Your State of Life – WDTPRS SURVEY

Here is a survey about YOU.  Pass the word to others.

IMPORTANT: Anyone can participate in this survey.  I cannot tell who you are or even where you are. If some bishop or priest out there is worried about being identified, I can’t tell. You are entirely anonymous.

The combox is closed.

UPDATE:

From the email I am getting I sense that the “seminarian” category is vastly undercounted.  For that reason I will ask all seminarians who have tried to vote and couldn’t to try again and/or drop me a line.  If you can’t vote (probably because someone from your same institution already voted) send me an email and I will add a vote for you.  Indicate how many guys to add from your seminary.

State in life of WDTPRS readers. I am a...

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There are other, more complicated ways to do this, but choose the best answer.

I already know the Pope reads, so I didn’t have to include that option.  o{];¬)

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Baldachin by Baldachin: Texas edition.

The other day I wrote about the restoration of the spiffy baldachin over the Archbishop’s cathedra in the Cathedral Shrine of St. Paul in Minnesota.

A priest friend, Fr. SR of TX, sent photos from his phone of a new baldachin over the altar of … well… I’ll let Father tell you himself:

The new St John Fisher church in Richmond, TX. To be dedicated this Friday. A relatively poor parish can still do this. Jackson Ryan Architects of Houston.

baldichin

New church designs or restorations of older church don’t have to have weird ugly things.  Really.. they don’t!

Milwaukee

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Fun With Latin! “The makeup of the cosmos.”

In preparing an article for The Catholic Herald, the UK’s best Catholic weekly, I ran across something fun I wrote for the now concluded WDTPRS series’ look at the Third Eucharistic Prayer.

Enjoy!

Mundus, a, um is an adjective for “clean, cleanly, nice, neat, elegant” and “morally pure, upright, free from sin” as in the famous phrases from the Vulgate “cor mundum crea in me Deus… create in me a pure heart O God” (Ps 50 (51):12) and, “beati mundo corde … blessed are the pure of heart” (Matthew 5:8).  In the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite, before the the Gospel the priest says the prayer called the Munda cor meum:

“Cleanse my heart and my lips, O Almighty God, Who cleansed the lips of the Prophet Isaiah with a burning coal.  In Your gracious mercy deign so to purify me that I may worthily proclaim Your holy Gospel.”

As an aside, mundus, -i refers in the first place to “a woman’s dress or ornamentation” such as cosmetics. It is also “the universe, the world, esp. the heavens and the heavenly bodies” and thus “the earth, the inhabitants of the earth, mankind”.   This is the equivalent of the Greek kosmos, whence is derived English cosmos and cosmetics.

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Skype security hole and a 72 Hour Kit

From the National Terror Alert Response Center page:

Fox News reports a flagrant security flaw in the massively popular Skype video chat service may be putting Internet users worldwide at risk.The serious security breach in the Internet video chat program, which boasts over 500 million users around the globe, means that any evil computer nerd could easily hunt down users’ whereabouts, according to a study co-authored by an NYU-Poly professor.

I noted also that on the sidebar there is a link to a 72 Hour Kit, for an emergency.

Do you use skype?

Do you have a plan for you and your family if there is an emergency?

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Book/Library database software

I have a lot of books. I know an old priest who has even more.  A LOT more. One of these days his library will have to be cataloged.

What am I saying… MINE has to be cataloged!

Does anyone out there have experience with small library software? Scanning? Strategies?

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RECENT POSTS and THANKS!

First off, thanks to readers who have sent things from the wish lists or donations. I have your names jotted down and will remember you next Saturday when I will say Mass for the intention of my benefactors.


And thanks to those of you who have sent greetings in advance of my birthday and also for the good feedback about your experience of going to confession for the first time in a while.  If this blog helps people go back to confession, it is worth the effort.

And don’t forget my SURVEY!

Here are links to some posts which are scrolling along:

The Mystic Monk Coffee of the Month this month is Tanzanian Peaberry.

Many years ago when I ran a whole bean coffee and tea shop, I used to sell a lot of this stuff.  It is, if memory serves, lower in acid than many coffees.

If you are starting to think about your Thanksgiving meal prep, use my link to get your coffee and tea!

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In retribution for my sins… a terrible thought to make the blood run cold! Save me, O Lord!

I just had a horrible though that made my blood run cold…..

It just occurred to me what a Dantesque contrapasso it would be – for my black and horrible sins – were some bishops to engineer me being assigned to work for the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, or for Promoting the New Evangelization, or Communincations or…

brrrrrr

O my God, I am heartily sorry for having offended Thee, and I detest all my sins, because I dread the loss of heaven, and the pains of hell; but most of all because they offend Thee, my God, Who are all good and deserving of all my love. I firmly resolve, with the help of Thy grace, to confess my sins, to do penance, and to amend my life. Amen.

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Catholics on social issues in Minnesota

As I have written before, during the 2012 election run-up Minnesota will be a battle-ground state for the defense of marriage issue.  The Catholic bishops of Minnesota will be deeply involved.  Archbishop Nienstedt of St. Paul and Minneapolis has all but nailed their colors to the mast… and well he should.  There is a state amendment up for a vote in Minnesota.  Money from everywhere will pour into Minnesota in order to corrupt the definition of marriage.  The Catholic bishops have taken a stand and they will fight to the end.

I don’t think there is a connection between my comments above, on the Catholic bishops, and then this next item, on another important social issue.

I noted with interest that a Catholic pro-life DEMOCRAT candidate is going to run for Minn.-5.  Did you get that?  A pro-life dem?

Catholic Pro-Lifer to Challenge Muslim Congressman Ellison in Minnesota Primary

Contact: David Lewis, 202-531-7547, media@GaryInTheHouse.com; www.GaryInTheHouse.com [Be aware that at that site there are horrible photos of aborted babies.  FYI.]

MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 24, 2011 /Christian Newswire/ — On Monday, October 24, 10:00 A.M., Catholic Pro-lifer Gary Boisclair will announce primary against incumbent Keith Ellison, District 5. Boisclair (Biography below) will challenge Mr. Ellison in a Democrat (DFL) primary to Represent Minnesota’s 5th Congressional District.

Location: U.S. District Court, Plaza, 300 South 4th Street, Minneapolis, MN

Time: 10:00 A.M.

Gary Boisclair states:

“I intend to defeat Mr. Ellison soundly in this primary, based upon the issues at hand. Congressman Keith Ellison has failed to represent the ethics and beliefs of this district.

“At the onset of his tenure, Ellison took his Oath of office with his hand on a Quran – a book which mandates violence against Jews and Christians.

“Ellison consistently legislates for socialist programs, which in effect make us the slave labor force of the federal government. Under his agenda, we are enslaved to heavy taxation, crushing debt, runaway inflation, and we are forced to ‘give’ our hard earned money to his favorite ‘entitlements.’ [Not only democrat and pro-life, but also a Tea Partier? This after that PCJP “white paper” today.  My head is starting to spin.]

[NB] “But Mr. Ellison’s track record is even more nefarious. [What is this? Tolkien?  I guess Mr. Boisclair isn’t into mincing words!  But wait! There’s more… ] Mr. Ellison has voted repeatedly to fund Planned Parenthood, a racist organization with a long history of discrimination against minorities, which has consistently targeted black and Hispanic minorities for the abortion of their children. Planned Parenthood is a racist, criminal syndicate, which covers up the crimes of pedophiles, rapists and sex traffickers; it slaughters nearly 1,000 unborn babies every day, and Keith Ellison is their brazen champion, as he hypocritically parades his Progressive Caucus motto, “Liberty and Justice for ALL.” (caps brought to you by Rep. Ellison)

I urge all DFLers to put their most sacred beliefs about God, ethics, and human life first in this election, and to vote for a candidate who truly represents those beliefs.”

Mr. Boisclair will unveil his first three TV ads on Monday, October 24th, at www.GaryInTheHouse.com.

What I find fascinating about this is that Mr. Boisclair is running in the DFL primary.  A pro-life Democrat who speaks in these terms?

A war is going to flare up in Minnesota over social issues.  The Catholic bishops are going to have a strong voice in the public square.  However, it seems that some other Catholics are stepping into another aspect of the public square and challenging the status quo of the dem’s plaftform.

Again, I don’t think the Catholic bishops of Minnesota are connected to this fellow running for MN-5.  What I find interesting is that there is a stronger Catholic voice being expressed in Minnesota than has been heard for a very long time.  It is fascinating to me that this challenge to the incumbent in MN-5 should come from within the DFL.  Rara avis.

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Samuel Gregg on the new “white paper” from the Pont. Con. for Justice and Peace

From National Review Online comes a piece by the eminent Samuel Gregg, a fine scholar with his head screwed on in the correct direction. He gives some reactions to the new “white paper” as I call it from the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace. Mr. Gregg is research director at the Acton Institute. He has authored several books including On Ordered Liberty, his prize-winning The Commercial Society and Wilhelm Röpke’s Political Economy, and his 2012 forthcoming Becoming Europe: Economic Decline, Culture, and America’s Future.  Also, see Economic Thinking for the Theologically Minded.

Be sure to check out the comments at National Review.

My emphases and comments.

Catholics, Finance, and the Perils of Conventional Wisdom
October 24, 2011 12:22 P.M.
By Samuel Gregg

Despite the Catholic Left’s excited hyperventilating that the document released today [Which is our first clue that the “white paper” is bad.  And I call it a “white paper”, since it doesn’t form a part of the Holy Father’s Magisterium.] by the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace (PCJP) would put the Church “to the left of Nancy Pelosi” on economic issues, more careful reading of “Towards Reforming the International Financial and Monetary Systems in the Context of Global Public Authority” soon indicates that it reflects rather conventional contemporary economic thinking. [The phrase “damning with faint praise” comes to mind…] Unfortunately, given the uselessness of much present-day economics, that’s not likely to make it especially helpful in thinking through some of our present financial challenges.

Doctrinally speaking, there’s nothing new to be found in this text. As PCJP officials will themselves tell you, it’s not within this curial body’s competence to make doctrinal statements that bind Catholic consciences. [Did you all get that?  This “white paper” is not a document of the Church’s Magisterium.] Moreover, the notion that an increasingly integrated world economy requires some type of authority able to make decisions about what the Church calls “the universal common good” has long been a staple of Catholic social teaching. Such references to a global world authority have always been accompanied by an emphasis on the idea of subsidiarity, and the present document is no exception to that rule. This principle maintains that any higher level of government should assist lower forms of political authority and civil-society associations “only when” (as this PCJP text states) “individual, social or financial actors are intrinsically deficient in capacity, or cannot manage by themselves to do what is required of them.”

But putting aside doctrinal questions, this text also makes claims of a more strictly economic nature. Given that these generally fall squarely into the area of prudential judgment for Catholics, it’s quite legitimate for Catholics to discuss and debate some of this document’s claims. So here are just a few questions worth asking.

[1] First, the text makes a legitimate point about the effects of a disjunction between the financial sector and the rest of the economy. It fails, however, to note that one major reason for this disjunction has been the dissolution of any tie between money and an external object of value that regulates the quantity of money and credit in circulation in the “real” economy.  [For example, there is no “gold standard”.]

Between the late 1870s and 1914, such a linkage existed in the form of the classic gold standard. This gave the world remarkable monetary stability and low inflation without any centralized authority. You needn’t be a Ron Paul disciple to recognize that fiat money’s rise is at least partly responsible for the monetary crises this document correctly laments.

[2] Second, this document displays no recognition of the role played by moral hazard in generating the 2008 crisis or the need to prevent similar situations from arising in the future. Moral hazard describes those situations when people are effectively insulated from the possible negative consequences of their choices. This makes them more likely to take risks they wouldn’t otherwise take — especially with other people’s money. The higher the extent of the guarantee, the greater is the risk of moral hazard. It creates, as the financial journalist Martin Wolf writes, “an overwhelming incentive to privatize gains and socialize losses.”

If PCJP were cognizant of this fact, it might have hesitated before recommending we consider “forms of recapitalization of banks with public funds, making the support conditional on ‘virtuous’ behaviours aimed at developing the ‘real economy.’” Such a recapitalization would simply reinforce the message that Wall Street can always turn to taxpayers to bail them out when their latest impossible-to-understand financial scheme goes south. [NB:] In terms of orthodox Catholic theology, it’s worth reminding ourselves that the one who creates an occasion of sin bears some indirect responsibility for the choices of the person tempted by this situation to do something very imprudent or simply wrong. [There are various ways to participate in and be responsible for the sin of another person.  You can see how some things that liberals like to call “structural” sins have their grounding in the choices of individuals.]

[3] Third, given this text’s subject matter, it reflects one very strange omission. Nowhere does it contain a detailed discussion of the high levels of public debt and deficits in many developed economies, the clear-and-present danger they represent to the global financial system, and their negative impact upon the prospects for economic growth (i.e., what gets people out of poverty).

Given these facts, [Quaeritur…] how could governments provide the aforementioned public funds when they are already so heavily in debt and already tottering under the weight of existing fiscal obligations? By raising taxes? Even Bill Clinton thinks that’s not a great idea in an economic slowdown. Indeed, the basic demands of commutative justice indicate that governments need to meet their current obligations to existing creditors before they can even consider contributing to further bailouts.

[4] Fourth, the document calls for the creation of some type of world central bank. Yet its authors seem unaware that much of the blame for our present economic mess is squarely attributable to central banks. Here one need only note that the Federal Reserve’s easy-money policies from 2000 onwards played an indispensable role in creating America’s housing-market bubble, the development of questionable securities products, and the subsequent 2008 meltdown.

Calls for a global central bank aren’t new. Keynes argued for such an organization 75 years ago. But why, given national central banks’ evident failures, should anyone suppose that a global central bank wouldn’t fall prey to the same errors? The folly of a centralized supranational body like the European Central Bank setting a one-size-fits-all interest-rate for economies as different as Greece and Germany should now be evident to everyone who doesn’t live in the fantasy world inhabited by EU bureaucrats. Indeed, it is simply impossible for any one individual or organization to know what is the optimal interest-rate for every country in the EU, let alone the world.

Plenty of other critiques could — and no doubt will — be made of some of the economic claims advanced in this PCJP document. As if in anticipation of this criticism, the document states, “We should not be afraid to propose new ideas.” That is most certainly true. [NB] Unfortunately, many of its authors’ ideas reflect an uncritical assimilation of the views of many of the very same individuals and institutions that helped generate the world’s most serious economic crisis since the Great Depression. For a church with a long tradition of thinking seriously about finance centuries before anyone had ever heard of John Maynard Keynes or Friedrich Hayek, we can surely do better.

A very helpful intro to the “white paper”.

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A reader used an Examination of Conscience to identify a sin

A while back I linked to the site of Fr. Tim Finigan’s parish where he has made available different examinations of conscience.

Thank you for this invaluable advice.

I found a check-box style examination of conscience similar to the one you linked to recently, and by using it I was able to identify and confess a really awful sin, one so awful that I had suppressed the memory of it.

I am so thankful to have been able explicitly to confess it and receive absolution.

Fathers, give people direction about how to make a good confession. Then hear confessions.

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