VIDEO: London Rosary Crusade of Reparation 2022

A friend in London sent this video of procession with the Rosary, Rosary Crusade of Reparation.

He wrote:

It’s held each year on the Saturday after the feast of the Holy Rosary, and the March starts at Westminster Cathedral and ends at the Oratory. Covid stopped it in 2020 and last year due to severe restrictions it was much smaller and entirely held outdoors. In effect this year was its comeback in its glory after a two year hiatus.

The Crusade was started in 1984 by a good Jesuit Fr. Hugh Thwaites SJ who was himself a convert from Anglicanism. HERE

This year, the guest speaker was the Provost of the London Oratory, Fr. Julian Large CO, and despite a National Rail strike, attracted a considerable number of faithful. The procession made its way through the busiest and most exclusive shopping district of Knightsbridge, passing shops that sell fashion items beyond the reach of many of the ordinary Catholics clutching their rosaries hemmed within two plastic ropes held by volunteer wardens. However, many of the visiting Arab population, who make up the majority of buyers at these shops, stopped to take photos or respectfully stood by to see what the procession go past. Some, however, impatiently revved the engines of their Bugatti Veyrons or their Ferrari Purosangues, above the endless Aves.

It’s the only day of the year that Catholics get to stop the traffic in London, and show public witness to the faith. And it certainly feels wonderful to be in their midst.

Thank you for publishing it father, for the greater edification of the faithful.

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ASK FATHER: Father rushes through the weekly Novena. What to do?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

At my parish, we have a new pastoral administrator….  Don’t know the whole story, but suffice it to say that Fr. W does not really seem to want to be in parish ministry.  Our parish has prayed the Perpetual Help novena every week for several generations, and many people come from other parishes just to pray it with us.  Fr. W, however, has no time for it and races through it after Mass with so little an attempt at reverence and so obvious a desire to get the heck out as quickly as possible, that it has driven most of the people away.  Is there a version of the novena which lay people can pray without the “participation” of a priest?  I should also say, that his normal mode of blessing is to say “May Almighty God bless US . . .,” not a real blessing, so the loss of the final blessing would be no loss to us.  Thank you for taking the time.  God bless you, Father!

I know that Novena well, since at my home parish, also for generations, it has been prayed publicly on Tuesday nights followed by Benediction and confessions.  It also included one of the most Caro-syrup sweet Marian hymns I know: Mother Dearest, Mother Fairest. It has to be Irish.

I answered this privately, as I do a great many questions.  However, I thought about this a little more in light of the how, these days, lay people need to step up more and more.  As Fulton Sheen said:

“Who is going to save our Church? Not our bishops, not our priests and religious. It is up to you, the people. You have the minds, the eyes, and the ears to save the Church. Your mission is to see that your priests act like priests, your bishops act like bishops.”

The immediate answer is, just go ahead a pray the Novena as printed but, without a priest to bless you, say “May Almighty God bless us”, as you wrote above.  God hears.

As I wrote to the Titius who sent in the question, I had a flash in my imagination of the whole congregation staying put as Father “gets the heck out” and then re-praying the entire Novena, aloud, with greater attention.

I wonder if that would get his attention.

Another reason why I wanted to bring this to a wider audience is because of my conviction that our prayers really make a difference, but they have to be prayers.

Prayers don’t have to be sloooooow to be attentive and reverent.  They don’t have to be rushed to be reasonable.   They ought to be paced so that they are language and natural, which will shift a little according to the group and culture.

An exorcist friend told me about the effect that the Rosary has on demons.  In general, the Rosary has a greater effect on demons than any other devotion.  On the “screamometer” from the demons, the Rosary is powerful.

He recounted a particular experience during an exorcism.  Exorcisms can go on for hours and many different prayers and devotions, along with the actual ritual, are deployed.  At one point they were saying the Rosary.  The demon stared to laugh at them.  When queried, the demon responded that their distracted Hail Mary’s were like, “laying wilted dried flowers at her feet”.   When asked what a attentive Rosary filled with love was like, the demon said, “What is a fragrant bouquet for her is our downfall.”

Father needs a reality check.  Prayers have purposes and effects.  While sacraments work ex opere operato, devotions have effect ex opere operantis.

Father has to be made to understand that rushing through the Novena with people like that, in a way that is obviously rushed, is like laying wilted flowers at Mary’s feet.

Think of the rising tide of distain for that which is good, true and beautiful in society and in the Church itself.  I had a mental picture of a tsunami or storm surge, for long held back by the dikes of prayers, devotions, acts of charity, Mass intentions, mortifications and acts of reparation for the sins also of others like offenses against Our Lord and Our Blessed Mother.  At a certain point the dikes will stop restraining.  As the destroying wave roars forward we will be left in the time remaining to us to ponder if perhaps we might have done better to have prayed those Novenas with real attention, to have taken our obligations to fast and abstain and perform works of mercy more intently, to have make our participation at Mass all that it could have been, to have …

GONE TO CONFESSION

… when we could.

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Male service at the altar

A friend and long-time internet colleague – once a member of the staff of the ancient Catholic Forum on Compuserve! – sent the following from a blog called Harvey Millican 2.0: Musings of a Trad Dad: “These Our Men“.

I once told a friend that the servers at Latin Mass, in particular, evoke a great sense of both pride and humility in me. Here we have – in some cases – boys as young as seven or eight serving a Latin Mass with the absolute greatest of integrity. They have diligently studied and memorized another language and intricate movements out of love for Our Lord. I well up when I see this. It is plain to me that the moment these lads pull the cassock over their heads and step into the sanctuary, they have at that moment become men. It doesn’t matter what youthful scraps they may find themselves in on the field, what emotional outbursts erupt as they develop physically and for which their hormones have not yet caught up. It doesn’t even matter their stage of physical development. Lacking the muscle mass, voice change, and facial hair that will one day belie their sex to the world; no, these boys could fight battles with the strength of soldiers once they ring the bell and Father hands off his biretta. There’s just something about that role and how seriously they take it. I think we know the reason. It is indeed a grace.

 

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Canada: A bishop is determined that a church be closed. Parishioners fight back.

Reality is sometimes harsh.

For example, if a parish is not able to pay its bills, it’ll probably have to close or be “merged”.   Either way, a few  hearts will be broken.  I don’t say “lots of hearts” because if there were lots, people would have paid the bills.  I know that in some places demographics shift because of jobs and economy, but if people want it badly enough, they find a way.

HOWEVER, there is the role of the bishop and the local clergy to factor in.  If they have for years given the people no straw for their brick making, scorpions and rocks instead of fish and bread, then the clergy are to blame and it is wrong to punish people for their mistakes.

So, people want a church to stay open and a bishop wants it to close.   There is an example of this I read about at The Pillar in Canada, Archdiocese of St. John.  The bishop, it seems, said that if the people could buy the church they could have it, but there is a priest shortage, etc.   It seems that people came up with the funds but the bishop still wants the place closed.  Period.

Conflict.  It is an interesting read.

Naturally we have to have the usual disclaimer that these situations are complex, etc. etc. etc.  Included in the questioning is whether or not the parish produced priestly vocations over the years, even in the more distant decades.

At this point we are probably saying, “Why not bring in a priest of the FSSP or the ICK or a diocesan priest and try TRADITION?”  What is there to lose?   If the place survives, in a symbiotic rapport between parishioners and chancery, bills being paid, a priest being provided for in a decent manner, what is there to lose?

Of course there are a lot of bishops who would rather see a smoking crater filled with salt and bleach than see a happy parish with our Catholic tradition in action.

It will in interesting to see what happens with this.

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WDTPRS – 28th Ordinary Sunday (N.O.): A seminar on grace!

The elegant Collect for the 28th Ordinary Sunday has been used for centuries on the 16th Sunday after Pentecost according to the traditional Roman calendar.  This is a lovely prayer to sing.

Tua nos, quaesumus, Domine, gratia semper et praeveniat et sequatur, ac bonis operibus iugiter praestet esse intentos.

The separation of tua and gratia in the first line is an example of the figure of speech called hyperbaton: unusual word order to produce a dramatic effect.  That et… et construction is snappy.

This prayer was in manuscripts of the Gregorian Sacramentary which results from the 10th c.   The prayer must have struck a chord with Thomas a Kempis in the 15th c., for he quotes it in the Imitation of Christ, Bk. III, 55: Liber internae consolationis.    It may also have been echoed earlier, in the a 12th c. Commentarium in Ruth e codice Genouefensi: Ex quo motandum est nec fortes stare nec posse debiles proficere, si non superna gratia et praeveniat et sequatur.

st-alphonsus-liguoriThe pair of verbs praeveniat…sequatur reminds me of a prayer I heard at my home parish every Tuesday night after the communal recitation of the Novena of Our Mother of Perpetual Help by St. Alphonsus Liguori (+1787).

In the Rituale Romanum for blessings of people who are sick:

“May the Lord Jesus Christ be with you that He may defend you, within you that He may sustain you, before you that He may lead you, behind you that He may protect you, above you that He may bless you. In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.”

Beautiful.  Gotta suppress that one!

As long as we are into the weeds, let’s really dig and root using especially our wondrous Lewis & Short Dictionary.

Intentus, -a, -um is from intendo, “to stretch out, extend” as well as “to turn one’s attention to, exert one’s self for”.

Our Collect has both semper (“always”) and iugiter (the adverbial form of iugis) meaning “always” in the sense of “continuously.”  A iugum is a “yoke”, like that which yokes animals together.  Iugum, or in English “juger”, was a Roman measure of land, probably because it was plowed by yoked oxen, and it is also the name of the constellation Libra, Latin for a “scale, balance”, which has a beam, a kind of yoke. The Roman measure of weight called the “pound” still today has abbreviation “lbs”.

The iugum was an infamous ancient symbol of defeat.  The Romans would force the vanquished to pass under a yoke to symbolize that they had been sub-jug-ated.  Our adverb iugiter means “always” in a continuous sense probably because of the concept of yoking things together, bridging them, one after another in an unending chain.  We hear this iugiter also in the famous prayer written by St. Thomas Aquinas (+1274) which is the Collect for Corpus Christi and is also used at Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament:

“O God, who bequeathed to us a memorial of Thy Passion under a wondrous sacrament, grant, we implore, that we may venerate the sacred mysteries of Thy Body and Blood, in such a way as to sense within us constantly (iugiter) the fruit of Thy redemption.”

LITERAL TRANSLATION:

We beg, O Lord, that Your grace may always both go before and follow after us, and hence continuously keep us intent upon good works.

OBSOLETE ICEL (1973):

Lord, our help and guide, make your love the foundation of our lives. May our love for you express itself in our eagerness to do good for others.

Look what we had to endure for so long.  What slop.

CURRENT ICEL (2011):

May your grace, O Lord, we pray, at all times go before us and follow after and make us always determined to carry out good works.

Let’s be super picky for a moment about the conjunctions.

That et…et is a classic “both…and” construction, joining praeveniat and sequatur. Here we see et…et…ac…   That ac (short for atque) sometimes informs us that what follows is of greater importance than what precedes it. If that is the case here, then our Collect presents a logical climax of ideas.  This is why I added a “hence” to my literal version.

Tua gratia, “your grace”, is the subject of all these verbs. 

We want God, by means of grace we do not merit, always to be both before and behind us.  We want His help so that we, fallen and weak, may be always attentive to the good works which, informed by faith and God’s grace, will help us to heaven and benefit our neighbor.

All our good initiatives come from God.  If we choose to embrace them and cooperate with Him, He guides them to completion.

Grace goes before.  Grace follows after.

Grace goes before.  God starts things.  Even those initial glimmerings of faith that come before full fledged acts of will based on knowledge come from God.  Like a gardener, he prepares the mind to have faith. This is prevenient grace, for it “goes before”.    Thus, “In every good work, it is not we who begin… but (God) first inspires us with faith and love of Him, through no preceding merit on our part.”  (cf. C. Orange II, can. 25)

That is for the beginnings of faith.  But after faith we can fall and lose sanctifying grace and the gifts and fruits.  That’s when God also “goes before” by offering us graces to convert, glimmers in our soul that bring us to repent and seek forgiveness.  He disposes us by prevenient grace to return to Him.  (Cf. C. Trent, Session 6, ch. 5: “a Dei per Dominum Christum Iesum praeveniente gratia … a going-before (predisposing) grace of God through the Lord Jesus Christ”).

God’s grace goes before.   God’s grace follows after.

Praeveniat… sequatur.

Our good works have merit for heaven because God inspires them, informs them, and completes them through us, His knowing, willing, and loving servants.

The deeds and their merits are ultimately God’s but, because we cooperate and because He loves us, they are also truly ours.

Augustine

As St. Augustine of Hippo (+430) wrote, God crowns His own merits in us (ep. 194.19 to Sixtus, later Pope Sixtus III).

They are truly His.  They are also truly ours and, because He makes His ours, ours are meritorious.

They are meritorious not by us, but by Him who goes before and after.

Sunday’s Collect reminds us how important our good works are for our salvation. They are all manifestations of God’s grace.

Just as we hope God will lavish His graces on us, so too we should be generous with our good works for others.

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ROME 22/10 – Day 8: More about fish, forbidden games, and a new book

Sunset… sunset… 7:12… 18:42. The Ave Maria is at 1900. Today is the traditional Feast of St. Bridget. I’ll stop later to see if the nearby sisters keep the traditional day.

TOMORROW, however, is the Feast of. St. John Leonardi whose remains are at not too distant S.M. in Campitelli. There will be a procession this evening with his relics through the streets of that quarter. I hope to get there. Here is his enclosure from my last visit.

Tomorrow will also be the Feast of St. John Henry Newman.   It is possible to celebrate him with the TLM when not blocked by a heavier day (such as a Sunday, like tomorrow).  For you priests out there who may desire to do this in the future, here is my post about the LATIN Collect for St. John Henry Newman: HERE  Bookmark or copy now so you have it.

I made a bit of a stroll yesterday and the knee did well.   Over in the ghetto, the Jewish quarter, I was able to visit, just to keep the fishy theme going, St. Angelo in Pescheria.  This little church is sort of inside the Portico of Octavia, which was built by Augustus Caesar to replace the Portico of C. Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus, between 33 and 23 BC.

To right, you see the entrance of the Oratorio dei Pescivendoli, of the Fishmongers which was part of the Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament.  The inscription reads: LOCUS ORATIONIS VENDITORUM PISCIUM.  Note the image of St. Andrew, who was, of course, a fisherman.

 

Inside St. Angelo in Pescheria.

The side altar with St. Andrew.



NB: Universitas Piscium Vendotorum Urbis.   Eventually it was suppressed in 1801.  Too bad.  I’d like to think that my fishmonger, near Campo de’ Fiori, was a member and participating in veneration of the Blessed Sacrament as part of his membership.

From this church Cola di Rienzo made his attempt at a coup.

On the Portico itself is this marvelous sign.  It strikes home to all players of games.

There was a list of prohibited games in Rome, generally involving dice and cards, and therefore susceptible to bloodshed.   Chess – waaaaaay back – once involved dice!  That’s why at the time St. Peter Damian railed against chess for clerics and it came to be forbidden.   It couldn’t last, of course.  Great saints played chess, St Francis de Sales… St. Theresa of Avila is the patroness of chess!  Several Popes were avid players, including Leo X and Leo XIII.  John Paul played a lot of chess, too.

Speaking of chess….  BLACK to move for a winning position.

Please remember me when shopping online. Thanks in advance.

US HERE – UK HERE

I’m starting to read… by Peter Kwasniewski (if it is Saturday, he must have another book out)…

The Once and Future Roman Rite: Returning to the Traditional Latin Liturgy after Seventy Years of Exile

More later.

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Wow… just… wow….

WOW. I am a bit at a loss for words, after reading this. It is dead on. I would only quibble with one small part, but even in that he has a point that ought to be considered.

There are so many things I would like to quote. Allow me to be a little self-referential. He describes almost exactly what I experienced in a US seminary:

Nope. I am going to have you go there and read it.

Bring your favorite quotes back here. (Try not to cut and paste the whole thing.)

Here’s one:

What they want is precisely to reignite the fires of that revolution and to reopen the debates over women’s ordination, contraception, intercommunion with Protestants, communion for the divorced and remarried, the legitimation of homosexual sex, cohabitation, and a greenlighting of the whole LGBTQ+IA++ world of sexual acronyms. And if you doubt this just look at Jimmy Martin’s dance card in Rome or the list of issues that the Germans, Belgians, Dutch, Australians, and Irish bishops have put forward. Cardinal Tobin just released the results of Newark’s “listening” sessions and, as I have written elsewhere, it seems as if the Holy Spirit thinks just like the ladies on The View. This is not new. We have seen it before. This is not our first ecclesial rodeo and we did not just fall off the ecclesial turnip truck yesterday. But we are being played for fools as if we do not see what is plainly in view and the sooner we start speaking frankly about all of this the better.

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Diebus Saltem Dominicis – 18th Sunday after Pentecost: Have we forgotten who we are?

I’m pretty much at the end of  Trent: What Happened at the Council by John O’Malley. [US HERE – UK HERE]   O’Malley cannot be thought to be a proper theologian, but he is a pretty good historian and a good writer.  His book is so informative that, when I finish, I might start over.  There is so much to the Council of Trent that I didn’t know about and much that mirrors our own times.   In any event, because of the truly ghastly state of clerical formation and abysmal preaching at the time, which factors fueled the Protestant Revolt, Trent decreed the following:

Archpriests, priests and those who in any manner whatsoever hold any parochial or other cure of souls in the churches shall, at least on Sundays and solemn feastdays, feed the people committed to them, either personally or, if they are lawfully hindered, by someone competent, with salutary words according to their own capacity and that of the people.

They must teach the people everything necessary that they need to know for their salvation by announcing to them – with briefness and clarity of discourse – the vices they must avoid and the virtues they must practice, so that they may escape everlasting punishment and obtain the glory of Heaven. [Council of Trent- Session V, Second Decree, § 2]

Priests and bishops today would do well to review the decrees of Trent.  They waft a lot of the happy gas being spewed into the Church that drugs so many into thinking that everyone is automatically saved by our good buddy Jesus, who is your BFF rather than the Just Judge and King of Fearful Majesty.   However, it is precise the goal of many bishops and those very high in the Church indeed to keep pumping in that soporific gas.  They want to obliterate anything before the 1960’s in favor of the effectively gnostic potions they have alchemically extracted from the Rock through the application of the “spirit” of Vatican II.

That rant apart, let’s consider the upcoming Gospel passage for the 18th Sunday after Pentecost in the Vetus Ordo, recalling with a chuckle the accusation that before Vatican II there wasn’t enough emphasis on Scripture.

I always like to provide some context.  We’ve seen something about the ecclesial lay of the land.  Let’s liturgically expand.

In the northern hemisphere, the shift is on from summer to autumn.  In the sequence of Sundays, Holy Church – which rose and expanded principally in the north – begins her own spiritually autumnal meditation in our liturgical prayer.  As daylight wanes with each check on the calendar, more and more we hear in our sacred worship the eschatological themes of the end of the world and the coming of the Just Judge.  For this reason, in the Novus Ordo – now “Novus Ordo Only” – the Epistle reading from St. Paul to the Corinthians, heard on the 18th Sunday after Pentecost, is read on the 1st Sunday of that most eschatological of church seasons Advent, albeit just in Year B.

Our context for Matthew 9.  Immediately in the previous chapter, Matthew 8:228 ff., Our Lord had just been east of the Sea of Galilee in Gentile territory, the country of the Gergasenes or Geresenes or Gadarenes where He worked the so-called Miracle of the Swine.  This miracle is not recounted in the Gospels of the Vetus Ordo, so it is worth a little space.

Matthew, Mark and Luke have parallel accounts of the Miracle of the Gadarene Swine with differing details.  Luke and Mark have one demoniac, naked, cutting himself, so strong he could break chains, whose demon is “Legion”.  At that time a Roman legion numbered, infantry and cavalry, almost 7000.  Luke has a curious feature.  The Lucan demoniac had been living in the cemetery and was naked.  But after Jesus exorcized him he is described as clothed.  St. Ambrose of Milan (+397) says of this detail that,

“Whoever has lost the covering of his nature and virtue is naked…. A man who has an evil spirit is a figure of the Gentile people, covered in vices, naked to error, vulnerable to sin” (Exp. Luc. VI,44).

Thus, the reclothing of the previously naked man is a return to the way humans ought to be, as Luke further describes him, “in his right mind”.  He begs Jesus to let him follow Him (Luke 8:38).

Although the demonically possessed are not automatically to be assumed to be in the state of mortal sin, we may take this reclothing symbolically to be a return to the state of grace after mortal sin.  The Lord didn’t just exorcize the man, He probably forgave His sins.  Forgiveness of sins and exorcism would also link this episode in Gentile territory in Matthew 8 with the very next chapter in Jewish territory.  Our Savior performed similar deeds in those two, disparate regions to show how He was bringing all the peoples together in His Person.  Think of two miraculous feedings of the multitudes, one in Gentile territory, the other in Jewish, recounted back to back in Matthew 14 and 15.

Meanwhile, Matthew 8 presents not one, but two demoniacs.  Ambrose comments,

“I think we should not idly disregard but seek the reason why the Evangelists seems to disagree about the number.  Although the number disagrees, the mystery agrees” (ibid.).

Ambrose, reading the Scriptures more deeply than just for bare facts, teaches us today how to look beyond the details for what they could suggest spiritually.  The great Fathers of the Church can teach us how to read Scripture so that it isn’t just a text to be deconstructed.

The exorcism and the subsequent possession of the herd of pigs, unclean animals for Jews (but this is Gentile territory), suggests that this isn’t just a concocted tale.  Something happened there that made a real impression.

Imagine the demonically frenzied sight, the demonically enraged porcine squealing of that forced suicide by downing. The swine “rushed violently” (Greek hormáo) into the thrashing waters. Onlookers would rightly deduce that Jesus had initiated this horrific scene.

It was so frightening for those Gentiles, that they begged Him to go away.

And so He went.

And so we finally arrive at this Sunday’s Gospel.

Jesus then crossed the Sea of Galilee westward and made His way to His hometown, Nazareth.  Four faith-filled men carrying a stretcher bearing man locked in paralysis arrived, maybe with others accompanying them, at the building where Jesus was.  While our Gospel passage is from Matthew 9, the parallel passages in Mark 2 and Luke 5 provide additional information, for example, there so a large crowd that there was no room left, “not even about the door”. They couldn’t get through the door to Jesus because of the press of onlookers. Mark relates that they went to the roof and pulled it apart to make a hole through which they lowered the paralytic’s pallet to where Jesus was within.

One assumes that people noticed that someone was tearing up the roof, the tiling (Greek keramos, Luke 5:19).  That would have caused a stir.   Normally, people don’t go around making holes in roofs.  In general, homeowners don’t like it when others pull the roof apart. They, reasonably, try to stop the destruction.  Hence, I am led to wonder if this event may have taken place in the Lord’s own house in Nazareth, which may have been small, because they were poor, and lacking room for a large crowd.  He and His mother didn’t protest the roof’s demolition because of what was going to occur.  Besides, it wouldn’t have been damage that a builder’s Son (“…ho tou téktonos uiós?” in Matt 13:55, asked about him precisely when in Nazareth again) couldn’t repair quickly with willing help, surely from the Faithful Four and Company.  There’s no evidence from Scripture for my conjectures, of course.

Matthew’s and Mark’s accounts both say that scribes (Greek singular grammateos – “lettered guy”, gramma are the Hebrew sacred writings) were present, Scripture scholars and interpreters of Mosaic law, also called nomikoi, “law guys, lawyers”. We saw them last week, too.   When practical questions came up about how to act under the law, these experts were consulted (when they weren’t already sticking their noses in) even by the priests and elders of the Sanhedrin.

In this dramatic setting, dust motes floating and debris from the roof perhaps still coming down, light streaming from above like in a Caravaggio painting, Our Lord read the thoughts and hearts of those present.  He knew that the people (Mark 2:3) who went to such lengths to get their friend to Him were men of faith (Matt 9:2).  In that moment, instead of healing the paralytic, which is surely what the Faithful Four had hoped, Jesus forgave their friend’s sins.

Then Christ read the thoughts and hearts of the scribes (v. 4).  Because only God can forgive sins, they thought, “Blasphemer!”.  Jesus had made Himself out to be God.  Ironically, they got it right but in the wrong way.  Our Lord challenged them with,

Which is easier, to say, ‘Your sins are forgiven,’ or to say, ‘Rise and walk’? But that you may know that the Son of man has authority on earth to forgive sins”—he then said to the paralytic—“Rise, take up your bed and go home.” (vv. 5-7 RSV).

The Lord wasn’t toying with these scribes.  The Lord’s miracles demonstrated His divine personhood and His power over evil.  Words alone wouldn’t impress the scribes.  After all, gratis asseritur, gratis negatur, what is asserted without proof can freely be rejected.  He healed the man’s body. The malady which required an obvious miracle was the result of Original Sin, and it’s resulting separation from God, which He had come to heal in every one of us.

As He had exorcised the man who had been living like a self-mutilating non-human in the place of un-life, a cemetery, He restored to walking normally a man prone and captive in sin.   Draw the conclusion.

In our Epistle for Sunday, we will hear in 1 Cor 1:9: “[S]o that you are not lacking in any spiritual gift, as you wait for the revealing [apokalypsis] of our Lord Jesus Christ”. This is an oblique way to talk about the Lord’s Second Coming.

I mentioned, above, that as we whirl from summer into autumn, the Church now presents end of the world themes.  For that paralytic in Nazareth, this encounter with the Lord through the help of the Faithful Four, this spiritual gift, was a Parousia, an Advent, an Apocalypse.  He received, with the agency of the faith of his friends, the immense spiritual gift of the revelation of the divine Lord and forgiveness of sins, together with the renewal of his physical body.

It all sounds rather like the sequence of our eventual judgement, possible purification in Purgatory, and resurrection of the flesh.

It is what happens in the confessional during our encounter with Jesus in the person of the alter Christus, the priest, the “other Christ”.  As we enter to find Jesus we are paralyzed in sin and acting in a less human way than we ought.  Then, suddenly, at the Savior’s command we are clothed in favor and we exit, risen in grace.  Ergo….

Lest I go on and on about going to confession, perhaps we can close with a couple of points.

First, like the Faithful Four we must ask for miracles.  If we don’t ask for them, we won’t receive them.  Why should there be fewer miracles now than before?   Have we forgotten who we are?

Secondly, please reflect on how the Faithful Four were so determined to get their ailing friend to the Lord that they tore up a roof.

It may be that you are the instrument by whom God wants to work in someone else a beautiful spiritual healing, a liberation perhaps from “demons” of the past, a rising to new freedom in grace.

Some people need to be carried to opportunities for their own mysterious, transforming encounter with Christ.   As a phrase sometimes attributed to St. Teresa of Avila puts it, “Christ has no hands and feet on earth but yours.”

Are you willing to expend time and effort to do that for someone who is spiritually sick or separated from the Church by their choices?   Someone who is not really himself?

Perhaps by inviting someone in spiritual peril to go with you to Mass or to confession or to some good scheduled talk at the parish, or even just to have coffee, will make an opening in a hard case and he will encounter grace.

Posted in Sermons |
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Card. Müller: “we must resist” the hostile takeover of the Church

The other day I saw in a dreadful video something really alarming in regard to the Synodal (“walking together”) process.  The implication was that the Holy Spirit will change the Church and the Church’s doctrines because the Holy Spirit will listen to the process.

That’s bad.

Have a listen to Card. Müller with Raymond Arroyo.  He is dead on target.

His comment about the head of the Synod (“walking together”) Card. Grech is spot on (after 6:05).   Someone ought to make a transcript of this interview.

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ROME 22/10 – Day 7: Fishy First Friday

Today, though it happened behind the buildings, the Roman sun arose on this First Friday at 07:11 and it will set with glorious light and color at 18:44.  The Ave Maria should be at 19:00.  It is the 451st anniversary of the Battle of Lepanto and, therefore, the Feast of Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary.

Today I offered Holy Mass for the intention of my Roman Sojourn Donors.

It’s hard to convey the light factor in Rome on any evening, but especially in October, which must have something to do with angle of the sun, the color of the buildings, and factors like humidity or the amount of dust in the air.

These are just past the prime hour, but  I was in with my knee up.

After Mass today, Clement XIV (Ganganelli) of happiest memory smiles upon my breakfast of toasted pane di Lariano and Patum Piperium.  It is indeed delicious on hot toast.  I brought this from home, but I shall make some of my own while I’m here.

They were setting up in Campo de’ Fiori.  Not so many people see this part.

Today I bought some postcards for the first time in decades.  I have a plan for them, of course.  I’ll use Italian post, so who knows how long they will be en route.

Black to move and win material.

As I did this puzzle, the organist across the way was practicing.

click

Yesterday’s puzzle…  no one?

I created a search box for online shopping at wdtprs dot com slash shop dot htm

Enter anything and search.  This is what I use when I have to buy something.  I may as well use my own links!  You will get a window saying that “The information you’re about to submit is not secure”. Ignore that and “send anyway”.  That’s a good way to shop online and give me a hand.

UPDATE:

I did have a walk and the knee felt good.  I had a desire for a true Roman Friday meal from Er Filettaro… filetto di baccalà.

Here’s Roman Friday… note the bread with anchovy and butter.

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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