” After a 16 year absence I returned to the Sacrament of Holy Confession this evening.”

From a reader in my email:

Message:

Dear Fr. Z,
My sincere thanks and gratitude to you for your ministry. After a 16 year absence I returned to the Sacrament of Holy Confession for the first time this evening. After some gentle encouragement from my husband, and in large part due to your frequent discussion of the Holy Sacrament on your blog, I finally found the strength to return. At first I was a little afraid because most of the stations they had set up were face to face – I almost lost my nerve, but your words echoed in my mind – “Just do it!” and I found myself face to face with the most gentle and compassionate priest I could have ever hoped for – the good Lord knew exactly what I needed and provided it for me abundantly. I was able to let go of so many of the terrible sins that had weighed me down for years and am filled with JOY knowing that this Easter I will be able to receive Holy Communion in a state of grace and with my husband. Thank you, Father, you have helped to change my life and strengthen my faith in untold ways. May God bless and keep you always. You are in my prayers.

Everyone… please go to confession.

Fathers… please hear confessions.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, GO TO CONFESSION, HONORED GUESTS, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , ,
55 Comments

Z-Cam and RADIO SPTDV

Father Z TV is on today, live from the Steam Pipe Trunk Distribution Venue.

If ads pop up, I don’t control them.

In the playlist right now are some chants, the Rosary (Sorrowful) in Latin, a couple versions of the Stations of the Cross.

I may tinker with it during the day.  FWIW.  I’d like to add back in another cam or two and try to get the video effects going once more.

Posted in The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged ,
6 Comments

Martyrdom and you.

Over at the National Catholic Register, Matthew Archbold has this sobering observation:

Preparing my Children for Martyrdom

I was looking at my children in Mass yesterday and a horrifying thought occurred to me. If I do my job well as a parent, my children may end up persecuted and/or in jail. That may be the best I can hope for at this point in 21st century America.
I prayed that their faith would be strong enough to resist a pro-death culture, a secular academia, an antagonistic media, and the pressure of a government out to separate faith from action.
Secularism isn’t just on the march, it’s positively doing a jig.
I’m not talking about troubled times ahead for my grandchildren’s children in some possible future. I’m talking about my kids. So revolutionary have been the recent changes in America that defending life, liberty, and the pursuit of holiness could very well lead to persecution in the very near future.
Are you in doubt?
In recent years:

[…]

You parents with children at home… what do you think of this?

I have often mentioned that we should all take care to be at least minimally prepared to make a move if we have to. I have also mentioned that I have been trying to get my head into a mental place wherein I may be able to deal with the circumstances of… well… let’s just say… being hunted down. While that may be the dimmest view of what is around the corner, I can’t help but think that things are -at the very least – changing really fast, and not in a good way.  Life as we know it is … not really as we knew it.  Is it?

And so, the question of martyrdom looms.

Each of us may be called on to give witness that brings suffering.

Posted in Cri de Coeur, Liberals, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, TEOTWAWKI, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged
169 Comments

New experiments show that the Shroud dates to 1st century AD

From Vatican Insider:

New experiments on Shroud show it’s not medieval

ANDREA TORNIELLI
romE

New scientific experiments carried out at the University of Padua have apparently confirmed that the Shroud Turin can be dated back to the 1st century AD. This makes its compatible with the tradition which claims that the cloth with the image of the crucified man imprinted on it is the very one Jesus’ body was wrapped in when he was taken off the cross. The news will be published in a book by Giulio Fanti, professor of mechanical and thermal measurement at the University of Padua’s Engineering Faculty, and journalist Saverio Gaeta, out tomorrow. “Il Mistero della Sindone” (The Mystery of the Shroud) is edited by Rizzoli (240 pp, 18 Euro).

[…]

Read the rest there.

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged
37 Comments

PARIS: Notre Dame gets new bells for her 850th birthday – video

We Catholics love our bells.  Bells are, traditionally, not just blessed but “baptized”.  They are given names as well.

From The History Blog:

Notre Dame gets new bells for her 850th birthday

Notre Dame de Paris, the Gothic cathedral that is one of the most famous churches in the world, turns 850 years old this year and has gotten a new set of nine bells for a birthday present. The new bells range in size from 767 kilos (1691 lbs) to 1.91 tons. They were blessed in a ceremony at the cathedral on February 2nd (see this YouTube for the full ceremony; the top comment lists the times they were rung), but since they were lined up in the nave, their rings were only heard individually when their clappers were struck against the sides by hand. On Palm Sunday, the new bells rang together with the one surviving old one in all their glory for the first time.

Despite its glamour and celebrity, Notre Dame has been saddled with inferior bells since the French Revolution took down the cathedral’s 20 bells in 1791 and 1792, melted 19 of them down to make cannon. Only one survived the Terror: Emmanuel, the great 13-ton bourdon (the lowest and largest of the bells) in the South Tower. It was first installed in 1685 and its rich deep notes marked the hours of the day and the great events of French history like the coronation of kings and, since Napoleon had it rehung in 1802, the liberation of Paris on August 24th, 1944.
[…]

Read the rest there.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

A link to the site of Notre-Dame de Paris.

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged ,
12 Comments

TRADS ON FIRE! Young men getting the job done and implementing a TLM in a parish.

Here is a good Brick By Brick story.

A while back I posted a note to traditional Catholics.  This is our time to push forward and use the provisions of Summorum Pontificum and advance the vision of Benedict XVI.  I urge you to go read that post.

On that note, I received this from a reader:

Dear Father Z,
Thanks for all you do. I read your blog all the time, but never post in comments. I was reading your “Dear Trads” post – it got me all fired up…
Recently we were able to start up an EF Mass at our parish, Our Lady of Victory in State College, PA (Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown). This is a pretty liberal diocese, and we don’t have much support for this from the pastor OR bishop. However, our pastor agreed to it as long as we (a group of young men, I am the oldest at 34) did all the work. [Excellent.]
After months of planning, we have been able to start a Missa Cantata on the first Saturday of each month at 7pm (first Mass was in January 2013). We have had a pretty good turnout at around 150 (our parish has thousands…) for the first 3 Masses. As our church was built in late 1969 and features an altar pushed so far forward that it cannot be accessed from the front, one of our altar boys, for his Eagle Scout project, built a 3 step platform so we could access the altar ad orientem – with the exception of the past 3 months, the Old Mass has NEVER been celebrated in that church. Also, we are importing a priest from 2 hours away for the Mass, and have a 6-8 member (give or take) all male schola cantorum. Just wanted to let people know that it is possible to introduce the EF in their parishes as long as they are willing to put in the hard work. We were wondering if you might possibly do a blog post for the “brick by brick” file? [Sure!]

The info for the Mass: 7pm on the 1st Saturday of every month, Our Lady of Victory Catholic Church, 820 Westerly Parkway, State College, PA If you would like any other info, please email me – I know you are very busy, and again, thanks for all you do with this blog – it has helped me learn so much about the Faith.
Sincerely yours in Christ,

PS – we do have some pics from the second Mass (Candlemas – complete with Procession!) if you are interested…

No whiny defeatism.  Get to work.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Benedict XVI, Brick by Brick, HONORED GUESTS, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
23 Comments

A new blog by faithful Catholic women: Catholic Women Rising

There is a new blog by Catholic women who are faithful to the Church’s teachings: Catholic Women Rising

The manifesto:

We the undersigned

This blog has been set up as a place where faithful practicing Catholic women may register their support for Catholic doctrine regarding women, in particular issues relating to sexuality, contraception, abortion, marriage and the male priesthood.

It is for women who accept that the teaching of the Catholic Church was revealed to us by Jesus Christ and handed down by the apostles, expressed in sacred scripture and tradition and is therefore not able to be modified or deleted. This is a place where women can joyfully testify to the freedom from oppression that accompanies an authentic God-given expression of sexuality and chastity.

If you agree with the statement below, please register your support in the comments box.

I am a faithful practicing Roman Catholic woman, who attends Mass at least once a week and who believes in and practices the Church’s teachings, specifically pertaining to matters on sexuality, contraception, abortion, marriage and the ordination of women. I believe that the Roman Catholic Church is sympathetic to and representative of the needs and concerns of women and their children, wherever they may be in the world. I would like to offer our new Pope Francis, my prayers and support and thank him for his continued protection and support of mothers and their unborn children. I fully endorse Church doctrine in relation to women’s issues. 

[…]

Read the rest there.

The Catholic Herald of the UK (the best Catholic weekly in the UK) hails this blog as supporting a “New Feminism”.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged ,
16 Comments

Robert Spencer on Pope Francis and “dialogue” with Islam

Pope Francis has openly expressed desire for dialogue with Islam. HERE.

Here is a thought provoking piece from Robert Spencer about dialogue with Islam:

Pope Francis: “Intensify” Catholic “dialogue” with Islam

I am all for dialogue between Muslims and Christians when it is honest and not based on false pretenses. [That can be said for all interreligious dialogue and ecumenical dialogue.] There doesn’t seem to be any use to dialogue that ignores difficulties and points of disagreement rather than confronting them. They won’t go away if ignored. I discuss the genuine prospects for dialogue and its pitfalls at length in my book Not Peace But A Sword, which will be published next week by Catholic Answers.  [I’m putting that on my wish list.]

click

One thing that must be recognized is that for many Muslim spokesmen and leaders, dialogue with adherents of other religions is simply a proselytizing mechanism designed to convert the “dialogue” partner to Islam, as the Muslim Brotherhood theorist Sayyid Qutb explained: “The chasm between Islam and Jahiliyyah [the society of unbelievers] is great, and a bridge is not to be built across it so that the people on the two sides may mix with each other, but only so that the people of Jahiliyyah may come over to Islam.” [Of course, from a Catholic perspective, do we not want to convert the whole world?]

In line with this, 138 Muslim scholars wrote to Pope Benedict XVI, inviting him to dialogue. The title of the document they sent to him was A Common Word Between Us and You. [NB] Reading the entire Qur’anic verse from which the phrase “a common word between us and you” was taken makes the Common Word initiative’s agenda clear: “Say: ‘People of the Book! Come now to a word common between us and you, that we serve none but God, and that we associate not aught with Him, and do not some of us take others as Lords, apart from God.’ And if they turn their backs, say: ‘Bear witness that we are Muslims’” (3:64). Since Muslims consider the Christian confession of the divinity of Christ to be an unacceptable association of a partner with God, this verse is saying that the “common word” that Muslims and the People of the Book should agree on is that Christians should discard one of the central tenets of their faith and essentially become Muslims. Not a promising basis for an honest and mutually respectful dialogue of equals.

“‘Intensify’ dialogue with Islam: Pope to Roman Catholic Church,” from PTI, March 22 (thanks to Milad):

Vatican City: Pope Francis on Friday called for the Roman Catholic Church to “intensify” its dialogue with Islam, echoing hopes in the Muslim world for better ties with the Vatican during his reign.
“It is important to intensify dialogue among the various religions and I am thinking particularly of dialogue with Islam,” the new pontiff said in an address to foreign ambassadors at the Vatican.
Francis’s predecessor Benedict XVI was seen by some Muslim leaders as hostile to Islam and the change at the top had been welcomed by the 57-member Organisation of Islamic Cooperation and Al-Azhar, Sunni Islam’s highest seat of learning. Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu, head of the Saudi-based OIC, said earlier this month that he hoped “the relationship between Islam and Christianity will regain its cordiality and sincere friendship”.
Mahmud Azab, adviser for inter-faith affairs to Al-Azhar imam Ahmed al-Tayyeb in Cairo, also told AFP earlier, “As soon as a new policy emerges, we will resume the dialogue with the Vatican“. Al-Azhar broke off ties in 2011 after Benedict called for the protection of Christian minorities following a suicide bombing at a church in Egypt.

So apparently the new policy that Azab wants is for the pope never to criticize the Muslim persecution of Christians. Then we’ll all be great friends — and what’s a few burnt churches and dead bodies when we’re getting on so famously?

Benedict was also heavily criticised early in his reign when he recounted a Byzantine emperor’s description of the Muslim Prophet Mohammed as a warmonger who spread evil teachings.

In his address on Friday, Francis also called for the Church to dialogue more with non-believers — returning to an effort begun during Benedict’s reign amid rising secularism in the Western world.

“It is also important to intensify outreach to non-believers so that the differences which divide and hurt us may never prevail but rather the desire to build true links of friendship,” he said.

True friendship cannot be built on false pretenses.

Posted in Francis, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , ,
101 Comments

ARMENIA: Islamic rebels demand $250,000 for kidnapped Catholic priest

From Public Radio of Armenia:

Rebels demand $250,000 for the kidnapped Armenian Catholic Priest

A world wide appeal has been initiated by the Bishop Marayati, Armenian Catholic, of Aleppo for the release of Fr Michael Kayyal who was kidnapped on 9th February 2013 by an Islamic rebel group located some 30 kilometres from the above-mentioned city.

The rebels have made contact with the Archbishop and informed him to mediate with the Syrian authorities with the aim of securing the release of 15 rebel fighters from Syrian prisons. The rebels also made financial demands to the tune of 15,000,000 million Syrian pounds ($250,000 approx).

On February 20, 2013 the rebels allowed Fr Michael to contact his mother for only one minute to prove that he is still alive.

The Armenian Catholic Community of Aleppo urges everyone to forward the feelings to the French and Russian Foreign Ministries and the following Facebook page HERE.

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, intercede for Fr. Kayyal!

 

Posted in Mail from priests, Modern Martyrs, Priests and Priesthood, Religious Liberty, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged , , ,
9 Comments

Of Holy Thursday and the foot-washing rite: problems – solutions

Dr. Peters at In The Light Of The Law, a blog on matters canonical, has this to day.  He doesn’t have an open combox (which I quietly envy sometimes), so we can have the foot-fight food-fight over here.

The annual Lenten foot-fight

The annual Lenten foot-fight is almost upon us. Again.

May I suggest that discussion of this matter begin with what canon and liturgical law actually say (and don’t say) about the Mandatum rite, and that serious attention be given, if not this year then next, to eliminating this ill-conceived and merely optional rite from parish liturgies altogether and instead making it a powerful part of the bishop’s Chrism Mass?

First, let it be remembered that the foot-washing thing during Holy Thursday’s Mass of the Last Supper is an OPTION.  Many problems (and violations of law and good taste and common sense) could be avoided by choosing NOT to do it.  All manner of absurdities are inflicted on God’s people because of this option.

Second, let it be remember that the Church’s legislation allows for the washing of the feet of only men.  MEN = VIRI = MEN.  Not manish women or any other critter.  Even if some claim to have received permission to wash the feet of women, and even if the claims were true, those permissions would in no way change the law for the rest of the world.  Period.  Furthermore, I have never seen a letter or a copy of a letter from the Congregation in Rome granting such a permission.  I doubt anyone else has either.

Third, the rite of washing of the feet of men harks to Christ washing the feet of the Apostles… not just the feet of anyone out there in the highways and byways.

Finally, Dr. Peters would like to see this rite moved out of the evening Mass of the Lord’s Supper and into the Holy Thursday Chrism Mass.  An interesting idea.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged , ,
113 Comments