PRAYERCAzT/PODCAzT: Trinity Sunday: singing the whole nine yards

I again inflict my singing on you for most of this project.

Quite a while back I started a PRAYERCAzT series, wherein I read and/or sang the prayers and readings for upcoming Sundays and Feasts for the Extraordinary Form.  I meant to be helpful to men who were faced with singing the texts and who were, perhaps, not so familiar with what to do.  It was also meant to help people in the pews get the sounds of the Latin into their ears so that their participation at Mass would be more comfortable and fruitful.

Not long ago I received a very useful new book which published by the Canons regular at St. John Cantius in Chicago.  The book is called Canticum Clericorum Romanum, and it is the first volume.

In the celebration of the older, traditional form of Holy Mass in the Roman Rite, the Extraordinary Form, when Mass is celebrated with greater solemnity, the texts are sung.  The prayers or orations, the readings, the preface, every thing is sung.  This volume has all the texts for all the Sundays of the year and most major feasts in Gregorian musical notation.  Not only that, since there are different tones or melodies we can use to sing texts, the book has the alternative tones as well.

Some time ago I started an audio project, especially intended for priests, who might have to sing the texts during the Extraordinary Form but who may not be very familiar with these old Roman ways.

Priests, deacons (actual deacons and priests who serve as deacons), laymen who serve as “straw subdeacons”… must sing texts, which for some men is nerve wracking enough.  You wind up looking at examples of paradigmatic texts in, say, the Liber Usualis, and then you look at the Missale, perhaps making a photocopy, perhaps penciling in lines under the vowel where you are supposed to go up….

This new book from the canons in Chicago book has it all laid out.

What I do in this audio project is sing through all the texts of the Mass, in the different alternatives, for Trinity Sunday.  For the collect there will be a festive tone and a solemn tone.  The first reading  has its own tone.  There are three possibilities for the Gospel, the tonus evangelii, tonus antiquior, tonus ad libitum.  There is no tone, of course, for the Secret because it is silent.  And then the two tones we had for the Collect also used for the Post Communion.

This book does not have prefaces, which are in the Missale Romanum.  But there are three tones for the Preface of the Trinity, the most usual of which for Trinity Sunday is the solemn tone. There is, however a more solemn tone, or tonus solemnior.  There is a ferial tone, which you would not use on Trinity Sunday.  It would more likely be sung for a votive Mass of the Trinity.

First I’ll sing through the prayers and texts using the new book from the canons.  Then I will switch books and sing all three versions of the Preface of the Trinity. You will notice the different introductory dialogues.  I suggest before singing the tonus solemnior that perhaps you could start with the tone for the tonus solemnis, which people are more likely to know, and then switch seamlessly into the tonus solemnior.  That way, you don’t have chaos at the beginning.

I am doing this so that people can hear the different tones, with the same texts, and, if some priest or deacon out there finds them useful as he looks at the texts and wonders how to sing them, well… this is a public service as it were.

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About Fr. John Corapi with observations about our times

I haven’t written much about Fr. John Corapi, because I honestly don’t know much about what is going on.  I don’t know the details.   But I am sad to read that he is leaving active ministry.  I am profoundly sad.

Fr. Corapi and I were ordained together, by John Paul II, in 1991.  I didn’t know him at that time.  After ordination I think I only ran into him twice, at conferences where we were both speakers.  So, I don’t know him.  I don’t know what is up with his life or situation and I won’t speculate.  Nevertheless, by that tendril connection of our ordination, I have imagined a kind of bond with him and all the other men scattered across the world, even though I didn’t know most of them personally.

So, I don’t have much to say about Fr. Corapi.

I do have a few things to say about the circumstances surrounding this sad announcement.

From the email I am receiving and a few blogs I have read reacting to Fr. Corapi’s video message, it strikes me that a lot of people are doing neither themselves nor Fr. Corapi any good.  Charity requires us to consider the good of others.  I can’t see how the way some people are talking about Fr. Corapi does anyone any good.

We are in difficult times right now concerning ecclesiastical relationships.  The Church has sustained horrible wounds because of her own churchmen and, during this time of healing, there are bound to be painful moments.  When you receive a blow upon a bruise, the pain can be great.  I suggest that we avoid poking the bruises as much as we can.

Given what I have been seeing and experiencing, I believe the verse many priests pray every night during Compline in the older form of the Office (Tuesday in the Liturgy of the Hours) is being realized in a particularly intense way right now:

“Be sober and vigilant: because your enemy the devil, like a roaring lion, is roaming around seeking whom he might devour.  Strong in faith, resist him knowing that the same affliction befalls your brethren who are in the world. ” 1 Peter 5:8-9.

This is certainly the case in my life right now and I think it is also going on in the life of many priests and bishops who are on the more conservative side of things.  The attack is on.

This is one reason why I have been earnestly asking the support of your prayers.

The enemy hates priests and bishops.  Let me say that again.  The enemy hates priests and bishops.  When priests and bishops start making inroads, they will be attacked with intensity.

But priests and bishops remain men and remain sinners.  We need the support of prayers especially regarding the primary goal of saving our souls.  We must, for the love of God, help each other.

I will keep Fr. Corapi on my prayer list, and will remember him in a special way, hoping that through the help of the Holy Spirit, who bends the rigid and heals the broken and consoles those who are in pain, he will have some peace whether he is able to return to active ministry or not, whether he wants to or not.   He is a priest forever and he is my brother in that indelible mark received from Christ the High Priest.  And because he is a priest forever, the devil will not relent in attacking him until he dies.  Nor will the devil relent in attacking anyone who has authority over him.

It is what we signed up for, but sometimes it can be very hard.

Please remember, please, that all priests are human beings and subject to the afflictions of the world, the flesh and the devil.  If you look at them in some other way, you do them and yourselves a disservice.

In these difficult times, when we are seeing the lion and hearing the lion roaring around even more, I ask for your prayers for myself and for all the priests you know, whether they are in active ministry or they are for whatever reason not active, whether they have been exemplary according to how you think they ought to be, or whether they have made mistakes and are suffering the consequences.

They have immortal souls and they, like you dear lay people, are working out their eternal salvation with fear and trembling with the additional burden of knowing that they will be priests forever, in heaven or in hell.  Ask St. John Vianney for help.  And, since St. “Padre” Pio has been on my mind with increasing frequency lately, perhaps ask him as well.

Please don’t write to me anymore about Fr. Corapi.  Please.  Even though I didn’t know him, right now for me this is like a blow upon a bruise.

Please find it in your hearts to pray, daily and often, for priests.

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QUAERITUR: Who is bishop of the Moon?

Under the recent entry about titular sees, the question arose about which bishop would have jurisdiction over the Moon.

I think there are conflicting claims.  I heard once that Rome itself had jurisdiction.

However, there is another claim.

Sometimes it is said that the Diocese of Orlando, Florida, has jurisdiction over the Moon.

“But Father! But Father!”, some of you are saying now.  “Orlando?  Why?  Because of Disneyworld?   More proof that YOU HATE VATICAN II!  Have you finally lost your mind? ”

Not quite completely.

The idea is that, back in 1969 when Apollo 11 landed on the Moon, the Diocese of Orlando included Cape Canaveral.  Because the journey began from the Diocese of Orlando, Orlando had jurisdiction.

There is an anecdote about this.  The late Archbishop Borders, who eventually was in Baltimore, had been once the Bishop of Orlando.  During an ad limina visit he actually told Paul VI that he was the bishop of the Moon.

I would love to have been standing there with a camera to capture Pope Paul VI’s expression as he considered this statement.

Posted in ASK FATHER Question Box, Just Too Cool, Lighter fare, Look! Up in the sky! | Tagged , , ,
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Msgr. Ralph Belluomini – RIP

In your kindness please pray for the repose of the soul of a friend of mine, Msgr. Ralph Belluomini who died recently.

He was a priest of the Diocese of Fresno, and, not a young man, he succumbed to cancer.

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OLDIE PODCAzT: Friday in the Octave of Pentecost

OLDIE PODCAzT: Friday in the Octave of Pentecost

Today is Friday in the Octave of Pentecost, or at least it ought to be in in the Novus Ordo as it is in the older, Traditional Roman Calendar.

This is the fifth PODCAzT for the Pentecost Octave.

Today we will look at some customs associated with Pentecost, very beautiful.  These customs informed the rhythm of people’s lives for centuries.

Then we will drill into the image of the dew of the Holy Spirit (which some bishops sadly think people are too thick to understand and therefore want to eliminate the image from liturgical translations…).  To help we enlist the help of a very wise Bishop, the great Ambrose of Milan (+397) who always tried to explain hard things to his people rather than make them out to be too stupid to get the point.  Ambrose wrote a work On the Holy Spirit in which he explains the dew that descended on Gideon’s fleece in the Book of Judges.  So, we will hear Judges 6 and 7 and then Ambrose allegorical commentary.  Fascinating stuff, I can tell you.

This reading from Scripture and the patristic commentary, gives you a sense of how some of the Father’s worked with Scripture and how their reflections can be useful for us today.

Of course, I have lots of comments along the way.

For music,
we have an antiphon for Pentecost in Gregorian chant, and a bitter sweet song Dancing at Whitsun, a folk song, which speaks of the rhythm of our lives and the challenges we endure.  There is a Fanstasia super Kom, Heiliger Geist BWV 651 by J.S. Bach on the pipe organ, which Holy Church recommends above all other instruments.  We hear a haunting Byzantine Communion for mid-Pentecost, in other words this very week and at the end a real change of pace, which you can listen to yourselves.

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QUAERITUR: Bishops and Titular Sees

From a reader:

Recently, you had a post up regarding Archbishop Nienstedt’s defense of traditional marriage.  As a curious person, I looked up the Archbishop’s background and discovered he once held the titular see of Alton, in Illinois, when he was serving as an auxiliary bishop.  As you may or may not know, the “old cathedral” of the now defunct Diocese of Alton still stands and is still in use as a parish by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield, IL.  From what I recall, the old “bishop’s chair” is still present in the sanctuary. 

Now my question:  If a bishop who is titular see, such as Archbishop Nienstedt formerly was, visits the old cathedral of his defunct diocese, or Alton in Archbishop Nienstedt’s case, would it be proper for him to use the bishop’s chair?

I had long thought most, if not all, of the titular sees were long defunct dioceses where there would be little remnant of the old diocese.  But seeing Alton as Archbishop Nienstadt’s former titular see made me realize there are at least a few exceptions.  Any details you can provide about titular sees would be appreciated.

You raise an interesting question.

The main point we must consider is that a bishop isn’t just a bishop on his own. He is a bishop of a Church and that Church must be somewhere.  In ancient times there were very many more dioceses, which were effectively swept away either by invasion of Muslims or the erosion of demographics, etc.  In more modern times, in the “propaganda” countries, Sees were sometimes established, but the town lost importance for one reason or another and it became impractical to maintain the see there.

I am reminded of the story about the Diocese of Lead, South Dakota, which was set up in 1902.  Many bishops traveled from the East out to the wilderness to install the first bishop of Lead.  They had a nice supper and everyone went back to the train station for their return to civilization.  As the train pulled away from the platform and the prelates waving from the end car and windows could no longer be seen, silence fell.  The new bishop turned to his secretary and said, “And they closed the tomb, and all withdrew.”

The great Bishop Perry, auxiliary bishop in Chicago, is now the Titular Bishop of Lead.   Lead, however, was supressed and the Diocese of Rapidopolis (Rapid City) was created in its place.

There are a number of titular sees in the USA, and one is mentioned in the question.  Off the top of my head I can think also of Walla Walla, Bardstown and Natchez.  It can be rather diverting to look at the titular sees of some of the more interesting figures in the Church.

Keep in mind that Curia Cardinals, who don’t have a see of their own, if they were once diocesan bishops are now emeritus bishops of those dioceses.  Card. Burke, for example, is the Archbishop Emeritus of St. Louis.  He is also, however, the holder of the ancient Roman titulus Sant’Agatha dei Gothi.  The Roman tituli were the first parishes and they were held by deacons or priests.  This distinction in maintained in the College of Cardinals so that even today all Cardinal Deacons and Priests have titular churches in Rome.  They don’t have much influence over those churches, because there are rectors or parish priests, pastors, assigned to them.  There are also, however, Cardinal Bishops who are assigned titular dioceses very close to Rome.  These ancient sees now have their own ordinary bishops.  Once upon a time, the Cardinal Bishop really was the actual bishop of the diocese.  Now, however, he is just the “bishop” in an honorary sense.  This is the only situation, I believe, where there is simultaneously a titular bishop of a diocese which is still a real diocese which also has a bishop.  Very odd, but wonderfully Catholic.  We don’t have a problem with these niceties any more than we have a problem with two statues of Christ in the same church or multiple Hosts being distributed at Holy Communion.  It all works.

Some of the titular dioceses have some real history.  For example, just to stick to St. Louis, back in the 80’s the brand new auxiliary of St. Paul and Minneapolis Robert Carlson, now in St. Louis, was titular bishop of Avioccala, a remnant of the great Church of Proconsular North Africa, present day Sidi-Amara in Tunisia.  This is as much in the middle of nowhere as you can get.  There is an early 4th century Donatist sermon about the death of Donatus of Avioccala, who probably was not the more famous Donatus of Carthage, Donatus being a common name.  Donatists were being expelled after an edit of Constantine to return churches to Catholics.  Soldiers massacred some Donatists in their basilica, which because a cause célèbre for the Donatist schismatics.  In another case, still in Proconsular North Africa, a fine auxiliary Bishop Lee Piché in St. Paul and Minneapolis has the Titular See of Tamata, under the See of Byzacena, which once had the Titular Bishop Franciszek or Frank Musiel once Auxiliary of Czestochowa, Poland, though that Frank Musiel was neither a Cardinal, nor in St. Louis.

I digress.

Titular dioceses are in some sense preserved from being entirely obliterated, lost even in memory, by being maintained in a kind of “suspended animation”.  They exist, but they are sleeping, rather like Briar Rose waiting for her prince to come.

But the fact is that these titular dioceses are not territorial in the sense that the true, presently established diocese is territorial.  The titular bishop doesn’t have any jurisdiction in the sense that the local ordinary bishop has jurisdiction.  If a titular bishop goes to his quondam cathedral church, he is just a visiting bishop as any other.  To put this in terms of Thomistic philosophy, they have jurisdiction in potency but not in act.

However, one could imagine a situation wherein were there huge growth of Catholic population around, for example, Lead, that diocese could be revived.  I know… I know… rather like the fairy tale with Briar Rose.

An interesting point about these titular sees.  Until the late 1800’s they were identified as being dioceses “in partibus infidelium” (“in the regions of unbelievers”).  This term was probably dropped because of any ecumenical concern.  More likely was the fact of expansion into areas that were Christianized but still mission territories, as in the New World.  That is my guess and I happy to be corrected on this point.  Then again, in this age of the “New Evangelization”, that is, the re-evangelization of formerly Christian lands, it might be a good idea to go back to “in partibus infidelium” just to remind us of the steep hill we have to climb.

Finally, take this away from this entry.

While the Lord promised that the hell would in the end not prevail, He did not promise it would not prevail in, say, your home town, your country.  Think of the mighty Churches of ancient times, in Turkey and North Africa.  They are gone and now we have echos of their memory in certain bishops who serve the Church everywhere but where those sees were.

Whole regions of Churches can be broken and swept away like sand.  Parishes close in dioceses.  Jesus did not found your parish.  He didn’t promise that it would last until He returned.

Get involved.

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S. California: relic of St. Anthony of Padua stolen – UPDATE!

A reader alerted me to this:

St. Anthony’s stolen religious relic sparks searches
By Mike Krumboltz

A 780-year-old treasure honoring St. Anthony of Padua has been stolen from a Southern California Catholic church.

The relic, which is normally kept under lock and key, was brought out by the Rev. Jose Magana because he thought it might help his parishioners regain their faith during the difficult economic climate. In a bit of bitter irony, St. Anthony is known as the patron saint of lost things. Following news of the theft, web searches on “st. anthony stolen” and “who was st. anthony” both surged.

The relic was taken at some point on Monday, “the feast day of the church’s namesake.” According to a buzzy article from the AP, the relic was likely stolen at some point between 6 a.m. and 9 a.m. When the parishioners realized the relic had been taken, there was an audible gasp in the church.

A police lieutenant said “the relic is housed in a 16-inch reliquary case with angel-shaped handles made of gold and silver on either side.” The reverend called the relic invaluable,” according to the AP.

[…]

Could I ask a prayer from the readership for the recovery of this relic?

UPDATE 17 June:

I thank a reader for alerting me to the news item at Catholic Culture:

Police in Long Beach, California, have arrested Maria Solis, 41, in conjunction with the theft of a relic of St. Anthony of Padua from a parish on June 13. The relic was discovered undamaged in her living room and has been returned to the parish; the suspect is not a parishioner.

“St. Anthony is the patron saint of travelers and lost things, but today he’s also the honorary saint of the Long Beach Police Department,” said Father Jose Magana, pastor of St. Anthony’s Parish.

I wasn’t aware that police department’s have patron saints, but it is a very good idea.

Let there be sung Non nobis and Te Deum.

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QUAERITUR: Is it sinful to go to Saturday evening Mass if you can go on Sunday?

From a reader:

Is it wrong or even sinful to attend a Saturday evening vigil Mass IF you could otherwise attend a Sunday Mass?

I ask this because at my parish there is one particular priest who has solid homilies and celebrates the Mass reverently. The other priests, while good men, can sometimes give questionable sermons and are not as mindful of the rubrics. So, if I wanted to attend the first priest’s Mass on a particular weekend, and he was assigned a vigil Mass… is that OK?

I guess I always thought the vigil Mass was more for people who had to work on Sunday or for some reason could not attend on Sunday. Maybe this is not the case?

It is not sinful to attend Saturday evening Mass, the vigil of a Sunday.  The Church permits Masses “of precept”, which fulfill your obligation, on Saturday evening.  You are free to go.  It is not a sin to go to Mass.

That said, let us not forget that Sunday is really the Lord’s Day.

While the liturgical day can be reckoned to begin on Saturday evening, and while the Church permits Masses of precept on Saturdays, I think a lot of people make use of Saturday Masses because they don’t want to have to go to church on Sunday, thus leaving Sunday open for entirely worldly pursuits.

The character of Sunday as “the Lord’s Day” should be fostered at all times.  I think that the Saturday evening Masses can at times erode this important dimension of Sunday.

As John Paul II unfolded in his 1998 Letter Dies Domini (The Day of the Lord), there should be a well-considered balance between the Sunday as Dies Domini and Dies Hominis (Man’s Day), a balance between what we owe to God and resting in God, and what we owe to ourselves and our neighbor and resting for our well-being.

Finally, it is too bad that people sometimes feel driven to go to the Mass of a particular priest and avoid Masses by other priests.  Were priests to cultivate a sounder ars celebrandi (“art of celebrating”) and try to get themselves out of the ways – not to mention always say the black and do the red, this favoritism applied to priests might be diminished.  There will always be the factor of the priests skills in preaching or perhaps singing, but were priests to avoid pulling attention to themselves, that would help a lot.  Also, it is more than likely the case that the Novus Ordo tends to place more of a burden on the priest’s personality and skills than the older form of Mass.  Therefore, learning to celebrate the older form could be of help in the priest’s celebration of the Ordindary Form.

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Abortion: the paramount social justice issue

One of the greatest victories of the pro-abortion crowd, even Catholics in the pro-abortion crowd, is to divorce abortion from other social justice issues.

Abortion must be the social justice issue.

This is from CNS, with my emphases.

It goes without saying there are a lot of important causes that spur activism, but for Lila Rose, the abortion issue in the U.S. is paramount. Rose is the founder and president of the pro-life group Live Action, which currently focuses on investigating Planned Parenthood.

She was recently in the Diocese of Madison, Wis., [where H.E. Robert Morlino is bishop] for the annual dinner and auction of the Wisconsin Right to Life Education Fund. Coverage of Rose’s remarks is in the June 9 issue of the Catholic Herald, Madison’s diocesan newspaper.

“The purpose of laws is to protect people in this country. The purpose of laws is to protect the weak against the strong,” she said. “But what happens to a country, to a legal system when the law is turned against the weakest member of the society? That at the very heart of the system is injustice.”

In April Rose was in Washington to speak at the National Catholic Prayer Breakfast. She talked about becoming a Catholic recently, calling it the “best decision” she ever made.

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QUAERITUR: Mass obligation and Traditional Anglican Communion

From a reader:

Can a Roman Catholic fulfill her Sunday Obligation at a Traditional Anglican Communion church that is part of one of the Pro-Dioceses awaiting the construction of the Ordinariate for the United States?

In the Code of Canon Law for the Latin Church can. 1248 says:

1. The precept of participating in the Mass is satisfied by assistance at a Mass which is celebrated anywhere in a Catholic rite either on the holy day or on the evening of the preceding day.

There are several things to consider.

First, has the Anglican priest and community actually been integrated into the Catholic Church, or are they still waiting?

Anglican orders are not recognized as valid.  Thus, when Anglican priests are received into the Church as priests, they are ordained to the priesthood.  No valid priesthood – no Mass – no fulfillment of the obligation.

Another point is, what are they celebrating?  I understand that when the Anglicans are integrated into the Roman Communion they have to make some adjustments to their liturgical rites in regard at least to the consecration of the Eucharist, etc.

Once the priest and group have been integrated into the Catholic Church, then a person can fulfill the Mass Obligation.

This is a different situation from, for example, the Society of St. Pius X (SSPX).  The SSPX has valid ordination and they are using what is obviously a Catholic rite for Mass.  A person can fulfill the Sunday and Holy Day Obligation by attending a Mass at an SSPX chapel.

Let us pray for a speedy process for both the traditionally-minded Anglicans as well as the swift reunification of the SSPX.

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