How a perfectly good Saturday can be eaten up

This is one of the things I dealt with this weekend.

20110822-095850.jpg

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged
11 Comments

Cathedral in Phoenix to have male only altar service (includes whimsical WDTPRS POLL)

I was alerted to this article from The Arizona Republic with a note from a reader saying: “The coverage is predictably bad, but the facts are good.”

You may remember that I posted about Fr. Lankeit last January when he promoted Communion on the tongue.  This guy gets it!

For your Brick by Brick file with my emphases and comments.

Phoenix diocese cathedral won’t allow girl altar servers [It could have said, “Cathedral gives affirmation to young men who serve” ]
Reverend: Altar duties part of priesthood prep
by Michael Clancy – Aug. 21, 2011 08:51 PM

The Arizona Republic

Girls no longer will be allowed as altar servers during Mass at the cathedral of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Phoenix, SS. Simon and Jude.

The Rev. John Lankeit, rector of the cathedral, said he made the decision in hopes of promoting the priesthood for males and other religious vocations, such as becoming a nun, for females.

Made up primarily of fifth- through eighth-graders the altar-server corps in American churches has included girls since 1983 in many places. [I suspect that the writer just took the date of the Code of Canon Law.  But there were females serving, contrary to the law, before that.] Girls and boys regularly serve together at churches throughout the Phoenix Catholic Diocese.

Bishops and pastors always have had the option of restricting the role to boys, but only one diocese, Lincoln, Neb., and scattered parishes have done so. [Didn’t Arlington also do that?] Before 1983, when church law was revised, girls were not allowed to serve.  [Even after, until there was an interpretation… a bizarre interpretation I might add… from the Holy See on the point.]

At SS. Simon and Jude Cathedral in Phoenix, the girls will be offered the role of sacristan, the person who prepares the church and the altar area before Mass.

Lankeit said 80 to 95 percent of priests served as altar boys, but he could not state the percentage of altar servers who go on to be priests. [How could he?  Does the writer think this is Psychic Network?]

He made the decision on his own, he said, even though the cathedral is recognized as the home church of Bishop Thomas J. Olmsted and is used for some important church events.

“He leaves these decisions to me,” Lankeit said.

SS. Simon and Jude is believed to be the first church in the diocese of Phoenix to ban girls from serving Mass, according to the diocese. [Note the language.   It could have said “first to support and affirm service by boys”.]

Altar servers have a direct role in the Catholic Eucharistic ceremony, [For pity’s sake.  Non-Catholics know what “Mass” is.] assisting the priest, and are the only lay people directly involved throughout the entire service. [?] Other lay people may serve as lectors or Eucharistic ministers, helping the priest distribute communion.  [Perhaps the writer didn’t have his coffee before he wrote this.  Altar servers are the only lay people involved, except for the other lay people who are involved.]

“The connection between serving at the altar and priesthood is historic,” Lankeit said. “It is part of the differentiation between boys and girls, as Christ established the priesthood by choosing men. Serving at the altar is a specifically priestly act.”

There appears to be little if any research connecting altar service to a later decision to enter the priesthood [And, seemingly, the reporter didn’t do any either!] – or connecting other types of service for girls to religious life as a nun. Anecdotally, the Diocese of Lincoln, Neb., is one of the stronger dioceses in developing new priests. [Hmmmm….]

The Rev. Kieran Kleczewski, pastor of St. Thomas Aquinas in Avondale and director of the diocese Office of Worship, does not expect other parishes following the cathedral’s policy just because it is the cathedral. [That’s right!  Pit one priest against another now.]

“That’s not the way things work in our diocese,” he said. “The pastor has the authority over the parish’s liturgical practices.” [And the bishop?  The pastor as a lot of authority.]

Kleczewski allows girls to serve Mass and has no plans to change.

Lankeit said there had been little reaction to his decision so far, but it was unlikely to sit well with many Catholics, especially those who have daughters who wish to serve. [“Fair” describes the weather, not life.]

“It is a shame on how the church continues to abuse the females,” [PUHLEEZE] said Bob Lutz of Phoenix, a Catholic with three grown daughters. “Church attendance is shrinking now, and this adds more fuel to the fire on how females are treated as second-class citizens.” [he said, as he ordered his caramel-flavored chai whipped cream mocha frothie with sprinkles]

Carole Bartholomeuax of Phoenix, who attended St. Joan of Arc parish, said girls outnumbered boys as altar servers there.

“I believe Mary Magdalene set the example for women to be altar servers. [So!  That’s what Carole thinks.  There it is, then.] I am so sorry to hear of this going backwards,” she said, adding that she still loves her church, “warts and all.” [She still finds reasons to love the Church even after this.  Jesus is so lucky!]

But Michael Clancy, who heads the diocesan men’s group, said girls never were supposed to be allowed to serve, based on his understanding of the rules of the Mass.  [Well… that statement could have been refined a little more too.  Or did the reporter just run out of column inches?]

WDTPRS kudos to the rector of the Cathedral of Phoenix, Very Rev. John Lankeit.

If I get some donations today, I’ll send him a “Save The Liturgy Save The World” coffee mug.  Or should I send the “Say The Black Do The Red”?  Or “WDTPRS”?

Decisions!  I’ll leave the poll open for a couple hours only.

Which coffee mug should Fr. Z send to the Rector of the Cathedral in Phoenix?

  • Save The Liturgy Save The World (79%, 698 Votes)
  • "To Be Deep In History" (8%, 66 Votes)
  • Say The Black Do The Red (7%, 63 Votes)
  • Unreconstructed Ossified Manualist (6%, 51 Votes)
  • WDTPRS (0%, 4 Votes)

Total Voters: 879

UPDATE 1712 GMT:

Okaaaaay… that seems rather decisive.

Now… a few small donations…

UPDATE 21:46 GMT:

FIRST of all, please check out my ACTION ALERT!

The Diocese of Phoenix has issued a statement.

Altar Serving at Ss. Simon and Jude Cathedral

PHOENIX (Aug. 22, 2011) — Experiencing personally the consequences of the priesthood shortage and noting the absence of strong fatherly presence in society in general, and religious practice in particular, Fr. John Lankeit, rector of Ss. Simon and Jude Cathedral, recently restructured the program for boys and girls who serve at Mass. At the Cathedral, boys can train to serve at the altar, and girls can train to serve as sacristans.

The decision was made in order to encourage young men and women to honor their God-given differentiation and complementarity, and to discern more clearly how such differentiation points to specific vocations in the Church.

Boys’ service at the altar has roots in Church history prior to the creation of the modern seminary system where men are formed for priesthood. Before seminaries, serving at the altar was part of an apprenticeship for priesthood. Fr. Lankeit’s decision was made primarily in response to the shortage of priestly vocations, since serving at the altar points very clearly to the specific vocation of priesthood.

He cites examples where limiting altar service to boys in the Diocese of Lincoln, Neb., and in Ann Arbor, Mich., has borne the fruit of many priestly vocations. The Diocese of Lincoln is considered a vocations “powerhouse.” In a single parish in Ann Arbor, in 2008, there were 22 new seminarians and five women in formation for religious life. The same parish is also home to 16 sisters in the Servants of God’s Love religious community.

The Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist, also based in Ann Arbor, are receiving so many inquiries from young women interested in entering the order that they cannot build facilities fast enough to accommodate the surge in vocations. Their order offers clear evidence that when the God-given differentiation between male and female is honored, both men’s and women’s vocations flourish.

The first girls to train in the Cathedral’s sacristan program are learning quickly, serving well and enjoying the important responsibility of sacristan. [And it is very important.  No question.] The parish is coordinating with a contemplative women’s religious order to provide these young sacristans with a “come and see” event at their monastery and to learn from one of the sisters who served as the official sacristan of their mother house in Alabama.

Press Contacts:

Rob DeFrancesco
Director of Communications
rdefrancesco@diocesephoenix.org
(602) 354-2130

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
48 Comments

Where you are!

Here is a snapshot of some of the places, and they could be approximations, of where some visitors to this blog are.  I cut out the “Unknown” and vaguer references to countries without additional specification.   This snapshot covers about 15 minutes.

New Haven, Connecticut
Columbus, Ohio
Unity, Maine
Reston, Virginia
Washington, District of…
Roseville, California
Washington, District of…
Leesburg, Virginia
Mountain Top, Pennsylva…
Avils, Asturias
Tarragona, Cataluna
Birmingham, Alabama
Sacramento, California
Houston, Texas
Egypt
London, London, City of
Sevilla, Andalucia
Simpsonville, South Car…
Charlotte, North Carolina
Providence, Rhode Island
Belleville, Illinois
Burgos, Castilla y Leon
Dudley
Arvada, Colorado
Madrid
Decatur, Georgia
Frisco, Texas
New York
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Columbus, Ohio
Cambre, Galicia
Rapid City, South Dakota
London, London, City of
Vitoria, Pais Vasco
Bilbao, Pais Vasco
Cabanillas Del Campo, C…
Ciudad Real, Castilla-L…
Savannah, Georgia
Whitestone, New York
Trumbull, Connecticut
Mountain View, California
Hico, Texas
Taunton, Somerset
Tonawanda, New York
Colorado Springs, Color…
Washington, District of…
Decatur, Alabama
Oceanside, New York
Fair Haven, New Jersey
Sydney, New South Wales
Avon, Connecticut
Helsinki, Southern Finl…
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Munich, Bayern
Jamaica, New York
Little Rock, Arkansas
Perth, Western Australia
Memphis, Tennessee
Saint Marys, Ohio
Islip, New York
Kitchener, Ontario
Belleville, Illinois
Schenectady, New York
Batavia, Illinois
Leavenworth, Kansas
Brampton, Ontario
Overland Park, Kansas
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Barcelona, Cataluna
Madrid
Fort Lauderdale, Florida
White Haven, Pennsylvania
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Dallas, Texas
Konstanz, Baden-Wurttem…
Mountain View, California
Fort Myers, Florida
Washington, District of…
Raynesford, Montana
Medina, Ohio
Madrid
Madrid
Raleigh, North Carolina
Tallinn, Harjumaa
Saint Louis, Missouri
Leesburg, Virginia
Saint Petersburg, Florida
Colorado Springs, Color…
Media, Pennsylvania
Clinton Township, Michi…
Morayfield, Queensland
Bethpage, New York
Bel Air, Maryland
Frome, Somerset
Almera, Andalucia
London, London, City of
Troy, New York
Burlington, Vermont
Paducah, Kentucky
Chicago, Illinois
Washington, District of…
Watertown, Connecticut
Malden, Illinois
Brainerd, Minnesota
Sevilla, Andalucia
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Boston, Massachusetts
London, London, City of
Webster, New York
Milan, Lombardia
Houston, Texas
Phoenix, Arizona
Liphook, Hampshire
Dunbarton, New Hampshire
Markham, Ontario
Madrid
Vigo, Galicia
Solna, Stockholms Lan
Pittsburg, Kansas
Horsham, West Sussex
Ridgewood, New Jersey
Madrid
Trenton, New Jersey
Grinnell, Iowa
Washington, District of…
Denver, Colorado
Rochester, New York
Unity, Maine
Sacramento, California
Trenton, New Jersey
Ostrw Wielkopolski, Kal…
Mountain View, California
Platteville, Wisconsin
Florence, Kentucky
Perth, Western Australia
New Canaan, Connecticut
Richmond Hill, Ontario
Oslo

I always find it fascinating to see where people are.  Today I noticed lots of visitors from Spain.

Posted in Just Too Cool, Lighter fare |
22 Comments

MUST READ: Young person’s account of harassment and violence at WYD

Nolite mirari fratres si odit vos mundus.

Wonder not, brethren, if the world hate you.

1 John 3:13

In Madrid during WYD the were no lack of twisted, benighted wing-nut protesters harrassing the pilgrims and young people.

One of the readers here has a daughter who was in the midst of the unrest the protesters caused.  She wrote to me about her daughter’s description of what happened.  I asked her permission, and through her her daughter’s to post the young lady’s account here, which I believe was posted on her Facebook page.  I am anonymizing it for now.

The the reader and/or her daughter want to identified, they can chime in.

You might remember the photo I posted of the protests.  The girl who wrote what follows was in one of the photos.

With some editing and my emphases:

We had been wandering Madrid all day, chillin
The boys were wearing their kilts so we got stopped for photos many times
One guy who stopped us said there was an anti Catholic protest in Sol so we went to check it out
There was this HUGE crowd of people so Seamus & Louise didn´t want to come check it out with us, they sat at a corner
We went in and people were shouting filthy slurs and cursing the Pope and it was awful
So we knelt down and prayed a Rosary for them in the crowd and got surrounded by angry protesters, shouting and threatening and spitting and filming us and mocking us and trying to burn our flags.
A gay couple came and made out in front of us but whatever
Anyway, Dominic made us stand up because he felt threatened so we finished our Rosary standing but on the last decade, a fight broke out right next to us between the Catholics who had been standing behind us and and the protesters so some of the other Catholics lead us out of the crowd.
We went back and dropped our bags with Louise and this time Mim stayed back so it was just Me & Dominic & Greg & Billy who went back and prayed a second rosary on the side of the crowd and we got more of the same, people getting up in our faces screaming
We were met with a couple more of Juventutem but they left after we finished our second Rosary before one had an emotional breakdown.
Everyone left but the group I just mentioned above and we chanted BENEDICTO, BENEDICTO and VIVA PAPA and waved our Papal flag and so on up against the police line
Lots of people yelled at us still
Then, the police line broke and they charged at us and we had to run for our lives a little more urgently than after our Rosary
Then the riot police came out and beat the ___ out of the protesters
At least one guy lost a WYD pilgrim from his group in the crowd and a lot of medics showed up… A lot of people got lost & hurt

The cops wouldnt let us take the metro there so we went off to find a pub

That´s BASICALLY what happened

Expect more of this in the future, dear readers.

This is the cloaca secularism and even the liberal Catholic agenda brings us, allied as it is with secularism, because it undermines Christian values and therefore respect for human freedom and dignity.

Start think about this sort of thing every day.

Start getting used to the idea.

  • Jeremiah 20:11
  • Psalms 31:16
  • Psalm 44:22
  • Matthew 5:10-12
  • Matthew 5:44
  • John 15:19-21
  • Acts 5:29
  • Romans 8:35-39
  • Romans 12:2
  • 2 Corinthians 4: 8-11
  • 2 Corinthians 12:10
  • 2 Thessalonians 1:3-6
  • 2 Timothy 3:12
  • 1 Peter 3:14-15
  • 1 Peter 4:12-14, 16
  • 1 John 3:13
  • Revelation 2:10-11
Posted in Brick by Brick, Modern Martyrs, New Evangelization, Non Nobis and Te Deum, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, TEOTWAWKI, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice, Throwing a Nutty | Tagged , , , , , , , ,
73 Comments

Storm Interrupts Papal Address at Vigil: “Your Strength Is Greater Than the Rain”

From ZENIT:

Storm Interrupts Papal Address at Vigil

Pope to Youth: “Your Strength Is Greater Than the Rain”

By Inma Álvarez

MADRID, Spain, AUG. 20, 2011 (Zenit.org).- After the intense heat that has marked these days in Madrid, a sudden and powerful rainstorm prevented Benedict XVI from giving the discourse he had prepared for this evening’s World Youth Day prayer vigil.

The Pope arrived to Cuatro Vientos around 8:30 p.m., as an estimated 1 million youth, who had endured the heat all day, awaited him at the park. The vigil began as planned, with an opening procession in which the WYD cross, given youth by Blessed John Paul II, was carried to the papal stage. The program then called for five youth, one from each region of the world, to address the Pope, sharing their experiences and questions with the Bishop of Rome. But immediately afterward, as the Holy Father began his discourse, the skies opened and the winds rose, and he was unable to continue.
Benedict XVI didn’t leave his post and continued to smile, as hundreds of thousands began chanting, “These are the youth of the Pope.” Despite attempts to cover the Holy Father with umbrellas, his clothes and the text of his speech were drenched.

After a few minutes in which everything was interrupted but the cheers of the young people, the Holy Father told them, “Young people, thank you for your joy!” as they responded with more cheers.

“Thank you for your resistance! Your strength is greater than the rain!” he added. “The Lord, with the rain, sends us many blessings. Also in this, you are an example.

Omitting the rest of his discourse, the Pontiff gave the final greetings that he had prepared in several languages, joking as he greeted the Italians that this vigil “with all of our adventures,” will be an “unforgettable experience” in your lives.

Guard the flame which God has lit in your hearts tonight. Never let it go out, renew it each day, share it with your contemporaries who live in darkness and who are seeking a light for their way,” he added.

The vigil continued with the main portion of the program: a Eucharistic procession and adoration, and benediction.

At the end, the Pope said good night in Spanish to the young people, wishing them well through the night as they await Sunday’s closing Mass. “Dear young people, together we have experienced an adventure. Firm in the faith in Christ, you have resisted the rain.

“Before leaving I want to tell all of you good night. Rest well. Thank you for the sacrifice you are making. And which I don’t doubt you will offer generously to the Lord. We’ll see each other tomorrow, God willing. I await you all. I thank you all for the marvelous example that you’ve given. Just like tonight, with Christ you will always be able to take on the tests of life. Don’t forget that. Thank you to all!”

[Reporting by Jesús Colina]

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged , , ,
14 Comments

Catholic New Media Awards: Voting is still OPEN.

The great Catholic New Media Awards are going on now!

Will you please give WDTPRS your support?

We are in these categories:

  • Best Blog by a Cleric
  • Best Blog by a Man
  • Best Produced Podcast

There are lots of other interesting categories as well and some very fine bloggers and Catholic websites represented.  I must say I was surprised that some obvious choices were missing from some of the categories… but… oh well.   It would be great if you could ensure they have a big turn out!

I especially wanted to give some support to Creative Minority Report and Badger Catholic and the Catholic Underground podcasts and iPadre.

I also learned about a few new blogs and sites I hadn’t seen before.

Give the CNM awards your support!

Click HERE and vote today!  Voting is open until 26 August.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes | Tagged
12 Comments

Fr. Z’s Litany for the Conversion of Internet Thugs (2.0)

A work in progress.

Litany for the conversion of internet thugs (2.0).
(For private use only, when truly irritated, and when the alternative is foul language.)

Lord, have mercy.
Christ, have mercy.
Lord, have mercy.
Christ, graciously hear us.
God, the Father of Heaven, have mercy on us.
God, the Son, Redeemer of the World, have mercy on us.
God, the Holy Ghost, have mercy on us.
Holy Trinity, one God, have mercy on us.

Lest internet thugs be eternally tormented by all the fiends of hell, convert them, O Lord.
Lest they pass eternity in utter despair, convert them, O Lord.
Lest they come to be damned for the harm they cause, convert them, O Lord.
Lest they roast forever in the deepest cinders of hell, convert them, O Lord.
Lest they suffer the unceasing pain of loss, convert them, O Lord.

Lest devils endlessly increase their physical agony, convert them, O Lord.
Lest devils twist their bowels and boil their blood in hell, convert them, O Lord.
Lest devils use them as toys and tools, convert them, O Lord.
Lest devils forever gnaw upon their skulls, convert them, O Lord.

Lest the innocent be harmed by the sins of thugs, convert them, O Lord.
Lest the innocent yield to thugs in weakness, convert them, O Lord.
Lest the innocent be drawn into thuggish traps, convert them, O Lord.

From faceless Facebook admin drones, spare us O Lord.
From tweeting Twitter idiots, spare us O Lord.
From from heart-hardened spammers, spare us O Lord.
From liberal nut-case smear-blogging hacks, spare us O Lord.
From thread-dominating combox trolls, spare us, O Lord.
From sophomoric drive-by commentators, spare us, O Lord.

From server memory resource difficulties, spare us O Lord.
From rss feed problems, spare us O Lord.
From DOS attacks, spare us O Lord.
From power outages and surges, spare us O Lord.
From viruses, trojan horses, and all manner of snares, Lord save us.
From wasting our time, Lord save us.
From our own stupidity, Lord save us.

St. Michael, defend us.
St. Gabriel, defend us.
Holy Guardian Angels, defend us.
St. Isidore of Seville, defend us.
St. Francis de Sales, defend us.
St. Maximilian Kolbe, defend us.
All ye angels and saints….. GRRRRR.

Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, spare us, O Lord.
Lamb of God, who takest away the sins of the world, graciously hear us, O Lord,
Lamb of God who takest away the sins of the world, have mercy on us.

V. Christ, Jesus who died for our sins.
R. Please return, and return swiftly.

Let us pray.
Almighty and merciful God,
who according to Thy ineffable plan
hast called us into existence to do Thy will
amid the vicissitudes and contagion of this world
grant, we beseech Thee,
both protection for Thy servants who use the tools of this digital age
and confusion for evil-doers who abuse their neighbors and Thy gifts.
Through Christ our Lord.   Amen.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, New Evangelization, The Drill, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , , , , , , ,
38 Comments

St. John of Avila to be proclaimed Doctor of the Church

Here’s an interesting bit of news made by Pope Benedict in Spain:

Announcement of the Holy Father

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

With great joy, here in this Cathedral Church of Santa María La Real de la Almudena, I announce to the People of God that, having acceded to the desire expressed by Cardinal Antonio María Rouco Varela, Archbishop of Madrid and President of the Bishops’ Conference of Spain, together with the members of the Spanish episcopate and other Archbishops and Bishops from throughout the world, as well as many of the lay faithful, I will shortly declare Saint John of Avila a Doctor of the universal Church.

In making this announcement here, I would hope that the word and the example of this outstanding pastor will enlighten all priests and those who look forward to the day of their priestly ordination.

I invite everyone to look to St John of Avila and I commend to his intercession the Bishops of Spain and those of the whole world, as well as all priests and seminarians. As they persevere in the same faith which he taught, may they model their hearts on that of Jesus Christ the good Shepherd, to whom be glory and honour for ever. Amen.

I think we may need some direction from the Pontifical Council “Ecclesia Dei” about how to observe his feast, now that he will be a Doctor of the Church.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool | Tagged ,
17 Comments

Benedict XVI to seminarians

The Holy Father’s sermon at Mass with seminarians.

Note especially this:

Approach the priesthood only if you are firmly convinced that God is calling you to be his ministers, and if you are completely determined to exercise it in obedience to the Church’s precepts.

Slightly edited and with my emphases and comments.

[…]

Looking at you, I again see proof of how Christ continues to call young disciples and to make them his apostles, thus keeping alive the mission of the Church and the offer of the Gospel to the world. As seminarians you are on the path towards a sacred goal: to continue the mission which Christ received from the Father. Called by him, you have followed his voice and, attracted by his loving gaze, you now advance towards the sacred ministry. Fix your eyes upon him who through his incarnation is the supreme revelation of God to the world and who through his resurrection faithfully fulfills his promise. [Christ, Word incarnate, is the perfect visible image of the invisible God.] Give thanks to him for this sign of favour in which he holds each one of you[And it really is a high favor and great gift.]

The first reading which we heard shows us Christ as the new and eternal priest who made of himself a perfect offering. The response to the psalm may be aptly applied to him since, at his coming into the world, he said to the Father, “Here I am to do your will” (cf. Ps 39:8). He tried to please him in all things: in his words and actions, along the way or welcoming sinners. His life was one of service and his longing was a constant prayer, placing himself in the name of all before the Father as the first-born son of many brothers and sisters. The author of the Letter to the Hebrews states that, by a single offering, he brought to perfection for all time those of us who are called to share his sonship (cf. Heb 10:14).

The Eucharist, whose institution is mentioned in the Gospel just proclaimed (cf. Lk 22:14-20), is the real expression of that unconditional offering of Jesus for all, even for those who betrayed him. [See my discussion of “enemy love” in the post about Augustine’s 1st tractate on 1 John.] It was the offering of his body and blood for the life of mankind and for the forgiveness of sins. His blood, a sign of life, was given to us by God as a covenant, so that we might apply the force of his life wherever death reigns due to our sins, and thus destroy it. Christ’s body broken and his blood outpoured – the surrender of his freedom – became through these Eucharistic signs the new source of mankind’s redeemed freedom. In Christ, we have the promise of definitive redemption and the certain hope of future blessings. Through Christ we know that we are not walking towards the abyss, the silence of nothingness or death, but are rather pilgrims on the way to a promised land, on the way to him who is our end and our beginning.

Dear friends, you are preparing yourselves to become apostles with Christ and like Christ, and to accompany your fellow men and women along their journey as companions and servants.

How should you behave during these years of preparation? First of all, they should be years of interior silence, of unceasing prayer, of constant study and of gradual insertion into the pastoral activity and structures of the Church. A Church which is community and institution, family and mission, the creation of Christ through his Holy Spirit, as well as the result of those of us who shape it through our holiness and our sins. God, who does not hesitate to make of the poor and of sinners his friends and instruments for the redemption of the human race, willed it so. The holiness of the Church is above all the objective holiness of the very person of Christ, of his Gospel and his sacraments, the holiness of that power from on high which enlivens and impels it. We have to be saints so as not to create a contradiction between the sign that we are and the reality that we wish to signify. [Not so easy, but possible.  I think one of the reasons why JP2 beatified and canonized so many was to send the signal that it is possible to be holy in this life in any state of life.  Yes, that raises some questions, but I think that the motive was not bad, especially in the aftermath of the horrors of the 20th century.]

Meditate well upon this mystery of the Church, living the years of your formation in deep joy, humbly, clear-mindedly and with radical fidelity to the Gospel, in an affectionate relation to the time spent and the people among whom you live. [May it be so for seminarians today!  My years were among the most horrible, most painful I have experienced in life.  However, if think that today most seminaries, in the USA at least, are vastly improved.] No one chooses the place or the people to whom he is sent, and every time has its own challenges; but in every age God gives the right grace to face and overcome those challenges with love and realism. That is why, no matter the circumstances in which he finds and however difficult they may be, the priest must grow in all kinds of good works, keeping alive within him the words spoken on his Ordination day, by which he was exhorted to model his life on the mystery of the Lord’s cross.

To be modeled on Christ, dear seminarians, is to be identified ever more closely with him who, for our sake, became servant, priest and victim. To be modeled on him is in fact the task upon which the priest spends his entire life. We already know that it is beyond us and we will not fully succeed but, as St Paul says, we run towards the goal, hoping to reach it (cf. Phil 3:12-14).

That said, Christ the High Priest is also the Good Shepherd who cares for his sheep, even giving his life for them (cf. Jn 10:11). In order to liken yourselves to the Lord in this as well, your heart must mature while in seminary, remaining completely open to the Master. This openness, which is a gift of the Holy Spirit, inspires the decision to live in celibacy for the sake of the kingdom of heaven and, leaving aside the world’s goods, live in austerity of life and sincere obedience, without pretence.

Ask him to let you imitate him in his perfect charity towards all, so that you do not shun the excluded and sinners, but help them convert and return to the right path. Ask him to teach you how to be close to the sick and the poor in simplicity and generosity. Face this challenge without anxiety or mediocrity, but rather as a beautiful way of living our human life in gratuitousness and service, as witnesses of God made man, messengers of the supreme dignity of the human person and therefore its unconditional defenders. Relying on his love, do not be intimidated by surroundings that would exclude God and in which power, wealth and pleasure are frequently the main criteria ruling people’s lives. You may be shunned along with others who propose higher goals or who unmask the false gods before whom many now bow down. That will be the moment when a life deeply rooted in Christ will clearly be seen as something new and it will powerfully attract those who truly search for God, truth and justice.

Under the guidance of your formators, open your hearts to the light of the Lord, to see if this path which demands courage and authenticity is for you. Approach the priesthood only if you are firmly convinced that God is calling you to be his ministers, and if you are completely determined to exercise it in obedience to the Church’s precepts.

With this confidence, learn from him who described himself as meek and humble of heart, leaving behind all earthly desire for his sake so that, rather than pursuing your own good, you build up your brothers and sisters by the way you live, as did the patron saint of the diocesan clergy of Spain, St John of Avila. Moved by his example, look above all to the Virgin Mary, Mother of Priests. She will know how to mould your hearts according to the model of Christ, her divine Son, and she will teach you how to treasure for ever all that he gained on Calvary for the salvation of the world. Amen.

Posted in New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, SESSIUNCULA, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
8 Comments

Help from readers? Prayers for altar boys.

A reader sent this:

We are starting an altar boy bootcamp this September for the EF, and we need prayers before and after serving. Can you send us some, or point us in a direction where we could find some? The prayers should be in Latin!

Okay, there is a request for Latin there, but I think we could include English as well.  Common sense, right?

I know that there are prayers to St. John Berchman’s for altar boys.   Also, the Archconfraternity of St. Stephen would have booklets with prayers.

Can you readers help this fellow?  It sounds like a good cause.  Putting together some texts here could be useful to many parishes.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Brick by Brick | Tagged ,
11 Comments