Sr. Joan and the “Organizing Committee of the Council of Elders”

National Catholic ReporterAn Irishman was walking down the street one day and, to his delight, he saw a big crowd surrounding a couple of blokes beating each other to a pulp.  The Irishman, shoved and elbowed his way though the crowd to the inner circle and, in a lull, shouted, “Is this a private fight or can anyone join?!?”

Tahrir Square Triumph

The Triumph of Tahir

Fresh from her triumphs in Tahir Square in Cairo, the National catholic Fishwrap’s very own Sr. Joan Chittister has now taken up fight for the Occupists!

Yes, Sr. Joan, looking for a pick-up protest to join, has linked arms with the unwashed.

She was not there to protest in favor of women who were battered during the siege of Zuccotti Park. No, her motive was more poignant.

She is pointing out that the “elders” of the early protest movements has decided to reach out to the young visionaries of the Occupy thing and extend to them their wisdom.  Of course, the young people have not asked for any advice but, damn it, Joan and company has it anyway.

And now… heeeeeere’s Joan!

[…]

A Council of Elders has appeared on the scene.  [And when she says “elders”, she’s not kidding.]

A newly organized, independent group of leaders from many of the defining American social justice movements of the 20th century a veritable who’s who of social change in the United States over the last 60 years has risen up anew, this time in solidarity with OWS.
You know these people; if not by their names, [CUE MUSIC!] certainly by the breadth of their hearts. You have heard their cries for justice, seen their protests for peace, followed their steady, steady demonstrations of care for the dispossessed everywhere.  [Can she write a sentence without a cliché?]

Organizing Committee of the Council of Elders[I swear I am not making this up….] The Organizing Committee of the Council of Elders includes Rev. Vincent Harding, Rev. James Lawson, Rev. Philip Lawson, Dolores Huerta, Dr. Bernice Johnson Reagon, Dr. Grace Lee Boggs, Dr. Gwendolyn Zoharah, Marian Wright Edelman, Rabbi Arthur Waskow, Rev. Dr. George Tinker, Rev. John Fife, Rev. Nelson Johnson, Joyce Hobson Johnson and, because of their generous spirits, me, as well.  [Who are these people?  Has anyone heard of them?]

Try a park bench, people.

Their statement of solidarity reads: [I swear I am not making this up…] “As veterans of the Civil Rights, Women’s, Peace, Environmental, LGBTQ, Immigrant Justice, labor rights and other movements[but not defense of the unborn] we are convinced that Occupy Wall Street is a continuation, a deepening and expansion of the determination of the diverse peoples of our nation to transform our country into a more democratic, just and compassionate society.”

[But wait!  There’s more] To be clear that they are about more than writing statements, this group of leaders [this band of elders] — seasoned by all the social justice movements of their day [but, wait!… there’s more!  What did they do next, Joan?!] — started a Facebook page,  [sniff] launched a website, [wow] uploaded a video to YouTube [just wow] and sent a delegation of older people to Zuccotti Park in New York City, to Justice Herman Plaza in San Francisco, and to Los Angeles, Oakland and Washington, D.C., to speak with demonstrators. [I … sniff… just have to stop for a moment and gather my thoughts.  All this from the “Organizing Committee of the Council of Elders”.] They went to encourage this generation’s young people, who are bringing to consciousness a national awareness that our wealth is in our people and our resources, well developed and well used, not in our banks. They went to bring the flame of peace and economic justice from one generation to the next.  [Can she write a sentence without a cliche?]

The elders are going to be among the Occupiers, [I hope their insurance is good and they bring some … spray.] they say in their public statement, to “applaud the miraculous extent to which the Occupy initiative has been non violent [except when it wasn’t] and democratic, especially in light of the weight of violence under which the great majority of people are forced to live, including joblessness, foreclosures, unemployment, poverty, and inadequate health care.”

[..]

It stumbles along pretty much like this for a while longer.   Meanwhile…. CLICK.

I say we form our own council of elders and call it the “Council of Donors to Fr. Z in Protest of the Fishwrap!”

Posted in Dogs and Fleas, SESSIUNCULA, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , , ,
25 Comments

Bishops of Minnesota will be attacked in the press, betrayed by their erstwhile allies

You have seen the feeble attempt of some defenders of homosexual acts to equate the efforts of those who want unnatural “unions” to be recognize in law as if they were marriages with the civil rights racial efforts of the 60’s.   There is no moral equivalence.  Don’t be taken in by that sort of argument and watch for it to be used often in the months to come.

Especially in Minnesota.

In Minnesota an amendment to the state constitution has been proposed which would define and defend proper and true marriage.  When the weather warms up again watch for St. Paul, Minnesota to become ground zero for this issue just as Madison, Wisconsin was for the labor/union dispute was last spring.  Activists from around the country will start showing up in Minnesota to create havoc and muddy the waters of the debate and promote the defeat of the amendment.

The Catholic bishops of the Minnesota Catholic Conference have rightly offered strong support of the amendment.  They have also begun an effort to promote grassroots support for this amendment.   Watch for the bishops to be vilified in the press and then betrayed by those who should be their allies.

Quite a few of my fellow Minnesotans have sent notes about a silly letter written to the Minnesota Catholic Conference by a retired Lutheran bishop and head of the liberal ELCA.

Over at CMR we find a pretty good summation of the letter and circumstances surrounding it.

Before reading this, however, you may recall that when a large group of Lutherans met in Minneapolis for a confab and approved homosexual unions, lightening struck the steeple of the church where they were meeting and knock the Cross off the top.

Dying Lutheranism Wants To Kill Catholic Church

Lutheranism is dead, or at least soon will be and it wants to take the Catholic Church with it.

Herbert W. Chilstrom is former presiding bishop of Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. Chilstrom has written an open letter to the Bishops of Minnesota asking them to accept gay ‘marriage’ becuase gays are like blacks or something.

May I share a word with all of you who now lead the Roman Catholic community of faith in Minnesota?

First, I would go to the wall to defend your right to work for the adoption of the so-called marriage protection amendment. Having said that, I must tell you that I believe you are making a significant mistake.

Over my 35 years as an active and retired bishop I have come to know hundreds of gay and lesbian persons. I have yet to meet even one who is opposed to the marriage of one man and one woman. After all, they are the daughters and sons of such unions. [Puhleeze.]

What they cannot understand is why church leaders would oppose their fundamental desire and right to be in partnership with someone they love and respect who happens to be of the same gender and sexual orientation. They don’t understand why they should not enjoy all the rights and privileges their straight counterparts take for granted. [I refer the bishop to the book of Genesis and the letters of St. Paul.]

More than a half century ago Father Francis Gilligan spoke out for equality [Wait for it…] for African American citizens of Minnesota. Though many argued on the basis of the Bible that these neighbors were inferior to others, Gilligan fought tirelessly for justice for these brothers and sisters.

In our generation homosexual persons are subject to the same discrimination. Their detractors often use the Bible and tradition as weapons of choice. [Lutherans have a long tradition of ignoring in the Bible that which is inconvenient for one’s personal position.]

What strikes me about this letter is how utterly juvenile it is in its thinking and how insulting it is to the Catholic position.

Chilstrom challenges the Bishops to “Let me put out a challenge to each of you brothers. Invite 15 gay and lesbian persons from your respective areas, one at a time, to spend two hours with you.”

In Chilstrom’s mind, the problem is that we don’t know and therefore don’t like gay people. If we just got to know them, then all these problems would go away. How utterly juvenile. We know them, we love them, that is why we can never support this behavior because it destroys them body and soul.

It is no wonder that Lutheranism is dying a milquetoast death.

Well said.

Posted in Dogs and Fleas, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, SESSIUNCULA, The Drill, The future and our choices, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , ,
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Benedict XVI: “The only danger the Church can and should fear is the sin of her members”

Persecutors can kill our bodies. Only we can kill our own souls, extinguish the life of grace, separately ourselves for eternity from God.

I saw this in the UK’s best Catholic weekly, The Catholic Herald:

The Church should fear the sin of its own members more than hatred against Christians, Pope Benedict XVI said.

While the Church has suffered from persecution throughout its history, it “is supported by the light and strength of God” and will always end up victorious, he said.

Overcoming trials and outside threats shows how the Christian community “is the presence, the guarantee of God’s love against all ideologies of hatred and selfishness,” he said on the feast of the Immaculate Conception today.

“The only danger the Church can and should fear is the sin of her members,” the Pope said.

Pope Benedict marked the feast day by making an afternoon visit to a statue of Mary erected near the Spanish Steps.

He went from the Vatican to the heart of Rome’s tourist and shopping district to pay homage to Mary by praying before the statue, which commemorates Pope Pius IX’s proclamation in 1854 that Mary, by special divine favour, was without sin from the moment she was conceived.

The Pope offered a large basket of white roses, which was then set at the foot of the column topped by the statue. He also greeted and blessed the infirm and their caregivers.

He told the crowds gathered for the event that Mary is “free from every stain of sin [and] the Church is holy, but at the same time is marked by our sins”.

For that reason, Christians often turn to Mary for help and encouragement in living a truly Christian life, he said.

She also gives hope, “which we really need, especially at this very difficult time for Italy, Europe and different parts of the world”.

“Mary helps us see that there is a light beyond the blanket of fog that seems to envelop reality,” he said.

[…]

Posted in Our Catholic Identity |
11 Comments

Star Wars and the History of Vatican II

Bp. Vader

I think I’ll share this without much commentary of my own.

On the blog Vestal Morons a … interesting… case is made.

Star Wars and the History of Vatican II
Posted on December 4, 2011 by Remus
The outrageous but bizarrely supportable thesis statement that I lay before you is this: the Star Wars saga symbolizes the history of Vatican II. For those unschooled in the ways of Star Wars and recent Church History, this may not interest you … or will just be incoherent. But without further ado, let me start at the beginning, a long time ago, in an Ecumenical Council far, far away …
[…]

The rest is pretty … interesting.

To bring this full-circle, however, and personalize it, I had always planned that, were I ever forced to be a bishop, my first entrance into the cathedral would be to the accompaniment of the Imperial March.

I chuckled at the comparison made between one of the most annoying characters ever put on the silver screen, Jar Jar Binks and…. go there and find out!

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged
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QUAERITUR: Fulfilling obligation of the Office when visiting a religious community with their own way of doing things.

From a priest:

In the GILH, it is clear that a cleric meets his obligation if he
finds himself praying with a community following a different calendar or from a different rite (#242). Would this also include praying the Office with a religious community of the same rite who has a different order of psalms? Or should their provincial be informed of a wayward community doing their own thing?

I am pretty sure it would, for the visiting cleric who is doing as the house does.

However, if that house is not actually saying the Office their larger community has assigned, that could be a problem for them.

As a visitor there, however, I would not want to get involved with their internal politics.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box | Tagged , , , ,
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Where you are!

From time to time I enjoy looking at the visitors stats to see, more or less, where in the world people are when they visit the blog.

Below are some names of places which could be near where visitors are as they clicked and were looking around. I cut out all the “unknowns” and the vaguer entries such as “Canada”.

Here are the last few minutes: at this time of day I see mostly Europe and the East Coast of the US.

Rio De Janeiro, Rio de …
Tallahassee, Florida
Moorestown, New Jersey
Gloucester, Gloucesters…
Hollister, Florida
Swindon
London, London, City of
Norfolk, Virginia
Canonsburg, Pennsylvania
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Brooklyn, New York
Leeds
Lansdale, Pennsylvania
Pensacola, Florida
Midlothian, Texas
Wellfleet, Massachusetts
Braintree, Massachusetts
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Porter Corners, New York
Orleans, Massachusetts
Philadelphia, Pennsylva…
Sydney, New South Wales
Sydney, New South Wales
Warrenton, Virginia
Alexandria, Virginia
Manchester, Maryland
Fort Worth, Texas
Chicago, Illinois
Waterloo, Ontario
East Lansing, Michigan
Dublin
Groton, Massachusetts
Bournemouth
Waterloo, Ontario
Washington, District of…
Tuttlingen, Baden-Wurtt…
Anchorage, Alaska
Edinburgh, Edinburgh, C…
Columbia, South Carolina
Tllse, Vestsjalland
Great Neck, New York
Drogheda, Louth
Dublin
Middletown, Ohio
Huddersfield, Kirklees
Tampa, Florida
Madison, Wisconsin
Indianapolis, Indiana
Sunbury, Greater London
Allegan, Michigan
Cincinnati, Ohio
Bowie, Maryland
Youngstown, Ohio
Indianapolis, Indiana
River Falls, Wisconsin
Mishawaka, Indiana
Wilmington, Delaware
Greenville, South Carol…
Joensuu, Eastern Finland
Houghton, Michigan
Saint Cloud, Minnesota
Green Lane, Pennsylvania
Manchester
Brighton, East Sussex
Darlington
Ashburn, Virginia

UPDATE: 9 Dec 0226 GMT

EVENING SUPPLEMENT:

Melbourne, Victoria
Ulladulla, New South Wa…
Collegeville, Minnesota
Blind River, Ontario
Waban, Massachusetts
Mountain View, California
Nashville, Tennessee
Santiago, Region Metrop…
Sparta, New Jersey
Brinktown, Missouri
Bethesda, Maryland
Willow Street, Pennsylv…
Concord, New Hampshire
Ottawa, Ontario
Homer Glen, Illinois
Thornhill, Ontario
Ottawa, Ontario
Blue Bell, Pennsylvania
Union City, New Jersey
New Zealand
Malaysia
Prairie Village, Kansas
Neshanic Station, New J…
Tempe, Arizona
Wichita, Kansas
Fort Mill, South Carolina
Regina, Saskatchewan
Deep River, Connecticut
Grosse Pointe, Michigan
Seattle, Washington
Oakland, California
Mazomanie, Wisconsin
Tulsa, Oklahoma
Castro Valley, California
Utica, New York
Alexandria, Virginia
Washington, District of…
Victorville, California
Moline, Illinois
Bound Brook, New Jersey
Montreal, Quebec
Knoxville, Tennessee
Easthampton, Massachuse…
Toronto, Ontario
Flushing, New York
Mayville, Wisconsin
Mountain View, California
Lima, Ohio
Fairfax, Virginia
Fair Haven, New Jersey
Regina, Saskatchewan
Chicago, Illinois
Overland Park, Kansas
Mountain View, California
Asheville, North Carolina
La Mesa, California
Perris, California
Denver, Colorado
Somerville, Massachusetts
Los Angeles, California
Madison, Wisconsin
Dayton, Ohio
Lowell, Massachusetts

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
44 Comments

KC, MO: The Star continues its relentless biased attacks on the Church

Over at SERVIAM you can learn a great deal about what is going on in the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph and the relentless attacks on Bp. Finn in particular and the Catholic Church in general.

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged , ,
4 Comments

St. Ambrose: copycat, rookie, disliked by St. Jerome

St. Ambrose was a titanic figure in the Church in Italy in the 4th century.  Here is a post I wrote some time ago about him and another great figure of the patristic era, St. Jerome.

In the ancient world, invective was a standard tool of debate.  Interlocutors would often pour acid on each other in a way we today… well, perhaps not some who read blogs today… find quite unsettling.

St. Jerome (+420), not known for his easy-going, gentle character, genuinely had if out for St. Ambrose of Milan (+397) and didn’t spare him one little bit.

My conjecture is that Jerome was jealous of Ambrose, who had “made it” in the Church in Italy, whereas Jerome always played second fiddle. But I digress.

What’s with Jerome about Ambrose?

To get at this we have to bring in a third character, Tyrannius Rufinus of Aquileia.

You are no doubt aware that Jerome and his old friend of his youth Rufinus (+410) had a titanic clash over the writings and teachings of the early Alexandrian exegete Origen.

When Jerome and Rufinus were young, they were very close, forming part of a group of dedicated Christians at Aquileia and then later at Jerusalem. They began to argue over the theology of Origen, but they patched things together before Rufinus left Palestine for Italy.

However, once in Italy Rufinus began to translate Origen Peri archon (De principiis). In his preface Rufinus made the mistake of assuming that just because Jerome had translated some of Origen’s work, therefore Jerome was a fan of Origen. People around Jerome also thought Rufinus purposely made Origen sound more orthodox than he was. These folks wrote to Jerome to let him know what they thought Rufinus was up to and asked Jerome to explain what was going on.

In response Jerome translated Origen himself.

In a letter he strongly denied being a partisan of Origen’s theology, even though he admired Origen’s skill. Jerome focused his laser on Origen’s statements about the resurrection and the preexistence of souls, and how the Persons of the Trinity related to each other which made him sound like a subordinationist. Jerome, in this second phase of translation, interpreted Origen in a very strict and harsh way.

St. JeromeWhen you look at the way Jerome spoke of Origen the first time around, 12 years before, and what he did to him in the second round, it is pretty clear that this was a reaction to Rufinus’s written assumption about Jerome. Jerome was afraid that his own reputation was going to be damaged by a positive association with ideas which seemed very strange to many people, especially in the West.

In short, Jerome turned savagely on both Origen and Rufinus in order to defend his reputation. In defending himself Jerome was a little less than sincere.

Rufinus responded, of course. He had to. Rufinus pointed out, for example, that in a commentary on Ephesians Jerome had referred without objection to ideas of Origen about the preexistence and fall of souls into bodies. There are other points as well. Jerome responded with vitrolic force saying that some people (e.g., Rufinus), “love me so well that they cannot be heretics without me.”

Ouch.

Of course the ways of saints are strange and fraught with problems.

The postal service, or lack of one, actually plays an importance role in all of this.

Jerome wrote a friendly letter to Rufinus assuring him of his high esteem and speaking of their past friendship and the passing of his mother. He expressed his desire to avoid a public fight.

The letter never reached Rufinus. Jerome’s “friend” Pammachius kept it, and published instead a letter of Jerome which accompanied his translation of Origen’s De principiis.

Not having seen Jerome’s irenic gesture, Rufinus published his Apology, in response to Jerome the attacker.

And now we arrive finally at the point of this entry.

In Book II of his Apology, Rufinus points out how Jerome had attacked Ambrose. He mentions Ambrose’ work De Spiritu Sancto. Thus, Rufinus about Jerome’s view of Ambrose.

Rufinus relates more of Jerome’s disdain for his “rival” in Milan (Apology 2,23-25) as he digs into accusations of plagiarism which were being hurled around.

Rufinus says in 2, 23 that Jerome referred to Ambrose as a raven, a bird of ill omen, croaking and ridiculing in an strange way the color of all the others birds on account of his own total blackness…

praesertim cum a sinistro oscinem corvum audiam croccientem et mirum in modum de cunctarum avium ridere coloribus, cum totus ipse tenebrosus sit.”

Again, going on about Jerome’s accusation against Ambrose of plagiarism, in 2,25 Rufinus continues about Jerome’s treatment of Ambrose with his own counter charges:

25. You observe how (Jerome) treats Ambrose. First, he calls him a crow and says that he is black all over; then he calls him a jackdaw who decks himself in other birds’ showy feathers; and then he rends him with his foul abuse, and declares that there is nothing manly in a man whom God has singled out to be the glory of the churches of Christ, who has spoken of the testimonies of the Lord even in the sight of persecuting kings and has not been alarmed. The saintly Ambrose wrote his book on the Holy Spirit not in words only but with his own blood; for he offered his life-blood to his persecutors, and shed it within himself, although God preserved his life for future labours.

Suppose that (Ambrose) did follow some of the Greek writers belonging to our Catholic body, and borrowed something from their writings, it should hardly have been the first thought in your mind, (still less the object of such zealous efforts as to make you set to work to translate the work of Didymus on the Holy Spirit,) to blaze abroad what you call his plagiarisms, which were very possibly the result of a literary necessity when he had to reply at once to some ravings of the heretics. Is this the fairness of a Christian?

Is it thus that we are to observe the injunction of the Apostle, “Do nothing through faction or through vain glory”? But I might turn the tables on you and ask, Thou that sayest that a man should not steal, dost thou steal?

I might quote a fact I have already mentioned, namely, that, a little before you wrote your commentary on Micah, you had been accused of plagiarizing from Origen. And you did not deny it, but said: “What they bring against me in violent abuse I accept as the highest praise; for I wish to imitate the man whom we and all who are wise admire.” Your plagiarisms redound to your highest praise; those of others make them crows and jackdaws in your estimation. If you act rightly in imitating Origen whom you call second only to the Apostles, why do you sharply attack another for following Didymus, whom nevertheless you point to by name as a Prophet and an apostolic man?

For myself I must not complain, since you abuse us all alike. First you do not spare Ambrose, great and highly esteemed as he was; then the man of whom you write that he was second only to the Apostles, and that all the wise admire him, and whom you have praised up to the skies a thousand times over, not as you say in two, but in innumerable places, this man who was before an Apostle, you now turn round and make a heretic.

Thirdly, this very Didymus whom you designate the Seer-Prophet, who has the eye of the bride in the Song of Songs, and whom you call according to the meaning of his name an Apostolic man, you now on the other hand criminate as a perverse teacher, and separate him off with what you call your censor’s rod, into the communion of heretics. I do not know whence you received this rod. I know that Christ once gave the keys to Peter: but what spirit it is who now dispenses these censors’ rods, it is for you to say. However, if you condemn all those I have mentioned with the same mouth with which you once praised them, I who in comparison of them am but like a flea, must not complain, I repeat, if now you tear me to pieces, though once you praised me, and in your Chronicle equalled me to Florentius and Bonosus for the nobleness, as you said, of my life.

And from Jerome’s own pen we have this vicious attack on Ambrose (ep. 69,9).

Jerome was writing in the year of Ambrose’ death, 397, to a Roman named Oceanus who wanted Jerome to help him fight against a bishop in Spain who had married a second time. Jerome tells Oceanus to drop it, since that bishops’ first marriage had been before baptism.

However, Jerome uses the occasion to take a somewhat less than oblique swipe at Ambrose.

Ambrose had been popularly proclaimed bishop in Milan in 374 even though he had not even been baptized and had no theological training. The emperor, who wanted peace, acceded and within a week Ambrose was baptized and consecrated bishop.

Jerome, who had probably been disappointed that he hadn’t been made bishop of Rome, surely felt the sting of this meteoric rise of Ambrose.

In any event, listen to Jerome:

One who was yesterday a catechumen is today a bishop; one who was yesterday in the amphitheater is today in the church; one who spent the evening in the circus stands in the morning at the altar: one who a little while ago was a patron of actors is now a dedicator of virgins. Was the apostle ignorant of our shifts and subterfuges? Did he know nothing of our foolish arguments?

(Heri catechumenus, hodie pontifex; heri in amphitheatro, hodie in ecclesia; uespere in circo, mane in altari; dudum fautor strionum, nunc uirginum consecrator: num ignorabat apostolus tergiuersationes nostras et argumentorum ineptias nesciebat?)

Okaayyyy! That’s a big “NO!” vote from Jerome.

Regardless, today is the feast of St. Ambrose, who seemed to bring out both the worst and the best in people.

Posted in Linking Back, Saints: Stories & Symbols | Tagged , , , ,
27 Comments

QUAERITUR: Dalmatics on deacons! Maniples all around!

From a priest:

I enjoyed reading your post a month or so ago about how the use of maniples is really a sine qua non for the New Evangelization.  [Do I hear an “Amen!”?] As a relatively-new, hip, young priest, I have a few matching solemn high vestment sets, complete with maniples, and at my parish, we have 3 permanent deacons who are all quite active. [For the love of all that is holy… teach them the Extraordinary Form!] Therefore, at most Masses, even daily ones, we have at least one deacon, and sometimes two. My question is this: although the maniple is allowed but not required in the OF, if I’m going to wear one, should I have the deacon(s) wear one too?  [YES!] After all, it is proper to all the ordained, not just the priest, and it seems that I could potentially cause some confusion if only I wore one and not the deacon(s).  [I don’t know how much confusion it would cause, but surely the angels would weep.] Of course, another factor to consider is that the other priests in my parish, including the pastor, [the plot thickens] would definitely not wear a maniple, and so that could also cause confusion when the people see me wear one and not the other priests, and the deacons wearing one only when I’m the celebrant.  [Show ’em how it’s done, sonny.]

Another question, slightly related, has to do with dalmatics. We have two dalmatics of each color (including rose and black!), but the general practice is that they’re only worn on Sundays and feasts, and so at weekdays the deacon(s) just wears an alb and stole. Should they wear the dalmatic everyday? And would it be inappropriate for them to wear an alb, maniple, and stole, without a dalmatic? [Yahhhh… I can’t see them wearing the maniple without the dalmatic.  But it seems to me that the proper vestment of the deacon is the dalmatic, all the time.  If you have the dalmatic, use the dalmatic.  ]

I am reminded of a parody song the official WDTPRS parodohymnodist made up years before … I think before the internet.

Dalmatics on deacons and cassocks on priests,
habits on nuns and immovable feasts,
bishops in soutanes with big, gaudy rings –
these are a few of my favorite things.

[…]

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged , , ,
28 Comments

Prayer request for a priest

In your charity, please pray for an old priest who has had a serious stroke, Fr. Robert Auman, who may be known to some of you long and I mean loooong time readers of this blog and of the Catholic Online Form.

Fr. Auman was a prolific contributor to the original ASK FATHER question box.  Between myself and Fr. Auman and a couple other priest collaborators we wracked up over 6000 pages of Q&A.  I still have it archived, but can’t get it online.  But that is another story.

Fr. Auman needs prayers.

In your charity, perhaps you could stop and pray now?

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged
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