“He was going to be a major leaguer, absolutely”

The writing is a bit scrambled, but have a look at this story of a fellow who gave up a promising career in baseball (the sport God loves best) for a vocation with the Norbertines in Orange, California:

SILVERADO, Calif. – On the morning Grant Desme ceased to exist, he was at peace. He spent years searching for serenity, convinced it was coming soon, next, now. It never did. Life was a blaring stereo, and he had become numb to its noise. The sound finally abated when he arrived here. He believed God muted it.

So on Christmas Eve two years ago he and seven other men marched into the church at St. Michael’s Abbey and readied for a transition the church considered spiritual death. Grant Desme would go by another name. His plainclothes would become a head-to-toe white habit. For the next two years, he would commit to the dual life of a priest-in-training and a monk in the Norbertine Order. The naming ceremony bound him to the virtues of chastity, poverty and obedience.

[…]

On the afternoon Grant Desme retired from baseball, he was at peace. The world in which he had immersed himself was shocked and dumbfounded, of course, that a strapping 23-year-old center fielder with power, speed, smarts and just about everything baseball teams want in a player would quit. Sports is a place of great myopia, insular thinking and exaggerated accomplishment that conflates excellence and holiness. In baseball, God is the home run. And Desme knew that God well.

He hit 31 of them during the minor league season and another 11 in the prospect-laden Arizona Fall League, where he won the Most Valuable Player award in November 2009. He emerged as the talk of the league, and the team that drafted him in the second round and signed him for $430,000, the Oakland Athletics, started dreaming on Desme’s future.

“He was going to be a major leaguer, absolutely,” A’s general manager Billy Beane says. [BTW… I have found the movie Moneyball (the Billy Beane connection) to be an interesting source of reflection on, mutatis mutandis, how we might try to get some spheres of the Church functioning again.] “He looked like he’d gotten over that hump. And he could’ve been a lot more. A great talent.”

People in the game scrambled to understand why Desme would give up the riches and the platform baseball affords to spread the word of God. The decision wasn’t met with derision as much as wonderment. Athletes leave when their talents or bodies or something tangible betrays them. Desme left ascendant.
“I had everything I wanted,” he says, “and it wasn’t enough.”

[…]

Read the rest there.

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AP’s cheap shot coverage of the Pope’s Butler’s unbelievably unimportant Vatican Trial of the Century!!!

The Trial.  Nay rather… the Trial of the Century!  The earthquake provoking butler-who-done-it in the Vatican!

The trial of the Holy Father’s document-leaking former-valet (keep repeating: the Butler, in the Office, with a Copying Machine), is comparable to what the ancient Romans called a fluctus in simpulo, “a wave in a ladle”.  There is no there there.

But newsies are having a nutty … because they can.

A case in point is a really bad article by AP’s Nicole Winfield.

Winfield doesn’t usually go off the rails, but this time the trolley slipped in an embarrassing way.  Perhaps all the vapid gas being vented about this in the Italian press gave her a temporary case of the vapors.

Given that readers scan the beginning and the end of pieces like this, and given that writers know this, it was pretty clear what Winfield was trying to get a across.  You decide.

The middle section of her article involved some reporting.  The opening and the close were distracting, frivolous.

Have a look:

Pope’s ex-butler goes on trial for leaked papers
By NICOLE WINFIELD, Associated Press – 1 hour ago

VATICAN CITY (AP) — There was a time when a Vatican trial could end with a heretic being burned at the stake. [?!?  This is how she starts her report after today’s briefing?  Really?] Paolo Gabriele doesn’t risk nearly as dire a fate, but he and the Holy See face a very public airing [“very public” as opposed to a little bit public… ] over the gravest security breach in the Vatican’s recent history following the theft and leaking of the pope’s personal papers.  [Desperation, like a zombie, stalks the press corps, waiting to eat warm brains.]
Gabriele, the pope’s once-trusted butler, goes on trial Saturday, accused of stealing the pope’s documents and passing them off to a journalist — a sensational, Hollywood-like scandal that exposed power struggles, intrigue and allegations of corruption in the highest levels of the Catholic Church.  [For pity’s sake. They just don’t have enough to do.  The Holy See isn’t blameless. The Press Office doesn’t give them much to work with.  When they get a whiff of chum, they have a little thrash in the water.  Maybe if there were, I dunno, real engagement by the Holy See …  But I dream… I digress…]
Gabriele is charged with aggravated theft and faces up to four years in prison if convicted by the three-judge Vatican tribunal. He has already confessed and asked to be pardoned by the pope — something most Vatican watchers say is a given if he is convicted — making the trial almost a formality.

[…]

[…  in fairness Winfield does some reporting in the rest of the piece which might be of interest…]  

[… skipping to the end…]

There has been no such vote of confidence for the Vatican’s onetime Congregation for the Holy Roman and Universal Inquisition, [?!?] the commission created in 1542 that functioned as a tribunal to root out heresy, punish crimes against the faith and name Inquisitors for the church.  [Just in case you didn’t catch that whole “Inquisitor” thing, she made sure to repeat it.]

One of its more famous victims was Giordano Bruno, burned in Rome in 1600 after being tried for heresy.  [From this stupid trial to Giordano Bruno?  Really?]

The Inquisition?  That’s the lead?  That’s the closure?

I guess we should put this in perspective.  The writer also put some effort into the far more important story about the topless photos of Prince William’s wife Kate.

“But Father! But Father!”, you might be saying.  “That last thing was a cheap shot!”

Riiiight.  I think you grasp the essential point.

Cheap. Shot.

Even ridiculous stories deserve better.

 

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Political cartoon distorts the Minnesota Marriage Amendment

My fellow Minnesotans will have the opportunity on election day this November to vote in favor of an amendment to the Minnesota state constitution which would define marriage as being between one man and one woman. Minnesota is ground-zero for this nationwide battle over nature versus distortions of nature provoked by appetites or errors about true friendship.

In the local press (liberal) there is a telling political cartoon. It is telling because it reveals either that the cartoonist is ignorant of the issues and players involved and is simply waving his arms around, or that he is adopting – maybe consciously – a page from the tactics of Saul Alinsky, namely,

RULE 12: Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it.” Cut off the support network and isolate the target from sympathy. Go after people and not institutions; people hurt faster than institutions.

The cartoon is an attack on the institution (of marriage, of the coalition of groups supporting the amendment).  It targets Archbp. Nienstedt as a way to attack support for the amendment.

This cartoon is pernicious for various reasons, not the least of which is that it falsely asserts that the Minnesota Marriage Amendment is Archbishop John Nienstedt’s project.   Note that “HIS marriage amendment”.  He supports it, but it isn’t “HIS”.

Minnesotans: GO to the polls in November.  When you vote the pro-abortion, pro-infanticide, anti-liberty Pres. Obama out of office, also vote in FAVOR of the Marriage Amendment, not … not… not… because this is a politically partisan issue, but because the laws of the land ought to be in conformity with the laws of nature and of nature’s God.

Perhaps some Minnesotans will chime in to explain how people all over the country can help the effort.

Begin by praying for Archbp. Nienstedt, who is taking it on the chin.  Taking it pretty well, too!  No glass jaw.

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November is coming swiftly

From my email:

The Religious Liberty battle is NOT over.

Posted in Lighter fare, Our Catholic Identity, Religious Liberty, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged ,
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Some thoughts about the Pope’s Lebanon trip

Because of my travel and the need for a little down time, I didn’t do much with the Holy Father’s visit to Lebanon.

However, a few things have come to mind after some recent conversations and some reading.

First, even though there were a lot of risks, the Holy Father did not once consider not going on this trip.

After the terrorist attacks in Egypt and Lebanon, there were rapid press releases from the Holy See’s Press Office (which I didn’t especially care for at the time). The first of the releases aimed at the Middle East, surely made it possible for the Pope to go on that trip to Lebanon.

While I was not entirely pleased with the statements that came from the Holy See’s Press Office after those terrorist attacks, and while some might say that the Holy See should use a less temporizing voice, the Pope’s trip to Lebanon had a very important objective: let Christians of that region that they are not completely alone.

Christians there are vastly outnumbered, virtually forgotten, and in danger of the loss of their very lives. Christians are fleeing the region. Those who remain are in a tenuous position. Governments don’t give a damn about the basic human rights of Christians anywhere, much less in that region.

The only person those poor people have in their corner is Pope Benedict XVI and he traveled to be with them, even if briefly and under tight security.  The trip was an act of physical and moral and pastoral courage.  Some high level chess made it happen.

Some retrospect prompts me, again, to breathe deeply and read the press releases again and consider broader views.   Not all press releases need to be subject to a deeper consideration, but these did.

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Recycling

This image is clearly aimed at discouraging panhandling.

However… could it have another application?

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Personal stroll





This morning I decided to take a bit of a stroll rather than go out to Castel Gandolfo for the Audience and other events.  Instead, I went to look at a few places I hadn’t seen for a while and are of note in my life’s stroll.

Is it possible that I have developed a shred of sentimentality?

Breakfast was in the Borgo Pio, at a very good old fashioned bar.  My usual.

My stroll brought me past the shop where I had my chalice made.

The shop happens to share the palazzo where Pius XII was born and grew up.

Around the corner to the Chiesa Nuova.

To consult with Pipo Buono, St. Philip Neri, a patron.

Down the street to Sant’Andrea della Valle

After admiring Pius II, the great humanist, in the church which is the setting for Act I of Tosca…

… into a back chapel to consult with another saint, Giuseppe Maria Tomasi (di Lampedusa).

Around the corner, past where invader soldiers had carved their names into the bricks of the building during the Sack of Rome, to the street where my Roman seminary is and, beyond it, the place where Julius Caesar was killed.

Then I headed over to the Ghetto on my way to another church.

Here I had a great experience.  I was walking past the doorway to one of the synagogues (not the big one).  The synagogue was very busy today, as you can imagine, since it is Yom Kippur.   There was a bench full of old Jews outside.  Men were going in and out, with their shawls and tzitzit.  One of the old men on the bench hailed me, and we had a long cordial conversation about a variety of things, back and forth.  I asked some questions about Yom Kippur and their prayers.  I could see directly into the building, could see the ranks on ranks of men praying in their shawls, could hear the chanting of the prayers.  I listened for a while.  There was huge security in the area.  The police and other services were not letting people into the main street of the Ghetto but they had let me pass through.  Thus, I had this great experience.  I really couldn’t take photos, alas.

And so I continued on to San Nicola in carcere, where I was ordained to the diaconate and where I directed an all-female Gregorian chant schola.  They sang chant ethereally.

Off then to the Capitoline Museums.  Here is a view from the opening arches of the ancient Tabellarium.

The section of the museums where the paintings are is dreadfully behind the times, primitive compared to great museums of the world.  There are some interesting paintings, however.

Among the collected works, here are two by Guido Reni, a Lucretia and a Cleopatra.  I think I have mentioned before how during a certain period there Cleo, Lucretia and Mary Magdalene can often receive a similar treatment.  This is a good example: knife v asp.  You decide.

If memory serves, a nice Annunciation by Dosso Dossi.

A gallery.

By now I am hungry.  I went to another favorite old haunt, l’Angoletto.

Caprese.

Spaghetti alle vongole.

At this point a “certain Roman curial prelate” came by and we had a nice long talk about the inner workings of some places.  Nice to see him and catch up.

After lunch, I stopped at Sant’Agostino and had a chat with St. Monica, whose bones are interred here.  I have no doubt that she was remembered at the altar by her son.

Down the Via dei Coronari, my old neighborhood, I stopped to visit the great guys at the best bonsai shop you will ever see.  These men are experts.  They still have my bonsai, too!  I had a bonsai for years, perched high above the Piazza Navona, and it spent a lot of time in my window.  Whenever I left Rome, they would take it and give it TLC in my absence.  Very dedicated.  Truly nice men.  I hope all the seminarians from the NAC and any priests or religious living in Rome would stop by.  I used to give bonsai’s as gifts when I was here.

Via dei Coronari 16 – alberoantico.it

At San Salvatore in Lauro there was/is a display of relics of St. Pio.  A shot of his stole.

The Blessed Sacrament was exposed, and therefore I stayed to consult and adore for a bit.  Some neighborhood women had a litany going, but the point, the constant phrase after each invocation was “Send us more priests, send us holy priests”.  Humbling.  Inspiring.  I don’t doubt but that the Lord will reward them.





This evening I went to have some supper nearby at a favorite place.  I settled into a plate of bucatini and read some of a novel on my Kindle.  And before someone asks, yes, I have two mobile phones.  Actually, I have three.  I feel like a drug dealer.

At this point, three priests came in, two of whom I knew.  There was a priest from a big city on the East Coast, a fellow who works in Rome in a great role (which I rather envy) and a “certain highly placed Curial official”.  We got caught up and/or acquainted.   It was pleasant to hear their views and find out what they were up to and exchange some ideas.  Along the way I heard some things that actually left me feeling rather uplifted, which I did not expect.

My first full day back here was pretty good, all in all. It was full and it was fruitful.

In my prayers at the tombs of saints I did not forget to keep in mind Your Urgent Prayer Requests. I especially asked the saints to intercede for the special needs of those of you who have been benefactors along the way.

Since I am in Rome for a few more days, and since I will be saying Mass, and since I will be visiting the tombs of many saints, I will start another Urgent Prayer Request thread HERE. I’ll look at it as I am going about my day. I ask a prayer for myself.

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YOUR URGENT PRAYER REQUESTS

Please use the sharing buttons!  Thanks!

Continued from THESE.

I get many requests by email asking for prayers. Many requests are heart-achingly grave and urgent.

We should support each other in works of mercy.

As long as my blog reaches so many readers in so many places, let’s give each other a hand.

If you have some prayer requests, feel free to post them below. You have to be registered here to be able to post.

But, registered or not, please take a moment to pray for the people about whom you read here below.

Finally, I still have two serious needs.  It seems repetitive, but… it looks like prayer may be the only way to bring help, even if it isn’t as swift as I had hoped.

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Now THAT’S Basil!

This is too cool not to post.

You might remember that I posted about blessing basil in honor of the Cross?  Basil is from the Greek word for “king”.

A priest reader breathing mainly from the Eastern lung sent me great photos of the blessing of basil.  I will share three.

Think of the smell of the church, with the candles and incense and basil.

 

 

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The Holy Father’s General Audience on liturgical worship

Our Holy Father on what Mass means during his General Audience.  I have read the Italian, but the English isn’t available and I am not going to translate it right now.  Video HERE.

<font color=”#ff0000″><b>[UPDATE: I found a translation.]</b></font>

Vatican Radio translation of the Holy Father’s catechesis:

Dear Brothers and Sisters,
in recent months we have made a journey in the light of the Word of God, to learn to pray in a more authentic way by looking at some great figures in the Old Testament, the Psalms, the Letters of St. Paul and the Book of Revelation, but also looking at unique and fundamental experience of Jesus in his relationship with the Heavenly Father. In fact, only in Christ, is man enabled to unite himself to God with the depth and intimacy of a child before a father who loves him, only in Him can we turn in all truth to God and lovingly call Him “Abba! ! Father. ” Like the Apostles, we too have repeated and we still repeat to Jesus, “Lord, teach us to pray” (Lk 11:1).

In addition, in order to live our personal relationship with God more intensely, we have learned to invoke the Holy Spirit, the first gift of the Risen Christ to believers, because it is he who “comes to the aid of our weakness; for we do not know how to pray as we ought,”(Romans 8:26).

At this point we can ask: how can I allow myself to be formed by the Holy Spirit? What is the school in which he teaches me to pray and helps me in my difficulties to turn to God in the right way? The first school of prayer which we have covered in the last few weeks is the Word of God, Sacred Scripture, Sacred Scripture in permanent dialogue between God and man, an ongoing dialogue in which God reveals Himself ever closer to us. We can better familiarize ourselves with his face, his voice, his being and the man learns to accept and to know God, to talk to God. So in recent weeks, reading Sacred Scripture, we looked for this ongoing dialogue in Scripture to learn how we can enter into contact with God.

There is another precious “space”, another valuable “source” to grow in prayer, a source of living water in close relation with the previous one. I refer to the liturgy, which is a privileged area in which God speaks to each of us, here and now, and awaits our response.

What is the liturgy? If we open the Catechism of the Catholic Church – an always valuable and indispensable aid especially in the Year of Faith, which is about to begin – we read that originally the word “liturgy” means ” service in the name of/on behalf of the people” (No. 1069) . If Christian theology took this word from the Greek world, it did so obviously thinking of the new People of God born from Christ opened his arms on the Cross to unite people in the peace of the one God. “service on behalf of the people ” a people that does not exist by itself, but that has been formed through the Paschal Mystery of Jesus Christ. In fact, the People of God does not exist through ties of blood, territory or nation, but is always born from the work of the Son of God and communion with the Father that He obtains for us.

The Catechism also states that “in Christian tradition (the word” liturgy “) means the participation of the People of God in “the work of God.” Because the people of God as such exists only through the action of God.

The very development of the Second Vatican Council reminds us of this. It began its work, fifty years ago, with the discussion of the draft on the Sacred Liturgy, solemnly approved on December 4, 1963, the first text approved by the Council. The fact that document on the liturgy was the first result of the conciliar assembly was perhaps considered by some a chance occurrence. Among the many projects, the text on the sacred liturgy seemed to be the least controversial, and, for this reason, seen as an exercise in the methodology of conciliar work. But without a doubt, what at first glance seemed a chance occurrence, proved to be the right choice, starting from the hierarchy of themes and most important tasks of the Church. By beginning, with the theme of “liturgy” the primacy of God, his absolute priority was clearly brought to light. God before all things: the Council’s choice of starting from the liturgy tells us precisely this. Where God’s gaze is not decisive, everything else loses its direction. The basic criterion for the liturgy is its orientation to God, so that we can share in His work.

But we may ask: what is this work of God that we are called to participate in? The answer offered us by Conciliar Constitution on the sacred liturgy is apparently double. At number 5 it tells us, in fact, that the works of God are His historical actions that bring us salvation, culminating in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ; but in number 7, the Constitution defines the celebration of the liturgy as “the work of Christ. ” In reality, the two meanings are inseparably linked. If we ask ourselves who saves the world and man, the only answer is Jesus of Nazareth, Lord and Christ, Crucified and Risen. And where does the Mystery of the Death and Resurrection of Christ, that brings salvation it becomes present and real for us, for me today ? The answer is the action of Christ through the Church, in the liturgy, especially in the Sacrament of the Eucharist, which makes real and present this sacrificial offering of the Son of God, who has redeemed us, in the Sacrament of Reconciliation, through which we pass from the death of sin to new life, and in the other sacramental acts that sanctify us (cf. PO 5). Thus, the Paschal Mystery of the Death and Resurrection of Christ is the centre of liturgical theology of the Council.

Let’s take a step further and ask ourselves: how is this re-enactment of the Paschal Mystery of Christ made possible? Blessed John Paul II, 25 years after the Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium, wrote: ” In order to reenact his Paschal Mystery, Christ is ever present in his Church, especially in liturgical celebrations. (27). Hence the Liturgy is the privileged place for the encounter of Christians with God and the one whom he has sent, Jesus Christ (cf Jn 17:3). “(Vicesimus quintus annus, n. 7). Along the same lines we read in the Catechism of the Catholic Church: ” A sacramental celebration is a meeting of God’s children with their Father, in Christ and the Holy Spirit; this meeting takes the form of a dialogue, through actions and words.” (n. 1153). Therefore, the first requirement for a good liturgical celebration is that both prayer and conversation with God, first listening and then answering. St. Benedict, in his “Rule”, speaking of the prayer of the Psalms, indicates to the monks: mens concordet voci, “may the mind agrees with the voice.” The Saint teaches that the prayer of the Psalms, the words must precede our mind. Usually it does not happen this way, first one has to think and then what we have thought, is converted into speech. Here, however in the liturgy it is the inverse, the words come first. God gave us the Word and the Sacred Liturgy gives us the words, and we must enter into their meaning, welcome them within us, be in harmony with them. Thus we become children of God, similar to God. As noted in the Sacrosanctum Concilium, to ensure the full effectiveness of the celebration ” it is necessary that the faithful come to it with proper dispositions, that their minds should be attuned to their voices, and that they should cooperate with divine grace lest they receive it in vain “(n. 11). The correlation between what we say with our lips and what we carry in our hearts is essential, fundamental, to our dialogue with God in the liturgy.

In this line, I just want to mention one of the moments that, during the liturgy calls us and helps us to find such a correlation, this conforming ourselves to what we hear, say and do in the liturgy. I refer to the invitation the Celebrant formulates before the Eucharistic Prayer: “Sursum corda,” we lift up our hearts outside the tangle of our concerns, our desires, our anxieties, our distraction. Our heart, our intimate selves, must open obediently to the Word of God, and gather in the prayer of the Church, to receive its orientation towards God from the words that it hears and says. The heart’s gaze must go out to the Lord, who is among us: it is a fundamental requirement.

When we experience the liturgy with this basic attitude, it is as if our heart is freed from the force of gravity, which drags it down, and from within rises upwards, towards truth and love, towards God. As the Catechism of the Catholic Church recalls: ” In the sacramental liturgy of the Church, the mission of Christ and of the Holy Spirit proclaims, makes present, and communicates the mystery of salvation, which is continued in the heart that prays. The spiritual writers sometimes compare the heart to an altar. “(No. 2655): altare Dei est cor nostrum.

Dear friends, we celebrate and live the liturgy well only if we remain in an attitude of prayer, united to the Mystery of Christ and his dialogue as the Son with the Father. God Himself teaches us to pray, as St. Paul writes (cf. Rom 8:26). He Himself has given us the right words to hear to Him, words that we find in the Psalter, in the great prayers of the liturgy and in the same Eucharistic celebration. We pray to the Lord to be ever more aware of the fact that the liturgy is the action of God and man; prayer that rises from the Holy Spirit and ourselves, wholly directed to the Father, in union with the Son of God made man (cf. Catechism the Catholic Church, n. 2564).

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