It seems that, after Vatican II, nothing really changed. But now? Now’s our chance!

For the last couple months I was too happy to have had the desire for self-harming.  However, now that I am not in Rome anymore I ventured over to the Fishwrap and revisited the darkness of self-inflicted irritation.

Sr. Joan Chittister, incredibly still writing (in more than one sense), has finally unlocked the secret to what’s been going on since Vatican II.

Fishwrap shares with us her razor sharp observations and the polished steel traps of her reasoning.  Who better than she, with her vast experience of the LCWR, the Council of Elders, Oprah, and her triumphs in Tahir Square and Zuccotti Park?

The title might shock you a little.

Nothing really changed after Vatican II. But synodality may make a difference.

Nothing changed after Vatican II?

Let’s explore the cave of the sybil to unpuzzle the puzzle of her oracle. We have to skip around a little, as usual, to catch the essence.

My emphases and comments:

The word synodality has been around a year or so now and people are still asking what it really means — for them, of course. The last time the church said it was going to make changes was in 1965. Fifty-eight years ago. In the meantime, all the changes to be seen were basically meaningless ones. Not because change was forbidden. On the contrary.

[…]

Whatever changes the people had wanted from the 1962-65 Second Vatican Council were, it seemed, formless, silent, lost in the bustle of a busy church frozen in a medieval mind. Instead, after 400 years without a council of reform, the kinds of changes the people had expected from this council lay yet in Rome, drying in wet ink there and largely ignored here. [What sort of changes did “El Pueblo” want, such that they had been clamoring for a Council to put everything to right?  No.  Wait.  There was no clamor from “the people”.  It was forced on them from above.]

[…]

Oh, a few churches redesigned their confession boxes and a few more took down the altar rails, [Apparently those were good things, since people stopped going to confession and stopped showing reverence to the Eucharist.] but really, other than that and the move to the vernacular in all liturgical events — nothing much did happen. [She doesn’t get it.  Change how people pray and you change what they believe.  Clueless.  ] Most of the changes were window dressing. [Those things were insignificant?  What would have been significant?]

[…]

The two popes, John XXIII and Paul VI, who had led the way to these times died. The popes who had called the Second Vatican Council to bring the church into the modern world lived on in the hearts of the new church in the pews. [New church need Newspeak.]

But both Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI resisted the full force of Vatican II. Though they never denounced the council, they never really promoted it either.  [JP2 and B16 didn’t “denounce” Vatican II! But, can you sense that Sr. Joan’s piece is about to trans?]

This synodality is different. [It sure is.] This time, Pope Francis is having the faithful themselves become part of the agenda-making process before the synod even convenes. The laity has been invited into the intellectual theology of the church rather than simply poised to bring pious concern to the event.  [Because who better than the laity, with their deeply formed sensus fidelium over the last 50+ years, to enter into the “intellectual theology” of the church.]

This time, the laity themselves have been deemed to determine what topics must be considered — married priests, genderism, marriage theology, equality, women priests, whatever. They will be allowed to speak to what 99% of the church rather than the 1% of the church, its clerics, allow to be heard. [That pesky %1!  Cause that’s what shepherds do with their flocks: “Okay, you guys decide what you are going to do today. I’ll just go wherever you want.]

In fact, churches all around the world have been gathering and detailing the items the people themselves want to see considered for timeliness, for growth, for equality. [At this point we get a glimpse into what shapes these effusive musings:] The German church, [She got that miniscule right!] in fact, has gone so far as to film the gathering of the topics from German congregations that will be sent to Rome as the skeleton for these discussions.

Two weeks ago, I sat in front of my television for several hours and listened to the topics each of the dioceses wanted addressed at the synod in Rome. [And there it is.] One at a time, representatives from the entire region read out the topics and the numbers of their groups who most wanted particular topics to be considered by the modern church at this new conciliar process called “synodality.”

I got a chill. [… ! …] I was listening to a drumbeat of human issues that were separating people from the church, from support, from holiness in this day and age. [Someone get this woman a purple-ink pen. No, wait… ] The drone I was hearing was clearly the drone of the Holy Spirit: “Group A: Married priests … women priests … deaconesses …” — topics from every nook and cranny in the area over and over again.  

Francis had managed to involve Catholics around the globe in this common search for communal and spiritual growth.

[…]

The rest is… well… a waste of more time.

I shared Sister’s prophetic message with a couple of friends.  Of course two are crippled because they are firmly part of that 1%. The representative of the pews in our group isn’t exactly clamoring for a total overhaul.   But here is something of what came up.

After sending them the link to the article (with some editing)

Cleric 1: We fear change.

Layman: Wait. “Nothing really changed”?!? I thought Pentecost only happened sometime after 1965!! That we got everything wrong from 33AD to the 1960s!!! That as Roche says the theology of the Mass changed and so on!!! Now they tell me?!?

Cleric 1: The rationes seminales hidden in Vatican II now sprout and bear abundant fruit everywhere, for those who have woke eyes and see.

Layman: That must be it. Ignorant non-woke laymen like me get easily confused. I don’t hear “the spirit” much less understand his “surprises”. And I can’t even read Syriac manuscripts (in the rain) at the Gregorian U library!

Cleric 2: They’ve lain dormant all this time. But, with lots of “fertilizer” they’ve woked!

Layman: Reminds me of the cyclical “leaps forward” of the communists or the great “transitions” of the EU. Every time socialism fails it’s always because a) sabotage b) it wasn’t “true” socialism, or it wasn’t “socialist enough” and we need more of it, faster.  So now the Synoding Synod on Synodal Synodality will “reveal” the “true spirit” of Vatican II and bring about the “change” we’ve been waiting for 20 centuries.  More altar girls, more guitars, more envirowhackoism, more turning away from Calvary, more degrading of the priestly vocation, more weakening of the marital bond, more confusion on all level, more sodomy. Got it.

And as usual, ideological misrepresentations of reality deliver the opposite of what they promise. 60 years later, normal Catholics who actually read Vatican II with a discerning but loyal eye, can see it at work in solid NO or even more in traditional communities. Participation in liturgy? Lay empowerment? Youth involvement? Large families? Dynamic engagement with the world? Charitable activities? Continuity? Stewardship of the heritage of the Church? Study of doctrine? Pride of place for Gregorian chant and polyphony? You name it.  But it is precisely those solid NO or traditional communities, those heroic priests and families, the last remaining reliable theologians and bishops that the rainbow camarilla would like to eradicate from the Church.

Cleric 1: You are not happy… very suspicious. But everything is good all the time and getting better still, so do not be afraid of change.

See?  Even the 1% can come around.  Thanks Sr. Joan!

Posted in Deaconettes, Liberals, Pò sì jiù, The Drill, The future and our choices, Vatican II, What are they REALLY saying?, Women Religious, You must be joking! | Tagged ,
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From “The Private Diary of Bishop F. Atticus McButterpants” – 23-06-12 – Going to the bishops meeting

June 12th, 2023

Dear Diary,

Off to Orlando for the bishops’ meeting soon. It’s like heading into a sauna. At least that’s how I remember Florida. Whew. Squeezing into an airplane seat even first class. It’s just not much fun any more.

I’m taking Fr. Gilbert, so he can drive me around.  I remember ordaining him on a really muggy day and the kid didn’t break a sweat. Just grinned. Super annoying! I’m sure he’ll be all calm and cool in Orlando. He can drive, and I’ll crank up the air.   Crank down?  There are good restaurants in O I remember when Jenny* and her kids took me with them ages ago. There’s a good one at the animal world place. Can’t get on the rides at the parks so might as well tuck in to a good steak – I always think of surf n turf at zoos – and cocktails with little umbrellas.

Haven’t looked at the TON of meeting stuff from DC yet.  So much paper.  What about the planet?  HA!  Blah blah on immigration, ongoing formation for clergy, health care issues, sin-odd, as Vice calls it.  Still don’t know. I figure if I keep everyone happy that’s half the battle.   No one talked about sin-odds before, much anyway.  Now they don’t shut up.

Gotta pack.  I hate this part.

I wonder how with Fr. Gilbert and Fr. Tommy out of town Sr. Randi will manage with Chester.  She’s on her own now in that apartment now that the last two old gals passed away.   She be alone with Chester.  Ha!  There outta be some good stories when I get back.  Or lawsuits.   Nah, she wouldn’t do that.  Her superior, that’s another matter.  I should get Sr something nice from the airport shop.

It’ll be good to catch up with some of the bishops, friends that is.  It’s good to get together for the regional things with the guys, but this is different.

And the Nuncio will be there.  Gotta keep my head on a stick swivil and watch my blind spot.

Dear Diary,

Update.  I had a disturbing call from Jude.  He wants to talk to me in O about an ex-priest of ours.  What that could be about I don’t know but it sounds like work.  He said he’d buy supper at Charley’s Steakhouse so, I guess we’re meeting up.  “Absolutely no Dozer!”, he said.  He knows me too well.


*Fatty’s sister.

Posted in Diary of Bp. McButterpants | Tagged
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Daily Rome Shot 717

I miss my neighborhood.

Meanwhile, not much chess news. The Juniors are playing in a speed chess tourney. Yesterday I tuned in to Eric Rosen’s stream – he is playing in Las Vegas – and just as he turned his cam to look out his hotel window the Thunderbirds flew by. Very cool. I think it was part of the final game of the Stanley Cup. Coincidently, the Golden Knights won, beating the Florida Panthers… two ICE hockey teams in places where there is really no business having ICE hockey since there isn’t any ICE. For those of you in Columbia Heights, a “knight” is a chess piece and you don’t pronounce the “k” unless you are in a Monty Python movie.

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.

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BTW… today is a very lean day for monthly donors.

I have no idea why there are two donate buttons. There just are. I can’t get rid of the duplicate. I don’t want to rule out donating twice, but that’s not the intention.

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Another gift from the Pope of Christian Unity: Anglican bishop swims the Tiber

Here’s some good news.

From CBCEW:

Right Revd Richard Pain to be received in the Personal Ordinate of Our Lady of Walsingham

The Right Revd Richard Pain, a former Bishop of Monmouth, will be received into the full communion of the Catholic Church within the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, on Sunday 2 July at St Basil & St Gwladys, Rogerstone Newport. He will be received by The Rt Revd Keith Newton, Ordinary of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham.

Monsignor Newton said: ’We are delighted that after much prayer Richard has asked to be received into the full communion of the Catholic Church. He will be the first bishop from the Anglican Church in Wales to be received into the Ordinariate since its creation in 2011. Richard has a long and distinguished ministry in the Church in Wales. He has many gifts which he will continue to use to proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ to the people of Wales.’

Commenting on his forthcoming reception, Richard expressed joy at this next step of his Christian journey. ‘Having retired from episcopal ministry three years ago, I have had time to reflect on the retiree’s perennial question- what next? The process of discernment continues throughout life and is constantly shaped by context but more importantly by the whisper of God’s voice.

The Benedictine understanding of obedience – hearing the Lord- has been significant to my personal formation. The call to conversion which follows has led me to becoming a convert to the Catholic Church through the Ordinariate.

I have much to be grateful for the experience gained over a lifetime as an Anglican. Yet the call to Catholicism seems natural and spiritual at the same time. To start afresh will be a welcome challenge and I come – as we all do – as a learner and a disciple. The Ordinariate, through the vision of Pope Benedict, provides a generous pathway to walk a pilgrim way and I ask for your prayers.’

[…]

Benedict XVI. Pope of Christian Unity.

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From “The Private Diary of Bishop F. Atticus McButterpants” – 23-06-10 – More on that problem couple and the Nuncio

EDITOR’S NOTE:  +F.Atticus is referring to a couple who asked for his blessed at a reconciliation service back in Lent.  HERE  There was serious fallout.  The couple claimed that +F.Atticus blessed their marriage and now the Nuncio is involved.  HERE

June 10th, 2023

Dear Diary,

It turns out the people who wrote to the Nuncio live outside our diocese. Thank the Lord and get me a scotch! They live just over the border in the Pie Town diocese. They are Dozer’s subjects!  HA!   Their own parish was “throwing up hoops” for them to jump through, so they came over the border to our Engendering Togetherness Community of Welcome.  I love that name.  It turns out that this couple recently moved to America and the man had an annulment from his home country but could not get the documentation from his diocese back home nor could he get a baptismal certificate. Their pastor in Newville, Fr. Bob “anything goes” Newsome who Dozer is always griping about tried to help them but no go.  They had to have the documentation. Then the couple went to Fr. Bruce at Engendering. Bruce ain’t exactly the sharpest fork in the drawer, but even he knew he needed proof the man was free to marry. After that they ambushed me at the Cathedral and escalated it and wrote to Archbishop Florange.  It’s not the first letter the Nuncio has gotten about me, so I keep trying to keep him happy. Dang it if that isn’t life as a bishop, always have to keep everyone happy! Vice better put the petal to the medal. The letter that Mrs. Kennedy drafted for me was the height of groveling. That’ll keep Florange at bay for a while.

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Daily Rome Shot 716: Glorious

Quite the evening.

In chessy news, Netflix is offering a game/trainer based on the massive-hit 7-part series The Queen’s Gambit, a book by Walter Tevis. That series was one of the elements that fueled the chess tsunami that is still rolling. So it seems that you, too, will be able to be coached up by Mr Shaibel.

From the end of July and into August, the FIDE World Cup will be held in Azerbaijan with a combined prize pool of $2.5 million. Magnus and Nepo will be there along with Fabi, Anish, Wesley (yay!), MVL, Gukesh, Nodirbek, Pragg and locals Radjabov and Marmedyarov. On the women’s side Hump Koneru, Alexandra Kosteniuk, Ju Wenjun, etc.

FIDE and Mahindra – a huge tech thing in India where chess is exploding along with the population – are joining forces to create The Global Chess League which begins on 21 June with its first season, ten round-robins among 6 teams of 6 players. The male, female, and under 21 mixed Teams: Ganges Grandmasters, Triveni Continental Kings, SG Alpine Warriors, Chingari Culf Titans, Balan Alaskan Knights, upGrad Mumba Masters.

They are expecting some 600 MILLION viewers in 160 countries. The franchise owners will held – I think that’s right – a players draft to fill out their teams. The first season is from 21 June – 2 July in Dubai. This is OTB, folks, not eSport like the Pro Chess League wherein teams such as the Norway Gnomes battled the Spain Maniac Shrimps. I’ve gotta say that the Global Chess League should work on their team names and logos. Yawn.  I note that the only puzzling, unengaging team and logo in the PCL is also Indian, that TeamMDG1.  What is that?  A little whimsy is needed.  Am I wrong?

In any event, this should be interesting.  All the great players will be involved.

Back to The Queen’s Gambit for a moment.   The music composed for the series was terrific, but the closing credits with the – I don’t know how to describe it – animation? – were spectacular.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Meanwhile, 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.

Today in 1231 the Portuguese-born friar Anthony died in Padua.   He was canonized by Gregory IX in 1232.  FAST!    This is an amazing saint.

Speaking of St. Anthony, his favorite hymn was O gloriosa Domina, which his mother would sing to him.

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Another version. This is sung by the wonder BEER BREWING MONKS of Norcia!

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Another version.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

 

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Daily Rome Shot 715

Welcome registrant:

SanDiegoCatholic

Here’s a puzzle.  White to move.  Watch your king!  The position looks dire. Therefore, better force.

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

I am an affiliate for chess.com with House of Staunton. Buy chess stuff.

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And if you want to improve – and who doesn’t? – try this guy. This isn’t his only offering, by the way.

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

In chessy news, in that chess megalopolis St. Louis, Ukranian-born US-player Anna Zatonskih, 44 years old and the lowest rated in the tournament, beat Zhansaya Abdumalik in round 8 of the Cairns Cup to claim tournament victory with one round to spare, also gaining a GM norm. Today, Alexandra Kosteniuk will try with black against US player Irina Krush.

Let’s see if I can manage to embed the game correctly.

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Daily Rome Shot 714

Welcome registrant:

David James

Here’s a puzzle.  White to move.  FORCE!  Watch that pawn.

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

Prayer for my mother, please.

 

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A nostalgic moment

On this Sunday, when many are celebrating Corpus Christi, I’m feeling a little nostalgic.

I spotted this photo in my plentiful archive.

Back when the world was a brighter place and hearts were buoyant and war was not being waged on Catholic identity, we had a Pontifical Mass at the Throne celebrated by the late Extraordinary Ordinary, Most Rev. Robert C. Morlino.  For one of the Benediction Stations, we went into the building which was the former seminary/chancery and from a high balcony the Bishop gave the Eucharist Benediction over the whole city.

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, Linking Back, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World |
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Your Sunday Sermon Notes: Corpus Christi Sunday (2nd Sunday after Pentecost) 2023 – POLL

First, let us know if you had the observance of Corpus Christi on this Sunday.

Too many people today are without good, strong preaching, to the detriment of all. Share the good stuff.

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

We can have an exception to just good stuff this week.

Tell about attendance especially for the Traditional Latin Mass.  I hear that it is growing.  Of COURSE.   The church was jammed in Rome.  As “diverse” a crowd as you will see anywhere other than a major international airport.

Any local changes or (hopefully good) news?

Here’s a poll.  Anyone can vote, but you have to register and be approved to make a comment.  I hope you will!  Tell us what you had.

For Corpus Christi 2023, on either Thursday or on Sunday, Novus or Vetus...

View Results

I made some comments based on the 1st Reading for Mass in the Traditional Roman Rite: HERE

A sample:

There’s something wrong when Catholics don’t take Christ into the streets, as well as beloved relics and statues of Our Lady and the Saints. That “something wrong” can come from outside the Church, from persecution. It can also come from within the Church, for example when our leaders, once shepherds, get their priorities scrambled, and begin giving logical priority to things like “process” and “dialogue” and even works of mercy, as good and as important as those things can be. They have their place. But, for them to be fruitful and Catholic in the deeper sense, they must have their origin in and direction back to the fons et culmen, the source and summit, which is the Eucharist, itself in the sacramental species as well as in its celebration which is Holy Mass. We are our rites. Therefore, we have to have our priorities straight, logically, even though their ends may chronologically overlay each other. Identity checks are in order.

 

 

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