author he was studying should express himself vaguely, some doubtful and attentive hearer would ask him to expound it or discuss some of the more abstruse questions, so that he could not get over as much material as he wished, if his time was occupied with others. And even a truer reason for his reading to himself might have been the care for preserving his voice, which was very easily weakened. Whatever his motive was in so doing, it was doubtless, in such a man, a good one.

Amazing stuff there.

Keep in mind that, i the ancient world, books were rare. If you had a book, you were probably wealthy. If you got your hands on a book, you had to remember what you read because you might not ever see that particular book again. There would be public readings of books so that more people could hear them. People had to read aloud, actually, to help their memory. The more senses you could involve, the easier it was to remember the material. This holds true today! But, in the ancient world, everyone who read, read aloud.

Notice that Augustine, writing many years after the scene he recounts, and now a bishops himself, understands what it is to be entirely lacking in free time. He wonders if Ambrose read quietly so that the intellectually hungry people around him wouldn’t ask him to explain what he was reading, thus cutting short his own time for study. Also, Augustine himself later in life suffered from having a very weakened voice. In his sermons we actually hear him saying once in a while to the crowd that they had to stop making so much noise in their reactions to him, because his voice to too weak to shout over them! At any rate, Augustine puts a positive spin on what Ambrose did.

Busy tired clergymen understand each other.

Posted in Saints: Stories & Symbols | Tagged ,
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OLDIE PODCAzT: St. Ambrose and pro-abortion Catholic politicians

Some time ago I made a PODCAzT about St. Ambrose and pro-abortion Catholic politicians.

054 08-04-29 Pro-Abortion Politicians and Communion; St. Ambrose and Emperor Theodosius

Also on Ambrose:

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, Linking Back, PODCAzT, The future and our choices |
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Wed 8 Dec: Holy Day of OBLIGATION. Have a plan!

Also, 8 December is, I believe, a Holy Day of Obligation in most places.  It is the Feast/Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception.

Have you made a plan to go to Mass?

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged
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For priests who must sing upcoming TLMs

Reminder to priests who may have to sing a TLM on Sundays and on the feast on Wednesday.

PRAYERCAzTs are available.

011 07-12-03 Feast of the Immaculate Conception
012 07-12-04 2nd Sunday of Advent
013 07-12-12 “Gaudete” Sunday, the 3rd Sunday of Advent
014 07-12-22 4th Sunday of Advent
015 07-12-24 3 Masses of Christmas
030 10-12-23 The 3 tones of the Christmas Preface

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, PRAYERCAzT: What Does The (Latin) Prayer Really Sound L |
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Pont. Comm. “Ecclesia Dei” intervenes in Croatia

It was apparent not long after 7 July 2007, when Summorum Pontificum was issued, that suddenly all sorts of bishops became intensely interested in implementing the defunct Ecclesia dei adflicta.

They right away began talking about “giving permission” and “granting celebrations”, etc.   The problem is that Summorum Pontificum lifted most of that burden from the already tired shoulders of bishops and gave it instead to those so-esteemed collaborators, pastors of parishes, rectors, etc.

There are still places where people ask for celebrations and are denied, not just because the priest might not be interested (in those cases the bishop is required to help them positively). Bishops have ways to make sure priests knuckle under, even when the law isn’t on their side.

His dictis

Our friends at Rorate have posted something quite interesting.

Monday, December 06, 2010
The PCED intervenes in Croatia

There is apparently, at present, not a single public Mass according to the preconciliar Roman Missal in Croatia, either in Latin or in Slavonic (the “Slav-Latin” or “Glagolitic Rite” in use in parts of the former Yugoslavia — including in Croatia — from time immemorial until the 1960’s), and it’s not due to lack of interest among the laity. Since 2008, various lay faithful of Zagreb, Croatia have been pressing for the application of Summorum Pontificum in their archdiocese, apparently to no avail. The complete correspondence of the Traditionalists of Zagreb with the archdiocesan officials and with the PCED can be found here (with English translations). The October 28, 2009 letter from the Archdiocese of Zagreb denying the request for a TLM of thirty faithful from 20 parishes is a particularly instructive example of the art of using the text of Summorum Pontificum in order to obscure its obvious meaning and to frustrate its implementation.

Today, the Croatian blog Toma Blizanac has published the following letter from the PCED:

Pontificia Commissio “Ecclesia Dei”

N. —
Vatican City, 25 November 2010

Dear Mr. —,

This Pontifical Commission would like to thank you for your kind letter of 8 November 2010.

This Pontifical Commission is able to inform you that after contacting His Eminence Josip Cardinal Bozanić, it has received the assurance of His Eminence that the Holy Mass in the Extraordinary Form will be celebrated in one of the churches in Zagreb.

With every good wish, I remain

Sincerely yours in Christ,
Rev. Mons. Guido Pozzo
Secretary

If in Croatia… why not where you are?

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Biased Media Coverage, Brick by Brick, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM |
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REVIEW: Wyoming Catholic College Christmas Music CD

Wyoming Catholic CollegeI had a note from the nice folks at Wyoming Catholic College – a great place.   They have produced their second CD of Christmas Music.

It is very good!  There are some unconventional tunes on this disk.  It includes some medieval music also.  That seems appropriate for a school where student study according to the Trivium and Quadrivium.

Here is a sample track they sent me.  I think I will add it to the RADIO SABINA playlist.

This CD would make a good stocking stuffer and it would give support to a good Catholic school in Wyoming.

And be sure to look at their online VIDEO!

Speaking of Wyoming…

[CUE MUSIC]

Mystic MonkWhen you’ve had a long day trying to come up with small gifts to give friends and perhaps colleagues and coworkers, or you just need extras for those stockings and “secret Santas”, how about listening to music from the students at Wyoming Catholic College while sipping some Mystic Monk Coffee?

HEY WAIT… packs of Mystic Monk Coffee can be nice gifts too, come to think of it!

They even have large, 5 pound bags.

There are some flashy names for some of this stuff, by the way.  Jingle Bell Joy… Shepherd’s Watch…

Hmmmm…. there is no Fr. Z Blend.  Why is there no Fr. Z Blend?   Oh well.  I think it would have to involve Sumatra and a very dark roasted Colombian.   And they need a half-caff version now.  Perhaps some pun on the Z and sleep thing… dunno.  You could drink it from a WDTPRS mug! But I digress.  See?  I can double up in commercials too!

If you are looking for gift ideas, if you want to help some monks, if you want to refresh your coffee supply, try Mystic Monk Coffee.

It’s swell!

Posted in Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool, Lighter fare, REVIEWS | Tagged
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NCFishwrap has a new columnist! Prepared to be astounded.

NCFishwrap has a new weekly columnist. 

No, it is not I.  I haven’t been invited.  Would I accep…. no.. no… don’t go there.

We have seen her before here, when she wrote a deeply conflicted piece begging for the affirmation of men in Rome even while pouring bile on them.

Remember Jamie Manson?  She has the coveted MDiv degree fropom Yale, has been working for Presbyterians at Jan Hus Presbyterian Church in New York City, and has been a board member of the Women’s Ordination Conference.

Jamie has some breathtaking  insights for Archbishop Dolan, sure to bring us all up in our tracks!  I predict that the Archbishop will immediately instruct the USCCB to support unnatural “marriage”, the ordination of women, and forget about that whole abortion thing in Obamacare.  Oh yes,… he’ll sell the property of the Archdiocese too.

My emphases and comments.

To attract youth, bishops must admit vulnerabilities
by Jamie L Manson on Dec. 06, 2010

“It’s not like we’re in a crisis; it’s not like all of a sudden we need some daring new initiatives,” Archbishop Timothy Dolan of New York declared during his acceptance speech following his stunning election as president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops.

The archbishop was thanking God for the work of his soon-to-be predecessor, Cardinal Francis George of Chicago, [Get this…] whose strict opposition to health care reform [“strict”! Oooo…] – because it might expand financing for abortion — and gay marriage Dolan promised to uphold. [But is that true?  Is Card. George against health care reform?  The USCCB?  I’m not.  I don’t think they are either.  I think, however, that health care reform which provides taxpayer money for abortions is unacceptable.  That is not the same thing as being against health care reform.  But from the onset the writer is poisoning your view of Archbp. Dolan, bishops in general, with loaded words and untruths.]

But just days later Dolan gave an interview to The New York Times admitting his concern that only half of young Catholics marry in the church and that weekly Mass attendance has dropped to about 35 percent — down from its peak of 78 percent in the 1960s. [Still better than, say Holland, where they do some of the things that Jamie likes.]

He lamented that the throngs of people on Fifth Avenue are not waiting to get into New York’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral, but rather, the neighboring Abercrombie and Fitch store. [I have something to say about that, too.]

“Wow,” Dolan sighed, “there’s no line of people waiting to get into St. Patrick’s Cathedral, and the treasure in there is of eternal value. What can I do to help our great people appreciate that tradition?”  [Well… Your Excellency… how about doing something that young people are interested in?  We can start with liturgy.  First, go visit some parishes where the older form of Mass is celebrated and look at all the young families.  Then extrapolate to the Cathedral’s liturgical practices.  Do something spectacular with the resources of the Cathedral liturgically.]

I wonder how often the archbishop and his fellow hierarchs [Again, note the word choice.  They are not “bishops” or “shepherds” for her.  She seems to not have a Catholic sense about the role of successors of the apostles.  For her, this is a matter of “hierarchy”.   Keep in mind that in these women’s ordination groups, there are power structures.  They will eventually start excommunicating each other.  I’ll make popcorn.] stop to ask what it is about the tradition that makes it great. What aspects of it would speak to the hearts of young adults? [Legit questions.  What will Jamie’s answers be?  Can you predict without looking at the next bit?]

Is it the continued shaming of gays and lesbians? Or is it the mandate to feed, clothe, shelter, and comfort the poor[Yes, you got it.  Let’s be clear about a couple things.  The Church does not shame homosexuals.  Homosexuals shame themselves when they engage in immoral acts.  The Church is as open and welcoming to homosexuals as to any other group of broken sinners (read=everyone).  Also, the writer seems to think – and this is a common liberal tactic – that when things aren’t going her way, that means that “hierarchs” are doing one thing instead of another.  The fact is, we can do many things at the same time.  It is possible to be consistent about the Church’s teaching on the immorality of homosexual acts (which seems to be her deep concern) and also work for the poor.  Look around in dioceses and see what the Catholic Church is doing for the poor, or in poor countries.  No, this is just an empty husk of an argument.] Is it the legacy of fighting for a just wage and adequate health benefits for all laborers?

[CUE MUSIC…

Arise ye pris’ners of starvation
Arise ye wretched of the earth
For justice thunders condemnation
A better world’s in birth!
No more tradition’s chains shall bind us
Arise, ye slaves, no more in thrall;
The earth shall rise on new foundations
We have been naught we shall be all.
]

Is it the fixation on contraception (which has driven more than one couple away from the Pre-Cana process)? Or is it the life-giving, mystical tradition of meditation and prayer[HUH?  But note the juxtapostion of contraception (much of which is really abortifacient) and “life-giving”.  But our writer is on a role now.  She is heavily into call-and-response!]

Is it the rigid, unjustifiable exclusion of women from ordained leadership? [Remember: this is the NCR’s position.  This is why bishops should rethink their use of “Catholic” in their title. But now we get the fruits of her coveted Yale MDiv degree!] Or is it the sacramental tradition that says that all finite things in nature are capable of revealing transcendent, eternal meanings? [You see, that is supposed to convince you that women should be ordained.  All finite things can “reveal… meanings”, after all.  But wait! There’s more…]

Does the archbishop really not recognize that church attendance was at its peak when the institution made its greatest effort to engage with spiritual needs and moral dilemmas of the modern world? [?!?  I think she means when the Spirit of Vatican II was at work.  I’m not sure.] Does he really not see the failing relationship between young adults and Catholicism as a crisis[And for the writer the fault must lie with Catholicism.  And now we head into the ad hominem section, probably an easy exercise, since Dolan is, after, a man.]

In the photo accompanying his interview Dolan dons his full cassock, [As opposed to the more acceptable “partial cassock”?] seated in a well-appointed parlor [Liberals think their opponents should have only junk and live like dogs.  This is only a technique of polemic, of course.] of his residence located on the poshest stretch of Madison Avenue. Mahogany [Ooooo!] doors highlight the backdrop and a priceless Persian rug [priceless?] lines the floor. Dolan seems to be comfortable surrounded by many of the same the luxuries sought by many of those frantically shopping in the street below. [This was Judas’s argument too, wasn’t it?  Of course, if he lived like a sewer-rat, he would be accused of bringing down the image of the archbishop.  He would be ridiculed for spending time begging for change for a sandwich instead of running the archdiocese, which is, after all, his job.]

For younger generations, image communicates everything. If they see a religious leader living a detached life [?!? “detached life”?  Are we talking about the same Timothy Dolan here?  Timothy Dolan Archbishop of New York?  Detached?  ROFL! ] on the elite East Side of Manhattan, where is the motivation for them to stop storing up treasures on Fifth Avenue and seek instead the treasures in Catholic doctrine?

[Behold them seated in their glory
The kings of mine and rail and soil!
What have you read in all their story,
But how they plundered toil?
Fruits of the workers’ toil are buried
In strongholds of the idle few
In working for their restitution
The men will only claim their due.]

Young Catholics’ knowledge of their faith may be waning, but their images of Jesus are likely clear and consistent[I think Jamie might be living in a dream world.  Do young people have an “image of Jesus”?  I wonder.]

To them, Jesus was born in a stable and was probably poor for most of his adult life. [Or maybe He was a pretty good carpenter and made a good living, like Joseph before Him.] He fed the hungry and healed the sick. [It helps when you are GOD and can multiply loaves and cause miraculous catches.  BTW… Peter probably cashed in on that miraculous catch.  On the other hand, people with nothing don’t feed the poor.  You have to have something before you can give it.] He showed compassion to outcasts and asked us to love one another as God loves us. These are the ideals that young adults expect religious leaders to try to honor.  [And… Catholic bishops… don’t?… what]

[And if you thought this was silly before… ] On their way to Abercrombie, most young Catholics surely passed dozens of homeless men and women — many of them mentally ill or addicted — huddled on sidewalks or napping in the corner of subway cars. Were these young folks to have seen Dolan stopping to chat with a panhandler or hand out sandwiches to someone resting on the sidewalk, he might have done the nearly impossible: he might have captured the undivided attention of young, frenzied shoppers. He also would have embodied one of [get this…] the eternal treasures of the tradition.

[We toilers from all fields united
Join hand in hand with all who work;
The earth belongs to us, the workers,
No room here for the shirk.
How many on our flesh have fattened!
But if the norsome birds of prey
Shall vanish from the sky some morning
The blessed sunlight then will stay.]

But young people trust the images they see. If the institutional church [Not like her church. ] identifies itself regularly with being anti-gay, anti-woman, and anti-sex, how many young people will enter a cathedral expecting to have their questions and worries heard by a compassionate, humble minister? How many will feel genuinely welcome in the cathedral without the dread of feeling judged and shamed? [I can’t help but wonder what lies behind that statement… for the writer.]

[Isn’t this finished yet?] The archbishop is right. There is nothing of eternal value in any retail store. But without spiritual leadership that is willing to engage … [blahblahblah]

[Refrain:
‘Tis the final conflict
Let each stand in his place
The International Union
Shall be the human race.]

Yes, folks.  NCR has a new weekly columnist.

Posted in Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , ,
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Austrian MP tells it like he sees it. KABLAM!

Here is an amazing piece of video from the Austrian Parliament.

Austrian MP Ewald Stadler speaks to the position of the Turkish Ambassador and tells off some of his colleagues.

During this, he addresses the lack of outrage when a Catholic Archbishop, Luigi Padovese, was killed in Turkey and mentions the priests who have been killed.

I wonder if this fellow wouldn’t be open to ordination and elevation to some Austrian see.

But… who is this guy, Ewald Stadler?  His wikipedia entry states:

[H]e was close to the Catholic traditionalist movement the Society of St. Pius X. Stadler is a member of the Catholic lay association Compagnia di Santa Maria della Mercede, affiliated with the Mercedarian order.

Well!  Not an indifferent Catholic, he.

There are subtitles if you can’t follow the (Austrian-accented) German.

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, pray for us.

Posted in The Drill, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged , , ,
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QUAERITUR: cutting back confession hours before Christmas

From a reader:

In the parish where I presently reside, it was announced today that the normal two hours of confessions heard on Saturdays, would be only one hour next week, and no more Saturday confessions before Christmas.

The three priests will hold a general confession service one afternoon next week. Is this normal?

Normal for what?  Normal for the 80’s perhaps.

Look.   I don’t know what the situation is at that parish.  It could be that the priests are in ill health.  It could be that they have many parishes to cover.  There could be good reasons for this.

However, it just doesn’t seem right.

If there are Masses, perhaps the priests could hear before Masses.

No more Saturday confessions before Christmas?

That strikes me as odd… but again, there could be a reason.

If you can’t find a good explanation from the pastor, why not ask your bishop what he thinks?

Posted in ASK FATHER Question Box | Tagged ,
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The Feeder Feed: new old birds

I am seeing a few old friends at the feeder right now.   It is getting cold out there, so birds who are usually off look elsewhere are coming around.  Also, I now have a heated bird bath!   And they drink!  There isn’t a lot of snow at the moment, but it has been well under freezing for a long time.  Birds need water sources.

First, high drama.  This woodpecker and a dove are not getting along.  GO WOODPECKER!

The woodpecker won.

I don’t seem to be able to draw in many Cardinals, despite the fact that there is good cover here and the food they like.  But this fellow comes fairly regularly.

Another view of its tuft.

TwitterPine Siskins have returned.

Mr. Nuthatch is living up to its name.

But here is a different nuthatch… Red-breasted Nuthatch!  I see this loner rarely.  But today he has been around pretty often.  Must be hungry…. of a newcomer, perhaps.

And my favorite Chickadees are abundant and firmly in control.

Thanks to all of you who have made a donation to help feed the birds.  They eat from donations.

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