Ivory Coast: Stories of slaughter of Catholics by Muslim troops

I found this via Gateway Pundit:

Bumped: MUSLIM TROOPS SLAUGHTER 1,000 CATHOLICS IN IVORY COAST
Posted by Jim Hoft on Sunday, April 3, 2011, 10:22 PM

(UPDATED & BUMPED)
At least 1,000 Christians were slaughtered this week in at the Salesian Saint Teresa of the Child Jesus mission in Duekou, Ivory Coast by Muslim troops loyal to Alassane Ouattara. The state-run media has been slow to report the facts.

[…]

UPDATE: The Muslim troops slaughtered several hundred Catholics at at the sprawling Salesian Saint Teresa of the Child Jesus mission in Duekou.
Herald Scotland reported:

A massacre in a Roman Catholic mission compound in the heart of the Ivory Coast’s cocoa-producing region could come to be seen as a crucial moment in the West African state’s escalating civil war.

Reports are mounting of atrocities by both sides in the conflict ? those loyal to head of state Laurent Gbagbo, besieged in his presidential residence in Abidjan, Ivory Coast’s commercial capital, and those who follow northern leader and president-elect Allasane Ouattara.

Events at the Italian Salesian Roman Catholic mission in Duekoue increasingly echo a notorious church massacre during the Rwandan genocide in 1994.

Early reports suggested that more than 800 people, largely from the Gbagbo-supporting Gueré tribe, were killed in a single day at the sprawling Salesian Saint Teresa of the Child Jesus mission in Duekoue, 300 miles west of Abidjan towards the Liberian border. The attackers seem to have been largely soldiers descended from Burkina Faso immigrant Muslim families loyal to Ouattara.

Late yesterday the Roman Catholic charity Caritas said more than 1000 people were massacred in Duekoue. A Caritas spokesman said Caritas workers visited the town and reported seeing a neighbourhood filled with bodies of people who had been shot and hacked to death with machetes.

More at Libertarian Republican.

I hope there is more reporting about Ivory Coast and what is going on there.

Do any of you readers have links to solid reports?

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, pray for us.

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FSSP Instructional DVD for the TLM – reminder

I was sorting through some things around my cluttered work area and came up the instructional DVD prepared by the Fraternity of St. Peter to help seminarians and priests learn how to say Holy Mass in the Extraordinary Form.

I reviewed it extensively here.

I think every seminarian should have this DVD.  All young priests should get this DVD.  You good lay people out there… get this DVD for your seminarians and priests…. and bishops, come to think of it.

Posted in REVIEWS, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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Please read this, help a priest, and many priests and bishops through him

I want to bring to the attention of the readership an important development in our collective spiritual warfare.

Holy Souls Hermitage

A long-time, some-time participant here, Father George David Byers, CPM, has begun his life as a Hermit dedicated to the sanctification of bishops and priests in this life and their help in the next in purgatory.

Fr. Byers was kind enough to say Holy Mass for my intention today, and I was very touched by the gesture.   I am not sure how the liturgical chainsaw was used.

Fr. Byers has a his page going, Holy Souls Hermitage.  There is an important BENEFACTORS page.  There is plenty of information there for you to drop something in his worthy begging box.

As I do always, he prays for benefactors, who can help in categories:

He posted that someone gave him a box of altar breads for Mass.  And you have to love that “chain saw” category.

Also, it looks as if he might be able to take “Gregorian Masses”, which is a rare thing today.  I can take them once in a while.  They are intense.

Take part in Fr. Byers’ effort to pray for the sanctification of priests and bishops.  We need it.

Consider what he is doing in light of my “Save The Liturgy – Save the World” post.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Mail from priests, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged ,
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Rats in the Rectory – Redivivi

It looks as if in Macon, Georgia it may be time to pick up that Rituale Romanum again and flip to the part with the deprecatory prayers against rats.

Poor Fr. McDonald at Southern Orders is fighting off the rats again.  We have seen this before.

In your kindness say a prayer for the priests there.

Here is an excerpt from the Rituale for such an eventually:

Exorcism

I cast out you noxious vermin, by God + the Father almighty, by Jesus + Christ, His only-begotten Son, and by the Holy + Spirit. May you speedily be banished from our land and fields, [rectories, … chanceries, … I’m just sayin’ …. ] lingering here no longer, but passing on to places where you can do no harm. In the name of the almighty God and the entire heavenly court, as well as in the name of the holy Church of God, we pronounce a curse on you, that wherever you go you may be cursed, decreasing from day to day until you are obliterated. Let no remnant of you remain anywhere, except what might be necessary for the welfare and use of mankind. Be pleased to grant our request, you who are coming to judge both the living and the dead and the world by fire.

All: Amen.

The places infested are sprinkled with holy water.

UPDATE 2040 GMT:

The estimable Laudator picked up on this entry and added a fascinating bit of information I must share:

Cf. Geoponica 13.5 (tr. James George Frazer):

Take a sheet of paper and write on it as follows:—”I adjure you, ye mice here present, that ye neither injure me, nor suffer another mouse to do so. I give you yonder field” (here you specify the field, perhaps a neighbour’s) “but if I ever catch you here again, by the mother of the gods, I will rend you in seven pieces”; write this and stick the paper on an unhewn stone in the field before sunrise, taking care to keep the written side uppermost.

Otto Weinreich discusses this “Mäuseexorzismus der Geoponika” in his Ausgewählte Schriften III (Amsterdam: B.R. Grüner, 1979), pp. 43-45.

Both it and the exorcism from the Rituale Romanum (at least the part about “lingering here no longer, but passing on to places where you can do no harm”) are examples of epipompe, a method of getting rid of evil not by destroying it but by sending it somewhere else.

I had forgotten about epipompe.  Thanks for that reminder and lesson!

WDTPRS KUDOS to the Laudator.

UPDATE 2103 GMT:

If the rats weren’t bad enough, now there is an enormous bee hive to worry about.

The Rituale Romanum has a spiffy blessing for bees and bee hives, by the way.  Different bees.  Bees in boxes, etc.  You know what I mean.

And then there were the 60,000 bees, more or less, Dr. Maturin brought aboard HMS Lively in a glass hive and kept in the main cabin.  Which its one of the funniest bits in the series.

Posted in Fr. Z KUDOS, Linking Back | Tagged , , ,
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Reason #15749079 for Summorum Pontificum

Put your Say The Black – Do The Red coffee mug down and swallow your Mystic Monk Coffee beforebefore you turn this on.

How embarrassing.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM |
77 Comments

John Paul II – six years

Today is the sixth anniversary of the death of Ven. John Paul II.

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Baby Talk… no, it’s not about the lame-duck ICEL translation

Just in case you are one of the three people in the internet using universe who hasn’t yet seen this video – I hadn’t until this afternoon – enjoy.

The conversation is at the level of the lame-duck ICEL translation, but it is genuinely funny.

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged , ,
25 Comments

It’s restorative! It’s roborative! It’s enthralling for cats!

I had an email today from the Brothers of the Little Oratory in San Diego who have a blog.

They have received a shipment of Mystic Monk Coffee.

Their cats were ensorceled, mostly, though they both had to crawl into the box.

They need WDTPRS mugs, I think.

Those are just two of the photos.  Hijinx abounded.

Mystic Monk Coffee!   Refresh your coffee supply now and help the Carmelites in Wyoming.

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WDTPRS – Laetare Sunday (2002MR)

The nickname Laetare originated from the first word of the Introit chant for the today’s Mass, “Rejoice!”

On Laetare Sunday there is a slight relaxation of Lent’s penitential spirit, because today we have a glimpse of the joy that is coming at Easter, now near at hand.

As WDTPRS has explained before, the custom of rose vestments is tied to the Station churches in Rome. The Station for Laetare Sunday is the Basilica of the Holy Cross of Jerusalem where the relics of Cross and Passion brought from the Holy Land by St. Helena (+c. 329), mother of the Emperor Constantine (+337), were deposited. It was the custom on this day for Popes to bless roses made of gold, some amazingly elaborate and bejeweled, which were to be sent to Catholic kings, queens and other notables. The biblical reference is Christ as the “flower” sprung forth from the root of Jesse (Is 11:1 – in the Vulgate flos “flower” and RSV “branch”). Thus Laetare was also called Dominica de rosa…. Sunday of the Rose. It didn’t take a lot of imagination to develop rose colored vestments from this. Remember, the color of the vestments is called rosacea, not pink. This Roman custom spread by means of the Roman Missal to the whole of the world.

Our Collect is a new composition for the 1970MR and subsequent editions of the Novus Ordo based on a prayer in the Gelasian Sacramentary and a section of a sermon by St. Pope Leo I, the Great (+461). There is some similarity between this Collect with those of Advent. On the 2nd Sunday of Advent, we heard: in tui occursum Filii festinantes… “those hurrying to meet your Son.” On the 3rd Sunday (this Sunday’s fraternal twin Gaudete, the only other day for rose vestments) we heard: votis sollemnibus alacri laetitia celebrare…”, to celebrate…with eager jubilation by means of solemn offerings.” There is rosy anticipation in today’s Collect just as there was in Advent. Without further delay, here is the beautiful Latin followed immediately by the atrocious but happily lame-duck ICEL version.

COLLECT – LATIN TEXT (2002MR):
Deus, qui per Verbum tuum
humani generis reconciliationem mirabiliter operaris,
praesta, quaesumus, ut populus christianus
prompta devotione et alacri fide
ad ventura sollemnia valeat festinare.

Sollemnia is the neuter plural of the adjective sollemnis meaning “yearly”, that which is established to be done each year. In religious contexts, it comes out as “religious, festive”. As a substantive, it is “a religious or solemn rite, ceremony, feast, sacrifice, solemn games, a festival, solemnity”. Sollemne, the neuter noun, is also, “usage, custom, practice”. In legal contexts, it can be “formality”. In later, Christian Latin words related to sollemnis came to indicate the celebration of the Eucharist. Alacer is “lively, brisk, quick, eager, active; glad, happy, cheerful”. Promptus, a, um is from the verb promo. Promptus indicates, “brought to light, exposed to view” and by extension “at hand, i. e. prepared, ready, quick, prompt, inclined or disposed to or for any thing.”

WDTPRS LITERAL RENDERING:
O God, who by Your Word
wondrously effect the reconciliation of the human race,
grant, we beg, that the Christian people
may be able to hasten toward the upcoming solemnities
with ready devotion and eager faith.

NEW CORRECTED ICEL TRANSLATION:
O God, who through your Word
reconcile the human race to yourself in a wonderful way,
grant, we pray,
that with prompt devotion and eager faith
the Christian people may hasten
toward the solemn celebrations to come
.

Note the marvelous parings of alacer fides and prompta devotio … “eager faith” and “ready devotion”. We know that fides “faith” can refer to the supernatural virtue which is given to us in baptism and also to the content of what we believe. This content must be understood as both the things we can learn and memorize with love, but more importantly the divine Person whom we must learn and contemplate with love. There is a faith by which we believe, the virtue God gives us, and a faith in which we believe, the content of the Faith. On the other hand, whereas fides is a supernatural virtue, devotio is an “active” virtue according to St. Thomas Aquinas in the Summa Theologica. The Angelic Doctor wrote: “The intrinsic or human cause of devotion is contemplation or meditation. Devotion is an act of the will by which a man promptly gives himself to the service of God. Every act of the will proceeds from some consideration of the intellect, since the object of the will is a known good; or as Augustine says, willing proceeds from understanding. Consequently, meditation is the cause of devotion since through meditation man conceives the idea of giving himself to the service of God” (STh II-II 82, 3). The Jesuit preacher Louis Bourdaloue (1632-1704) underscored devotion as especially “a devotion to duty”. What we do, including our “devotions”, must help us keep the commandments of God and stick to the duties of one’s state in life before all else. There is an interplay between our devotions and our devotion.

Each of us has a state in life, a God-given vocation we are duty bound to follow.

We must be devoted to that state in life, and the duties that come with it, as they are in the here and now. That “here and now” is important. We must not focus on the state we had once upon a time, or wish we had, or should have had, or might have someday: those are unreal and misleading fantasies that distract us from reality and God’s will. If we are truly devoted and devout (in the sense of the active virtue) to fulfilling the duties of our state as it truly is here and now, then God will give us every actual grace we need to fulfill our vocation. Why can we boldly depend on God to help us? If we are fulfilling the duties of our state of life, then we are also fulfilling our proper roles in His great plan, His design from before the creation of the universe. God is therefore sure to help us. And if we are devoted to our state as it truly is, then God can also guide us to a new vocation when and if that is His will for us. Faithful in what we must do here and now, we will be open to something God wants us to do later.

This attachment to reality and sense of dutiful obedience through the active virtue devotio is a necessary part of religion in keeping with the biblical principle in 1 John 2:3-5:

“And by this we may be sure that we know Him, if we keep His commandments. He who says ‘I know Him’ but disobeys His commandments is a liar, and the truth is not in him; but whoever keeps his word, in him truly love for God is perfected. By this we may be sure that we are in Him: he who says he bides in Him ought to walk in the same way in which He walked.”

LAME-DUCK ICEL (1973 translation of the 1970MR):
Father of peace,
we are joyful in your Word,
your Son Jesus Christ,
who reconciles us to you.
Let us hasten toward Easter
with the eagerness of faith and love.

This makes you want to pound your head against the table.

What would happen if we translated the ICELese back into Latin? If the ICEL were accurate, you might expect some similarities, right?

WARNING: Do not attempt this at home. Spiritual harm and damage to property can be caused by thinking about these ICEL versions. Leave this sort of thing to trained professionals and people with tough foreheads.

LATIN REVERSION of the LAME-DUCK ICEL:
Pater pacis,
in tuo Verbo, Iesu Christo filio tuo,
qui nos tibi reconciliat, laetamur.
Fidei studio et amoris
ad diem Paschalis festinemus.

Let’s see the

GOOGLE TRANSLATOR MACHINE VERSION:
O God, who by your word
reconciliation of the human race dost wonderfully,
grant, we beseech Thee, that the Christian people
with ready devotion and eager faith
the formalities to come to the be able to hurry up
.

Oookaayyy… ‘nuf said about that, I think.

Posted in LENT | Tagged ,
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Do we need Summorum Pontificum and the Corrected Translation? You decide.

A study in contrasts.

And…

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The future and our choices |
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