
5:34 – 20:52 – 21:15 – HIKE!
More like “YIKES!” in Rome today.

It actually hit 104ºF.
Too many people today are without good, strong preaching, to the detriment of all. Share the good stuff.
Was there a GOOD point made in the sermon you heard at your Mass of obligation for the 3rd Sunday after Pentecost (13th Ordinary in the Novus)?
Tell about attendance especially for the Traditional Latin Mass. I hear that it is growing. Of COURSE.
Any local changes or (hopefully good) news?

Sunrise was at 5:34 in Rome today and sunset will be lovely at 20:52. The Ave Maria should chime at 21:15.
It is the feast of two of the saints of the Roman Canon today as well as the day that the Pied Piper of Hamelin did his ratty deed in 1284.
I fortified myself with breakfast while it was still cool. Then off the the Caelian Hill.

The stupid taxi driver, talking on his phone, ignored my comments and took me to the wrong place, near S. M. in Domnica, instead of Ss. Giovanni e Paolo.
So, I visited the church, for the sake of the marvelous mosaics.

Another in the confessional series.

Great grate.


Little Pope Pascal venerates the Blessed Virgin’s slipper. He was alive when this mosaic was made, so he gets a square halo.

The expression on his face? I think it was the consistory list.

Outside. The “Navicella” has Medici connections that I talked about during Lent.


I walked through the park to get to the other church.
Speaking of water. I like these rare wolf’s head fountains.
They were getting ready for a wedding.


St. Paul of the Cross, founder of the Passionists.


Yesterday, which was the real Feast of the Nativity of St. John the Baptist though bumped a day because of the Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, I posted here and elsewhere:
#SCOTUS overturned Roe & Casey on the Feast of a beating Heart and also of a birth of the “greatest man born of woman” (Matthew 11:11).
The Feast of a Heart without sin and of a Saint who, according to tradition, was forgiven Original Sin before his birth.
What I did not know, and what a friend just emailed me, is that 24 June would have been the 98th birthday of Nellie Gray, the long-time pro-life activist who popularized the term “pro-life” and who founded the March For Life for the overturning of Roe v. Wade.
Is it possible that some clever-boots at the SCOTUS looked at a calendar and helped guide the release of the Dobbs v. Jackson opinion?
It sure feels that way.
After all, there are some Catholics around the place.
UPDATE:
Apparently, according to one of my emails, 24 June 1717 was the date of the founding of Freemasonry in England.
On this Feast of the Sacred Heart, when SCOTUS overturned Roe, remember that “Abortion Pill” use will be pushed hard by the Left, and that there is a SAFE REVERSAL after the first pill.
Yes, the pill process can be reversed… safely.
There is a wonderful organization called Heartbeat International, which I have been involved with over the years.
Heartbeat, which has been around since before Roe v. Wade, has something called the Abortion Pill Rescue Network which has a 24/7 contact center for women who regret their abortion decision. Many lives have been saved (and counting) through the abortion pill reversal protocol.
Not just the lives of the babies, but also saving women and the men involved probably a lifetime of wounded heartache afterward.
A great many the abortions in these USA not “surgical” anymore, but rather are from the “abortion pill”, which is in two parts, first, RU-486 (mifepristone) and then misoprostol.
If a woman has regret after taking the first pill, the pregnancy may be saved by the Abortion Pill Rescue Network.
This ought to be more widely known. Spread the word.
Yesterday, SCOTUS gave us: New York State Rifle & Pistol Assn., Inc. v. Bruen
Today, SCOTUS gave us: Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization
There is no longer a federal constitutional right to an abortion.? Abortion access will be determined by States. It is possible that Congress could enact laws.
A couple of really good days.
I note with extreme interest that today is the Feast of St. John the Baptist and the Feast of the Sacred Heart at the same time. Liturgically St. John is transferred to tomorrow, but his Feast really is today.


From a reader…
QUAERITUR:
So . . . I have to smoke some pork butt today for a get together tomorrow. It will send sweet odors heavenward, low and slow and very very tempting for us mortals still stuck on Earth. All day long that scent will drift through the air.
It got me wondering about Feast days that might exempt us from abstinence. Is the Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus a major feast day, or will it be a particularly efficacious day of abstinence?
Canon 1251 of the Code of Canon Law for the Latin Church says:
Can. 1251 Abstinence from meat, or from some other food as determined by the Episcopal Conference, is to be observed on all Fridays, unless a solemnity should fall on a Friday. Abstinence and fasting are to be observed on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.
Today, 24 June 2022 is…
a) a Friday,
b) the Feast of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus (bumping John the Baptist who won’t mind), and as such today is
c) a Solemnity (Novus calendar – 1st Class Vetus), and therefore today is
d) NOT a day for obligatory abstinence, etc.
Some printed trad calendars not withstanding, we go by the 1983 Code of Canon Law. And that’s the Code as it is now, not as it was or as we think it ought to be.
Hence, staying on the “heart” image…
If you want to eat meat today, you can do so with a light heart, even if it goes straight to your left anterior descending.
If you don’t want to eat meat today, you can abstain with a light heart, even if it is vegan.
Would today be a “particularly efficacious” day of abstinence? How should I know? That would be between you and God, who knows you better than you know yourself.
Okay, I’ll try to answer in some way.
Sure, I guess it could be, but then again, so could it be next Tuesday, depending on why you were doing it, the secret motions or your mind and heart, the circumstances. Frankly, I think that each and every willing, loving, joyful act of penance, for – for example – reparation for sins is met with by graces from God and smiles all around in Heaven. How many graces and how large the smiles, I cannot say. I think, “lots” might have something to do with the number, and “really” might have to do with the largeness of the smiles, at least from those with bodies, which aren’t too many, come to think of it.
Obligatory abstinence on such a joyful feast as today seems somewhat contrary to our Catholic identity, but whatever smokes your butt.