ASK FATHER: Attacks on the Vetus Ordo… “Aren’t you worried?”

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

What on earth is going on with a new document that will ban the TLM (Traditional Latin Mass)?  You seem quiet.  Don’t you worry about this?

This question represents many notes I’ve received.   I’ll answer this.  I’ll tell you what I think could happen.  I’ll give advice to seminarians and potential seminarians, lay people in general, and priests.

Don’t I worry about this?  Yes, and no.

Yes, I worry about this, because the powers that be are going to hurt a great number of innocent people.

No, I don’t worry about this, because worrying won’t help.

All analogies limp, but this is a good reminder: a scene in the movie Bridge of Spies.

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This analogy breaks down in that the cold war era Soviet spy on trial really is guilty of a crime and those who want to have traditional worship are not guilty of anything but reverence.   They are – as is more and more evident – far more sinned against than sinning.

Nevertheless the response from the Russian spy about “bosses” and about worrying seem apt in the Church today.  We have our “bosses” too, don’t we.

I have cited that movie clip before.  Freaking out and running around with your hair on fire because something might happen, even is going to happen is not helpful.

We must stay frosty and focused. 

If anything, ramp up your prayer life and mortifications.

Pray for those who have attacked you and who will attack you again.

I’ll repeat that.  They will attack you again.   In another of my vintage “classic” posts riffing on the “Laws of the House of God” (about a hospital in Boston), I cite the Laws of the legendary “Fat Man”.  Law 8: “They can always hurt you more.”

We have to get our heads into a place that will help us to maintain our cool and balance in a storm or wave of storms.

Mental and spiritual preparation beforehand is needed.

After the last stab at at the hearts of those attracted to Tradition, I said that it was probable that there would be another round of pogroms in the Church.

It’s the people they want to crush even more than the rites.  They fear and despise the people.

From where I sit and from what I read and hear, we must stay cool.   We must stay cool and we must plan.

I’ve written here before about house chapels.  You know what to do.  Get your “thing” together.

I say this because I firmly believe that, if and when another anti-Vetus Ordo edict is issued, the attack will be on diocesan priests with threats in the back channels against diocesan bishops.  Think of at least one bishop who was shot on the deck of his ship, “pour encourager les autres”.

To back up for a moment, I wrote for years and years and years that the true movement of reform would not start until the diocesan priests started saying the Vetus Ordo.  That would have a massive effect on their identity, their understanding of themselves as priests at the altar.   In turn that would have a knock on effect on the people in the pews, because their priests would be saying Mass, preaching and behaving differently.

So long as the Vetus Ordo was confined to a few places operated by specialist groups such as the FSSP and ICK – and there’s nothing wrong with them – the Vetus Ordo wasn’t much a a threat.  It was hated by the deep church but it was sort of like, in Star Trek, how the Borg didn’t activate and become hostile until they perceived you as a threat.   The Vetus Ordo grew.  The threat was that the Vetus Ordo would become mainstream in diocesan parishes.  From 2007 when Summorum Pontificum came out, there were some 50 places where the TLM was present.  Ten years later, there were 500.   The Borg activated.

I address myself to traditionally-minded young men thinking about the seminary.   

Gentlemen, it could be a good idea before the really bad times start to learn a trade.  I don’t know if this might entail night school or crash courses or whatever.  Don’t be dreamy about this.  Consider plumbing, electrical work, technical positions, EMT, etc.  Be practical. (Learning Chinese might be practical too, if you think about it.)

I write to lay people who might be in a position to help in what I am about to suggest.

Progroms against tradition and traditionally-minded Catholics strike at the heart of the Church herself.  The knock-on effects of these cruel measures, present and future, will only result in negative ripple-effects that accelerate the widening of the demographic sink hole into which swathes of Catholics are falling.

I write to priests. 

Fathers, it might not be a bad idea to acquire some property where you can live.   Believe me. Something you own, where no one (you know who I mean) can throw you out.  You can always sell it or pass it on.

A key to this is to stay cool and to plan.  Do not fret.  We are not without means and without creativity.  Slamming doors in the faces of those who love Tradition will result in the opening of windows in another part of the house.

Let no one freak out about this new slate of bad news.   BE WARY of the videos of the Johnny-come-lately pundits.   Just because they are newcomers doesn’t mean that they are wrong.  But some of us have already been there.

We must stay calm and soldier on.

I’ll return to a theme I hammer at.  Prepare home chapels.  It might be realistic project to network and buy a church.  After all, they are being closed everywhere.   It can always be used just for catechesis, recitation of the Rosary, and other devotions.  No one would ever suggest that it be set up as a counterpoint to the few diocesan parishes remaining after the powers that be crush the Vetus Ordo in parishes.

Do I think that things will be this bad?  I  think we are better off prepared, than not.  You will, moever, never regret having acquired those practical skills, having that home chapel, that church, or that private property.

Finally, before any other shoe drops, for the love of all that is holy, do all that you can to augment the numbers of people frequenting the Traditional Latin Mass whenever and wherever it is celebrated.  Be inviting.  Coax, urge, cajole.  Smile and offer to ride.  It is very important that everyone sees that TLMs are well-attended and growing.  If you are not doing something, every week, to try to help this, then if something bad happens where you are, you had best not utter a word.  We are in this together and we need you.

If the pogrom doesn’t come?  GOOD.  You will have maintained your cool and have benefited in the meantime, spiritually and temporally, without having made foolish mistakes.

Also, the Enemy’s hand in this.  Go to confession.  Be sure you are clean, that you mind is clear, and that your actions are meritorious.

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Daily Rome Shot 1054

From The World’s Best Sacristan™.

This is clearly breakfast at the usual post Mass haunt up the street from The Parish™.   The aforementioned breakfast this time consists of “er saccottino”, which the French foreigner refers to as “pain au chocolat”.     I saw this just after reading of an apartment available on the very piazza next to The Parish™ which made me gulp.  Alas, it was a little too much for my imagination unless I were to go full Neil Simon with a priestly Odd Couple in the place.     It would be perfect.  Sigh.

In Rome today, the sun rose at 05:33 and it will set at 20:51, the longest day of the year.  This is the Summer Solstice.   In Rome the Solstice is precisely at 20:50.

The Ave Maria ought to ring in its 21:15 cycle.

It is the Feast of St. Silverius today, though the 62 calendar allows for Votives.

It is the 172nd day of the year.

On this day in 1840 Samuel Morse, who spent time in Rome – there’s a plaque in the Via dei Prefetti – received a patent for the telegraph.

Lord, thank you for this day.

The first World Corporate Chess Championship has been decided in New York.  Chessify defeated Chess Moods.   At the closing ceremony there was a performance by the Rockettes.  Card. Dolan was not in sight.  In other news, we learn at Chess.com – I am an affiliate, btw, please sign up with my link – that British striker Harry Kane who plays for Bayern Munich, revealed that he is about a 1200 now in 10 minute Rapid.  He was inspired to play by The Queen’s Gambit.    A friend of mine and ham elmer will surely be distraught at the loss of this player from Tottenham to Munich.

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White to move and mate in 2.

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

Today is the last day to get up to 75% off at Remote Chess Academy.  HERE

Sign up with Chess.com. Maybe we can get a group going.

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I would very much like to see them overwhelmed with 20 year old participants.

At The Pillar I read…

TLMS as part of the scheduled Masses for the Eucharistic Congress? Not just coincidental?

I would very much like to see them overwhelmed with 20 year old participants.

TMLS… part of the schedule…

Now that The Pillar has written about them… CANCELLED? In 5… 4… 3… 2… 1!

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Mala tempora currunt!

I saw a pipiatio on Pipiatum (X) about Cicero’s oration against Cataline.  It brought back many memories.  Not that I was there… but I was, sort of.  I studied it in school.  Also, there is an inscription from the consulship of Cicero above the Forum and behind the Campidoglio where the “she wolf” is.  I always give it a good look when I am there.  In any event, the oration – this oration, mind you – of Cicero against Cataline is magnificent.  Cicero certainly at stenographers, but he certain also polished his speeches later.  But it is hardly to be doubted that Cicero railed against Cataline.

What am I talking about?

In an incredibly brief summation, in the throes of the Republic there are massive socio-economic problems in Rome and Pompey was looming in the distance with his legions.  The Senate and the Roman People (SPQR) were modern day republicans, in a sense, unable to get their caca together and solve problems.  Relatively lower family status Cicero defeated Cataline, from an ancient clan, for the consulship in 64 BC.  Cataline organized a group to commit coup.  Cicero got wind of it and there were bitter public exchanges.  Conspirators were arrested, Cataline fled with troops eventually to be run down.

The most famous of Cicero’s four Catalinarian Orations, given while he was consul (polished later),  is the first.  It is a web of rhetorical devices and invective.  It is in this speech that we have the famous phrase – often uttered in my own circle of friends when we are in our Latin mode – “O tempora! O mores!  … O what times these are!  O what dreadful conduct!”   He had used the phrase also against the fabulously corrupt governor of Sicily, Verres.    The first part of the speech is in the “tweet” I mentioned…

Quo usque tandem abutere, Catilina, patientia nostra? Quam diu etiam furor iste tuus nos eludet? Quem ad finem sese effrenata iactabit audacia?

I am reminded of an interview I recently read… “he takes part in public debate, he notes and marks out with his eyes each one of us for slaughter!”

Ah dear readers… as we find in another place…

Mala tempora currunt!

To which we respond…

Sed peiora parantur.

Posted in Be The Maquis, Latin, Semper Paratus, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice |
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ASK FATHER: Our choir is scheduled to sing something that seems blasphemous

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

You’re probably the only priest who can properly help me navigate this, given your knowledge of the fine arts, particularly classical music, as well as being solid on Catholic morality. You’re also the only priest whom I know is familiar with Carmina Burana (I saw you mention it in very old posts).

I’m slated to perform Carmina Burana along side my city’s philharmonic orchestra in its chorus. I’m feeling uneasy because of the subject matter and the piece that parodies the Ave Maria.  I want to sing it because it’s a major piece of the Canon of Western Music, but I also don’t want to sin and blaspheme Our Lady or anything else sacred. Frankly, the subject matter makes me want to vomit.

Navigating the arts, particularly secular choral music that is questionable, has proven to be difficult and anxiety provoking for me because I don’t know when it becomes sinful. Can you give me some pastoral guidance on this subject matter?

Thanks for the front-loaded kind words.  I am sure there are many priests out there who could help you out with this.  As a matter of fact, I bounced this off a priest friend just to be sure I was not drifting.

Firstly, it has been a long time since I looked at the texts of the Carmina Burana used by Orff.  And it is Cármina, not Carmína.

However, the work by Orff is part of a set of three pieces often performed together.  The other two are poems from the ancient Neoteric author Catullus, famous for some raunchy stuff.   I assume that you may be asking about those.

You mention the canon of western music.  There are works in the accepted canon which respect the rules of beauty and thus reflect reason and truth.  They certainly can be played and heard by conscientious Catholics.   On the other hand, there are works which do not respect these rules and our involvement with them becomes murkier.

Moreover, St. Thomas Aquinas tells us that all art and science should lead to adoration.

Hence, the guiding questions for all art and science, is whether or not it pleases God and whether or not it can be offered to Him.  We may not act on an uncertain conscience.

If the texts you are being asked to sing parody what is sacred, then it can hardly be a worthy offering to God.

That said, I recall an amusing video which provides the most famous of the Orff Carmina Burana (which is used in snippets all over the place – very drammmmatic!).   The video has “misheard” lyrics.   I’m sure everyone here knows the idea: the lyrics of some song are a little garbled and we mishear them, get them wrong, and pretty soon they are the words we remember.  You might remember the Monkey’s singing “Then I saw her face, now I’m gonna leave her.” A related phenomenon is mis-learned prayers by phonetics, as in “O God, I am hardly sorry for having offended Thee”. Here’s the video with the misheard lyrics of O Fortuna from Orff’s riff on some medieval poet or other. Orff… not my fav, but this made me laugh a couple of times. I’d pay to go to a concert with these lyrics.

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O Fortunavelut lunastatu variabilis
O Fortune
like the Moon
you are changeable
Gopher tuna!
bring more tuna!
Statue of a big dog with fleas
semper crescisaut decrescisvita detestabilis always growing
always shrinking
detestable life
Some men like cheese
hot temperate cheese
green chalk can taste like hippies
nunc obduratet tunc curatludo mentis aciem,egestatem,potestatemdissolvit ut glaciem.

[…]

now oppresses
and then heals
as the fancy games it
poverty or power
she melts them like ice[…]
You caught two rocks?
Pet two cool rocks!
You don’t get cheese or chicken.Play chess all day.
Hold his sock tip.
She sold me good hot chicken.[…]
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Daily Rome Shot 1053

Photo from The World’s Best Sacristan™.

Meanwhile, it is black’s move.  What to do?  How would you proceed?

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.

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This interview underscores their unbounded contempt for you.

At the Italian site Messa in Latino there is an English translation of an interview about matters concerning the Vetus Ordo and – especially – the people who desire it, with Andrea Grillo (aka Mister Cricket).     HERE

As MiL says:

“In the view of many in the Roman Curia, for Pope Francis, Prof. Grillo is on liturgy what Fr James Martin, S.J., is on homosexuality.”

You should read this.

Virtually everything he says is false, including “and” and “the”.  That’s not the point.  This fellow is a key influencer right now.

I’ve been saying for eons that the people who want to destroy the Vetus Ordo don’t hate and fear just the Vetus Ordo, they hate and fear the people who want it.  They don’t like the people.

This interview underscores their animus in spades.  You can sense the hostility pouring out.  His contempt for you is unbounded.

 

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Yes, I’ve seen the assertions about rumors, etc.

I have seen them.  You don’t need to send me links.

It is no surprise that the Vatican’s liturgical Einsatzgruppe is flecked with spittle about the Vetus Ordo.  It’s summer and they need to hurt someone.  That’s how they roll.

Remember, it is not just about the content of the prayers of the Vetus Ordo, which is the real issue.  It reminds people of the eternal consequences of their actions and it tells us how to attain Heaven, not just to long for it.   The real problem, as they see it, are the people who want the Vetus Ordo.  They don’t like the people.

However, be cool.   Resist the temptation to run after every doom and gloom YouTube video which will whip this into a click bait froth.  “Look at MEEEEEE!  MEEEE!”

The best things you can do are

1. GO TO CONFESSION

Be sure your good works and prayers are meritorious.

2.Get down on your knees, literally, and pray. 

Rosary is good.  Fast.  Give alms.  These work effectively against demons.

3. If you can, start organizing/networking with laypeople and priests about when and where the TLM will be celebrated.

4. Start approaching bishops, perhaps with spiritual bouquets in hand.

Yes, a lot of these guys have ice in their veins, but not all of them. It is said that it takes 3-4% of a population which is activated to make real changes. Be the change.

5. Home altars and Mass items.

Have you gotten everything together?

6. Ask yourself if you really care.

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Amusing choice in The Chosen

I watched the most recent episode of controversial The Chosen.  A recurring Pharisee character has on his robe braiding/trim which you can get at Gammarelli in Rome for your Roman (and other) style vestments.   I sure some Smarticus Pantsicus will come up with a witty remark.

 

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Daily Rome Shot 1052 – St. Benedict Medal info

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.

I received an advance copy of a book to be released tomorrow, 18 June: The Cross and Medal of Saint Benedict: A Mystical Sign of Divine Power edited by Fr. Robert Nixon, OSB.   You can “pre-order”.

US HERE – UK HERE

This is a handy volume.  There are quotes from famous saints and writers about Benedict, there’s a quite hagiographical account of the life of the great saint (miracle stories, etc., always fun and edifying), a brief account of the Order and then a detailed look at the St. Benedict Medal.

As a side note, whenever I bless a St. Benedict Medal or Cross (there is a Cross in the design), all sorts of nasty things happen to me.   This chapter describes the origin and variations.  However, the definitive – and I didn’t know this – design was approved by Pope Benedict XIV (a favorite of mine) in 1741.

What I also didn’t know is that the meaning of the letters, the abbreviation of the Latin poetic inscription with powerful content, faded from memory.  It was rediscovered in a centuries old manuscript in the Abbey of Metten in Bavaria.   I have a personal connection to Metten because this was the Abbey of my great friend and mentor the late great Augustine Card. Mayer, OSB, who had been Abbot there and then was in the Curia for a long while.  He was perhaps the holiest man I’ve ever met.   I still reflect on the object lessons he gave me in life.  Metten was also the Abbey of the monk who founded the huge St. John’s in me native Minnesota.

Here’s a taste from the book…

In the Year of Our Lord 1647, the cross of Saint Benedict, which was by then already in widespread use and had been revered for some centuries, began to shine forth with a new and radiant splendor. This came about in the following manner. In a certain town [in Bavaria] called Natternberg, a coven of wizards and witches had been discovered. Once these vile and viper-like malefactors were arrested by the authorities, they were placed in chains and carefully questioned as to their nefarious activities and practices. In the course of their confessions, they revealed that their black arts were utterly powerless wherever they encountered a particular type of cross or medal [i.e. that of Saint Benedict.] For, wherever it was painted or engraved, it served as an invincible shield against the forces of evil which they employed. They went on to say that they had found that their works had no effect in the monastery at Metten in Bavaria, for many such crosses were located there.

[…]

This story goes on to recount how by then no one knew the meaning of the Letters.  Then a manuscript was discovered in Metten’s magnificent library – and if you haven’t seen photos of this library… wow.   With this ancient parchment in hand, it was possible again to read the medal.

There’s a lot more too this, also.  But you can find that in the book when you get a copy!

There is also a section on the documented powers of the medal and how to use it.  A couple of them were a surprised to me.

When I would visit Card. Mayer when he was at his Abbey (away from Rome during the summer) I had a chance to wander about in the library and grounds.

Quite the place.

I don’t recall seeing chess puzzle books, however.

White to move and mate in 2.

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

Right now, for a few days, there is a big sale for FATHER’S DAY at Remote Chess Academy. 75% on some things.
Interested in learning?  Try THIS.

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