Catholic hospitals closing because of Obamacare. Sr. Keehan tries to hide the story

The other day I posted a little entry about how the “Magisterium of Nuns” is making war on the American bishops.  The liberal sisters, who have compromised their Catholic identity, are trying to set up an alternative magisterium over and against that of the actual duly appointed shepherds.

In the debate about Obamacare, for example, the LCWR types and the Sr. Keehan types provided cover so that pro-abortion “catholic” politicians could vote in favor of legislation that, down the pike, would provide federal funding of abortion.

Take a look at this from CatholicVote with my emphases:

The bad consequences of Obamacare are on full display in Pennsylvania, but the lessons that the situation provides should motivate us all into taking action nationwide.

Jeffrey Lord at American Spectator has done us all a service by calling attention to the scandal in PA:

Can you say “October Surprise”? A mushrooming political battle over ObamaCare involving the White House, two incumbent Pennsylvania congressmen, three Catholic hospitals and a nun has just exploded in, of all places, Scranton, Pennsylvania. Charges from the Scranton medical community of intimidation by the Obama White House and its allies are filling the air.

It is a long, complex story, which I encourage you to read, but I’ll summarize as briefly as I can:

  • 3 Scranton-area Catholic Hospitals are shutting down because of Obamacare regulations that are set to go into effect soon. The CEO of the hospitals, Kevin Cook, is on record saying Obamacare is “absolutely” responsible for their painful decision to shut down. There’s a strong posibility the hospitals will be sold to a secular organization which would perform procedures against Catholic teaching. In other words, it is becoming more and more difficult for Catholics to have access to ethical health care.
  • Sr. Carol Keehan – the nun and President of the Catholic Health Association, who famously received a “thank you pen” from President Obama for her work in turning Catholic congressman to give up their opposition to Obamacare, has been trying to bully Kevin Cook into changing his story about why his hospitals are closing, because she knows what a political powder keg the headline “Catholic hospitals closing because of Obamacare” will be in this critical election season
  • CatholicVote has entered the fray: we’ve recorded a powerful radio ad to air in the Scranton market, so that Catholics and other citizens can know about the harmful consequences of Obamacare in their own district. Congressmen Paul Kanjorski and Chris Carney both voted for Obamacare, and both are facing tough challenges from pro-life alternatives this November.

Here’s what you can do to help our mission to educate Catholics and other citizens about the harmful consequences of Obamacare, and about the need to elect responsible, pro-life representatives….

1. Watch the ad

2. Help us with a small (or large!) donation so we can buy airtime for the ad by clicking HERE.

3. Share this message with your friends and family!

I believe this story is important because it shows in real-life terms that the flawed legislation pushed through Congress and signed into law by President Obama is already hurting the quality of health care offered in this country, and especially hurting Catholic hosptials. It is therefore especially scandelous that some high-profile Catholics, such as Sister Keehan, continue to attempt to obfuscate the truth of the matter because of ideological commitments. Again, I would encourage you to read Jeffrey Lord’s full exposition of this story.

Let’s stop what is happening in PA from happening to other Catholic hospitals across our country!

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, Our Catholic Identity, The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
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Mantilla giveaway

It would be nice to see greater use by women of the chapel veil or mantilla.  While the chapel veil is no longer obligatory according to the canon law for of the Latin Church (I have written about that several times.  Here for example.), it is still a venerable custom and adds to the decorum for of the service.

From a reader:

Kelly from The Careless Catholic is having a giveaway on her blog, and the winner receives one of my crocheted mantillas! Be sure to visit her blog at http://www.thecarelesscatholic.com/2010/10/mantilla-monday-my-very-first-giveaway.html for your chance to be the winner!

Posted in The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged ,
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Lansing, MI: New TLM community has first Mass with Bp. Boyea

From a reader:

I have some news for your Brick by Brick File.

Today was the official opening Mass of the Blessed John XXIII Community at the Cathedral in Lansing Michigan, in the Extra-ordinary Form.

Bishop Boyea, Ordinary of Lansing, celebrated the Mass, with the chaplain of the community and another priest in choro. The Crypt of the Cathedral was overflowing with people, and there were many many young families with more than four children in attendance.

The Community was founded just recently (the first Mass was three weeks ago) partly because of Summorum Pontificum, and also partly because of requests of the faithful of Lansing.

Bishop Boyea has been known to be extremely favorable to the EF, having celebrated the EF in Detroit when he was Auxiliary Bishop of Detroit.

Today’s date was selected because it coincides with the founding of another Latin Mass Community in the diocese.

The Community’s website is: www.getholy.com  Please pray for the growth of our new Community and for spiritual growth of it’s members.

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MUGS GONE WILD! Mystic Monk and, wait for it, … maniple edition

A reader sent this:

This is inspired by recent posts. And that maniple is in my house so I can make a pattern.  It will soon rejoin the full set.

To My Burying Priest:

Say the Black and Do the Red,
Tie this on when I am dead.
To purge my soul free of gunk
Pray often and early with Mystic Monk!

maniple, mystic monk, mug

It is nice to see all three, mug, maniple, and Mystic Monk in one photo.   The reader is clearly making a set of vestments which will include a maniple, and wants her own funeral with black vestments.  Excellent.

I am very pleased at this flowering of monasticism in an area where I spent time when I was young. This is very good news for everyone. And so …

[CUE MUSIC]

When you’ve had a hard day of making maniples and thinking about your own death, sharpen your focus on mortality with  …

… Mystic Monk Coffee!

That’s right! With Mystic Monk, you’ll be able to thread needles more easily and contemplate your own demise all while enjoying a great cup of coffee, supporting the monks and helping Fr.  Z!

Tick… tick… tick…. Refresh that supply now!

Mystic Monk!

It’s swell!

Posted in Lighter fare |
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When in Newark…

… find a procession!

I went for the afternoon and evening to find a priest friend in Newark.

There was a procession tonight at Our Lady of Mount Carmel for the Peruvian community in honor of El Senor de los Milagros, in Lima.

First we visited the cathedral.  Being with one of the priests of the diocese, and one who knew the cathedral well, we were able to look around pretty well.   I think the Cathedral of Newark my be the most beautiful cathedral church in the USA.

I am sure many of you know this church.  Here is a view most of you will never see.  A panoramic view from the pulpit.

Newark

Newark

Then off to Our Lady of Mount Carmel.

Newark

Newark

Newark

Newark

Newark

Newark

And some video…

Well… if I can get it converted, I’ll add it.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged ,
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Stemma Papale

When the Holy Father is in Rome on Sundays he usually will give his Angelus address from a window of his residence in the Apostolic Palace.  From the window sill there will drape a tapestry with the Pope’s coat-of-arms, or stemma.

On Sunday a new stemma papale was seen.

Thanks to Rinascimento sacro for the images.

stemma

stemma

stemma

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged ,
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“Why do bad things happen to ‘good’ people?”

Here is a worthy entry over at Serviam, which I thought good to pass along as food for your own examination of conscience.  My emphases:

There is another excellent piece over at The Integrated Catholic Life this morning.  This one is penned (keyboarded) by Dr. Peter Kreeft and deals with the subject of evil.  When people have asked me why an all-loving God allows good things to happen to good people, I have always said three things:

  • So that a greater good can come from it.
  • Our goal is not to be comfortable on Earth but to respond to each day as God desires us to so that we can be comfortable with Him in heaven.
  • Faith seeks understanding, it does not require it.

Dr. Kreeft poses several questions and addresses them and points out that “hell is a result of God’s love,” but I was struck in particular by this:

First, who’s to say we are good people? The question should be not “Why do bad things happen to good people?” but “Why do good things happen to bad people?” If the fairy godmother tells Cinderella that she can wear her magic gown until midnight, the question should be not “Why not after midnight?” but “Why did I get to wear it at all?” The question is not why the glass of water is half empty but why it is half full, for all goodness is gift. The best people are the ones who are most reluctant to call themselves good people. Sinners think they are saints, but saints know they are Sinners. The best man who ever lived once said, “No one is good but God alone.

Read the entire piece here.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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Same-sex attraction doesn’t justify redefining marriage

Here is a CNA story that cuts to the chase.

My emphases and comments:

Same-sex attraction doesn’t justify redefining marriage, Minnesota bishops explain

St. Paul, Minn., Oct 10, 2010 / 07:44 am (CNA).- The Catholic bishops of Minnesota have issued a brief statement on marriage, saying that having same-sex attractions does not deprive anyone of basic human rights but also does not create the right to “marry” someone of the same sex.

The bishops’ catechetical statement, published in The Catholic Spirit on Thursday, urged the state government, all Catholics and those of good will in Minnesota to support marriage.

A constitutional amendment clearly defining marriage as a union of one man and one woman would be one practical measure, but redefining marriage and legitimizing same-sex unions would work against the “socially vital goal” to support marriage between one man and one woman, the bishops said.  [A redefinition of marriage would tear at the most fundamental bonds of society.]

Their catechesis also countered the claim that maintaining the definition of marriage as a man-woman union is discriminatory against homosexuals.

“Persons with same-sex attractions are our sisters and brothers, [NB:] and their same-sex attraction does not define them as persons nor deprive them of their authentic human rights, including the most fundamental rights of all — the right to life and the right to love,” the bishops said. “Consequently, we oppose any discrimination against persons based on their having a same-sex attraction.” [A key word there is “authentic”.  It cannot be argued that a homosexual civil union is a “human right”.  Something contrary to the will of God can be a “human right”.  Humans by their free will have the “right” so to speak, to chose to go against God’s will or to act against nature.  But free will pure and simple isn’t the ground for establishing a human right.]

However, meeting “authentic human needs” does not require changing the legal definition of marriage or creating a marriage-like status for those with same-sex attractions.  [Not just “marriage”, but also other sorts of homosexual “unions”.]

“As pastoral leaders within the state of Minnesota, we believe that efforts to bestow legal recognition on same-sex unions are mistaken,” they continued, saying it is “erroneous” to think that a “committed homosexual relationship” is a human right and can be legitimately defined as a marriage. [Ditto.]

“The specific privileges granted to married persons by the state are not granted for the personal advantage of spouses [Ditto:…] but to advance the common good,” they wrote. While protecting people from discrimination advances the common good, not recognizing a same-sex union as a marriage is not discrimination “because it does not deny a basic human right.”

The “natural right to love another and to marry” is limited significantly by the nature of the human person and the nature of the institution of marriage, the prelates explained.

In their catechesis Minnesota’s Catholic bishops also discussed Catholic teaching on marriage.

Based on God’s Word given in divine revelation, we believe that marriage creates a sacred bond between spouses. We hold this to be true not only for ourselves, but for all humanity,” they stated. [One should make an argument from nature as well, no?]

The bishops said that God willed marriage to mirror his love for the human family, underlining that Jesus raised marriage to “the dignity of a sacrament” and made it a sign of his sacrificial love revealed on the cross.

“(M)arriage is a constant reminder of God’s love for the human race, as well as a reflection of the permanent, faithful, and fruitful bond of love between Christ and the church,” their statement continued, citing the Manhattan Declaration as an indication that this perspective is shared by non-Catholic Christians and others.

Noting the “universally recognized” importance of stable marriages for the education and formation of children and the “obvious and intimate connection between the conjugal act and conception,” the bishops said that marriage is a public matter that is part of the common good. [Closer to the argument from nature.]

“Both faith and reason agree, then, that marriage is an institution central to the life of human society,” they continued. “The committed relationship between one man and one woman calls forth the best of the spouses, not only for their own sake, but also for the well-being of their children and for the advancement of the common good. It is neither possible for us to change the definition of marriage nor wise to attempt to do so.”

For further reading, the bishops recommended the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ website www.usccb.org/defenseofmarriage.

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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WDTPRS Collect 20th Sunday after Pentecost: “to live with a mind and conscience quiet”

This ancient Collect is found without variation in the Liber Sacramentorum Gellonensis, written perhaps in Meaux, near Paris, between 790-800. The Gellone Sacramentary, which has Frankish influences, is a strand in the complicated web of manuscripts descending from what we called the Gelasian Sacramentary, the source of so many of our ancient prayers found in the Roman Missal.  The Gellone seems to have been an attempt at a complete book for liturgical services.

COLLECT (1962MR)
Largire, quaesumus, Domine,
fidelibus tuis indulgentiam placatus et pacem:
ut pariter ab omnibus mundentur offensis,
et secura tibi mente deserviant
.

The pattern indulgentiam [X] et pacem reminds me of the post-Conciliar formula for absolution of sins spoken by the priest in regular auricular confession: Deus, Pater misericoridiarum… indulgentiam tribuat et pacem.   I found the same patter in ancient prayers with various verbs inserted in the X spot, such as tribuas and also consequatur as well as largiatur or largiaris.

Our prayers very often include requests for pardon, that God forgive our sins.   We ask for absolutio, remissio, indulgentia and in liturgical language we use verbs like largiri, tribuere, conferre, and as the priest speaks to God, he describes Him in terms of propitius, propitiatus, and placatus.

Largire looks like an infinitive but is really an imperative form of the deponent largior, “to give bountifully, to lavish, bestow, dispense, distribute, impart… to confer, bestow, grant, yield”.

The adjective securus, a, um, which the mighty Lewis & Short Dictionary says means first and foremost “free from care, careless, unconcerned, untroubled, fearless, quiet, easy, composed” is understandably found in conjunction with the Last Judgment.  We wish to be “free from anxiety” when see the Just Judge coming.  Think of the line in the sequence Dies irae used during Requiem Masses: “Quid sum miser tunc dicturus?  Quem patronum rogaturus? Cum vix iustus sit securus.  … What am I, a wretch, to say then? what patron am I to beseech? When the just man is scarely free from care [about his salvation – ]”.  Remember also from the Ordinary of the Mass after the Lord’s Prayer (my emphases): Libera nos, quaesumus, Domine, ab omnibus malis, da propitius pacem in diebus nostris, ut, ope misericordiae tuae adiuti, et a peccato simus semper liberi et ab omni perturbatione securi: exspectantes beatam spem et adventum Salvatoris nostri Jesu Christi… which in the new ICEL version approved by Rome will sound like this:

“Deliver us, Lord, we pray, from every evil, graciously grant peace in our days, that, by the help of your mercy, we may be always free from sin and safe from all distress, as we await the blessed hope and the coming of our Savior, Jesus Christ.”

Placo is “to appease, render favorable”, and is also connected with gifts (munera, dona) or sacrifice (immolatio).  Deservio is not simply “to serve”, but “to serve zealously, be devoted to, subject to”.  This takes a dative “object”.   Par, paris, n., means “a pair”, which logically gives us the adverb pariter, “equally, in an equal degree, in like manner, as well”.

In the first place, indulgentia indicates an attitude: “indulgence, gentleness, complaisance, tenderness, fondness”, and then what flows from that attitude, namely, “a remission” of something like punishment or taxation.  In the French language dictionary of liturgical Latin, we find the same idea, an attitude which brings a result: “abandon de sa sévérité”, or “a giving up of severity”.

It doesn’t take much thought to see why “security”, in the sense of being without anxiety, and “peace” are closely tied to God’s forgiveness, His indulgence.

If God were to judge us truly according to our own fruits, and not mercifully see us through the merits of Christ’s Sacrifice, life would become unbearable and each day would bring us closer to unspeakable terror as we awaited either death of Christ’s return.

LITERAL TRANSLATION:
Having been appeased, impart to Your faithful, O Lord,
we beseech You, remission and peace:
so that in an equal measure they may be cleansed from all sins,
and may zealously serve You with a mind free from anxiety
.

It is nice to look at old translations from old hand missals on occasion, just to see something smoother, language that doesn’t stick slavishly to the text.  Here is a version prepared by J. O’Connell and H.P.R. Finberg, the editors of …

The Latin Missal In Latin and English (1957):
Relent, Lord, we pray thee,
and grant thy faithful pardon and peace,
so that they may be cleansed from all their sins,
and serve thee with a quiet mind
.

What a grace it is to live with a mind and conscience quiet about the course of our lives and our coming judgment.

Christ gave us Holy Church and our sacraments as the ordinary means of salvation.

To each of us sufficient grace is offered for our salvation, but to us who are so favored as to belong to the Holy Catholic Church … so much more has been given.

Posted in WDTPRS | Tagged
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Bp. Loverde (D. Arlington) on the corrected translation

In The Catholic Herald of the Diocese of Arlington, His Excellency Most Rev. Paul Loverde has a piece about the new, corrected translation of the Roman Missal.  My emphases and comments:

The new translation — A call to deeper prayer

Some of you may recall, as I do, learning certain tenets of our faith from the Baltimore Catechism. The concise, memorable question-and-answer format assisted me as a boy in learning theological truths upon which I still reflect today[A catechetical approach to which we must return.] In light of the announcement from the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) that, after years of work, the new translation of the Roman Missal will be implemented in Advent 2011, the Catechism question “What is Prayer?” particularly resounds with me. The response, “Prayer is the lifting up of our minds and hearts to God,” highlights the opportunity for spiritual growth that the new translation will afford each of us (Baltimore Catechism, no. 1099).

[…] Yes, this translation means more than merely learning new responses to say during Mass, although the words have a particular purpose and are important. It is, ultimately, a call to strengthen our prayer to God during the liturgy and to more actively and authentically participate: to truly “lift our minds and hearts to God.”

It is my prayer that each of us will take time to reflect upon the changes being made and the true meaning of the words that the priest and the congregation pray at Mass. Consider, for example, the occasions in the Mass when the celebrant says, “The Lord be with you.” Instead of, “And also with you,” under the new translation the congregation will reply, “And with your spirit.” Far from being a reduction in meaning, this response, which is more true to the official Latin text from which all translations have been made, increases our understanding that we are asking the Lord to dwell in the souls of those gathered for the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. In addition, since the priest (or deacon before the proclamation of the Gospel) greets the faithful with the words, “The Lord be with you,” the response, “And with your spirit” serves to mark those moments of truly priestly (or diaconal) ministry, that is, when the priest (or deacon) is about to do what he is ordained to do. These moments include: presiding over the entire prayer of the community at the beginning of the Mass; proclaiming God’s holy Word in His Gospel; offering the Eucharistic Prayer, which begins with the Preface; and imparting the final blessing. Our new response indicates that the priest (or deacon) is not acting on his own but only in the power of Christ and the Holy Spirit.

[…]

[This is nice…] Our participation in the liturgy is an essential part of our worship. Discussing the Mass, Pope Pius X taught that “the faithful assemble for no other object than that of acquiring this spirit from its foremost and indispensable font, which is the active participation in the most holy mysteries and in the public and solemn prayer of the Church” (Pope Pius X, Tra le Sollecitudini, 22 November 1903).  [Active participation is, first and foremost, about active receptivity.  The “acquiring”.  This lead to outward expression in a second step.  Receptivity has logical priority, though receptivity and outward expression can be chronologically simultaneous.] This liturgical theme was further developed by the Servant of God, Pope Paul VI during the Second Vatican Council when he wrote that the “Church consists in the full active participation of all God’s holy people in these liturgical celebrations, especially in the same eucharist, in a single prayer, at one altar, at which there presides the bishop surrounded by his college of priests and by his ministers” (Pope Paul VI, Sacrosanctum Concilium, 1963, no. 41). The new translation provides us with the opportunity, once again, to participate in the Mass in a deeper way. [Certainly deeper than we have seen in most places for the last few decades.]

[…]

During this time of fruitful transition, I ask you to dedicate yourself to active participation in the celebration of the Mass. As this new translation so beautifully emphasizes, Our Lord Jesus Christ died so that we may have life, a mystery which we celebrate at each and every Liturgy. He sacrificed Himself for us; let our response be one of prayerful participation in the celebration of the Eucharist, which He instituted in His Church.

WDTPRS kudos to Bp. Loverde.

We see from some corners these days an effort to poison the reception of the new, corrected translation.

It is good to see bishops reaching out past these naysayers in an effort to make the transition more appealing by painting it as an opportunity.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Fr. Z KUDOS, The Drill |
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