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Meanwhile,… white to move and win.

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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Pro Chess League resumes tomorrow, 8 March.

IMPORTANT BOOK

However, the 2023 Chessable Masters is 4-7 April and it will be the last time 32-year old Magnus Carlsen completes while holding the title “World Champion”.  He will remain the high rated player in the world and arguably the “GOAT”. He has been World Champion for over a decade. The upcoming world championship match will end by 1 May and either China’s Ding Liren or Russia’s Ian Nepomniachtchi will hold the title World Champion. Whether or not they will be able to beat Magnus in tournaments is another matter.

In other news, the Russian Chess Federation (largest in the world – 35K players and 200 GMs) have broken with the European Chess Union and are joining the Asia Chess Federation. It is excepted that some players will break with Russia and will join European groups. Does it make a difference what flag a play plays under? I guess it does for events like the Olympics.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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EXCELLENT MODEL for other Bishops about how to handle requests for St. Patrick’s Day dispensations for Lenten Friday Abstinence

From Twitter by a reader here…

This is a great model.

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From “The Private Diary of Bishop F. Atticus McButterpants” – 23-03-06

March 6, 2023

Dear Diary,

“Mr. Domenico” has been the tailor here for years. Cute old guy. A true expert. Saw him just before Christmas to be fitted for some new things. He outdid himself. The new cassocks are slimming. He took my measurements, but I also gave him an old house-cassock of mine that had seen better days to compare. The old one fit me fairly well, but it had stains all over it … noticeable.

He also delivered my new vestments for the Easter season, all in white brocade.  No cheeseburgers or tacos in the sacristy anymore!  It’s a complete set.  He said “classical”.  It has one of those bizarre short stoles, same fabric as the real stole but with ties in the middle.  Fr. Tommy said it was a manipulate. Domenico personalized the chasuble with a Latin saying embroidered on the inside, from the Bible.  I copied it down. Domine Iam Foetet. Lord, I’m something or other.  Happy? Anyway, it was nice of him.

AND it’s better than anything Dozer has.  Can’t budge him out of polyester.

That reminds me. Jude wore a super-thin dalmattic last year under his chasuble when he ordained those ten new priests, so now I feel like I have to, at least for big events.  Gotta talk to Domenico.

 

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes – 2nd Sunday of Lent 2023

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

It was the 2nd Sunday of Lent in the Novus Ordo and in the Vetus 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 reading HERE.

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St Peter’s dome is turning black. Why?

Welcome Registrant:

Mrs.

Help the traditional Benedictine monks of Le Barroux who are making good wine.

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Meanwhile,…

White to move.  White is in serious trouble and the best outcome is to go the half-point by a draw or stalemate.  Can you “not lose”?

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. Even if you use SMILE, don’t worry! SMILE still gets the donation.

Pro Chess League action resumes on 8 March.

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The rhetoric of “walking together-ity”

Robert Royal has a good piece today at The Catholic Thing about the twisty, tricksy, rhetoric of reality distortion that is hanging like a dense fog obscuring the swamp of synodality (“walking together-ity”).

The Ruinous Rhetoric of ‘Synodal Interpretation’

Here’s a taste.

[…]

In The Divine Project: Reflections on Creation and the Church, a series of lectures from 1985, lost but rediscovered and recently published by Ignatius Press, Joseph Ratzinger’s very first sentences read:

Our first concern in this opening lecture is to work out the standards that we will be using to interpret Scripture: How, indeed, can we properly understand a biblical text – not coming up with ideas of our own, but remaining honest with ourselves as interpreters of history – and yet, without doing violence to the text, inquire into its relevance for the present?

This strikes the ancient Catholic note, the desire to know what God has communicated, carefully distinguishing what we might like to be the case, for whatever reasons, from what is the case, and the further effort – beyond intellectualism – to discern how it should shape our lives.

Compare Ratzinger’s spirit in seeking to understand Creation with this account in “Vatican News,” the website of the Vatican Dicastery for Communication, of remarks by the General Relator of the Synod on Synodality at the Asian Continental Assembly on Synodality:

In his third and final point, Cardinal [Jean-Claude] Hollerich offered a synodal interpretation of the creation text. Rather than looking at the text as the creation of “man,” or “man and woman,” or the institution of marriage and the family, a “synodal interpretation of the text” is that “humanity” was created, he said. “We as Church are part of that humanity, and we are called to serve humanity. So, a synodal Church is a Church that is missioned by Christ, proclaiming the Gospel. And if we do not serve the world, nobody will believe in [our] proclamation of the Gospel.”

Anyone reading this might be forgiven for thinking that “a synodal interpretation” – not only of the Creation account but of the Bible in general – really seeks to correct the defects of the text. Forget those simplistic bronze-age binaries, “male and female” He created them, or on the very next page, “For this cause a man shall leave his father and his mother, and cleave to his wife; and they shall become one flesh.” (Gn. 2:24)

Forget what the text – which is to say divine revelation – actually says, concrete reference to man and woman. We now have – who knows how? – “humanity.”

[…]

One more step towards being a fulltime NGO.

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From “The Private Diary of Bishop F. Atticus McButterpants” – 23-03-05

As we wait for more recent entries, here is an older one.  Poor Fr. Tommy.  He has to deal with a guy whose need not to be alone is nearly pathological.

August 8th 2022

Dear Diary,

Low-key day.  Nothing on calendar.  Asked Fr. Tommy at breakfast if he had any ideas about what we could do today.  He looked at me like I had asked him to explain the Trinity or something, kind of flushing red and then he got real pale.  For a second I thought he was gonna hurl — maybe it was that omelette?  Anyway, he assured me he was fine.  So we took off for the golf course and had a great time.  Fr. Tommy drives a mean golf cart.  Then we stopped for a nice lunch and went shopping.  Bought some great stuff!  Fr. Tommy lugged all of it upstairs for me, too.  He’s a nice young priest, even though with spouting all that Latin I miss some of his ‘inside jokes’ – ha!  Too many more episodes like this morning, though, and I’m going to have to look into sending him for evaluation at the priest funny farm.  Get it together, Tommy, or I’ll call your grandmother!

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Welcome registrants:

dPilk
Therese59

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. Even if you use SMILE, don’t worry! SMILE still gets the donation.

Use FATHERZ10 at checkout

Meanwhile,…

White to move.  Weave the net!

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

Interested in learning?  Try THIS.

In news from chess.com… dig this!  This is about their stats for the month of February (a short month, btw.):

In total, there were an astonishing 1,057,320,754 games played on Chess.com. Of those, 576,946,832 were live games, of which 3,181,513 were daily games, and 480,373,922 were against the computer.

It works out as around 37.67 million games per day played in February. For comparison, that’s nearly 2.8 times the average number of games played per day in 2022, which was 13.53 million.

To put the numbers into context, there were a grand total of 16.83 billion games played here from September 2016 to February 2023. Unfortunately, Chess.com does not hold an accurate figure for the total amount of games played on the platform before 2016.

Records have been broken at regular intervals since the turn of the year. In fact, on December 31, the site hit 7,000,000 daily users for the first time. Within three weeks, that record had risen to 10,000,000.

This is an explosion.

The other day I was at the car dealership for the ride’s annual checkup and recall updates.  I had brought a travel set and a book with opening lines to work on while I waited.   Soon thereafter, one of the salesman – about 30 – approached and we chatted for bit.  He told me that he had just gotten into chess recently, that he had not played as a kid.  Then another worker there, younger, came by and said that he was just getting into chess and asked about the notation – “code” – in the book.  He sat down and I explained how it worked.  He asked for a game and we commenced.  What resulted was interesting.  After a few minutes some staff and the waiting customers were gathered at the table watch.

Shortly before, they had been all looking at their phones or at the big TV screen.  Suddenly, zero screens and 100% human interaction.

In itself, this is an argument in favor of learning to play and then going out and playing.

 

 

 

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WDTPRS – 2nd Sunday of Lent (NO): a more perfect “view”

Transfiguration_by_fra_Angelico_(San_Marco_Cell_6)Here is the Collect of the 2nd Sunday of Lent, a new composition for the Novus Ordo based on a precedent in the Liber Mozarabicus Sacramentorum:

Deus, qui nobis dilectum Filium tuum audire praecepisti, verbo tuo interius nos pascere digneris, ut, spiritali purificato intuitu, gloriae tuae laetemur aspectu.

Used by early Latin writers such as Sts. Hilary of Poitiers (+c 368), Ambrose (+397) and in liturgical texts, gloria is more than fame or splendor of appearance.  Our Latin liturgical gloria is the equivalent of biblical Greek doxa and Hebrew kabod.   Romans translated these concepts also with words like maiestas and claritasGloria has to do with man’s recognition of God as God.  Gloria is a characteristic of God which He will share with us so as to transform us throughout eternity.

The vocabulary of the prayers reinforces that this covenant we are in with God is not a contract between equals: He is Almighty and eternal, we are lowly and mortal.

We do well to beg as supplicants before His Majesty, not as cowed slaves terrified of a harsh master, but with the reverential awe of children looking at authority with the eyes of truth.  Our orations during Mass help us to see who we are and who we are not.

LITERAL RENDERING:

O God, who commanded us to listen to Your beloved Son, deign to nourish us interiorly with Your word, so that, once (our) spiritual view has been purified, we may rejoice in the sight of Your glory.

OBSOLETE ICEL (1973):

God our Father, help us to hear your Son. Enlighten us with your word, that we may find the way to your glory.

NEW CORRECTED ICEL (2011):

O God, who have commanded us to listen to your beloved Son, be pleased, we pray, to nourish us inwardly by your word, that, with spiritual sight made pure, we may rejoice to behold your glory.

Note the senses of hearing (audire) and of seeing (intuitus, aspectus), both physically and also inwardly, spiritually.

The voice of God the Father spoke at the Transfiguration commanding us to listen to His beloved Son (Matthew 17:5).  We listen to Jesus and look at what He does, both in the pages of Scripture and in His continuing work through Holy Church.

Christ’s words which we hear and His deeds which we see both save us and teach us who we are (cf. GS 22).

Aspectus has both active and passive connotations, that is, the sense of sight, the act of seeing a thing, and the appearance of the thing itself.  Aspectus can mean, “mien, countenance”, how something “looks”.  Think of Henry V in Shakespeare’s homonymous play inciting his soldiers before battle to “lend the eye a terrible aspect” (III, i).

Intuitus (from intueor) means “a look, a view; respect, consideration.”  You know intueor from a verse of the hymn of St Thomas Aquinas Adoro Te Devote: “I am not looking (intueor) at the wounds, like Thomas; I am nevertheless professing faith that you are my God; make me always more to believe in you, have hope in you, love you.”  That hymn also sings “ex auditu solo tuto creditur’, only “by hearing” is the doctrine of the Eucharist believed “safely”.  Sight, touch and taste can deceive us.

Our intuitus spiritalis could be our own ability to see clearly into the state of our soul. Our intuitus (“insight”, “view”) is that spiritual lens which must be cleansed so that we can have a more perfect “view”.  Otherwise, intuitus could be the spiritual landscape within us, the “view” God sees, how we “look” to Him.  “View” picks up both views of intuitus (the power to see and that which is seen).  “Insight” would favor just one possibility.  The cognate “intuition” suggests the wrong connotation from common usage, that is, “sudden insight” or “good guess”.

Both how we see and what is seen in us, our “spiritual view”, must be purified (purificato) so that God is not offended (cf. Habakkuk 1:3)  

God and neighbor must see His image in us.

We must see His image in ourselves and others if we are going to treat them with the charity Christ commands.

St. Bonaventure (+1274) wrote about how Thomas the Apostle looked through the Lord’s visible wounds and saw His invisible wound of love.

We must with charity try to look past our neighbor’s imperfections, the wounds caused by sin, to see the intended reality.

Lent is a time for gaining a “view” of the Love who died and rose for us, thus transforming us into more perfect images of who He is: risen, living, glorious.

How are we seen?  How do we see?  What is our “view”?  What is our “look”?

This necessarily requires a close examination of our lives to see and to hear what or whom we have placed at the center of our lives, Jesus Christ’s rightful place.

Posted in LENT, WDTPRS |
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From “The Private Diary of Bishop F. Atticus McButterpants” – 23-03-04

Dear Diary,

Today I’m off to do a wedding for a friend’s daughter.  She’s marrying a nice Jewish boy, and I’ll officiate along with the rabbi.

I love these ecumenical events!

He told me to stay after for some nosh. I think that’s Hebrew for fried chicken.

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