The Feeder Feed: Museum Song Bird Edition

Here is an Allegory of Music by Laurent de la Hyre (+1656).

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The figure is playing a theorbo, or chitarrone, probably a symbol of musicaartificiale“. They had drone strings and produced a rather symphonic effect. On the other hand, the little bird is probably a symbol of musicanaturale“.

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The music is actually readable.

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Tweet!
UPDATE:

And simply because she is so beautiful.

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Thank you Filippino Lippi!

UPDATE:

For St Ambrose on his feast!

By Giovanni di Paolo.

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UPDATE:

By the way, we don’t know what exact piece is in the manuscript in the painting. However, so that you know more about the theorbo, here is a great video that shows it from many angles.

The being played is by Kapsberger, who did in 1651 in Rome. The painting is from 1647.

[wp_youtube]CpQw0UH-YV4[/wp_youtube]

And this piece, with a touch in Piccinini, is a little more groovy.

[wp_youtube]GFJnJsPgss8[/wp_youtube]

Posted in The Feeder Feed, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged , , , ,
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Promoter of women “deacons” can’t speak in Archdiocese of Philadelphia

NB: The Deacon in question posted a comment, below.  Be sure to check it out.

The Fishwrap is having a little nutty these days about the ordination of women.

First, there is an editorial openly declaring that women should be ordained as a matter of “justice”. It is fun. If you bother with it, note how Fishwrap creatively hijacked Bl. John Henry Newman on conscience and papal teaching. The Catholic Herald‘s William Oddie has a sharp piece about that HERE.

Second, there is a piece at Fishwrap about a permanent deacon who was recently told he could not speak at a church event in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. The deacon in question, Rev. Mr. William Ditewig, once worked in the office of the USCCB for deacons. He co-authored a book promoting the ordination of women deacons. His co-author was Fishwrap columnist Phyllis Zagano. Remember her? She doesn’t like me very much, I’m afraid. (She actually has a fairly decent column this week about the secular and materialistic enervation of the Christmas season.)

Fishwrap has been having a pretty bad innings when it comes to promoting weird and invalid ordinations. Their darling Roy Bourgeois was recently dismissed from the Maryknollers for pushing women’s ordination to the priesthood. Now, Rev. Mr. Ditewig is not given a chance to talk in Philadelphia. Ditewig says that he wasn’t going to talk about women’s ordination, but giving him a platform might look like an endorsement of his unorthodox notions.

“But Father! But Father!”, some will declare. “Ordinatio sacerdotalis says women can’t be ordained as priests…. as prieeeeests. Get it? Can’t you read? It doesn’t say anything about deacons! There were deaconesses in the ancient Church. So there!”

Piffle. Are we going to disconnect the diaconate from the sacrament of Holy Orders? Ordination of women to the diaconate is nothing other than an attempt to promote the ordination of women to the priesthood. And if there were female “deacons” in some century in some corner of some church somewhere, the phenomenon was a) not anywhere near universal and b) swiftly stamped out as wrong.

Just because something happened occasionally way back when, that doesn’t mean that what happened was acceptable then or legitimate today.

In any event, women are not going to be ordained deacons.

Posted in "But Father! But Father!", Liberals, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , ,
46 Comments

ACTION ITEM! POLL ALERT – The Tablet about the new tranzleshun

UPDATE 7 Dec: The Tablistas finally found the correct texts for their poll about the new translation. Go back and give it another try! NB: As a sweetener, there is a question about preference for the Ordinary or Extraordinary Forms.

Click HERE.

PS: They ask for your email address but you don’t have to give it in order to complete the poll.

UPDATE 7 Dec 1631 GMT:

A couple people have written to me saying that the Tablistas may be blocking people coming from this blog.  I doubt that, but it is fun to imagine.  If you can’t get in, it is probably a cookie/history issue because you already did their survey.

Here is another link.

http://thetablet.co.uk/page/survey 

_____

Original posted Dec 2, 2012 @ 11:52

A priest alerted me to a poll about the new, corrected ICEL translation of the Roman Missal being conducted online by the UK’s ultra-liberal dissenting catholic weekly The Tablet (aka The Bitter Pill). HERE.

You know what to do.

Be mindful that there are text errors in the poll!

HA HA HA HA HA!

Posted in Liberals, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, POLLS | Tagged , ,
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Earth at Night

At Astronomy Pic of the Day there is a great image of your planet at night.

Explanation: This remarkably complete view of Earth at night is a composite of cloud-free, nighttime images. The images were collected during April and October 2012 by the Suomi-NPP satellite from polar orbit about 824 kilometers (512 miles) above the surface using its Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS). VIIRS offers greatly improved resolution and sensitivity compared to past global nightlight detecting instrumentation on DMSP satellites. It also has advantages compared to cameras on the International Space Station, passing over the same point on Earth every two or three days while Suomi-NPP passes over the same point twice a day at about 1:30am and 1:30pm local time. Easy to recognize here, city lights identify major population centers, tracking the effects of human activity and influence across the globe. That makes nighttime images of our fair planet among the most interesting and important views from space.

Click the image for a much larger version.

It is interesting to compare the Northern Hemisphere and the Southern.  Compare North Korea to the South.

 

 

Posted in Just Too Cool, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged ,
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NYC 7 December: 1st Friday @ Holy Innocents – all night vigil with Masses and devotions

Anyone in the New York City area should want to know that at the Church of the Holy Innocents an all night vigil is held on 1st Fridays.

Holy Innocents is 128 West 37th Street (between Broadway and 7th).  It is close to Penn Station and several subway stops.

The vigil is sponsored by the traditional Knights of the Regina Coeli and Agnus Dei Councils of the Knights of Columbus.  It is great that there are Councils of the Knights of Columbus which are focused on the traditional Roman Rite.

The 1st Friday vigil begins at 6 p.m. with a Solemn Votive Mass of the Sacred Heart  according to the 1962 Missale Romanum, followed by Stations of the Cross, Exposition and Solemn Vespers and Compline coram Sanctissimo.

Throughout the night, they will also pray a full scriptural rosary, recite or sing all six Litanies approved for public use by the Church and sing the Divine Mercy Chaplet (at 3 a.m.).  The vigil concludes with a procession of the Blessed Sacrament and Mass at 5 a.m. in the Usus Antiquior for the Feast of the Immaculate Conception.

If you are in or near New York City, you have a great spiritual opportunity on 1st Fridays.

For those in the area who prefer to fulfill their obligation to attend Mass for the Immaculate Conception a little later in the day on Saturday, there will also be a Solemn Mass at Holy Innocents at 1 p.m.

Beautiful church.  Beautiful devotions.  Beautiful Masses.  Great location.

Over the years it has been great to see what use of the traditional forms has done to bring more people and spiritual benefits to this centrally located parish.  If only more pastors of souls would be open to what the Extraordinary Form could bring to their communities.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged ,
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OLDIE PODCAST: Thursday 1st week of Advent

Try this!

075 08-12-04 An Advent hymn dissected “Conditor alme siderum“; Fr. Z digresses far afield

 

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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Wherein Fr. Z shows provocatively that Dr. Peters agrees with Fr. Z after all in the matter of one Mass for back to back Holy Days of Obligation

[GO HERE for an important follow-up post.]

I include the picture to the right, only, because, today, I went to the fantastic exhibit on the American painter George Bellows. Thus, “Stag at Starky’s”.  The audience depicts the internet more than the opponents.

Regarding the need to attend two Masses to fulfill the obligation of Holy Day of Obligation preceding a Sunday (which is always a Holy Day of Obligation) Dr. Peters wrote… watch the moves….:

To satisfy the obligation to attend Mass on Immaculate Conception, must the Mass one attends in satisfaction of the Immaculate Conception obligation be [a] the Mass of the Immaculate Conception, celebrated before the evening of December 8, or, can it be [b] any Mass celebrated at any time beginning on the evening of December 7 and running till 11:59 pm December 8? I say the Latter.

And I rest my case.

Is that Mass also the eve, the vigil, of a Sunday?

Yes. It is!

Ergo… it satisfies also the obligation for Sunday.  One Mass – two obligations satisfied.  The formulary for Mass is not relevant.

Sometimes it works that way, because that is how we do law in the Church.  We favor flexibility when burdens are imposed.

Others disagree.  Others, such as Peters?, do not agree that we, according to the long-standing practice of interpretation, should interpret the law as flexibly as possible to allow for people.  No.  They impose burdens the law seems not to impose.

Liturgical time… blah blah blah… the law says on the day itself or the evening.  The “day”. This time, they coincide.  Let the law be made clearer if a burden is being imposed.

Also, auctores scinduntur.  Given the doubt, all the more reason to be looser on the obligation.

In the meantime, I repeat, I think people should go to Mass twice.  I will also repeat that I defer to proper authority.

I don’t think people should think in terms of the minimum.  But I, a priest, learned that we use canon law also to help people be at ease about their obligations.  That is why we interpret law strictly.  Am I wrong?

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged , ,
64 Comments

QUAERITUR: Should I, a deacon, go on “strike” when I see liturgical abuses?

From a deacon:

Dear Father Z,
my parish priest is leftist and modernist (like the vast majority of priests and bishops here in ___) and always changes the words of the Missal, adding his personal opinions. His homilies are more about ___ than the Gospel. My question is: as a permanent deacon, would I sin if I went on strike and quit acting as a deacon at Mass?

I strongly advise against any cleric going on “strike.” You are ordained for the Church – it’s not a job. You are a deacon, you should always act as a deacon, whether at Mass or elsewhere.

That said, let’s make distinctions about what “acting as a deacon” means.

As a deacon, you need not function as the deacon of the Mass at every Mass you’re at. It is acceptable for you to sit in choir.  Even sitting in choir, you can assist with the distribution of Holy Communion if there are not enough priests present to do so.

If you have serious and well-founded questions about the validity of the Mass being offered, you should certainly abstain from serving at it.  Then you should take other steps in keeping with the last part of Redemptionis Sacramentum.

If you are reasonably sure the Mass is invalid, document what you see and in private bring your concerns to the priest.  If the priest will not address your concerns, bring your concerns to the bishop with copies to the diocesan vicar for clergy, or your regional vicar.  If you are still not satisfied with the response, send what you have to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

If the questions go to liceity, but not validity, again, document your concerns and bring them to the priest in private.  If that does not produce results, write to the bishop, again with copies, etc. If you’re still not satisfied with the response, write directly to the Congregation for Divine Worship.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged ,
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Metropolitan Museum Visit

A beautiful image for your day.

Mother and Daughter in Prayer

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Ludwig Ferdinand Schnorr von Carolsfeld (+1853) with Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld (+1872)

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QUAERITUR: Priest at Mass as mere “presider”?

From a reader:

I have attended a spiritual recollection of cathechesis assistants of ___. The augustinian frater who led the sessions concentrated on the Vatican II, said in his presentation about the SC constitution: “We all celebrate the Mass, the priest presides”, as if we the lay folks were taking part in the job of the priest, actually. Since this was not a place for a debate, I did not respond, but I am seriously thinking about some reaction now. There were about 50 people present. I would be most grateful for a response or suggestion from you.

If the Augustinian told you that there is no difference between what a lay person does in offering spiritual sacrifice at Mass and what a priest does, then what he told you is wrong.

There is a sense in which “presider” can work well for an ordained person at Mass.  Say, for example, a priest is saying Mass and a bishop is present in choir.  The bishop can, in a sense, “preside”, though the priest is saying Mass.  When John Paul II could not say Mass easily anymore, he could preside while another said the Mass.   Otherwise, a person might “preside” at a Communion service or the recitation of one of the liturgical hours, which is a true liturgical service.

When it comes to Mass, we can use “celebrate” for laypeople in an equivocal way. What the priest does at Mass is entirely different. We can loosely use “celebrate” for both lay and priest, but let’s not get confused into thinking that what they do is the same.

There is a qualitative difference in how all the baptized participate in the priesthood of Christ the High Priest and how the ordained priest participates in Christ’s priesthood (Lumen gentium 10). The sacrament of Holy Orders confers a qualitatively different priesthood on the man ordained. Holy Orders changes the priest ontologically. The baptized offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God because they participate in Christ’s priesthood in their way. But what the priest does is different.

Put in blunt terms, when the priest says Mass, transubstantiation takes place. This takes place whether the priest is alone or there are other people present. A lay person, saying the same words over bread and wine, effects no change whatsoever. A hundred, a thousand, a million laypeople saying the words does precisely nothing. What lay people can do is, with all their mind, heart and will, unite their spiritual sacrifice to what the priest is doing.   The priest renews Christ’s saving Sacrifice.  Laypeople participate in that renewal by uniting themselves with what the priest does.  That is a real participation, too!

Let not the dignity of how laypeople offer sacrifice be denigrated by trying to dumbdown the concept of the ordained priest’s role.  And, similarly, let not the dignity of laypeople be besmirched by the condescending permission some cleric might grant them to do something that he should be doing.  That is the worst sort of clericalism there is.  The dumbing down of the priest’s role to that of a mere presider is the flip side of the same coing.

When you hear of this blurring of distinctions between the priesthood of the baptized and the priesthood of the priest, remember that if there is no priest, there is no Mass.

We should avoid the description of priest as mere “presider” when it comes to Mass.  “Presider” can mean just about anyone running anything.  “Priest”, however, is connected inextricably from the concepts of sacrifice.  Priests are for sacrifice.  No priest.  No sacrifice.  No need for sacrifice, no need for priesthood.  Priests exist for offering sacrifice.  That is their primary purpose.

When liberals start talking about the priest as mere “presider”, you can bet that they either don’t believe in or they are dangerously deemphasizing the sacrificial nature of Holy Mass.

Yes, the priest is a “presider” in the sense that he stands as the head of the body of the congregation.  Fine.  But he is the head of the body of the congregation because he is the mediator who offers sacrifice.  That is a special role.  Remove the concept of sacrifice and make the priest into a mere “presider” then you remove the need for ordained priesthood. No renewal of Christ’s Sacrifice on Calvary?  No need for ordained priests.  Anyone can stand up there and say the prayers.  Indeed, it makes no difference at that point if the person is male or female.  A community could pick any person whom they deemed to be competent or appropriate at that moment.  It would hardly make a difference, since Christ’s Sacrifice would not be the point of why they were there.

When you hear “presider” instead of “priest”, your metal sirens should sound.

Posted in ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged , , , , , ,
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