Prayers for a priest after suicide. Priests, drugs, and you.

A terrible thing happened recently.  A young priest, almost certainly reacting badly to medication, committed suicide.  Fr. Evan Harkins, of the Diocese of Kansas City – St. Joseph, had been on medication for an ailment.  It seems to have affected him in a profoundly negative way.

I know I can count on you readers to pray for him and for his family and friends.

There is a lesson that comes from this.   Medications can do really strange things to your mind.

In the wake of Fr. Harkins’ death, the Abbess of Gower – you will remember the great consecration of the Abbey and Abbess – sent out a letter which described the bad experience of some of the sisters who had some medication.  HERE  She writes about how medications for other things induced in her sisters suicidal thoughts.

Also, I recommend that you read the sermon given by the Bishop of Kansas City, Most. Rev. James Johnston, at the funeral Mass for Fr. Harkins.  It is exceptional.  HERE  The bishop spoke, with permission of the family, about how medication for stomach problems worked negatively on Fr. Harkins.

Will you please pray for your priests?   Some of your priests are having a hard time.  Stress, medication, the deteriorating state of the Church, other factors can weigh heavily on them.  May I recommend, please, a prayer for priests daily?  I posted a link to such a prayer on the sidebar of this blog.   Also, ladies, please consider the Seven Sisters Apostolate.

Daily Prayer for Priests

O Almighty Eternal God, look upon the face of Thy Christ, and for the love of Him who is the Eternal High Priest, have pity on Thy priests. Remember, O most compassionate God, that they are but weak and frail human beings. Stir up in them the grace of their vocation which is in them by the imposition of the bishop’s hands. Keep them close to Thee, lest the Enemy prevail against them, so that they may never do anything in the slightest degree unworthy of their sublime vocation.

O Jesus, I pray Thee for Thy faithful and fervent priests; for Thy unfaithful and tepid priests; for Thy priests laboring at home or abroad in distant mission fields; for Thy tempted priests; for Thy lonely and desolate priests; for Thy young priests; for Thy aged priests; for Thy sick priests, for Thy dying priests; for the souls of Thy priests in Purgatory.

But above all I commend to Thee the priests dearest to me; the priest who baptized me; the priests who absolved me from my sins; the priests at whose Masses I assisted, and who gave me Thy Body and Blood in Holy Communion; the priests who taught and instructed me, or helped and encouraged me; all the priests to whom I am indebted in any other way, particularly N. O Jesus, keep them all close to Thy Heart, and bless them abundantly in time and in eternity. Amen.

IMPRIMATUR
+Robert C. Morlino, Bishop of Madison, 6 September 2018

Posted in ACTION ITEM!, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged , ,
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PHOTOS of beautiful Pontifical Mass in Rome at Ss. Trinità and UPDATE on the Baptismal Font Project

Last October I involved you in a project at at Ss. Trinità dei Pellegrini, the FSSP parish and my adoptive home parish in Rome.   Historically, the place had never been a parish church. Therefore, it didn’t have a baptistry or font.  Now that they are a parish, they needed a font for baptisms.  They had a fundraiser which I – and you – got involved in, and we quickly raised the money they needed.

I had an update on the baptismal font.  Here’s a photo.  The font is “on the way”!

Thanks to all of you who stepped up last October.

Meanwhile, my old friend, the mighty Archbishop of Portland, Most Rev. Alexander Sample, is in Rome for his ad limina visit. He celebrated Holy Mass for the Feast of the Purification on Sunday at Ss. Trinità … or as the Romans might say Tirnità.

Here are some shots from their page.

Some comments along the way.   First, note the folded chasubles on the deacon and subdeacon.

In the traditional distribution of candles, you kiss the candle and the priest’s hand as you receive it.  It is, therefore, a liturgical act, far more than, “Here. Have a candle.”

Ready for the procession.  Note that Bambino Gesù is in the house.  The Feast of the Purification is the last hurrah of the Advent/Christmas/Epiphany cycle.  This is the last time we sing Alma Redemptoris Mater, for example.

At Ss. Trinità dei Pellegrini they have, with the help of The Great Roman™, revived the ancient Archconfraternity set up by the Co-patron of Rome, St. Philip Neri.    Their original mission was to minister to pilgrims to Rome.  Today they are also working to promote a more zealous practice of the Faith through liturgy, processions and devotions.

Out into the streets.

“Meno chiacchiera!  Più processioni!”

Back in the church, it’s time for Mass.  The ministers and altar change to white.  The blessing of candles and procession take the place of the prayers at the foot of the altar.  After reverencing the altar, they go straight up for the incensation.

How a celebrating bishop ought to dress and to sit.  It is also an old custom for the ministers to sit with their right foot slightly ahead of the other, in the old Roman manner of ancient holder of imperium seated in his curule chair.

As usual the church was full.

They used a pax brede.  This gadget is used to carry the kiss of peace from the altar to those in choir.

A truly Roman Mass has a lot going on.

I am please to see these photos of the font and of Archbp. Sample and the crew at Ss. Trinità.

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, Just Too Cool, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged , ,
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ASK FATHER: What is St. Augustine’s true name?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I have a number of volumes of St. Augustine’s writings, almost entirely English translations. However, I recently acquired a volume of his writings in Latin and the title page refers to him as “Sancti Aurelii Augustini.” I was wondering if you could explain the significance of “Aurelii” and why it is added to his name. I believe it is the Latin word for golden and therefore assume it is some sort of title of honor, but I was curious about its origin and significance.

Thanks for all the good work you do for our Church!

Thanks for the interesting question.

Auctores scinduntur… authors are divided about the great saint’s name.

The main line is that Augustine belonged to the Roman family, gens, the Aurelia.  The gens Aurelia were Roman citizens.  Thus, his name, Aurelius Augustinus.

On the other hand, some suggest that Augustine acquired Aurelius along the way because Augustinus was on lists of participants of Councils in N. Africa immediately after that of the great Primate of Africa and Bishop of Carthage, Aurelius.  So, as Lancel puts it in terms of modern orthography, was the conciliar list really “Aurelius Augustinus” or was it “Aurelius, Augustinus”.

But, as I said, it is pretty much accepted that Augustine was from the gens Aurelia.

As Gerald Bonner says, the saint’s nomen is Aurelius, his cognomen is Augustus, and there is no information about a praenomen.

Of course we could have a little fun and take this another step.

How is the saint’s name pronounced?

Is it

AuGUStin
ɔːɡʌs’tiːn

or
AUgusteen
ɔːɡʌsˈtiːn

We could have a poll!

Think about it.  There is another Augustine, of Canterbury.  Is his name pronounced differently from that of the Doctor from N. Africa?   How about the city in Florida?  Aby analogy, what about the name of the Emperor Constantine?

Everyone can vote, but only registered users can post comments.  And please do!

How is St. Augustine's name really to be pronounced?

View Results

I think there is a correct answer, by the way.

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Archbp. of Kampala forbids Communion in the hand, other decrees

From PML (Post Media Ltd in Uganda) comes this story.  HERE

The Archbishop of Kampala, Most Rev. Cyprian Kizito Lwanga (age 67), has issued some decrees.

First, he has decreed on 1 Feb 2020 that “every priest, be it a curate or parish priest, will be required to serve for three years in any given parish, school or area. From there, his contract can then be renewed for another three years, after which he will transferred to another area. He said no priest will be allowed to serve beyond two three-year terms at a parish.”

I suspect what this is a similar to the (I think bad) practice in these USA of assigning priests for a 6 year term, renewable. Instead, it is a three year term.

Moreover, Masses are not to be celebrated in homes.

Moreover, he has admonished cohabiting (unmarried) couples not to receive Communion.

Moreover, he has said that priests should avoid having lay people distribute Communion at Mass.

Moreover, priests and deacons are to wear proper vestments.

Moreover, and this is the big one, he has forbidden Communion in the hand. Separate story HERE

“Henceforth, it is forbidden to distribute or to receive Holy Communion In the hands. Mother Church enjoins US to hold the Most Holy Eucharist in the highest honor (Can. 898). Due to many reported instances of dishonoring the Eucharist that have been associated with reception of the Eucharist in the hands, it is lilting to return to the more reverent method of receiving the Eucharist on the tongue,…”

Hopefully this can be a model for decrees by other bishops across the world.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Just Too Cool, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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POLL: St. Blaise Day Blessing of Throats – 2020

Tomorrow, Monday 3 February 2020, is the Feast of St. Blaise, upon which we traditionally have the blessing of throats.

However, in some places, because so many are in church today for Sunday Mass, the St. Blaise blessing was given.

Let’s have a poll.

Did you receive a St. Blaise Day blessing of the throat on Sunday or on Sunday 2 February, or Monday 3 February?

Pick your best answer.  You are registered and approved, use the combox to explain what happened.

NB: ALSO, today I have a setting that should allow you, tomorrow, to come back and click ALSO the BONUS option if you wind up getting the blessing on both days.  (In other words, check two boxes.) But be aware: if you vote today, and click submit, then you won’t be able to add your BONUS tomorrow.  If you think you will be at Mass also tomorrow, you might wait until tomorrow to vote.

Meanwhile, if you are registered here, then both today and tomorrow, you can add a comment!  You don’t have to be registered to vote… sort of like Chicago. Unlike Chicago, you do have to be alive.

Did you receive a 2020 St. Blaise Day Blessing of the Throat? Either on Sunday 2 Feb, or Monday 3 Feb, or both?

View Results

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ASK FATHER: St. Blaise blessing of throats on a different day? And MORE on Blaise blessings!

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Some of us have a hard time getting to Mass on Feb 3rd for the Saint Blaise throat blessing with the candles.

Would it be okay for a priest to give that blessing on another day?

Frankly, I can’t think of a reason why a priest couldn’t give that blessing on, say 2 February, or 4 February, or 4 July, or some other time, if needed.

I like things tidy and I think that the calendar is important.  But, a greater good than sticking only to 3 February as the sole day for that blessing is that people receive the blessing.  Remember that the traditional Rituale Romanum itself says that it is intended as a starting point for practice and even local rituals.   Since I seriously doubt that it is an easy matter to come up with something better than what the Rituale provides, just stick to it.

It is best that you make the effort to get it on St. Blaise Day, since that is the day prescribed.  However, well… get it when you can.

Let’s review the blessing for the candles.

God, almighty and all-mild, by your Word alone you created the manifold things in the world, and willed that that same Word by whom all things were made take flesh in order to redeem mankind; you are great and immeasurable, awesome and praiseworthy, a worker of marvels. Hence in professing his faith in you the glorious martyr and bishop, Blaise, did not fear any manner of torment but gladly accepted the palm of martyrdom. In virtue of which you bestowed on him, among other gifts, the power to heal all ailments of the throat. And now we implore your majesty that, overlooking our guilt and considering only his merits and intercession, it may please you to bless + and sanctify + and impart your grace to these candles. Let all men of faith whose necks are touched with them be healed of every malady of the throat, and being restored in health and good spirits let them return thanks to you in your holy Church, and praise your glorious name which is blessed forever; through Christ our Lord.

Lovely.

So, that is the prayer for the blessing, which must be done in Latin.  Remember, in 1962 we still had to use Latin for blessings of objects.  Latin.  Not Weller’s English.  Latin.

How about the blessing of throats?

The Rituale says that the priest holds these candles in the form of a cross under the chin and against the throat of each person who are kneeling before the altar.

He says, in Latin, “Per intercessionem Sancti Blasii, Episcopi et Martyris, liberet te Deus a malo gutturis et a quolibet alio malo. In nomine… Through the intersession of St. Blaise, bishop and martyr, may God preserve you from throat troubles and every other evil. In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.”

But wait!  There’s more.

Did you know that there is yet another thing to bless on St. Blaise Day?

On 3 February Father can also bless bread, wine, water and fruit.

Here is the English

God, Savior of the world, who consecrated this day by the martyrdom of blessed Blaise, granting him among other gifts the power of healing all who are afflicted with ailments of the throat; we humbly appeal to your boundless mercy, begging that these fruits, bread, wine, and water brought by your devoted people be blessed + and sanctified + by your goodness. May those who eat and drink these gifts be fully healed of all ailments of the throat and of all maladies of body and soul, through the prayers and merits of St. Blaise, bishop and martyr. We ask this of you who live and reign, God, forever and ever.

So, you can take some fruit, bread, wine and water… good things for a person who isn’t feeling well, to church for a special blessing.   Here is the Latin.  Father has to use Latin, not English.  Latin.  You can get the Rituale online at this site, very handy for resources.  HERE

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Saints: Stories & Symbols | Tagged ,
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ASK FATHER: Different kinds of Holy Water

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

To prevent the potential spread of coronavirus, my parish in Tokyo has temporarily discontinued the use of Holy Water upon entrance to the chapel. This has me thinking about the various types of Holy Water. Can you explain the difference between ordinary Holy Water, Epiphany Water, Easter Water, Old Rite Water and their relative merits/uses/capabilities?

Tokyo!  It was about 1 year ago that I was there and celebrated the TLM for a wonderful group of people.  I met the late Fr. Augustin Toship Ikeda at that time.  Prayers for him.

Holy waters!  A great topic.

Here are a few notes about different blessed waters we Catholics use and enjoy.  This is not meant to be exhaustive.  I just want to give a snapshot to those of you who haven’t heard of these things before.

The blessing and use of Holy Water goes back to very early Christian times.  Using the traditional Roman Ritual, the water for Holy Water is first exorcised.  Exorcised salt is mixed with the water.  In both exorcisms the water and salt are addressed directly, as if they were almost sentient, “O you creature of salt, be thou a blessed salt”, and so forth.  The salt has symbolic value, of course, and the saltiness of the water helps retard algae growth.    The prayers for blessing the salt include the biblical image of Eliseus (Elisha) healing the barrenness of the land and water of Jericho with salt, which is counter-intuitive.  God can do all things through his chosen instruments.

The blessing for the water and salt tell us what the Church is doing and what we should do with it:

 May this creature of yours, when used in your mysteries and endowed with your grace, serve to cast out demons and to banish disease. May everything that this water sprinkles in the homes and gatherings of the faithful be delivered from all that is unclean and hurtful; let no breath of contagion hover there, no taint of corruption; let all the wiles of the lurking enemy come to nothing. By the sprinkling of this water may everything opposed to the safety and peace of the occupants of these homes be banished, so that in calling on your holy name they may know the well-being they desire, and be protected from every peril

[…]

wherever it is sprinkled and your holy name is invoked, every assault of the unclean spirit may be baffled, and all dread of the serpent’s venom be cast out.

You see, this is a powerful spiritual tool against the enemy.

Remember that this world has its “prince”, the Enemy, the Devil.  By blessings and consecrations by the priest material things are torn away from the prince and given over to the King, Christ.  We use these sacramental against the Enemy for the sake of body and soul, which are interconnected in this life.

Easter Water is blessed at Easter and at Pentecost.  As you might surmise it is used for baptisms.  Easter Water is blessed while mixing in Oil of Catechumens and Sacred Chrism.  The Paschal Candle is also held in the water.   There is a rite for blessing Baptismal Water apart from Easter or Pentecost.  This is the water we generally use for baptism, though in a pinch, other true water may be used.  We use Baptismal Water for much the same reason as regular Holy Water.  The bonus is the lovely fragrance of the Chrism in the water.

There is a blessing of a rare water used for the reconciliation of a church building, or for the blessing of an altar at the time of the consecration of a church called Gregorian Water, which involves the admixture of blessed ashes and blessed salt and blessed wine.  This water is also used in the rite of “reconciliation” of a church.  A church is a sacred place, normally consecrated.  If something bad happens in the building, say the priest is attacked during Mass or someone breaks in and does a terrible thing inside, then the building should be “reconciled” so that it can be used again for sacred purposes.  We don’t just ignore evil acts, because demons attach through evil acts.  Hence, we exorcise things and people before we bless or baptize.  Gregorian Water, with its use of ash, is a cleansing water.  Ash is an element of ancient soap, after all.   The blessing of Gregorian Water is in the Pontificale Romanum, used by bishops only. The rite for Gregorian Water is particular.  Even the exorcism and blessing of salt is unlike that of the normal Holy Water.  It talks about the reason for its use, the expulsion of demons and temptations from demons.  Similarly, the exorcism of the water describes how it is to be used to drive demons from the even the shadowy places of the church and around the altar.  He blesses ashes without exorcising them, with the image of ourselves confessing our faults.  The wine is blessed invoking the image of Cana.  I’ve never seen this rite.  I’d sure like to.  I hope it will be for the consecration of a church, rather than for its reconciliation!

There is also a blessing of water at Epiphany which involves the basic salt and water combination of Holy Water.  This make Epiphany Water.  The rite is amazing.  I refer you to my post HERE.  However, there is a nice rite which can be performed in the context of, say, Vespers which involves solemn exorcisms of the place and singing psalms, the Litany and Te Deum.  This water would be used to bless houses, along with the blessed chalk, of course.  It is an amazing rite.  This year’s photos HERE.

On different feast days priests could bless water in honor of such and such a saint, for example, St. Raymond Nonnatus or St. Ignatius.  Lots of these.

And we mustn’t forget the Benedictio maris, blessing of the sea, wherein, I believe God has already mixed in the salt.  Spectacular prayers.  I’d love to do that one sometime, preferably with a procession with a statue of the Blessed Mother to the shoreline, with the city’s oompa band.  There are blessings of a spring and a well, as well.  When you don’t get your water from a tap, a state to which we may all soon be returning, you want a priest around to bless your water source.  The blessing for the well includes the serious “repulsis hinc phantasmaticis collusionibus, ac diabolicis insidiis, purificatus atque emendatus semper hic puteus perseveret.”  Nice clausula.

Anyway, we Catholics are deeply interested in water and we like our water blessed, thank you very much.  A thousand and one uses!  Especially against the Enemy of our soul.

The Devil really hates this stuff.

A note.

Newer rite v. traditional rite.

I have never, in almost 30 years as a priest, even once use the post-Conciliar Book of Blessings to bless anything, much less Holy Water.

As a matter of fact, I don’t think that the prayers in that book intend to bless anything.  There is one, I think, which is the traditional prayer for blessing a rosary, tucked in with other options that might bless a person who might use a Rosary.  The book’s preface attempts to change the Church’s theology about blessings.  There are, to be quick, two kinds of blessings, invocative, by which we call down God’s blessing on a person or animal, and constitutive, which ask God to make a thing or place a blessed thing or place with an enduring blessing.   The new book eliminates that distinction.  Hence, I will never, ever, EH-VUR, use the Book of Blessings, which I consider to be a travesty that should never have been promulgated.

I use the older, traditional Rituale Romanum.  I always have and I always will.  The rite tells you what it is doing.  There are the important exorcisms of the elements of the Holy Water (salt, water – in the case of Easter water the oils are consecrated by a bishop).  The prayers say what is going on, the Church’s intention in blessing regular Holy Water.

“God’s creature, salt, I cast out the demon from you…”

“Almighty everlasting God, we humbly appeal to your mercy and goodness to graciously bless + this creature, salt…”

“God’s creature, water, I cast out the demon from you…”

“… pour forth your blessing + on this element now being prepared with various purifying rites.”

“… we beg you, Lord, to regard with favor this creature thing of salt and water, to let the light of your kindness shine upon it, and to hallow it with the dew of your mercy; so that…”

Our rites should describe what we want them to do.  This is also important because

WE ARE OUR RITES.

Use Holy Water.  Sprinkle it around your dwelling. Bless yourself with it.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged
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Lest BREXIT go unnoticed, a Martyrology entry: “Pridie Kalendas Februarii Luna sexta Anno Domini 2020…”

I received this from a reader.

Pridie Kalendas Februarii Luna sexta Anno Domini 2020

Britanniae, anno LXVIII regni Elizabethae Reginae, Imperium, splendore radians, ab illo comitio diabolico scilicet, Unione Europaea, post annos dolorosos XLVII, (br)exiit.

‘In Britain, the 65th year in the reign of Elizabeth Regina, the Empire, bedecked with splendour, after 47 dolorous years, left that diabolical assembly, the European Union.’

This is what Beans tweeted today, in a fit of Euronostalgia.

Perhaps the best thing that he could do is return to Europe, there to help his fellow Europeans get over their loss.

Next… Uscitalia?

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged
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ASK FATHER: In time of high risk contagion, nitrile gloves for distribution of Communion?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Are disposable nitrile gloves acceptable of a Priest distributing the Eucharist? Nitrile gloves are proven to help prevent the spread of pathogens.

Yes, this can be done.  Should it be done is another thing.

Holy Communion can be delivered by means of an inanimate object, such as a tweezers or forceps or tube.  I don’t see a problem with a nitrile glove, other than aesthetics.

Perhaps the color of the day would help?    Blue gloves… hmmm.

It is easy to purify metal objects, but less easy to purify the gloves.  They could be put into water, to dissolve particles of the Host, and then eventually burned.

This brings in several points.  Would the people receiving, and receiving in the hand (blech), wear nitrile gloves?   What would that look like (other than increased risk of profanation of the Eucharist… as every Communion in the hand obviously is)?

I suppose that the gloves would have to be immediately stripped off, dropped into water for a bit, the water drained into the sacrarium or onto the ground, and then the gloves burned.  Would there now have to be a Minister of the Glove Bucket?

Of course if tongs can be used, why use the gloves?

I wonder if it would get to this point.

In a case where the disease is that dangerous and easily transmitted, I suspect you won’t have many people in church for Masses.  Some will want to pray, naturally, and have Mass.

The more urgent question is the procedure for the priest giving last rites including Viaticum.  In that case, Fathers, yes, you can use a nitrile glove or a tong or a metal fistula or straw or an eyedropper to give Communion.    Also, it is possible to anoint using a tweezers or forceps to avoid contact or also simply to reach a person.  I had to do that once in a hospital.

It is an interesting question and I am glad that it came up.

We need questions and information to help us game things out in our heads, which ought to be a constant, commonsense, practice of situational awareness.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Semper Paratus | Tagged ,
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Getting a boost. Thanks.

I am grateful today for a new monthly donor.  AO  UPDATE: Also,  MB, RS, QJ, JB, DH, ML, MM

Today is one of those lean days of the month, when not so many people have subscribed to a monthly donation. One reason why, perhaps, is because not all month’s have a 31st day. In the case of those that have only 30, I think the 31sters get bumped forward. I have to see what happens on 29 February, since it is a leap year!

The last year, 2019, was leaner than 2018, which is a problem.  Hence, having notifications about new subscribers is a morale boost when they come in.

I consider it a duty and an honor to pray for benefactors.  I remember you daily and I, regularly, say Mass for your intentions.  If there are notes with the donations, I also stop and pray for those intentions.

If the blog is useful to you, please consider signing up.


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Thanks. And when shopping online, please use my Amazon link. HERE

Finally, for those of you who have qualifications, remember that I and others are trying to form a Catholic Signal Corps.

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