Daily Rome Shot 591, etc.

GO TO CONFESSION!

Meanwhile…

White to move and win material.

NB: I may hold comments with puzzle solutions a little longer than others so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Please remember me when doing your Christmas shopping online. Thanks in advance.

US HERE – UK HERE


BTW… the ChessUp “smart” chessboard is on sale now for 20% off.

As I write, the Black Friday deal lasts only about 11 more hours.

US HERE– UK HERE

I have one and I am really enjoying it.

This board has built in AI which will beat you. So, you can use it when you are alone.  However, it will link up with chess.com and lichess.com so you can play other people anywhere in the world, but on a board rather than on your phone or a computer screen.  You can play other people even if they do not have a ChessUp board.

The light indicators on the squares can be set to indicate potential moves.

As I write, the Black Friday deal lasts only about 11 more hours.

I probably should have bought the carrying case.  I’ve been looking for an alternative among my various bags that are close to the right dimensions.

And…

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
3 Comments

DIEBUS SALTEM DOMINICIS – 1st Sunday of Advent: The Drills of a Militant Church

The essence of a cliché is that it is unoriginal and often repeated. However, as the old Latin phrase goes, repetita iuvant… repeated things help. Allow me to get an initial cliché out of the way: with the 1st Sunday of Advent we begin a new liturgical year. There.

But wait. Perhaps it isn’t cliché to begin in this way. The fact is that, year in and out, century in and out, millennia in and out, Holy Mother Church unfolds again and again the whole of salvation history and the mysteries of the life of our Savior through lovingly polished cycles of seasons and feasts. For a child or older student repetitio est mater studiorum, repetition is the mother of all learning. We, as neophyte liturgical children or as seasoned Catholics, by frequenting – in the classical, Latin sense both of crowding together often and also of recapitulating or summing up separately stated arguments – the celebration of the sacred mysteries, especially on Sundays, are helped in the ongoing transformation of our lives by grace and by doctrine. Liturgy is doctrine. To create what I hope becomes a “cliché,” in the sense of it being oft repeated, “We are our rites.”

Think of our entrance into a new liturgical year of grace in philosophical terms. St. Thomas Aquinas (+1274) lays down the dictum (another kind of cliché) that, “Quidquid recipitur ad modum recipientis recipitur… Whatever is received, is received according to the ability of the one receiving it” (cf. STh, Ia, q. 75, a. 5; IIIa, q. 5, etc.).

To illustrate, were I to write the rest of this in Latin, some of you would get it while most of you would not. However, were you to learn Latin and then come back to read it, you would get it. Another illustration. Point a hose at a paper cup and most of the water is not going to wind up in the cup: it is not proportioned to receive what is being given. Point that same hose at a swimming pool and there is a different result.

Consider your own participation in the sacred mysteries at the beginning of a new liturgical year. The sacred mysteries we are exposed to in our liturgical worship don’t change. That is one of the advantages of a perennial, nay rather, millennial and traditional manner of worship. The mysteries don’t change but we do. Each year we are little different, changed by our defeats and accomplishments, our expanding experiences and our pains and sufferings, our growth in knowledge and grace and our physical struggles against the march of time.

On the 1st Sunday of a new Advent we are not the same receivers as we were last year.

What are you going to do with your new opportunities? What is your plan for this new liturgical year of grace? Will it be the same ol’ same ol’, or perhaps something more expansive and, therefore, more receptive? More receptive in passivity or, better, in activity? The essence of what the Council Fathers wanted at Vatican II in their proposals for reforms of sacred worship was a people who were active participants, in the sense of being actively receptive to what the Lord, the true High Priest, offers to the baptized during the sacred mysteries of Holy Mass and other liturgical rites. Reminder: we are our rites. Our participation in them shapes who we are. Having been shaped by them, we are more and more able to receive what God wants us to have. Quidquid recipitur. Repetita iuvant.

Allow me to repeat a suggestion I’ve made before in these columns and on the blog.

A good way to prepare for the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass on Sunday is to begin to look at the antiphons, orations and readings – the Mass formulary – a few days ahead of Sunday. On Thursday you might start looking, for a few minutes each day, perhaps with your morning coffee, the Mass texts for the upcoming Sunday or great feast. That way, when you are in church for Sunday Mass, you are a better active recipient of what is being annually repeated to you for your own good. Then, having received your gifts at Sunday Mass, review them on Sunday evening and again for a few days, Monday through Wednesday, so that they sink in. On Thursday, repeat the process. Try it.

After these hectoring suggestions, here are a few orienting words about this 1st Sunday of Advent.

Advent is mainly focused on our preparation for our personal encounter with the Just Judge and King at the Second Coming (or at our death, whichever comes first). This season is also about other ways in which Our Lord comes to us. For example, the Lord comes to us when the priest says, “This is my Body.” He comes in Holy Communion, actual graces, the words of Scripture, the person of the priest, and in all who need our “righteous deeds,” especially corporal and spiritual works of mercy. With His help we must “Make straight the paths!”, as the liturgy of Advent cries out with the words of Isaiah and John the Baptist.

Adventus translates Greek parousía, which is the term for the Second Coming, the day of the “visitation” of the Lord. In Latin, a visitatio, also known as an adventus, was when the governor or emperor came to take account of the state of things. For those who are well-prepared ahead of time, the visitatio could be less frightening than the contrary state of lack of preparation. Think of the somewhat archaic meaning of the phrasal-verb “visit upon,” as in “the Lord visited a great plague upon the city.” Whether it is the wrath of God or the ineffable joy of the Visitation of Mary to Elizabeth (the adventus of the Man-God King of the Universe still in the womb which made pre-born John leap with joy) a sacred arrival – a divinely informed Advent – must never be taken lightly.

With great wisdom our Holy Mother the Church has given us on this Sunday, century in and century out, the Blessed Apostle Paul’s admonition to “put on the armor of light.” It’s almost as if we belong to a “militant” Church or something. As a matter of fact, week in and out, if we drill down into our orations at Holy Mass we often find military imagery and terms. The Latin content of the traditional orations shapes us. We are our rites. Change the prayers and you change, over time, our identity. Just look at the last 50 or so years of the larger Church’s life.

Notice anything different about the state of the Church?

For those attending the Traditional Latin Mass at least, as well as in quite a few of the altered orations of the Novus Ordo, there are strong verbal reminders that we are members of the Church Militant. In the military you drill a lot: you repeat things. You pay attention to orders for the uniform of the day, communicated or announced in the morning. As Advent begins your uniform of the day is the armor of light.

It might be a good idea to figure out what that means for you, in your God given vocation. To begin that drill, go to confession.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged ,
Comments Off on DIEBUS SALTEM DOMINICIS – 1st Sunday of Advent: The Drills of a Militant Church

Broken Wheels, Mystical Nuptials, Lunar Landscapes, and a Funny Nickname

Today in the calendars of both sides of the Roman Rite is the Feast of St. Catherine of Alexandria, virgin, martyr.

As a matter of fact, she is celebrated by just about all Christians (who have any doctrine and history).

In the 2005 Martyrologium Romanum we find this entry:

Sanctae Catharinae, quam virginem fuisse Alexandrinam et martyrem nrratur, ingenii acumine et sapientia non minus quam animi robore refertam.  Eius corpus in celebri coenobio monte Sina pia colitur veneratione.

It is said that angels bore her body to Mt. Sinai, where Moses received the Law.

In an interesting coincidence, it is also today the feast of St. Moses, a priest and martyr in Rome in 251.  It is also the feast of Peter of Alexandria, a bishop and martyr in 311.  I’m just sayin’.

In the briefest terms, as a well-educated well-born pagan girl she had a vision of the Blessed Virgin, converted, and dedicated her virginity to Christ.    During the persecution by Maxentius she was arrested and challenged by pagan philosophers, some of whom converted before their immediate execution.  She was tortured.  In prison she was fed by a dove and Christ appeared to her.  She claimed Christ as her spouse.  People around her converted.  She was condemned to a seriously ugly death on the “wheel”, which broke when she touched it.  As happened with many remarkably hard to kill virgins, they chopped off her head.

Catherine of Alexandria is depicted usually with a palm, since she is a martyr, and a spiky but broken wheel, the instrument of her agon.  She is also often depicted from medieval time onward as the subject of a “mystical marriage” with the Christ Child who is in the act of placing a ring on her finger.  Another Catherine who is depicted this way is Catherine of Siena, recognizable in her Dominican habit.  There are zillions of painting across several centuries of this popular theme for both saints.  The painting I embedded, above, show both saints at the same time, which is not so usual.  Sometimes, two Cates are better than one.

Eventually the tale emerged of the discovery of the body of St. Catherine on Mount Sinai, healing oil flowing from the body.  It became a pilgrimage destination.

Catherine of Alexandria is also one of the Fourteen Holy Helpers, the “Auxiliary Saint” to whom people have over the centuries turned most often for intercession.  Recourse to the Vierzehnheiligen was an especially popular tradition in German speaking lands.

Here is Catherine’s rather poetic Collect in the older, traditional Roman Rite:

Deus, qui dedísti legem Móysi in summitáte montis Sínai, et in eódem loco per sanctos Angelos tuos corpus beátæ Catharínæ Vírginis et Mártyris tuæ mirabíliter collocásti: præsta, quaesumus; ut, ejus méritis et intercessióne, ad montem, qui Christus est, perveníre valeámus:…

Did you know that there is a lunar crater named after St. Catherine of Alexandria?

And in France, unwed women who attain the advanced unmarried age of 25 are called “catherinettes”.

Meanwhile, Catherine saw the consistory list.

CARAVAGGIO (Michelangelo Merisi)_Santa Catalina de Alejandría, c. 1598_81 (1934.37)

Posted in Saints: Stories & Symbols, SESSIUNCULA | Tagged
3 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 590, etc.

It’s Black Friday, and therefore there are lots of “deals” which the thoughtful and prepared can use to great effect, especially in view of Christmas, a month away.  Please remember me when shopping online. Thanks in advance.

US HERE – UK HERE

Meanwhile, black is threatening mate in 2.

White to move and mate in 4.

NB: I may hold comments with puzzle solutions a little longer than others so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Interested in learning?  Try THIS.   NB60% off through 29 November.

The “Opening Bundle” is 71% off!  HERE

The monks of Le Barroux have a 15% site wide discount today.

And here is a bonus shot, provided by The Great Roman™.

All over Rome there are 18th c. marble inscriptions indicating punishments for those who dumped their garbage in certain places.   The fines and corporal punishments were serious.

Today is the anniversary of one of these placques, these “monnezzaro” signs.   They usually begin citing the order of the Most Reverend and Illustrious Monsignor President of the Streets and at the end give the date of the particular law.

Today, 25 November, is the anniversary of one such sign precise at the place where a group of men get together every afternoon to play chess, in front of a bar in the Piazza der Fico.  The Great Roman™ trekked there in the rain to get me a fresh photo, because I couldn’t find mine.  A Hail Mary for him, please.

Most of the signs are in good shape, but this one is damaged, such that we can’t read the exact year.

D’ORDINE DI MONS. PRESIDENTE DEL. STRADE
SI PROIBISCE A TVTTI DI PORTARE O FAR
PORTARE IN QVESTA PIAZZETTA DAVANT. LA
CASA DELL EREDITA FOPPA IMMONDEZZE
DI SORTE ALCVNA E FARVI MONDEZZAR.
SOTTO PENA DI SCVDI DIECI ED ALTRE
AD ARBITRIO A TENOR DELL EDIT. PVBLICATO
SPEDITO PER GL ATTI DEL NOT DELLE
STRADE IL DI 25 NOVEMBRE 17…7

Moreover, the men who play chess there put up a little plaque of their own in honor of one of their friends who had died, a founder of their chess circle.

Where is this?  As you can see, the chess plaque was added after this google capture.  And there they are playing chess, this time only one board.

Life being lived in Rome.

And garbage is still a real problem.

 

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
2 Comments

CQ CQ CQ: Ham Radio – #ZedNet reminder – 27 November ’22 – 1st Sunday of Advent

Fellow hams, it is time to revive ZedNet.

Here’s a notice about ZedNet for Sunday 27 Nov ’22 – evening at 2000h EST. (0100h ZULU Monday).

I’ve gotten my hardware working again.  I’ll keep my rig on.

So far so good with my DMR and Echolink.  WB0YLE is working on all the connections.   We were on the other day, he using Wires-X. There were some glitches, but it was working.

We now have the site running:  http://zednet.xyz   I have to get that updated.

Zednet exists on the…

  • Yaesu System Fusion (Wires-X) “room” 28598, and 83466 which is cross-linked to
  • Brandmeister (BM) DMR worldwide talkgroup 31429 (More HERE)
  • Echolink  WB0YLE-R

Fellow hams who have access locally to a Yaesu System Fusion repeater, a repeater on the BM network, or a multi-mode hotspot registered with BM can get on and have a rag chew…. 24/7/365

Want to get involved? WB0YLE provided a Bill Of Materials, with links, for what you need. HERE  THIS WAS UPDATED on 22 March 2021  – And this may need another update.

I created a page for the List of YOUR callsigns.  HERE  Chime in or drop me a note if your call doesn’t appear in the list.

For an image of what the Zednet “interconnections” are, click HERE.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged , ,
3 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 589, etc.

Please remember me when shopping online. Thanks in advance.

US HERE – UK HERE

Meanwhile, BLACK to move and mate in 3.  And three is the key!  This is fun.

NB: I may hold comments with puzzle solutions a little longer than others so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Looking for some reading and perhaps a Christmas gift? Here’s an idea.

The Holy Bread of Eternal Life: Restoring Eucharistic Reverence in an Age of Impiety by Peter Kwasniewski – Sophia Press

US HERE – UK HERE

Some nice gift ideas can be found at the shop of the wonderful Summit Dominicans.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
4 Comments

ACTION ITEM! URGENT PRAYER SUGGESTION! Archbp. Carroll’s “Prayer for Government”

Our nation is being torn by organized factions.  The followers of those factions are mostly blind and dim dupes, the ultimate products of a long-targeted education system precisely for these days.  We run the risk of losing all that our forebears won.

Pray in a special way today, Thanksgiving Day, and also make acts of reparation to the Immaculate Heart of Mary, who is the Patroness of these United States.

Everyone, please PRAY for government officials.  Please pray for the timely revelation of the truth in electoral matters.

Fathers, on important public holidays you might have everyone pray this after Masses.  This, and other prayers, are deeply needed.

The following prayer was composed by John Carroll, Archbishop of Baltimore, in 1791. He was the first bishop appointed for the United States in 1789 by Pope Pius VI. He was made the first archbishop when his see of Baltimore was elevated to the status of an archdiocese. John was a cousin of Charles Carroll of Maryland, a signer of the Declaration of Independence.

For Catholics who love their country!

PRAYER FOR GOVERNMENT

We pray, Thee O Almighty and Eternal God! Who through Jesus Christ hast revealed Thy glory to all nations, to preserve the works of Thy mercy, that Thy Church, being spread through the whole world, may continue with unchanging faith in the confession of Thy Name.

We pray Thee, who alone art good and holy, to endow with heavenly knowledge, sincere zeal, and sanctity of life, our chief bishop, Pope N., the Vicar of Our Lord Jesus Christ, in the government of his Church; our own bishop, N., all other bishops, prelates, and pastors of the Church; and especially those who are appointed to exercise amongst us the functions of the holy ministry, and conduct Thy people into the ways of salvation.

We pray Thee O God of might, wisdom, and justice! Through whom authority is rightly administered, laws are enacted, and judgment decreed, assist with Thy Holy Spirit of counsel and fortitude N., that his administration may be conducted in righteousness, and be eminently useful to Thy people over whom he presides; by encouraging due respect for virtue and religion; by a faithful execution of the laws in justice and mercy; and by restraining vice and immorality. Let the light of Thy divine wisdom direct the deliberations of Congress, and shine forth in all the proceedings and laws framed for our rule and government, so that they may tend to the preservation of peace, the promotion of national happiness, the increase of industry, sobriety, and useful knowledge; and may perpetuate to us the blessing of equal liberty.

We pray for his excellency, the governor of this state , for the members of the assembly, for all judges, magistrates, and other officers who are appointed to guard our political welfare, that they may be enabled, by Thy powerful protection, to discharge the duties of their respective stations with honesty and ability.

We recommend likewise, to Thy unbounded mercy, all our brethren and fellow citizens throughout the United States, that they may be blessed in the knowledge and sanctified in the observance of Thy most holy law; that they may be preserved in union, and in that peace which the world cannot give; and after enjoying the blessings of this life, be admitted to those which are eternal.

Finally, we pray to Thee, O Lord of mercy, to remember the souls of Thy servants departed who are gone before us with the sign of faith and repose in the sleep of peace; the souls of our parents, relatives, and friends; of those who, when living, were members of this congregation, and particularly of such as are lately deceased; of all benefactors who, by their donations or legacies to this Church, witnessed their zeal for the decency of divine worship and proved their claim to our grateful and charitable remembrance. To these, O Lord, and to all that rest in Christ, grant, we beseech Thee, a place of refreshment, light, and everlasting peace, through the same Jesus Christ, Our Lord and Savior. Amen.

I became familiar with this moving prayer at my home parish of St. Agnes in St. Paul (MN) where it was recited after all Masses on civic holidays of the USA, such as 4 July and Thanksgiving.

Americans among the readership might print it and bring it to your parish priests and ask them to use it after Mass on national holidays.

firstcontcongresslarge (1)

Continental Congress at Prayer

The opening prayer session of the 1st Continental Congress was about 3 hours long.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
1 Comment

Daily Rome Shot 588, etc.

From my old neighborhood and near where I stay in Rome in Rione Regola.

Via Caritatis Wine GIFT CARDS HERE

Meanwhile, black to move.

NB: I may hold comments with puzzle solutions a little longer than others so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

I received a pack of forwarded mail!

I’d like to thank ALT, AMC, DGC, D&AT, DD, VV, VD, MS, the O’B family.

And thank you to all my donors and wishlist senders.  You are dear to me.  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

Enter Amazon through one of my links and during that session I get a small percentage of what you purchase.  Christmas shopping and Early Black Friday Deals included.

Here’s an idea for your family, or for you as an individual.  This is what I sometimes use for the harder puzzles and to work openings (except that my carrying case is red, to differentiat it from from the other OTB guys regularly battle).

US Chess Triple Weighted Chess Set Combo

Give a gift to your kids: teach them chess when they are young.  THAT’s when to start learning this game.  Make sure they learn LATIN, too.  And most of all, teach them that it is a joy to be able to…

GO TO CONFESSION!

 

Posted in GO TO CONFESSION, SESSIUNCULA |
4 Comments

A zwischenzug

I’ve been reading something co-written by scholars whom I have hitherto respected.  These are not “libs”.   These are not Fishwrap types.  They are sound scholars.  What they signed is over-the-top ideological cant about the Novus Ordo and its Spirit-inspired glories, with a strong polemical and aggressive style.

I’m bumfuzzled.  I’m not bumfuzzled about how to respond to their points (they get some things just plain wrong, which amazes me, easy things, too), though that always takes writing as much or more than they.  I’m bumfuzzled at how people who are so smart could get to this point.

One of the core ideas of their aggressive and polemical ideological cant is that the Novus Ordo is the same Roman Rite reformed by the Fathers of the Second Vatican Council under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit.  It’s the same.

Is it?  Is the Novus Ordo what the Council wanted?  Or is it what some people wanted the Council to want and, by hook and crook … sorry, Spirit-filled discernment… eventually got in the name of the Council?

Whatever it is, friends, and under what inspiration and stemming from which mandates, we have to account for serious contemporary problems, not the least of which are the fruits it has borne, the “poorly implemented” excuses left aside.  We can start with why a huge majority of self-professed Catholics don’t believe what the Church teaches about the Eucharist. That’s a problem.

(But Hey! Father!  But Father!   You are an ossified, nitpicking stick in the mud (not that sticks are bad, they are from trees).  We have the solution!  In the name of the Spirit, we change what the Church teaches, or at least obscure it, so that it isn’t even an issue anymore!  How?  Wellll… change how it is received!  Change the language used!  It’s the Spirit!  Change how it is handled!  Because, People of God! Change who can receive it! Accompaniment is what the Council wanted.  Pretty soon, no problem, right?  If people don’t have the right words and visuals, they don’t have the concept and the problem is gone, right?  No… wait… ummmm…..  YOU HATE VATICAN TWOOO!)

What I’ve read is part of a series, so I will reserve my zisks for the time being.

As a zwischenzug, I’ll re-post this.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

I have questions for them.

Intermediary thoughts.

What we are seeing is a blitzkrieg on all fronts, the main method of attack is the claim that the Second Vatican Council ushered in what is tantamount to a new age of the Church, the “spirit” of which doesn’t just permit but requires RE-interpretation of all cult, code and creed.

The new re-interpretive gift of the Council is not so much in the written texts of the documents but rather in their innovative (and therefore Spirit-filled) style, their subtext, what they really say to the special people who have the ability to tease the Spirit-filled message out from between the words.  It’s a kind of Gnosticism, perhaps.

Whatever there was before the Council is now open to re-interpretation, reform or even rejection, including dogmatic teaching.  We have to use “discernment” through a synodal (“walking together”) path to arrive at the new “way”.  It will be hard, but it is so important that we get that there that anyone who stands in the way or questions motives or direction or methods must quite simply be marginalized, silenced and, if need be, crushed.

Why the aggression?

The answer could have several elements.

Some of those who embrace that aggressive cant, are locked into a paradigm burned into them in their formative years of change, revolution, “fresh air”, anti-authoritarianism, etc, culminating in an iconic moment of halcyon days that must be perpetuated.   Gotta keep that guitar music coming.  Don’t trigger me with a biretta and a Kyrie “in Latin!

Next, there are those who, by their formation committed once-for-all-time to the changes. They take revival of the old ways as implying that they are failures on the level of human respect.  “You are saying that I’m a failure!”

Others sense that there is something lacking in the post-Conciliar reforms that was lost.  They don’t want to look too closely at what was lost because it is frightening.  They don’t want to look at what really is found in the cleft of the rock, because that would require a deep and maybe painful conversion and change.  This is one reason why they don’t like popular devotions: because they are so raw and active in the affective life.

Some know that the winds are blowing in a certain direction. They want to a) ascend with them or b) not be blown over and left behind by them.  They might be ambitious or they might be afraid for what they have.  Either way, they react aggressively to challenges.  Their attachments are utilitarian and political.

The bottom line is, perhaps, fear.

More later.

Meanwhile, compare and contrast.

with

And…

Posted in "But Father! But Father!", Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, The Drill, What are they REALLY saying? |
35 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 587, etc.

Have you ever had one of those days wherein it seems like the entire world, at the same time, wants your attention “NOW!”?

That’s my day so far.

Pardon my brevity.  I am trying to write a couple of things and study what I might use for ADVENCAzTs (if I do them).  I spent part of the morning healing the tech I use for ZEDNET. There’s a chess meeting today.  It is pour rain.

Meanwhile, because I’m having a hard day, here is an easy one!

White to move.

NB: I may hold comments with puzzle solutions a little longer than others so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Priestly chess players, drop me a line. HERE

Interested in learning?  Try THIS.

Check out some swag.

Click!
There’s a back story, too.

And Robert Card. Sarah has a new book, Catechism of the Spiritual Life.

US HERE – UK HERE

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
4 Comments