Daily Rome Shot 1075

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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.

White can mate in 3.

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

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Nice people! Great service!

In Zagreb, Fabiano won the Rapid portion and now they are on to blitz. My guy Wesley is in 2nd but is 3 points behind… a big margin.

In about 15 minutes, I am off to OTB, late but late is better than never. My expectations are low, but if you learn something, you win.

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Daily (not) Rome Shot 1074

From a friend at Lago di Garda.

Welcome registrant:

claddah76

Whenever I see the word “claddah” I think of an evening many moons ago when at a little dive in St. Paul I went to hear an Irish band with an unknown singer named Enya.

Black to move and mate in…. 5.

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

The third event of the 2024 Grand Chess Tour is underway in Zagreb, Croatia, the SuperUnited Rapid & Blitz. Format: 9 rounds of rapid, followed by 18 rounds of blitz. Fabiano Caruana is in 1st and my guy Wesley So is in 2nd. However, as I write, action is underway and I am on the road, typing in an airline lounge.

When you are travelling, you should wash your hands. But, heck, you should do that anyway, right?

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My View For Awhile: Domum

The last phase of the St Paul Center priests conference began this morning at 0500.

If you have to stay in a hotel near PIT chose the Hilton Garden not the Marriott.

In PIT there is a lot of construction for a new terminal. After checking in I was sent outside again for an alternate TSA. Pre check really helped. The regular line was enormous. Be advised.

One of the highlights was seeing the nearly vibrating excitement of a little boy seeing the T-Rex. I was reminded not only of my own puerile interest in dinosaurs but also the hilarious SNL video which explored the incontrovertible truth that men think of Ancient Rome at least 10 times a day. … … Probably more to be honest.

I wonder if I can find it while using my phone to post this. I’ll be right back.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

There!

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Archbp. Cordileone writes in favor of the Traditional Latin Mass, Vetus Ordo

At the National Catholic Register, His Excellency Salvatore Cordileone, Archbishop of San Francisco, has penned a piece in defense not only of the Vetus Ordo, but of the people who desire it.  This is important.   The attacks on the Vetus Ordo are, yes, against the rite of Mass itself, but they stem also in large part for the antipathy help by some who have their hands on the gears of power for the people who desire the traditional forms.  They don’t like the people.  It is to the point that, as we heard lately from key players against the Vetus, such as Andrea Grillo and someone in the Dicastery with whom Card. Müller spoke recently, they see those who desire tradition as being rather thick and, indeed, perhaps sick in the head.

I won’t reproduce Archbp. Cordileone’s piece here, but here are some tastes.  BTW… he starts with the image of how people came together when Notre-Dame of Paris burned.  As I write, I read that the spire of the Notre-Dame in Rouen is burning.  (Coincidence?)  The Archbishop draws a comparison to how diverse groups came unified when Notre Dame burned and now how various people have unified in the UK to sign a letter in favor of preserving the TLM.   Why?  Because, inter alia, it is beautiful.

With my emphases he wrote:

[…]

I am concerned that a skewed impression of lovers of the Latin Mass has taken hold due to a few extremists on the internet. As this petition, and previous petitions, demonstrate, the Latin Mass has a curiously inclusive appeal.

Most who attend the Latin Mass also attend the Novus Ordo (known colloquially as the Mass of Vatican II). They know that to be Catholic means we must remain inside the barque of Peter, however stormy the seas. They plead not against the new Mass but for the form they love, that feeds and inspires them — indeed, to the point that they constitute a visible proportion of those who go on to become creators of new art and beauty in which the world shares and celebrates. This is why the Latin Mass has attracted the support of nonbelievers who understand its crucial role in the creation of Western civilization.

The signers of the most recent petition include many great classical musicians — singers, pianists, cellists, conductors and including, of course, Sir James MacMillan, who spearheaded this petition effort. MacMillan is the most celebrated and most performed Catholic classical music composer of our times. His Stabat Mater was commissioned by the Vatican and performed in the Sistine Chapel.

Other important artists include the celebrated novelist, screenwriter and film director Julian Fellowes, who has won the Academy Award, Emmy Award and the Tony Award. Fellowes is perhaps best known for his role as the creator of the long-running television series Downton Abbey. Another signatory, Andrew Lloyd-Webber, is perhaps the most successful creator of musicals of our age (including CatsEvitaJoseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dream Coat and the modern Passion play Jesus Christ Superstar).

The signers of the 1971 “Agatha Christie” petition also included celebrated artists and literary figures, such as poets Robert Lowell, Robert Graves, David Jones and England’s poet laureate Cecil Day-Lewis; novelists such as Graham Greene, Nancy Mitford, Djuna Barnes and Julian Green, as well as the most celebrated Argentinian short-story writer Jorge Luis Borges, whose literary work gave birth to the “magic realism” movement of the late-20th century among Spanish writers in the Americas. And beyond this, the signatories included even Anglican Bishops Robert Cecil Mortimer of Exeter and John Moorman of Ripon.

There was a similar petition in 1966, organized by Christine Campo, translator of Marcel Proust (another example of a lapsed Catholic who understood the value of the Latin Mass for preserving civilization even in a secular sense), and addressed to Pope Paul VI, asking that the Latin Mass be maintained at least in monastic communities. It gathered signatures from 37 writers and artists, including two Nobel Prize winners. Among the signers were W.H. Auden, Evelyn Waugh, Jacques Maritain, French Nobel Prize-winning novelist Francois Mauriac, composer Benjamin Britten and Gertrud von Le Fort, the author of the Catholic classic Dialogue of the Carmelites, which later formed the basis of an opera by Francis Poulenc.

The Second Vatican Council taught us to read the signs of the times. One sign staring at us right now in large block letters is: Beauty evangelizes.  

We live in an age when we need to leverage the power of beauty to touch minds, hearts and souls, for beauty has the quality of an inescapably real experience, one that is not subject to argument. The current cultural maxim, “You have your truth and I have my truth” leads to the refusal to recognize even obvious physical and biological reality, whereas beauty circumvents the cognitive process and hits directly to the soul. Sacred beauty lifts us out of the world of time and gives us a glimpse of that which transcends time, of what ultimately lasts, of what our goal and our final home is: the reality of God.

Take the example of filmmaker Martin Scorsese. Even with all of the criticism for his controversial depictions of religious themes, and even of our Lord himself, Scorsese is one modern artist whose imagination was formed by the contrast between what the Latin Mass conveyed and the tough-guy culture of New York streets. As a profile in The New York Times in 2016 put it:

“Inside the old cathedral, it became clear how literally Scorsese has never forgotten — not the splendor of the church, nor the presence of suffering and death, sin and redemption, nearby. The pastor pointed out the details of a renovation: the saints retouched in their original colors, the marble and brass altar fixtures restored to the way they were before a 1970 modernizing effort. Scorsese, who left the neighborhood in 1965, didn’t need a guide. He knew every inch of the place. ‘Picture an 8-year-old boy standing right here in a white cassock, reciting a prayer in Latin,’ he mused aloud. ‘That’s me.’ … I asked him to draw a connection between [his 2016 film] ‘Silence’ and what he was seeing in the old cathedral. He tapped his forehead with two fingers. ‘The connection is that it has never been interrupted. It’s continuous. I never left. In my mind, I am here every day.’

In an age of anxiety and unreason, beauty is thus a largely untapped resource for reaching people, especially young people, with the Gospel message of hope. There is much work to do, but honoring and encouraging the special calling of artists is a key part of this labor.

In a de-Christianized age that is becoming increasingly inhospitable to any traditional sense of religion, the Church needs to operate on all cylinders. The traditional Latin Mass and the beauty it inspires is one of those cylinders. That even nonbelievers can feel an attraction to it in itself proves this point.

Why suppress what is one, among others, successful means for connecting with souls far away from Christ and bringing them into the loving and saving encounter with him within the communion of his Bride, the Church?

I trust and pray that this cri de coeur from the artists and other prominent British figures will be heard and seen it for what it is: that, rather than dividing the world in the name of ideological purity, it is an opportunity to bring the world together for beauty — a path that eventually and inevitably leads to the Beauty ever ancient, Beauty ever new.

Posted in Fr. Z KUDOS, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice |
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PRIEST’S CONFERENCE – Day 3: Prophecy and Typology

The conference wrapped up today. In the morning there was a talk by John Bergsma about the Holy Spirit as “water”. A key concept impressed on us was that God placed types in creation itself so that they could later be used as types of spiritual realities and events in salvation history. Hence, the Holy Spirit is described as wind or breath, fire, and water. Today we went into the physical properties of water, a component sine qua non for the existence of life.

There was a panel discussion with all the speakers.

Into Steubenville for a meetup with a friend who is also a prominent streamer. Gyros at a not bad local dive diner.

At a nearby cigar spot we enjoyed some good conversation.

This was nice.  People donate cigars for priests.

Into Pittsburgh, where I am now, and furious.

I am at a hotel near the airport due to an early flight tomorrow.  I will NOT recommend Marriott “Bonvoy” which I think was or is Courtyard.   It’s grim, near nothing, and they force you to join their program to get internet and there’s an upcharge.   So, I tried to use my phone as a tether.   That wasted an hour of my life.   I hate Zuhlsdorf’s Law.   Not as much as I am hating this hotel.  And the staff at the desk here were not nearly as friendly and helpful as those at the Hilton Garden Inn a few days ago.  Thumb is stabbing downward, with force.  DOWNWARD!   DEORSUM!

And speaking of images of water, this is available to me at the hotel as I write.

What could be in there along with the water?   Diamonds?  Does it also give you super powers?  Is the cap perhaps an ancient artifact with a treasure map?

This is a normal sized bottle.

The conference was terrific.

 

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Daily Rome Shot 1073

Photo from the World’s Best Sacristan™.

Welcome registrant:

johnhuntercleland3

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.

In chess news, we had heard that Magnus Carlson had withdrawn from the tournament now going on in Croatia due to a family issue. I read today that Magnus’ mother passed away at the age of 61 from a long illness. Requiescat.

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PRIEST’S CONFERENCE – Day 2: Prophecy and Typology

Talks continued today. A friend of mine, retired chaplain, Navy Captain, remarked “Coming to the conference would have been worth it for this talk alone.” I agreed.

We had an excursion to the new building of the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology next to the Franciscan University in Steubenville.

The building has three stores, came in on budget and on schedule! Surely a sign that Someone likes this project. The space is bright and roomy, hi tech, thoughtfully laid out. And there is a tantalizing bookstore, as there is at the conference.

I liked this shelf.  Timely!

Scott staying hello to the first wave.

More books, but from the conference tables, not the Center store.

 

Scott holding the final draft of the new study Bible they’ve been working on since 1998, with something like 18K notes.

Books… right click to enlarge in a new tab.

 

The conference room

Outside my door this morning, a rat with hooves.

At the University.  It was nice to see “normal” trees and see “normal birds”.

More on the talk in a bit.

 

 

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Daily Rome Shot 1072

Welcome registrant:

oremus23

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.

July 10 onward is the
SuperUnited Rapid & Blitz Croatia. I see Nepo, Fabi, Giri, Vidit, Gukesh, Levon, MVL, Saric, and my guy Wesley So, for whom I hope all good things. Right now Wesley is in a three way tie for first.

White to move and mate in 3.

Since the Tour de France is on….

Finally, some Days In Rome Oct ’24 donations have already come in via the wavy flag. I will shortly have a dedicated post on this. However, thanks…

VF, JL, MR, DVDH, DC, LG, MMcM, MH, SB, PG

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PRIEST’S CONFERENCE – Day 1: Prophecy and Typology

After a couple of interesting days in Pittsburgh my friend and I wended our way to WV for this annual conference held by the St Paul Center For Biblical Theology.

From last night Scott gave a dense talk on prophecy.

This morning John Bergsma on an aspect of the Holy Spirit.

First – overcoming ZUHLSDORF’S LAW.

Mike Aquilina on types and the Fathers and Jewish feasts.

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Daily Rome Shot 1072

Welcome registrants:

katherine2cor318
A. Smith

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