A palindrome for St. Martin’s Day

From a reader from back on 11/11/11:

I thought that you and your readers might find this legend of Satan, St. Martin of Tours, and two exquisitely long palindromes, to be of interest particularly on this palindromic day of 11/11/11.

From The Book of Days, Vol. II, R. Chambers, ed., W. & R. Chambers, Ltd., London & Edinburgh, 1864, p. 568:

“Martin, having occasion to visit Rome, set out to perform the journey thither on foot. Satan, meeting him on the way, taunted the holy man for not using a conveyance more suitable to a bishop. In an instant the saint changed the Old Serpent into a mule, and jumping on its back, trotted comfortably along. Whenever the transformed demon slackened pace, Martin, by making the sign of the cross, urged it to full speed. At last, Satan, utterly defeated, exclaimed:

‘Signa te signa: temere me tangis et angis:
Roma tibi subito motibus ibit amor.’

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Reason #5466 for “Romanorum coetibus”!

In England, there is a new Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury.

In the USA, in the Episcopal Church, I read thanks to a link sent by a priest friend, that there is a new Episcopal Bishop in the Diocese of Eau Claire, WI! HERE

I noted in that article that:

Fr. Lambert succeeds the Rt. Rev. Edwin Leidel who served as provisional bishop following the translation of the diocese’s fifth bishop, the Rt. Rev. Keith Whitmore as assistant Bishop of Atlanta in 2008

The diocesan profile said the “ideal candidate” for the half time position would be able to “support himself or herself through a part-time position, provide vision for new ways of working in the Episcopal Church, and an energetic spirituality that will nurture the wide variety of people to whom we minister.”

The diocese has a baptized membership of 2200 in 21 congregations served by 15 priests, 12 deacons and 7 active retired clergy. Its 2012 budget is $223,632.

Again, I call for the Anglicans/Episcopalians to issue Romanorum coetibus.

Just look how well conforming your message to the wisdom of this world has worked for them?

They have some space and readers of the National catholic Fishwrap and The Tablet, Call To Action, the LCWR need a safe-haven, a warm, welcoming, nurturing environment in which they can maintain their most cherished traditions.  It’s a win-win scenario!

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Medieval Airport Security

A reader sent me this with a caption:

Medieval Airport Security

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Look! Up in the sky!

From Spaceweather:

TOTAL ECLIPSE OF THE SUN: Scientists and sky watchers are converging on the northeast coast of Australia, near the Great Barrier Reef, for a total eclipse of the sun on Nov. 13/14. For researchers, the brief minutes of totality open a window into some of the deepest mysteries of solar physics. [full story]

TAURID METEOR SHOWER: Earth is passing through a stream of gravelly debris from Comet Encke, source of the annual Taurid meteor shower. Because the debris stream is not very congested, Taurid meteor rates are usually low, around 5 per hour. The special thing about Taurids is that they tend to be fireballs.

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OORAH! 237!

I cannot let the day pass without saying Happy Birthday to the United States Marine Corps.

Happy 237th Birthday and thank you, Devil Dogs!

OORAH!

Let’s have a sing along.

[wp_youtube]Jh5OlT-cslQ[/wp_youtube]

 

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Pope Benedict, speaking on liturgical music and the new evangelization, emphasizes Gregorian chant, polyphony, listening

Pope Benedict received in audience the “Saint Cecilia Association”, on the occasion of a congress of liturgical choirs taking place in Rome.

The reports on the Holy Father’s address were rather thin and I haven’t seen anything about this in English.  However, in the Italian original I noticed some thoughts of the Holy Father that confirm and strengthen positions I have been trying to emphasize for many years.

Here is the last part of the Pope Benedict’s address in my fast translation:

The second aspect that I propose for your reflection is the relationship between sacred song and the new evangelization. The Conciliar Constitution on the liturgy calls to mind the importance of sacred music in the mission ad gentes and urges an appreciation of the musical traditions of peoples (cf 119). But also in countries of ancient evangelization, as is Italy, sacred music can have, and in fact does have, a relevant task, to foster the rediscovery of God, a renewed approach to the Christian message and to the mysteries of the Faith. Let us think about the famous experience of Paul Claudel, who converted while listening to the singing of the Magnificat during Vespers of Christmas in the Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris: “In that moment”, he wrote, “an event happened that dominates my whole life. In an instant my heart was touched and I believed. I believed with a force of adhesion so great, with such a lifting of all my being, with a conviction so powerful, in a certainty that would not leave room for any kind of doubt that, from that point onward, no reasoning, no circumstance of my agitated life could either shake my faith or touch it.” But, without bothering with illustrious people, let’s think about how many people have been touched in the depth of their soul listening to sacred music; and even more how many felt themselves attracted anew towards God by the beauty of liturgical music as was Claudel. [NB] And here, dear friends, you have an important role: commit yourselves to improve the quality of liturgical singing, without fearing to recover and to make use of the great musical tradition of the Church, which in Gregorian (chant) and in polyphony have two of the highest expressions, as the same Vatican II affirms (cf Sacrosanctum Concilium 116). And I would like to underscore that active participation of the whole People of God in the liturgy does not consist only in speaking, but also in listening, in receiving the Word with the senses and with the spirit, and this goes also for liturgical music. [This is my constant point of “active receptivity”.] You, who have the gift of singing, can make the hearts of so many people sing in liturgical celebrations.

Note that the Holy Father isn’t just talking about Holy Mass.  He is talking about liturgical celebrations.  He uses the example of Vespers.  Vespers is a liturgical celebration.  Vatican II mandated that vespers be fostered in churches.

But be sure not to miss that point about participation by listening.  Listening is not passive when the mind and heart are engaged by the will.  Close listening is active reception.

Moreover, the Holy Father spoke of the sort of music that we are to use in liturgical services: sacred music.  The texts and the musical idiom must be sacred.

Also, the Holy Father urged them not to be afraid of the treasury of the Church’s sacred music, especially Gregorian chant and polyphonic music.  We must reopen the treasury and make use of our patrimony.  It will take courage to open the treasury, but also courage to use what is inside.  Some people of a certain age have a visceral reaction to the use of anything “old”, as if by using it, even thinking that it is good, is an attack on their persons.  The sight of a traditional vestment or the sound of Latin or chant provokes many of them to a blind suspicion that their lives are being questioned, so bound up is their identity with the iconoclastic upheaval of the halcyon 60’s and 70’s.

Let this Year of Faith see a revival of sacred music.

 

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Benedict XVI, Brick by Brick, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Drill, The future and our choices, Vatican II | Tagged , , , , , , , ,
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Pontifical Academy for Latin established by Benedict XVI

You will all be pleased to know that the Holy Father’s Motu Proprio establishing the Pontifical Academy for Latin. The name of the Motu Proprio is, amazingly enough, Latina lingua! No!  Really!

The new Academy will be under the aegis of the Pontifical Council for Culture, of which Cardinal Ravasi is the President.

The “Latinitas” Foundation is also suppressed.

I noted with interest the line in the Motu Proprio:

3. In hodierno tamen cultu, humanarum litterarum extenuatis studiis, periculum adest levioris linguae Latinae cognitionis, quae in curriculis philosophicis theologicisque futurorum presbyterorum quoque animadvertitur.

D’ya think?

Whose, I wonder, fault is that?

It is good that there is a new structure to advance Latin.  Let’s see if anything concrete happens.

Let’s start with the observance of CIC 1983 can. 249

Institutionis sacerdotalis Ratione provideatur ut alumni non tantum accurate linguam patriam edoceantur, sed etiam linguam latinam bene calleant necnon congruam habeant cognitionem alienarum linguarum, quarum scientia ad eorum formationem aut ad ministerium pastorale exercendum necessaria vel utilis videatur.

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UK: Legal path set to deny charitable status to Church which exclude anyone from Communion, sacraments

Tales of the Bizarre.

This is from LifeNews:

UK Catholics might lose charitable status for not offering communion to everyone

BY HILARY WHITE

LONDON, November 7, 2012 (LifeSiteNews.com) – A Conservative Party MP has accused the government’s Charity Commission of attempting to suppress Christianity after the group denied charitable status to the Plymouth Brethren, a small denomination of conservative evangelicals. MP Charlie Elphicke has said that the Charity Commission has stepped outside its mandate telling the Brethren that their religion is “not necessarily for the public good”.  [hmmm]

In a letter to the community, the Commission wrote of a tribunal decision that found “there is no presumption that religion generally, or at any more specific level, is for the public benefit, even in the case of Christianity or the Church of England”. [The official state church.]

The Plymouth Brethren, of which there are about 16,000 adherents in Britain, have said they intend to pursue their dispute to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg if necessary. They have been embroiled in the dispute with the Commission for seven years since the Commission refused charitable status to one of the group’s churches in Devon. The group engages in street preaching, distributing bibles and visits hospital patients. These activities, said Garth Christie, an Elder in the group, more than qualifies them for charitable status under the “advancement of religion” clauses.

[…]

[NB] The Charity Commission alleges that the group’s rule of only giving Holy Communion to full members means that their services are not open to all, [?!?] a charge which the Brethren deny. The Brethren say that their public services are offered to everyone regardless of religious affiliation. If it is upheld, the rule could be extended to the Catholic Church which also officially restricts Communion reception to members.

[…]

Get that?

Deny Communion to a non-Catholic or excommunicated Catholic, refuse to marry homosexuals….

Get it?

Posted in 1983 CIC can. 915, Blatteroons, Dogs and Fleas, Liberals, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged , ,
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QUAERITUR: “Marry us or you’ll drive us out of the Church!”

From a reader:

Starsky and Phyllis [LOL] were married while vacationing on a cruise ship in the Caribbean last summer, and now want to have their married “blessed.” Starsky does not believe this is necessary because even though he was baptized Catholic, he was raised to believe the Church is just a bunch of rules trying to control people’s lives. But, he says, he will do whatever Phyllis wants if it will make her happy. He says he will even go to church with his wife on Christmas and at Easter. Phyllis, who claims to be a “good” Catholic, says she wants to raise their children in the Catholic Faith, “the right way.” Phyllis is due to deliver their first child in two months and wants to be married “in the Church” before the child is born. To reject their request, according to Phyllis, will both push Starsky away from the Church and ruin her life.

Whatever happened aboard the cruise ship, Starsky and Phyllis, if they were both baptized Catholics at the time, and did not receive a legitimate dispensation, were not married.

Baptized Catholics are bound to observe the Catholic form of marriage.

What we have here is a situation where an unmarried couple comes to the Church, not to get their marriage “blessed,” but rather, to get married.

Let’s track this.

The groom is reluctant.  He thinks, perhaps, he is already married.  He has no need to get married again. He may be reluctant to observe his Catholic faith in any regular manner. Phyllis, on the other hand, seems to be using emotional blackmail to get what she wants.  It’s a common argument in many spheres: the Church MUST marry her, or it will push Starsky away from the Church even more!  The Church will ruin her life.

A cruel, if honest, pastor might tell Phyllis that it was her choice to enter into a civil union despite her Catholic faith, that she chose Starsky as a mate (not a paragon of Christian manliness or the ideal husband), it was her choice to consummate that civil union despite her Catholic faith.

Who brought ruin down upon her life again?

On the other hand she may encounter a less cruel, but nevertheless honest pastor.

This priest will remember that sacraments are for people. Not only the most virtuous have the right to the assistance of the Church. Some people are led back into a regular practice of the faith because of the ministration of a kindly, but firm, priest. This priest will recall the words of Pope Benedict XVI during his 2011 Allocution to the Rota:

“The right to marry, ius connubii, must be seen in this perspective. In other words it is not a subjective claim that pastors must fulfill through a merely formal recognition independent of the effective content of the union. The right to contract marriage presupposes that the person can and intends to celebrate it truly, that is, in the truth of its essence as the Church teaches it. No one can claim the right to a nuptial ceremony. Indeed the ius connubii refers to the right to celebrate an authentic marriage.”

Here’s a fact: the couple came.  They desire to be married (or at least one of the parties desires to get married). They demonstrate they are prepared for marriage. The fact that a child is on the way should not hasten the necessary inquiry and preparation for marriage.  That fact should make the preparation more urgent.

Someone might be concerned about the “legitimacy” of the child.  This is primarily a civil, not a canonical matter.  Children born outside of marriage are legitimated by the subsequent marriage of the parents (can. 1139). Holy Church is more interested that the couple has a solid foundation for a true, lasting marriage than that a wedding take place quickly.

In most places, the Church requires a six-month or longer preparation time before celebrating the wedding. During this time, hopefully, there is solid catechesis about marriage, natural family planning, even professional counseling if significant issues come up. Despite what the wedding industry says the arrangement of the externals (e.g., the dresses, tuxes, reception hall,  menu, and the damn photos…) are NOT IMPORTANT.

Couples should prepare for their marriage, not for their wedding.

If our aforementioned kindly, but honest pastor thinks Starsky and Phyllis are not prepared for a true marriage, he can delay their wedding.

If he deems they are not headed towards a true marriage, he has the right to say: “I’m sorry, but I can’t sanction this wedding.”

Tough love.

The couple would have the right to appeal to the bishop for a “second opinion” but – get this- the Church’s interest is not in having as many weddings as possible.  

The Church’s interest is to celebrate as many true, valid and binding marriages as possible.

 

Posted in ASK FATHER Question Box, One Man & One Woman | Tagged , , , ,
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Let the payback begin

We are not even a week from the election. The pay-back will now start and pick up speed.

From the paper in Green Bay, WI:

A Madison-based group that advocates the separation of church and state and once took on Green Bay City Hall for putting up a nativity scene is now taking on the bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Green Bay.

The Freedom From Religion Foundation is looking for help from the Internal Revenue Service in going after Bishop David Ricken for what it says is a violation of the diocese’s nonprofit tax status. The foundation argues Ricken intervened in a political campaign.

The foundation is asking the IRS to investigate the diocese and take “appropriate action to remedy any violations” of the diocese’s non-profit tax status.

Ricken wrote an article Oct. 24 for publication in all church bulletins within the diocese calling for parishioners to keep church teachings in mind when voting in the Nov. 6 election.

In his article, which Ricken titled “An Important Moment,” he stated the church is not a political organism but that it has a responsibility to speak out regarding moral issues. Ricken urged church members to keep in mind a set of what he calls “non-negotiables.” Those are positions he says are “intrinsically evil” and that “cannot be supported by anyone who is a believer in God or the common good or the dignity of the human person.” He cited abortion, euthanasia, embryonic stem cell research, human cloning and gay marriage.

[…]/blockquote>
Read the rest there.

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