Daily Rome Shot 721

Photo from A.

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HistoryGuy97

White to move.  Mate in 3.

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

Priestly chess players, drop me a line. HERE

Interested in learning?  Try THIS.

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes – 3rd Sunday after Pentecost (N.O.: 11th) 2023

Share the good stuff.

It’s the 3rd Sunday after Pentecost in the Vetus Ordo and the 11th Sunday of the Novus Ordo’s Greater Meatloaf Time*.  Green is back.  Hopefully the vestments, not the meatloaf.

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 HERE.

A taste:

Combat now; peace and rest and a crown them.  Happy they who, during these days of probation, have recognized the mighty hand of God in all the trials they have had, and have humbled themselves under its pressure, lovingly and confidingly! Against such Christians, who have been strong in faith, the roaring lion has not been able to prevail.

*The Novus Ordo’s “ordered” time is split into two unequal parts.  An old clerical friend of mine, dear Harold – R.I.P – called them “Greater and Lesser ‘Meatloaf’”.  

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WDTPRS – 3rd Sunday after Pentecost: “As soldiers, traveling through enemy territory…” (NO and VO comparison)

In the older, traditional calendar of the Roman Rite, today is the 3rd Sunday after Pentecost.

This is a yummy oration.  Let’s have a taste.

COLLECT (1962MR):

Protector in te sperantium, Deus, sine quo nihil est validum, nihil sanctum: multiplica super nos misericordiam tuam; ut, te rectore, te duce, sic transeamus per bona temporalia, ut non amittamus aeterna.

There is a pleasant alliteration in lines 2-3 of the collect. We can find a pair of pairs: nihil validum, nihil sanctum and some great ablative absolutes te rectore, te duce.

In the Novus Ordo Missale this prayer – sort of – is used on the 17th Sunday of Ordinary Time.

Where does this prayer really come from?

The first part, Protector in te sperantium deus, seems to be a fairly common introductory phrase in ancient Roman prayers. But after that, we find the whole prayer as it appears in the 1962MR in the Liber sacramentorum Gellonensis or Gellone Sacramentary, one of the Frankish “newer Gelasian” type sacramentaries, an attempt at a complete service book in the late 8th century, and in the Liber sacramentorum Romanae ecclesiae or Book of the Sacraments of the Church of Rome, which is another “Gelasian” type book.  However, the snipping and pasting experts employed by the Council’s Consilium hacked off the end of the “Pian” edition’s ancient prayer and for the “Pauline” version of the Missale Romanum, glued on a chunk of another ancient prayer in the Veronese Sacramentary or Leonine Sacramentary or for good measure Codex sacramentorum vetus Romanae ecclesiae a sancto Leone papa I confectus, for the month of July, perhaps on the 13th of the month, and perhaps as part of a preface formula: Vere dignum: qui mutabilitatem nostram ad incommutabilia ita iustus et benignus erudis, ut nec fragilitatem destituas et coherceas insolentes: quo pariter instituti pia conversatione et caelestibus sacramentis, sic bonis praetereuntibus nunc utimur, ut iam possimus inherere perpetuis. They even tinkered with that.

Tinker tinker tinker!

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.

Many people don’t realize that very few of the prayers of the 1962 Missale made it into the Novus Ordo without alterations.  Sometimes those alterations took the prayers back to an more ancient version.  Mostly, they just fiddled around with them.

Let’s have some vocabulary.

Protector is, according to our always valid Lewis & Short Dictionary, from protego, 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”.  Amitto is “to lose” in the sense of “let slip”.  A Latin dux is a “leader, guide”, and also “commander, general-in-chief”.  This is why Benito Mussolini was in Italian called “il Duce”.  A rector is pretty much the same as the first sense of dux, but it can also be a “helmsman” or “governor”.  Interestingly enough, gubernator means “helmsman” also, while an English “governor” is a moderator.

St. Andrew’s Bible Missal (1962):

O God, guardian of those who trust in you, without whom nothing is strong, nothing holy, increase your mercy towards us. With you as our ruler and guide, may we pass through the good things of this world, so as not to lose those of the world to come.

LITERAL VERSION (1962MR):

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 guide and leader, we may pass through temporal goods in such a way that we do not lose the eternal.

We have the image of a people asking God to cover them over abundantly with mercy.  We are acknowledging how we need a roof over our heads to protect us, so we want God’s mercy upon us. Also, since a protector is something or someone that covers us in front, God is our shield before us.  In His mercy He guards us from the attacks we face as soldiers in the Church Militant.

We must never forget that we are members of the Church Militant, the part of the Church which is in the world, on the march, as a pilgrim people.  We must be clear in our minds that the Lord says this world has its prince (cf. John 10:31 and 14:30).  Satan and his fallen angels desire our everlasting damnation and agony with them in Hell.  Jesus broke their power over us, but for a time we are still in this world which they dominate. We are living in a state of “already, but not yet.”

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

God is the one without whom nothing is worthwhile or holy. He must provide for us all that we need on the march.

Because of the wounds to our nature from the Fall, we are susceptible to the passing things of this world and vulnerable to the attacks of hell.  We need shielding, protection, so that we are not overly mired or stained, lest we lose track of our pilgrim route to heaven.

LITERAL TRANSLATION (2002MR):

O God, protector of those believing in You, without whom nothing is efficacious, nothing holy, multiply Your mercy upon us, so that, You being our guide and leader, we may so use things that pass away as to be able to cleave to those that endure.

Notice the slightly different emphasis.

This version also contrasts the passing things of this world with those that do not pass away.  This version also stresses that we must cling to, or not let slip, eternal things, so that we lose heaven.  However, whereas the older version seems to take a position of suspicion about the dangerous nature of worldly, temporal things, the newer version indicates that we use them correctly.  The structure is ita with a result following in the subjunctive: in such a way that….

Lest anyone get their shift all in a twist about how the Novus Ordo version obviously reflects the dangerous modernism of the Second Vatican Council’s Constitution on the Church in the Modern World, Gaudium et spes, remember that the final two lines are also essentially from an ancient prayer.  After all, our ancestors also were concerned actually to use the things of the world, which remain good.

They are bona temporalia.

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.

This is so bad that one might laugh, if it weren’t for the fact that God’s people were so cheated for so many years.

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.

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Daily Rome Shot 721

Photo from Fr. RB

Welcome registrants:
Sheami
Roman Catholic Oma

Here’s a puzzle.  White to move.

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

Interested in learning?  Try THIS.

80% off on courses right now!

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Daily Rome Shot 720

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

Yesterday in LA, a Catholics massed at Dodger (Traitorous Dogs) Stadium to protest the presence of an anti-Catholic hate group of perverts.  I saw pics showing that, inside the stadium, hardly anyone showed up for the perverts’ spotlight moment.

Evil must be resisted.

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Intense image of the Sacred Heart and YOU – ACTION ITEM!

It is the Feast of the Sacred Heart and, therefore, the Church’s appointed Day of Sanctification of Priests. Please pray for your priests. Pray for me. HERE

This striking detail is from a print by the Catholic artist Daniel Mitsui.

It is inspired in part by the visions of Gertrude and the 1467 Sanctus Salvator.

Even the small details, the little animals that are scattered through the background, have symbolic meanings…. even the platypus!

Intense.

Now…

ACTION ITEM!

I ask you all earnestly to pray the classic Act of Reparation that the great Pius XI released in 1928 in Miserentissimus Redemptor.

Prayer of Reparation

O sweetest Jesus, whose overflowing charity towards men is most ungratefully repaid by such great forgetfulness, neglect and contempt, see, prostrate before Thy altars, we strive by special honor to make amends for the wicked coldness of men and the contumely with which Thy most loving Heart is everywhere treated.

At the same time, mindful of the fact that we too have sometimes not been free from unworthiness, and moved therefore with most vehement sorrow, in the first place we implore Thy mercy on us, being prepared by voluntary expiation to make amends for the sins we have ourselves committed, and also for the sins of those who wander far from the way of salvation, whether because, being obstinate in their unbelief, they refuse to follow Thee as their shepherd and leader, or because, spurning the promises of their Baptism, they have cast off the most sweet yoke of Thy law. We now endeavor to expiate all these lamentable crimes together, and it is also our purpose to make amends for each one of them severally: for the want of modesty in life and dress, for impurities, for so many snares set for the minds of the innocent, for the violation of feast days, for the horrid blasphemies against Thee and Thy saints, for the insults offered to Thy Vicar and to the priestly order, for the neglect of the Sacrament of Divine love or its profanation by horrible sacrileges, and lastly for the public sins of nations which resist the rights and the teaching authority of the Church which Thou hast instituted. Would that we could wash away these crimes with our own blood! And now, to make amends for the outrage offered to the Divine honor, we offer to Thee the same satisfaction which Thou didst once offer to Thy Father on the Cross and which Thou dost continually renew on our altars, we offer this conjoined with the expiations of the Virgin Mother and of all the Saints, and of all pious Christians, promising from our heart that so far as in us lies, with the help of Thy grace, we will make amends for our own past sins, and for the sins of others, and for the neglect of Thy boundless love, by firm faith, by a pure way of life, and by a perfect observance of the Gospel law, especially that of charity; we will also strive with all our strength to prevent injuries being offered to Thee, and gather as many as we can to become Thy followers. Receive, we beseech Thee, O most benign Jesus, by the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Reparatress, the voluntary homage of this expiation, and vouchsafe, by that great gift of final perseverance, to keep us most faithful until death in our duty and in Thy service, so that at length we may all come to that fatherland, where Thou with the Father and the Holy Ghost livest and reignest God for ever and ever. Amen.

The Devil is active and we must fight him, firstly, on our knees in prayer before we rise to fulfill our state in life with fidelity and perseverance.

 

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INDULGENCE ALERT – Feast of the Sacred Heart

Today, the Feast of the Sacred Heart, the faithful can gain a plenary indulgence by the public recitation of Iesu dulcissime (Act of Reparation) (Ench. Indulg., al. conc., 3). All other recitations gain a partial indulgence.

Priests and Bishops! Have PUBLIC recitation!

Do not be afraid to bend yourself down before God especially and also to the angels and saints our intercessors and patrons and be simply pious.

Man was made to be pious.

This is the essence of religion, without which we are empty shells: to give due reverence to God. The sin of our first parents came from trying to be the opposite of pious: self-sufficient self-gods. That was defiance of due piety.

We can drift into the same emptiness of life by neglect of piety and devotion, neglect of fostering the habits of devotion.

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Daily Rome Shot 719: story time

The “Spanish” church, S. Maria di Monserrato.  The illumination is first rate, unusual in Rome.

I am delighted to report that diminutive 13 year old Alice Lee (from my native place, Minneapolis) has earned her IM title, the youngest American born female ever.  I really enjoyed watching her clean up for the St. Louis Arch Bishops over more experienced players during the Pro Chess League.  She’s rated 2390 second only to Irina Krush in these USA.

Interested in learning?  Try THIS.

Chess is undergoing a huge renaissance. Do yourselves and your kids a favor. LEARN TO PLAY. It is something that lasts a lifetime.

Solve this puzzle.  Black to move and mate in a couple moves.  Go ahead! Try!

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

Sophia Press has put out a fascinating book by Guy Gaucher, Bishop Emeritus of Bayeux and Lisieux.

I Would Like to Travel the World

It recounts miracles through the intercession of St. Thérèse, the Little Flower.

The blurb recounts something true about the title: St. Thérèse’s relics have gone everywhere, five continents, “in jets, a military plane, and a helicopter; in a police car, a firetruck, a cruise ship, and a steamer; on horseback; and on a sled pulled by dogs.”

US HERE – UK HERE

I have a personal interest in this book, not that my story is included, but because I received the intercession of St. Thérèse at a critical moment in my vocation back in the 80s and I received the famous “shower of roses”.

Her intercession was so vital, that when I had my chalice made for my ordination a couple years later, I had the node wreathed in roses.

Moreover, I was in Rome last October and November. Two days before I was to depart, I had nearly despaired of accomplishing two important goals. Things came together suddenly.  I had prayed to St. Thérèse.

In a flash, a priest, a cardinal, and a layman (diplomat), combined independently but in utter coordination to bring everything to pass.  That morning, I had that same chalice, newly re-gilded, consecrated by Card. Pell (shortly before his death).  As I explained to him the elements of the chalice, I recounted St. Thérèse’s intercession.  I was then given a lift by that same cardinal to church so I could say a private Mass for a layman’s lovely family.  I used the newly re-consecrated chalice, of course, and at the main altar where after ordination I had said my third Mass with it over three decades before.  That same day I had a meeting with my bishop, very difficult to attain without my priest friend’s help. My lay friend – for some reason not incredibly busy that day – gave me a ride.  On the way, I again mentioned the help of St. Thérèse decades before.  The meeting was excellent.

At the end of the day, clunky black chalice case still in hand from the wee morning hours, while heading home weary and head-spinning I walked through the darkening Campo de’ Fiori. Windy, so much so that awnings and pieces of stands were blowing over. Carts and big street sweeping machines and trash blowing around in the chaotic cleanup-wreckage.  I waved to my flower-guy, Pippo, at one of the three big flower stands near the fountain. He was in my Rome Shot post a couple days ago.

He walked out and gave me a single, perfect white rose.

The ambient.  It was so surreal with the wind that I shot a couple photos as I entered the Campo and before that happened.

The flower stand in question is near that large building in the background.

What I received out of the blue in that chaos.

I took it to church the next morning and gave it to Mary.

St. Thérèse isn’t done with me yet, I think.  I don’t know what is in store.  There are a lot of serious problems yet to overcome.

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Signs of the times

I was about to post something along the lines of “KETCHUP: THE WONDER FOOD”, but then I saw this.

Remember.  Vatican II was – pace St. Joan – the new Pentecost… Springtime in the fullest sense.  It surely – pace the cynical Joan – unleashed a tsunami of renewed Catholic identity across Gaia that influences even the never-to-be proselytized.

The following is NOT from the Babylon Bee.

I sense that the contestants might have been either non-Christians or Fishwrap readers.  Tautology?  Not sure.  Anyway, any decently educated non-Christian, of any creed or none at all, should be able to get this.

From FoxNews (which I stopped watching on 3 Nov 2020).

‘Jeopardy!’ fans unleash wrath over ‘pathetic’ lack of response to biblical clue: ‘Sad world we’re in’
A biblical passage stumped three ‘Jeopardy!’ contestants on Tuesday

“Jeopardy!” contestants made an error of biblical proportions on last night’s show.

Fans were enraged Tuesday after all three contestants failed to answer what many believed to be a very easy question about the Lord’s Prayer.

Host Mayim Bialik read a clue that began, “Matthew 6:9 says, ‘Our Father, which art in heaven, [THIS] be thy name.’”

When the camera cut to Laura, Joe and returning champion Suresh, not one contestant buzzed in with a response.

[…]

Are we surprised?  Really?

This leads me to a question.

Have you MEMORIZED prayers?  Have you had your children MEMORIZE prayers?   Once they are in there they are useful in myriad circumstances, even years in the future.

Fathers: Memorize a Mass.  When you are in the gulag, it could be useful.  I recall the story of a priest in solitary in a repressive regime who had prayed for a chance to say Mass on Christmas Eve.  In the one hour he could walk around, a mysterious figure he didn’t know gave him a tiny bit of bread and a little vial of wine.  Later, he said Mass in his cell, scraping  frost off the inside of his window for water and using his cupped palm as a chalice.

He was in jeopardy.  He had memorized a Mass formula.

Perhaps I can get back to the practical applications of “Ketchup: The Wonder Food” at another time.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged
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Daily Rome Shot 718 (not so much but I make up for it, also with video)

I know it’s not a “Rome Shot”, but I couldn’t help myself.

Welcome new registrant:

j******@gmail.com (Don’t use your email, friends.)

For more chess news, keep reading.

My guy Wesley So won ‘Armageddon Series: Americas’. The series was broadcasted live on 16 online and TV platform. During the games they are tracking players heart rates. Wesley won that one too, at 177/minute. Who says chess isn’t a sport? The series has daily matches of two blitz games (three minutes plus a two-second move increment) and, if necessary, an Armageddon game (five minutes for White, four for Black) in which a draw is a win for black. So far, the Americas, Asia and Oceania and Women have played. Europe and Africa weeks will be the penultimate before the Grand Finale in September.

Okay… okay… it is a Rome Shot post, so here’s some of Rome.

From last Sunday’s Mass and Eucharistic procession for the external observance of Corpus Domini.

And here is a great moment. Look! Up in the sky! It’s….

What were they looking at?

People were throwing flower petals from their window. Very sweet.

Once again, please, prayers for my mother.

And, my incessant plea, 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.

And to offset the tenebrous influence of a different Benedictine on the blog today, the wonderful nuns of Gower Abbey, the Benedictines of Mary, Queen of Apostles, have a new disc and digital download:

Tenebrae at Ephesus

US HERE – UK HERE

These are the RESPONSORIES of Tenebrae for all three days of the Triduum.  They are, arguably, the most beautiful chants of the entire liturgical year.

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.

Today is, again, a very lean day for monthly donors.

As yesterday, I have no idea why there are two donate buttons. I can’t get rid of the duplicate.

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