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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Daily Rome Shot 750

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White to play and mate in 2.

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

Extra credit for naming the pattern.

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.

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Not only does the ISS have a “ham” radio station with which we can make contacts (I haven’t yet), but there is also chess aboard. Astronaut Woody Hoburg, plays against the control in Houston and sometimes against a Russian colleague.

Yes, magnetic pieces.

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My View For Awhile: Heading to the Shrine

I’m on my way to the wonderful Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Wisconsin. A couple days ago, the flights were ghastly, as most are these days, jammed and delayed by several hours thus resulting a a very late arrival. No reason given.

This was lunch in view of a long day.   I did get something in the lounge during the second delay (3 hours).

Putting the “OMF” in “Comfort+”

The next day we were off to lunch to meet up with a prominent Catholic writer speaker in the Chicago area, this unfortunate archdiocese.  Alas, we drove past Superdawg without stopping, which made my heart cry.

Consolation was given to my riven heart later through an exceptionally good GT.  Remember: the proper plural of Gin & Tonic is “Gins & Tonic”.

There is an old phrase: the bread was fresh and was good, the cheese was not and was excellent.   My hosts for these days pick both well.

For the Great Roman.  He will understand.

I made a large quantity of pasta “al seminario”, much as what we had fairly often in Rome.

A Florentine cut with a little Dijon vinaigrette for scale.

I have eaten this well since Rome.

It hasn’t been all beef.  No.  Variety is the spice of life.

We used this stuff.  I must say, it’s GREAT.  Try it!  HERE  Japanese Barbecue Sauce

“Our Ingredients Matter”… “Authentic Family Recipe”

Am I forcing a comparison too much to say that Our Rites Matter and our AUTHENTIC Family Rite is the TRADITIONAL Roman Rite?

Today, I will pick up a rental at ORD and continue to journey to the Shrine.   It should be a beautiful driving day.

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MAZZA: The Importance of the Value of Reputation, Part II

At Homiletic and Pastoral Review (yes, it still exists), find the second part of important work by civil and canon lawyer Michael Mazza (whom I’ve known for a zillion years).   He now works as a canonist especially in defense of priests.  HERE

The Importance of the Value of Reputation, Part II

People who are accused of crimes have a right to proper process and to their good name (bona fama). Both of those often go out the door in the case of priests who are falsely accused and/or cancelled. In this offering, Mazza starts with some Patristic references to bona fama and then traces papal comments in the more modern Magisterium.

A sample:

We note in conclusion that such evidence stands for the proposition that the good of bona fama has been valued, in a variety of contexts and time periods, as a fundamental human good. This article has also referenced several well-known artistic works, emanating from diverse cultures and at various points in history, that also testify to enduring truths concerning the good of bona fama. The extent of all this evidence suggests that there would be something profoundly inhuman, and therefore deeply disturbing, about any community that neglects to care for the right to reputation of its members. Such attentiveness for reputation is particularly important when the prevailing cultural zeitgeist militates against the right to bona fama by demanding quick guilty verdicts so as to quench the popular thirst for vengeance.

Owing to the power of speech itself, along with the close link between a person’s name and his very identity, we saw how the witness of Sacred Scripture, the early Church, and centuries of theological tradition have established the foundations on which the current juridical framework protecting a cleric’s right to bona fama rests. Authentic developments in magisterial teaching on the issue of reputation support the conclusion that respect for bona fama is not only an essential element of any human community, but that it is particularly important in the life of the Church, especially for its clergy. In light of such evidence, it is incomprehensible for an ecclesial community professing fidelity to the incarnate Word of God to ignore or downplay a right so fundamental as the right to reputation. We have seen how our bona fama is linked to our physical, mental, social, and spiritual health; we have also examined how closely connected is a person’s name to his very life. In this light, then, we can more easily see the fundamental hypocrisy at work if one professes caritas but permits calumnia.

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How to force a new ecclesiology on the Church. It takes time.

At Rorate today there is a useful piece by Roberto de Mattei. In spite of his strange jabberings about “the jab” It is useful in that it provides a few concise paragraphs that put into perspective where we have been and where we are now.

Here are examples.

John XXIII attributed a specific pastoral character to the Council that was opening. Historians of the school of Bologna have defined the pastoral dimension of Vatican II as “constitutive”. This pastoral dimension became the form of the Magisterium par excellence. At first this was not evident to all, but in the following months and years, it became clear that John XXIII’s allocution was the manifesto of a new ecclesiology. And this ecclesiology, according to progressive theologians, was supposed to be the foundation of a new Church, opposed to the “Constantinian” one of Pius XII. A Church no longer militant, no longer defining and assertive, but itinerant and in dialogue: a synodal church.

In this new perspective, the Holy Office, which for centuries had been the Church’s bulwark against the errors that attacked it, no longer had a reason to exist, or in any case, had to change its mission.1

On 8 November 1963, the cardinal archbishop of Cologne, Josef Frings (1887–1978), asked to speak and, to general surprise, launched a violent attack against the Holy Office, directed by Cardinal Alfredo Ottaviani (1890–1979). In front of all the bishops of the Church gathered under the presidency of the pope, Frings denounced the “immoral methods” of the Holy Office, stating that its procedure “no longer suits our age, harms the Church and is an object of scandal for many”.

This is a good summation. Link it to what John O’Malley proposed in his book on Vatican II, namely that the true “spirit” of the Council, it’s true message, is in the different tone it sets, and we have more pieces of the mosaic.

De Mattei draws a parallel with the man Paul VI put into the newly minted CDF (olim Holy Office) as undersecretary (sent to change the operation and goals of the congregation, which is how Francis has worked) with the appointment of the kissy-book writer and probable plagiarist from Argentina.

The anecdote at the end, which I had never heard, is worth the few minutes.

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Daily Rome Shot 749

Here’s a puzzle.

Black to move and win.

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.

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There was a fun couple of games in a short video at chess.com (I have a shop affiliate, btw). GM David Howell takes on Magnus in a game where all the pieces look the same, because they are all Airthings (which I think about air purity monitors and Magnus is into that). And the clock is sort of far, so … it’s a factor. And I am glad to report that Magnus got a haircut. Well… part of a haircut. More, Magnus, more.  Video is HERE

Given that guys at this level can play blindfolded, even simuls… I am not sure how hard this was for them. It’s still fun.

In other news, Hikaru Nakamura got hitched to Iranian WGM Atousa Pourkashiyan.

In other news, in the Vatican trial of Card. Becciu, involved in the London property 140 million euro loss fiasco, the prosecutor is seeking a sentence of 7 years and 3 months in jail.

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INTERVIEW: One of my profs in Rome Dr. John Rist with Ed Pentin: The Catholic Church Could Be Facing a Crisis Worse Than the Arian Controversy of the 4th Century

Ed Pentin, surely Rome’s best English language commentator on Church matters these days, has an interview with Dr. John Rist, a professor at Cambridge and also in Rome at my school, the Patristic Instititute Augustinianum.  I had several courses from him.

Rist has a piece in the recently published The Faith Once For All Delivered: Doctrinal Authority in Catholic Theology,a set of important essays by world class scholars with forward and afterword by Cardinals Burke and Sarah.   It is about sensus fidelium.  VERY IMPORTANT.  US HERE – UK HERE

I’ve written about Rist’s brilliant, hard, books over the years.  HERE  You can read about how he was cancelled in 2019 by the Vatican after he signed a letter critical of Francis.  He was banned from all pontifical institutions.  CUA even cancelled his Festschrift.

Rist was interviewed by Pentin now probably because Rist has a new book which is to be released 27 June 2023 (tomorrow, as I write):

Infallibility, Integrity and Obedience: The Papacy and the Roman Catholic Church, 1848-2023 US HERE – UK HERE

BTW… go to amazon and take a look at the titles that John M Rist as authored or written for. Amazing.

The interview deals throughout also with treatment of an Italian priest Fr Tullio Rotondo who was suspended a divinis by his bishop because he wrote a book critical of Francis and his collaborators.

Here’s a taste:

PENTIN It’s also one thing for a bishop to shut down heresy and heterodoxy, but if it’s orthodoxy, or trying to emphasize orthodox arguments, that’s very odd, isn’t it?

As I say, because Don Tullio has got a position which he’s trying to advocate, and he’s done so by producing material on either side, and has then tried to evaluate it — what the French would call a catalogue raisonné. That, of course, is how things should be sorted out. It’s exactly what people should be doing. Don Tullio has a doctorate in theology. It’s his job to think about these kind of things. And because some bishop doesn’t like his conclusions… Put it this way: this book couldn’t have been written in the time of John Paul II or Benedict XVI, but had it been, he would not have been banned by his bishop. Let’s forget about Amoris Laetitia, if he’d discussed the subject matter of an encyclical, and related matters in the times of Benedict and John Paul, or let alone John XXIII, or Paul VI, for that matter, people would have said, “Yeah, it’s a bit pedantic, long-winded and so on, but of course very useful.” It would not have led to him being suspended by his bishop. Undoubtedly, it would not.

PENTIN What does it tell us about this time in the Church?

Well, Don Tullio cites me, and others, in the interview which he gave to Maike Hickson, as well as, for example, John Finnis, who was a professor of law at Oxford, saying that the present crisis is probably the worst the Church has had for centuries, perhaps from its beginning, in some way or another. It’s more dangerous to the existence of the Church. You can compare the Reformation, but I think it’s even more serious than that. You’ve got to go back to the Arian controversy to find something comparable. But I think that, in terms of the damage that it now might cause, what might happen to the Church in the future, this is going to cause more trouble, more than anything else we’ve seen before.

 

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The persecution of traditional Catholic faithful continues: TLM forbidden at St. John Vianney’s shrine in France

Remember: It’s not just the rites that they fear, because they make them uncomfortable, it’s the people who desire those rites whom they really distain. It’s the people.

Posted in Liberals, Pò sì jiù, Traditionis custodes | Tagged
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Daily Rome Shot 748

 

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White to move. Mate in 2.

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

Your use of my Amazon affiliate link is a major part of my income. It helps to pay for insurance, groceries, everything. Please remember me when shopping online. Thanks in advance.  US HERE – UK HERE

I can’t recommend this enough.

Crucifixion to Creation: Roots of the Traditional Mass Traced back to Paradise

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Meanwhile, the greatest players in the world are heading to Baku, Azerbajian for the FIDE World Cup ($2.5 million prize find). For the first time, the top three players from both the Open and the Women’s section will qualify for the Candidates tournaments. It will last a month, but it is a knock-out format. Lose… go home.

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26 July: Fr. Jacques Hamel, martyred 7 years ago in France

Interrupted while saying Mass at his parish church in Saint-Étienne-du-Rouvray, the 85-year old priest struggled to repel his two 18-year old attackers with his feet. “Go away Satan!”, he repeated.

Fr. Jacques Hamel was murdered, in odium fidei, a martyr to the Faith, his throat slashed by Islamic terrorists.

Today is the 7th anniversary of the martyrdom of Fr. Jacques Hamel in France.

Churches are being attacked and destroyed all over France… and elsewhere.

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, pray for us.
St. Lawrence of Brindisi, pray for us.
St. Pius V, pray for us.
Martyrs of Otranto, pray for us.
St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle.
Our Lady of Victory, intercede for us with your Divine Son.

Posted in Modern Martyrs, Saints: Stories & Symbols |
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