STATIONS OF THE CROSS (audio from Fr. Z)

Many parishes and chapels will have the Via Crucis or Stations of the Cross during Lent.

What version does your parish use?  

Let’s get some titles/versions/authors and we can have a poll later on.

I have audio projects with the Way of the Cross.

Here is a reading of the Via Crucis, the Way of the Cross, composed by Joseph Card. Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, for the 2005 Good Friday observance at the Colosseum in Rome.

Also, for your Lenten spiritual warfare, here are two versions the popular Via Crucis by St. Alphonsus Liguori.  One version is plain, just my voice.  The other is the same voice recording, but with the Gregorian chant Sequence Stabat Mater interlaced between the stations.

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WDTPRS – Friday 3rd Week of Lent – Prayer over the people (2002MR)

A great new feature of the 2002 Missale Romanum in Latin is that for Lent the "Prayer over the people" or Oratio super populum has been revived as an option.

Priests can use this prayer NOW at the end of Mass, but still only in the Latin.

Yah, I know.. I keep posting these as if they were, I dunno, interesting.

Let’s have a look at today’s:

ORATIO SUPER POPULUM (2002MR):
Implorantes, Domine, misericordiam tuam,
fideles tuos propitius intuere,
ut, qui de tua pietate confidunt,
tuae caritatis dona ubique diffundere valeant
.

"But Father! But Father!," some would be liturgists might be saying as they scratch their heads.  "Where does this pray come from?  How do you ferret out its origins?"

Books, friends.  The Corpus Christianorum Latinorum has volumes and volumes of orations.  You sort though the bits and pieces using, especially, the first few words.  And you use your Latin ear.

For example, in today’s prayer, which is I think a "shake and bake" oration, pasted together from pieces of other orations and some new composition, we find a source in this:

You can see some of our old friends, for example, the Liber sacramentorum Gellonensis 387.

Where we find this on p. 47 of its critical edition.  This in the section on the 2nd week of Lent.

So that takes care of the first part of the prayer… which we still haven’t translated.

The second part?  I think it was a new composition.

So, when you scan over these WDTPRS entries you now have a glimpse of a little of what I do in writing them.

Now…  who wants to take this easy prayer and make some comments after a

SLAVISHLY LITERAL VERSION?

 

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URGENT POLL UPDATE on Denver priest attacked for being obedient

Look what you have done!

ORIGINAL ENTRY HERE.  Comment there.

 UPDATE 10 March 1813 GMT:

LOOK WHAT YOU HAVE DONE!

The poll graphic on the denverpost.com page is screwed up.

This is the best I could get.

Close… it is getting closer. 

And those "Yes" and "No, and I’m Catholic" categories are getting closer too.

UPDATE 10 March 1839 GMT:

I see that on Fr. Breslin’s blog, the comments have been deleted under all the posts.  Hard to blame him, poor guy.

UPDATE 10 March 2344 GMT:

The Yes, I am Catholic category has pulled ahead!  

But the bad opinion is still head if you add their two categories together.

UPDATE 11 March 1344 GMT:

The poll has been turned around!

Keep up the good work!

UPDATE 11 March 2304 GMT:

The good guys are winning.

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Zmirak responds to Hoopes, Fr. Z does Liturgy Science Theatre 3000

There is a bloggy debate going on between Mr. Zmirak and Mr. Hoopes.  Rather, it turned into a debate.

Zmirak started the ball rolling it with a piece in Inside Catholic.  Hoopes responded on the National Catholic Register. 

I posted a fisk of Hoopes’ response.

It is only fair that I now fisk Zmirak’s loooooong retort to Hoopes’ response… with the oft imitated emphases and comments:

You May Kiss the Bridey
by John Zmirak  
3/10/10
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My former editor at the National Catholic Register, Tom Hoopes, has done me a courtesy rarely afforded tradition-minded Catholics: He has stooped to address my arguments, instead of airily dismissing them as the sad obsessions of half-wits, bag ladies, and yellow-eyed anti-Semites with dirty fingernails. Sure, he did so in a blog post which referred to the traditional Mass — the one said by almost every priest who has ever been canonized — as a "freak flag." But as a true-blue Traddy, I will take what I can get. Give me a Mass at 6 a.m. at a chapel in a lunatic asylum . . . a muttered liturgy with a mandatory sign-in sheet at an abandoned Armenian parish . . . and I’ll show up, clutching a missal — despite the alarming (if not surprising) percentage of eccentrics. [That’s true, you know.]  Come to think of it, those of us who accept Humanae Vitae are already a vanishingly tiny segment of practicing Catholics, so it seems a bit rich for one sliver of this infinitesimal subculture to throw donut holes across the bingo hall at the other. (Okay, I’ll toss a few: At least we Trads aren’t scarfing down lame Catholic knock-offs of already-pitiful Christian "rock," or training our daughters to be altar servers for the next World Urban Youth Day . . . bless their hearts!)  [Okayyy… Zmirak has the flamethrower charged up.]
 
What makes responding to Hoopes such fun […and he left himself open, folks, for this…] — I’m almost moved to give up writing this article for Lent — is his resemblance to one of my favorite characters in the works of Evelyn Waugh, Sebastian Flyte’s brother Bridey. Like him, Hoopes is a fervent believer, who has worked hard and sacrificed much in the service of the Church, and he earnestly strives to explain and defend the Faith. Like Bridey’s, his arguments have a curious effect. As Charles Ryder says:
 
D’you know, Bridey. If ever I thought about becoming a Catholic, I’d only have to talk to you for five minutes to be cured. You manage to reduce what seem quite sensible propositions to stark nonsense.
 
To which Bridey responds, with admirable humility:
 
It’s odd you should say that. I’ve heard it before from other people. It’s one of the reasons why I don’t think I’d have made a good priest. It’s something in the way my mind works, I suppose.
 
The "Bridey Effect" is so evident in Hoopes’s response to my piece on the liturgy that I face an embarrassment of riches. And to avoid the rich embarrassment I fear might otherwise result, I will henceforth refer to the article’s author simply as "Bridey." [ROFL!]
 
Bridey begins by objecting to the suggestion that it was an imprudent act for Pope Paul VI to forbid the liturgy in its solemn, invariant, historic form and replace it with one open to dozens of options, subject to a decade of tinkering, at a time of deep theological uncertainty and radical social change. Did this radical, unsettling alteration in the form of the Church’s central mystery prepare the laity to accept the lies of dissenting Catholics who claimed that everything else — from faith to morals — was also up for grabs? Was it indeed like a new president coming into office and changing our country’s flag? [That was the point in Zmirak’s original article.]
 
Bridey doesn’t answer, but instead takes refuge in a theological evasion: "The Church doesn’t have or need a flag, because it isn’t a nation. Its members are tied to each other by bonds far deeper than political ones." Very nice, and very high-minded. The Church is indeed, in one sense, the Mystical Body of Christ. And in that sense, a Renaissance cardinal could have whispered to his mistress across the pillow that the Church of his day was not in any sense "corrupt." Indeed, the Bride of Christ is indefectible. So why even talk about it? Why have a newspaper devoted to reporting on the changeless, eternal union of Christ and His Church? My old colleagues at the Register can pack up their laptops and go home.  [NB: A flag is a "sign".  The point is that Bridey decides that because the Church is, ideally and considered from the point of view of Christ, spotless, it doesn’t need an outward sign such as a flag, or a Mass that doesn’t change, etc.]
 
What if, however, by "Church" we are referring to the changeable, human side of the Church Militant on earth [Which speaks to the point that while the Church is spotless, ideally, we are not.  Humans are, furthermore, not angels.  We need things like signs.] — you know, the aspect of the Church that indeed has human leaders and members, news, controversies, flaws, reforms, and renewals? It is that Church that had an abuse crisis culminating in the 1990s, and a liturgy crisis beginning in the 1970s. If we’re permitted to talk about the former, we must also address the latter. In that sense, the Church has an earthly governance, a legal code, an administrative structure, and more than one billion imperfect adherents. Thanks to the fall of the Chinese empire in 1912, it is the oldest continuous human institution on earth. Such an organization, which commands human loyalties and can lose them, [Indeed.] might indeed need something like a flag[Indeed.] It’s not for nothing that Catholics during the Counter-Reformation marched (heavily armed, to prevent sacrilegious attacks) in Corpus Christi processions through hostile Calvinist towns. The Eucharist itself was those brave Catholics’ banner, and I for one am not ashamed of them. Is Bridey?
 
My original article implied — no, it stated outright, and let me here reaffirm it — that the chaos in Catholic bedrooms began on Catholic altars. [The constant changes people experienced in liturgy led to confusion also about moral issues, especially in the lead up to and in the wake of Humanae vitae.  And vice versa.] The noodling, tinkering, profanation and vulgarization that afflicted the Catholic sanctuaries gave busy, weary, worldly Catholics (i.e., most of us) apparent permission to follow the lead of pastors and theologians who were tinkering and noodling with Catholic sexual morality. Humanae Vitae was treated as a dead letter when it was issued, as was Sacrosanctum Concilium, and then the norms that (once upon a time) forbade Communion in the hand and altar girls. [Well… that parallel isn’t quite right.  Liberals rejected Paul VI’s Humanae vitae but they enthusiastically instrumentalized Sacrosanctum Concilium to be able to do their own thing with impunity.  Subsequent corrective documents on liturgy however…] Documents trickled in from Rome from time to time on sexual morality and liturgical abuses, and they were duly ignored by the very bishops Rome had appointed. What exactly were ordinary Catholics, the kind who don’t read curial admonitions over breakfast, meant to think? If that’s good governance, I’d hate to witness anarchy[Do I hear an "Amen!"?]
 
Of course, much of this confusion — which has dragged on for a generation — could be resolved by a "reform of the reform," such as many suggest Pope Benedict XVI has in mind. Were the Novus Ordo pared back to something resembling the intentions of the Second Vatican Council — facing the altar, minus all the ambiguous Eucharistic Prayers (that is, all but the First), with congregants kneeling for Communion on the tongue received from a priest — most Traditionalists would shut up. No, we’d sing for joy. Most of us appreciate hearing the readings in the vernacular, and few would travel for miles and hours to find a Mass for the sake of the old Confiteor. [Indeed.]
 
[But let’s move along to the next section.] The next point Bridey makes is one intended to make the delicate reader squirm. He compares the reception of Holy Communion to the intimate marital act, and suggests there is something prurient in paying undue attention to the externals attending either sexuality or Mass. Here again, it is hard to know where to begin. I might start by noting that the sexual act is private and properly confined to the participation of two. The Mass is inherently public and communal, even when said by a solitary priest in a prison camp. It is the summit and locus of unity in the Church. To lump these mysteries together and ask that marital dignity and privacy be accorded, say, the public masses said by an archbishop . . . for once in my life, I am almost speechless. [i would add that if Bridey, as Zmirak calls Mr. Hoopes in this piece, thought – really – that people on the traditional side of things might be discomforted by a reference to Mass and sex, then he doesn’t know traditionalists.  Trads are not pruds, in the sense many liberals assume them to be.  As a matter of fact, the same sort of traditionalism and conservatism allows "trads" to have the sense of humor lacking in most liberals, as well as a healthier use of the good things of creation.]  I’ll leave my response to one of Bridey’s more acerbic commenters, who rightly replied:
 
[I]f that’s the analogy you REALLY want to use, current celebration of the Liturgy has become less like one of the parties insist[ing] on the same candles and Journey tape all the time, and more like one of the parties . . . insisting on constant novelty, obsessing on what she can do to make it "different" this time; as if it were . . . oh, I don’t know, the French maid’s outfit that made it all "meaningful."
 
Bridey says that the Eucharist, like sexual intercourse, is an "expression of a relationship of which it is a very small (but very important) part." Concerning the Eucharist, this statement is so wide of the mark I’m tempted to say, "It is not even wrong." Does the author really regard sexuality and all the ripples it spreads across the surface of life as a drop in the bucket? Is he saying, with so many randy bachelors over the centuries, "It’s just sex, sweetie"? Surely not. That’s just the "Bridey effect."  [Nor is Holy Mass just a "small" part of the Catholic experience.  I was rather surprised at that.]
 
The sexual act and the commitments (such as children) that follow from it are the only decisive difference between a marriage and a friendship. The first thing we singles wonder when we see two members of the opposite sex together is: Are they "together"? Are these people married, engaged, exclusively dating, or are they just "pals"? In answer to this honorable question, married people wear rings, women change their names, and healthy laws still distinguish marriage from "domestic partnerships." We do all sorts of very public things that declare which person we’re married to, and mark that relationship off from every other.
 
Indeed, in almost every culture, the two sexes engage in a wide variety of activities designed to reinforce and celebrate the distinctions between male and female — almost as if the most primitive men and women knew that the difference between them was profound and meaningful. In Jewish and Christian theology, as theologian Manfred Hauke demonstrated, the male represents transcendence and the female immanence; God is the Father or the Bridegroom, and humanity is the Bride. Desacralizing the liturgy, confusing the roles of priest and laity, is as confusing and misleading as pretending there is no difference between the sexes. But then we’re doing that too, nowadays. [Do I hear and "Amen!"?  That was good, Mr. Zmirak.]
 
An article I penned eight years ago on Paul VI’s collaborator in crafting the Novus Ordo, Archbishop Rembert Weakland [!], explains the implications here:
 
The priest acts in the person of Christ. Christ acts as high priest, and offers himself as victim to God the Father, in expiation for the sins of man. In the person of the priest, Christ weds himself to the congregation, which stands for the Church, Christ’s mystical Bride. Just as the priest’s sacrificial role in the New Testament theology is a direct outgrowth — down to many of the rituals and prayers used — of the High Priest’s Temple ritual in Judaism, so this matrimonial theology grows directly out of the Old Testament understanding of the Jewish people as wedded to Yahweh. (See the Song of Songs and Hosea for lovely, poetic meditations on this theme in the Hebrew Bible.) . . .
 
This marriage between the priest and the congregation, between Christ and the Church, is at the very heart of Catholic theology. It connects to the sacredness of the sexual act, and expresses the very reason why (as we believe) God became a man — in order to unite the mass of fallen, weak humanity to himself, in a mystical sacrament of love. In pagan religions and ancient Judaism, the role of a priest — one who offers sacrifice — was distinctly and utterly masculine. [My digression: This is a good reason why we priests should always use a chalice veil for Holy Mass.  End digression.] This is true in all the traditional liturgies of the Church, East and West, along with the papal mass in Rome, which dramatically depict Christ’s manhood along with his transcendent Godhood, in the imperfect but sanctified masculine person of the priest. A woman playing at priest is just as absurd as Nathan Lane playing a nun. It’s a drag act, proper to Saturday Night, but not to Sunday morning.
 
In a reverent liturgy, we engage in all sorts of symbolic behavior to distinguish the sacred elements from the profane, the unconsecrated bread from the Body of Christ, and the priest from the laity. Liturgies that cloud such distinctions are inherently confusing, as in some sense they were meant to be. [RIGHT] As Michael Davies [and Rembert Weakland in the same piece…] noted long-ago, the Anglican and Lutheran-inspired changes in the Novus Ordo Missae in the original Latin were intended by the committee that crafted them to fudge the differences among the churches — in the hope that an ecumenical liturgy would promote Christian unity. [How did that go?  Now that Pope Benedict is shifting the discussion with his liturgical view (inter alia) the Orthodox are entering a new phase of dialogue with the Catholic Church.] Later, secularizing abuses such as Communion in the hand were promoted precisely in order to cloud the exact Catholic theology about the Mass as a sacrifice performed by a priest in the Person of Christ, in favor of a nebulous, liberal Protestant spirituality of communal commemoration — one that could lead to the ordination of women. [Do I hear a HUGE "AMEN!"?] The Holy Spirit has prevented any changes that invalidated the Mass. That is all we were promised.
 
It is one thing to call for the proper celebration of the Novus Ordo, minus destructive options (ambiguous Eucharistic prayers, handing out Communion like a movie ticket, Mass said facing the people — something Benedict has regretted). Do that, and you settle the question. In that idealized vision of the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite — such as I’ve seen good priests celebrate maybe five times in my life — there are no theological or catechetical problems. [Though… ehem… you could look at the way the orations were changed.  But let that pass.] Impose that liturgy throughout the Church, and every objection raised by Traditionalists fades into pedantry — though some of us will really miss those extra Kyries . . . [Not quite every, but nearly all.]
 
It is quite another thing to defend the Ordinary Form as ordinarily celebrated, [Something fewer and fewer reasonable people do, actually.  I think it is pretty well accepted even in some liberal circles that something has to be done.  We might differ a great deal about what, but something isn’t working.] in some 99.9 percent of parishes outside Vatican City, then scoff at those who object to its banality, vulgarity, and casual sacrilege as aesthetes or Pharisees. Bridey’s position reminds me of a wedding I heard about among some distant acquaintances. For reasons that remain opaque to me, the groom decided to take his bride’s last name, and have her female friend serve as his "best man." My charitable response was: "Which one of them wore the white dress?"
 
Imagine for a moment that the groom was indeed the one in the puffy gown, the bride in a tuxedo. Picture that whole wedding party done up in drag, with the bridesmaids wearing taped-on Freddie Mercury moustaches, the ushers in high heels and stockings. With his consistent disregard of "externals," I’d expect Bridey to answer that this marriage was sacramentally valid. As indeed it was. [Well… probably.] So is the Ordinary Form as ordinarily celebrated. That’s pretty much all we can say for it[Which is precisely which lies at the core of Pope Benedict’s real concern about liturgy: the "so long as it’s valid" – from a strain of Neo-Thomist reductionism to the bare basics for validity – spurred a generation and more to make the rest up as they pleased…. "so long as it was valid".]
 
John Zmirak is the author, most recently, of the graphic novel The Grand Inquisitor and is Writer-in-Residence at Thomas More College in New Hampshire. He writes weekly for InsideCatholic.com.

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WDTPRS – Wednesday 3rd Week of Lent – Prayer over the people (2002MR)

A great new feature of the 2002 Missale Romanum in Latin is that for Lent the "Prayer over the people" or Oratio super populum has been revived as an option.

Priests can use this prayer NOW at the end of Mass, but still only in the Latin.

Yah, I know.. I keep posting these as if they were, I dunno, interesting.

Let’s have a look at today’s:

ORATIO SUPER POPULUM (2002MR):
Tibi placitam, Deus noster, populo tuo tribue voluntatem,
quia tunc illi prospera cuncta praestabis
cum tuis aptum feceris institutis.

This prayer has ancient origins, being in the Sacramentarium Leonianum, the Liber sacramentorum Augustodunensis, etc.  I don’t think it was in the pre-Conciliar edition of the Missale Romanum.

I have been posting these each day, translating them and commenting.

How about you readers do that today?

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WDTPRS Tuesday 3rd Week of Lent – Prayer over the people (2002MR)

A great new feature of the 2002 Missale Romanum in Latin is that for Lent the "Prayer over the people" or Oratio super populum has been revived as an option.

Priests can use this prayer NOW at the end of Mass, but still only in the Latin.

Let’s have a look at today’s:

ORATIO SUPER POPULUM (2002MR):
Vivificet nos, quaesumus, Domine,
huius participatio sancta mysterii,
et pariter nobis expiationem tribuat et munimen.

Here is our word munimen again.

This prayer is in various old manuscripts such as the Liber sacramentorum Augustodunensis and Engolismensis and Gellonensis as Post communions for a Mass in time of war and in the 14th Sunday after Pentecost.  There is a variation for vivificet in a purificet.  I don’t think it was in the pre-Conciliar Missale Romanum.

SLAVISHLY LITERAL VERSION:
May holy participation of this sacramental mystery
quicken us, we implore, O Lord,

and may it impart to us equally an expiation as well as a defense.

I love the word "quicken" for vivifico. You will probably think immediately of "vivify", and you would be right.  But in English, "vivify" can mean not just to "bring to life" but also "to bring back to life", "to restore life".  Thus vivifico is "to make alive, restore to life, quicken, vivify". 

How dead we would be without God’s mercy.  He quickened each one of one from the beginning, from our conception, according to a plan He formed from before the creation of the rest of the universe. 

He quickened us in baptism because we were dead in original sin.  In the sin of our First Parents the whole human race sinned. 

He quickens us in the sacrament of penance when we are dead in actual mortal sin.

He quickens us in many small ways with actual graces.

Our prayer reminds us that at the heart of our quickening is expiation.

Expiation requires sacrifice.  At the heart of expiation lies our debt, a debt paid by another, freely, in perfect love.

The gifts we gain from God’s grace require protection.

For today’s COLLECT.

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NCReg: Normalizing the Extraordinary Form

From the NCR that’s actually Catholic, the National Catholic Register, comes this on the increasingly wide-spread use of the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite.

My emphases and comments.

Normalizing the Extraordinary Form
Priests Are Free to Celebrate the Traditional Latin Mass at Any Time

by Thomas Wehner

The Vatican has issued a directive to a Polish diocese that emphasizes the freedom of priests to celebrate Mass in the extraordinary form whenever they choose.  [At the time of the release of SP I said often in writings and interviews that this Motu Proprio was unique in that it stressed the rights of priests… for a change.  Summorum Pontificum is a great gift to priests, especially.  Learning the older form of Holy Mass teaches priests more about who they are and what Holy Mass is.  In turn that affects all the other spheres of their activity.]

The Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei made the clarification in January in a series of responses to questions from a Polish diocese, which sought clarification regarding the use of the traditional Latin Mass. The answers, which came to public attention in mid-February, concerned Pope Benedict’s 2007 apostolic letter Summorum Pontificum, issued “motu proprio” (on his own initiative).

However, the Vatican stresses that the clarification is addressed to a particular group and is “not a set of guidelines.” [Right.  This clarification was also made here on the blog under that entry.  A canonist helped with some clarifications as well.] Officials are still working on a comprehensive set of guidelines on Summorum Pontificum, which are expected to be published soon.

Two points of the ruling are considered most significant: A Mass in the extraordinary form “may replace a regularly scheduled Mass in the ordinary form,” and a parish priest “may schedule a public Mass in the extraordinary form on his own accord.” [It is hardly to be imagined that directives such as these are not also to be applied every where.]

Another response also stipulates that the calendar, readings or prefaces of the 1970 Roman Missal “may not be substituted for those of the 1962 Roman Missal in Masses in the extraordinary form.”  [Something which could be a disappointment to many.  However, let us not forget that the Holy See is presently engaged in talks with the SSPX.]

Michael Dunnigan, chairman of Una Voce America , said the commission’s response “forcefully reaffirms both the plain meaning of Summorum Pontificum and also the rights of the laity and clergy [especially] who are devoted to the traditional Mass.”

The first response begins: “If there is no other possibility, because for instance in all churches of a diocese the liturgies of the Easter triduum are already being celebrated in the ordinary form, the liturgies of the Easter triduum may, in the same church in which they are already celebrated in the ordinary form, be additionally celebrated in the extraordinary form, if the local ordinary allows.”  [Which some will find too restrictive, but which is a clear signal that Summorum Pontificum is not as restrictive as liberals claimed.]

The second response clarifies that a Mass in the usus antiquior (extraordinary form) “may replace a regularly scheduled Mass in the ordinary form.” The question contextualizes that in many churches Sunday Masses are more or less scheduled continually, leaving free only very inconvenient mid-afternoon slots, but this is merely context, the question posed being general. The answer leaves the matter “to the prudent judgment of the parish priest,” and emphasizes “the right of a stable group to assist at Mass in the extraordinary form.”  [However, the flip side is that the Novus Ordo must also be offered, for those who desire to attend it.]

In the third response, it states that a parish priest “may schedule a public Mass in the extraordinary form on his own accord (i.e. without the request of a group of faithful) for the benefit of the faithful including those unfamiliar with the usus antiquior.” The response of the commission here is identical to No. 2.  [But this is a huge deal.]

Fourth, it adds that “the calendar, readings or prefaces of the 1970 Missale Romanum may not be substituted for those of the 1962 Missale Romanum in Masses in the extraordinary form.”

Lastly, it states: “While the liturgical readings (epistle and Gospel) themselves have to be read by the priest (or deacon/subdeacon) as foreseen by the rubrics, a translation to the vernacular may afterwards be read also by a layman.”

Regarding the second and third responses, Dunnigan said that, strictly speaking, they should “not have been necessary at all, because the language of Summorum Pontificum already was clear.” [Perhaps not.  Some clarifications are necessary in the case of most juridical documents.] However, he added that in the United States the faithful have experienced the same type of obstruction to celebration of the traditional Latin Mass as has happened in Poland.

“Some leaders in the Church seem determined to relegate the traditional Mass to second-class status by restricting the pastor’s prerogative to revise his parish’s Mass schedule,” said Dunnigan. “I am grateful to the commission for making clear that these obstacles find no support in Summorum Pontificum and amount to unjust restrictions on the rights of the faithful.”  [Now the PCED needs to write a similar letter to a priest in the USA.]

The last two responses may not be as rigid as they seem. A committee of Ecclesia Dei is currently studying what parts of the new Missal can be used in the extraordinary form and, although not yet certain, it is probable that saints canonized since 1962 will be incorporated into the 1962 Missal. (There are already communities where the 1970 sanctoral cycle is followed with the commission’s tacit approval, such as the Abbey of Fontgombault and all its daughterhouses, including Clear Creek in Hulbert, Okla.)

This means, for instance, that the two forms of the Mass could celebrate saints on the same days, something which would be in line with Pope Benedict XVI’s accompanying letter to Summorum Pontificum. [The calendar situation really needs work.]

The Holy Father wrote: “The two forms of the usage of the Roman Rite can be mutually enriching: New saints and some of the new prefaces can and should be inserted in the old Missal.”  [Thus, the interdict on the use of these elements in the older form of Mass really must be temporary while the details get worked out.]

The directive on liturgical readings may also be looser than it might appear in these responses, as there are already communities using the traditional Latin Mass with the new lectionary in the vernacular. [Where?  Will they have to stop?]

The Vatican has long been concerned about resistance to allowing stable groups of faithful and priests to celebrate the traditional Latin Mass.

Although it believes these obstructions are beginning to die down, Ecclesia Dei still plans on issuing a “clarification document” on Summorum Pontificum.

Rumors have long circulated that the Vatican has been drawing up such a document and that it was delayed because some officials found problems with the drafts. These recent responses, apparently issued with minimal consultation, are therefore not meant to replace the forthcoming document.


 

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NYC – St. Vincent’s and Holy Innocents

I will be in Manhattan for a while.  I will be celebrant for a Triduum in the older Roman Rite at Holy Innocents

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NY – Bronxville

I will do a parish mission.

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The Feeder Feed and thanks

House Finch.

They were scarce for a while, but are getting more active, I think.

And many thanks to RF who used my amazon wish list to send Joseph Pearce’s Through Shakespeare’s Eyes: seeing the Catholic presence in the plays.  I read Clare Asquith’s book a while ago and found many of her examples compelling.

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