Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, pray for us!

Today is the Feast of Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, martyrs!  Hurray!

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, pray for us in our time of political correctness run amok.  Intercede for us in this time of fear and tension.   Ask God to grant us courage and perspicacity in our daily lives when confronted with conflicts about the burning issues of our time.

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia

Saints Nunilo and Alodia were 9th c. virgin martyrs in Huesca, Spain.  They were born to a Muslim father and Christian mother.  However, they chose their mother’s Christianity.

And so during the Emirate of Abd ar-Rahman II it came to pass that these little girls were first put in a brothel and then were executed as apostates according to Sharia law.

Posted in Saints: Stories & Symbols, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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Anglican Archbp. Williams wants a joint commission to oversee Anglican conversions

A reader alerted me to the following story from the Telegraph:

Archbishop of Canterbury moves to flush out Anglicans plotting to defect to Rome

The Archbishop of Canterbury moved last night to counter secret plotting [!] among disaffected Anglicans who are planning to defect to Rome.

By Tim Ross, Religious Affairs Editor

In a surprise announcement, Dr Rowan Williams [Anglican Archbp. of Canterbury] said he wanted to establish a new joint group of Roman Catholic and Church of England figures to oversee the conversion process.  [A joint commission?  Cui bono?  Would this commission help to… what… transfer property?]

The proposed group would be designed to enable smooth and less painful transition for those who want to leave the Church of England to become Roman Catholics in protest at the ordination of women bishops.

It would also bring into the open the negotiations between disaffected Anglicans and the Vatican which have been taking place in secret for months.  [The title of the article suggests that this is the main purpose: identify in advance those who are thinking about transferring their flags.]

Dr Williams’s suggestion came in his first public remarks since a parish in Kent and a London bishop announced their intention to accept the Pope’s offer to convert to Roman Catholicism.

Last Friday, St Peter’s church in Folkestone and the Bishop of Fulham, the Rt Rev John Broadhurst, disclosed their plans to join the so-called English Ordinariate, a new body proposed by the Vatican as a home for disaffected Anglicans.

At least two more bishops are widely rumoured to be planning to join the Ordinariate when it is established next year, but their negotiations with Rome are taking place behind closed doors.

Neither Lambeth Palace nor the Roman Catholic authorities in England and Wales know the extent of the numbers of Anglicans who are likely to switch allegiance.

Under Pope Benedict XVI’s plan, Anglicans would be able to move into full communion with Rome while at the same time preserving some of their traditions and heritage.  [Perhaps Dr. Williams is edging closer to issuing Romanorum coetibus?]

In an interview with The Hindu newspaper, while on a trip to India, Dr Williams spoke of his frustration at the Pope’s decision to announce the Ordinariate to the public with little prior warning a year ago.

“I was very taken aback that this large step was put before us without any real consultation. And it did seem to me that some bits of the Vatican didn’t communicate with other bits,” he said.

“It caused some ripples because I think there was a widespread feeling that it would have been better to consult.  [Boo. Hoo.]

“As this is now being implemented, we are trying to make sure that there is a joint group which will keep an eye on how it’s going to happen. In England, the relations between the Church of England and Roman Catholic Bishops are very warm and very close. I think we are able to work together on this and not find it a difficulty.”

It is understood that neither the Church of England nor the Roman Catholic authorities in England and Wales have yet agreed to Dr Williams’s proposal for a joint group to oversee the Ordinariate.

In the interview, Dr Williams acknowledged that the ordination of homosexuals and women as bishops threatened to create “deeper divisions” within the world-wide Anglican Communion.

I feel that we may yet have to face the possibility of deeper divisions,” he said.  [D’ya think?  When doctrine can be voted up or down, when prevailing societal trends are the wind in your sails, what else is going to happen?]

“I don’t at all like, or want to encourage, the idea of a multi-tier organisation. But that would, in my mind, be preferable to complete chaos and fragmentation. It’s about agreeing what we could do together.”

Perhaps such a joint committee could be useful in working out the details of transferal of ownership of property?   I don’t know how those things get worked out in England, where the state church is the Church of England.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged ,
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BLOG RENEWAL: mobile theme

I have had a few notes from readers complaining about the mobile theme view of the blog.

I have tried a couple different solutions in the last month.  For the most part, they work pretty well for me.

I am willing to try another solution, such as WPtouch 2.0, … which isn’t free, btw.  Pitch in if you want me to try a new mobile theme solution.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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Followers of Fr. Feeney recently reconciled!

A reader alerted me this.  It is significant enough to let everyone know about it. This is from 14 October!

For your Brick by Brick file.

All friends and supporters of Saint Benedict Center are hereby informed that Father David Phillipson has been appointed to serve at Saint Benedict Center, Richmond. Father has been granted faculties by the Bishop of Manchester to offer Mass and hear confessions at the Center’s Immaculate Heart of Mary Chapel. Please join the Brothers and Sisters, Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, in our gratitude to Bishop McCormack for approving our chapel as a place of Catholic worship and for allowing Father Phillipson to serve here.

This concerns some of the descendants of the followers of Fr. Feeney who had not yet been reconciled with the Church.

Te Deum.

Posted in Brick by Brick | Tagged , ,
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Blogs You Might Consider

I like Catholic bloggers who work and play well with other bloggers.  Some don’t, you know.

Here are three who have lately caught my eye.

  • Les Femmes – The Truth – What man isn’t going to give that mystery a shot?  Okay, so it’s a little different than what you think.  Fine.  Look anyway.
  • Love In The Ruins – Which title reminded me of the title of a novel by a very fine author.
  • Cowgirl’s Country Life – Holy Cow!  This gal can cook!  I am tempted to make a pilgrimage.  Years ago I did a little of her style of cooking, but she has command of the methods.

Go spike their stats and enjoy.

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QUAERITUR: Is the SSPX just being stubborn?

From a reader:

Why is the SSPX still not in union with Rome? Especially with groups
like the FFSP what problem do they still have with us? They could
unite with Rome, and still basically continue as usual. Am I missing
something big? Are they just being stubborn?

Well.. yes.  They are being stubborn!

It is of the essence of being traditional and being a Christian to be stubborn, by the way.  We have some other, fancy words for “stubborn” when speaking about fidelity to doctrine and our identity, but “stubborn” will do for the sake of this entry.

StubbornnessChristians are stubborn in the face of all sorts of things the world has to offer.  And the SSPX would say they are being stubborn about those very same things, for they fear, or think, or have the suspicion that some of those worldly things have been embraced by the Church in a way that is contrary to her God-given mission.

There are various concrete issues over which members of the SSPX and formally manifest members of the Catholic Church will dispute.  And I use that distinction of “manifest” in there because I believe SSPXers are members of the Church who are to one degree or another either separate from formal unity with the Church’s duly appointed shepherds (including the Bishop of Rome) or who are progressively getting closer or farther from that unity.  But that is another discussion.

There are various concrete issues they will want to discuss.  Some of which could be resolved with the stroke or two of a papal pen (such as the lifting of the excommunications incurred by Archbp. Lefevbre and the SSPX bishops in 1988 or the expansion of the use of the Roman Rite as it was in 1962).  Other issues are thornier and will take hard work and humility to resolve.

For the sake of putting it in a nutshell, the people in the SSPX think or wonder (sometimes very strongly and out loud) or simply assert that something bad happened during the Second Vatican Council.  The documents produced by that Council – along with everything that followed from those documents – were tainted which modernism, or immanentism.   To make that even more concise, they think that the spirit of and even the letter of the documents of the Council may be more man-centered than God-centered or Christ-centered, anthropocentric rather than Christocentric.

They are stubborn about having it out with authorities in Rome over a whole raft of questions that eventually go back to whether or not the documents of the Second Vatican Council caved into modernity, lack a focus on God, and, thereby, stray from a proper understanding of Tradition.  The SSPX wants to work out theological problems before there can be other questions about formal unity within the structure of the Church.  They are being stubborn about that.

In trying to work things out with the SSPX, Rome has undertaken some theological discussions which will have to touch on the essential questions behind the other issues, such as that of “religious liberty” and to what extent the Council’s document on religious liberty may have changed the Church’s teaching.

In some ways the stubbornness of the SSPX is laudable.  It is laudable if they are really interested in getting at the truth and not just in getting their way, as if they alone are arbiters of what is Catholic.    But there are ways in which their stubbornness it is not laudable.  Otherwise their priests and bishops would not be suspended from acting as priests and bishops and there would not be discussions with the view of their reconciliation. The separation is stretching out and there is an increasing danger of a real schism.

When you can’t hear Peter say you are in unity with him, and when that is a question on the table, then you may be in serious trouble.  Be stubborn all you want, but at the end of the day Christ entrusted his Church to Peter and Peter’s successors.  We can’t both remain Catholic and remain separated from Peter for a long time.

That said, the SSPX has hammered away at some theological questions that really do deserve attention and answers!  In the interest of the truth, one way or another, we need to have clarity about some aspects of the Council’s documents which over the years have proven to be troubling and controversial.

My view is that when it comes to most of the theological questions that the SSPX wants to raise about the Council, since the Council never intended from the beginning to issue any new dogmatic statements, and since some of the things the Council dealt with (such as religious liberty) are really hard questions about which people of good will can disagree, there are very few reasons why some structure could not be provided for them within the Church.  After all, the followers of Fr. Feeney, who held to a very strict interpretation of the difficult to understand extra ecclesiam nulla salus, were reconciled without having to recant their positions.  If they, why not the SSPX?

The question that looms, however, is this:

Have they gone their own way for so long that they simply don’t want to obey? Are they actually willing to submit to the Vicar of Christ?  Or will they be stubborn?

On the side of the Church, of course, there must be a genuine openness to receive the questions the SSPX will want to raise and then work through them to find answers.

Popes, by the way, are the most stubborn Christians of all.  It is their special role in the Church to say “No.”, all the time.  Thanks be to God.  Don’t be surprised when you propose something against what he wants to happen if he says “No.”.

Moreover, consider when the SSPX is trying to defend over an opposed to what dissidents in the Church are trying to accomplish… rather… trying to tear apart.

Dissidents, and you can make your own list, will tear at the Church’s cult, code and creed very often with impunity in schools, parishes and in dioceses.  Meanwhile, people who want nothing more than to uphold the tradition we have received from our forebears regarding cult, code and creed are often identified by duly appointed pastors as being the dangerous ones, they who must be repressed, they who are making trouble.  Sometimes they bring this on themselves by being jerks, but that is an issue for a different entry.

Never mind that while in parishes far and wide there is crazy preaching from pulpits, poor catechism, and wacky liturgy, it is the SSPXers or other traditionalists within the Church who are regarded with suspicion even though they stick to the liturgical books and virtually never depart from what you could find in the Roman Catechism, the Baltimore Catechism or the Catechism of the Catholic Church.

In the final analysis liberals and dissidents will always give ecclesiastical authorities far more headaches through their heterodoxy and disobedience. They, however, get and keep parishes and schools and top notch positions while the more traditionally-minded occasionally get a handful of dirt.

I have in mind, for example, a diocese in which the more traditional Catholics and their priests would quite literally go to the wall to back the bishop in good initiatives for which he is taking heat, but liberal priests actually attack him in public, even in newspapers.  One of these days, bishops are going to figure this out and start going to the wall for the faithful in their flocks.

That will be a grand day indeed, on which I shall sing Non nobis.

Thing are going to change.  It is a matter of demographics and the inexorable grace of God.

Benedict XVI is. furthermore, the Pope of Christian Unity.

Posted in ASK FATHER Question Box, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Pope of Christian Unity, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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A really old thing!

For the first time in a while I found something useful on the site of the National Catholic Fishwrap!

Headline:  Oldest and most distant object in the universe discovered

No, this isn’t about Richard McBrien or even Joan Chittister.

Fishwrap is referring to a story in The Daily Mail about how astronomers using a big telescope have spotted a galaxy so far away that it has taken 13.1 billion years for its light to reach us.  That means that we are now seeing the galaxy as it was 13.1 billion years ago, or when it was only 600 million years old.

After reading about that galaxy far far away…. I also learned about a really cool green comet!

Hmmm… that’s portentous.

I don’t know what effect this will have on The Vortex.

I must have some …

[CUE MUSIC]

.Mystic Monk… Mystic Monk coffee and ponder this portentous news.

When you’ve had a hard day trying to figure out why people still pay attention to really old liberals, … and when you figure out you’ve just fallen into the trap of caring what they think and could kick yourself for driving traffic to their site … have a nice piping hot mug of Mystic Monk Coffee.

That’s right!  With Mystic Monk Coffee, you’ll soon get rid of that nasty metallic taste left after reading that paper and replace it with sumptuous java goodness provided by… you know it… real live monks!

Refresh your supply now!

Mystic Monk Coffee.

It’s swell!

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged
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Today is the vigil!

This is the vigil of the Feast of Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, martyrs!

Are you getting ready to have some paella?  Perhaps Cardinal Mendoza brandy?

Posted in Lighter fare, Saints: Stories & Symbols | Tagged
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Getting from Washington DC to Rome

I noticed that the annual fall plenary session of the USCCB will be held 15-18 November.

But there will be consistory in Rome immediately thereafter. The Cardinals are supposed to be present, at least. It is a consistory after all.

Doesn’t leave them a lot of time to get from Washington D.C. to Rome and changed into the special clothes.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes | Tagged
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NPR fired Juan Williams

National Public (Liberal) Radio has fired commentator and columnist Juan Williams for remarks he made about Muslims.

Part of the story from NPR:

NPR News has terminated the contract of longtime news analyst Juan Williams after remarks he made on the Fox News Channel about Muslims.

Williams appeared Monday on The O’Reilly Factor, and host Bill O’Reilly asked him to comment on the idea that the U.S. is facing a dilemma with Muslims. [It is, isn’t it?]

O’Reilly has been looking for support for his own remarks on a recent episode of ABC’s The View in which he directly blamed Muslims for the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Co-hosts Joy Behar and Whoopi Goldberg walked off the set in the middle of his appearance. [Thereby raising the quality of the show exponentially.]

Williams responded: “Look, Bill, I’m not a bigot. You know the kind of books I’ve written about the civil rights movement in this country. But when I get on the plane, I got to tell you, if I see people who are in Muslim garb and I think, you know, they are identifying themselves first and foremost as Muslims, I get worried. I get nervous.”

[…]

Is that out of line?   It certainly isn’t out of step with what a lot of normal people think.  Is that the problem?  NPR is out of step with what normal people think?

Mennonites, by the way, also dress in distinctive garb because of religious tenets.  So far Mennonites haven’t done much to make us wonder if they are going to try to blow up the airplane.  I could say the same about Hasidim and Buddhist monks, whom I have also seen on airplanes.  Since it is a little harder to identify members of the sect called the LCWR – unless you can spot their lapel pin and get a look at their shoes – we probably won’t worry about them being on our airplanes.

Posted in Throwing a Nutty | Tagged ,
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