Re-Elect Pope Benedict

With affection and appreciation.

Click HERE for bumper stickers, car magnets, even yard signs and car flags.

And we have to have some Latin…

And just for nice…

 

Posted in Benedict XVI, Lighter fare | Tagged , ,
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Pope Pius Clocks

I was thinking about what it might mean for owners of a “Pius Clock” were the next Bishop of Rome to take “Pius” upon his elevation to the See of Peter.

“But Father! But Father!”, some of newcomers are surely saying, “‘Pius clock’? What on earth is that?”

The official Fr. Z Blog photoshop expert, the great Vincenzo, put together a spiffy clock-face for different sized clocks and all the “numbers” are images of Popes Pius I-XII.

I had one on my office wall for a long time and I know that some of you readers have bought them too.

I encourage you to check out Vincenzo’s online Pope Pius Clock store and “give him the business”.

Posted in Lighter fare, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged
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MADISON: 22-23 Feb – Men’s Retreat (with overnight accommodations)

There is going to be a men’s retreat at the pastoral center (“chancery” on my planet) of the Diocese of Madison. Click HERE.

Some details from the site…

Fortes in Fide
Annual Diocesan
Men’s Lenten Retreat
February 22-23, 2013
Bishop O’Connor Pastoral Center, Madison Wisconsin
Featuring Fr. John Zuhlsdorf (“Fr. Z”) and
Internationally Renowned Apologist Raymond de Souza
“Be watchful. Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking some one to devour. Resist him, firm in your faith” (1 Peter 5: 8-9).

Join other men from the Diocese of Madison and elsewhere in this special Year of Faith Lenten retreat. We will be gathering once again to renew and deepen our understanding of Jesus Christ and His teaching through the sacramental voice of His Church, be renewed and strengthened through prayer and the grace of His sacraments, and as a result of this intensified communion of love and friendship with His Divine Majesty, advance his Kingship in our souls and our lay mission, firm in our faith.

Mr. Raymond de Souza: Raymond de Souza is the Director of the Office for Evangelization and Apologetics of the Diocese of Winona, MN. In the last twenty-five years, he has distinguished himself as an international lay Catholic Apologist, broadcaster, Pro-Life activist and Catholic Action militant, having given over 3,000 talks in twenty-one countries of five continents and in four languages (English, Spanish, French and Portuguese). He founded Saint Gabriel Communications, Australia’s first outreach to promote Catholic Apologetics worldwide, is the Special Missions Coordinator for Human Life International (HLI), an EWTN Program Host and a Knight of Malta. His marriage to Theresa has been blessed with eight children.

Cost:
$40 – Commuter (includes all the retreat activities and lunch on Saturday)
$65 – Includes shared overnight accommodations (with breakfast, lunch and snacks)
Please do NOT let financial considerations prevent you from attending. Just let us know what you can or cannot afford.

There is a schedule and a signup form on the webpage.

In the Diocese of Madison you can find a strong sense of what some might call “hard identity” Catholicism (as opposed to “soft identity”).

Posted in The Campus Telephone Pole, Year of Faith | Tagged , ,
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Beastly reporting by Barbie

The abdication of Pope Benedict is yet another opportunity to see how ignorant most of those contributing to the mainstream media can be when it comes to the Catholic Church.

A case in point is The Daily Beast who has someone, I am not making this up, named “Barbie” writing about papal “scandal”.  I found this story on the same page with the heading “Viva la Papa!”  Yes, “la”. Did anyone over there go to school? Ever?

Let’s have a brief look at this risible piece by Barbie Latza Nadeau.

American Nuns Hope For Sister-Friendly New Pope

American nuns—fiercely [!] condemned under Pope Benedict for being too “radical”—are looking forward to a fresh start with a new pontiff. [The first factual error: “American nuns” were not condemned, fiercely or even mildly.  And what does “radical” mean?  Probably not like St. Francis of  Assisi.]

Of all the scandals [“scandal”?  I’ll tell you what’s a scandal.  The real scandal is that the Holy See should have to have deal with women religious who have moved “beyond Jesus”.] that have been pinned to Benedict XVI’s papacy, perhaps none has been more divisive [The writer lives in a tiny little world in which, when women religious go off the rails, it is the Pope’s fault when he does his job to bring them back to their senses.] than the so-called clampdown on American nuns last April. Its no wonder, then, [You are just supposed to accept that premise.] that sisters across America [only those of the liberal-loony stamp… which, thank God, are not all sisters across America] are hoping that the next pope gives them a fairer shake. [I’ll bet the writer has a photo of Pres. Obama in her purse.] In an exclusive interview with The Daily Beast, the head of the largest group of American nuns  shares what she is looking for in a new leader.  [Another factual error.  The LCWR is not the “largest group of American nuns”. It is merely a large group of the leaders of communities of women religious.  The LCWR is the “Leadership Conference”, and it does not represent automatically all the members of the communities represents.]

[…]

It is one thing to not appreciate the Catholic Church or the Roman Pontiff.  It is another thing entirely to write about something you know so little about.

Weigel’s contribution is better.  At least it has the virtual of getting the facts right.  HERE.

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Tu es Petrus

At the end of the Holy Father’s last public Mass as Bishop of Rome.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Posted in Benedict XVI | Tagged , ,
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Ash Wednesday by T.S. Eliot

Have you ever read or studied T.S Eliot’s poem Ash Wednesday?

You should have, you know.

Let us not let Ash Wednesday pass without at least touching on the poem.

If you have never read or heard it, at least you can hear it here.  Alas, I and no better read it through the remnants of a cold.

Posted in Poetry | Tagged , ,
19 Comments

Rutler on the Pope’s abdication

Someone forwarded what Fr. George Rutler contributed to Crisis about the Pope’s abdication.  Let’s have a look with my emphases and comments.

Benedict’s Decision in the Light of Eternity

What God knows is not necessarily what God wills. Each pope is guaranteed the protection of the Holy Spirit from fallible definitions of faith and morals, [NB: ] but to suppose that each pope is there because God wants him there, including the unworthy successors of Peter, comes close to the unforgivable blasphemy against the Third Person of the Holy Trinity.   Twenty year old Benedict IX was at least as nightmarish as his successor Gregory VI who usually is counted with his predecessor among the popes who relinquished their office. There are times, though, when the hand of God is not manhandled, and that, for instance, is why Cardinal Cooke once told me that he had never been so conscious of the presence of the Holy Spirit as he was in the Conclave that elected John Paul II.  It may also be that the sudden death of John Paul I, as stunning as recent events in the Vatican, was not untimely if it was part of a higher plan.

The Petrine office is not indelible like Holy Orders,  [As I wrote elsewhere today.] and  in 1415 Gregory XII nobly and efficiently made his resignation a kind of security for healing the Western Schism.  Dante  was so frustrated by what he considered dereliction of duty, that he put the abdicated Celestine V [probably, though Dante doesn’t name him as other than the one who made the “great refusal”.] into the Inferno but that was his own Commedia, when the Church, not in fancy but in fact, knew he is in Heaven.  In 2009 photographs were widely circulated showing Benedict XVI leaving his pallium at Celestine’s tomb, and many commentators then thought that this was more than a gesture of incidental piety. [As it turns out…]

As with the Spiritual Franciscans as a whole, almost in tandem with the earlier Montanists, Celestine V proved the utter impracticality of dovelike innocence without serpentine astuteness, and Boniface VIII was as right as was John XXII in condemning these “Fraticelli.”  But Boniface also proved the desperate shortcoming of cleverness without innocence.  Benedict XVI’s serene retreat to pray will not be like the last months of Pope Celestine who might nearly qualify as a martyr for the terrible treatment he endured for ten months until death when immured in the walls of the Fumone  castle in Campagna. Celestine was confined to an unsanitary cell hardly large enough for a bed and an altar.  We see in this the contempt that venal souls have for the motives of the humble, [nicely put] and Celestine was nothing if not humble. The role of Boniface in Celestine’s degradation has often been sanitized, but, as John Henry Newman wrote in the “Historical Sketches: “glosses are put upon memorable acts, because they are thought not edifying, whereas of all scandals such omissions, such glosses, are the greatest.”  [Men like Boniface VIII reassure me that this truly is the Church Christ founded and still guides.  Were it not for God, we would have destroyed the Church long ago.] A decree of Boniface, making hay of the misfortunes of his saintly predecessor, spelled out for the first time the canonical case for papal renunciation:

Pope Celestine V, Our predecessor, whilst still presiding over the government of the aforesaid Church, wishing to cut off all the matter for hesitation on the subject, having deliberated with his brethren, the Cardinals of the Roman Church, of whom We were one, with the concordant counsel and assent of Us and of them all, by Apostolic authority established and decreed, that the Roman Pontiff may freely resign. We, therefore, lest it should happen that in course of time this enactment should fall into oblivion, and the aforesaid doubt should revive the discussion, have placed it among other constitutions ad perpetuam rei memoriam by the advice of our brethren.

Benedict XVI certainly has known all this, for perhaps not since the Lambertini pope Benedict XIV has there been a pope of such mental acuity and historical erudition, nor probably has any pope since Gregory I, in his writings and witness, matched the magisterial eloquence and liturgical sensibility of this pope of Bavaria. The verdict of centuries from now will affirm the spiritual electricity of his Regensburg lecture, [Certainly one of the most important moments of his pontificate.] and how he spoke to the French academics in 2010, and, if words be immortal, his undying words in Westminster Hall.  [One of the other great moments of the pontificate. Benedict went to Westminster in much the same way as Nixon went to China.] His general audiences regularly outnumbered those of his beloved predecessor and those accustomed to spectacle actually began to listen to the crystalline reasoning of what he said. [I think the phrase is, people went to see John Paul II but to listen to Benedict XVI.] Before he became pope,  any form critic could detect his hand in Vatican documents when turgid prose suddenly [almost accidently] broke into clarity. His first rate mind did not indulge the tendency of lesser minds to obscure what is profound and to think that what is obscure is perforce profound.

If he was expected to be a caretaker pope, he took care very well, proving himself unexpectedly radical in his reform of reform, [Not so unexpected, really. ] which is more difficult than reform itself, for it restores the form that reformers forgot. So we had the renewal of liturgical integrity in an ecology of beauty,  streamlining of the Curia, [though not enough] greater attention to episcopal appointments, the overdue beatification of Newman with all its portents for theological science,  the Anglican Ordinariate which may be less significant for what it becomes than for the fact that it exists at all, [indeed] and progress with the Eastern churches.  His plans, like all “the best laid schemes of mice and men” were not completely realized.  Not all that Benedict called “filth” was removed, [cf. Joseph Ratzinger’s Stations of the Cross from 2005] and we can be sure that a  media eager to affect being scandalized, [well said] will point out among those entering the Conclave, those who bring with them the shadows of what Benedict tried to dispel. But he continues to dignify in charity even those who may not understand that “dignitas.”  He announced his renunciation of office in Latin, and  by so doing indicated his hope that even if some of those listening may have mingled astonishment with incomprehension, his successor will be able to speak the official language of the Church he leads and the city he governs. [Hmmm… I wonder… is this a hint at the writer’s preference?]

According to the postulator for the Cause of John Paul II, as early as 1989 Wojtyla had signed a  letter of renunciation to be invoked should he become incapacitated. He reaffirmed this in 1994 but in the same year he told the surgeon operating on his broken leg: “I have to heal. Because there is no place in the Church for a Pope Emeritus.”  It is only human to be so conflicted, and John Paul II opted  against renunciation. The fact that Pope Benedict had scheduled various journeys, canonizations and an encyclical to be published “within the first six months of 2013” would indicate that his decision to step down, if  considered a possibility for a while, was made more suddenly.  As  Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, he must have suffered patiently when he saw decisions made that he would not have wanted made.  And had he become pope sooner,  many tragedies such as the Legionaries of Christ scandal and other defacements of the Church, would have be handled far differently. [Do I hear an “Amen!”?] Although he is younger than Leo XIII who slogged on until his 93rd year, and his physical condition is far better than that of his predecessor in his last years,  the experience of those years had to have shaped his present decision. [And it is pro-active.  Had he waited and abdicated after the howls of the MSM and pressure from within and without had risen, his enemies would have claimed victory.  Some of the stupider of Benedict’s critics are trying to push that claim now, but they are hardly to be taken seriously.]

In an age of dangerously limited attention spans and fickle loyalties, there is a danger of proposing that popes last only as long as people want them. Romans have long said with their typical insouciance that when one pope dies you just make another one:  “Morto un papa se ne fa un altro.”  As everyone dies, it was important that John Paul defied the aimless Culture of Death by showing how to die, but that witness also came at the cost of care of the churches. There were times then when the Church Militant seemed in freefall, and the man who then was Cardinal Ratzinger must have anguished much in silence. He did not, however, trim the truth as he knew it and went so far as to say that a certain passage in “Gaudium et Spes” of which young Wojtyla was a principle architect was, “downright Pelagian.”  Cardinal Dulles observed: [NB] “The contrast between Pope Benedict and his predecessor is striking. John Paul II was a social ethicist, anxious to involve the Church in shaping a world order of peace, justice, and fraternal love. Among the documents of Vatican II, John Paul’s favorite was surely the pastoral constitution Gaudium et Spes. Benedict XVI, who looks upon Gaudium et Spes as the weakest of the four constitutions, shows a clear preference for the other three.”

The personality cults of our present age had to a degree shaped the young in the Church who had only known one pope. A most attractive charism of Benedict XVI has been his desire to vanish so that the faithful might see only Christ: “cupio dissolvi.”  He strengthened the papacy by vaulting sanctity over celebrity.  In a grand paradox, nothing in him has become so conspicuous as his  desire to disappear. Christ gave the Keys to a Galilean fisherman with a limited life span. He chose Peter; Peter did not choose Him. When the pope relinquishes the Petrine authority, he does not submit a letter of resignation to any individual, for the only one capable of receiving it is Christ. This is why “renunciation” or “abdication”  is a more accurate term than “resignation” in the case of the Supreme Pontiff. [Sound familiar?] Unless this is understood, the danger is that a superficial world will try to refashion the pope into some hind of amiable but transient office holder. Popes are not Dutch royalty. On the other hand, Queen Elizabeth II has one tiara, not three, but the longer she wears it, the more she seems to grow in the affection of her people, which bond of respect is morally more powerful than any constitutional grant of rights and privileges. But the papacy’s authority is absolute and not gratuitous, and its exercise cannot be only conditional and validated by human approval. Pope Benedict pays tribute to that imperial obligation of his office by  willing to relinquish it.

To risk the sort of truism that gets to be what it is by being true: Nothing is permanent in this world. The world is older than our centuries and cannot stop changing. We speak of papal protocols in the Middle Ages as if they happened long ago, but only from our limited perspective were they in the middle of anything. In view of the recently found fact that the declining dinosaurs were finally wiped out by an asteroid 66.03 millions years ago, the Middle Ages might as well have been when my alarm went off this morning. Study of the amino acids in the eyes of bowhead whales now reveals that these magnificent creatures can live over two hundred years, and there may be a whale in the Arctic right now that swam those same waters during the War of 1812. Line up ten of those whales and you are at the Resurrection. From that perspective, we [and the SSPXers] should speak cautiously about Rome as the Eternal City.  “Sub specie aeternitatis,” Rome really was built in a day.  Pope Benedict attests by word and example: that “… here we have no lasting city, but we seek the city that is to come” (Hebrews 13:14).

 

Posted in Benedict XVI, Mail from priests | Tagged , , ,
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Translating the “catholics For Choice” statement about Pope Benedict

When Pope Benedict announced his abdication, the heretical “catholics for Choice” issued a statement.    I didn’t want to sully my hands with it but someone else got out the little plastic bag and did the dirty work.

At the blog Acts of the Ashpostasy, we find a little parsing of their statement.  Holding your nose helps a little.

After Pope Benedict surprised the world Monday by announcing his resignation effective 2/28, the political action group Catholycs For Choice issued a press release.  Now, it’s your standard boilerplate, but I thought it’d be fun to translate it from Catholycese into normal English.  Let’s go!

“It will be nothing short of a miracle if the next papal conclave

Jon O'Brien - who has worked for the Irish Family Planning Association and International Planned Parenthood Federation

produces a good leader,” said Jon O’Brien, president of Catholics for Choice. “Pope Benedict XVI and John Paul II stacked the College of Cardinals with ultraconservatives. This means that it is highly likely that they will elect somebody very like them.

Translation:  “I’m a jerk,” said Jon O’Brien, president of Catholycs for Choice.  “And I hated everything Pope Benedict XVI and John Paul II ever did.  Unfortunately, the next pope is going to be Catholic.”

“The Catholic church and the 1.2 billion Catholics worldwide would like a pope who better reflects the way that they live their faith. We want a pope who understands the needs of Catholics—and the rest of the world—today. He would be a leader with a vision, one that Catholics and all the world’s citizens so desperately need.

Translation:  “My group, and the world, doesn’t want a Catholic pope.  It’s time for a non-Catholic one.”

“Instead, we are likely to get a leader who runs the Vatican as it has been run for the past few decades—a business-as-usual leader, who will continue to condemn contraception, abortion, LGBT individuals and all those who support them. We expect another pontiff who gives no backing for policymakers who rightfully serve all their constituents equally and do not feel compelled to enshrine Catholic teachings into civil codes. It would be refreshing if we moved away from the culture of impunity that has not held bishops to account for shielding sex-abusing priests, but I do not hold out much hope for that, either.

Translation:  “If we get a Catholic pope, we’re going to do everything in our power to undermine him and those who support him.  Because like I said earlier, I’m a jerk.”

“It is, however, reassuring that the pope has taken the mature decision to resign. While Benedict has not gone against the grain during his papacy, the fact that he is the first pope in 600 years to choose to leave office is perhaps a sign of a maturing approach to governance.”

Translation:  “It’s too bad Benedict didn’t resign earlier, or just die.  But this is better than nothing, I suppose.”

There you go – the thing to remember with these people, is that they use no subtlety, no reflection, no humility.  They are as transparent as glass.  Unfortunately, because so many Catholics are poorly catechized, the things they say sound reasonable and seem sensible.  Well, so did the serpent in Eden, and we know where that got us.

Once you boil away the rhetoric, and strip away the puffery, you’re left with lies.  Pure and simple.

[…]

Read the rest there.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged , , ,
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Bp. Sample’s great Pastoral Letter on Sacred Music

My old friend now-Archbishop Alex Sample, before his translation to Portland, issued a Pastoral Letter on Sacred Music for the Diocese of Marquette.  It is called “Rejoice in the Lord” and it is a hit.

First, remember his spectacular sermon about the older form of Holy Mass?  HERE.   Sample is the real deal.

Find the pastoral letter HERE.

Here are some samples (sorry!) from the letter:

This is an important discussion to have, since so often the music selected for Mass is reduced to a matter of subjective “taste,” i.e. what style of music appeals to this or that person or group, as if there were no objective principles to be followed. There are indeed objective principles worthy of study and proper implementation, as will be shown.

[…]

Church teaching emphasizes that the music proper to the Sacred Liturgy possesses three qualities: sanctity, beauty, and universality. Only music which possesses all three of these qualities is worthy of the Mass.

[…]

Finally, the third essential quality of sacred music must be considered, i.e. its universality. This quality means that any composition of sacred music, even one which reflects the unique culture of a particular region, would still be easily recognized as having a sacred character. The quality of holiness, in other words, is a universal principle that transcends culture.

[… I think you can see where this is going …]

Any discussion of the different forms of sacred music must start with Gregorian chant.

[…]

Given all of this strong teaching from the Popes, the Second Vatican Council, and the U.S. Bishops, how is it that this ideal concerning Gregorian chant has not been realized in the Church? Far from enjoying a “pride of place” in the Church’s sacred liturgy, one rarely if ever hears Gregorian chant.

This is a situation which must be rectified. It will require great effort and serious catechesis for the clergy and faithful, but Gregorian chant must be introduced more widely as a normal part of the Mass. Some practical steps toward this are outlined in the Directive section of this pastoral letter.

[… OORAH! …]

The Church recognizes an objective difference between sacred music and secular music. Despite the Church’s norms, the idea persists among some that the lyrics alone determine whether a song is sacred or secular, while the music is exempt from any liturgical criteria and may be of any style. This erroneous idea, which was alluded to earlier, is not supported by the Church’s norms either before or since the Second Vatican Council.

[…]

Hymns are a musical form pertaining more properly to the Liturgy of the Hours, rather than the Mass. Hymn-singing at Mass originated in the custom of the people singing vernacular devotional hymns at Low Mass during the celebrant’s silent recitation of the Latin prayers. However, the current Missal as well as official liturgical documents envision a singing of the Mass as outlined above. [You’ll have to go read that part on your own.  You won’t be wasting your time.]

[…]

The texts of the Roman Missal and the Lectionary, and none others, constitute the official Mass in English. No one in the diocese, including the Bishop, has the authority to add to, subtract from or change the words of the Mass, either sung or recited. The only exceptions are when the Missal specifically gives an option, using expressions such as “in these or similar words.” This is to be strictly interpreted and observed.

[…]

Then there are norms.

Have a look at the letter and then reflect on what you experience in your parish.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Mail from priests, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill | Tagged , , ,
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HEY LATIN STUDENTS! Conventiculum Viomingense (very cool)

The other day I shared a photo of the Wyoming Catholic College display at the Legatus Summit.  This was one of the t-shirts.

Is that cool, or what?   And now comes this!

 

CONVENTICULUM VIOMINGENSE

 We are happy to announce a new summer Latin immersion opportunity at Wyoming Catholic College!

The 2013 Conventiculum Viomingense will run from August 5th – August 13th.

Some of the many highlights of the Conventiculum Viomingense are:

? You will learn to speak Latin or improve your spoken Latin with several highly experienced Latin speakers

? It is designed for beginners as well as more advanced participants; for students and teachers

? We will be housed at a welcoming and friendly Catholic community

? There will be outdoor excursions and a three day camping trip, backpacking through the beautiful mountains of Wyoming (with all gear provided!)

? Small groups will attend break-out sessions separated by levels

? Interested participants will enjoy sports activities (e.g., Frisbee, soccer, touch football, yard games)

? There is an EXCEPTIONALLY low-cost

Find-out more at:

http://www.wyomingcatholiccollege.com/conventiculum

OVERVIEW

The Conventiculum Viomingense is a full-immersion residential experience, designed both to introduce aspiring Latinists to the beauty and power of the ancient language of the Church and to provide more advanced Latinists with an exciting opportunity to improve their abilities. Classes will be conducted primarily in Latin and will include an exciting outdoor component: We will take advantage of our location to discuss trees and plants, mountains and glaciers, rivers, animals, birds, insects, weather, and many other aspects of nature. The week will culminate in a camping trip.

Is that cool or what?

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Just Too Cool, Our Catholic Identity, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged , , ,
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