Blog’s “forbidden” messages

I’ve been told by a couple of readers that they were “forbidden” to a) register to comment and b) use the search bar at the top of the right side side bar.

We think the culprit is the CleanTalk plugin we use to keep spam and bad actors out of the comments. CleanTalk works from a database of IP addresses that spammers have used. Therefore, if you are using a VPN that spammers have used or happen to get a dynamically assigned IP that some spammer had, CleanTalk will block you.

One person – a donor as a matter of fact – who had tried to register with no success and had given up, eventually mentioned it to me in email and, when I suggested she turn of either her ad blocker or VPN she was able to register, no problem.

Anyway, I am not quite sure how to proceed. We’ll look at this. If you are getting “forbidden”, try turning off your VPN or adblocker. That could help.

I have to have the CleanTalk or similar plugin on because there can be many thousands of probes and attacks per day.

In any event, I am grateful for everyone’s attention and good will.

Thanks for keeping this going.

And the CSC are the GREATEST!

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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IMPORTANT BOOK: Does Traditionis Custodes Pass the Juridical Rationality Test? (VIDEO)

Does Traditionis Custodes Pass the Juridical Rationality Test?

by Fr. Réginald-Marie Rivoire FSVF and Fr. William Barker FSSP

US HERE – UK HERE

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Posted in REVIEWS | Tagged
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Here’s a bishop doing something good!

May I suggest that you add this bishop to your list of those for whom you regularly pray? Pray especially for his protection from the Enemy and his human agents in the Church.

The new and young bishop of Columbus “presided” at a Solemn Mass. Rather, he assisted from the throne in cope and miter. There are grand photos of the Mass at the site of their diocesan paper. HERE

Would that more bishops would do this. And then that they would be the celebrant for Masses as well.

Sample.

Posted in Fr. Z KUDOS, Just Too Cool, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, SESSIUNCULA | Tagged ,
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Concerning fasting during Lent, fasting and abstinence on Ash Wednesday, eating endothermic moonfish, drinking coffee, and YOU

If you are serious as a Catholic, you know at all times what is on the calendrical horizon. If you are a follower of the Vetus Ordo of the Roman Church, you have additional help by means of the “gesima” Sundays. This Sunday is Quinquagesima. That means that Quadragesima (Latin for Lent) is upon us.

Reminder.

According to the 1983 Code of Canon Law for the Latin Church, Latin Church Catholics are bound to observe fasting and abstinence on Ash Wednesday.

Here are some details. I am sure you know them already, but they are good to review.

FASTING: Catholics who are 18 year old and up, until their 59th birthday (when you begin your 60th year), are bound to fast on Ash Wednesday and on Good Friday.

Moral theologians consider what fasting means.  Fasting literally means not eating.  However, in the manuals we find that fasting is interpreted as 1 full meal and perhaps some food at a couple points during the day, call it 2 “snacks”, according to local custom or law. Two snacks that don’t add up to a full meal.  Why is there gap between “not eating” and 1 meal a day.  This is because, surely, there are those who because of their profession or the necessities of life, require calories to do their work.  Rather than try to parcel out in an paragraph in a manual who merits by work to eat or not eat – which sounds rather creepy – it is reasonable to establish something that pretty much everyone can do as a baseline.  You can then ask yourself honestly: Can I do more than that?  Or, in the terms of fasting: Can I do less than that?

There is no scientific formula for this.  Figure it out.

ABSTINENCE: Catholics who are 14 years old and older are abound to abstain from meat on Ash Wednesday and on all Fridays of Lent.

In general, when you have a medical condition of some kind, or you are pregnant, etc., these requirements can be relaxed.

For Eastern Catholics there are differences concerning dates and practices. Our Eastern friends can fill us Latins in.  In general, their “fast” is more serious.

You should by now have a plan for your spiritual life and your physical/material mortifications and penitential practices during Lent.

You would do well to include some works of mercy, both spiritual and corporal.

I also recommend making a good confession close to the beginning of Lent.  Let me put that another way:

GO TO CONFESSION!

“But Father! But Father!”, some of you are saying anxiously, “What about my coffee?  I can drink my coffee, can’t I?  Can’t I?”

You can, of course, coffee with and as part of your full meal and two “snacks”.  No question there.

How about in between meals on Ash Wednesday?

The old axiom, for the Lenten fast, is “Liquidum non frangit ieiuniumliquid does not break the fast”, provided – NB – you are drinking for the sake of thirst, rather than for eating.

Common sense suggests that chocolate and banana shakes or “smoothies”, etc., are not permissible, even though they are pretty much liquid in form.  They are not what you would drink because you are thirsty, as you might more commonly do with water, coffee, tea, wine in some cases, lemonade, even some of these sports drinks such as “Gatorade”, etc.

Again, common sense applies, so figure it out.

Drinks such as coffee and tea do not break the Lenten fast even if they have a little milk added, or a bit of sugar, or fruit juice, which in the case of tea might be lemon.

Coffee would break the Eucharistic fast (one hour before Communion), since – pace fallentes  – coffee is no longer water, but it does not break the Lenten fast on Ash Wednesday.

You will be happy to know that chewing tobacco does not break the fast (unless you eat the quid, I guess), nor does using mouthwash (gargarisatio in one manual I checked) or brushing your teeth (pulverisatio because once upon a time we had “tooth powder”).

NB: Concerning the consumption of alligator and crocodile – HERE

I included notes also on the eating of endothermic moonfish, peptonized beef, and muskrat… just in case.

If you want to drink your coffee and tea with true merit I suggest drinking it from one of my coffee mugs.  I’d like to offer an indulgence for doing so, but that’s above my pay grade.

I just happen to have available a “Liquidum non frangit ieiunium” mug!  HERE

And there’s also this new choice…

3:16 isn’t just in John.

CLICK to see MORE

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , ,
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Daily Rome Shot 665

Photo by The Great Roman™

Welcome new registrants:

Lbr1946
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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

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Meanwhile,…

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

Meanwhile, the Pro Chess League is back in action.  16 teams this year.  Schedule

Teams have great names…  Spanish Maniac Shrimps… Budapest Gambit… St. Louis Arch Bishops… Brazil Capybaras …

They are seriously under-merched!

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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Wherein Fr. Z rants about clericalism

At Crisis there is a good article: Clericalism Is Dead. Long Live Clericalism!

The writer, a priest, explores what real clericalism is all about. It is NOT what libs say it is, by the way.

Long-time readers here will recall that I have written about the worst sort of clericalism that I know: liturgical clericalism.

Liturgical clericalism is the worst, because it is inflicted on the greatest number of people in the most important thing we do: worship.

Clericalism’s main exponents are NOT traditionalists or conservatives. Libs are the worst of all.

The worst sort of clericalism manifests in the dreadful propensity of lib priests who condescendingly bring all sorts of lay people up into the sanctuary (to “clericalize” them) so that they can do things that the priest is supposed to do. That’s a way of saying, “Your dignity as a baptized Catholic isn’t enough. But I – “Just call me ‘Bob'” – shall henceforth confer more dignity upon you by my fiat.”

Negative clericalism is fueled by and present in the insistence on versus populum Mass.

Negative clericalism is tamed and suppressed by ad orientem worship.

Clerics, bishops and priests, who tenaciously insist on versus populum worship are practitioners of clericalism.

If there is a bad clericalism, there is a good. There is a healthy clericalism in a healthy clerical identity.

Clerics, who by definition are “set apart” need to understand and live who they are supposed to be. To do that, they need the fraternity of other clerics, who are trying to live the same way. If Sr. Mary Charles told you in 3rd grace to “avoid the company of bad friends”, the obverse is also true. Seek the company of good friends. You reinforce each other.

That is why I used to post, fairly often about my “Suppers for the Promotion of Clericalism”.  For example: HERE

I would get a bunch of priests together (and not exclude the bishop if he was available… to remind him that he was a priest) for a big meal with lots of fixin’s. This is important to do. I recall the key formation that came from, for example, suppers after Forty Hours back in much happier days: lots of priests together being priests together.

There is an old word which usually has a negative connotation: priestcraft. Just as clericalism can be positive, so can priestcraft be. Priests need to have meet-ups with, especially, older priests who know the stories, the “lore” of the diocese, and anecdotes that can help them in their own ministry.  Older priests also need the company of younger priests.  It stands to reason.   In some dioceses that is difficult to pull off, because there is often is serious generational divide over the Church’s moral theology and discipline.  But it is worth attempting, precisely for the sake of those issues… and lore.

Anyway, when you see “Just call me ‘Bill'” grinning at you over the altar, blowing air back and forth like an oscillating fan with rictus, imagine his reaction were you to ask him about celebrating Mass ad orientem.

Posted in Priests and Priesthood | Tagged
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NEW ARRIVAL! Hand-made cincture. Think about this for your priests.

I have received a beautiful handmade cincture from the nice people at Via Providence.

This is exceptional.  The work is very fine.  I have no idea how long it took to make this, but… wow.

I once had a couple of cinctures like that, which I inherited.  They were pretty old already when I got them and, over the last decades of my use, they went the way of all flesh.

The stuff generally available today feels like plastic.  They get the job done, but they are not the same.

That’s an amazing thread count.

 

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, SESSIUNCULA | Tagged
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Daily Rome Shot 664

Photo by The Great Roman™

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

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Meanwhile…

White to move and crush black’s soul.

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

 

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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An article at CWR and a Twitter thread seek to uncover a serious concern

There is a convincing piece at Catholic World Report by James Baresel about what I think is the greatest conflict in the Church today: her conflict within herself over her sacred liturgical worship.

Why, “greatest”?  Because we are our rites!  And liturgy is doctrine.

The article is entitled: Liturgical double standards and the hermeneutic of rupture

On the face of it, you would think, “Okay, another article about Benedict XVI and recent attacks on his person and all that he stood for in life.” You wouldn’t be wrong.  But Baresel also goes back to the antics of Bugnini, et. al. Attacks on the Church’s continuity of worship go way back.

That said, the article really showcases the machinations of Arthur Roche, now Cardinal, now, incredibly, Prefect of the “Dicastery” for Divine Worship. It’s not pretty.

In 2007, Bishop Arthur Roche obstructed the implementation of Summorum Pontificum. Now, as Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments, is he misusing and even abusing Traditionis Custodes?

Was it Mark Twain who said that history doesn’t repeat itself, but it often rhymes?

Baresel touches the neuralgic point this way.

From any perspective, this is a serious problem. As past facts make clear, there are only two possibilities. Either Roche can in no way, shape, or form be relied upon to accurately understand a church legal document or the intentions of a pope—or he deliberately undermined the law of one pope in order to restrict the Tridentine Mass and now insists upon firm adherence to the law of another pope in order to accomplish that same purpose.

Roche seems to be operating on his own and in a way that “rhymes” with Bugnini.

In the 1950s, Annibale Bugnini was hiding liturgical abuses from Rome so they could be popularized and eventually sanctioned. Less than two decades later, he obtained sanction for them and was enforcing conformity. Readers may be familiar with Father Louis Bouyer’s account of how Pope Paul VI and the members of the commission charged with liturgical reform were united in opposition to some of Bugnini’s proposals. And how Bugnini pushed them through by telling the pope that they were what the commission wanted, while telling the commission members that they were what the pope wanted.

One is forced to ask: “Why would he do that?”

Baresel is not the only one to have taken notice of his behavior.

The Pillar has a post about Roche.  HERE  “Roche’s gamble — and the Vatican law of power”

In the implementation of ‘Traditionis custodes,’ Cardinal Arthur Roche has been criticized for an approach that seemed to arrogate authority to his office, beyond the motu proprio’s text.

In a Twitter thread Damian Thompson, a long-time observer of Roche, opines that Roche has gone off the reservation and is operating for his own ends.

The tweet thread begins:

In several tweets, Damian maps out what Roche appears to be up to.

Mind you, Damian Thompson – who has one of the best twitter handles eh-vur – is decidedly not a fan of Roche and has written about him in mordant terms.

That doesn’t mean that he isn’t dead on target.

Another tweet in Damian’s thread:

It seems a quixotic suggestion.  Then again, some of the things that Roche has come up over the years are also hard to fathom.

Cui bono?  Cui prodest?

Therein lies the answer.

Through his diktats, which verge on “will to power”, Roche is certainly making himself highly visible in a time when other formerly papabili are dropping to the wayside.

Our sacred liturgical worship is of such importance that it is worth defending even to the point of having a fight about it. Desirable? No, not if peaceful solutions – like what we had before with Summorum Pontificum and the gentle perspicacity of Benedict – can be sorted out.

No one enjoys the division and pain that is being inflicted from on high these days.

In order to heal the divide, the divide must first be accurately described and its causes laid bare.

It could be that Baresel and Thompson are onto something.

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, SESSIUNCULA | Tagged , ,
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IMPORTANT BOOK ALERT: The Faith Once for All Delivered: Doctrinal Authority in Catholic Theology – UPDATED

UPDATE 14 Feb 2023:

The Faith Once For All Delivered: Doctrinal Authority in Catholic Theology is a daring selection of essays by prominent orthodox Catholic scholars recently published by Emmaus Academic Press.

The book includes a Foreword and Introduction written by Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke, and an Afterword authored by Robert Cardinal Sarah. The book is edited by Father Kevin Flannery, SJ.

The essays in the first part of this collection seek to answer the question, “What went wrong with Catholic theology since the Second Vatican Council?”

Following a brief account of the movement in modern theology from its philosophical basis in Kant and Hegel to the nouvelle théologie and later progressivist theologies of the twentieth century, the writings of Karl Rahner, Walter Kasper, and Bernhard Häring are treated as representative of principal problematic trends, and the concept of heresy is surveyed as it has been understood in the past and as it operates in the Church today.

The essays in the second part indicate the way forward for Catholic doctrinal and moral theology, examining and distinguishing the orthodox use of the sources of theology of magisterial teachings, the deposit of faith in its development, the “sense of the faithful” (sensus fidelium), Sacred Scripture, and Church councils and synods.

The book is intended for seminarians and young priests who are orthodox in their theology but perhaps lacking an understanding of how today’s liberal Catholic theology fell away from the Tradition.

How is it that we ended up where we are today?

However, the book will also interest orthodox theology students and earnest readers of theology.

Edward Feser’s treatment of the Magisterium is deeply instructive and challenging to the present pontificate. The same is true of John Rist’s masterful commentary on contemporary heresies. These essays are especially valuable in debunking the current German synodal way and stand as a warning about the upcoming Synod on Synodality.

The book has received accolades from the recently deceased George Cardinal Pell and the prolific Gerhard Cardinal Müller.

It is a must read in this day and age.

PRE-ORDER for 27 March ’23 – US HERE – UK HERE (that’s the page, but it isn’t yet available)

 

 


Originally Published on: Feb 8, 2023

This is an important book.  I’ve been waiting for it for a long time.  I know well the now-anonymous co-editor, so I’ve been able to follow it’s lengthy gestation.

PRE-ORDER the hardcover.

The Faith Once for All Delivered: Doctrinal Authority in Catholic Theology

Edited by Kevin L. Flannery, [AND BY AN ANONYMOUS EDITOR]

  • Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke (Foreword and Introduction)
  • C.C. Pecknold
  • Christopher J. Malloy
  • Thomas Heinrich Stark
  • Edmund Waldstein, O.Cist.
  • John M. Rist
  • Edward Feser
  • Eduardo Echeverria
  • Kevin L. Flannery, SJ
  • Robert Dodaro, OSA
  • John Finnis
  • Guy Mansini, OSB
  • Robert Cardinal Sarah (Afterword)

US HERE – UK HERE (that’s the page, but it isn’t yet available)

I’ve read Edward Feser’s contribution on the Magisterium.

This is going to be a nightmare for liberals.  It delves into the real meaning of sensus fidei… the sense of the faithful.  That’s exactly what the left does not want.

More to come.

Posted in The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged
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