JUST TOO COOL: Of Niobids and Rovers

This is simply too cool.

Every once in a while, we find something from antiquity that we knew about but thought lost.

Check this out, from Gazzetta del Sud.  Dorothy King’s PhDiva has a lot of photos.  With a biretta tip to rougeclassicism. La Reppublica HERE.

Archaeologists discover Augustan-era sculptures near Rome

08/01/2013
Sculptures found in villa in Ciampino tell myth of Niobe

Archaeologists discover Augustan-era sculptures near Rome

Rome, January 8 – Archaeologists say they’ve uncovered an “exceptional” group of sculptures dating to the 1st century BC in a villa in Rome’s suburb of Ciampino. The sculptures, found in an ancient villa owned by Roman general Marcus Valerius Messalla Corvinus, a patron of the poet Ovid, tell the myth of Niobe, the proud daughter of Tantalus who lost all her 14 children after boasting to the mother of Apollo and Artemis, Leto, about her fertility. Niobe, regarded as a classic example of the retribution caused by the sin of pride or hubris, was turned to stone. Excavations at the villa have also revealed a thermal bath area with fragments of artistic mosaics and a swimming pool as long as 20 meters with walls painted blue. Inside the bath area were found seven sculptures dating to the Augustan age, as well as a complete series of fragments that experts say can be reassembled. The group tells the story of Niobe, which figured in Ovid’s epic poem of transformation, the Metamorphoses, published in AD 8. La Repubblica newspaper said Tuesday a team of archaeologists made the valuable discovery last summer. “Statues of Niobe have been found in the past, but in the case of Ciampino, we have a good part of the group,” of statues, said Elena Calandra, superintendent of archaeological heritage. According to their reconstruction of the bath area, experts say the statues were carved on all four sides of the swimming pool, which may have been buried by an earthquake in the 2nd century AD. (file photo of Niobe statue)

This is as cool as another story on the other end of the spectrum, as it were.  The Mars rover Curiosity has – for the first time – used its brush!  Yes!  It has!  HERE.

PASADENA, Calif. — NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity has completed first-time use of a brush it carries to sweep dust off rocks.

Nearing the end of a series of first-time uses of the rover’s tools, the mission has cleared dust away from a targeted patch on a flat Martian rock using the Dust Removal Tool.

The tool is a motorized, wire-bristle brush designed to prepare selected rock surfaces for enhanced inspection by the rover’s science instruments. It is built into the turret at the end of the rover’s arm. In particular, the Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer and the Mars Hand Lens Imager, which share the turret with the brush and the rover’s hammering drill, can gain information after dust removal that would not be accessible from a dust-blanketed rock.

Choosing an appropriate target was crucial for the first-time use of the Dust Removal Tool. The chosen target, called “Ekwir_1,” is on a rock in the “Yellowknife Bay” area of Mars’ Gale Crater. The rover team is also evaluating rocks in that area as potential targets for first use of the rover’s hammering drill in coming weeks.

Images of the brushed area on Ekwir are online HERE.

Ciampino.

Mars:

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“The Latin Mass is like beer. You have to drink it in a few times to like it.” Why Taylor Marshall attends the TLM.

May I suggest that you trot like Chaucer over to Taylor Marshall’s place and read his reflection on why he now attends Holy Mass in the Usus Antiquior?

Some highlights to whet the… you know…

I’ve not always been partial to the Latin Mass. For a few years after my conversion to the Catholic Faith, I was cautiously curious about the the “old Mass.” I perceived it as exotic, antiquarian, and even as a dangerous.

[…]

Most of it had to do with my alarm at the liturgical abuse that we witnessed. For example, the first time that my 4 year old daughter saw female “altar boys” serving at the altar, she tugged on my sleeve and said, “Daddy, look. I wanna be a girl priest, too.” Not encouraging.

[…]

The EM to whom we were routed that day was wearing jeans and she had on an over sized blue shirt with a giant image of Grover’s face. I just did a Google search and found a picture of the exact shirt: …

[…]

As I returned to my pew, I thought inwardly: “This is it! I just can’t take it anymore. Things have to change Lord. I’m now desperate. I don’t want my children to grow up with this perception of the one true Faith.” I had seen worse things than this before, but for some reason the Grover moment broke me.

I was now ready to make full hearted foray into the Latin Mass community served by the FSSP (Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter – in union with the Holy Father, of course). Yet, I had a few pre-conceived notions against the Latin Mass and its adherents.

[…]

The Latin Mass is like beer. You have to drink it in a few times to like it. My challenge would be for you to attend the Latin Mass for four Sundays in a row before making a decision. Give it that long. Here’s why.

You will slowly make a shift in the way that you assist at Holy Mass. Your concept of Active Participation will transform in your heart. There is a lot of quiet “space” in the Latin Mass. The first time or so, you’ll be sitting there doing nothing and thinking, “What’s going on? Why aren’t we doing anything?”

When you’ve reached that point, you’re getting close. It’s like drinking beer for the first time. “This tastes terrible? What’s the hype? I don’t understand.” But then you come to realize that beer is more than just the taste.

[…]

Read the rest there.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Benedict XVI, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Drill | Tagged , , ,
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RECENT POSTS and THANKS (Mass for Benefactors)

First, help each other out:

Your Urgent Prayer Requests

And…

A suggested Twitter project for @Pontifex

Now…

Then….

I want to thank all of you who sent me a donation or item from my wishlists (regular and Kindle) around Christmas time and the end of 2012.  You are not forgotten.  Sometimes amazon doesn’t put a packing slip in with the name of the sender, but God knows who you are and I pray for you with that confidence.  I am loaded up with lots of good things to read and I received some useful things as well.  For example, just yesterday I took apart my espresso coffee maker -and please do use my links to buy your Mystic Monk Coffee! -and cleaned it up with some descaling fluid.

I must add, however, that I think a couple items from my wishlist were clicked and purchased but they did not come to me. I suspect they went to the buyers. That is why I might from time to time repost an item. Things eventually get sorted.

Here are some of those who in the last month or so have been on my list because of money donations (with JS, KA, and DY as usual):

RB, DM, CMB, HE, JS, MJC, MH, JH, DP, MK, MF, AM, MF, ER, CO’C, PB
Jr, DN, LS, KB, JB, RMcE, BB, MG, MK, LJ, SM, Fr LT, BD, KB, SC,
WJC, LV, MH, PAP, AN, AR’sC, AR, FN, JP, DH, JEJ, Fr. RH, VW, VS,
KA, JR, MZ, KT, CG, JK, EM, JR, DM, SG, CD, WH, GJ, MCB, MG, JWM,
GMcI, PV, JR, MR, TW, CB, ALG, AD, SD, ML, SH, AR, MAD, SMcM, RR,
VD, TH, DN, KA, CL, HE, RB, MF, MJC, MR, AM, AAP, MF, LS, CO’C, ER,
JB, RMcE, RA, [UPDATES:…] DP, MH, SS, BB, MK, LV, JH, CB, CL

UPDATE: I postpones Mass for my benefactors till morning Saturday, 12 January.  It is my pleasure and duty to remember you at the altar.

 

Also, in the lead up to Christmas, quite a few of you, I think, used my amazon links or the search box on the side bar.  THANK YOU!  I hope you will get into the habit of using that search box all the time.  It really helps.  If you can’t see it, you might have to let your browser’s ad-blocker let it through.

In any event, thank you all from the bottom of my beady-black heart. You make it possible for me to do this. It has been a little slow since the beginning of the new year, which is understandable. Perhaps it will pick up? That’s up to you.
PS: I have also gone back to buying bird feed! I don’t need as much as I once did. I am trying to keep the Z-Cam on my little, but fairly active, feeder.

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Faithful Chinese Bishops dies – forgave his enemies

From Fides:

The death of Mgr. Chen Shizhong: during forced labor he had received the gift of forgiving his enemies

Yibin (Agenzia Fides) – On December 16, 2012, His Exc. Mgr. John Chen Shizhong, Bishop of the Diocese of Yibin (Suifu), in the province of Sichuan (Mainland China) died. The Archbishop was 95 years old. He was born in 1917 to a Catholic family. When he was ten years old he began his vocational journey in the minor seminary of Yibin, then continued with the philosophical and theological formation at the seminary of the Annunciation. In 1947 he was ordained a priest and worked as a parish priest. In the 50s and during the Cultural Revolution he was first imprisoned and then sentenced to hard labor as a farmer. In this regard, a few months ago, he confided to a faithful that during that ordeal he had received the gift of forgiving his enemies.
In 1985 he was consecrated bishop and in 1988 and was appointed Rector of the Regional Seminary of Sichuan, a position he left the following year for health reasons. He returned to the diocese of Yibin where he remained for over twenty years. On 30 November 2011, seriously ill, he consecrated Rev. Peter Luo Xuegang as Coadjutor for the office in Yibin.
Mgr. John Chen Shizhong, the last elderly Bishop of Sichuan, is remembered for the work of formation of priests and religious women. Thanks to him, in the 80s and 90s, vocations to priesthood and consecrated life resumed throughout the province. Over 30 priests received sacred orders from his hands, thus ensuring the survival and development of the Church in a region, which was characterized by a hard Maoism and in which the hardships and persecutions of the Cultural Revolution strongly influenced the society and the life of the Church.
The funeral of Bishop Chen, celebrated on December 18 in the Cathedral of Yibin, were presided over by His Exc. Mgr. Luo Xuegang. His Excellency Mgr. Paul He Zeqing, Bishop of Wanxian also concelebrated. The Mass was attended by priests, religious women, and many of the faithful of the Diocese. Mgr. Chen’s body was then buried in the Catholic cemetery, close to the diocesan seminary. The diocese of Yibin has 9 priests, 7 religious women and 40,000 Catholics.

I understand that the bishop of the bishop of the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association was present at the funeral.

I read stories like this and reflect upon both my own faults in charity, and I have had a relatively easy time of things compared to that old bishop, as well as the direction we are heading in West, these U.S.A. in particular.

When the times comes, will I be so forgiving?  I think it probably helps to get my head in to a mental place where I can think about this scenarios now.  Bp. Chen Shizhong said that he had received the gift, the grace, of being able to forgiven enemies.  Grace perfects our nature.  We have to do our part too.  We have to work on all the virtues, because they are habits.  We have to ask for graces.  We have to pray for and beg for miracles.  We have to be engaged and then strive to be at peace with the results God permits or grants.

Will we in time see the formation of an American Patriotic Catholic Association?

Some people don’t think that the horrors that happened in other places can possibly happen where they live.

I think they are wrong and I think we should all remember, daily, not only the Four Last Things, but also how precarious are our comforts and our worldly freedoms.

I should watch For Greater Glory again soon.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Cri de Coeur, Modern Martyrs, Pò sì jiù, Religious Liberty, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , ,
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QUAERITUR: Participating in wedding of sister to a married man

From a reader:

My sister is getting married next month. She has asked me to ‘give her away’ as our father is deceased. She has not practiced the Catholic faith for a long time. Although she was civilly married once before, and divorced, she was never married in the church, so no impediment there.
Her fiance (a fine man who I really like) WAS married before, in the church, and is legally divorce (no grounds for annulment). Ergo, they are getting married in an Episcopal church.
1- Is there a canon that would affect ME if I ‘give her away’ in an Episcopal ceremony?
2- Canon or no canon, would participating in the ceremony in this manner be sinful?

Canonically, there seems to be no prohibition against attending or participating in an invalid wedding. There are no penalties applied or suggested in Law for going to an invalid wedding, serving as best man, maid of honor, groomsman, bridesmaid, flower girl, etc. at an invalid wedding. The only penalty would be for the bride or the groom. By entering into an objectively invalid marriage, a Catholic thus deprives himself of the ability to receive the sacraments: Holy Orders, Confirmation, Penance, Anointing, and most importantly Holy Eucharist (danger of death can be a factor, but let that pass). Only when his marriage is regularized, or when he ceases to live in the invalid conjugal situation are the doors of sacramental grace open to him (after a good confession, of course).

Morally, however…

This is something that an individual involved must work out with his pastor and/or confessor. Those “on the ground” with the situation would know details, circumstances which would color and give texture to the situation.

Then one must ask: Which response would be more likely to bring the recalcitrant Catholic back to practicing the Faith?

If you say “No!” to participation, would it shock your sister into realizing the damage she is about to do to her relationship with the Church? Would it make her think twice about proceeding with the invalid wedding? Her intended spouse may be a fine man, but he is (if there truly are no grounds for a declaration of nullity) a married man, and therefore not free to marry.

Would saying “no” harden your sister’s heart and drive her even further away from the Church? Would it be possible to say “no” to giving her away to an already married man, but still attend the service out of sincere affection for your sister?  Would your answer set an example for your own children, if you have children?  They watch and learn about how important the Church is by watching you.

From the bare facts given, inadequate facts, my gut tells me – say “no”.  Do not participate.

But this is a moral question, not a canonical one.  You need input from your pastor, confessor, or trusted spiritual adviser, who could more fully work out with you some of the issues in this, your, particular care.

Comment moderation is on.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , ,
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Brick by Brick… Altar by Altar

My friend Fr. Richard Heilman, pastor of St. Mary’s in Pine Bluff, WI, in the Diocese of Madison – where there reigneth Bp. Morlino – has made the move to the East.

After a process of catechesis, St. Mary’s has gone ad orientem versus. All Holy Masses will now be celebrated with priest and congregation facing liturgical East.

Here is a happy photo of the table altar being taken out of the church, which I hope to see in many variations in the future.

“But Father! But Father!”, some of you might be saying, “Where are they taking it?  That priest must hate Vatican II as much as you!  Now people won’t be able to participate!”

They are taking the altar over to the rectory, where Father will create a nice private chapel.

The New Evangelization continues at St. Mary’s in Pine Bluff.

To put table in front of that splendid altar was just plain silly.

Now they need an altar rail.

Bp. Morlino has spoken clearly about the importance of ad orientem worship.  HERE.

I’m sure that the day will come when we will turn toward the Lord together, in even a more full way when we all face east, when we all turn toward the Lord in the same direction. And when we do that, that’s not the priest turning his back on the people, it’s the priest directing the people to look toward the east, to obey the prophetic word, to believe how concrete, real, physical and visible Jesus Christ was and is. How concrete, real, physical and visible is the last coming, from the east.

The east matters. It matters a lot. That’s why the creator gave us the sunrise from the east to remind us that from there, comes the light, who is Christ.

As we behold the flesh and blood of Christ, in the sacramental sign of the Eucharist, we are turned toward the east, as Jesus comes to use here in mystery, to remind ourselves that our whole life is an eager, prayerful waiting for him to come in majesty, waiting for him to come from the east, turning toward the Lord.

The Diocese of Madison has 35 seminarians.

Posted in "But Father! But Father!", "How To..." - Practical Notes, Benedict XVI, Brick by Brick, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Mail from priests, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Year of Faith | Tagged , , , , ,
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A mordant look at the wrong notion of “active participation”

From the amusing Eye of the Tiber:

Culver City, CA––Parishioners of St. Raymond Catholic Church in Culver City, California were forced to jump into action during Mass early Monday morning when it appeared that only one priest would be available for the consecration. According to sources at the scene, parishioners went into a frenzy when it appeared that visiting priest Fr. Bryce Carbone was close to saying the words of consecration all by himself. [!] “Our regular pastor, Fr. Ed, usually invites us all to gather and encircle the Lord’s table during consecration,” said longtime parishioner Donna Fullwood, before reassuring reporters that Carbone was doing well despite his brush with Mass without liturgical participation. “All I can say is it was a close call. I know a few parishioners are a little shaken up thinking of what could’ve happened if they hadn’t been able to participate. All’s well that ends well, though.” 56-year-old Fullwood went on to recount the story of how 20 or so quick-thinking parishioners rushed into action as Carbone prepared to consecrate the bread and wine without a single layman there to assist him. “We all looked at each other like ‘Oh no,’ then rushed to the altar as quick as we could and surrounded it. Then we all lifted one hand each in the concelabratory way. It was amazing how fast everyone moved to assist Fr. Bryce. I’m sure he’s really thankful. Maybe they’ll make a movie about it one day, like Zero Dark Thirty or something.”

Remember: A thousand lay people, ten thousand, a million, can say the words of consecration over bread and wine again and again and again with all the fervor they can humanly muster and, at the end of the day, there will still be only bread and wine on the altar. A single priest, even a little distracted, can whisper the words of consecration over the same bread and wine and they become the Body, Blood, Soul and Divinity of Christ.

The priesthood shared in by all the baptized and the priesthood of the ordained are qualitatively different. Lay people, by their participation in Christ’s priesthood as the baptized, are enabled to offer in their manner spiritual sacrifices and join their sacrifices to that which the priest does at the altar in his way.

Priesthood is for sacrifice. Sacrifice requires priesthood. No priest, no sacrifice.

Pray for an increase in vocations to the priesthood.

Posted in Liberals, Lighter fare, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged , , ,
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@Pontifex Tuesday Project: Week 2

I suggested a project using Twitter HERE.  Let’s create a “stack” of tweets during the day.  Concentrate your effort on a day and single theme instead of various scatterings over days when they might not be noticed.

Here is the first collective tweet for TUESDAY, 8 January 2013.  Copy. Paste. Tweet after 00:00 GMT.  Repost. Retweet.

@Pontifex Holy Father, thank you for your Epiphany sermon!

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QUAERITUR: Concerning the thumb and forefinger

From a priest:

It is now over five years since I learned to say Mass in the Usus Antiquior. [Hooray!] I have tried hard not to import random bits of rubrical practice into my celebration of the Novus Ordo. [That can be tough.]
One thing, however, that I do find myself doing is holding my thumb and forefinger together once the Sacred Host is consecrated. [Good!]

I have recently been challenged by a lay person, who felt that I was exercising private preference rather than conforming to the norms of the Church. Yet not holding my digits together seems disrespectful.

Can you please offer any guidance?

Guidance?  Sure!  Lemme think…

You could just gape at the lay person and say, “Are you serious? And if so, have you seen a doctor for this condition?”

Otherwise you could say, “Yes, you know, you’re absolutely right!   Thank you!  Thank you for helping me see the error of my ways.  I will immediately stop importing these horrible practices into the Ordinary Form.  Hence, because of your comments, from now on every Mass I say at this parish will be according to the 1962 Missal.”

Ignore the lay person.  Continue to do what you are doing.

Posted in ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Mail from priests, Puir Slow-Witted Gowk, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged ,
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What the National Catholic Reporter is really doing by calling for an “assault weapons” ban. (Hint: It ain’t about guns!)

These are "clips".

The National catholic Reporter always has to be where other liberals are, but they are always a day late and a dollar short.

Now they are calling for a ban on “assault weapons”.  Why?  Because they are running after the wave of gun-ban hysteria, utilizing the horrible deaths of children, to promote a political goal.  Don’t let a crisis go to waste, right?

And they have no idea what they are talking about.

First of all, when they and others talk about “assault weapons” they really mean “scary looking” guns.

And get this:

At the moment polls show a majority of Americans support banning the sale of assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition clips.

Clips?  I think they mean “magazines”.

These are "magazines"

They haven’t the slightest clue what they are talking about when bringing up “assault weapons”, but that doesn’t matter. Guns are not their real target.

The real reason for this editorial is to shame pro-lifers into silence about abortion. Their weapon du jour is the Sandy Hook massacre.

The editors of the Fishwrap don’t give a damn about “assault weapons”.  They don’t even know what “assault weapons” are.  “Assault weapon” is a pointless catch-all label used by enemies of the Second Amendment to describe guns that are functionally no different, no more lethal, that any other run of the mill firearm.

The real target of the ban on “assault weapons” are the people who want to own guns.

Fishwrap is blathering about “assault weapons” because they don’t like a certain kind of person. They tie people who own guns to people who are against abortion.  You know who I mean, right?  Those red-necks?  Those Tea Party types?  Those knuckle-draggers who “cling to their guns or religion”?

Fishwrap is against anti-abortion pro-lifers. That is what their call for a ban on “assault weapons” is all about.

They are trying to use the “assault weapon” ban as a way to shame pro-lifers into silence about abortion.

Get it?  One more time for the people in Broward County: They are trying to tie “gun control” to the pro-life movement.  They could care less about abortion.

“But Father! But Father!”, some of you are going to write, “I’m pro-life but I don’t think people should own these guns either!”

No, friends.  Keep your eye on the target here, right on that center ring.   I’ll explain.

For the Fishwrap and their ilk, abortion is not really a pro-life issue.  For the Fishwrap and their ilk, like the LCWR and the Nuns on the Bus, high taxes and entitlements are pro-life issues.  The unborn can be sacrificed for their higher cause.

Fishwrap has been trying to hijack pro-life language.  Remember how they tied gun control to the pro-life movement (HERE)? Moreover, Fishwrap trumpeted the fact that the LCWR called for an “assault weapons” ban (HERE).

Has the LCWR called for a ban on abortion? Please send me the link to their statement.  Has Fishwrap?

This editorial from Fishwrap about “assault weapons” is not only an example of running after the wave of hysteria and instumentalizing the death of children to promote their ideology.  They are also anticipating the rapidly approaching March for Life.

I ask simply: Will the NCR be represented at the March in Washington DC?  I want to take a photo of their anti-abortion banner.  Perhaps they will be standing next to the LCWR’s delegation with their anti-abortion banner!

UPDATE 10 Jan 21:38 GMT:

What did I hear on Rush today in Hour Two?

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