Rome June 2011 Conference on Perpetual Adoration

There will be a conference in Rome next June which some of you may desire to attend.

This conference intends to give impetus to the spread of Eucharistic Adoration.

Think about parishes where there is Eucharistic Adoration.  Isn’t it the case that good things usually happen in these places?

The First International Conference on Eucharistic Adoration will be held in Rome (Italy) from June 20 to June 23, 2011.

It looks as if the venue will be the Salesianum… ’cause it seems to be all Salesian all the time in Rome these days.  They would have done better at the much better situated Augustinianum, but that’s just my observation.

The conference was apparently announced by H.E. Most. Rev. Dominique Rey, Bishop of Frejus-Toulon in France.  You may recall that he supports a seminarians who desire both forms of the Roman Rite.  He also founded a group called the Missionaries of the Most Holy Eucharist.

The now usual suspects, very welcome and interesting usual suspects are involved, through the impetus seems to be coming from a new and real player in the European “new evangelization” track.

  • Cardinal Francis ARINZE, Emeritus Prefect of the Congregation of Divine Worship
  • Cardinal Raymond BURKE, Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura, Vatican City
  • Cardinal Antonio CAÑIZARES LLOVERA, Prefect for the Congregation of Divine Worship
  • Cardinal Malcolm RANJITH, Archbishop of Colombo, Sri Lanka, former Secretary of the Congregation for Divine Worship
  • Cardinal Mauro PIACENZA, President of the Congregation for the Clergy, Vatican City
  • Cardinal Peter TURKSON, President of the Pontifical Council Justice and Peace, Vatican City
  • Bishop Giovanni D’ERCOLE, Auxiliary Bishop of L’Aquila, Italy
  • Bishop D. José Ignacio MUNILLA – Bishop of San Sebastian, Spain
  • Bishop Dominique REY, Bishop of the Diocese of Frejus-Toulon, France
  • Bishop Athanasius SCHNEIDER, Auxiliary Bishop of Karaganda, Kazakhstan Fr Nicolas BUTTET, Founder of the Eucharistein Community, St-Maurice, Switzerland
  • Fr Mark KIRBY, Prior of the Diocesan Benedictine Monastery of Our Lady of the Cenacle in Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • Fr Florian RACINE , Founder of the Missionaries of the Most Holy Eucharist, Sanary, France
  • Mother Adela GALINDO, Foundress of the Servants of the Pierced Hearts of Jesus and Mary, USA
  • Sr. Joseph, Missionaries of Charity, Calcutta, India
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A Vortex Video about the need for true reform

Here is a video from Michael Voris.

What do you think?  On target?  Deluded?

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Pray for a priest’s father

A priest and blogger, Fr. Rob Johansen of Thrown Back has recently lost his father rather suddenly.

Please say a prayer for the repose of the soul of Robert Johansen, Sr.

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A note from a priest and a request for your prayers

I had to share this with the readership:

Thank you so much for “What does the prayer really sound like.” [HERE is the PRAYERCAzT for the 3rd Sunday of Advent.] I have been a priest for ten years now and I am trying to polish my Latin skills and learn the traditional Mass on my own. The audio on your website has been a great help. In seminary we took two years of classical Latin and thus I am very apprehensive about my pronunciation and so on. This was also years ago and now my Latin skills are terrible. I am very grateful for your willingness to help us priests who wish to learn the traditional rite. [My pleasure.  Many will be grateful to you in years to come.]

In addition, I confidentially ask for your prayers for us younger priests who are not supported in our willingness to serve the church using the older rite. My bishop has made it very clear that it is not welcome in this diocese, and most (actually all) of our priests have no interest in the older rite. To be very honest, I personally am so tired of Novus Ordo land and pray that God will guide me to serve the church and the liturgy as He best sees fit. However, it is a cross to carry as one easily feels isolated in this situation. One of my best priest friends celebrates TLM and I have seen the joy it has brought to his priesthood. If it is God’s will hopefully some day, and soon, I can get to that point. Whatever the consequences may be I will have to deal with. As for now, I do pray often the Breviarium Romanum and it has been a wonderful experience. God willing soon I can go out of my comfort zone and celebrate the Latin Mass even if privately. Thanks again for your wonderful presence on this website and know of my prayerful support in your ministry!

Hang in there, brother.  The time will come when your view will be normal.  It’ll take a while.  Be patient.  Think of how far we have come in just the last five years.

Dear readers, please remember in your prayer priests who are literally isolated or made to feel isolated because of their legitimate aspirations in favor of traditional liturgical worship.

St. Michael the Archangel,
defend us in battle.
Be our defense against the wickedness and snares of the Devil.
May God rebuke him, we humbly pray,
and do thou,
O Prince of the heavenly hosts,
by the power of God,
thrust into hell Satan,
and all the evil spirits,
who prowl about the world
seeking the ruin of souls. Amen.

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WDTPRS 3rd Sunday of Advent – Collect (200MR):

We are coming to the 3rd Sunday of Advent, also nicknamed Gaudete…. the plural imperative of gaudeo, “Rejoice!”.  This Sunday there is a relaxation of the penitential aspect of Advent.  Yes, Advent is a penitential time, though not so much as Lent.

Remember: Real priests wear rosacea.

In the first week of Advent we begged God for the grace of the proper approach and will for our preparation.  In the second week, we ask God for help and protection in facing the obstacles the world raises against us.  This Sunday we have a glimpse of the joy that is coming in our rose colored (rosacea) vestments, some use of the organ, flowers.  Christmas is near at hand.

COLLECT – (2002MR)
Deus, qui conspicis populum tuum nativitatis dominicae
festivitatem fideliter exspectare,
praesta, quaesumus,
ut valeamus ad tantae salutis gaudia pervenire,
et ea votis sollemnibus alacri laetitia celebrare
.

The infinitives in our Collect (expectare… pervenire… celebrare) give it a grand sound and alo sum up what we are doing in Advent.  L&S informs us that conspicio means, “to look at attentively, to get sight of, to descry, perceive, observe.” Alacer is, “lively, brisk, quick, eager, active; glad, happy, cheerful” and it is put in an unlikely combination with laetitia, “joy, especially unrestrained joyfulness”.  At the same time we also have votis sollemnibus. Votum signifies first of all, “a solemn promise made to some deity” (we have all made baptismal vows!) and also “wish, desire, longing, prayer”.  There is a powerful sentiment of longing in this prayer, God’s as well as ours.  Don’t fall into the trap of thinking that expecto is from ex- + pecto (pecto, “to comb”). You won’t find exspecto “look forward to”, in your L&S, but the etymological dictionary of Latin by Ernout and Meillet says it is from ex– + *specio, spexi, spectum or ex- +  spicio.  Therefore, it is a cousin of conspicio:  God “watches” over us and we “look” back at… er um… forward to Him.  This word play is clever.

LITERAL TRANSLATION:
O God, who attentively do watch Your people
look forward faithfully to the feast of the Lord’s birth,
grant, we entreat,
that we may be able to attain the to joys of so great a salvation
and celebrate them with eager jubilation in solemn festive rites.

LAME-DUCK ICEL (1973 translation of the 1970MR):
Lord God,
may we, your people,
who look forward to the birthday of Christ
experience the joy of salvation
and celebrate that feast with love and thanksgiving.

You decide.

With the last two week’s of “rushing” in our prayers and doing good works, we have now the added image of eager and unrestrained joy, an almost childlike dash towards a long-desired thing.

Have earthly fathers watched this scene all of a Christmas morning?

Even so should we be in our eager joy to perform good works under the gaze of a Father who watches us, a Father with a plan.

The lame duck ICEL version captures little of the impact of the Latin prayer, that is, God the Father is patiently watching his people as we go about the Advent business of doing penance and just works in joyful anticipation Christ’s coming.

A CORRECTED ICEL TRANSLATION (A):
O God, who see how your people
faithfully await the feast of the Lord’s Nativity,
enable us, we pray,
to attain the joys of so great a salvation,
and to celebrate them always
solemn worship and glad rejoicing
.

THE OTHER CORRECTED VERSION (B):
O God, who look upon your people
as they faithfully await the feast day  of the Lord’s birth,
strengthen us, we pray,
to reach the joys of so great a salvation,
and to celebrate them always
with solemn worship and glad rejoicing
.

Which of these last two is the better effort?  A or B?

Discuss.

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PODCAzT 112: Winter poems – corrected

Well… I went and did it again.  I made a PODCAzT.

And then I screwed up and posted the wrong audio file.   I have now corrected that.  Sorry.

I’m not going to say what’s in it other than that there are some poems.  You’ll know a most of the authors, think, but perhaps not the poems I chose.

They have to do with winter, … I’ll say that much.  Most do, anyway.

There is a very famous line in one of them, pertinent to today.

I just felt like reading some poetry. So I did.

113 10-12-12 More winter poems


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Stunningly dopey editorial

From the Catholic League comes a note about an example of extreme religious illiteracy… or is it just plain stupidity?

My emphases and comments.

MENORAH IS A RELIGIOUS SYMBOL

The Sun-Sentinel, a south Florida newspaper, has an editorial today criticizing the Catholic League for its claim that Christians are being discriminated against in Boca Raton: the City allows a menorah in public buildings, but not manger scenes. The editorial says, “local governments have been fairly consistent that nativity scenes are religious symbols that violate the separation of church and state when on public property, but [get this…] that secular symbols like menorahs and Christmas trees do not.”  [I think Christmas trees are religious symbols actually.  One could debate that.  But is there any question about a menorah? Really?  Do the editors of that newspaper not know what a menorah is?]

Catholic League president Bill Donohue responds:

This is the most remarkably ignorant editorial I have ever read on this subject. If what the Sun-Sentinel said were true, then there would be no nativity scenes on public property anywhere in the United States. In fact, they appear in State Capitols, Governors’ Mansions, outside municipal buildings, and in public parks. They even allow nativity scenes in Boca Raton’s Sanborn Square Park! On December 16, the Catholic League will display a life-size nativity scene on public property—it’s called Central Park—just as we have since the mid-1990s; Jews displayed the world’s largest menorah there over Hanukkah.

If the Sun-Sentinel were correct, then all of these crèches are illegal. I have a wager for them: tell those who share your ignorance to sue the Catholic League once we put our manger scene up in Central Park. And remind them to sue the New York City Parks Department as well—they granted us the permit.

Someone at the Sun-Sentinel needs to tell an Orthodox rabbi that a menorah is a secular symbol. They also need to educate the public: they should explain why a symbol that represents a miracle is considered secular in nature. And then they need to inform all federal judges that the Second Circuit erred when it said, in its 2006 ruling, Skoros v. City of New York, that “The Supreme Court and our sister circuits agree that the menorah is a religious symbol.” (My italic.)

Contact the paper’s editorial page editor, Antonio Fins:afins@sun-sentinel.com

Here is the Sun-Sentinel editorial.

Wow. Just wow.

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Iran: Christian convert to be executed

Pray, please, for our brother Christian Youcef, sentenced to be executed in Iran for converting to Christianity from the religion of peace.

Iran to execute Christian pastor for renouncing Islam
December 10, 2010

Youcef Nadarkhani, a 32-year-old Protestant pastor who became a Christian at the age of 19, has been sentenced to death for renouncing Islam. Nadarkhani maintains that he did not practice any faith before his conversion to Christianity.

The “draconian language in the verdict makes it very clear that the Iranian authorities mean business,” said Leonard Leo, chairman of the US Commission on International Religious Freedom. “He could be executed at any time. And for what? For being a Christian.”

“We call upon the Obama administration and the international community to use every means available, to raise this issue and demand the unconditional release of Mr. Nadarkhani.”

Nadarkhani’s attorney has appealed the verdict to the nation’s supreme court.

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, pray for us, pray for Youcef.

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WDTPRS: Collect – Friday of the 2nd Week of Advent

Wise and Foolish VirginsThe Collect for Friday of the 2nd Week of Advent.

This is an ancient prayer, found in the Gelasian Sacramentary among the prayers for Advent.

Concede, quaesumus, omnipotens Deus, plebi tuae
adventum Unigeniti tui cum summa vigilantia exspectare,
ut, sicut ipse docuit auctor nostrae salutis,
accensis lampadibus in eius occursum
vigilantes properemus
.

Exspecto means, basically, “await”.  But our fully-stocked Lewis & Short Dictionary shows that it means also “to look for with hope, fear, desire, expectation, to hope for, long for, expect, desire; to fear, dread, anticipate, apprehend.”

SLAVISH VERSION:
Grant, Almighty God, to Your people
to look
with the greatest vigilance for the Coming of your Only-Begotten,
so that, just as He, the author of our salvation himself, taught,
we wakeful may hasten, lamps alight,
toward His meeting
.

LAME-DUCK ICEL:
All-powerful God.
help us to look forward in hope
to the coming of our Savior.
May we live as he has taught,
ready to welcome him with burning love and faith
.

Hmmm… a prayer a Pelagian would be pleased to say.

2008 CORRECTED VERSION:
Grant your people, we pray, almighty God,
to keep wide awake for the coming of your Only Begotten Son,
that as he himself, the author of our salvation, has taught,
we may be alert, with lamps alight,
and hurry out to greet him as he comes
.

The image is that of the wise virgins in Matthew 25, which has a long association with Advent and Christmas.   During the Middle Ages the parable of the wise and foolish virgins was sometimes enacted as a mystery play in church before the celebration of the 1st Mass of Christmas.

And rightfully so.  We must be wakeful.  If we are not, knowing the stakes, we are criminally stupid.

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What is going on in China?

In all seriousness.

John Allen
, the nearly ubiquituous, fair-minded writer for the ultra-lefty NCR has a piece about what is going on in China.

Crackdown in China takes church ‘back to the time of Mao’
by John L Allen Jr on Dec. 10, 2010

By JOHN L. ALLEN JR.
Rome

New government pressures on the Catholic church in China, including the election of an illicitly ordained bishop as the new president of a government-controlled bishops’ conference, threaten to “turn the clock back to the times of Mao Zedong,” according to an influential Vatican China-watcher.

Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions Fr. Bernardo Cervellera, director of the “Asia News” agency and a longtime Vatican advisor on Chinese affairs, said Dec. 10 that the results of an early December assembly of Catholic groups recognized by the country’s Communist government, but not by the Vatican, “reaffirms the power of the Party over the church” and “risks reopening the wounds of division within the church.”

Though Cervellera does not hold an official Vatican position, his views on China are routinely consulted by Vatican diplomats, and often reflect the thinking of senior church officials.

There’s a widespread sense in Rome that recent events represent “the end of a spring” in China, in the words of an essay carried today on the front page of Corriere della Sera, Italy’s most influential daily, by Catholic writer Alberto Melloni. Just a year ago, Melloni noted, a thaw between Rome and Beijing seemed to be leading towards a gradual resolution of longstanding church/state tensions.

The latest row began Nov. 20, with the ordination of a new Chinese bishop, Guo Jincai, without approval of the pope.

Since the Communist rise to power in China in 1949, government policy had been to try to promote an “autonomous” Catholic church in the country, controlled not by Rome but a government-sponsored “Patriotic Association.” That policy led to a stark division between an “official” church in China which cooperated with the government, and a “catacombs” church which spurned Communist influence.

In recent years, the Vatican has worked toward rapprochement, encouraging bishops and clergy to come out into the open, while also pressing the government to respect the freedom of the church. That policy was expressed in a May 2007 “Letter to Chinese Catholics” from Pope Benedict XVI, which supported ending the division between an official and an underground church, while defining the government-controlled Patriotic Association and bishops’ conference as illegitimate.

In China, the letter was widely seen as as a signal of détente with the government.

The test case for whether the government would meet the Vatican halfway has always been seen as its willingness to defer to Rome on the selection of bishops, and in broad strokes that had seemed to be the recent policy: According to Melloni, ten of the last eleven Catholic bishops ordained in China were approved by Rome.

That, in turn, is why the Nov. 20 ordination was seen as a provocation.

The early December elections for leadership in the Patriotic Association and the government-controlled bishops’ conference seem certain to reinforce that impression. The new president of the bishops’ conference is Giuseppe Ma Yinglin of Yunnan, who was ordained without papal recognition. Another illicitly ordained bishop is among the vice-presidents, and Jincai is among the newly chosen vice-presidents of the Patriotic Association.

The new president of the Patriotic Association, Bishop Johan Fang Xinyao of Linyi, was ordained with papal approval, but is also seen as a figure willing to cooperate with the government authorities.

According to Cervellera, the presence of so many illicitly ordained bishops at the top of the country’s official Catholic agencies “raises the fear that from here on, it will be impossible to ordain pastors for China who are in communion with the Holy See.”

In effect, Cervellera said, it seems to be deliberate policy of the Chinese government “to want to create chaos in the church,” while also “extending the control of the Community Party over the entire official church.”

Other observers, however, suggest that the recent elections for the Patriotic Association and the bishops’ conference may represent a Pyrrhic victory for the government – a technical success but a PR failure, underscoring the lack of real religious freedom in China.

News reports, for example, suggest that several of the 64 “official” bishops who attended the meeting did so only under strong government pressure. According to a report in an Italian newspaper, one bishop apparently fled by car rather than attend the session and is now being sought to face criminal charges.

Another sign that Chinese Catholics at the grassroots are chafing at government pressure came in recent days in a seminary in Hebei, where a hundred seminarians protested against the nomination of a new vice-rector, a member of the Communist Party, by the local ministry for religious affairs. The reaction was so strong, according to local sources, the nomination had to be withdrawn.

Longtime China-watchers caution that it will take some time to see where church/state affairs actually stand in the wake of these new tensions. Relations between the Vatican and China have often been marked by a one-step-forward, one-step-back dynamic; both sides pride themselves on pragmatism, yet both have deep concerns about surrendering control of the local Catholic church to the other.

It’s possible, those China-watchers say, that the recent crackdown will be matched in the near future by some new gesture of reconciliation, intended to keep balance in the relationship with Rome.

In the meantime, however, most observers agree on one point: The new controversy has made a papal trip to China, long an ardent Vatican desire, seem even less likely as a near-term prospect.

I would love to see Benedict go to China, though I believe he already went to China, in the Nixonian sense, when he went to the UK.

Sad business.  Please, in your prayers, do not forget our brothers and sisters in China.

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