A Lutheran pastor muses about the state of the Catholic Church. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

The following was penned by a Lutheran at the blog Pastoral Meanderings: The Random Thoughts of a Lutheran Parish Pastor

It is packed with items for reflection. One in particular caught my eye.  My emphases and comments.

The glory of Rome. . . [I’ve chosen not to port over here the photo of Cupich.]

News from Chicago is grim. While the Chicago Archdiocese had 2,400 priests in 1975, including Diocesan, religious order and retired priests; today there are 1,200. In terms of parishes, just four years ago there were 344 in the Chicago Archdiocese. Under Cardinal Cupich, the Archdiocese has wonderful news. On July 1, 2022, there will likely be 221 parishes — the loss of 123 churches. At least 57 churches across the archdiocese will no longer be used for Mass and so their buildings will be closed, sold, or repurposed. Others will be yoked together into a parish that includes several facilities or sites where Mass is offered. Although this reduction has been in the planning stages for some time, the pandemic only hastened and expanded the overhaul. After all, Mass attendance had been falling long before the impact of COVID on the dismal statistics. A couple of other things to consider. The Chicago Archdiocese was one of the last hold outs for masked students in their parochial schools and Cardinal Cupich has been quicker and tougher than most bishops in clamping down against the Latin Mass. At the same time, the Cardinal made waves by performing a Chinese pagan ceremony at Mass and tolerates the abuse of the Novus Ordo by some priests, such as Father Michael Pfleger, and seems friendlier than most Roman Catholic bishops to the LGBTQ cause.
[Nota Bene!] Is there a lesson here for Lutherans? [This will be bracing.] I think there is. The road to renewal does not lead to an embrace of the prevailing move of culture or society. It leads through orthodoxy in doctrine and in practice. [Let’s consecrate this guy and give him a diocese.] The future of the churches is dim if all we can do is offer the world a faint echo to what they already think or feel. There will be no blessing from God upon such distortion of the Scriptures or betrayal of the authentic Gospel of Jesus Christ crucified and risen. In some respects, we have suffered greatly under the same temptation. When you lose faith in God to keep His promise and work through the means of grace, you are left with a conundrum. If God is not going to build His Church in a way that satisfies you, then you must build His Church for Him. Or, simply do what God has called you to do and trust that He will make sure that the Word does not return to Him empty. It seems that many are not quite willing to let God be God of His Church and so they have taken in hand the work of the Kingdom, dismissing faithfulness to Scripture and Confession in favor of a faithfulness to an image or idea — the welcoming church.

Growing up as a child in the 1950s, it was inconceivable to me that the Church would be in such a state today. Rome was monolithic and unbending. Parishes were full. But the little breathe of spring that John XXIII brought, turned out to the cold wind of winter in the hands of Paul VI. Lutherans were also enjoying rapid growth. [PAY ATTENTION!] We knew who we were, what we believed, and how we worshiped. People responded[More on this…] There was a Bible institute for the laity every year and my parents dropped everything to listen to the pastors of the Circuit. Catechism classes were full — like Sunday school. Seminaries were also full. The liturgy, though not the hymnal, was pretty much the same wherever you went in Lutheranism. And then the bottom dropped out when we thought it was time to get with the times. While an embrace of avenues to proclaim the Gospel is never bad, the Word of the Lord cannot be changed or adapted or the faith modernized without losing the Gospel itself. The changeless Christ for a changing world has become a Christ changing to keep up with a changing world. The only changeless thing around us is the primacy of the individual and the individual’s feelings and perception.

Most of our whole districts are much smaller than the Archdiocese of Chicago and we do not have a clergy shortage like Rome does but we may be in the same boat of closing down parishes because they have no people. If we have done all we could in faithfulness to Christ, His Word and His Sacraments, then closing them down is what we have to do. But if we are closing down parishes because we have been unfaithful to the unchanging Christ and His means of grace, then it is high time that we made the mea culpa and repented with the promise to amend our sinful ways. [More on this, too.] God’s forgiveness is never in doubt but our faithfulness as a Church has not exactly been certain.

Update. . . Cincinnati is not far behind. . . the Bishop announced plans to reduce the number of parishes in this 450K size diocese: 210 down to 57. They must be doing something right. Huh?

Rich points for thought.

First, note the overarching point that if we do what Paul warns against, and align ourselves with the “wisdom of this world”, it is all going to go bad.

You know my phrase, “We are our rites!”  Note what he said: “We knew who we were, what we believed, and how we worshiped.

If I’ve written it once, I’ve written it a hundred times.  Our identity is in our rites.  That’s where we start.  That’s where we return.   I pulled this out of a previous post, but it is the same as I’ve written here over and over:

The renewal of our Catholic identity requires a realigning of the Roman Rite.  How we pray has a reciprocal relationship with what we believe.  This realignment requires the Traditional Roman Rite.  There is no way around it.  We have to renew our liturgical worship in order to be who we are within Holy Church, so that we can have an impact, as Catholic disciples of the Lord, on the world around us.

The Traditional Roman Rite is an antidote to the secularization of the Church.

Find a bishop or priest who resists, forbids the Traditional Rite, and you find a priest or bishop for whom the Church is an NGO.

If we don’t know who we are, no one will pay attention to us or what we might have to offer in the public square.  If we are incoherent, for example giving Communion to radically pro-abortion Catholics, why should anyone pay attention to anything we have to say on any other issue?  Bishops have squandered out moral capital for decades.

If we don’t know who we are, we can’t tell others.  So, why should anyone in the public square listen to us?

Note again what the Lutheran pastor said: “We knew who we were, what we believed, and how we worshiped.

Another of his points: “it is high time that we made the mea culpa and repented with the promise to amend our sinful ways.”

I’ve used a couple of analogies in the past, often, to get at this and its ramifications for the rational.  From our basic geometry we know that two rays that extend from the same point in different directions get farther and farther apart the farther they extend.   That’s what has been happening in the Church for decades.

Here’s another analogy, from another post in the past:

I’ve made this comparison before.

Say you are in Chicago and you want to drive to New York. You set out and drive for a long time. Suddenly, thinking you were drawing nearer to Empire State you see a sign saying “Kansas Welcomes You!” What do you do? Do you keep driving in the same direction? Not if you really desire to get to New York. No. Commonsense dictates that you do a U-turn and head the other direction until you start see welcome signs for Eastern states. That’s the smart course. It would be stupid to continue driving in the opposite direction once you know you have strayed.

Let’s add to this the fact that you have put on your car a sign, “NEW YORK OR BUST!” You pull into the gas station in Kansas to fuel up and the guy there says, “Hey, didn’t you come in from the East? Buddy, you are going in the wrong direction!” You pay him and start to pull out onto the road, again toward the West. The guy runs out waving his arms, shouting, “HEY! THAT WAY! NEW YORK IS THAT WAY!” But, no. You are on your path.

For these older guys who are committed to what they committed in the 60s, 70s, 80s, the sight of a growing congregation at a Traditional Latin Mass is like hot coals on their forehead.  But they’ve got those thinning white-knuckled  hands locked onto the steering wheel and, by gum, they’re not turning the car back.

For this reason, some of them, sad to say, would rather drive off a cliff than turn around.  They would rather destroy a thriving, growing community of happy, zealous young Catholics than let it grow.  Instead of joining them, or at least benignly watching from afar, they’ll run over them with the car on the way to the cliff’s edge.

Because, in the end, it’s all about them.

ACTION ITEM! Be a “Custos Traditionis”! Join an association of prayer for the reversal of “Traditionis custodes”.

 

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, SESSIUNCULA, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , ,
8 Comments

ASK FATHER: Did Vatican II extend the Good Friday fast also to Holy Saturday? What about Sacrosanctum Concilium 110?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

For a scrupulous person (me!), who would like clarity on his obligations:

Is the extending of the Good Friday Fast to Holy Saturday obligatory? One translation of SC 110 says, “Let [the Paschal Fast] be celebrated everywhere on Good Friday and, where possible, prolonged throughout Holy Saturday, so that the joys of the Sunday of the resurrection may be attained with uplifted and clear mind.”

My brain says, well, it’s possible for me, so maybe I have to do it!

But doesn’t Canon Law only give us two days of obligatory fasting?

GUEST PRIEST RESPONSE: Fr. Tim Ferguson

The pastors of the Church have an obligation to be clear and considerate to the faithful. Jesus didn’t tell His disciples, “Go to the ends of the earth, make a mess, and confuse everyone in My Name.”

It’s not just the scrupulous, but all the faithful who benefit from pastoral clarity. When laws are clear and concise, people know what to do. If they (for whatever reason) can’t follow the law, they have recourse to their pastors to ask for permission or dispensation, as the case may be.

Sadly, for the past 2000 years, there has arisen a good deal of confusion, largely due to those who should be clear.

The 1983 Code of Canon Law simply says that Ash Wednesday and Good Friday are days of fast and abstinence in the universal Church (c. 1251) and that all Fridays of the year, unless a Solemnity should fall on a particular Friday, are days of abstinence.

The bishops of the United States have used their authority to allow the faithful to substitute another penance for abstinence on all Fridays outside of Lent, and the bishops of Canádia have used their authority to allow the faithful to substitute another penance for abstinence on all Fridays, including those of Lent (except for Good Friday).

We are, of course, free to abstain any day of the year – for health reasons, reasons of penance, reasons of taste, reasons of simple penance. No one is ever forced by law to eat meat.

The bishops at the Council urged that the penitential spirit of Good Friday, including the fast, be prolonged throughout Holy Saturday, but, like many of the expressed desires of the Council, it was never enacted into law.

Therefore, the faithful are free to continue their fasting throughout Holy Saturday, and for many, it’s probably a good thing. It’s not mandatory, and no one should feel guilty (or be made to feel guilty) if they don’t do it.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Canon Law, Hard-Identity Catholicism | Tagged , , ,
1 Comment

Here’s something you don’t see everyday. VIDEO

Here’s something you don’t see everyday.

Today is Rome’s Birthday, 2775nd.

Rome and the sun and time are intertwined.

For example, Augustus set up an Egyptian obelisk as the gnomon of a sundial. The obelisk of St. Peter’s also casts its shadow on an enormous calendar. In the Santa Maria degli Angeli there is a sun calendar on the floor of the basilica, which was used to find solar noon in Rome and, therefore, send up a flag to by spied from the Gianicolo Hill for the firing of the canon that booms across the City, indicating the beginning of contracts and of appointments to offices.

Here’s another Roman Sun story.

Every April 21, at noon, the sun enters the oculus of the Pantheon with such an inclination as to create a beam of light centered perfectly on the entrance portal.

At that exact time, the Emperor would cross the threshold into the then-pagan temple and he would be dramatically bathed in light.

This video from 2020 when everything was shut down due to COVID-1984 Theatre captures the moment.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

And I will add that tomorrow, Friday in the Octave of Easter the Roman Station is at Santa Maria ad Martyres…. aka… the Pantheon.

For a description of the exorcism of the pagan Pantheon in AD 608, HERE.  Quite a story.

Meanwhile, a stone’s throw away from the Pantheon is the Church of St. Augustine.  Within are the body of St. Monica, Augustine’s mother, and a painting by Caravaggio.  However, on the Epistle side in the aisle near the door of the sacristy there is a monument to Onofrio Panvinio (1529 Verona – 1568 Palermo), admire his stony countenance captured in cold marble, and say a prayer for the repose of his soul.

Onofrio was an Augustinian and great scholar.    He is the author of such page turners as the 1557 work Fasti et triumphi Rom. a Romulo rege vsque ad Carolum V. Caes. Aug.:Sive epitome regum, consulum, dictatorum, magistror. equitum, tribunorum militum consulari potestate, censorum, impp. & aliorum magistratuum Roman. cum orientalium tum occidentalium, ex antiquitatum monumentis maxima cum fide ac diligentia desumpta.  A ripping yarn if ever there was one!

This fellow worked out the date of the founding of Rome, the dates we often see with the abbreviation A.U.C. (Ab Urbe Condita).

As you know that condita comes from condo condere cOnditum and not condio condire condI­tum.  If not, we would be saying “From the (year) the City was pickled/flavored” rather than “From the (year) the City was founded”.  Yep, in Latin it is good to get the accents right.  Condio gives us our English word “condiments”.

Here is his monument inscription.  Go ahead and take a crack at it!

D.O.M.
F. ONVPHRIO PANVINIO VERONENSI
EREMITÆ AVGVSTINIANO
VIRO AD OMNES ET ROMANAS
ET ECCLESIASTICAS ANTIQVITATES
E TENEBRIS ERVENDAS NATO
QVI ALEXANDR FARN. CARD. VICECAN.
IN SICILIAM PROSEQVVTUS ALIENISSIMO
ET SIBI ET HISTORIÆ TEMPORE
PANORMI OBIIT XVIII KAL. APR. MDLXVIII
PRÆCLARIS MVLTIS ET PERFECTIS
ET INCHOATIS INDVSTRIÆ SVÆ
MONVMENTIS RELICTIS VIX. ANN. XXXIX.
AMICI HONORIS CAVSSA POSVERUNT.

So… Buon Compleanno Roma!

I am pretty excited to be returning to Rome after quite a long Chinese imposed hiatus.   Should anyone want to help with my stay… click the flag.

UPDATE:

Thanks for using the wavy flag: AS

Posted in Just Too Cool, Linking Back | Tagged ,
1 Comment

Daily Rome Shot 477, etc. – Happy Birthday!

Happy 2775th Birthday Rome!

Use your phone’s camera!

Daily Mass Fervorino: HERE

Posted in Sermons, SESSIUNCULA | Tagged ,
Comments Off on Daily Rome Shot 477, etc. – Happy Birthday!

Just Too Cool: The Shroud examined with a new dating technique…. SURPRISE! (Not!)

I am ever delighted when I hear news that some new technological development has been used to discover a hitherto unimagined detail in one of our famous miraculous objects.  For example, the development, pun intended, of photography reveal that the Shroud of Turin is a photographic negative, something people in earlier times would not have known anything about.  Closeup images and filtering revealed the reflection in Mary’s eye on the Tilma, the people standing before her.

We find in the National Catholic Register:

New Scientific Technique Dates Shroud of Turin to Around the Time of Christ’s Death and Resurrection

Italian scientist Liberato De Caro discusses his peer-reviewed findings, based on an X-ray method of research, used to determine the age of the shroud’s fibers.

An Italian scientist is claiming a new technique using X-ray dating shows the Holy Shroud of Turin to be much older than some scientists have stated, and that it does in fact coincide with Christian tradition by dating back to around the time of Christ’s death and resurrection.

Working with a team of other researchers, Liberato De Caro of Italy’s Institute of Crystallography of the National Research Council in Bari used a “Wide-Angle X-ray Scattering” method to examine the natural aging of cellulose that constitutes a sample of the famous linen cloth.

They concluded that their peer reviewed research shows the Holy Shroud is compatible with the hypothesis that it is much older than seven centuries old — the conclusion reached in 1988 using carbon dating techniques — and is around 2,000 years old.

In this April 13 email interview with the Register, De Caro, who has been investigating the Holy Shroud for 30 years, explains more about the discovery, why he believes the X-Ray technique is superior to carbon dating for determining the age of fabric fibers, and discusses other recent discoveries that also point to the Holy Shroud’s authenticity.

[…]

Read the rest there. Amazing.

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged
3 Comments

ASK FATHER: Must we abstain from eating meat on Friday in the Octave of Easter?

We are now in the Easter Octave – Happy Easter!

Let’s get out in front of this before the calendar clicks over to Friday

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

My wife and I recently returned to the traditional Friday abstinence from meat year round.

Traditionally, would the Friday abstinence from meat also apply during Fridays of the whole Easter season?

What about just the octave?

Congratulations for wanting to adhere to the traditional practices.  Kudos.

You’ve asked a good question.

Here is canon 1251:

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.

The days of the Octave of Easter are celebrated as Solemnities (in the Novus Ordo calendar).    Therefore, there is no canonical obligation for Catholics for the Friday abstinence on this coming Friday.

Note well that the other Fridays of Eastertide are not Solemnities.  The relief from abstinence applies only to the Friday in the Octave of Easter.

BTW… this does not apply to the Octave of Christmas, because the days of that Octave are not counted as “Solemnities” as are those of the Easter Octave.

This is how the 1983 Code of Canon Law handles Friday in the Octave of Easter, and this applies also to those who prefer the Extraordinary Form (which did not have “Solemnities”).

As far as other Fridays are concerned, outside the Octave of Easter or some other Solemnity, you can ask your parish priest to dispense you or commute your act of penance.

Can. 1245 Without prejudice to the right of diocesan bishops mentioned in can. 87, for a just cause and according to the prescripts of the diocesan bishop, a pastor [parish priest] can grant in individual cases a dispensation from the obligation of observing a feast day or a day of penance or can grant a commutation of the obligation into other pious works. A superior of a religious institute or society of apostolic life, if they are clerical and of pontifical right, can also do this in regard to his own subjects and others living in the house day and night.

Abstinence from meat has good reasoning behind it. For some, however, abstinence from other things can be of great spiritual effect.

Certainly you would never abstain from reading this blog… or from ordering…

OPPORTUNITY
10% off with code:
FATHERZ10

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Canon Law | Tagged , ,
3 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 474, etc.


New: two Via Caritatis rosés: Vox Rosé and Lux Rosé

Please remember me when shopping online. Use my affiliate link.  Thanks in advance.

US HERE – UK HERE

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged
Comments Off on Daily Rome Shot 474, etc.

Now THAT’s what I’m talkin’ about!

The Gloria at the Easter Vigil at Brompton Oratory.

Posted in Just Too Cool, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged
5 Comments

URGENT ACTION ITEM! UPDATE on Fr. Dana Christensen: final earthly journey. Renew a petition to Ven. @FultonSheen for him.

Update on Fr. Dana Christensen:.   He is the young priest who has been struggling heroically with ALS.

More than ever now, pray for him.

Dear friends and family of Fr. Dana:

This is Annie, his sister. Our family wanted to let you all know that Fr. Dana has started his journey home to be with his Heavenly Father. He has been resting comfortably surrounded by family. We are all so humbled and grateful by all of your continued and faithful prayers for Fr. Dana and our family. We ask that you continue to pray for Fr., especially for a beautiful and peaceful passing when the Lord finally calls him home.

God bless,

Annie

Tomorrow I will offer Holy Mass for him and and will, news not withstanding –  in fact, because of it –  renew my petition to Ven. Fulton Sheen at the request of Fr. Christensen:

Eternal Father, You alone grant us every blessing in Heaven and on earth, through the redemptive mission of Your Divine Son, Jesus Christ, and by the working of the Holy Spirit. If it be according to Your Will, glorify Your servant, Archbishop Fulton J. Sheen, by granting the favor I now request through his prayerful intercession (mention your request here – [the swift, complete and lasting healing of Fr. Christensen’s ALS]).  I make this prayer confidently through Jesus Christ, Our Lord. Amen

 

Posted in Mail from priests, Urgent Prayer Requests | Tagged
7 Comments

ASK FATHER: Solid books about Ignatian spirituality and Jesuit teaching without the crazy stuff

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Thank you for all you do Father. I’ve always been a big fan of St Ignatius of Loyola and what the Jesuits once were. I’m also equally appalled at what they have become. Growing up the Benedictine nuns were teachers at our school in ___ (in full traditional habit) and our priest was a solid Irish Monsignor who resisted the innovations and gave us solid instructions and always remarked how St Ignatius would tackle a problem sparking my life long interest. My question is do you know where we can find or even titles I should look for on solid book about Ignatian spirituality and Jesuit teaching prior to when they went sideways? Every search I do always leads me to the plaid shirt wushu washy modern Jesuits and for the life of me I can’t seem to find much written prior to their demise as a solid order. I’m positive if anyone knows it’s you and your network. Thanks for everything in advance.

While I had a few ideas of my own, I figured it best to reach out to a Jesuit priest friend who would give reliable counsel.  This is what he responded.

I would probably recommend All My Liberty – Theology of the Spiritual Exercises by John Hardon, S.J. It serves as a good introduction.
I would also recommend The Spiritual Writings of Pierre Favre The Memoriale and Selected Letters and Instructions. Ignatius considered St. Peter to be the best at giving the Exercises.
Finally, the best contemporary writer on Ignatian spirituality is not a Jesuit, but an O.M.V., Timothy Gallagher. I would recommend his books as sound and very worth reading.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Jesuits | Tagged ,
3 Comments