Happy Birthday 1962 Missale Romanum! [puff… sip … puff]

I must hand it to our friends at Rorate, who are always on top of this stuff.

Today is the 50th “birthday” of the 1962 Missale Romanum!

As per Rorate:

The Decree of the Sacred Congregation of Rites establishing the 1962 edition of the Missale Romanum was promulgated exactly 50 years ago today: June 23, 1962, a few months before the opening of the Second Vatican Council and with all rubrics and classifications fully aligned with the Codex Rubricarum promulgated along with the motu proprio Rubricarum Instructum of 1960.

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Spiffy!

And because it is the Vigil of my Name Day, I am glad to have received a nice box of Macanudo cigars from one of you readers.  I shall enjoy one in honor of this festive occasion!

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UPDATE 24 June:

If yesterday was the day of the Missal’s promulgation, then today could be the anniversary its “First Mass”. If it was signed and promulgated on 23 June, then it came into force after most priests in Rome had said their morning Masses. Thus, today could have been the first day of its use. No? Also, in 1962, 24 June was a Sunday. It seems appropriate that Pope John would want it to go into force on a Sunday which was also the Feast of the Nativity of John.

Posted in Just Too Cool, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged ,
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Saturday Supper: Dining with “the enemy”!

Since it is a Vigil of a Feast (St. John the Baptist) I extended my Friday abstinence (and fast, as it turns out) to 1st Vespers. For breakfast, 2 poached eggs and half an English muffin, for lunch some pickled beets (love ’em). That brought a hungry me to supper.

Tonight I had scoiattolo in umido… squirrel braised in white wine.

I hate squirrels. When dead, however, they are rather well tasting.  Tip: lightly killing them makes for a less agitated meal.

Here is the enemy, female, dubbed for the sake of this exercise, “Carol”, both from Sciurus carolinensis and in honor of the Catholic Health Association, lightly killed as mentioned before, then skinned, etc.

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I also had a chicken breast that had to be either cooked or tossed.  I opted for cooking and, in solidarity with Carol, dubbed the chicken “Margaret”. Of course country squirrel is better, right? I am sure Horace would agree… just to link it back to The Sabine Farm.

First, I butterflied Margaret open, though against my instinct I did not then beat her with a hammer.  I then browned them both in olive oil and, nicely bronzed, removed them from the pan.

In the same pan, I sweated down a base of finely chopped carrot, celery, onion, garlic, all nameless.  Then I added white wine (Sauv blanc) and chicken stock in about equal portions along with tarragon, thyme, a bay leaf, a generous grind of black pepper and a dash of cayenne. No salt.

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I dredged the meat in flour and rejoined them to the base and liquid.

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I was going to have Carol and Margaret with fava beans and a nice Chianti, but opted instead for rice and broccoli.

I covered the sisters’ pan and prepped brown rice – 1 cup of rice in 1 cup of white wine  and 1 cup of chicken broth.

About 15 minutes into the simmering process I turned the meat.

When the rice was just about done, I put into the pan a large and equally nameless broccoli floret cut vertically in quarters, covered the pan, and let it simmer at very low heat.

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Scoiattolo in umido.  However, in this photo I had forgotten to dress up the rice with the wonderful self-generated sauce in the pan.  Sorry, no photo.

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Yum.  It’s a lot of work to eat a tree rat, er um… Carol… but they are tasty.

“But Father! But Father!”, some of you are trying to ask, “Eeeeeew!  What do they taste like?”

They taste much like rabbit. They are both a bit sweeter and a bit more intense than chicken, even real scratching-around chicken.

Afterwards, amaro Ramazotti and a Macanudo “Gigante”, given by grateful readers.  I deeply appreciate them. I usually get the Hyde Park but I like this gauge better.

Perhaps you have your own Carol recipes, which you should feel free to share.

Buon appetito!

And Happy Birthday 1962 Missale Romanum! [puff… sip … puff]

AFTERWORD:

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Posted in Fr. Z's Kitchen | Tagged , ,
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Vatican Secretariat of State creates new “Director of Communications” position and fills it with American Greg Burke

Okay, cat’s outta da bag.

Vatican Insider finally has it. I’ve know about this for a while, but didn’t want to say anything about it.

It seems that my friend in Greg Burke, formerly a Fox News correspondent in Rome, will have a position in the Vatican’s Secretariat of State as a new “director of communications”, much as Toby’s role in the show The West Wing (surely with a better outcome for Greg).  This is a new position for the Holy See and realllllly overdue.

Greg Burke, giornalista di Fox News per anni corrispondente dal Vaticano di Time Magazine, assumerà un ruolo di primo piano nella comunicazione della Santa Sede

REDAZIONE
ROMA

“Greg Burke assumerà presto servizio nell’ambito della Segreteria di Stato come advisor per la comunicazione”. Lo ha confermato il direttore della sala stampa Vaticana, padre Federico Lombardi, aggiungendo che “questa nuova figura avrà la finalità di contribuire ad integrare l’attenzione alle questioni della comunicazione nel lavoro della Segreteria di Stato e a curare il rapporto con il servizio della sala stampa e delle altre istituzioni comunicative della Santa Sede“.

Quello che Burke assumerà entro breve tempo è un ruolo nuovo per l’amministrazione vaticana, e ricalca quello del direttore della strategia comunicativa che c’é invece presso la Casa Bianca.

Burke lavorerà, con un ufficio all’interno della Segreteria di Stato e in stretto coordinamento con il direttore della sala stampa Vaticana, padre Federico Lombardi.

Greg Burke, che è membro dell’Opus Dei, è stato per anni corrispondente dal Vaticano di Time Magazine. La proposta di assumere questo nuovo incarico, ha raccontato all’ANSA, lo ha raggiunto per via telefonica a New York alla fine di maggio e in primo tempo la sua risposta era stata negativa. Successivamente ha invece deciso di accettare l’incarico.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , ,
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Of Beer, Norcia, Monks, Boars, Cheese, Truffles and the City of God

For your Just Too Cool file, the great Benedictines monks in Norcia, Italy (the place where it is said St. Benedict was born) are making BEER!

Birra Nursia!

I often go to their website to listen to the office chanted.   They do a good job, though sometimes they have a cage-match with pitch-gravity and go flat during their psalms.

Here is what the monks say about their new beery project:

As is customary for monastic breweries, the name of the beer is connected to the city. For instance, Chimay and Orval are both towns in Belgium which have monastic breweries. Therefore, our monastery will do something similar, using the Latin word: “Nursia”, and calling it “Birra Nursia”.

The monks are quite excited. In fact, the equipment arrived only a couple weeks ago. That means that we’ll be busy with the final bureaucratic steps before we’ll be able to start brewing beer in a couple of months.

The fact that the name of the city is in the beer will bring great pride to the inhabitants of Norcia. Norcia is famous for wild boar, cheese, and prosciutto, not to mention truffles and being the birthplace of SS Benedict and Scholastica. To that list, the monks hope to produce a high quality brew that might accompany the boar, cheese, and prosciutto. Many of the shops, hotels, and restaurants in town have already expressed interest in selling it to their customers.

So, the next time you’re in Norcia, stop by a norcineria, a trattoria, or the monastic gift shop, and pick up a bottle of Birra Nursia!

I have not visited their monastery yet, but I look forward to the day.  I am thinking about attending a conference in Rome in the fall on The City of God at my school the Augustinianum.  Perhaps I will get up to Norcia and have some beer with my truffles, boar and cheese!  It will be truffle season.

Hmmm… WDTPRS pilgrimage?

Posted in Just Too Cool, Lighter fare, Our Catholic Identity, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged , ,
17 Comments

Fork over your forks

Surreal from Politico:

Forkless Friday at Obama event

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. –Does a fork or dinner knife pose an unacceptable danger to President Barack Obama?

One wouldn’t think so, given the hundreds of lunches and dinners he’s attended ranging from state dinners to political fundraisers to run-of-the-mill stops on the rubber-chicken circuit.

However, at one such lunch Friday afternoon, guests heard an unusual announcement that they needed to hand over their silverware for security reasons.

“It’s very important that you use your utensils as soon as possible,” National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials board member Raquel Regalado told about 1000 delegates at the group’s annual conference.

Regalado hurried the diners to finish up their salads and pre-cut chicken breasts, saying that the Secret Service required that there be no knives at the tables and that the forks be rounded up before Obama entered the room.

[…]

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged ,
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QUAERITUR: Can the newly ordained hear confessions? Wherein Fr. Z rants.

From a reader:

Being that it’s ordination season and there’s lots of new young priests eager to do priestly things, there’s something that crossed my mind recently. My understanding is that in order to hear confessions and absolve sins, priests need permission from the bishop. Is this something that happens automatically once a deacon is ordained a priest, or does there have to be paperwork filled out first? Basically, what I’m getting at is if someone not endanger of death went up to a newly ordained priest right after his ordination, could he licitally and validly absolve that person?

Ordination is one thing, permission from the Church to do priestly things is another.  Validly ordained priests must have faculties (permission, authorization) to say Mass, to preach, and to receive sacramental confessions.

Of course, since there are no longer any benefices, the whole point of ordaining a man – at least for diocesan priests – is precisely so that he can do priestly things.

I was ordained for an Italian diocese and, as a result, I did not go through the process that American priests have at the moment of their ordination. But how different could it be?  In my case – and in the cases of two American priests, one religious and one diocesan, I just checked with, we all had our paperwork, with the indications of faculties, before our ordinations.  I am sure that each new American or English or (CHOSE A PLACE) priest already has paperwork completed ahead of time so that at the moment of their ordination they have, not only their assignments, but their faculties as well.  In other words, they would, from the moment they are ordained, have faculties to say Mass, to preach, and to receive sacramental confessions.

An amusing aside: Since I was working for the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei” even before my ordination, I wrote my own faculties to use the 1962 Missale Romanum.  The Cardinal signed it ahead of time.  Thus, from the moment I was ordained I also had faculties for the older form of Mass.  Happily, none of that is needed today because of our wonderful Pope Benedict and that great gift to priests Summorum Pontificum.   I still have that document, as a souvenir of the bad old days.

Your question, however, prompts things from my memory.

Once upon a time some men were ordained only to say Mass, they were ordained “simplex“.  Sometimes they were called “Mass priests”.  I suspect that doesn’t happen anymore, except, perhaps, in some monasteries.  Perhaps it should?  I don’t know.  Also, once upon a time, in some places young priests were examined a few months after their ordination for the faculty to hear confessions.  Some continuing education and refreshers might be a good idea.

Digging deeper into my memory, in my own case, before ordination I had to do a whole series of oral exams – conducted by examiners appointed by the Vicariate of Rome – on different “tracts” or “topics”, such as De novissimis (On the Last Things), De gratia (On grace), De sacramentis (On sacraments), De virtutibus (On virtues) etc..  We hadn’t been educated specifically with a “tract” methodology, but they were still examining by it!  I went from examiner to examiner, for different topics.  I actually did one of my interrogations in Latin, since the examiner and I weren’t communicating well in Italian or English.  I did my Hebrew exam in Latin as well, but that is another kettle of gefilte fish.  I also had to write out my oath of fidelity, in front of witnesses, and then read it aloud with my hand on the Bible.  I did that in Latin too.  Hmmm… both my ordinations were in Latin also.  I am sensing a theme.

Given the fact that I frequently receive questions from people about this or that dopey priest using a strange form of absolution, were I pope would ratchet up the pre-ordination exams, especially concerning moral theology and about matters of the confessional.  Were I a diocesan bishop, I would talk to the men I was ordaining for my diocese to find out what they knew and what they didn’t know on a whole range of topics.  I would include the Extraordinary Form of Sacraments.  That’s the Roman Rite, right?  Is a Latin Church, Roman Rite priest well-formed if he doesn’t know half of his Rite?

And while I am getting steamed up, did you know that Canon Law for the Latin Church requires that seminarians be “very well trained” in Latin (can. 249 – “linguam latinam bene calleant“… not just calleant, but bene calleant)?  Did you know that Canon Law requires that they study especially St. Thomas Aquinas (can. 252 §3)?  Did you know that the Congregation for Education/Seminaries requires by a 1989 document that all seminary curricula include a separate rubric for Patristics (HERE and is it in English anywhere?!?)?  If they don’t learn these things, have they been properly formed?  some guy has to stand up in front of the ordaining bishops and attest that they are.  So, as a bishop (which will – thanks be to God – never happen) were I to discern that the gaps in formation were serious enough, I would delay their ordinations and then zoom over to the seminary with Darth Vader music playing and find out why the hell my men didn’t learn a, b, or c.

It is really hard to blame priests of a certain age and era of ordination for things they didn’t learn (though because of the obligations of their state in life they were/are obliged to fill in the gaps once they see them).  Bishops, on the other hand….

St. John Chrysostom said:

I speak not otherwise than it is, but as I find it in my own actual experience. I do not think there are many among bishops that will be saved.  … Do not tell me that the priest or the deacon is at fault. Their guilt comes upon the head of those who ordained them.  (Acta Apostolorum 3, 5-6)

Okay, I’m ranting now.

Seminaries are vastly improved since my day.  Vastly.

And, yes, new priests have faculties.  Don’t worry.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Four Last Things, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Drill, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , ,
31 Comments

QUAERITUR: A priest who won’t prevent self-intinction

From a reader:

I am a lay eucharistic minister, and 2 parisheners recieve communion, then dip it in the cup.. I told my parish priest and he never did anything about it. He acted as tho he knew it was wrong, but wanted to stay “nice” to all.

First, friend, no matter what term is being used at your parish, you are not a “Eucharistic Minister”.  If you are a lay person helping to distribute Holy Communion, then you are an Extraordinary Minister of Holy Communion (EMHC).  Eucharistic Minister is not a term found in the Code of Canon Law, but were it, it would really have to refer to the ordained.  That said, Ordinary Ministers of Communion, properly understood, are the ordained.  There are also instituted Acolytes who are Extraordinary Ministers of Communion (cf can. 920).  Lay people should be called upon only where there are not enough bishops, priests, deacons, or instituted acolytes to distribute Holy Communion in a reasonable amount of time.  And that reasonable amount of time shouldn’t be “as fast as we possibly can”.

Second, that “dip it in the cup” thing is really called “intinction”, from the Latin verb intingo or intinguo, -nxi, -nctum, “to dip in”. It can also mean “to pickle”, but that’s another kettle of garum.

We read about intinction in the document Redemptionis Sacramentum:

[104.] The communicant must not be permitted to intinct the host himself in the chalice, nor to receive the intincted host in the hand. …

It is clear that people may not… must not… dip the Host they receive into the chalice/cup on their own.

That said, distribution of Communion under both kinds by intinction has been used effectively as a transition away from Communion in the hand.

If you have already told your pastor about this self-intinction situation verbally, and he responded that he will not do anything about it, then write a very brief letter to the pastor expressing your concern, and send a copy of that letter to your local bishop.

In writing, do not make accusations or be harsh (“I told you about this and you did nothing!”).  Do not go on at length.  Do not call into question the motives of the people who are doing the self-intinction.  Be brief, state the fact that you asked him, the pastor that is, before and that now you are asking him again to explain to you how this is permitted.

Also, don’t make a big fuss about this with other parishioners.  Let this take place quietly so that things don’t get heated.

I have some tips for writing to Church authorities HERE.

Also, lets review together the end of the aforementioned Redemptionis Sacramentum with my emphases:

6. Complaints Regarding Abuses in Liturgical Matters

[183.] In an altogether particular manner, let everyone do all that is in their power to ensure that the Most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist will be protected from any and every irreverence or distortion and that all abuses be thoroughly corrected. This is a most serious duty incumbent upon each and every one, and all are bound to carry it out without any favouritism.

[184.] Any Catholic, whether Priest or Deacon or lay member of Christ’s faithful, has the right to lodge a complaint regarding a liturgical abuse to the diocesan Bishop or the competent Ordinary equivalent to him in law, or to the Apostolic See on account of the primacy of the Roman Pontiff.  It is fitting, however, insofar as possible, that the report or complaint be submitted first to the diocesan Bishop. This is naturally to be done in truth and charity.

CONCLUSION

[185.] “Against the seeds of discord which daily experience shows to be so deeply ingrained in human nature as a result of sin, there stands the creative power of the unity of Christ’s body. For it is precisely by building up the Church that the Eucharist establishes fellowship among men.” It is therefore the hope of this Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments that also, by the diligent application of those things that are recalled in this Instruction, human weakness may come to pose less of an obstacle to the action of the Most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist, and that with all distortion set aside and every reprobated practice removed, through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, “Woman of the Eucharist”, the saving presence of Christ in the Sacrament of his Body and Blood may shine brightly upon all people.

[186.] Let all Christ’s faithful participate in the Most Holy Eucharist as fully, consciously and actively as they can, honouring it lovingly by their devotion and the manner of their life. Let Bishops, Priests and Deacons, in the exercise of the sacred ministry, examine their consciences as regards the authenticity and fidelity of the actions they have performed in the name of Christ and the Church in the celebration of the Sacred Liturgy. Let each one of the sacred ministers ask himself, even with severity, whether he has respected the rights of the lay members of Christ’s faithful, who confidently entrust themselves and their children to him, relying on him to fulfill for the faithful those sacred functions that the Church intends to carry out in celebrating the sacred Liturgy at Christ’s command. For each one should always remember that he is a servant of the Sacred Liturgy.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged , , , , , , , , ,
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“c”atholics United: Who runs the dissident group politicizing the HHS mandate issue and fighting the US bishops?

Catholics United is politicizing the HHS mandate issue.

A reader sent an article from the Baltimore Sun about the opening Mass for the Fortnight for Freedom. I am sure you have read about that elsewhere, so I will only point out one interesting aspect of the story and then you can go your merry way and find a rally in support of the bishops and against Pres. Obama’s HHS attack on the Church.

My emphases and comments:

Catholic leaders launch campaign against Obama policies
Archbishop Lori begins ‘Fortnight for Freedom’ amid protests

Catholic leaders launched a nationwide campaign challenging the Obama administration’s health policies with a Mass at Baltimore’s Basilica of the Assumption on Thursday evening, filling the 200-year-old stone structure with supporters.

The standing-room-only crowd stood and applauded when Baltimore Archbishop William E. Lori, leader of the Roman Catholic bishops’ “Fortnight for Freedom” initiative, entered.

A separate crowd of people outside, most of them Catholic, held signs protesting the event, one of which read, “Bishops! YOU DON’T SPEAK FOR ME! Freedom For All!”  [“Freedom For All”.  Okay.  What does that mean?  Freedom for what?  Freedom to have big government tell your Church what it can and cannot do?]

[..]

Outside the Basilica, about 40 people protested Lori’s message, [Maybe this little group is getting so much attention because 40 is a biblical number.  No?  Could there be another reason?  Read on!] saying variously it is too political a stand for the church or that it clashes with their beliefs about women’s or minority rights. [It is a real victory of the left to have painted abortion as a “women’s issue”.  It is actually a human rights issue.  Innocent people have the right not to be killed for convenience.  And “minority” right?  What is that about?  Which minority?  Perhaps they mean Catholics who prefer the Extraordinary Form.]

“We love the church, but we hate the politics,” said James Salt, executive director of Catholics United, a Washington-based group that pushes for Catholic commitment to social issues. [As if the Catholic Church wouldn’t be committed to “social issues” without someone like Salt?  And who is this guy?  See below.] “We think that the decision to have a ‘Fortnight for Freedom’ really is a political attack on President Obama, and it doesn’t reflect the moral priorities of Catholics sitting in the pews, who are really more concerned about bread-and-butter issues.” [Note the way he shifts the image away from aborted children and condoms and RU-486 to “bread and butter”.  Learn from these deft deceivers.]

[…]

“Catholics United” is funded by George Soros. James Salt, according to their website worked for HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and the Kansas Democrat Party.

Catholics United is politicizing the HHS mandate issue, NOT the US bishops!

These catholics won’t rest until they have something like an American Patriot Catholic Association lapdog in the public square, rather than a strong, vociferous Catholic Church.

These catholics would endorse the imposition of mandate after mandate on the Church, and force Catholic institutions to pay for your contraception and abortifacient pills.

These catholics would have Patriotic Catholic Hospitals where you could get your state funded abortions.

These catholics would force Patriotic priests to celebrate unnatural weddings for same-sex or even other-specied couples.

These catholics would edit the pastoral letters of Patriotic Conference of Bishops.

These catholics would in Pres. Obama’s 4th term require chaplains to never to mention God or anything religious when serving “voluntarily” in the newly formed Civilian National Security Force.

These catholics are trying to bully the bishops.  If they get there way, we would have a  American Patriot Catholic Association.

No!  Let’s get that right.

 

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, Our Catholic Identity, Religious Liberty, The Drill, The Last Acceptable Prejudice, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , , , , , , , , ,
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PODCAzT 131: Ratzinger on Conscience and Truth – Part 2

In 1991 Joseph Card. Ratzinger gave a talk to American Bishops called “Conscience and Truth”. This talk is useful today, especially in the context of two major controversies that are going on as I write, namely, the defense of the proper definition of marriage and, of course, the attacks on the consciences of Catholics and others by the Obama Administration, which is trying to undermine the our first liberties.

The talk is longish, so I have broken it into three parts. PODCAzT 130 included my preliminary comments and Part 1 of the talk, “A Conversation On The Erroneous Conscience And First Inferences”.In this PODCAzT we have Part 2: “Newman and Socrates: Guides to Conscience”.


https://zuhlsdorf.computer/podcazt/12_06_23.mp3 

Posted in Benedict XVI, Linking Back, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, PODCAzT, Religious Liberty, The Drill, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged , , , , , , , , ,
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WDTPRS POLL: Your participation in scheduled Fortnight For Freedom events.

Here is a quick poll for you.

Use the combox! Let everyone know what is up.

Have you or will you attend some event for the Fortnight For Freedom?

View Results

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, POLLS, Religious Liberty, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , , ,
36 Comments