MENE MENE TEKEL UPHARSIN – REVIEW: Mark Steyn – After America: Get Ready for Armageddon

I am reading Mark Steyn’s brilliant After America: Get Ready for Armageddon.

USA book click here.
USA Kindle book click here. (Text-to-Speech enabled)
UK book click here. UK doesn’t have a separate Kindle version yet.

Readers in the USA, this is a good book.  I suggest you read it.  There are reasons for people on the other side of the Atlantic to read this book.  Steyn analyzes the state of Europe’s economy and culture and prospects for the future in tandem with what is going on the USA.  He is brutally clear, but his prose and sense of dark humor are rich, the word play so far ranging, that you can’t help turning page after page in anticipation of the next witty turn of phrase.  His skill is, in itself, a reason to read it.

One of the important things he tackles is the falling birth rate in nations with vast debt being shoved along to future shrinking generations.  He looks at the issue not only from point of view of economic implications but also social, cultural.

He is talking about the death of a civilization, not just problems in the USA or Europe.

In this, it seems to me that he is giving voice, from another point of view, to Pope Benedict’s concerns for the identity of Europe and, of course, the West.

Here is a sample of the end of one of Steyn’s chapters.

I was struck by this little section because I had just read a story on Roma Sette about vandalism of the Trevi Fountain and also a fountain in the Piazza Navona.

Here is Steyn on the defacing of monuments, et al., with my emphases:

Europe is already dead—in the short run. Linger awhile, how fair thou art.  It’s nice to linger at the brasserie, have a second café au lait, and watch the world go by. At the Munich Security Conference, President Sarkozy demanded of his fellow Continentals, “Does Europe want peace, or do we want to be left in peace?”  To pose the question is to answer it. But it only works for a generation or two, and then, as the gay bar owners are discovering in a fast Islamifying Amsterdam, reality reasserts itself.

We began this book with some thoughts from Bertie Wooster and Jonathan Swift regarding Belshazzar’s feast and “the writing on the wall.” But sometimes there’s so much writing you can barely see the wall. On my last brief visit, Athens was a visibly decrepit dump: a town with a handful of splendid ancient ruins surrounded by a multitude of hideous graffiti covered contemporary ruins. Sit at an elegant café in Florence, Barcelona, Lisbon, Brussels, almost any Continental city. If you’re an American tourist, what do you notice? Beautiful buildings, designer stores, modern bus and streetcar shelters…and all covered in graffiti from top to toe. The grander the city, the more profuse the desecration. Go to Rome, the imperial capital, the heart of Christendom: the entire city is daubed like a giant New York subway car from the Seventies. Look at your souvenir snaps: here’s me and the missus standing by the graffiti at the Trevi Fountain; there we are admiring the graffiti at the Coliseum.

A New York Times feature on Berlin graffiti reported it as an art event, a story about “an integral component of Berliner Strassenkultur.” But it’s actually a tale of civic death, of public space claimed in perpetuity by the vandals (like graffiti, another word Italy gave the world, as it were). At the sidewalk cafés, Europeans no longer notice it. But it is in a small, aesthetically painful way a surrender to barbarism—and one made even more pathetic by the cultural commentators desperate to pass it off as “art.” And it sends a signal to predators of less artistic bent: if you’re unwilling to defend the civic space from these coarse provocations, what others will you give in to?

It’s strange and unsettling to walk through cities with so much writing on the wall, and yet whose citizens see everything but. Bertie Wooster’s Aunt Dahlia is right: once upon a time, you were certainly an ass if you didn’t know where “the writing on the wall” came from. It was part of the accumulated cultural inheritance: in the old Europe, Handel and William Walton wrote oratorios about it. Rembrandt’s painting of Belshazzar’s Feast hangs in the National Gallery in a London all but oblivious to its significance. Instead of paintings and oratorios and other great art about the writing on the wall, Europeans have walls covered in writing, and pretend that it’s art. Today, I doubt one in a thousand high-school students would have a clue whence the expression derives. And one sign that the writing’s on the wall is when society no longer knows what “the writing on the wall” means.  (p. 124)

Turn to any page in the book and you find stark commentary on what we face in the not distant future.

I hope a perfectly sane Steyn is more successful than poor Cassandra.  We had better start listening and doing something soon.  If it is not too late already, it is nearly too late.

Posted in Global Killer Asteroid Questions, Our Catholic Identity, REVIEWS, SESSIUNCULA, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , , , , , ,
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Accidently praying together, or, reason #7873 for Summorum Pontificum

Amy Welborn had a very interesting entry at her blog, Charlotte Was Both.  She writes about a Mass she attended which wound up with the priest as the focus.  Here I jump into the middle of her post with my emphases:

The priest became the center of the Mass – and not in the alter Christus  offering sacrifice mode he’s supposed to – and for the rest of us, there was no escaping him.

But I’ve gone over that before in this space.  Here’s what struck me this time.

The parish has a special intention for which they are praying to the Virgin.

So after Mass the priest led the people in this prayer to the Virgin for this special intention.

He turned around. Away from the congregation. With them.

He recited the words of this prayer to the Virgin, on his knees facing her statue –  which stood in the sanctuary.

He turned , he faced the statue, he prayed.

With us.

I could not help but wonder why embracing this stance and this mode of praying which did not deviate from the given, “rote,” prayer one bit – leading us, but in the same direction –  was acceptable now, but not during Mass.

When it cam time to pray instead of celebrate together, the instinct was to face the same direction together to the one whom they were addressing.  When the priest got himself out of the way, they prayed together.

The imposition of a versus populum position for Mass was probably the single most corrosive thing perpetrated in the name of Conciliar liturgical reform.  That was the opinion of the great liturgical scholar Klaus Gamber.

A reorientation of our Catholic identity requires a reorientation of our liturgical worship.  One way to help reorient ourselves as a praying Church would be to reorient our altars to the “liturgical East”.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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10 September 2001 – 10 years ago today

What were you doing the day before

NOT ten years ago tomorrow.  Ten years ago today.  The day before.

On 10 September 2001 I was to fly to Minneapolis from Albuquerque, where I had given a talk at a conference.  But a friend (who reads and comments here, by the way) called me with the suggestion that, if I could reroute my return flight, he, a pilot, would meet me in Phoenix and we could go to a Diamondbacks game for which he had tickets.

I changed my flight to go through Phoenix with a long layover before an American West connection to Minneapolis on the red eye.

We went to the game and then visited a mutual friend in the area (now deceased, God rest her soul).  My friend dropped me at the airport and home I went back to Minneapolis on the last flight out of Phoenix.

The last flight on 10 September 2001 out of Phoenix.

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About registration and my combox. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

It would be nice to have an open combox, but experience demonstrates that that is not possible.

Some people think that they can, behind their nearly complete anonymity, puke into my combox anything they expel from their atrabilious gorges.   Therefore, I have the unpleasant task of watching registrations and the combox queue.

I don’t know what it is about anonymity and the internet that makes so many people nastier and stupider.  If anyone doubted the reality of original sin…

To post comments, you must be registered and that registration must be approved by me.  Sometimes people have to wait a bit after registering.  I look at the registration queue on my own schedule.  I look at the comment moderation queue on my own schedule.

I don’t know why some comments get pulled into the moderation queue, by the way.  Sometimes it happens when you include links.  I think the spam detection software flags certain words.  I haven’t figured it out and, frankly, I don’t worry about it very much.  Moreover, I can flag usernames so their comments always go into moderation.  I don’t use that very often, but I do use it.  I also don’t lose any sleep over it.

I do regret that some entirely innocent and well-meaning comments wind up in the queue.

I always take note of the name fields.  I prefer some sort of name rather than just initials or a bizarre handle.  I understand that some people prefer anonymity, but I think some sort of name – even a pen name – is important for the combox.  See my comments about the fruits anonymity, above.

I have a field in the registration form wherein you can indicate something about yourself.  I look carefully at that field.  I don’t need a biography, just something to let me know a) that the registrant is a human being and b) that the registrant doesn’t have some nefarious intention.  If people leave that field blank, I delete the registration.

I get quite a few false or malicious registrations, by the way.

I have been at this internet thing for a couple decades now and, like an hard horse old Wild West sheriff, I am set in my ways.

Lastly, I won’t hesitate to delete comments and ban people.  It keeps my irritation level down.

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WDTPRS 13th Sunday after Pentecost

COLLECT (1962MR):
Omnipotens sempiterne Deus,
da nobis fidei, spei et caritatis augmentum:
et, ut mereamur assequi quod promittis,
fac nos amare quod praecipis
.

This prayer, found in the Veronese and the Gelasian Sacramentary, survived the machetes of the Consilium, to live on in the Novus Ordo as the Collect for the 30th Sunday of Ordinary Time.

LITERAL TRANSLATION:
Almighty everlasting God,
grant us an increase of faith, hope and charity,
and cause us to love what You command
so that we may merit to obtain what You promise
.

LAME-DUCK ICEL (1973 – 30th Sunday):
Almighty and ever-living God,
strengthen our faith, hope, and love.
May we do with loving hearts
what you ask of us
and come to share the life you promise
.

NEW CORRECTED ICEL (2011 – 30th Sunday):
Almighty ever-living God,
increase our faith, hope and charity,
and make us love what you command,
so that we may merit what you promise
.

Bare bones.

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A pessimistic article about SSPX and talks with Rome

In Vatican Insider of La Stampa comes this.  My emphases and comments.

Beware: Weird translation.  You might have better success in Italian.  Or else the original French, more more nuanced, here.

Before a key meeting in Rome, the leader of the traditionalists stressed that he was not prepared to make any compromises and also revealed some interesting behind the scenes happenings…
Alessandro Speciale
vatican city

“If their aim is still to force us to accept the second Vatican Council, the discussions have been clear enough in showing that we have no intention of  doing any such thing.”

SSPX Bp. FellayThese were the decisive but prudent [HUH?  “É un Bernard Fellay deciso a non cedere a nessun compromesso con il Vaticano ma allo stesso tempo prudente,…” A better word is “cautious”.] words of Bernard Fellay, who was adamant he would not agree to any compromise with the Vatican. On the 15 August, Fellay spoke openly about the talks between the Lefebvrians and the Holy See during the “summer University” of the Society of St. Pius X, fonde [surely founded rather than melted, no?] by Monsignor Lefebvre.

The transcription of the public interview with the Lefebvrian superior, held by the Society’s press agent, the abbot Alain Lorans, was published a few days ago, on the eve of the meeting in Rome between Fellay and Cardinal William Levada, Prefect of the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which should encapsulate two years of “doctrinal talks” between Rome and the traditionalists.

The Lefebvrian superior’s judgement on the discussions was anything but friendly: “They are not beneficial right now because there is a clash of mentalities… In any case, we are certainly not in agreement. If there is one thing we agree on, that is that we do not agree on anything.”  [Sure a lot of mixed message in the last few months.]

Monsignor Fellay, one of the Society’s four bishops, ordained against Rome’s will by Monsignor Lefebvre and whose excommunication was removed by Benedict XVI in 2009, called for “extreme prudence” [“caution”] in terms of their relationship with the Vatican, especially in view of next week’s meeting, of which he said he did not know what to expert. [or even what to expect!]

[…]

“If the Society of St. Pius X i sto be recognised, the Vatican Secretary of State said in December 2009, they absolutely must recognise the Council and the teachings of John XXIII, Paul VI, John Paul I, John Paul II and Benedict XVI himself.” [Two things.  That was in 2009, not 2011.  That was Card. Bertone, not Pope Benedict XVI.]

People must not believe everything they hear,” the traditionalist superior told his followers. For example the rumours going round about Cardinal Levada making a “pro position[or perhaps a “proposition”?] to the Brotherhood [Who did this… google translator?  “Fraternity” is, I think the preferred term.] to allow it to entre [“Apres vous mon cher Alphonse!”] into communion with the Holy See once again: “On what conditions?” Fellay asked himself, “the way I see it, there must be certain conditions.” [Indeed, there must be conditions.  Let’s start with submission to the authority of the Vicar of Christ.]

He went on to say that “there are those who say that up until now, they (the Vatican, editor’s note) have always tried to shove the Council down our throats. I don’t know. All I am saying is: We are moving on. We have our principles, above all faith… Without faith God can never like you, so our decisioni s made. Faith comes first, no matter what, it even comes before recognition by the Church. We need to be strong.” [I think I understand what he is driving that, and I want to read it as favorably as possible, but does this sound like something a Donatist might say?]

[…]

Fellay also explained how the arrival of Pope Ratzinger on the papal throne “set something off” in the Vatican, changing the winds in favour of the traditionalists and opening the way for their potential reintegration: “However, thinking about it and as far asthe person himself is concerned, the mood has certainly changed. Even in the Vatican, his arrival gave courage to those who, calling themselves conservatives, were forced to hide.”

Still, with the revocation of excommunications and the Williamson case in 2009, relations “became more tense”: in June that year, Fellay claims he tried desperately to meet with the Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, but in vain. [That’s interesting.] The traditionalist superior was “diverted” to the Prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine for the Faith, cardinal LevadaCard. Bertone and Pres. Obama [Why not have Fellay speak with both CDF and also receive him as Secretary of State?  What would the downside be?  To meet with him?  Sit in a room and meet with him?  After all, in 2009 they met with the most pro-abortion President in American history, Pres. Obama.  Right?  Remember all the talk back them about “common ground”?Robert Mugabe (BTW… where’s the memo?) There is far more common ground with SSPXers than with Pres. Obama.  In 2011 they permitted Robert Mugabe to come to the beatification of John Paul II and receive Communion.  Right?  Why not meet with SSPX Bp. Fellay?]

Lefebvre’s successor, underlined more than once the divisions that esiste [Are you getting a sense that this wasn’t originally in English?] inside the Vatican Curia and warned that any news arriving from Rome should be taken with a pinch of salt. Fellay used the example of  an Augustinian monk  who was excommunicated and espelle from Rome having “converted” to “Monsignor Lefebvre’s society.”

The traditionalist superior claimed he went to Rome with the monk’s excommunication letter, signed by the Vatican Congregation for the clergy and that he showed it to Monsignor Guido Pozzo, current Secretary of Ecclesia Dei and head of the Vatican “negotiating” team engaged in talks with the Brotherhood.

“This is how the letter should be treated,” Pozzo allegedly said to Fellay before tearing it to pieces before him. The secretary of Ecclesia Dei is supposed to have added: “You should tell your priests and your flock, that not everything that comes from Rome comes directly from the Pope.”

Referring to another example, fellay spoke of  a case of  “ecumenical informing,” [“delazione ecumenica”] in which he was the central figure: after some Lefebvrian bishops, who were still excommunicated, were forbidden to celebrate the eucharist in the Lourdes sanctuary, the traditionalist superior contacted cardinal Castrillon, still president of Ecclesia Dei, to “condemn” the fact that some Anglican bishops had been allowed to celebrate mass.

“I am not calling them bishops because they are all laymen, they are not real priests, let alone bishops,” Fellay added with disdain.

And yet ironically more Anglican bishops have come into unity with Rome than SSPX bishops.  And the Anglicans have been ordained as priests, and they have faculties to do what the SSPX bishops cannot.

In any event, I suggest that readers here pray to God the Holy Spirit to warm hearts and bend wills.  Pray to the guardian angels of all involved that the meeting on 14 September will go well.

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TAC’s Archbp. Hepworth and breakthrough in negotiations with the Holy See

On the site of English Catholic I found an encouraging article about Archbishop John Hepworth of the TAC, Traditional Anglican Communion, and a breakthrough in negotiations with the Holy See for his flock to be united with the Catholic Church.

English Catholic had links to articles in The Australian.

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America Magazine wants dumbed-down path to canonization

From the Jesuit run America Magazine comes this with my emphases and comments.

The Universal Call
The Editors | SEPTEMBER 19, 2011

Ever since the Second Vatican Council spoke of the “universal call to holiness,” there has been a move to recognize more lay men and women as saints, as models of sanctity for lay Catholics. Several contemporary lay women and men have already been raised to the “glories of the altar,” among them St. Gianna Molla (1922-62), an Italian mother who carried a child to term rather than consent to an abortion and died in the process. Others on their way include Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati (1901-25), the charismatic Italian social activist who said, “Charity is not enough; we need social reform.” In that same vein, the cause for canonization of Dorothy Day, the American-born co-founder of the Catholic Worker movement, has just been advanced. And in 2008, Louis and Zélie Martin, the devout parents of St. Thérèse of Lisieux, were beatified, a rare instance of a husband and wife recognized together. [Bl. Luigi and Maria Beltrame Quattrocchi.]

But when it comes to recognizing saints, the church still tends to favor popes, bishops, priests and members of religious orders. In June Pope Benedict XVI released the latest list of 27 candidates for sainthood, which included martyrs in the Spanish Civil War, among them a bishop and 13 Daughters of Charity; an Austrian priest killed in Buchenwald; the Mexican foundress of a women’s religious order; an 18th-century Italian diocesan priest and a French Dominican priest who founded the Bethany community. While there are plenty of holy Fathers and Mothers on that list, where are the holy mothers and fathers? [If the editors of America Magazine have someone in mind, I suggest that they become the actors of a cause.  After all, they have the money and resources together with the apparent will to do such.]

Fifty years after the council, in the midst of the church’s continued invitations for laypeople to lead holy lives, why are there still relatively few role models for the laity? Surely there are many who fit the definition of holiness: men and women who, aware of God’s love for them, return that love through service to their neighbor, specifically in their humility, charity and self-sacrifice.

Though the logistics may be difficult, the church should find a way to recognize models of holiness in men and women who lived “ordinary” lives. [The Church does have a way.  It is called a “cause”.  The editors of America could initiate one.] These would include: someone other than a saint from the very earliest days of the church (like St. Joseph), [There are martyrs in the ancient Church, right?  Very many of them “ordinary” people.  But note the writer’s choice of St. Joseph.  More on that later.] someone who was not royalty (like St. Elizabeth of Hungary), a married person who did not found a religious order in later years (like St. Bridget of Sweden), a couple who did not initially plan to live as “brother and sister” while married (like Louis and Zélie Martin), someone who did not found a religious community or social movement (like Dorothy Day) and someone who did not die in terrible circumstances (like St. Gianna Molla). [Do you get the sense from that list that the writers of America are focused on who has sex and who doesn’t?]

While Catholics recognize that the canonized saint needs to have led a life of “heroic sanctity,” many lay Catholics long for someone they can emulate in their daily lives. [Hold on.  Are the editors saying that Catholics are not in fact to strive for heroic sanctity?  Also, I believe the better term for what the Congregation must determine is “heroic virtue”.  I don’t want to quibble to much with “sanctity”, which is “holiness”, but we more easily come to a determination of the holiness of a person though “proofs” about their manifestation of virtues, theological and cardinal.] Which raises a question: Who is holier—Mother Teresa or the church-going mother who for decades takes care of an autistic child? Pope John Paul II or the pious man who serves as a director of religious education while holding down two jobs to support his family? The answer: they are all saintly in their own ways. “Heroic sanctity” comes in many forms—and it includes both those whose faith inspires them to found a religious order and those whose faith enables them to care for a sick child for years on end.  [That is right.  But while someone can propose that a person lived a life of “heroic virtue“, they then have to demonstrate that claim so that it can be accepted with moral certainty. That isn’t easy.  And it shouldn’t be, given the stakes.]

Three factors frustrate the desire for more lay saints. The first is the persistent belief that ordination or taking religious vows represents a higher level of holiness than does, say, raising a child. [I believe there is a pretty sound tradition that priesthood and religious life are higher callings.  But I don’t think anyone suggests that having that calling automatically means greater holiness.] But even the saints disagreed with this idea. “Holiness is not the luxury of a few,” said Mother Teresa. “It is a simple duty for you and for me.” [Yes, of course.  To be lived according to one’s state in life.  A Jesuit should know that.]

The second factor is the public nature of the lives of the priests and members of religious orders who are canonized. It is easier to see the personal impact of a founder or foundress than it is to know about a parent’s care for an autistic child. This kind of hidden lay holiness will be less likely to attract the devout simply because it is less well known. So, in the case of the ordinary layperson, the church’s requirement that a local devotion spring up around the person will be frustrated. [For someone to promote the cause of a person, they have to be known.  Those who knew the person must have the sense that the person was holy.  The issue of the person’s fama sanctitatis is important precisely because it affirms the devotion of the ordinary people the editor’s are exalting.  It is a sign of God’s favor when authentic.]

The third factor is the arduous, time-consuming and expensive canonization procedure, which only religious orders and dioceses have the financial resources and technical know-how to navigate. [Consider the implications of a procedure that is easy, swift, and cheap.  McSaints. Consider the impact on the Church’s reputation when many people not meriting beatification or canonization, miracles which are bogus, obtain approval.] Not many children of holy parents can manage the complex process required by the Congregation for the Causes of Saints. [Where there is a will there is a way.  If people want it badly enough, and if God favors the enterprise, they find a way.  It may not be the smooth and easy road the editors of America want.  When did excellence cease to be of value in Jesuit spirituality?] Once the mother of the autistic child dies, who will advance her cause? Few might know of her holiness, yet her example might speak to more Catholics than even that of a pope[I cannot but agree.  She might be inspiring.]

If the church hopes to offer relevant models of holiness for laypeople, it is time to make the canonization process far more accessible and far less expensive for those who knew a holy husband, wife, mother, father, friend or neighbor.

So, they think the process is too complicated and expensive.

I think that these causes are very important and require the highest standards.  Having high standards will incur costs.

What aspects of finding out the truth of claims about holiness are the editors of American Magazine ready to set aside?

Another thing that makes me uncomfortable with their editorial is the sense I get that they don’t quite get what this “heroic” thing is.

At the time of the beatification of John Paul II I wondered aloud if we weren’t seeing a shift in the criteria for what is called “heroic virtue”.  I wasn’t suggesting that John Paul wasn’t heroically virtuous, by the way.  But I get a sense, in recent commentary, that what has always been understood as “heroicity” in the practice of the virtues a Christian must manifest hasn’t been somewhat undercut.

As I learned in the Studium conducted by the Congregation for Causes of Saints for future or potential postulators, et al., a virtue is practiced to a heroic degree under ordinary circumstances when it is practiced over a long portion of the person’s life and to the end with perseverance till death.  It can also be heroic when the circumstances of life are such that that most people fail.  True martyrs, for example, in their time of trial are thought to, in that time of being martyred, manifest the virtues to a heroic degree.

There is a tension inherent in the “universal call to holiness” and living a life of holiness, according to the virtues, to a “heroic” degree.  Heroic necessarily means something beyond the normal way people react to thing in life.  We are called to heroic virtues.  Not all of us attain them to a heroic degree.

And here I wonder aloud again…. could it be that the concept of “hero” has been eroded?  I don’t, for example, agree with the incessant use of the word “hero” when people do something out of the ordinary or perform some good act.  For example, I think that a Marine who is award the Congressional Medal of Honor probably did something heroic.  As much as I admire Marines, I don’t think that a Marine is a “hero” simply for serving in the Marine Corp.  I heard a story the other day and saw a video, about a man who ran to a car which was entirely engulfed in flames after an accident and, risking his own life, broke the window by pounding on it with his bare fist in order to rescue a perfect stranger.  I think acts like that are heroic.  The flames were enough to deter most people.  He did it anyway, seemingly with no self-interest. I am not sure that running to a car not on fire and opening the door and pulling a person out is “heroic”.  It could be.  The first example clearly is.  The second… not to clearly.  When you want to hold someone up as heroic, it is better to hold up clear examples of heroism, not doubtful examples.

Heroic virtue is attained through perseverance, elbow grease, and special graces.  It isn’t everyday.

That is not to say that people don’t attain the joys of heaven if they don’t manifest the virtues in a heroic degree.  They certainly can.  But when we want to hold some one up as a model of something, we hold up a model, not something ordinary.  We hold up as fine an example as we can find, so as to aspire, edify.  Cal Ripkin was a model baseball player, because he played well with great consistency for a very long time.  Some model players have shorter and less consistent careers, but they accomplished true mastery of the tools of their positions.  On cooking shows, you want to see good cooks, not just average cooks.  Even if they cook “average” or “everyday fare”, they do it well, with skill and insight.  What you then do with their recipes and examples is up to you.  You can adapt their recipes to just “okay”, or you can try to make it well.   But the model should be exemplary.

Another thing.  If the editors of American Magazine want the process to be cheaper, are they willing to abandon tenets of social justice and not pay people a proper wage for the work they do?  To put together a case for your “servant of God” you will have to cover travel and living expenses, which are not set by the Church, secretarial and translation costs, research, experts in many fields, etc.  A cause is a serious thing, like a juridical trial.  Precision is required because the truth is desired.

What aspect of finding out the truth of claims about holiness are the editors of American Magazine ready to set aside?

Yes, religious orders and dioceses have greater resources than most individuals.  The editors of American Magazine don’t think it is fair that people with resources should be able to advance causes, but those without the same resources cannot.  Do I detect a whiff of class warfare?  Let’s “dumb-down” the process so that everyone can have a whack, so that everyone can be called a “saint”.

But, “fair” is a description of the weather, not of life.

If some poor person thinks that another person who has died was a saint, then that person can go to the local bishop and make a case that a cause should be opened.  If the local bishop is convinced, he will take steps to begin a cause as the causes “actor”.

Otherwise, if the editors of America Magazine have some people in mind for beatification, I suggest that they band together to be the “actor” in a cause, approach the dioceses where the people died, and then commit to carrying the cause through to the end.

Rather than call on other people to do something, or to dumb-down the process, why don’t they write an editorial saying that they will take on the expenses of the process for any one and every one who has a person to propose?

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Saints: Stories & Symbols, The Drill, The future and our choices, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , , ,
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Benedict XVI refers to riots, relativism when welcoming new British Ambassador. Fr. Z rants.

Five Wounds of Christ BannerIn the UK’s best Catholic weekly, The Catholic Herald, there is a sound observation about a comment made by Pope Benedict as he formally received the credentials of the new Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland to the Holy See.

Pope Benedict XVI has urged the British Government to root its policies in objective values, saying this is “especially important in the light of events in England this summer”. [Rioting.]

In a speech welcoming Nigel Baker, Britain’s new ambassador to the Holy See, Benedict XVI said: “When policies do not presume or promote objective values, the resulting moral relativism, instead of leading to a society that is free, fair, just and compassionate, tends instead to produce frustration, despair, selfishness and a disregard for the life and liberty of others. [Do I hear an “Amen!”?]

“Policy makers are therefore right to look urgently for ways to uphold excellence in education, to promote social opportunity and economic mobility, to examine ways to favour long-term employment and to spread wealth much more fairly and broadly throughout society,” the Pope said.

“Moreover, the active fostering of the essential values of a healthy society, through the defence of life and of the family, the sound moral education of the young, and a fraternal regard for the poor and the weak, will surely help to rebuild a positive sense of one’s duty, in charity, towards friends and strangers alike in the local community.”

The full text of his address can be read here.

The fruits of the dictatorship of relativism are despair and violence and loss of freedom, property and life.

I think that Pope Benedict has what I call his “Marshall Plan” for the Church, especially the Church in Europe.  His concept of the New Evangelization, reintroducing the Faith into areas which were Christian but are losing Christian identity, is an aspect of this.

The West is losing its soul because Christianity – Catholicism in particular – is not being lived by the mature or passed on to the young in a clear form.  After WWII the US helped to rebuild Europe through the Marshall Plan to create good trading partners and to serve as a bulwark against Communism.  In Pope Benedict’s “Marshall Plan” he hopes that we can build up Catholic identity after the ecclesial devastation resulting for various reasons since the Second Vatican Council.  We need a stronger Catholic identity for the sake of souls and to help create a bulwark against secularism and the soul annihilating dictatorship of relativism.

Thus endeth the rant.

The RealmOn that note, however, I would remind the readers here of an fine book by Fr. Aidan Nichols called The Realm: An Unfashionable Essay on the Conversion of England.  If you are in the UK order it HERE.  If you are a Catholic in Dear Ol’ Blighty, and you haven’t read this… well then… just… tisk tisk.  In the US order it HERE (used or import).

Nichols argues that, since Catholic Christianity was at the heart of the development of England, the Catholic Church is essential for a positive transformation of England.

Nichols’ plan for renewal includes:

  • Firmer doctrine in our teaching and preaching [Go back before Vatican II.]
  • Re-enchant the liturgy [The tip of the spear. This should be No. 1, but it is linked to preaching and catechesis.]
  • Recover the insights of metaphysics [Be smart again.]
  • Renew Christian political thought [Be active in the public square.]
  • Revive family life [Stop denying human nature, God’s image, and natural law.]
  • Resacralise art and architecture  [Use God’s “grandchild” well.]
  • Put a new emphasis on monastic life  [Support in prayer for the active.]
  • Strengthen pro-life rhetoric [See above.]
  • Recover a Catholic reading of the Bible [Benedict has lots to say on that.]

I say that the key to any New Evangelization anywhere is a renewal of our liturgical worship under a hermeneutic of continuity with our tradition.  No renewal effort in any sphere of the Church’s life can be successful without a renewal of our liturgical worship.  It is the sine qua non, but they are all interconnected.

Posted in New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , , , , , ,
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Canadian Anglicans vote to unite with Rome

From the blog canterbury tales:

A recent meeting of leaders in the Anglican Catholic Church of Canada (ACCC) voted to unite with the Roman Catholic Church through the Apostolic Constitution created by Pope Benedict XVI.  [Do I hear an “Amen!”?]

[…]

Read more there.

Benedict XVI is the Pope of Christian Unity.

Posted in Brick by Brick, New Evangelization, Non Nobis and Te Deum, Our Catholic Identity, Pope of Christian Unity, The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
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