Question for readers: 3D printing

Is there anyone out there who knows about and does 3D printing of rather large objects?

Here’s the issue.

Some time ago, I shot many photos against a green background from many angles of the altar cards used on the daily Mass altars at Ss. Trinità dei Pellegrini in Rome.

I was hoping that, using those photos, some cleverboots in the readership could render a 3D printing file from the 2D images and, therefore, print frames that could be gussied-up and filled with their proper texts.   I understand that such a thing is possible.

A couple shots.

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31 July – St. Ignatius of Loyola – Please, O Please intercede for your spiritual sons!

ignatius_loyola_relics

Today is the Feast of the founder of the Jesuits.

May I say from the onset that I have some spiffy Pope Clement XIV gear? HERE

Here is the Martyrologium Romanum entry for this great saint, Ignatius of Loyola. To the right is my first class relic.

Memoria sancti Ignatii de Loyola, presbyteri, qui, hispanus in Cantabria natus, in aula regia et militia vitam egit, donec, post grave vulnus acceptum ad Deum conversus, Lutetiae Parisiorum studia theologica complevit et primos socios sibi ascivit, quos postea in Societatem Iesu Romae constituit, ubi ipse fructuosum exercuit ministerium et in operis conscribendis et in discipulis instituendis, ad maiorem Dei gloriam.

Here is the spiffy Collect from 1962 edition of the Missale Romanum:

Deus, qui ad maiorem tui nominis gloriam propagandam, novo per beatum Ignatium subsidio militantem Ecclesiam roborasti: concede; ut, eius auxilio et imitatione certantes in terris, coronari cum ipso mereamur in caelis.

LITERAL VERSION

O God, who strengthened the Church militant with a new reinforcement through blessed Ignatius, in order to spread widely the greater glory of Your Name, grant that we, who are contending on earth by his help and example, may deserve to be crowned with him in heaven.

The experts who cut and pasted together the Novus Ordo Collect for Ignatius weenied-down the content:

Deus, qui ad maiorem tui nominis gloriam propagandam
beatum Ignatium in Ecclesia tua suscitasti,
concede, ut, eius auxilio et imitatione certantes in terris,
coronari cum ipso meramur in caelis.

Notice anything important missing?

Let’s have your perfect renderings of the prayers.

Here is a shot of the altar and tomb of St. Ignatius in the Church called the Gesù in the heart of Rome.  It is a must stop if you ever visit Rome.

Now that’s an altar.

Church architecture reflects the Church’s understanding of her own identity.  

Each era has a different expression.  Compare and contrast to what is being built and used now.

The dopey Jesuits removed the Communion rail for this altar, thus turning decorative metalwork into inexplicable objects and destroying the integrity of the design.  To the right of the altar is a heroic marble group depicting of the Triumph of Truth over Heresy. Heresy, in this case, is manifest by the books of the error-filled works of Calvin and Luther.  The little angel is tearing up a bad book.   The ugly heretical bad guys shrink from the Cross and the light that Truth holds.

Under the lower heretic, there is a book with a visible spine that says MARTIN LUTHER. The dopey Jesuits, who now probably idolize Luther, hid it.  For shame.  You have to know they are there to make out the letters now.  Calvin and Zwingli are on the spines of the other books.

See? Nearly invisible now.

I found an older photo of the spine before it was wussified:

03_05_14_Gesu_Calvin_book_det_lr

Zwingli

03_05_14_Gesu_Zwingli_book_det

Calvin

03_05_14_Gesu_Calvin_book_det

And then there’s this.  No, this is not a rendering of a Jesuit.

Were these statues to have experienced a true aggiornamento, they’d be tearing up a certain book by James Martin, though though there are many other candidates.  

Meanwhile, since our church architecture tells present and future generation about our Catholic identity at the time it was built, let’s have a few shots from inside the church.

The cupola:

06_11_09_gesu_cupola

The Holy Name of Jesus (which in its iteration at Georgetown the Jesuits covered over when Obama spoke there):

06_11_09_gesu_IHS

A glimpse of me, shooting the photo of the ceiling of the nave in a mirror angled just so for viewing ease.

06_11_09_mirrorJTZ

The altar with the arm of St. Francis Xavier

03_05_14_Gesu_altar_Francis_Xavier

03_05_14_Gesu_Francis_Xavier_relic

My favorite version of the Sacred Heart, which you can find repeated all over Rome, in a small chapel to the Epistle side of the sanctuary.

03_05_14_Gesu_Sacred_Heart

There is an adage in Latin, corruptio optimi pessima.  The corruption of the best, is the worst kind of corruption.

Some might dispute the notion that the Jesuits were the best.  But there is no dispute that they have been among the best.

The Enemy works relentlessly to take us down.  Hence the Enemy will focus not only on the rank and file, but in a special way on leaders.

It is one thing to destroy or corrupt a small start up group of religious.  It is another entirely to twist the largest group of male religious, with universities and colleges.  It is one thing to lead some garden variety cleric into sins.  It is entirely another to subvert a Cardinal who is influential in conclaves and in the appointment of bishops.

Bring down a great group like the Jesuits?  What a coup for Hell.

I hope and prayer that great saints will rise within the Jesuits who will Make the Society Great Again.

Today, let us ask the intercession of St. Ignatius, and the other saintly founders of the Society, to intercede with their ultimate General, Christ Jesus, to guide and correct them or to bring them down until they can do no harm.

How I would dearly prefer the former to the later.

I’ll take either one.

 

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Daily Rome Shot 752

White to move and mate in 2.

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Interested in learning?  Igor has a new course. EXPLORE

The new course is “Level Up Your Chess” aimed at advanced beginners and intermediate who have perhaps plateaued. 6 sections, 26 lessons, 50 exercises. Through Thursday 3 August get the course with a 50% discount and get the course “Calculate Till Mate” for free.

Please remember me when shopping online. Thanks in advance. US HERE – UK HERE  These links take you to a generic “catholic” search in Amazon, but, once in and browsing or searching, Amazon remembers that you used my link and I get the credit.

Today, the last day of the month, is a very thin day for monthly donations. If you visit the blog often, please consider lending a much needed hand. Quite a few people are opting for Zelle, which works well, and Wise. I’d be happy to tell you more.


Some options




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Your Sunday Sermon Notes – 9th Sunday after Pentecost (N.O.: 17th) 2023

Share the good stuff.

It’s the 9th Sunday after Pentecost in the Vetus Ordo and the 17th Sunday of the Novus Ordo.

Was there a GOOD point made in the sermon you heard at your Sunday Mass of obligation?

Tell about attendance especially for the Traditional Latin Mass. I hear that it is growing. Of COURSE.

Any local changes or (hopefully good) news?

I have some thoughts about the Sunday Epistle reading posted at One Peter Five.

A taste:

When Moses descended the mountain in Exodus 32 and found what was going on around the Golden Calf he had the males of the Tribe of Levi, Levites, go through the people and slaughter the miscreants. That’s when the males of the Jews were stripped of their Adamic and Noachic priesthood and the new Aaronic priesthood began as well as the imposition of the Law. The first “ordination” of priests was quite literally a bloodbath. Then there was the fornication of the people who “played the harlot” and began to worship Baal. The avenging angel in the form of a plague slew 23,000 in a single day. It would seem that God doesn’t like idolatry.

 

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Daily Rome Shot 751

Welcome registrant:

top8305

White to move.  Mate in two.

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Please remember me when shopping online. Thanks in advance. US HERE – UK HERE  These links take you to a generic “catholic” search in Amazon, but, once in and browsing or searching, Amazon remembers that you used my link and I get the credit.

Interested in learning?  Try THIS.

World Cup. The knockout events are held from July 30 to August 27 at the Marriott Hotel Boulevard in Baku, Azerbaijan.  1st Round.  Most of the really well-known players are seeded and have a bye.

The top three players will qualify for the 2024 FIDE Candidates Tournament in both sections.

All matches consist of two classical games with a time control of 90 minutes for 40 moves, plus 30 minutes to the end of the game, plus a 30-second increment from move 1

In case of a tie, a playoff takes place on the round’s third day. The tiebreak consists of two 25+10 rapid games followed, if needed, by two 10+10 ‘slow blitz’ games, then two 5+3 blitz games, and finally an Armageddon game, in which White has 5 minutes to Black’s 4, but a draw counts as a win for Black.

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VINTAGE RECTORY BATHROOM TILES: 04

Just in.  And the floor tiles are just like those of a room I had in a rectory, except mine were dark gray.

My sender wrote:

“You might note with interest the four different shades of green being employed. Thanks for all you do!”

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Happy Birthday “Lord of the Rings”

On this day in 1954 the first part of The Lord of the Rings was published: The Fellowship of the Ring.

The LotR was one of the most important influences in the topography of my life, though its influence was karstic.  Once there, always there.  Sometimes sublimated, then again at the surface.  It shaped my world view in significant ways and helped to smooth and straighten the path of the Incarnated trascendentals.

The LotR also brought me into contact with some with whom a life-long friendship was born, but also – through seeming chance – brought me rather hesitantly to the study of Latin.  Not only did that turn into multiple degrees, but also set the table for the rich banquet that was the discovery of the Catholic Church especially through her sacred liturgical worship.

I even had a brief, too brief, correspondence with the author as a teen.

I want to thank again a couple of readers who have sent volumes of Tolkien’s (posthumously published) writings, especially CG who sent the set of LotR when my childhood set was languishing, karstically, in storage well over a thousand miles – nay rather – over 400 leagues distant.

 

 

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Daily Rome Shot 751

Welcome registrant:

bigmig

Use FATHERZ10 at checkout

Great wine from the traditional Benedictines of Le Barroux.

White to play and mate in 2. How long did it take you? Time yourself.

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

 

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WDTPRS – 17th Sunday Ordinary Time: Sin Teflon, Demon Kevlar

Shall we look at the Collect for this upcoming Sunday’s Holy Mass in the Ordinary Form?   It will the 17th Sunday of Greater Meatloaf…. Ordinary Time.

COLLECT (2002MR):

Protector in te sperantium, Deus, sine quo nihil est validum, nihil sanctum, multiplica super nos misericordiam tuam, ut, te rectore, te duce, sic bonis transeuntibus nunc utamur, ut iam possimus inhaerere mansuris.

The traditional Roman Missal, 1962MR, places today’s Collect at the 3rd Sunday after Pentecost though it is a little different from the newer version, to wit: sic transeamus per bona temporalia, ut non amittamus aeterna.

Historically the prayer has roots in the ancient “Leonine” or better the Veronese Sacramentary used during the month of July in which we find: sic bonis praetereuntibus nunc utimur, ut iam possimus inherere perpetuis. This historical digging shows us that the Novus Ordo version returned to a more ancient form of the prayer.

That inherere for the more regular inhaerere shows how the ae was pronounced when the manuscript was made.  The eminent paleographer E.A. Lowe dated the earliest manuscript of the Veronese to the first quarter of the 7th century.

There is a pleasant humming “m” alliteration in lines 2-3.  A nice pair of pairs present themselves: nihil validum, nihil sanctum and some exemplary ablative absolutes te rectore, te duce.

Protector is from protego fundamentally meaning “to cover before, or in front, cover over” and obviously also “to shield from danger” as well as things like “put a protecting roof over”.  A protector is also “one of the lifeguard or body – guard”.

Last week in the Collect we heard “vigili custodia … vigilant restraint/guarding.”  Both words refer to protection.

In last week’s Collect the priest prayed to God: clementer gratiae tuae super eos dona multiplica, (indulgently multiply upon/over them the gifts of Your grace) while this week we ask multiplica super nos misericordiam tuam.

In this and last week’s prayer we have the image of a people asking to cover them over abundantly, last week with the theological virtues, this week with mercy.

God is our shield.  In His mercy He guards us from the attacks we face as soldiers in the Church Militant.

Validus, a, um (from the verb valeo) is “strong, stout, able, powerful, robust, vigorous” and also “well in body, in good health, sound, healthy”.  “Vale!” is one Latin way to say “Farewell!”

The verb inhaereo means “to stick in, to stick, hang, or cleave to, to adhere to, inhere in”.  Inhaereo is construed with either dative or ablative and it is very hard to know which case is mansuris, the future participle from maneo, “to remain, last, endure, continue”.   Without going into details, St. Augustine (+430) used a similar combination of words, but to different effect, in a sermon about the love of God and love of the world (s. 344.2 in PL 39:1512).

LITERAL ATTEMPT:

O God, protector of those hoping in you, without whom nothing is efficacious, nothing holy, multiply your mercy upon us, so that, you being our helmsman, our commander, we may so make use of things that pass away as to be able to cleave to those that will endure.

We can also render rector and dux respectively as “guide” and “leader” but I think in our times we need a bolder tone.  A rector is also a “helmsman” and “commander of the army”.  In honor of World Youth Day, rector can be the “master of youth, teacher”.  On the other hand, dux is also a military term for a “general” or “chief”.

OBSOLETE ICEL (1973):

God our Father and protector,
without you nothing is holy,
nothing has value.
Guide us to everlasting life
by helping us to use wisely
the blessings you have given to the world
.

CURRENT ICEL (2011):

O God, protector of those who hope in you,
without whom nothing has firm foundation, nothing is holy,
bestow in abundance your mercy upon us
and grant that, with you as our ruler and guide,
we may use the good things that pass
in such a way as to hold fast even now
to those that ever endure.

We are members of the Church Militant and we must never forget it.

We must not permit ourselves complacency.  We must not be softened into spiritual acedia by the coos and lullabies of those who deny the existence of evil and the devil and personal sin.

Some people today think that any “evil”, if it is really evil after all and not merely a difference of perspective, can be reduced to mere social ills stemming from a societal lack of tolerance and diversity.

This is a deception of the enemy of the soul, the devil.

In reality, our personal sins are the foundation of every societal ill.  When people do not believe in the devil and in sin, then the enemy has already won.   Our enemy Satan and his fallen angels desire our everlasting damnation and agony with them in hell.  This world has a fell prince, a spiritual being, a mighty fallen angel (cf. John 14:30).

Jesus Christ is our King, our great Captain in our battle against all that is wicked in this world.  Christ Jesus has broken hell’s power over us, but for a time we are still in this world and the devil dominates it – but only to the extent that omnipotent God permits in His providence.  We are living in a state of “already, but not yet.”

As soldiers traveling through enemy territory we need strong shields, a sure leader to set our feet on the right path out of the danger zone, a sturdy roof over us when we rest, some way to identify what is holy and what is deception.

Without God nothing is worthwhile or holy.   He must pour out and multiply upon us all that we need simply in order to live.

Today we are asking for a protection, sin-Teflon, so that the passing things of this world can’t stick to us, distract us, and hold us back from heaven.

May God give us demon-Kevlar, so that the enemy cannot penetrate our minds and hearts with the darts of temptation and the provocations of doubts.

We beg God to make us “sticky” only for the things that endure forever and not the things that are under control of this world’s prince, who from the beginning is a liar, a murderer (cf. John 8:44).

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WDTPRS – 9th Sunday after Pentecost: O God, ever distant, ever near

This week’s Collect, which historically was in the 8th century Liber sacramentorum Gellonensis, was also the prayer over the people, or Super populum, in the 1962MR for Wednesday of the 4th Week of Lent.

It was not, I believe, in the 1970MR or 1975MR (Novus Ordo), but it was reinserted on Saturday of the 2nd  Week of Lent in the third edition of 2002, which also revived the ancient Lenten Super populum blessings.

COLLECT (1962MR):

Pateant aures misericoridae tuae, Domine, precibus supplicantium: et, ut petentibus desiderata concedas; fac eos, quae tibi sunt placita, postulare.

SUPER LITERAL TRANSLATION

Open the ears of Your mercy, O Lord, to the prayers of those humbly beseeching: and, that You might grant the things desired to those seeking them, cause them to desire the things which are pleasing to You.

We often use anthropomorphic expressions in our prayer, giving God physical, human characteristics.  The image of God opening or inclining His ears is common.  Our Latin liturgical prayer constantly has God harking to us or lending His celestial ear, or inclining toward us so that He can listen more closely, not miss our meaning, our sincerity, our need.  We want to be in His hearing and in His sight.  We want Him to hurry to us and to be near.

This language is normal in the human experience of praying to our mysterious and transcendent God, who is infinitely removed from us, but who is nevertheless closer to us than we are to ourselves.

St. Augustine of Hippo (+430) in his Confessions gives expression to this tension of transcendence and immanence in words unsurpassed by man for over fifteen centuries.

We might linger over the great Doctor of Grace’s words (Conf. 5.2; 6.3 – not my translation):

Thou alone art near even to those that remove far from You.  Let them, then, be converted and seek You; because not as they have forsaken their Creator have You forsaken Your creature. Let them be converted and seek You; and behold, You are there in their hearts, in the hearts of those who confess to You, and cast themselves upon You, and weep on Your bosom after their obdurate ways, even Thou gently wiping away their tears. And they weep the more, and rejoice in weeping, since Thou, O Lord, not man, flesh and blood, but Thou, Lord, who made, remakest and comfortest them. And where was I when I was seeking You? And You were before me, but I had gone away even from myself; nor did I find myself, much less You! …

O crooked ways! Woe to the audacious soul which hoped that by forsaking thee it would find some better thing! It tossed and turned, upon back and side and belly – but the bed is hard, and thou alone givest it rest. And lo, thou art near, and thou deliverest us from our wretched wanderings and establishest us in thy way, and thou comfortest us and sayest,

Run, I will carry you; yea, I will lead you home and then I will set you free.”

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