Moscow …. wait for it… TLM…. !

Our friends at Rorate have the news… which I read twice to be sure…

The next ‘approved’ Traditional Latin Mass will be on May 31 (Pentecost), but usually it is offered every 1st Sunday of the month, at 1700 H (5:00 P.M.) in the basement chapel of the Cathedral (of the Immaculate Conception, Moscow).

The priest who offers the Mass is Fr. Augustyn Dziedziel SDB. Catholic guests of Moscow are most welcome. (Father also speaks some English in addition to Polish and Russian, so confessions are possible before Mass.)

 

I think Satan might particularly hate this one.

Posted in Brick by Brick |
26 Comments

Name that speaker!

What major public figure recently said this:

"At the heart of Paul’s effort in Athens was an appeal to reason. He did not seek to impose his beliefs, nor exploit anxiety or fear. Rather he had learned that his faith in Christ was compatible with the mind’s capacity for reasoned thought. Indeed it complemented it. Some today propose that faith and reason are crudely opposed, with the fervour of faith replacing good reason. This reduction of both faith and reason inhibits not only our search for truth but also the possibility of real dialogue. In contrast, as Pope John Paul memorably said: ‘Faith and reason are the two wings on which the human spirit soars.’ (Fides et Ratio n.1)

This dialogue needs to go beyond the superficial and the slogans. Respectful dialogue is crucial today and I salute all who seek to engage in it. In this the media have such an important part to play, not by accentuating difference and conflict, but by enhancing creative conversation. Let us be a society in which we genuinely listen to each other, in which sincere disagreement is not made out to be insult or harassment, in which reasoned principles are not construed as prejudice and in which we are prepared to attribute to each other the best and not the worst of motives."

 

If you already know for sure…  leave the fun to some others.

Posted in I'm just askin'... |
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QUAERITUR: Ascension Thursday Sunday… what to do?

From a priest reader:

I am facing a dilemma.  I live in a part of the country which does not observe the Ascension in a biblical manner – that is, forty days after the resurrection.  Instead, we observe something that has come to be called "Ascension Thursday Sunday". 

My parish offers Mass in both ordinary and extraordinary forms (at least on Sunday). 

For this coming Sunday, am I to use the propers for the Sunday AFTER the Ascension or could I use the propers for Ascension (for the Mass in the Extraordinary Form)? 

I have consulted the Ordo (FSSP), which doesn’t foresee (or address) the dilemma, and it only gives the propers for the Sunday after the Ascension, with no mention of what might be done in my circumstances.  I would again be grateful for any help you can provide in this matter.

 

It seems to me that today is Ascension Thursday and that Sunday is the Sunday after Ascension.  The strange innovation of Ascension Thursday Sunday is not a feature of the older, traditional understanding of the liturgical year.

I would use the formulary for the Sunday after Ascension on the Sunday after Ascension.

Posted in ASK FATHER Question Box |
38 Comments

Weigel on L’Osservatore Romano’s “fideist credulity”

My friends – smart people – are angrily scratching their heads over the latest squishy musings in L’Osservatore Romano.

I have posted about this here and here.  In the second case, the editor, who is a fine fellow and doing a pretty good job making the paper into something other than fishwrap, really blew it. 

Here is a piece by George Weigel in National Review online with my emphases and comments.

Parsing the Vatican Newspaper
It doesn’t always speak for the pope.

May 21, 2009, 4:00 a.m.
By George Weigel

The newspaper published by the Vatican, L’Osservatore Romano, has created more than a little mischief recently, featuring essays by ill-informed European journalists who imagine that they understand American history, the American political scene, and the grave moral issues being contested in these United States. [This is a very good observation, and he leads with it.  Having spent a lot of time in Rome, having worked in the curia and lived with curial officials, and having never lived in the American ghetto in Rome, I can attest that most of the people there have their heads in very dark places when it comes to thinking about the USA.] Pro-administration American journalists and activists have leaped with barely concealed glee on several unfortunate articles in this genre, claiming that they demonstrate that “the Vatican” believes the U.S. Catholic bishops overreacted to Notre Dame’s award of an honorary doctorate of laws to President Obama, and that “the Vatican” is taking a wait-and-see, so-far-so-good attitude toward Obama after the horrors of the arch-demon Bush. [That is another piece: this is anti-Bush blow-back. No matter how inane it is, it is a constant in Euro-Think.]

About which, several points must be made.

1. The first thing one learns in Vaticanology 101 is that there is no such thing as “the Vatican.” The Holy See is as complex and confused a bureaucracy as one finds in national governments. Many points of view coexist within the Vatican walls, and there are more than a few curialists who like to talk to reporters. Very few if any of these chatty people count, in terms of expressing the settled judgment of the senior leadership of the Catholic Church. That leadership, when it wishes to make a serious point, does so through its major figures, not through the bureaucratic munchkins and [here it is] not via commissioned essays in a newspaper that, while published by the Holy See, is not taken all that seriously there. The last is a shame, for it suggests yet another facet of the Holy See’s communications problems; but it’s the truth, nonetheless. As for the teaching authority of the Catholic Church, what counts is what is said by the Bishop of Rome, who does not exercise his teaching office through some generic institution called “the Vatican” but in his own unmistakable voice. And he lets you know when he’s doing it. [So… "the Vatican" is not monolithic and L’OssRom is, well, not something to get too worked up about.]

2. In the normal course of events, L’Osservatore Romano does not speak authoritatively for the Church in matters of faith, morals, or public-policy judgment. The exceptions are when a senior churchman offers a commentary on a recent papal document (an encyclical, for instance), or on those exceedingly rare occasions when an editorial in the paper is followed by three dots, or periods, a traditional convention signaling that the opinion being expressed is from “high authority.” No knowledgeable or responsible analyst of Vatican affairs would regard commissioned essays in L’Osservatore Romano, even if they appear on page one, as somehow reflecting an authoritative view from the Holy See or the Pope. The same is true for statements by the paper’s editors or editorials without the dots. [True.  As I have pointed out in the past, unsigned editorials usually have more weight.  And there are some which have clues that they are even more weighty.]

In other words, without those dots, there is nothing here but opinion, to be weighed and judged as any opinion is weighed and judged — on its tether to facts and its argumentation. It is unfortunate that several recent pieces on the Obama administration in L’Osservatore Romano have been both factually questionable and analytically dubious. That is a problem for the senior officials of the Holy See to address, and they ought to address it soon. [D’ya think?  But don’t anyone hold his breath.] Any American commentator trying to spin these articles as a “Vatican” attempt to tell the bishops of the U.S. to “chill out” (as Time’s Amy Sullivan put it recently, in an article whose spin was similar to that of the Washington Post’s E. J. Dionne) is playing political games.

3. It is true, however, that the offices of the Holy See are replete with middle- and lower-level officials who are enamored of Barack Obama.  Why? In most cases, because they are Europeans who share the typical European Obamaphilia and whose sources of information and analysis are manifestly skewed. On the other hand, no one in a serious position of authority in the Vatican can doubt that the Obama administration poses the gravest challenges to the Holy See’s positions on the life issues since the Clinton administration tried and failed to get abortion-on-demand declared a fundamental international human right. The Obama administration will also be at loggerheads with the Holy See when the defense of marriage rightly understood is contested in international institutions.  [Anyone who thinks that Pope Benedict would be on board with Pres. Obama’s approach to abortion is living in a dream world.  The Pope, the Holy See, can perhaps agree or disagree with how best to ameliorate the many problems people face.  Differing approaches are possible.  But on the issue of the sanctity of life from conception to a natural dignified end, there can be no compromise.]

Moreover, several officials at very high levels — men I can say with confidence are not in conversation with E. J. Dionne, Amy Sullivan, or Obama administration fronts like Catholics in Alliance for the Common Good — spoke to me last fall of their deep appreciation for the Bush administration’s positions on the life issues, AIDS prevention in Africa, AIDS and malaria relief, and religious freedom. Indeed, one very senior official told me that, at his level, it was understood that no American administration of the immediate future was likely to be as supportive of Holy See positions as the Bush administration had been — and this, despite the obvious and serious disagreement over the administration’s 2003 decision to enforce the resolutions of the United Nations and depose Saddam Hussein by force.  [Again… it is possible to disgree over "what to do about Iraq".  And the CCC restates that civil authority determines if the conditions for a "just war" have been met.  But Catholics are not free to disagree about the sanctity of life.  That is why Notre Dame’s choice to honor the most aggressively pro-abortion President we have ever seen is seriously wrong.]

It would, of course, be helpful if the newspaper published by the Holy See did not display a sorry ignorance of recent American history (including the history of the civil-rights movement) and a fideist credulity about the magic of Barack Obama. [Great phrase, George…. "fideist credulity".] To assume that [and here is what I have been saying for weeks now…] the pope and his most senior advisers have drunk the Obama Kool-Aid and wish the American bishops would chill out is, however, another story altogether, and not a very credible one — no matter what foolishness finds its way into the pages of L’Osservatore Romano.  [Does anyone seriously believe that this Pope would see Pres. Obama’s position and actions on abortion as acceptable?]

—George Weigel is Distinguished Senior Fellow at Washington’s Ethics and Public Policy Center, where he holds the William E. Simon Chair in Catholic Studies.

 

Posted in The Drill |
45 Comments

QUAERITUR: priests extending hands at the time of ordination

From a priest reader:

Fr. Z,

Easter Greetings in the Lord.

I am writing with a question for you, or any other knowledgeable priest, to answer.

Last spring I attended two priestly ordinations.  The first was in the extraordinary form, the celebrant was Cardinal Hoyos, and the priests in attendance, after laying on of hands all congregated on one side of the sanctuary and extended the right hand during the consecratory prayer following the laying on of hands (we were vested in surplice and stole).

The second ordination was in the cathedral of my home diocese ….  It was, of course, in the ordinary form.  During this ordination, after the laying on of hands, the concelebrants similarly congregated in one area of the sanctuary, but during the consecratory prayer, the bishop was the only one who extended hands (in the "orans" position) while we (vested as concelebrants) stood with hands folded – NOT EXTENDED.  A priest acquaintance of mine, a member of the Institute of Christ the King (they who have taken to calling themselves "Canons"), was surprised that we were not extending hands during this moment of the ordination.

I subsequently asked the MC about it and he assured me that such is NOT done in the ordinary form.  For the life of me, I cannot remember what happened at my own ordination, but I am not satisfied with his assurance.

Could you shed some light on what ought to be done?

Timing is of the essence as we are on the cusp of our next priestly ordination.

My my!  It seems as if we have a bit of an emergency on our hands… so to speak!

Frankly, Father, I am not sure about this.  I have a clear recollection of extending my hand also during ordinary form ordinations to the priesthood as the bishop speaks the prayer.

As I am not at home at the time of this writing, and do not therefore have access to my liturgical books, I cannot advise.

Therefore, I call for the help of readers.  Anecdotes are great, but citations are what we really need.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Mail from priests |
27 Comments

QUAERITUR: What do you mean by “liturgy” in need of “reform”?

From a reader:

On your take on notredame you kept refering to the "liturgy". In the present catholic church there are 2 different liturgies: the novus ordo and the tridentine. What liturgy are you refering to that needs reforming. The old latin mass doeesn’t need, never did. The novus ordo mass, is that the one that you refer to as needing reforming?

By "liturgy" I and most everyone else understands the rites of Holy Church public worship of God.

Holy Church has many more "liturgies" than two!  The Church has many liturgical Rites.  We must not think that we Latins, or Roman Catholics are alone in the unity of the Catholic Church.

The Church is always in need of reform, not because the divine dimension is in any way flawed or lacking but because we are.  Times and circumstances change and many aspects of the Church – including her worship – also must change.  An Ecumenical Council saw the need for a reform of the older form of the liturgy of the Latin Church.  So, the writer above is apparently wrong.  It did need reform.  Tragically, the reform the Council ordered is not the reform we got.  The Latin Church’s worship was changed by force artificially, creating a rupture.

Pope Benedict is trying to restart the organic development which liturgy requires, the slow discerning and changes which occur by a more natural process.

So… the Novus Ordo very definitely needs reforming… but reforming with an eye to the past, to our Tradition.

The older form of Mass will be reformed along the way as well.   That is what happens over time.

Some of the proponents of worship as "fly in amber" never-to-be-changed, will attempt to drag this entry into their "feverish swamp", as a friend JH recently described it. 

Therefore – some fair warning: My time is rather limited right now and I am also slightly annoyed by a bunch of things.  It will probably be easier for me simply to delete your comments and lock you out if you get weird or go all trad-postal.  And consider that I get to decide what that is, no matter if you think you are being reasonable.  o{]:¬)

This is a good topic to revisit once in a while, but I have no desire to revisit Fever Swamp, and neither do 99% of WDTPRSers.

Posted in ASK FATHER Question Box | Tagged , , , , ,
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A fragment… ne pereat

I am struggling to get an article written for the paper this week, the column which gave this blog its name.

This week I had both a hard time getting going, and then a hard time stopping once I did.  Grrr.

I think I might have to cut this part, for length… but,… ne pereat:

You, I am sure, as I am, are faced often with very dark moments.

We live in a scary era. 

My heart quails sometimes. 

The Rosary, with its glorious mysteries, can be of help.

In reading the great liturgist Romano Guardini in The Rosary of Our Lady, actually on the third glorious mystery, I found this… just as an illustration of how we are not in fact trapped within the prison of the world:

The Holy Ghost is also sent to us.  Through his coming we are no longer orphans.  He is with us, if only we ourselves will stay with him.  He leads our lives through all that is concealed, but we must leave our hand in his.  If we beseech him and open ourselves up to him with heart and soul, he shows us how to know Christ, and in Christ ourselves.  But where darkness prevails – because our earthly life is hardened – he gives us a divine “nevertheless,” as Paul says, “testimony to our spirit that we are sons of God,” and the certainty that “for those who love God all things work together unto good” (Rom 8:16, 28)”.

Do you hear a foreshadowing of GS 22?

 

Posted in The future and our choices |
21 Comments

More ineffabilitas

Perusing Romano Guardini’s The Rosary of Our Lady on the Third Glorious Mystery I found this little gem…

Her life must have been ineffable in its tranquility.

Guardini, Romano.  The Rosary of Our Lady.  (Trans. H. von Schuecking).  New York: P.J. Kenedy & Sons, 1955, p. 85.

Furthermore…

When the Holy Ghost descended on the disciples, he equipped them for their mighty work. When at the same time he came to Mary, her work was already accomplished.  All that remained to do for her was to bring her fuller understanding.  From them on she must have lived in ineffable clarity, in indescribable peace.

 

Wow!  Twice on one page!  I understood them, too!!  

"Ineffable" wasn’t tooo haaard after all.

I think I should start a subcategory called "Ineffabilis".  People could post citations when they run into particularly apt uses of "ineffable".

And then we can explain them to Joe and Mary Catholic.

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged
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Americans “overwhelmingly” favorable toward Pope Benedict

Polling data is tricky, and too often people use it to justify their errors.  Some polls are helpful, however, provided that we take them for what they are worth.

This is in from CNA:

New Haven, Conn., May 19, 2009 / 08:35 pm (CNA).- Both American Catholics and their non-Catholic countrymen have an “overwhelmingly” favorable view of Pope Benedict XVI, a new poll commissioned by the Knights of Columbus says.

About 78 percent of practicing Catholics [note: "practicing"] had a favorable or very favorable view of Pope Benedict. Non-practicing Catholics were only slightly less [that is the interesting stat] likely to profess a favorable view. Among all Americans, about 59 percent had a favorable or very favorable view of the pontiff.

The poll was conducted in late March by the Marist College Institute for Public Opinion and the Knights of Columbus. It surveyed 2,078 Americans including 521 American Catholics. It claims a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percent concerning responses from all Americans and a margin of error of plus or minus 4.5 percent for Catholic respondents.

According to the survey results, about 65 percent of Americans in general and 85 percent of Catholic Americans said they had a favorable view of the Catholic Church. Of practicing Catholics, 92 percent had a favorable view of the Church while only 73 percent of non-practicing Catholics did.

The poll reported that about half of Americans said [get this…] they would like to hear Pope Benedict XVI on issues like abortion and stem cell research, while .57 percent wanted to hear his views on marriage and the family[People want to hear from trustworthy sources about the burning issues of our day and lives.]

Supreme Knight of Columbus Carl A. Anderson, commenting in an column for Zenit news agency, said the positive responses were “a great testament to the Pope’s ability to communicate the Gospel directly to people.”

“It is an unswerving commitment to the truth — and the ability through his own prayerfulness to introduce people to Jesus Christ — that has made Benedict XVI a beacon of moral courage whose message the American people and people worldwide respect and wish to hear. We might call it a triumph of truth over television,” he wrote.

 

Now if we could just start using the means of communication more effectively.

I think people were very interested to see Pope John Paul, but they are really interested to hear Pope Benedict.

Pope Benedict speaks with great clarity, making hard concepts easier to understand by means of a step by step presentation.  He is also a very linear speaker and writer, which makes him easier to follow.  Pope John Paul would circle and circle back, revisiting points as he developed them and his delivery style was a little less engaging… until he went off script.  And then… It didn’t happen often, but when it did… wow.  Pope Benedict is far more likely to leave his text and speak off the cuff, which is electrifying.

People want to know Holy Church has to say.  The Church is the great enemy for many because they know she speaks a truth from positions they cannot assail with reason.  As a matter of fact, that is why they nearly always use a personal attack or try to veer the conversation into emotions.  But I think people have retained a sense that when the Catholic Church speaks on faith and morals, they know they are going to get the straight stuff.

We need to use the tools of social communication more effectively.  I am doing my bit, but imagine what we could do if we collectively were dedicated to that task.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool |
26 Comments

It isn’t London

But it isn’t bad.

Posted in My View |
42 Comments