Card. Sarah on the eternal consequences for priests afraid to uphold the Church’s teaching

St. Augustine, in one of his tough sermons to his flock, spoke about the heavy responsibility of teaching a message that was hard for people to hear and accept.  He invoked the stern warning in Ezekiel 3 about negligent pastors, and forged ahead.  Finally, Augustine began to explain himself, tell his people why he was teaching and being so tough.  Here is some of s. 17.2.

I am saying this to you and I am saving my soul.  If I will have kept silent, I won’t be in great danger, I’ll be rather in utter ruin.  But when I will have spoken, and when I will have fulfilled my duty, pay attention then to your own danger.  What, after all, do I want?  What do I desire?  What do I long for? Why am I talking?  Why am I sitting here?  Why am I even alive, except for this intention: in order that we may live together with Christ.  That’s my desire, that’s my honor, that’s my treasured possession, this is my joy, that’s my glory.   But if you will not listen to me and if I haven’t been silent, I will save my soul.  But I don’t want to be saved without you (Sed nolo esse salvus sine vobis.)

Sometimes, nay rather, more and more often priests and especially bishops are called on to stand up in the public square as well as their pulpits and teach the truth as the Church and nature instruct us.  If they don’t, there are eternal consequences for those priests and bishops, because they have endangered their flocks either by lack of instruction or by false instruction.  Priests and bishops who don’t teach the truth are in danger of eternal damnation.  They have to preach the truth, whether people listen or not, for their own sake if for no other reason. But charity requires finding the best way.  The tough part is finding the right ways to preach the truth.  But the truth must be preached, nevertheless.

I’ll be you thought this was supposed to be about Card, Sarah.  Well, it is.

His Eminence Robert Card. Sarah, President of the Pontifical Council “Cor Unum“, gave a sermon on 25 July when he was ordaining some deacons, in which he delivered a stern and strong and correct message.  The whole sermon is here.  There is a summary on LifeSite.

Vatican Cardinal: Divine judgment will fall on priests who do not oppose abortion, homosexuality
by Matthew Cullinan Hoffman

July 25, 2011 (LifeSiteNews.com) – Cardinal Robert Sarah is warning that priests who fail in their duty to oppose the breakdown of morality in modern society, particularly pro-abortion and anti-family policies, will receive the condemnation of God.

In a sermon delivered on June 25 to seminarians of the Community of St. Martin, whom he was about to ordain to the priesthood and diaconate, Sarah admonished his listeners, “if we have fear of proclaiming the truth of the Gospel, if we are ashamed of denouncing the grave deviations in the area of morality, if we accommodate ourselves to this world of moral laxity and religious and ethical relativism, if we are afraid to energetically denounce the abominable laws regarding the new global ethos, regarding marriage, the family in all of its forms, abortion, laws in total opposition to the laws of nature and of God, and that the western nations and cultures are promoting and imposing thanks to the mass media and their economic power, then the prophetic words of Ezechiel will fall on us as a grave divine reproach.”

Sarah quoted the prophesy of Ezechiel found in chapter 34:2-4: “‘Son of man, prophesy against the pastors of Israel to pastor themselves.  Should not the pastors feed the flock? You have been fed with milk, you have dressed yourselves with wool.  You have not strengthened the weak lambs, cared for those who were sick, healed those who were injured.  You have not restored those who have strayed, searched for those who were lost.  But you have governed them with violence and hardness.’ (Ez. 34: 2-4)

“These reproaches are serious, but more important is the offense that we have committed against God when, having received the responsibility of caring for the spiritual good of all, we mistreat souls by depriving them of the true teaching of the doctrine of regarding God, regarding man, and the fundamental values of human existence,” the cardinal added.

[…]

In his June 25 address, Sarah notes that in modern society “we no longer know what is evil and what is good. There are a multitude of points of view.  Today, we call white what we once called black, and vice versa.  What is serious, and make no mistake about it, is the transformation of error into a rule of life.

“In this context, as priests, pastors and guides of the People of God, you should be continuously focused on being always loyal to the doctrine of Christ.  It is necessary for you to constantly strive to acquire the sensitivity of conscience, the faithful respect for dogma and morality, which constitute the deposit of faith and the common patrimony of the Church of Christ.”

Do I hear an “Amen!”?

WDTPRS kudos to Card. Sarah.

Posted in Fr. Z KUDOS, Patristiblogging, SESSIUNCULA | Tagged , , , , ,
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Fr. Sirico in NRO: The Church as the Bride of Caesar

National Review Online a couple days ago had a great piece by Fr. Robert Sirico of Acton Institute.

My emphases and comments.

The Church as the Bride of Caesar
July 27, 2011 4:15 P.M.
By Fr. Robert A. Sirico

It is telling that the Washington Post report on the religious Left’s Circle of Protection campaign for big government describes the effort as one that would “send chills through any politician who looks to churches and religious groups as a source of large voting blocs,” because, in fact, this is not an honest faith-inspired campaign to protect the “least of these” from Draconian government cuts, as claimed. It is a hyper-political movement that offers up the moral authority of churches and aid organizations to advance the ends of the Obama administration and its allies in Congress.

The Circle of Protection, led by Jim Wallis and his George Soros-funded Sojourners group, is advancing a false narrative based on vague threats to the “most vulnerable” if we finally take the first tentative steps to fix our grave budget and debt problems. For example, Wallis frequently cites cuts to federal food programs as portending dire consequences to “hungry and poor people.”

Which programs? He must have missed the General Accountability Office study on government waste released this spring, which looked at, among others, 18 federal food programs. These programs accounted for $62.5 billion in spending in 2008 for food and nutrition assistance. But only seven of the programs have actually been evaluated for effectiveness. Apparently it is enough to simply launch a government program, and the bureaucracy to sustain it, to get the Circle of Protection activists to sanctify it without end. Never mind that it might not be a good use of taxpayer dollars.

It is also telling that the group’s advertised “Evangelical, Roman Catholic, mainline Protestant, African-American, and Latino Christian leaders” who are so concerned about the poor and vulnerable in the current budget negotiations have so little to say about private charity, which approached $300 billion last year. [QUAERITUR: To what extent would a rise in interest rates coupled with the abolition of tax breaks for charitable giving impact help for the poor and other worthy efforts?] To listen to them talk, it is as if a prudent interest in reining in deficits and limiting government waste, fraud, and bloat would leave America’s poor on the brink of starvation. It is as if bureaucratic solutions, despite the overwhelming evidence of the welfare state’s pernicious effects on the family, are the only ones available to faith communities. This is even stranger for a group of people who are called to “love the neighbor” first and last with a personal commitment.

Although the Circle of Protection has been endorsed by a few Catholic bishops, the predictably left-leaning social justice groups, and Catholic Relief Services, the Catholic Church in America has long moved beyond the heady (and increasingly-distant) days of the 1980s when knee-jerk opposition to any reduction in government spending was the norm. That still holds, even if some of the staff and a few of the bishops at the Bishops’ Conference still imbibe such nostalgia.

The actions of Wallis and the co-signers of the Circle of Protection are only understandable in light of political, not primarily religious, aims. Wallis, after all, has been serving as self-appointed chaplain to the Democratic National Committee and recently met with administration officials to help them craft faith-friendly talking points for the 2012 election. And when Wallis emerged from that White House meeting, he crowed that “almost every pulpit in America is linked to the Circle of Protection … so it would be a powerful thing if our pulpits could be linked to the bully pulpit here.”

Think about that for a moment. Imagine if a pastor had emerged from a meeting with President George W. Bush and made the same statement. I can just imagine the howls of “Theocracy!” and “Christian dominionism!” that would echo from the mobs of Birkenstock-shod, tie-dyed, and graying church activists who would immediately assemble at the White House fence to protest such a blurring of Church and State.

But in the moral calculus of Jim Wallis and his Circle of Protection supporters, there’s no  problem with prostrating yourself, your Church, and your aid organization before Caesar. As long as he’s on your side of the partisan divide.

— Rev. Robert A. Sirico is president and co-founder of the Acton Institute in Grand Rapids, Mich.

Posted in Biased Media Coverage, HONORED GUESTS, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged , , , ,
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“Martha, Martha!”

In the National Gallery in London, you will find a painting by Velazquez entitled Christ in the House of Martha and Mary. I never fail to visit it when I visit that gallery and that painting when I cross the pond.

Last year I made some comments about that painting, to which I return this year.  Also, before I dig in, at the blog Idle Speculations there is an entry which picks up on my comments in the past, which I am revising here, but which adds a great deal more, including a story based on the painting!

Ad rem, and I may ramble a little.

Velasquez painting – a variation on the bodegón or kitchen/tavern scene, and a Flemish combination of domestic and sacred scenes – is a puzzle. It has layers. It is hard to tell if we are looking from the kitchen through a window into the room beyond, where the Lord is sitting with Mary and Martha, or if this is a painting within a painting, or if -and this may be the most likely – the scene in the square on the right is a reflection in a mirror showing what is going on in the other room.  Velasquez uses mirrors in other paintings.  If so, the young kitchen maid is watching the scene in the other room.  It is hard to tell whether this is a scene where the action in the kitchen is taking place simultaneously with that of the other room, or it this represents different chronological events.

Take a good hard look. The pouty look on girl’s face, almost that of a child, shows her displeasure.

In the other scene, Mary of Bethany is seated before Christ in the attitude of a disciple. Her hair, the “women’s glory”, is loose, which probably reflects her contemplative role.  Martha is remonstrating, her hand pointing.  Her hair is covered, probably to keep it out of the way as she works, so is doesn’t get burned, dirty and in her eyes.  Christ is seated on a chair, as befits a teacher.  If this is a mirror His right hand is elevated in a teaching gesture.  His cloak drapes an arm, just as the ancient philosopher’s robe would so as to demonstrate that the person’s primary concern was not manual labor.  Mary, seated below, is similarly garbed.  Mary’s hand from under her cloak is rotated toward herself, perhaps in a gesture of a question, such as “What must I do?”  Use the link at the top to zoom in on the details.

In the kitchen, the young woman is focusing her attention elsewhere, probably on the scene in the other room unless she is daydreaming.  She is put out.  Was she just terrorized a bit by Martha who is on edge?  The girl seems to be on the point of frustrated tears.  The household must be well-to-do and she must be pretty well treated, since she has a pretty earring. with a good sized dark stone of some kind.  Her is bound up for work, and also no doubt to show off the earring, but is still partially uncovered, the opposite of her opposite the old woman.  She seems to have made an effort to make herself pretty, but here she is, with the red hands and the garlic and fish and mortar.

The old woman is calm. Her face shows lines of age and toil.  Is the old women at the left telling the girl to pay attention to her work. She, like the small image of Martha, is pointing, creating a pair of bookends in the painting.  Is she pointing to the girl to warn you, the viewer?  She seems to be looking out of the painting, looking out at us.  Click here for a close up of a detail.  She is looking out, but her hand, which has a discreet bracelet, is point to her young underling.

What is the old woman saying to us?  Is this you?  This is you!”

In the other room, Christ’s hand is raised because He is teaching.  His hand will soon be bruised in falling and pierced with a spike. The hand is raised as if to say, “Wait! Be silent a moment! There is more to this than meets the eye.” The hands all convey a deeper point.  I think the old woman’s hand is also raised to remonstrate and to teach.

The girl upset because she is removed from the action.  Perhaps she wants to be near the Lord.  Perhaps she wanted to catch His eye with her earring.  In any event, she is not her own mistress and must do things she doesn’t want to do.

Her sleeve rolled up, exposing her forearm. Her hand is raw. There is a little bit of decoration on her rolled up sleeve which she won’t be able to show off, along with her earrings. When you are a servant girl, these little vanities are a big deal.

Mary can just sit there and be pretty, and calm, in the presence of the desired One. Martha must work, be less fetching, even grimy and sweaty as she works for the ease of others.  This is the state of the girl as well.

And the old woman has already been there and done that for a long long time.

Isn’t it true that sometimes we resent the joy or good fortune of others, even to the point that we want to strip them of their joy?  “If I am unhappy then, by God, no one will be happy!”  Have you ever resented that someone else was chosen for something?

On the work table are instruments of labor, the girl’s and Martha’s.

Fish and eggs are Christian symbols. The oil flask calls our mind to the Passion, or else the coming death and burial of Lazarus as well as that of the Lord. The cloves of garlic are a symbol of the resurrection, much like an orange is in art of the period: because of peeling and the sections they breaks into. The pepper with its seeds can burn.  However, in the iconography of some painters fish can also be a symbol of acedia, sloth.

Most significant is the large mortar, which breaks things down.  The girl seems to be using it to create a paste of garlic, oil and spicy peppers as a dressing for the fish and eggs.

But most importantly, this mortar is the daily grind.

The old woman on the left, seems to be our conscience which we are at our daily grind.

In this painting, as in life, there is always a tension between the active and the contemplative, the daily grind and a true Christian’s desire for silence, recollection and prayer. There is a tension and trap in the desire to be recognized or to have this or that position which is not to be had, to be ambitious… for what?  For God’s greater glory or our own?

These tensions force us constantly to examine our consciences and motives, as well as to prayer and reflection into our daily work.  We are challenged to find the space for prayer and reflection within our busy tasks. How do we make quiet stillness fruitful by means of action, perhaps through corporal works of mercy? How can we make action into some contemplative?  And how to let go of vanity and ambition?

In this life these things will always be a struggle, and very often we will fail.  Only in heaven are action and contemplation not in conflict, not divided as they are for us here. We are nevertheless called in our lives to inform each of these dimensions of Christian life with the other.

In Patristic terms, for Augustine, Martha is a figure of the active life and Mary of Bethany as a symbol of the contemplative life. Augustine has several pairings like this, for example, Rachel and Leah and also John and Peter.

Augustine was always constantly trying to find the right balance of action and contemplation in his own extremely busy life, otium in negotio. He sometimes laments that he wanted to remain a monk, in quiet prayer and contemplation of the deeper questions, but he instead must carry out his duties and problems as a bishop well.  He describes his role as bishop as a sarcina, the heavy backpack of the Roman legionary.  How to resolve these seemingly contradictory styles of life?  How to find otium in negotio… free space within busy-ness?

Augustine’s examination of Mary and Martha is found primarily in Sermons 179, 103 and 104. In s. 179 Augustine explains James 1,19;22 using an exegesis of Luke 10, the episode of Mary and Martha we see in the painting. He emphasizes the deep attention we ought to give Scripture: factores verbi… et auditores… contrasting the former who put what they hear into practice with the later who listen only and then do nothing about what they hear.

S. 179 shows Augustine’s deep regard for his flock. He would rather be a listener but he must also be a doer. He sacrificed his own desires for the sake of his flock. Augustine says that it is dangerous to be a preacher, and exercise ministry. He placed himself and his soul in danger for the sake of his flock.

For Augustine, contemplation must necessarily lead to action in this life. While the ideal would be to sit and listen (Mary) there nothing wrong with acting (Martha).  Indeed, it is necessary to act!  Martha the busy “ministrix” is therefore doing something great, and she has a great gift… magnum ergo ministerium, magnum donum.

What Mary does is still greater.  What Mary does takes nothing from Martha, and what Martha does enhances Mary.

Augustine explains that there is a unity between the two lives because they come to the same eternal reward. The Person of Jesus is the focus of both Mary and Martha. In heaven their focus and roles will overlap and combine perfectly.

One must arrive at the “better part” precisely by means of the active life. That is her lot. Heaven will be the perfect “fusion” of the active and contemplative dimensions of Christian life, though here in this vale of tears they are difficult at times to reconcile.

Finally, if you are chaffing under the grind, consider your lot as someone who has to get the work done in light of a question.

Where’s Lazarus?

When the Lord came back to the house, days after the death of Lazarus, it was Martha who went rushing out to meet the Lord on the road when He was still some way off.  It was Martha who spoke with the Lord first, not Mary.  It was Martha who made a great profession of faith, “I believe that you are the Messiah, the Son of God, the one coming into the world.”  Then it was Martha who brought Mary out of the house to the Lord, so that Mary could repeat, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died.”

So, some bullet points:

  • Have you been jealous of the good fortune of another? I offer this especially to clerics who are suffering from the dread fault of proud ambition.
  • Have you resented your state because you think you should have had a different lot in life?
  • Have you chaffed under what God’s will is for you in your vocation?
  • Have you neglected prayer in your daily grind?
  • Have you lacked generosity or been small of soul?
  • Have you thanked God for the graces that come with the challenges?
Posted in Classic Posts, Patristiblogging, The Drill, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , , , , , , ,
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Intimidation is the Enemy’s Tool

I have been thinking about the priest who was assaulted in Italy and the way the Catholic left treats conservatives and traditionally minded Catholic priests and lay people.

Assaults are not only physical and launched by people who are disturbed or overmastered by passions.  They are also planned, cold, systematic.

Bullies have plans.

The tactic of the Enemy, and the Enemy’s human agents, is to bully victims into silence.

Aggressive intimidation the not so subtle way that fidelity is assailed, not only by the Enemy, but also by enemies who are used by the Enemy.

Anyone who is being bullied by the left, by the liberal opponents of the Holy Father and his vision, must not be – like victims of rape – forced into silence.

We must hear about and report attempts to repress the rights of faithful Catholics who just want to pray and live out their legitimate aspirations.

When enemies of, for example, the Extraordinary Form or the Church’s teaching on the ordination of men only or on the sinfulness of homosexual acts and on artificial contraception, threaten and bully and assault Holy Church’s faithful and priests and courageous bishops, we must not be silenced.

Silence is defeat.

We have to report bullying so that bishops and others cannot pretend that it isn’t happening.

We must not be bullied into silence about attacks.

And this applies to those who desire the older form of Holy Mass.

We don’t have to be aggressive, but we do need to be assertive.

Stand up.  Speak out.

Saint Michael the Archangel,
defend us in battle.
Be our protection against the wickedness and snares of the devil.
May God rebuke him, we humbly pray.
And do Thou, O Prince of the Heavenly Host,
by the Power of God,
cast into hell, Satan and all the evil spirits,
who prowl throughout the world seeking the ruin of souls.
Amen.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Our Catholic Identity, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , ,
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BENEDICT XVI’S PRAYER INTENTIONS FOR AUGUST

BENEDICT XVI’S PRAYER INTENTIONS FOR AUGUST

VATICAN CITY, 29 JUL 2011 (VIS) – Pope Benedict’s general prayer intention for August is: “That World Youth Day in Madrid may encourage young people throughout the world to have their lives rooted and built up in Christ”.

His mission intention is: “That Western Christians may be open to the action of the Holy Spirit and rediscover the freshness and enthusiasm of their faith”.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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Smartphone obsession

I use my smartphone, an iPhone, to keep up with email, which flows in at a rate I can’t handle, and to post to or moderate this beast of a blog.  I use it for some light SMS texting too.  It is a great tool when I am on the road, since I can also use it like an iPod.

From Sancte Pater and the great Vincenzo:

Some owners so obsessed with their smartphones, they name them

BY ELLEN GIBSON
Associated Press

“Watching people who get their first smartphone, there’s a very quick progression from having a basic phone you don’t talk about to people who love their iPhone, name their phone and buy their phones outfits,” said Lisa Merlo, director of psychotherapy training at the University of Florida…

Merlo, a clinical psychologist, said she has observed a number of behaviors among smartphone users that she labels problematic.

Among them, she said, are some patients who pretend to talk on the phone or fiddle with apps to avoid eye contact or other interactions at a bar or a party; others are so genuinely engrossed in their phones that they ignore the people around them completely.

“The more bells and whistles the phone has,” she said, “the more likely they are to get too attached.”

For some, the anxious feeling that they might miss something has caused them to slumber next to their smartphones…

For others, being away from their phone will almost certainly cause separation anxiety. According to researchers at the Ericsson Consumer Lab, some people have become so dependent on being able to use their smartphones to go online anytime, anywhere, that without that access, they “can no longer handle their daily routine.”

Read More

Good grief!

Though I admit that when I have left home without my phone I feel really weird.   Hmmm….

BTW… Vincenzo is the official photoshopper of WDTPRS.  He is also the maker of the wondrous Pope Pius Clock, which WDTPRS endorses.

Posted in Throwing a Nutty | Tagged
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Card. Canizares: the “entire Church” should receive Communion kneeling. Fr. Z rants.

The overriding reason for why we belong to Holy Church and why we receive the sacraments and why we go to Holy Mass is the fact that one day we are going to die.

The sin of our first parents, at the prompting of the Enemy, was to think that we could be “as gods”.  That sin brought suffering and death into the world.  It required a Savior, both God and man, to repair the breach we opened between the human race and God.  We are redeemed by Christ’s Sacrifice and raised in hope at the victory over death in Christ’s Resurrection and Ascension.  We are given mighty gifts through Christ’s merits by means of the Church He found and by the sacraments He instituted and by the teaching He extends down through His Apostles and their successors to our own time and places.

As a consequence, when we meet with Him in the context of our sacred worship, while we stand at times as adopted children emboldened by Christ’s proximity to us in our human nature, we also abase ourselves before Him, before the MYSTERY we encounter, as we remember that we are so very small and so very dependent and so very much not gods.

From CNA with my emphases and comments.

Spanish cardinal recommends that Catholics receive Communion on the tongue

Lima, Peru, Jul 28, 2011 / 01:56 pm (CNA).- Spanish Cardinal Antonio Canizares Llovera recently recommended that Catholics receive Communion on the tongue, while kneeling.

“It is to simply know that we are before God himself and that He came to us and that we are undeserving,” the prefect of the Vatican’s Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments said in an interview with CNA during his visit to Lima, Peru.

The cardinal’s remarks came in response to a question on whether Catholics should receive Communion in the hand or on the tongue[OOH-RAH!]

He recommended that Catholics “receive Communion on the tongue and while kneeling.[Do I hear an “Amen!”?]

Receiving Communion in this way, the cardinal continued, “is the sign of adoration that needs to be recovered. I think the entire Church needs to receive Communion while kneeling.” [Get that?  “entire Church”.  And he means the Latin Church, of course.]

“In fact,” he added, “if one receives while standing, a genuflection or profound bow should be made, and this is not happening.”  [Wounded human nature being what it is.]

“If we trivialize Communion, we trivialize everything, and we cannot lose a moment as important as that of receiving Communion, of recognizing the real presence of Christ there, of the God who is the love above all loves, as we sing in a hymn in Spanish.”

In response to a question about the liturgical abuses that often occur, Cardinal Canizares said they must be “corrected, especially through proper formation: formation for seminarians, for priests, for catechists, for all the Christian faithful.”

Such a formation should ensure that liturgical celebrations take place “in accord with the demands and dignity of the celebration, in accord with the norms of the Church, which is the only way we can authentically celebrate the Eucharist,” he added.

Bishops have a unique responsibility” in the task of liturgical formation and the correction of abuses, the cardinal said, “and we must not fail to fulfill it, because everything we do to ensure that the Eucharist is celebrated properly will ensure proper participation in the Eucharist.”

No renewal of the Church can take place without a revitalization of our Catholic identity.  No revitalization of our Catholic identity can take place without a renewal of our liturgical worship.

Without a renewal of our Church, our identity, our worship, we as Catholics cannot have an effective impact on the world around us.  We cannot fulfill Christ’s great command before His Ascension.

In the presence of God we must adopt the posture of creatures, and for just a few seconds… just a few seconds of our oh so busy lives… make ourselves lowly.

Aside from those because of physical reasons cannot kneel, for those of you think think you have to stand when receiving Communion, I invite you to rethink your “position”.

Do not be afraid to bend yourself and lower yourself before the coming of the Most High God, in the mystery which envelops you during Holy Mass.

Don’t think you mustn’t and can’t kneel to GOD.

I have been concerned and less than sanguine about many things I have seen going on these days, but this story and the words of Card. Canizares, are a sign of hope.   This sort of article, with this recommendation for the whole Church, would have been unthinkable even, say, ten years ago, from a Prefect of the CDW.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Our Catholic Identity, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , ,
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GUEST POST: “They get the Ratzinger Marshall Plan better than many Catholics.”

My friend the great Fabricius Romanus, paterfamilias, sent me a reaction to the story I shared here about a priest in Italy who was physically assaulted by someone invoking Satan, because the priest was reintroducing traditional elements of Catholic worship.

Fabrizio, who writes English well, continues without translation, and only minor edits of orthography.

Since he works in his family business of growing mushrooms, Fabrizio knows BS when he sees it:

Yes, it’s scary, but I am not surprised. The hatred is mounting around here [in Italy] and that is one of the ultra-red areas of the country [Tuscany]. And from what I am told about this story I would not be surprised if this was also a “pilot” experiment, and the target is none else than the Pope, via intimidation of the clergy. I am just guessing here but from what they reportedly yelled at the priest, these people hate not only the “symbols” you’d expect them to hate (kneeling at the rail, ad orientem, Latin and so forth) but also what the Church teaches in matters moral.Now, it’s not just TLM priests who agree with the Church’s morals although more often so. Why then this priest? OK, the isolated place was safer for the aggressors, but there are tens of isolated priests in that area.

I think it was the Ratzinger Marshall Plan that they get better than many Catholics. Catholic identity being revived and given a coherent image that they hate: to “sound” Catholic, to “look” Catholic, to “speak” Catholic, to “act” Catholic without compartmentalizing the faith, so you don’t pretend to be St. Francis with the poor and then be Leonardo Boff on ecclesiology, or Andy Warhol on liturgy.

It could be a case of the “looks like a duck” principle used by evil people.

Now I don’t want to read too much into this, so I’ll wait and see. But think of movies: even today, when they have to depict a priest – especially a bad one – don’t they use way more traditional features than one actually sees in reality? They know what says “Catholic” in unmistakable ways. The silver lining is that the locals, even those who never step into a Church, are expressing their outrage at what happened.

Add to that, by the grace of God, the Italian Parliament just killed an “anti-homophobia” bill that would have done little less than to criminalize the thought of thinking of never getting near to a place where they do not glorify sodomy. Forget saying anything about it. Also, the press tried to present the Norwegian terrorist like an emissary of the Pope, and the Vatican just recalled the Nuncio from Ireland where they want to break the Seal of Confession by law.

If you remember our TV and you think it was bad when you were here, you have seen nothing yet especially in terms of hatred of the Church. The same goes for the rest of Europe. I don’t want to sound catastrophic or paranoid. The KGB won’t come tomorrow to get us, but it does sound like something is getting seriously wrong here.

Fabrizio is a Catholic layman, husband, businessman and father of 4 beautiful children.

Posted in HONORED GUESTS, Linking Back, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged
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RECENT POSTS keep scrolling

Here are easy links to some recent posts.

First of all:

Archbp. Sambi, Papal Nuncio to the USA – R.I.P.

Thereafter:

Thanks again for the prayers and notes, everyone.  They have been a help in a heavy time.  I have several pressing cares and my optimism is tidal.

Next week I will be at a annual and rather informal gathering of priests and, verily, at least one bishop, if anyone would like to pitch in to help with expenses, I would be grateful, as always.   Some timely donations may contribute to the “spirited” enjoyment of the whole group.  Also, the kind souls who sent the tomatoes and also the strozzapreti some time back may be pleased to know that I will use them for one of the meals I’ll be preparing.  The strozzapreti seemed … appropriate, and I happily have saves back enough for everyone.

Thanks to the reader who sent the copy of The Mass of the Future by Gerald Ellard, SJ (1948).  It is a fascinating look at what an avant guarde writer was thinking in the midst of the liturgical movement last century. A surprise in the book were photos of a parish in my native place where I was assigned.  I haven’t dug into yet, but I suspect the writer – beware of Jesuit liturgists – will have some ideas that have been demonstrated over the decades to be naively optimistic.

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Thomas Jefferson v Alexander Hamilton

I have been avoiding the tar baby of the debt ceiling debate, but I can at least able to say this.  I am pretty much fed up and disgusted by most the players involved.  “A Pox!”, I cry, “on both your branches!”

Now that that is off my chest, I share an interesting article from Crisis Magazine by Dr. Mark W. Hendrickson, adjunct faculty member, economist, and fellow for economic and social policy with The Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College.

This article was especially of interest, because when I get to NYC I often have debates with a smart friend there about Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton, whose bones rest in the bone yard of Trinity Church off of Wall Street.  One of the most memorable times was when we were on our way to a fantastic concert at Trinity of sacred music under the influence of the Sarum Rite.  That’s the time I heard music so beautiful it hurt.

Some of the points of this article provide a useful lens for interpreting the relentless news coverage of the debt crisis debate.

Jefferson Versus Hamilton: A Continuing Contest
Mark W. Hendrickson

This past Fourth of July marked 235 years since the Declaration of Independence was published. In this immortal document, the Spirit of ’76 was given its fullest, most eloquent expression. The Declaration is a timeless document, espousing eternal principles that, while forever historically identified with America, are universal in their application.

The Fourth provided an occasion to reflect on what it means to be an American. Since day one, there have been widely divergent views on those questions.

During the Revolutionary War, the colonists fell into three groups: those who desired independence from Britain, Tories who did not, and many who didn’t care or couldn’t decide.

The Second Continental Congress was so divided over the issue of slavery that the Declaration was almost stillborn. (The perfect Fourth of July movie is the musical “1776”—an excellent dramatization of that profound disagreement.) Many of the Founding Fathers abhorred slavery with every bone in their body. Those founders are sometimes condemned today for having compromised with southern slaveholders, a retroactive judgment of 18th-century men by 21st-century values. Granted, the founders didn’t create the ideal society. They knew that. They expected subsequent generations to make improvements. But they did, mercifully, lay the foundation for a republic that would go on to bring more freedom to more people than any other political entity in history.

From the start, Americans have been divided between the visions and values of Founding Fathers Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson. That intellectual and political debate continues undiminished today. In fact, during a recent radio interview, the host asked me out of the blue, “Whose side are you on, Hamilton’s or Jefferson’s?”

The question is difficult to answer for two primary reasons: First, these two giants of America’s founding addressed a wide range of issues, so one may partially agree and partially disagree. Second, as Stephen F. Knott’s 2002 book Alexander Hamilton & the Persistence of Myth demonstrates so ably, subsequent American thought leaders have invented their own versions of Jefferson and Hamilton. These versions have been based on their own political convictions and biases, including which books they themselves happened to read (each of those containing its author’s own slanted view) and the tenor of the era in which they lived.

There is no definitive, indisputable interpretation of Hamilton and Jefferson, but I’ll attempt a few generalities.

Foremost among these generalities, at the most elementary level, those who favor a stronger government in Washington are more likely to be Hamiltonians and those who favor a weaker government, Jeffersonians.

In reply to that radio host’s question, I said that I leaned toward Jefferson. In this era of Big Government that is suffocating liberty, devouring our economic substance, and is joined at the hip with big banks, Jefferson’s inspiring defenses of liberty and impassioned warnings about government are timely. Nevertheless, I have my differences with Jefferson, such as his endorsement of the French Revolution. My sense is that Jefferson’s strong suit was his idealism, whereas in practice he was, at times, inapt or inept.

While I have serious misgivings about Hamilton’s vision for government, I think he gets a bum rap when some accuse him of having been an antidemocratic monarchist. Yes, he distrusted certain elements of democracy, but so did most of the Founding Fathers, including James Madison. Hamilton believed in some degree of a government partnership with business, but, like other founders, he supported a Constitution that, unlike Old World governments, did not erect barriers designed to keep poor Americans poor. Hamilton was an elitist, but he was an elitist by accomplishment, and not (at all) by birth.

One of the ironies of the Jeffersonian/Hamiltonian divide today is that the two major political parties have flip-flopped on their historical positions. Up until the 1950s, Democrats tended to be Jeffersonian. They opposed tariffs and other government favors for moneyed interests. Republicans, who tended to be Hamiltonian in their use of government to shape economic development from the party’s founding through Herbert Hoover’s presidency, now have many leading figures with strong Jeffersonian sympathies. Today’s Republicans generally share to some degree Jefferson’s aversion to Big Government, the great threat to liberty and prosperity.

Finally, in the Hamilton/Jefferson debate, one of the few points that enjoys nearly universal acceptance is that both men were geniuses. They both played defining roles in the founding and formation of the United States of America. However much we may disagree with one or the other, they were great Americans and we are blessed to have had them both as Founding Fathers.

I suspect some of the smart readers here will want to chime in.  Whenever I have posted anything in the past about economic theory (e.g., Austrian school) some very smart people get involved in lively discussions and I wind up learning a lot.

The Jefferson/Hamilton diptych above may present another such learning opportunity.

At this point, may I add that I think we are all deep in serious trouble?

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