Try to do some task today with zeal, focus and excellence

We hear the phrase “Church Militant” often right now. Rightly so. We are in a war. War on the spiritual, angelic level rages around us constantly. The world, the flesh and the Devil war upon us as we struggle along in this vale of tears towards our patria, our heavenly fatherland.

Heck, we are even being warred upon by higher ups in the Church herself!

On this Feast of All Saints, I want to share something with you that moved me this morning as I read it.

Yesterday, Pres. Trump presented the Medal of Honor to Master Sgt. Matthew O. Williams, for his actions in Afghanistan. As I watched the blurb on the news I caught a view of his awards and decorations. He had already won a Silver Star and Bronze Star.  “Who is this guy?”, quoth I.

I read about the action he was in and the citation.

Read about him and Operation Commando Wrath and what happened on 6 April 2008 in the Shok Valley of Afghanistan. HERE

He said in the interview I saw on the news that he expects to return to his unit at Fort Bragg tomorrow and get back to work.

Friends, if you need something to inspire you on a hard day, if you need encouragement in living your vocation well, pick any MOH recipient and read the citation. If you are not moved thereafter to try to do some task today with zeal, focus and excellence, then you are not paying attention to the clock ticking on your time among us.

For our wrestling is not against flesh and blood; but against principalities and power, against the rulers of the world of this darkness, against the spirits of wickedness in the high places.

Ephesians 6:12 DRA

Posted in Be The Maquis, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Just Too Cool, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged
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WDTPRS – ALL SAINTS – Holy Day of OBLIGATION in 2019

Thursday 1 November 2017 is a Holy Day of OBLIGATION.

Check your parish schedules for Masses.

For our part, there will be a Missa Cantata at St. Mary’s in Pine Bluff, WI, in the Extraordinary Form.  6:30 PM.

The Collect for today’s Mass for All Saints is the same in both forms of the Roman Rite.  It it found already in the 8th century Liber sacramentorum Engolismensis. It was also, with variations in the Gelasian Sacramentary, among the prayers for Sts. Peter and Paul.

Omnípotens sempitérne Deus, qui nos ómnium Sanctórum tuórum mérita sub una tribuísti celebritáte venerári: quaésumus; ut desiderátam nobis tuae propitiatiónis abundántiam, multiplicátis intercessóribus, largiáris.

I like the separations of nos from venerari and, in the next section, desideratam from abundantiam. Note the assonance on “o” in the second line and “i” in the second. The third has strong alliteration and that whole second section hums with “m” and “n”. That last line has some thumping fine rhythms, and the final largiaris gives us a splendid clausula, or rhythmic closing: íntercessóribus lárgi-ÁH-REES. Wonderful to sing.

Our L&S says that celebritas, which looks an awful lot like an English word, is in the first place “a great number, a multitude, a large assembly, a numerous concourse or gathering, a crowd”. However, Cicero and Livy use it for “festal celebration, a solemnity” as in c. supremi diei, “a solemn procession for the dead”, appropriate for this time of year, for All Saints and All Souls. In the third place celebritas is “fame, renown”. But you might be able to hear how celebritas, while most naturally is in our prayer in the second sense of “solemnity”, can also bear that echo of “multitude” or even “throng” in our Latin ears and minds. Veneror is a deponent verb, and therefore has passive forms but active meanings. It means, “to reverence with religious awe, to worship, adore, revere, venerate” and “to ask reverently for any thing, to beseech, implore, beg, entreat, supplicate”.

Propitiatio, in our liturgical prayer, reflects propitiation in the sense of atonement, to be sure, but it is often rendered as “pardon, mercy, merciful indulgence”.

LITERAL REWORKING:

Almighty, eternal God, who granted us to venerate the merits of all Your saints under a single solemn festal celebration: we beseech You; that, our intercessors having been multiplied, You bestow upon us the longed for abundance of Your atoning mercy.

I like that image of the multiplication of intercessors.

Each saint before the throne of God – in love for us and desire for us to join them – intercedes and and glorifies.  God’s glory and how we receive intercessory help are both greatly increased with every soul that enters heaven.  Each soul entering heaven massively increases joy by orders of magnitude.

Remember the great scene in the movie Fantasia when Mickey Mouse is trying to stop the brooms from multiplying?  They redouble and redouble and redouble, their numbers compounding.  Or, sticking to pop culture and magicky stuff, that time in the Harry Potter movie when touching something made it reduplicate until you were overwhelmed by the volume.

We, however, cannot for a moment think that we can be mere passive recipients of their loving intercession, any more than we can commit the errors of Lutherans and think that we are strictly passive in the reception of graces.  We have to do our part.

Concerning our brethren in the Church Triumphant, we of the Church Militant must beg for intercession from on high and pray and intercede for the Poor Souls in Purgatory.

We are all in this together.   That’s why I posted about this project HERE.

We are together because of our common humanity and our baptism into Christ, from whom come and to whom go all things.

This perspective can help us get through all the vicissitudes of this life, the duties and challenges of our respective vocations… no matter what.

Are you frustrated in your life or what you see going on around you?  Anxious?  Angry or sad?

Let’s hear this prayer through the lens of the Imitation of Christ (3, 47):

THE VOICE OF CHRIST:

My child, do not let the labors which you have taken up for My sake break you, and do not let troubles, from whatever source, cast you down; but in everything let My promise strengthen and console you. I am able to reward you beyond all means and measure.

You will not labor here long, nor will you always be oppressed by sorrows. Wait a little while and you will see a speedy end of evils. The hour will come when all labor and trouble shall be no more. All that passes away with time is trivial.

What you do, do well. Work faithfully in My vineyard. I will be your reward. Write, read, sing, mourn, keep silence, pray, and bear hardships like a man. Eternal life is worth all these and greater battles. Peace will come on a day which is known to the Lord, and then there shall be no day or night as at present but perpetual light, infinite brightness, lasting peace, and safe repose. Then you will not say: “Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?” nor will you cry: “Woe is me, because my sojourn is prolonged.” For then death will be banished, and there will be health unfailing. There will be no anxiety then, but blessed joy and sweet, noble companionship.

If you could see the everlasting crowns of the saints in heaven, and the great glory wherein they now rejoice – they who were once considered contemptible in this world and, as it were, unworthy of life itself – you would certainly humble yourself at once to the very earth, and seek to be subject to all rather than to command even one. Nor would you desire the pleasant days of this life, but rather be glad to suffer for God, considering it your greatest gain to be counted as nothing among men.

Oh, if these things appealed to you and penetrated deeply into your heart, how could you dare to complain even onceOught not all trials be borne for the sake of everlasting life? In truth, the loss or gain of God’s kingdom is no small matter.

Lift up your countenance to heaven, then. Behold Me, and with Me all My saints. They had great trials in this life, but now they rejoice. They are consoled. Now they are safe and at rest. And they shall abide with Me for all eternity in the kingdom of My Father.

Do not be despondent.  Do not let the present chaos get you down.   It is an honor to have been called by God into existence in this present age.   He has something for us to do.  Now, more than ever, the Church Militant must be militant.   Buckle it on.

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URGENT ACTION ITEM: Special warfare for the Church on 1 Nov, 2 Nov, 3 Nov – VIDEO

Friends and I have kicked around a project which you can all participate.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Get this video out to at least FIVE other people.

Ask each one of them to share it with another FIVE… etc.

What’s this about?

The Church Militant is being disordered from the very highest climbs of influence, both within the Church and without.

We have to FIGHT for the Church.

The Church’s membership can be considered from three different angles.  All members of the Church belong to Christ’s Mystical Body.  Three groups participate as a Church in Christ, those who are alive on this earth now, those who have died and are awaiting in purification the Beatific Vision (for only the pure can see God) and those who, having died in the friendship of God, having done all the temporal punishment due to sin, having been purified of all attachment to sin, now enjoy together the bliss of Heaven for eternity.

The Church Triumphant enjoys heaven.
The Church Suffering is being purified.
The Church Militant is marching yet as pilgrims in this world.

The world itself is disordered in our regard because of sin.  We have wounds to our human nature, which makes it hard to learn and to control impulses.  This world is beset by its “Prince” as Christ calls the Enemy Devil.   We are fighting, as pilgrim warriors constantly against “the world, the flesh, and the Devil.

Consider these three days.

1 November – All Saints (the Church Triumphant) – A HOLY DAY OF OBLIGATION
2 November – All Souls (the Church Suffering) – INDULGENCES
3 November – SUNDAY (the Church Militant) – A HOLY DAY OF OBLIGATION

We propose to you to pray for the Church in a special way over these three days.

Here is the concrete project.

Let us ask for the intercessory prayers of the Church Triumphant and the Church Suffering for the Church Militant.

1 November you WILL go to Mass.  It is of Obligation this year.   Ask the Church Triumphant to intercede.  Pray to the Queen of Heaven, Mary, Mother of the Church, with a “Memorare” after Communion (which I hope you can receive, in the state of grace).

2 November you CAN gain a Plenary Indulgence for the souls of members of the Church Suffering.   Pray for the dead.   You can visit a cemetery and you can gain the indulgences in other ways as well.   Go to Mass and say a Memorare for the Church.  Ask Mary, Queen also of the Church Suffering to intercede for the Church on earth.

3 November you WILL go to Mass. Every Sunday is a day of Obligation.   Pray for the Church Militant in the special way.   At Mass say a Memorare after Communion for the Church Militant, of which you are a member.  Shoulder your spear and pack and pray.

Today, 1 November, engage in battle for the Church.

This is a time of spiritual battle.  YOU can alert your friends and loved ones to join the ranks of this battle line.  Get the word out.  Get the troops into position.   Send them the video.   Tell them what you are going to do.  Tell your parish priests.  Make at least 5 calls or contacts.

At the end of these three days we may not see the results of our efforts right away, but we will have done something that can be worked with on high. Remember. Christ crowns His own merits in our actions. By ourselves we are too weak to do anything. But Christ gives us the work to do, places our hands on the plow or on the hilt. He places His hands over ours, to make our hands strong enough. By so doing the works are ours and they are His and He crowns His merits in us.

Your holy efforts create ripples out into the cosmos, both visible and invisible.

Let us strike a mighty blow on 1 and 2 and 3 November and leave the Queen of Heaven to ask her Son to work His will in our ways.

Remember, O most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was it known that anyone who fled to thy protection, implored thy help, or sought thine intercession was left unaided.

Inspired by this confidence, I fly unto thee, O Virgin of virgins, my mother; to thee do I come, before thee I stand, sinful and sorrowful. O Mother of the Word Incarnate, despise not my petitions, but in thy mercy hear and answer me.

Amen.

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Ritual bowl for demonic Pachamama placed on St. Peter’s altar at closing Mass of #AmazonSynod

Robert Moynihan is a long-time vaticanista.  In his latest “Letter #59, 2019: In plain sight“, he looks into the pagan element worked into the closing Mass of the Amazon Synod (“walking together”).  We had speculated about whether or not the wooden demon idols of Pachamama, a demon goddess to whom human sacrifice was offered, a kind of “mother earth” embodiment, but clearly demonic, would be involved at the closing Mass of the “walking together”.   Nope. No demon statuette.

That doesn’t mean that Pachamama, the demon pagans worshipped with human sacrifice, wasn’t being openly honored during the Mass, and even put on altar of St. Peter’s, above the bones of the Apostle!

Moynihan at great length establishes with reference to video of the closing Mass the bringing forward at the offertory a bowl with a plant that that Francis instructed Msgr. Guido (that poor man) Marini to put on the altar.  Of course gifts at the offertory are NOT to be placed on the altar, much less trash like this.

What was put on the altar?

A bowl of dirt with various plants, one with red flowers.

Those are ugly plants.  Since they are not beautiful, they must have some other meaning or purpose.

Skipping to the point… Moynighan posted:

Then, after further searching, I learned that a bowl of soil with plants in it is often connected with ceremonial rituals involving Pachamana.

There is one among many websites that describes the ritual (link):

“If it is difficult for you to move to a natural space to offer to Mother Earth, do not worry, you can perform your own ritual at home:

“- Use a bottle or flower pot full of dirt, there you proceed to make a hole, it is recommended to do it with your hands to connect with the energy of the ritual[This goes back to what happened in the Vatican Gardens… the pagan, demonic ceremony.]

“- A kind of well is made, and food and drinks are poured for the enjoyment of the Pachamama.

“- The food option is extensive, one can place anything from fruits to Creole foods and seeds. In the case of drinks, chicha, natural juices, honey, wine, even coca leaves are suggested.

“- Then we proceed to cover it with dirt and flowers.

“Every year more people join in and they learn to leave our daily work and reflect and realize who we are, where we are and have this gesture of recognition and thanks to Mother Earth, which we say is humanity, the earth, the air, the animals, the water, the fire, which is everything that makes our life.”

Also: “You should never miss something red, it is the favorite color of the Pacha!  [Red flower.]

So it seemed that the bowl of flowers presented at the offertory of the final Synod Mass, and then placed on the altar during the consecration, may have been connected with a ritual of veneration, and thanks, to Mother Earth, known as Pachamana…

So the images were not in the basilica, but perhaps an offering to Pachamana, in a bowl, was…

Ann Barnhardt has the goods on this black bowl.  HERE  She has several posts.  In summary….

These black bowls, the same as the one with the red flower on the altar of St. Peter’s, were all over the place in the Synod Hall.

They were all over the church Santa Maria in Traspontina, where all the evil displays and presence of this demonic shaman and women religious were found all day.

The black bowl was in the pagan Vatican garden ceremony in honor of Pachamama:

Look on the left.

A closeup shows there is a symbol on the bottom of the upturned bowl.  Ann may have found a version of that symbol, which is, surprise, for Pachamama.

Detail… rotated.

With a red flower in honor of the demon goddess on the altar at St. Peter’s at the direction of Francis.

So, an obvious of statue wasn’t placed on or near the altar of St. Peter’s Basilica, but this instrument with the demonic symbol was placed on the mensa of the altar of Sacrifice directly over the bones of Peter himself.

The implications of this are, frankly, horrifying to contemplate.

 

Posted in The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged
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PRIESTS: Are you available to take a “Gregorian Mass” intention?

In the past I have played “yenta” and put lay people who want Gregorian Masses (30 consecutive Masses for a single intention – usually, but not limited to, for the deceased).

I have a few requests that are languishing.

Priests: If you can take such an intention write to me.

Put AVAILABLE FOR GREGORIAN MASS in the subject line.  Just that.  Not anything else.  Just that. Only that…. as in NOTHING OTHER THAN THAT.  Drop me a note (HERE)

I will forward your email to people who made the requests.  You work out stipends on your own.  I will have ZERO to do with that.

UPDATE 31 Oct:

Right now I have 5 priests available.

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HOME DAY 1: Thanks

Roman Sunset 6:39. Sunset 17:08.  Ave Maria bell 17:30.

Madison Sunrise 7:32.  Sunset: 17:51.  There is not now nor has there ever been an Ave Maria bell in Madison.

In case you are curious, the next change to the time of the Roman Ave Maria will be 4 Nov, when it changes to 17:15 through 19 Nov.

So, I am back in Madison.

Don’t look for HOME DAY 2 tomorrow, because… well… think about it.

My time in Rome was terrific and you benefactors made it possible. I hope to get back to Rome at the beginning of May, for business and pleasure.

Yesterday, when I was picked up at the airport, there were snow flakes flying.

This morning, we have a solid cover of snow.

Quite a contrast and more proof of global warming.

I now have to deal with my computer issues.  Sigh.  First, it was the major changes to the blog while on the road.  Now, at home, it is hardware.

I have a lot of mail to sort and quite a few errands.  I would ask a prayer or two that I remain healthy!

UPDATE:

I’m definitely not in Rome any longer.

Quite a bit of snow, as a matter of fact.

Collecting mail and two boxes from Gammarelli in Rome.

There’s a lot to go through when you are gone for a while.

Posted in What Fr. Z is up to |
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Communion denied to pro-abortion candidate Biden. Good.

Here’s a good thing.   The priest at this parish rightly denied Holy Communion to former VP Joe Biden according to can. 915.   By can. 916 he should not have presented himself for Communion.

From ABC news in S. Carolina.

The pastor and priest of St. Anthony Catholic Church in Florence refused to give communion this past Sunday to Former Vice President and Presidential Hopeful Joe Biden.

Biden attended the church’s early services during his campaign stop in the Pee Dee.

The church’s pastor, Rev. Robert E. Morey, released the following statement on the matter:

“Sadly, this past Sunday, I had to refuse Holy Communion to Former Vice President Joe Biden. Holy Communion signifies we are one with God, each other and the Church. Our actions should reflect that. Any public figure who advocates for abortion places himself or herself outside of Church teaching. As a priest, it is my responsibility to minister to those souls entrusted to my care, and I must do so even in the most difficult situations. I will keep Mr. Biden in my prayers.”

The Biden campaign declined to comment, citing the incident as a private matter.

Fr Z kudos to Fr. Morey!

Posted in 1983 CIC can. 915, Emanations from Penumbras, Our Catholic Identity |
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ROME DAY 27: Birthday Memories

Roman Sunrise 7:36. Roman Sunset: 18:11. Roman Ave Maria 17:30.

Yesterday was a bit of a down day.  I didn’t do much, other than to get my things organized for packing and to write an article for Catholic Herald.

In the afternoon I said Mass at Ss. Trinità, as usual, and a few friends participated.   One, from Germany, who has been good to the TMSM too, took a couple of photos.

It seems I am quite fast…

Afterwards we made our way to supper.

As we were waiting, they brought us some appetizers.

This a puff of baccala.

As mentioned yesterday, I had gone to the restaurant the day before to talk to the chef about creating a special risotto that would accompany the wonderful sake that my friend from Tokyo brought for my birthday.  The risotto was splendid, with mussels, a scallop, a bit of saffron and a touch of Sambuca Romana in the process.  The risotto and the sake were great together.  The chef got it exactly right.

Some fettucine with guanciale, Roman mint, artichoke and pecorino.

These things… these things… someone else ordered them and they were unbelievably good, with a filling of stracotto, in a thyme butter and with carmelized onion.  These guys have game.

There followed some 36 hour roast suckling pig and rabbit stuffed with sausage and herbs which we shared around.

For dessert some of us split portions of the unconventional ajo e ojo which matched up surprisingly well with Talisker 25, brought by a friend.

It was a fine evening, in a fine place, with close friends.  This will be a great memory down the line.  And it was a pleasure to share around the sake in such an interesting way which my friend from Japan took such trouble to bring, a real honor.

Thus, 60th birthday.  Thanks to everyone who sent greetings.

Today, not sure what’s going to happen.  I have packing in the morning.  I may see an exhibit.  There are two errands to fulfill and Mass tonight.

And that will be it.

Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to |
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A ‘Humanae vitae’ moment for this pontificate? It’s time to pray for a miracle.

I have in the past written, when writing about miracles, that it we don’t pray for miracles, we won’t receive them. Praying does not compel God to grant them, but praying prepares us to accept all that God grants and does not grant.

But God also works miracles.  He pours out extraordinary, undeserved graces.

My friend Msgr. Charles Pope penned a thoughtful and also heartfelt reaction to the Synod, the antics in and around in, and its closing document, to which I subscribe. He contextualized it against the background of those things Francis has been rumored to have said, things hardly to be believed about the divinity of Christ and the annihilation of the souls of sinners rather than damnation.

Msgr. Pope recognizes, as so many do, that these are times of unprecedented uncertainty and disorder, and much of that disorder is coming from the top. Ex capite.

Finally, as I have done in some of my posts, Msgr. Pope prays. He prays for a ostensibly miraculous Humanae vitae moment. In 1968 who thought that Pope Paul would remain strong and true, and not give in to the spirit of the times. And this of those times! 1968. If 1968 was bad, 2019 is worse. Who believes that Francis will be strong and true in support of and in defense of tradition in wake of this Synod (“walking together”)?

We pray for many things. Sometimes we promise prayers. Sometimes we fulfill those promises. Sometimes we pray in passing. Sometimes we pray in earnest.

How will you now pray?

Now pray as you have never prayed before. Pray often, intensely, with purpose.

This is what Msgr. Pope says:

Let us pray: Help us, Lord. Save us and have mercy on us, and draw us back from the brink. We acknowledge our sins Lord and that all of us have fallen short of the glory and holiness to which you have summoned us. But now, on the edge of a precipice, we pray for a miracle — indeed, Lord, one that will stun the world. Guide the Holy Father, who now writes an apostolic exhortation, and may his thoughts be directed only to you and the precious faith you have revealed. Lord, we are poor and needy — whom do we have but you, O Lord? To whom else can we turn? In these times of deep confusion and division we ask a miracle, Lord — yes, a miracle.

Mother Mary, intercede for us. Amen.

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ROME DAY 26: Old friends, new friends, dear friends

Sunrise in Rome: 7:35.  Sunset in Rome: 18:12.  Ave Maria: 17:30.

Today is the Feast of Sts. Simon and Jude, Apostles.  Martyrs.  Their tomb is in St. Peter’s Basilica.   I posted a photo of their resting place yesterday.

In a special way I ask the Apostles, one in particular known for interceding in the cases of impossible causes, to intercede for me on my 60th Birthday.

Yesterday there was a great Mass at Ss. Trinità dei Pellegrini, celebrated by Bp. Dominque Rey of the Diocese of Frejus-Toulon.   He has been a champion of evangelism and traditional liturgy.

It was a Mass at the faldstool.   Masses at the Throne are impossible in Rome.

This is a Roman altar, friends.   With the “buste” and relics and the wonderful… what are they called again.  The floral decorations in metal.  I can never remember the term.   Under that painting by Guido Reni.

After Mass I was greeted by very many people.  One of them is a young Vietnamese man who told me about the TLM being celebrated in Vietnam for the first time in a very long time.  Also, he spends time in Finland.

I also had a wonderful conversation with two Koran pilgrims.   And there were many others from the USA (Portland stands out!) and elsewhere.

The organizers of the conference I spoke at gave me a bottle of good Calvados.  I brought it for lunch with the priests and the bishop after Mass.  It went well with the apple pie.

I had a good chat with Bp. Rey.  He has 95 – 95 – seminarians.  95.   He has a missionary view.   Tradition and a missionary spirit brings them.

I told him that one of the priests in his diocese and I were seminary companions and dear old friends, long sundered.  He instantly got out his mobile phone and called him.  Handing it over to me, we had cordial exchange of greetings.   I guess have to go to S. France to see what is going on.

In these last few days I have had a flatmate.  We went to met mutual friends, who came to Rome specifically for these days, atop the Minerva Hotel at their well-known roof-top terrace bar and restaurant.   The view.   In the distance St. Peter’s.  Close, Sant’Ivo.  The next dome, St. Agnes on the P.za Navona.  The tower, Santa Maria dell’Anima.

I don’t get this.  Beams of light shooting up through the oculus of the Pantheon.  I don’t think they remember that it is a church.   In any event, my symbol wasn’t being projected, so I didn’t have to dash off.

Supper was… fussy.  This had something to do with mozzarella, though you wouldn’t have known from the flavor.   That thing propped up on the side that looks like it belongs on a rock in the ocean…. no, the one the right… was pretty good.

A view on the way back to the apartment.

Tonight, supper out with a small group of very close friends.

Speaking of friends, a great fellow from Tokyo, Augustine, came for the pilgrimage.   It was something to see him in his traditional kimono holding the UNA VOCE banner in St. Peter’s Basilica during the Pontifical Mass.

Knowing that it was to be my 6oth birthday, Augustine brought a gift of fine sake and a beautiful little sakazuki cup.  The 60th birthday, kanreki (), is one of the most important in Japanese culture. The characters indicate “circulate” and “calendar”, which means that you have come back to the same lunar year as when you were born, in my case, the Boar.  In other words, I’ve completed a cycle.   The little sakazuki which my friend brought is delicate, of wood, with a gilded bowl with a stylized boar.   I will treasure it.

Yesterday I stopped at the restaurant where we will eat tonight and told the chef (this guy’s got game, friends) and asked if he could create a special risotto that we could have with the sake.   There are few things in life that give more lasting pleasure and good memories than an evening out with a select cohort in a legendary place with thoughtful gifts to share around.

So the countdown is coming to an end.   Not only do I have some 60 hours remaining in this Roman sojourn, but, in Scripture, 60 is a threshold year when people enter the last major age of life.

 

Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to |
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