ROME 6/22 – DAY 2: Flying time

In Rome today the sunrise was at 5:34 and the sunset will be at 20:43.

In better times and under better men the Ave Maria would ring at 21:00.

We are 154 days into this year of salvation and 212 remain.

Today is a 1st Friday and it is the feast of St. Charles Lwanga, killed because he wouldn’t submit to sodomy.

Because yesterday, 2 June was national holiday, Festa della Reppublica – anniversary of the 1946 Referendum to establish a form of government (Pius XII let the nuns out of cloisters to vote) –  I didn’t do all that much except get my digs in order, take care of barrels of email, say my prayers, and have a stroll in the evening.   Today I’ll get out more, since everything will be opened up again.

Meanwhile, I stopped in at my home parish in Rome, Ss. Trinità dei Pellegrini.  After a couple years of being away I found it to be splendidly tidy and upgraded.

Here is a view down the Via dei Pettinari to the Ponte Sisto and across the Tiber.  It is one of the sights I saw when I first came to Rome in the early 80s, as our lodging was in this street, now a many starred hotel.  Here also is the little church with the body of St. Vincent Palloti.  On the left is the outer wall of the St. Trinità.

There are new paintings of saints, including Rome’s beggar saint, Benedict Joseph Labre and St. Giovanni Battista de’ Rossi, whose body was at first in this church under a side altar, but was, alas, translated to a church named after him.

There were lots of flowers by the sacred images.

A couple of years back I asked you readers to contribute to buy an old baptismal font and get it established in the church.  Since St. Trinità was not, before, a parish, it did not have one.  However, it is now the personal, traditional parish and, therefore, needed a font.  You came through.    Links to my old posts about that HERE and videos of the installation HERE.

Here is the final arrangement, with a nice balustrade, veil, and Trinity carving at the top.  Beautifully done.

St. Filippo Neri’s altar is very spiffy, since his feast was recently observed, though bumped around due to Ascension Thursday.

I am sad to report that a great restaurant nearby is gone.  Directly across from the church San Paolo alla Regola it was a terrific place.  About 7 months ago, I learned from the new proprietor, they cashed in and left.  Now it is a sort of upscale Chinese fusion place.  Lot’s of Chinese stuff going on here in Rome.  More on that another time.

Meanwhile, here is a lovely campanile, which I attempted to sketch during my last trip, attached to the little church of S. Maria in Monticelli.

The “mount” part of the name comes from the fact that it is built on a higher bit of land and it didn’t get flooded with the rises of the Tiber.  It is built on an old temple of Neptune (who, in Florence, did not approve of the consistory list)

The church has had a spotty history and has been handed around and rebuilt a few times, pretty much completely so that just about the only ancient thing left is the campanile, which I understand was at some point lowered for the sake of stability.  Too bad.

The apse has a fragment of a 12th c. mosaic.

I was pleased to see that the priests and seminarians who have the church, Padri Dottrinari or Doctrinaries, Priests of Christian Doctrine, were having an evening holy hour before the Blessed Sacrament exposed.   I stayed for a while and prayed especially for my Roman donors as well as for a young man, oppressed by the Enemy, whom I was informed shot himself and is in bad shape.

One of the things I really like about this church.  As you probably know, the coat of arms of the present Pope and, if there is one assigned, the titular cardinal are over or besides the main doors.   Over the years I always check on on S.M. in Monticelli because of this….

Nihil innovetur.

Speaking of time flying, here are some spiffy bells which will help me stay on schedule.  They ring on the quarter hour. Some readers will instantly recognize these bells, perhaps will mixed memories, bright and dark. You can also hear the Noon cannon from the Gianicolo. When We have become The Pontiff with the return of the Papal States, that cannon will be a M777 155mm Howitzer trained exactly at coordinates 41°53?56?N 12°29?5?E. To start.

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And, the Italian version of the Blue Angels, the Frecce Tricolori, zoomed over the City yesterday. I was too late to catch the first pass and I barely caught the second.

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“God Save The Queen”

For all of the vicissitudes of her reign, God bless Queen Elizabeth II for her Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.

Platinum Jubilee.

My prayer.

May she do God’s will in the time given to her and come to the bliss of Heaven by whatever means God designs.

I have lovely memories of being the celebrant at parishes in England on a Sunday and reciting the prayer for the Queen after Mass, which – American as I am – I could do with a warm heart. We want everyone to be saved, right?

Think of the weight of that over the years.

BTW… for an absolutely fascinating explanation of the coronation rites, check out a book by Fr. Aidan…   UK HERE

Aidan Nichols – The Realm

To all my priest friends in England, I raise a glass.  Right now, as a matter of fact.

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D. of Fréjus-Toulon – Rome crushes ordinations

The bishop of the Diocese of Frejus-Toulon, Most Rev. Dominique Rey, has been one of the most well-balanced and tradition friendly bishops of France.   Now comes this…

Rome has basically quashed priestly ordinations in Toulon.  HERE  For the sake of my schedule, here is the machine rendering.

The diaconal and priestly ordinations scheduled for the end of June in Toulon will not take place. Rome questioned about the restructuring of the seminary of Castile and its policy of acceptance, in particular members of new communities.

The blow is hard. The Vatican has asked the diocese of Fréjus-Toulon to postpone the diaconal and priestly ordinations scheduled for the end of June, announced Bishop Dominique Rey Thursday, June 2 in a press release. This decision follows a “fraternal” visit, at the request of Rome, undertaken in recent months by Cardinal Jean-Marc Aveline, Archbishop of Marseille and Metropolitan of the eponymous province on which Toulon depends.

The prelate would have noted, according to our information, several points which raise questions in the formation and discernment of the candidates of the seminary of Castile, but also the reception of members of new communities and young people from dioceses outside Toulon. “Alongside the many beautiful fruits that bear the proclamation of the Gospel and the mission of committed Christians – clerics, consecrated and laity – in our diocese, the questions that certain Roman dicasteries were asking themselves about the restructuring of the seminary and the reception policy of the diocese, confirmed Bishop Rey in his press release. An interview on these subjects even recently, with Cardinal Ouellet, prefect of the Congregation for Bishops, made it possible to provide useful additional information. It is while waiting for new exchanges between Toulon and the departments concerned that Rome has asked to postpone these ordinations.

This decision is welcomed “with pain and confidence” by Bishop Dominique Rey and the teams of the seminary of La Castille but nevertheless remains “a test” for those who were to receive ordination, the diocese said. “We will be keen to carry them in prayer and to continue to accompany them on their journey”, underlines the bishop of Toulon.

The Fréjus-Toulon seminary had ordained 6 priests in 2021, and 8 the previous year. For several years, the number of candidates for the priesthood within the seminary of Castile has been among the highest in France. In 2019, it had 66, just behind the seminaries of Paris (100) of the Saint-Martin community (115). Among the explanations for this high figure, the strong presence of members of new communities who came to train in Toulon. Among them are the Missionaries of Divine Mercy, the Ivorian community Mother of Divine Love, the Apostles of Life and the Sweet Mother of God community. “The principle of Bishop Rey is to give a chance to any community that asks him to be welcomed”, explained to FC Father Jean-Noël Dol, rector of the seminary. In 2019, community members represented between “a third and a half” of the 75 students welcomed, including propaedeutics and deacons.

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Francis talks about globalization of education, “new humanism”, attacks “guardians of tradition”, gets Aeneas wrong.

Above… Aeneas rescuing his family (not so much his wife) and household gods from the sack of Troy.  Leonello Spada

Who was Vincent of Lérins?  He was a Gaul and writer who died about 445.  His work Commonitorium is a defense of orthodox belief and is about how to hand it on.  Vincent is famous for the adage that true Catholic faith is that which is believed always, everywhere and by everyone.

Why bring him up?

In a talk to participants in a conference on the globalization of education – globalization being perhaps the new katholikon – Francis quoted Vincent to attack people who desire Tradition.  There is a summary article at Catholic News Agency.  It’s amusing.  Practically the whole article was about the pretty vicious (if truth be told) attack on people who desire Tradition.

Let’s have a look at the attack through the lens of the CNA piece (I don’t have the interest or time to translate the original).  My emphases and comments:

Pope Francis on Wednesday criticized people who “call themselves guardians of traditions, but of dead traditions,” saying that failing to move forward is dangerous for the Church today.  [Hmmm… I thought that the bishops were supposed to be the guardians of tradition.  Perhaps he doesn’t know the title of the document he signed?  Traditionis custodes?]

Speaking to the organizers of a conference on education on June 1, the pope said that it was vital to make progress by “drawing from the roots.”

He said that “there is the fashion [moda] — in every age, but in this age in the Church’s life I consider it dangerous — that instead of drawing from the roots in order to move forward — meaning fine traditions — we ‘step back,’ not going up or down, but backward.”

“This ‘back-stepping’ makes us a sect; it makes you ‘closed’ and cuts off your horizons. Those people call themselves guardians of traditions, but of dead traditions.”   [Here’s the deal.  This is all just blank assertions without any foundation.  “Those people”?  How is the “fashion” that, apparently, there always is, dangerous now in some particular way?  And if it is always going on, perhaps it isn’t what he thinks it is.  And… “drawing from roots to move forward”… okay, fine.  What does that mixed metaphor even mean?]

Pope Francis underlined that “the true Catholic Christian and human tradition … grows, progresses.”

“Education, for its part, is always rooted in the past, but it does not stop there: it is directed towards ‘forward-looking initiatives,’ where the old and the new converge to create a new humanism,” he said.   [Oh boy.  A “new humanism”.  What would something like that look like, I wonder.  What would constitute a “new humanism”?  I did a quick search on the phrase and found a couple of candidates, one of which (a school of lit crit) I dismissed.  The other… well… UNESCO.  Here are a couple of links about “new humanism” – HERE and HERE]

The pope underlined that true tradition is “what that fifth-century theologian described as a constant growth: throughout history, tradition grows, progresses: ut annis consolidetur, dilatetur tempore, sublimetur aetate.”

The pope was referring to St. Vincent of Lerins, who wrote about the development of Church teaching, saying that it “is solidified over the years, extended with time, and refined with age.”

Pope Francis has invoked this quotation numerous times since his election in 2013, including in a letter on Amoris laetitia in 2018. [Is Communion for the divorced and remarried something that we have as a Church held everywhere, always and by everyone?]

The pope did not mention the liturgy or Catholic doctrine in his June 1 address, but focused his speech on education.   [Okay, I guess we can stop here, since this doesn’t have anything to do with liturgy or doctrine.]

He said that Virgil’s Aeneid contains an image that “can serve to illustrate the mission of educators, who are called to preserve the past … and to guide the steps of the young towards the future.”

“An eloquent example of how to confront the crisis can be found in the epic figure of Aeneas, who amid the flames of his burning city, carries on his shoulders his elderly father Anchises and takes the young son Ascanius by the hand, leading them both to safety,” Francis said.

“Aeneas saves himself, but not by himself. He brings with him his father, who represents his past, and his son, who represents the future. And so he moves forward,” he added.

Pope Francis said that this representation of tradition being respected and preserved reminded him of “what Gustav Mahler said about tradition: ‘Tradition is the guarantee of the future,’ not a museum piece.”   [He likes pull quotes.  Fine.]

The pope met at the Vatican with participants in a conference organized to evaluate the work accomplished so far by his Global Compact on Education and to plan for its development in the years to come.

“I thank you for all that you do in the service of education, which is also the specific contribution that you are offering to the Church’s synodal process. Keep moving in this direction, from the past towards the future, continuous growth,” he said.

“And be attentive to the ‘back-stepping’ so much in vogue today, which makes us think that by stepping back, we can preserve humanism,” the pope added.

Okay… there were some other bits in that talk, I guess I have to just bite the bullet with some machine help:

Starting from Troy, Aeneas does not bring with him goods, things – apart from the Penati idols – but only the father and the son. The roots and the future, the promises. … [Now wait just a cotton-pick’n minute!  “Apart from the Penati idols”?  He tries to make it sound like Aeneas brought out only his father and his son (= past and future).  No. No. No.   He also brought with him his “Aeneads”, as they would be called, trumpeter Misenus (because everyone needs his trumpeter), his friends Achates, Sergestus, and Acmon, Iapyx, and Palinurus. He left his wife to die in the flames.  BUT… and this is key… he also brought the di penati!  These are the tutelary gods of the household, like the Roman lares and the genius of the head of the household, the paterfamilias.  Di penates guarded the whole well being of the microcosm of the cosmos that was the family house, members, servants everything.  And as families had them, so too did the larger res, society. Make no mistake.  If pius Aeneas needed to rescue anything from the wreck of Troy, it was going to be the tutelary deities of his house.  Why?  Because it all comes down to proper worship to secure their blessings and protection.  You might remember: the ghost of Hector comes to tell Aeneas to get out of Dodge and take not just any penates … 

sacra suosque tibi commendat Troia penatis;
hos cape fatorum comites, his moenia quaere
magna pererrato statues quae denique ponto.’

TROY’S PENATES. In other words, Aeneas brought with him the di penates so that he could continue to worship and secure blessings in the exact same way he did in TROY … before the enemy got the horse in and held a council.  The imagery of Aeneas in this case flies directly in the face of everything Francis and those around him are doing!  The image of Aeneas leaving Troy with father, son, followers and penates is exactly about the preservation of Troy in a new place and age and worship is the key.]

Another fundamental element is to invest the best energies with creativity and responsibility. Elder Anchises represents the tradition that must be respected and preserved. I am reminded of what Gustav Mahler said about tradition: “Tradition is the guarantee of the future”, not a museum piece.  [SO?!?] Ascanius represents a tomorrow that must be guaranteed; Aeneas is the one who acts as a “bridge”, who ensures the passage and the relationship between generations.  [Because he is bearing also the penates, even more than Anchises.] Education, in fact, is always rooted in the past, but not to stop: it is aimed “at a long-term planning”, [2] where the old and the new come together in the composition of a new humanism. And against this, there is the fashion  – in all centuries, but in this century in the life of the Church I see it as dangerous – which instead of drawing from the roots to move forward – that sense of beautiful traditions – [I wonder what traditions he thinks are beautiful and which he doesn’t think are beautiful.  That’s a good question: for Francis, what constitutes a “beautiful” tradition?] takes a “retreat”, not “under and up”, but backwards. This retreat that makes us sect, that closes you, that takes away your horizons: they say they are guardians of traditions, but of dead traditions. The true Catholic, Christian and human tradition is what that theologian [Saint Vincent of Lerins] – 5th century – described as a continuous growth, that is, throughout history, tradition grows, goes on: “ut annis consolidetur, dilatetur tempore, sublimetur aetate “. The true tradition is this, which is carried on with the children.

You know what?  I’ll tell you some other things that Vincent of Lérins said.

How about this one? From Commonitorium:

51. … I cannot sufficiently wonder at the madness of certain men, at the impiety of their blinded understanding, at their lust of error, such that, not content with the rule of faith delivered once for all, and received from the times of old, they are every day seeking one novelty after another, and are constantly longing to add, change, take away, in religion, as though the doctrine, let what has once for all been revealed suffice, were not a heavenly but an earthly rule — a rule which could not be complied with except by continual emendation, nay, rather by continual fault-finding; whereas the divine Oracles cry aloud, Remove not the landmarks, which your fathers have set (Proverbs 22:28)….

And…

16. When then all men protested against the novelty, and the priesthood everywhere, each as his zeal prompted him, opposed it, Pope Stephen of blessed memory, Prelate of the Apostolic See, in conjunction indeed with his colleagues but yet himself the foremost, withstood it, thinking it right, I doubt not, that as he exceeded all others in the authority of his place, so he should also in the devotion of his faith. In fine, in an epistle sent at the time to Africa, he laid down this rule: Let there be no innovation — nothing but what has been handed down. For that holy and prudent man well knew that true piety admits no other rule than that whatsoever things have been faithfully received from our fathers the same are to be faithfully consigned to our children; and that it is our duty, not to lead religion whither we would, but rather to follow religion whither it leads; and that it is the part of Christian modesty and gravity not to hand down our own beliefs or observances to those who come after us, but to preserve and keep what we have received from those who went before us. What then was the issue of the whole matter? What but the usual and customary one? Antiquity was retained, novelty was rejected.

And… FRANCIS quoting Vincent of Lérins:

“God gives some Popes to the Church, God tolerates some Popes in the Church and God inflicts some Popes on the Church.”

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ROME 6/22 – DAY 1: Getting some stuff

Today – 2 June – your planet’s yellow Sun shall appear from Rome to rise at 5:35 and to set at 20:42.   These the long and languid days of a Roman summer have already arrived.

If God still loved the Roman Curia, and if the old ways were still embraced, the Ave Maria bell would sound, if it sounded, at 21:00.

Yesterday, after prayers, etc. and a quick bite on the piazza in front of the Signoria of Florence, my eyes were turned to the train station and a fast ride to the City.   The night before, however, there was a fiorentina to devour.  You know you’ve found a good place to eat when the potatoes draw your attention nearly as much as the steak.

Florence is, right now, jammed with tourists.  There are rivers of young Americans. In charity, you would very much like to sit down some of these girls and explain that they really ought to put on clothing, that they are not supermodels, they they – frankly – look like hookers, the look they’ve chosen induces at most a momentary and mostly bored glance, and that modesty is fetching for a lifetime.  It’s really sad what the powers that be have done to women.

Sights and sounds.   Firstly, waiting to find out what our track number would be.

An hour and a half later….

My view for a while.   I am so happy to be back among the bells which ring out their characteristic chimes according to their idiosyncratic patterns.

Along the line I’ll share some of this charming little bell tower, which a few of you out there will instantly recognize both by sight and sound.

Today, 2 June, is a big public holiday so the shops are closed.  Hence, my first tasks involved the acquisition of basic food stuffs for the evening and for today.

The first thing I did was hunt up a ferramenta for the sake of a little shopping cart of the sort that you see women hauling around in the streets as they go from shop to shop.

I don’t especially “heart” shopping… well, here I do… but this one was €15 cheaper than its undecorated counterpart and I am nothing if not a skinflint.

Some of the best euros ever spent, my friends.   There’s nothing quite like hauling half a dozen two-liter bottles of water, a couple bottles of wine, and all your groceries with the bunched plastic bags’ handles slowly severing all your fingers down a cobblestone street in a blazing sun as nearly silent electric taxis startle the juice out of you as they pass.  No, the little carrello portaspesa is my new best friend in Rome.

This silent electric or hybrid car thing in Rome is a development that I do not appreciate.   to hell with cleaner air!   I want to know when the enemy is on my six!

Heading for an Amazon drop locker (I needed real ice cube trays and there wasn’t an ice-cubes chance in the Third Bolgia that I’d get good ones here so I “pro-positioned” some), I couldn’t help but see a gaggle of Franciscans, properly habited.  I suspect they were pilgrims out with one of their Rome dwelling confreres, for they were receiving an explanation of the statue.

You had a shot of the fountain in Milan.  If I forgot to post the one in Florence, here it is again…

Meanwhile, a counterpart in Rome, supplying us with its surprisingly sweet tasting, incredibly hard water.

Allow me to say that as civil ruler of Rome, I would cause various things to be done to these graffiti creeps in public view for the edification of their imitators.

It’s nice to be home.

Last night the Great Roman™ dropped in and we fended off death by starvation with Gins and Tonic and a few of these long noodles they have everywhere here.   This batch was made with little tomatoes – obviously – and hot pepper.

A short stroll as TGR™ departed, brought Day 1 to an end.

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My View For Awhile: heading south slowly

The journey continues although southern progress has been arrested.

Neptune doesn’t approve of the consistory list. At all.

For lunch, pig sandwich.

Yum. Also all around Florence there are small holes in the wall – literally – through which people could get beverages and bottles. There was a tax dodge motive. They eventually went out of use but now many are opened again.

Santa Croce

Dante does not approve of the list of cardinals. No sir!

Speaking of the baptistery doors.

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My View For Awhile: heading south… still

Still heading south, lingering in Florence.

Here is something instructive about the famous flood of the Arno.

A beautiful Mary and St. Filip Neri, my patron, near the street “dei Neri”, his family and where he grew up.

See that white plaque to the right?  That marks the height that the water of the Arno reached on that wall.

Perspective.

Meanwhile in the square in front of the famous Signoria…

A plaque in honor of Savanarola, burned here.

Donatello’s Judith.  Why is she here?   Some say, because she was a “freedom fighter”, it was a celebration of the expulsion of the Medici.  Others take it as a Florentine middle-finger towards Rome and the papacy at the time it was made.

I posted one in Milan a couple weeks back.  So… here.

Pappardelle with rabbit, lardo, and lemon.

Heading home.  In the square they are setting up for the Florentine medieval football.  Heh.

And for my tired eyes at the end of the day.  I can get this here in Italy, but I thank and bless the readers who have sent this to me in the States from my wish list.  You just don’t know!

 

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Of Canons and Wiffle Ball

Except to point out some great organ playing, I think this will speak for itself.

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New members of the College of Cardinals

I’ve been asked quite a few times today what I thought about the new “red hat” list for the College of Cardinals.

I simply laughed.

The ploy and play of the list is so obvious that it is hardly to be taken seriously anymore.

We must all remember that generations of Catholic through many centuries had no idea even of who the Pope was, much less who was a Cardinal in Mongolia. They got along just fine, saying their prayers and living their lives, and going out of the way to help each other when they could and confess their sins when they had to.

Some Catholics will, alas, suffer greatly because of these choices, and I feel for them. But we have to remember that of all the possible universes God could have created, He created this on and not another. This is the time into which our Creator called us into being. This is our time and we are his team for whatever work on earth is to be done. Sometimes that work involves suffering.

In the days to come we will watch the exaltation of will to power, the acceleration of the modernist grinders, the undermining of Catholic moral teaching to the accompaniment of “ooos” and “aaaahs” of sycophantic toadies, with over the top logorrhea about “new dawns” and the elevation of the mediocre against the memory of the truly accomplished of the past.

As my old pastor used to say, we are living in the era of “piccol0mini… little men”, and those who laud them the most are even smaller.

So, College of Cardinals. It’s hard to see such an institution get jerked around like this, but it has ever been so. History has seen the College as both the garden of flourishing saints, deserving of the role, and a sewer of the corrupt and corrupting.

So, laugh, have a Gin and Tonic, say your prayers, do your work, go to confession, help each other out. It’ll be fine.

And do not underestimate the timely interventions of the Almighty. Remember: ultimately, it’s God’s Church.

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ACTION ITEM! Must see brief VIDEO Alert! What was done to the Mass?

Part 2 of the trilogy Mass of Ages is out.

I have some mixed feelings about this second part, to which I will perhaps give voice in the future. Keep in mind that I’ve been writing and commenting on these matters for a very long time.

One thing that is striking in the new film, which is a “must view”, is the moment when the changes to the Mass in the Novus Ordo are shown graphicly, without comment.

While Summorum, in saying there were two forms of the one Roman Rite, was a deft juridical solution to a problem, no one with the slightest clue really thought that theologically, historically, structurally, the Novus Ordo and the Vetus Ordo were the same Roman Rite.

This brief video excerpt underscores the point.

Have a look at this excerpt.  Make sure everyone you know sees it.

Here is a link to the full video on YouTube. I have it set to the moment featured in the tweet. You can easily go back to the beginning. However, if you want to show people, quickly, what was done to the Mass, start here. It will open some shocked eyes.

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