Daily Rome Shot 583, etc.

Simple and simply wonderful. The pasta are ferretti, made from flour and water. With salmon, zest from various citrus, and dill.  I have to do this one myself.  The trick will be the “manticare” stage.  I ate out only about a half dozen times when I was in Rome recently and this was perhaps the most memorable plate I had.

Meanwhile, the other day I saw this fun puzzle which the participants in the Meltwater Champions Finals were asked on the spot and on camera to solve.   Magnus, just out of a match, took more than a minute (but he talked it through). Prag needed only about 10 seconds.  How about you?

White to move. Mate in 2.  Not easy.

This reminds me of a joke a commentator here posted:

“I met some chess enthusiasts in a large foyer recently.
They just kept bragging about how good they are at the game.

There’s nothing worse than chess nuts boasting in an open foyer.”

Apt, because in Rome these days the smell of roasting chestnuts is common on the streets.

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

Stock up on wonderful beer by the traditional Benedictine monks of Norcia.

Please use my Amazon links for online CHRISTMAS shopping.  I always like to get that done early so I don’t have to fret about it.

A chessy suggestion is

Birth of the Chess Queen: A History

US HERE – UK HERE

NB: This is a “feminist” view of the history of the development of the Queen.  The writer is at Stanford’s “Institute for Research on Women and Gender”, which sounds absolutely horrifying.  However, she did not go completely off the rails into the darkness of man-excoriating nuttiness.  The acknowledgments section, which I usually don’t read, reveals that she did serious work and consultation in trying to get things right in other languages, etc.  There’s a section on Isabella of Castile, whose cause for canonization is on the books.

Posted in Chess |
10 Comments

ASK FATHER: Our bishop refuses to consecrate sacred vessels. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

My parish has recently been gifted a beautiful new set of Sacred Vessels for use at Holy Mass. We have asked the bishop to bless them when he’s next due to come here for Confirmations but he flat out refuses claiming that it’s not necessary to bless them. Our priest thus tried asking for delegated authority to bless them himself but that was also refused. Is there anything we or our priest can do in this situation to get the vessels blessed so they can be used?

This is a serious problem that highlights many problems in the Church today, including loss of the sense of the sacred and blindness about the spiritual warfare constantly waged by the “prince of this world” against the Church as a whole and against individuals.

First, about that bishop…

What man of you, if his son asks him for bread, will give him a stone? Or if he asks for a fish, will give him a serpent? (Matthew 7:9-10)

What a crummy, stingy thing to do to this priest and those people.

Any bishop worth the chrism they put on him should be delighted to perform exactly the sort of thing for which he was consecrated in the first place. Bishops and priests don’t exist to “committee-fy” but to sanctify. They should be first and foremost involved in the transcendent before the immanent. But these are days in which most priests and bishops ignore transcendence and are mesmerized by immanence, which is the hallmark of Modernism: reduction of the supernatural to the natural… even in terms of priestly vocation.

It is said these days that simply by using a chalice and paten for Mass is sufficient. Once used, they are “consecrated”. I disagree. There is a traditional rite for consecration, so there is a distinction between what the chalice is before consecration and after consecration.  Even the Novus Ordo Pontificale Romanum has a rite for the blessing (not consecration) of a chalice and paten. It suffers from the mania of doing everything during Mass or at least turning everything into an interminable Scripture service, but at least there is a rite that blesses. If there is a rite, there is a distinction, even in the Novus Ordo.

If a chalice is used before consecration we might say that it is “sanctified” in a vague sense by its contact with the Most Precious Thing in the Cosmos, but it isn’t consecrated.

Note well.  In the traditional Pontificale (and appendix of the Missale Romanum) the rite is called “consecration”.  There are three levels of rendering the chalice a fit vessel for the Most Sacred (Eucharistic Species).  The bishop (not a priest), first, in the manner of more important blessing and consecration rites, removes the vessels from the realm of the immanent and mundane and transfers them into the realm of the transcendent and sacred.  Then they receive the consecration.   Similarly, people are exorcised before being baptized, salt and water are exorcised before being blessed, the priest says a purification prayer before praying to God to help him read the Gospel in a worthy manner.

This is the way.

Just as the Confiteor has three words which sound the same in English but are different ways of saying “forgive” (Indulgéntiam, + absolutionem et remissiónem…) imply the logical phases of reconciliation, so to the three words for blessing (benedictio, sanctificatio, consacratio) rather their own subtleties.   And that makes perfect sense, given that the prayers of consecration of a chalice and paten go back to the Liber sacramentorum Romanae ecclesiae (“Book of Sacraments of the Church of Rome”), which was compiled in the 8th century and surely has elements that go way back before that time.  That means that they were already the traditional prayers before that Sacramentary was assembled.

It is in the spirit of Romanitas that there are multiple words, each with a slightly different meaning, when performing the most important actions. This practice surely goes back to pagan Roman prayers and the contractual relationship of the people with the gods in a Pax deorum, in a do ut des agreement. This style of Latin prayer was ported over, quite properly, by the Latin speakers. It was not “vernacular”, the style of everyday language in the streets, but rather a highly stylized language with juridical, military, philosophical terminology and rhetorical shape.

For now, however let’s get a feeling for the traditional rite of consecration of a paten and chalice through a translation.  This is a rough and fast rendering of the Latin, which I may touch up later.  I want to get this posted before I forget why I am writing it.  Rubrics paraphrased.

The bishop wearing the miter:

V. Our help is in the name of the Lord.
R. Who made Heaven and Earth.

Let us pray, dear brethren, that the blessing of divine grace will consecrate and sanctify this paten, for the purpose of breaking on it the Body of our Lord Jesus Christ, who endured the Passion of the Cross for salvation of us all.

Miter off:

V. The Lord by with you.
R. And with your spirit.

Almighty, eternal God, who are the institutor of legal sacrifices, and who among them commanded sprinkled bread of fine flour to be borne to Your altar on plates of gold and silver, deign to ble+ss, sanct+ify + and conse+crate this paten, unto the administration of the Eucharist of Jesus Christ Your Son, who for our salvation and of all people chose to be raised upon the beam of the Cross as a sacrifice to You, God the Father, and who lives and reigns with You in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God, for ever and ever.  R. Amen.

The bishop puts on his miter and makes the sign of the Cross on the surface of the paten with Sacred Chrism and then covers the whole surface with Chrism.

Keeping the miter on he starts in on the chalice:

Let us prayer, dearest brethren, that our God and Lord will by the inbreathing of heavenly grace sanctify the Chalice unto the use of His ministry that is to be consecrated; and that He make it suitable for the human consecratory fulness of divine favor.  Through Christ our Lord. R. Amen.

Miter off

V. The Lord be with you.
R. And with your spirit.

Let us pray.
Deign, O Lord our God, to ble+ss this chalice, shaped by the pious devotion of service unto the use of Your ministry, and pour down by that sancti+fication, by which you poured forth the sanctified chalice of Your servant Melchizedek, and which by art and the nature of metal could not make worthy of Your altars, cause to be (fiat) sanctified by Your bene+diction.  Through Christ our Lord. R. Amen.

Putting on the miter, he makes the Cross with the Chrism inside the cup from lip to lip and then anoints the entire inside saying:

Deign to conse+crate and sanct+ify, O Lord God, this chalice through this anointing and our bless+ing in Christ Jesus Our Lord: who lives and reigns with You in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God, for ever and ever.  R. Amen.

Putting off the miter he says over the paten and chalice:

V. The Lord be with you.
R. And with your spirit.

Almighty, eternal God, we beg, by our hands infuse the power of Your blessing: so that by our bene+diction these vessels and patens be sanctified, and that by the grace of the Holy Spirit they be rendered the new Tomb of the Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ. Through the same Jesus Christ Your Son who lives and reigns with You in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God, for ever and ever.  R. Amen.

They are sprinkled with Holy Water and cleansed with bread which will be burned or put down the sacrarium (because it has Chrism in it).

Look, dear friends, at that last prayer.  That “our hands” speaks to the human element of mediation.  What is the “end” of this consecration?  That the vessels – and the paten is also a vessel – become the NOVUM SEPULCRUM…NEW TOMB.   This underscores that they are used for a sacrifice, after which a victim is dead.  When lately I had my chalice consecrated with this older, traditional rite, that phrase hit me like a baseball bat.

But the bishop in the sender’s question didn’t want to do even the Novus Ordo blessing.  Just use them.

The Novus Ordo rite for the blessing of a chalice and paten outside of Mass has readings, prayers of the faithful (no, really!), a kind of presentation of the gifts (which is how it they are brought to the priest as in Mass), the Our Father, final prayer.  Get it?

But let’s pull the business part of the thing out and see what’s there… or rather, what isn’t there.

Again, my fast translation because I don’t have the English text.

The priest (I suppose a bishop, too), says (and the Latin is as tortured as the English rendering):

Look, Father, on your children,
who, joyful, have brought this chalice and paten to the altar:
Let (fiant) these vessels, which by the will of your harmonious people are destined
for the purpose of celebrating the sacrifice of the new covenant,
become holy by Your bless+ing.
And may we, who, offering sacred things renew Your mysteries (sacramentis) on earth, be imbued with the divine Spirit
until together with the Saints we enjoy Your banquet in the kingdom of Heaven.

Yup.  That’s it.

The Latin is as tortured as the English rendering.

Another thing.  Note in the traditional consecration the prevalence and role of the Sacred Chrism.   This is a connecting feature in the Roman Rite.    The churches walls are anointed with Chrism in special places representing the whole.   The whole surface of an altar when it is consecrated is covered with Chrism.  The paten and chalice where the Eucharist has contact is entirely anointed with Chrism.

The priest’s hands are anointed, because they touch the Eucharist.  They have to be rendered worthy to handle that which is the Most Sacred. In the traditional Roman Rite the one to be ordained is called a consecrandus, a man to be consecrated.  His hands are anointed not with Chrism but rather with the Oil of the Catechumens which is the Oil used in the exorcism parts of the Rite of Baptism.  The bishop says:

“Consecrare, et sanctificare digneris, Domine, manus istas per istam unctionem, et nostram bene+dictionem. R. Amen. … Deign, Lord, to consecrate and sanctify these hands through this anointing and our bless+ing.   Amen.”

See the similarity?

Why might the Oil of the Catechumens be used?  Because it is a purifying agent.   Just as sinful Isaiah’s mouth was purified by an angel-borne burning coal before God gave him the prophetic office, so too the priest’s hands must be purified.   While the paten and the chalice will not ever be touched again in any significant way by the mundane, the hands of the priest will constantly be in contact with the secular.

The bishop goes on:

Ut quaecumque benedixerint benedicantur, et quaecumque consecraverint consecrentur, et sanctificentur, in nomine Domini nostri Iesu Christi.  … So that whatever they will have blessed will be blessed, whatever they will have consecrated will be consecrated and whatever they will have sanctified will be sanctified, in the Name of Jesus Christ our Lord.

After this the priest is given the power to say Mass.

In the consecration of a bishop, Chrism is used to anoint the head, first with the sign of the Cross, and then the whole crown (remember that clerics had tonsures).   His hands are also consecrated, with Chrism this time, first with a Cross and then the whole of both palms.

This why when bishops were ritually “degraded” their palms were scraped with glass and when bishops received Extreme Unction the backs of their hands were anointed, not their palms.

But that bishop won’t consecrate.  Perfectly in keeping with the desacralization of the priesthood and the rites of Mass and the devolution of constitutive blessings to invocative merely, to lay people touching sacred vessels and the Eucharist, the elimination of altar rails and the sacred space of the sanctuary, the turning about the altar, the virtual abolition of a sacred language, the suppression of minor orders and opening of “ministries” and service at the altar to females….

It’s all part of the ongoing process, all in the name of …. what?   Vatican II’s “universal call to holiness”?

IS IT WORKING?

This is getting long.

To the question.

Find another bishop.   I don’t know where you live, but perhaps there is a friendly bishop in a neighboring diocese.  Make it all very private.   Don’t go shouting around, “Bishop Fatty McButterpants in Libville refused to do it, but Bp. Noble in Black Duck was happy to help!”

Find a way.

This is important.

In my “manifesto” I ranted about the “ripple” effect doing sacred things must have in the world as a whole.    Save the Liturgy – Save the World

I wonder how many of the world’s problems today are being exacerbated, amplified, because things being used for Holy Mass, vessels, linens, candles, vestments, etc., have not been properly blessed and/or consecrated.  Things that are still in some way under the thumb of the Enemy, the “prince of this world”, things not yet turned over to God entirely are being used for the Most Sacred, the Sanctissima.

Isn’t that a massive disconnect?  A huge short-circuit of some kind?  A contradiction in terms at the deepest level?

Get a bishop, even if you have to make a special trip somewhere.  The names of tradition friendly bishops are known.  Contact them, one by one, with a private letter, explaining the situation, and asking if they will do it if you come to him.

What a time we are in.  But these mortifications will produce great fruits down the line.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Just Too Cool, Liberals, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Pò sì jiù, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, Si vis pacem para bellum!, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , ,
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The USCCB elections viewed from the ‘c’atholic side

It is occasionally instructive to view events through the lens of the… “other side”.  Hence, we might look at the panicky reaction over the USCCB elections over at the Fishwrap (aka National Schismatic Reporter).    One has the image of that photo of the woman wailing after the loss of her dearest Hillary.

As you may have heard, the US Bishops elected new officers.  From the USCCB site:

Archbishop [Timothy] Broglio [Military Services] was elected president with 138-99 votes over Archbishop Lori [Baltimore] in a runoff on the third ballot. Archbishop Lori was elected vice president on the third ballot by 143-96 votes in a runoff vote against Bishop Kevin C. Rhoades of Fort Wayne-South Bend. The president and vice president are elected by a simple majority from the same slate of 10 nominees. If no president or vice president is chosen after the second round of voting, a third ballot is a run-off between the two bishops who received the most votes on the second ballot. Both bishops will assume their new offices for a three-year term after the adjournment of this year’s USCCB Plenary Assembly.

Fishwrap‘s Brian Fraga shows that grubby site’s cards.  My emphases and comments:

 “Archbishop Timothy Broglio, a former Vatican diplomat who has supported religious exemptions for coronavirus vaccines and has blamed gay priests for the clergy abuse crisis…. [DOUBLE UNGOOD!]

[…]

In the 1990s, Broglio served as private secretary for the late Cardinal Angelo Sodano, the Vatican secretary of state under Pope John Paul II who was a staunch promoter and defender of then-Fr. Marcial Maciel Degollado …. [Therefore, BROGLIO must be bad… even through he was out of that position before the revelations came.]

[…]

In 2018, Broglio supported a U.S. Air Force chaplain who in a homily blamed “effeminate” gay priests for clergy sex abuse. In an emailed response to a woman who complained about the priest’s homily, Broglio said there was “no question that the crisis of sexual abuse by priests in the USA is directly related to homosexuality.”  [Fishwrap is committed to the pro-sodomy movement.]

[…]

During the coronavirus pandemic, Broglio supported vaccine exemptions for military members on religious objection grounds, writing in October 2021 that “no one should be forced to receive a COVID-19 vaccine if it would violate the sanctity of his or her conscience.”  [Fishwrap of course was on the side that no right had the right to refuse the non-vax “jab”, that all were to be compelled to receive it.]

[]

As chairman of the conference’s ad hoc religious liberty committee, Lori played a leading role in the conference’s fight against a rule in the Obama administration’s signature health care law that required employers to provide contraception coverage in health insurance plans.  [Very bad indeed!  We must be forced to pay for as much contraception and as many abortions as possible because… you know… seamless garment!]

In 2020, the conference elected Lori to serve as chairman of its Committee on Pro-Life Activities. In that capacity, Lori has praised the Supreme Court’s June decision overturning Roe v. Wade, which had guaranteed a constitutional right to abortion.
[See above.  Abortion remains the sacrament of the Left.]

Meanwhile, Madame DeFarge (aka the Wile E. Coyote of the catholic Left had a bad day.

The U.S. bishops have sent a clear message of rejection to Pope Francis by selecting Archbishop Timothy Broglio, who heads the Archdiocese for the Military Services, as president of the bishops’ conference.

The bishops’ choice of new leadership revealed the deeper ecclesiological orientation of the body. They had to decide if they wanted to be a part of the ongoing reception of the Second Vatican Council in the context of the magisterium of Pope Francis, or not, a choice made all the more obvious by the success of the synodal process so far. As papal nuncio Archbishop Christophe Pierre reminded them in his opening address, the bishops govern the church “cum Petro and sub Petro,” with Peter and under Peter. They forgot that law, or ignored it, 30 minutes later.

[…]

His oily encomia of the election losers follows.

From his feinting couch, DeFarge moaned…

It is difficult to overstate what a repudiation of Pope Francis the selection of Broglio to lead the conference is. He is the one bishop in the United States with long-standing tensions with the pope, tensions that goes back to Broglio’s work with Sodano, [Yup… gotta blame Broglio for that.] who famously tried to shut down the Latin American bishops’ conference CELAM and who protected the monstrous pedophile Fr. Marcial Maciel, founder of the Legionaries of Christ.  [Ditto.]

It was on Broglio’s watch as nuncio to the Dominican Republic and apostolic delegate to Puerto Rico that Bishop Daniel Fernández Torres was made a bishop. Torres was forced to step down as bishop [LOL!  That’s a good one.  He was summarily and unjustly sacked and hasn’t received an explanation as I understand the situation.] of Arecibo, Puerto Rico earlier this year.  The bishop had long been a thorn in the side of his brother bishops in Puerto Rico [the type liked by Fishwrap], but his decision to publicly oppose the bishops’ collective support for efforts to curb the spread of COVID-19 was a bridge too far. The pope took the unusual step of sacking him. [Everybody MUST BE JABBED!  Churches MUST BE CLOSED!  Masks ARE TO BE WORN!]

Broglio also supported those who harbored “conscientious objections” to getting the vaccine: “This circumstance raises the question of whether the vaccine’s moral permissibility precludes an individual from forming a sincerely held religious belief that receiving the vaccine would violate his conscience,” he wrote. “It does not.” [Everyone MUST comply!]

[…]

[And, true to the principle in cauda venenum, here is the basic problem…] Broglio also seems obsessed with the issue of homosexuality,… [the irony is rich…]

[…]

I am not all that concerned about who sits in the chairs in the US conference.  I am a little concerned for Archbp. Broglio, a good fellow whom I’ve had a chance to spend a little time with, who must travel to the farthest reaches of the planet to serve those who serve.   On the other hand, his HQ for the Archdiocese is just up the way from the HQ of the USCCB.

I pity bishops, all bishops.  I fear for the souls of most of them.

They need prayers.

Posted in The Drill | Tagged
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Chicago: Cathedral Rosary Rally for the restoration of the TLM interrupted by an assault

This deserves wider attention.   It underscores the attitude of cruelty unleashed in the tragically ill-conceived, ineptly named Traditionis custodes.

In that unfortunate Archdiocese of Chicago, this … at the cathedral.

From 1 Peter 5:

Chicago Rosary Rally Assaulted

Since February 2022, Cardinal Blase Cupich’s restrictions on the Latin Mass have severely harmed the liturgical life of Catholics in the archdiocese of Chicago, and even led to the complete cancellation of Masses and Confessions at the Shrine of Christ the King. In response, Catholics from around Chicagoland have been coming together once a month for a “Rosary Rally for the Latin Mass” outside of Holy Name Cathedral in downtown Chicago. The number of faithful attending the rallies has fluctuated from 25 to over 250 attendees.

This past Saturday, November 5, a group of about 25 gathered once again outside the cathedral at 11AM. As always, we had two banners, many signs, and our rosaries. The weather was very windy and a little rainy, which precluded us from displaying a statue of Our Lady of Fatima as we normally would.

After singing two verses of “Immaculate Mary” and announcing the intention of the Rosary Rally, we started the Joyful mysteries. This was our 10th monthly Rosary Rally since February, and we expected it to be uneventful.

Suddenly, after a few decades, a professional-looking man (in a suit and tie) walked out of the Cathedral towards us. Followed by Cathedral security, the man came up to me and loudly demanded that we stop the Rosary, since “there is a Mass going on inside the Cathedral.”

Before I could respond, he violently tried to grab the megaphone I was using, shoving the microphone into my face as he did so. I was shocked – this was the first and only time anyone had physically assaulted any of us since we started doing these rallies.

I immediately stopped the Rosary and told the man that what he did was assault, and that I was going to call the police. He continued to argue that we should stop the rally, to which I responded that he should ask Cardinal Cupich to stop what he is doing to the Latin Mass. Before going back inside the Cathedral, the man said “I apologize” to me. You can see footage with the moments directly after the assault here.

Immediately after the assault, my wife called the police. They arrived about 20 minutes later and suggested that we go inside to see if we could find the assaulter.

As the Mass had just ended, we began asking the faithful attending if they recognized the assaulter from the picture I had taken during the incident. When I showed the assaulter’s picture to one of the Cathedral priests, he immediately said “that man is our music director.”

[…]

Read the rest there.

Posted in Be The Maquis, Liberals, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Last Acceptable Prejudice, Traditionis custodes | Tagged
18 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 581, etc.

White to move. Good luck.  This is tricky.

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

Lately I was playing an online engine and running into the problem of doubled pawns against the Nimzo-Indian.  It looks like RCA has a course on this, though not by Igor.  And, it is on sale.

Also, I had mentioned the other day about the ChessUp board I received.  I’ve used it and have received several serious whuppins.  For the sake of my ego, I think I’ll have to ratchet down the level a bit.  And I need to analyze some of the games and figure out where I’m going wrong.

 

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
3 Comments

A Jesuit saint, Jesuits not-so-much saints, and prayers

A few weeks ago, I posted about going to find in Rome’s mighty, but besmirched, Gesù the tomb of a Jesuit saint held to be as if the Society’s “second founder”, St. Joseph Pignatelli.

Today is his feast.

Hence, I’ll repost a little of what I wrote the day I found his tomb.  I do this partially in light of a meeting of a couple of highly visible Jesuits who seemed to have discussed with a measure of approving glee something that their forebears in the Society would have retched over in disgust.


 

I was on the hunt for Pignatelli’s tombs, one a rake of a cardinal, the other a canonized saint… even though – or perhaps because – he was a Jesuit.

The first church was Santa Maria sopra Minerva.  However, the whole nave is blocked off, so I couldn’t explore for the funerary monument of Stefano Card. Pignatelli (+1623), son of a Neapolitan pottery maker, who had a spectacularly hideous reputation while alive as a committer of sins that cry to heaven.  Although some says it was from envy that lies were told about him, it was said of Pignatelli that his vices were so numerous that not even St. Peter’s dome could cover them.  He was a “friend” of the nephew of Paul V, Scipio Card. Borghese who was of the same sort.  Scipio somehow got Paul to make Stefano a cardinal.  Talk about reactions or a consistory list!

At the time, the “talking statue” Pasquino (there are a few statues around Rome that talk to each other and to the people through the papers people stick on them… they were “frank”), said of the elevation of Stefano to the sacred purple, that “No one should be surprised.  Spain campaigns for her candidates, France for hers.  Everyone wants his own man to be made a cardinal.  Why shouldn’t Scipio’s (member) get what it wants too, it’s own man in the College of Cardinals.”

Some things don’t change.  Think about what German and Flemish cardinals and bishops are pushing today.  Think about what certain Jesuits are after.   No one should be surprised at this.  The Enemy is very good at being an enemy.  The Enemy is going to attack high so as to confuse and corrupt many more.   Bring down some one in a very high place in the Church and massive damage is done.

[UPDATE: Doing a little more grave digging, I discovered HERE that Stefano Pignatelli was buried in S. M. sopra Minerva “senzo alcune monumento funerario… without any funerary monument” in the Caffarelli chapel.]

On the other hand, St. Joseph Pignatelli (+1811) is considered the second founder of the Jesuits after their suppression.  There had been for sometime in the 18th c. an effort on the part of some monarchs, etc., to suppress the Jesuits and expel them from their territories. For example, the Marquis de Pombal put all the Jesuits, with only the clothes on their backs, into 13 ships and sent them to Civitavecchia the port in the Papal States, as a “gift” to Pope Clement XIII, who refused to admit them.   They and Jesuits from Aragon fled to Corsica.  Pignatelli somehow got the 600 or more provisions and work until France took over Corsica and they were driven out again.  Clement XIV, of happy memory, suppressed the Society in 1773.  Pignatelli and his brother made their way to Bologna and lived in retirement, not functioning publicly as priests.  Eventually, Pius VI would permit the Jesuits left, including those who had not been suppressed by Catherine the Great in Russia, to regroup and function.  Pius VII appointed Pignatelli as the superior in Italy.  They remained untouched even when Pius was exiled and France took over.  The Society would eventually be restored fully in 1814, three years after Pignatelli’s death.  The Jesuits themselves consider him to be the second founder of the Society.  More on him HERE.

The Gesù, principle church of the Jesuits.  Magnificent Counter-Reformation statement which the modern day Jesuits are eroding with stupidate.

In the chapel where you find also the grave of Arupe, is the altar with the urn of the remains of San Giuseppe Pingatelli.

As I contemplated his tomb and thought about the immense suffering of those Jesuits, their rank and file, in the 18th c., driven here and there with nothing and under much hostility, I thought of canceled priests.  There are so many today.  Most are quietly trying to scratch out a living, somehow.  A few are visible or even noisy.  Most are hidden and nearly forgotten.  I prayed to St. Joseph Pingatelli for them, to ask Christ the High Priest to heal the injustices against them and to bring them consolations.

I thought of the plight of the Society of St. Pius X, with a saintly founder, which has in some ways been suppressed by Rome but which nevertheless is growing and thriving in a kind of exile in our midst.  I asked St. Joseph to intercede with God and raise up in the Church a figure who could navigate the present day Roman waters with their Scylla and Charybdis of moral and theological corruptions, to help bring that Society into undisputed harmony.  May Our Lady soften the hearts of their critics and be part of the solution rather than perpetuators of the problems.

I asked St. Joseph Pignatelli to intercede, along with St. Ignatius, St. Peter Favre, St. Francis Borgia, St. Robert Bellarmine, St. Aloysius Gonzaga, St. John Berchmans, St. Francis Xavier, St. John de Brebouf, St. Nicholas Owen, St. Robert Southwell (who lived across the street from where I write at the English College), and all the Jesuits saints and blesseds, with St. Joseph the Church’s Protector, and Mary Queen of the Clergy, to obtain special graces for the members of the Society, especially those who have strayed into destructive paths, who will reform the present day Jesuits. I pray for their reform.   If we say corruptio optimi pessima can we not turn the sock inside out and say conversio pessimi optima?


Meanwhile, Clement XIV (Ganganelli) swag that available.  >>HERE<<

Clement_XVI_Mug_01 Clement_XVI_Mug_02

Posted in Jesuits, Linking Back | Tagged
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Daily Rome Shot 582, etc.

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.

Priestly chess players, drop me a line. HERE

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Flying Padre Pio stopped bombers during WW2

I rounded this up from Fakebook.

“In the photo Padre Pio and the North American Protestant pilots who converted to Catholicism after seeing the Saint flying with his planes.”
The testimony of a general who was converted: in the region of San Giovanni Rotondo, where the saint lived, a bomb never fell
This extraordinary story about Padre Pio is told by Fr. Damaso di Sant’Elia, superior of the Pianisi convent, in Italy. The report appears formally in “Positio”, the official document that exposes the defense of the canonization of the famous Capuchin friar, who was awarded the stigmata of the Passion of Christ.
“Several pilots of British and American aviation, of various nationalities and different religions, who, during the Second World War, after September 8, 1943, were in the area of ??Bari to carry out missions in Italian territory, were witnesses of a unusual fact. In carrying out their duties, some airmen passed through the Gargano region, near San Giovanni Rotondo, and saw a ‘monk’ in the sky who was forbidden to drop bombs on the spot.
In Foggia and Apúlia almost all there were bombings on several occasions, but, incredibly, in the area of ??San Giovanni Rotondo (where Padre Pio lived) a bomb never fell. Direct witness of this fact was the general of the Italian air force, Bernardo Rossini, who, at the time, was part of the Air Unit Command together with the allied forces.
General Rossini told me that, among the military, there was talk of a ‘monk’ who appeared in the sky and made the planes withdraw. Many laughed in disbelief at these stories, but, due to the repeated occurrence of the episodes, and always with different pilots, the general decided to intervene personally: he took command of a squadron of bombers to destroy a German ammunition depot that was right in San Giovanni Rotondo.
We were all extremely curious to know the result of the operation. Therefore, when the flight returned, we immediately went to find the general, who, astonished, said that, as soon as he arrived at the site, both he and his pilots saw the ‘monk’ figure in the sky with their hands raised; the bombs dropped by themselves and fell in a forest; and the planes came around without any pilot intervention.
Everyone wondered who was that ‘ghost’ that the planes obeyed. Upon hearing that in San Giovanni Rotondo there was a friar with stigmas, considered holy by the community, the general thought that perhaps he was the ‘monk’ seen in heaven and decided to check it out as soon as possible. When the war was over, this was the first thing he did. Accompanied by some pilots, he went to the Capuchin convent and, crossing the threshold of the sacristy, found himself facing several friars, among whom he immediately recognized the one who had stopped his planes.
Padre Pio came over and, placing his hand on his shoulder, said: ‘So it was you who wanted to kill us all?’. The general knelt before Padre Pio, who, as usual, had spoken to him in the Benevento dialect. The general, however, was certain that the ‘monk’ had spoken to him in English. The two became friends and the general, who was a Protestant, converted to Catholicism ”.

Source: Positio III / 1, p. 689-690

That reference to “Positio” means the collection of “proofs” that were gathered and reports of their examination by experts for the cause of beatification.   Pio’s way many volumes.  My bishop was the Ponente for the cause, the member of the Congregation for Saints who presented the cause to the Congregation for its judgment. I saw the volumes of the Positio many times on his bookshelves.

Posted in Just Too Cool, Saints: Stories & Symbols | Tagged
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Manifestations of total madness (aka Motus in fine velocior)

Signs of the times…

First, Archbp. Vincenzo Paglia – head of the Pontifical Academy for Life – did an interview for RU-486‘s (aka The Tablet) with the writer most suited for that sort of intercourse.  You will recall that when Paglia was bishop of Terni he commissioned for the apse of their cathedral a fresco of a homoerotic scrum featuring himself, visible in a zucchetto and not much else.  I won’t post an image.

Paglia says that some day the Church’s teaching on contraception will be reversed by some Pope.  Really helpful.   Some, reading that, will say to themselves, “If it is going to be reversed someday, we might as well do it now.”   Surely then woke-bishops will coo at such suggestions and offer accompaniment and smiling synodality (“walking together-ity”).  But, some also believe that Traditionis custodes will be reversed, too, so we should simply ignore it now.  Surely then woke-bishops will… will…. well, maybe not.

Moreover, if you are not on board with this, you are fighting against the Holy Spirit.   Because defense of anything traditional these days is against the Holy Spirit.  Not only that, you are also sick in the head (which would be a mitigating factor in resisting the Holy Spirit, I guess – but why be consistent?).

Follow this line of thought as reported via LifeSite

[…]

“Today what is always important to us is to be really pro-life in a manner that is effective and in no way ideological,” Paglia stated. The archbishop added that “we’re interested in demolishing – how to say – the ideological prejudices that contaminate reflection, contaminate public opinion. And they prevent broad engagement across the board.”

Paglia also argued that discussions “about abortion or euthanasia have become ideologized,” without expanding on what he meant by such a statement.

However, he gave a hint on his thoughts when he attacked Catholics who Lamb described as being opposed to “even having a theological dialogue about certain moral questions.”

“I say to those who oppose discussing these issues: I think there is a deep problem of faithfulness to the Spirit,” argued Paglia. “And that is to say, that it is a pathology, it is a sick faith. And faith in the formula and not in the Spirit. I would say it runs the risk of blocking the Spirit.”

[…]

So, if you are against “progress” in moral issues – the sort of “progress” that entirely reverses what the Church has consistently taught, you are, in terms of faith, sick, pathological.

What sort of “progress” might Paglia be interested in dialoging about?

Second, LifeSite also reported on an interview given by the Bishop of Aachen (Germany aka caput omnium malorum) to Deutsche Welle.    He says that sex acts between people of the same sex are a manifestation of the sexual diversity “willed by God”.

[…]

The German prelate said that the “current state of Church teaching does not do justice to certain realities in the area of human sexuality.” Dieser called the Church’s teaching on sexuality “too simplified.” 

“This applies, for example, to the question of homosexuality,” Dieser continued. “We cannot give homosexual people the answer that their feelings are unnatural and that they must therefore live celibate lives. As a Church, we have to answer these questions in a new way.” 

The German prelate claimed that “the science” would show that homosexuality is “not a mishap, not a disease, not an expression of a deficit, nor, by the way, a consequence of original sin.” 

“The world is colorful and creation is diverse,” Dieser stated. “And then I may also accept a diversity in the area of sexuality that is willed by God and does not violate the Creator’s will.” 

This is not the first time that Dieser expressed his view that homosexuality is “willed by God.” He made the same assertion in an interview in September, in which he also claimed that contraception “strengths the protection of life.” 

When asked by the interviewer if God opposes “a man loving a man or a woman loving a woman,” Dieser replied that “same-sex attraction and lovemaking is not an aberration, but a variant of human sexuality.” 

Dieser said that he used to think that homosexuality was a “limitation in male or female identity,” that “young people” have changed his mind, and that he learned that his old views are not “theologically binding.” 

[…]

The Dictatorship of Relativism and the Culture of Death come together in the following.

Third, … I hope this is a spoof, really… someone dropped me a note a virtual reality headset that kills you if your character dies in a video game.  Yup.

The inventor is Palmer Luckey, who is a defense contractor and a key figure in virtual reality technology.  He was a founder of Oculus which Facebook bought for $3 billion. Luckey wrote in a blog post: “Pumped up graphics might make a game look more real, but only the threat of serious consequences can make a game feel real to you and every other person in the game.”

[…]

It was only a matter of time.

Okay, everyone, back to the Matrix.  I’ll leave alone the story about the guy who has invented DIY “assisted-death” pods, “Sarco pods”.  Really.

But before you get plugged in again, might I suggest that you…

  • pray a Rosary,
  • perform an act of reparation,
  • GO TO CONFESSION!
Posted in Pò sì jiù, Si vis pacem para bellum!, Sin That Cries To Heaven, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices, What are they REALLY saying?, You must be joking! |
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Advent 2022 is but a fortnight away! Fathers, do you have your 2022-23 Ordo yet for the Vetus Ordo?

Only 14 more days until Advent.  Early Christmas shopping is a good idea (use my links, please).  Planning for “Stir Up Sunday” should be undertaken.

You should also have an Ordo for the Vetus Ordo.

Which will it be?

There is always one online at divinumofficium.com, but it nice to have a printed copy.

The Pontifical Out-Of-Commission “Ecclesia Dei” used to put one out, but it itself has been put out.  Instead, the Una Voce Federation has created one.  The Latin Mass Society has links to an online view and a way to buy a copy. HERE

The FSSP used to do one, but I haven’t heard from them, nor from the Cantians.  Sooo….

Romanitas Press has one.  HERE

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