WDTPRS – 20th Ordinary Sunday: Live in love to have later Love Himself

Giacomo Galli – Christ Displaying His Wounds

The Collect for the 20th Ordinary Sunday, found also in the 8th century Gelasian Sacramentary, is in the 1962 Missale Romanum for the 5th Sunday after Pentecost.

Deus, qui diligentibus te bona invisibilia praeparasti, infunde cordibus nostris tui amoris affectum, ut, te in omnibus et super omnia diligentes, promissiones tuas, quae omne desiderium superant, consequamur.

Our prayer has many different words for love and longing: diligo, amor, affectus and the related cor, desiderium, promissioAffectus means “a state of body, and especially of mind produced in one by some influence, affection, mood: love, desire, fondness, good will, compassion, sympathy.”  The marvelous diligo means initially, “to value or esteem highly, to love”.  It also has the impact of being careful  and attentive, as in English “diligent”.  When you love, you give your best.  Desiderium is “a longing, ardent desire or wish, properly for something once possessed; grief, regret for the absence or loss of any thing [or person].” Cor is, of course, “heart” and promissio “promise”.  Consequor means, among other things, “pursue, go after, attend, to follow” and also, “to follow a model, copy, obey”.  It indicates, “to follow a preceding cause as an effect, to be the consequence, to arise or proceed from.”  I will say “attain.”

LITERAL RENDERING:

O God, who have prepared unseen goods for those loving You, pour into our hearts the disposition of Your love, so that we, loving you in all things and above all things, may attain Your promises, which surpass every desire.

OBSOLETE ICEL (1973):

God our Father, may we love you in all things and above all things and reach the joy you have prepared for us beyond all our imagining.

CURRENT ICEL (2011):

O God, who have prepared for those who love you good things which no eye can see, fill our hearts, we pray, with the warmth of your love, so that, loving you in all things and above all things, we may attain your promises, which surpass every human desire.

Today’s Collect pulses with longing.

When this is sung aloud – FATHERS…. please sing our prayers more often? In Latin? – I hear a connection between invisibilia at the beginning and promissiones at the end.

The concepts are ordered into a climax, beginning with the ways that we can love on our own (the starting point as the prayer begins), namely, that at first we love with “natural” love, previous to or apart from our new Christian character given to us through baptism.  We then move beyond mere human loves.  We can love, in this world, with the help of the grace which we ask God to pour into our hearts (charity).  Then we aim at the love which awaits us in heaven, a love beyond anything we can experience in this life.  This Love will complete our every hope and desire.

Everything God promised is already fulfilled for us, but we still have to live in love to have later Love Himself.

What a mystery it is that, even though Christ defeated death, we must still pass through death to have Love’s unimaginable fulfillment.

What awaits us at our entrance into the Beatific vision is unimaginable.  For now, however, we can only ache for the completion of what God promised.

Although we have, in our Collect, an ascent in and to Love personified, we shouldn’t oppose natural and supernatural loves.

Human love, sometimes called eros, isn’t automatically in conflict with “religious love”.  We are human beings, not angels.  We must avoid the extreme of trying to profane what is supernatural by locking it into the finite and, on the other hand, in this life paying attention to purely spiritualized supernatural love, which would render us ineffective in regard to Our Lord’s two-fold command of love for God and neighbor.

Our good earthly loves are fulfilled in the perfect love which is only in God.  Grace builds on nature, it doesn’t destroy it.  In redeeming us, God did not undo us. He lifts up who and what we are and makes us whole again.

We therefore long for Love, we reach out to it, thirsting for its fullness, its completing, it healing, transforming power. This is the promise we live for in this vale of tears.

Though this is summer, consider the Preface for Christmas, the celebration of Love Incarnate and finally visible:

“For through the mystery of the incarnate Word, the new light of Your glory dazzled the eyes of our mind, so that while we know God visibly, through Him we may be snatched up into invisible love… (in invisibilem amorem rapiamur).”

Richard of St. Victor, in his work on contemplation, cites the phrase: “Love is the eye and to love is to see”, or more precisely “where your is love is, there is your eye” (Ubi amor ibi oculus – Benjamin minor 13 – sometimes cites as “Amor oculus est, et amare videre est.”).

Our Collects teaches us that love is the key to seeing the one who is otherwise unseeable.

Practically speaking, couldn’t this also be a starting point for consideration of…

custodia oculorum… custody of the eyes.



Some options



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Adventures in “gay” ad blocking

I hate this ubiquitous “gay” rainbow garbage. First, I can’t stand what has been done to the word “gay” and I detest the appropriation of a sign of God’s benevolence to promote a totalitarian agenda.

I noticed at the bottom corner of my Tweetdeck page (really useful for Twitter) that there was a little “gay” logo with the tweety-bird on it.

I immediately found a different program for Twitter, Tweeten, which is similar. Maybe you have suggestions.

In any event, I determined also to defeat that infernal “gay” logo.

Enter: AdBlocker for Chrome

Right click the little bugger (pun intended) and block it selectively using the AdBlocker option on the mini-menu that pops up.

Gone.

But wait!  There’s more.

Look how tiny it is on Explorer.  It’s as if they are sneaking it in so that it’s subliminal.

I never use this browser, so I am not sure about blocking this element.

However, it showed up in Firefox, full-size as it did in Chrome.  BLOCKED.

The offending element is

tweetdeck.twitter.com##.tweetdeck-logo.height–24.width–26.color-transparent.txt-size–0

I don’t want this garbage shoved at me every time I look at the screen.

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Lighter Fare For Friday

It has been a serious week.

Let’s have something a little less heavy.

First, some memes that amused me.

 

For a long-time reader who works for NASA

Driving.

And now to make you suffer.

For the libs here.

Welllll… you do know you are dead, but you get the point.

And for the Trump supporters.  Spotted at the store.

Okay… enough of those.

On a cheery note, you know that a bishop has really made it when he gets his very own

BOBBLE-HEAD!

Congratulations to Bp. Hying, of Madison.  You’ve finally arrived at the apotheosis of the episcopate.

Speaking of Madison, yesterday I had some of the best BBQ I have ever had anywhere.

In MADISON!   Wisconsin!!

Beef brisket.

Pork ribs.  Chewy and tender at the same time.  Outstanding.

I am sad and glad that it is on the other side of town.

In any event, something lighter for Friday.

It’s been a tough week.

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ASK FATHER: @BishopBarron on the Pew Research and lack of belief in the Eucharist. Fr. Z rants a little and issues an invitation.

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Bishop Barron has a video reacting to the Pew Research saying that 75% of Catholics think the Blessed Sacrament is just a symbol.  He talks about the failure of catechetics and educators and that social justice was made more important than sound teaching.

What say you?

Here’s the video in question:

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Bishop Barron indeed reacted to the recent Pew Research about Catholics and their belief in the Church’s teachings about the Eucharist.  He is clearly frustrated.  Anyone with any commonsense and sliver of love left for the Church would be beside himself at the news that 75% think that the Eucharist is just a symbol (younger Catholics … drop that to 80%). It’s only a symbol.

Barron quotes Flannery O’Connor’s famous quip and quite properly.  “If it’s only a symbol, to hell with it.” Exactly right.  The Eucharist is the – here comes the non-cliché which must never be allowed to be used as a cliché – “source and summit” of our lives as Catholic Christians.

Barron admits that, if 75% don’t believe then something has gone seriously wrong. It represents a “massive failure” for which “we are all guilty”.

Sorry, but I’M NOT!  I’ve been flogging myself for decades to be clear as crystal about the Eucharist and I’ve been beaten to a pulp for my efforts.  As I recounted elsewhere, I was thrown out of seminary (the first time) because of a dispute over the Eucharist.  But, as a former Lutheran, I can “do no other”.  As a convert, I made radical choices knowing what I was leaving and knowing what I was embracing.  As a matter of fact, I did my profession of Faith, from the traditional Ritual, publicly during Sunday Vespers kneeling in front of the Blessed Sacrament exposed on the altar.  Enough about me.

It could be that Barron’s “we” meant “we bishops”. But, sincerely, I get his point: many, not all, people are to blame.  Hmmm… many… not all….

Bp. Barron underscores that this has been a massive failure on the part of educators, catechists, evangelists and teachers.

Well, yes, but mostly… NO!

Yes, catechesis is important, but more important still is our liturgical worship, for decades hardly “sacred” liturgical worship.

Lack of belief in the Eucharist is mostly a massive failure in the way we celebrate the Eucharist!  I mean, of course, Holy Mass.

Everything flows from worship and then back to worship.

Allow me to affirm that you can’t say everything in a short video. There isn’t enough time. So, what you choose to include is probably your most important position, what you really want to get across.

Not a word from Bp. Barron in the video about liturgy, about decades of the prevailing liturgical style (or the rite itself – the Novus Ordo).  This is so typical of bishops.

Not a word – in that video – about liturgy as either a cause of the problems we face or as a solution. I listened to it twice and didn’t hear it.  He talks about the danger of placing social justice, etc., before doctrine.  But, he doesn’t talk about liturgy.

Did I miss it?  Please correct me if I did.  It may be that he has held forth at length on the topic elsewhere.  I don’t follow him daily.

Bp. Barron, in this video, underscores great figures who loved the “Eucharist” and who would be flabbergasted at the suggestion that the Eucharist was just a symbol.  Exactly so!

However – and I know you know this Bp. Barron – “Eucharist” is not just the Blessed Sacrament. It is also the way the Eucharist is celebrated.

There’s the Eucharist that is the Host and Precious Blood and there’s the Eucharist that is the very way by which we have the Host and Precious Blood, the ultimate “thanksgiving” which is Holy Mass.

Our sacred liturgical worship is our most important action in the fulfillment of Religion, that orders all other activities and gives them meaning.

The way that Holy Mass is celebrated IS DOCTRINE… it IS CATECHESIS.

Liturgy is the principle locus of encounter which the vast majority of Catholics have with the Church. It’s Sunday Mass (if they go) far more than talks, classes, adult education, CCD, etc.  Let’s not even bring up efforts in most homes of your average Catholic to teach children the Faith.

The way Mass is celebrated is by far the principle influence on how people see and think about the Eucharist.

If the ars celebrandi of the priest is X, then people will be guided towards X. Change the liturgy and the belief of people about X will slowly follow.  Legem credendi lex statuat supplicandi … “Lex orandi – Lex Credendi” is NOT a cliché, either. It’s the way things work!

WE ARE OUR RITES. Change those rites and you change belief.  It is inevitable.

What Pew Research revealed is nothing other than the fruits of the last 50 years of near total liturgical devolution which enervated and evacuated the Faith of the overwhelming majority of Catholics.   And soon they won’t even bother calling themselves Catholic.

Tick… tick… tick… tick….

Bp. Barron says that this is a “call to action” in the Church. I agree.

On the other hand, the Bishop doesn’t seem to mean action to change the way we celebrate the Eucharist, the way we see the Eucharist, the way we sing to and about the Eucharist, the way we literally handle the Eucharist.  That is: liturgical worship, how we celebrate Holy Mass.

He wants a “call to action”? Here’s a call to action!

  • STOP COMMUNION IN THE HAND!
  • Foster kneeling for Communion put in Communion rails.
  • Get serious about music.
  • Phase out unnecessary lay ministers of Communion.
  • Clear the sanctuary of everything that distracts.
  • Celebrate ad orientem.
  • And the scariest of all … implement generously Summorum Pontificum!

Every one of those will require, yes, catechesis.  Lot’s of sound catechesis and patience.

Patience and more patience.

But “it’s the job that’s never started as takes longest to finish.”

Let’s not wring our hands and wonder how to proceed “pastorally” to the point that we, again, proceed to do nothing.

“Oh dear, oh dear! Some people might not like these changes!  We have to be sensitive!  They’ll… you know… complain!  Then what?  We have to be nice, after all.  Can’t we get along?  Let’s not fight over these things.”

Not fight?  NO!  Sometimes we have to have the fight.   The fight has come to us, whether we want it or not.

We are, in fact, now in the fight of our Catholic lives!

Bp. Barron has issued a call to action.

I respectfully issue a call and an invitation to Bp. Barron.

Bp. Barron: Think outside the box – which is actually inside the box of Tradition –  and talk about sacred liturgical worship as the key to rebuilding our Catholic identity.

Projects and programs and pamphlets and videos… yeah… great.  It’s liturgy all along.  It has always been about liturgical worship.

Also, in my capacity as the President of the Tridentine Mass Society of the Diocese of Madison, I invite you to come to talk to us here about all these matters and – please! – also to celebrate a Pontifical Mass in the Extraordinary Form either at the Faldstool or, with Bp. Hying’s consent as he wishes, at the Throne.

I am convinced that you will do well as celebrant.  It isn’t has hard as one might imagine.  In fact, celebrating traditionally as a bishop is about as easy as it gets in the Roman Rite on either side, because you are surrounded by ministers who do just about everything.  All you have to do is be a little docile, pray, and preach well.  We do the rest.

Please consider coming. Your welcome will be warm and sincere and you will set an example of “action”.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Mail from priests, Our Catholic Identity, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged ,
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The latest podcast on the upcoming Synod from Damian, Unbound. “@HolySmoke” is right!

Damian is Unbound.

Go right away to Damian Thompson’s latest podcast, an interview with Ed Condon.

Damn!

The synod and the sex scandal: two time bombs threatening Pope Francis’s moral authority

His comments and Condon’s comments on the upcoming Synod (“walking together”) – indeed the whole apparatus in Rome right now – are pure TNT.

A favorite moment… 5:00-6:48. If nothing else!

I rewound several times.

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ASK FATHER: Why didn’t Benedict XVI say the #TLM? How can we get one? What does the future look like?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Thank you for your blog. I get so much from it! Never stop!

I know you like one question at a time, but maybe you’ll do this.

I heard a podcast at 1 Peter 5 with Peter Kwasnieski about the Extraordinary Form. It was good but I wonder what you take is on a couple of the things they said. (They didn’t mention you, by the way.)

[1] Why do you think Benedict XVI never said the Extraordinary Form while we was Pope?

[2] What should lay people do to get the old Mass in their parishes?

[3] How do you see the future of the Extraordinary Form?

Thanks for answers to one or all!

Thanks for that.  No link to that podcast, so I am a bit hobbled.  However, I can’t imagine that they said anything strange.  These are smart guys.

1) Why didn’t Benedict XVI never say the Extraordinary Form?

He certainly did not, as Pope, celebrate the Extraordinary Form in public.  However, I suspect he could have privately now and then.  I say that because, once in while, during Masses I thought I spotted him doing some things that I must be very careful about when I say the Novus Ordo.  I don’t say the Novus Ordo very often, and I get into “autopilot”, for example, automatically genuflecting at certain points, automatically tucking the paten, etc.  But, that’s not really the question.

I think there were two reasons why Benedict didn’t publicly say the Extraordinary Form.  I am convinced that he would have liked to, so there must have been compelling arguments against.

One argument is that to mount a Papal Mass, not just a Pontifical Mass would have been extremely difficult.  It was already difficult at the time of John XXIII (who was reviving liturgical uses) and Paul VI (who abolished it all).  I used to argue on this blog that Benedict could celebrate not a Papal Mass but at least a Pontifical Mass.  I haven’t entirely abandoned that, but it would be seriously deficient.  The Pope must be the Pope and must not be just any old bishop.   The Papal Mass was so demanding that it was more common for Mass to be celebrated coram Pontifice, itself pretty complex especially when the Pontiff is the Roman Pontiff.

The full Papal Mass, however, had things and roles which were abolished that would have to be revived.  Impossible?  No.  Really hard?  Absolutely.  Worth the effort?  Jury still out.

For example, the Noble Guard. One of their tasks was to sound silver trumpets at the elevation.  Not too hard to overcome: His Holiness snaps his fingers an honorary Guards with trumpet skills can be placed in the tribunals.  It could be possible to created titular or honorary positions ad hoc, of course.  Heck, there are titular bishops and cardinals get titles in Rome.  There’s no reason why there couldn’t be established roles pro hac vice.  On the other hand, though there are no Papal Chamberlains any more, the newer-fangled Gentlemen of His Holiness – who replaced them – could take part as train-bearers. There are still Protonotaries Apostolic, so that’s not a problem. Cardinal Deacons still exist, as do Auditors of the Rota. There are not any longer officially appointed Assistants at the Pontifical Throne, but that can be fixed with the scribble of a pen on a napkin. There are still Prince Assistants at the Throne, by the way! The Sedia Gestatoria was not part of Mass per se, and so it wouldn’t be absolutely necessary, but it was part of the plan. Many of the vestments are not used now, but that’s a small detail and, frankly, they still exist in the papal stores and they can be made. A fanon was used by John Paul II and by Benedict XVI.

The papal tiara… yes, that was part of the gear, the last thing put on before Mass.  Well… they are still around in the Vatican’s treasuries. Also, a Pope could suggest that he would use it and two dozen individuals or organizations would immediately have one made.  Using it would absolutely make – even more than all the other stuff – make lib heads explode and all the parrots and ferrets fly out.  Which in itself might make it worth it, to answer my rhetorical question above.

So, it would not be impossible but the work to put it together and the fall out afterward might not make it feasible.

His scriptis, I suspect a deeper and more far-sighted reason.   Benedict was a teacher, not an imposer.  He reintroduced a few things, such as the sung Gradual and even the Fanon.  Small things, but indicative.  They were signals, much as, on a smaller scale the late Extraordinary Ordinary in Madison started to celebrate ad orientem on Sundays, a sign to priests that they could move in that direction.  Bishop Wall did this in Gallup.  Leading by example.

Benedict had magnificent vestments brought out of the treasury that probably made MC Piero (Bad) Marini writhe.  At that point, Benedict’s detractors started saying that he was imposing his personal tastes on the liturgy.  Never mind that that is what JP2 and Bad Marini did.  That was okay!  But what Benedict was doing was double-plus-ungood.   So, Benedict wanted to avoid that criticism.

Can you imagine what would have resulted from a PAPAL Mass? I used the image of exploding heads.  But it also would have run the risk of opening for future Pontiffs to do anything they wanted according to personal preferences.  That was, after all the trend ever since the conclusion of Pius’ pontificate.  John XXIII applied his personal preferences and revived the camaura and even thought about moving his residence to the Lateran.  Oh yes, he announced a Council even though it was advised against. Paul VI imposed an artistic style according to his preferences, sold the tiara, and, oh yes, also the Novus Ordo even though he acknowledged the upheaval it would cause.  See my podcasts on that.  John Paul II exercised his preference and stopped using the sedia, then adopting a populist low common denominator liturgy with strange inculturation applications according to the preferences of Bugnini’s former secretary Bad Marini.

The trend was that Popes do as they please: they don’t serve the Roman Rite in humility, they alter it according to their will.

Benedict’s whole life was about bringing the Church’s liturgical life back to stability and continuity.

Would reviving the Papal Mass, 40-50 years after the fact, serve well a long-term goal?

Would I have liked to see it?  Of course!   Old priests in Rome used to describe these Masses. You can see video clips.  Amazing.  But would it have been … prudent?

Quis sum ego ut iudicem?

What would be far more confounding would be for Francis to command one at full re-assimilation of the SSPX.

2) How to get the TLM in your parish.

I’ve written on this more times than I can count.  However, to break this down barney styles, here are some rapid pointers.

First and foremost, you have to be able to articulate why you want the TLM.  Like 1 Peter 3 (not 5!) says, always be ready to give reasons for the hope that is in you, with kindness.  So, you should sit down and make lists in columns on paper.  Why you want the TLM, its advantages, etc., across from objections to the same and then figure out your responses.  That means you might need some good reading.  Peter’s books are good for that.

Next, get a group together.  Don’t go at this alone.  Get on the same page about concrete things, namely, you will pay for all the expenses necessary to obtain vestments, books, booklets or hand missals, etc., and you will handle all the setting up and taking down, unlocking of doors and locking up, send them off for a workshop, etc.  In short, you will handle everything so that the priest doesn’t have yet another set of things to do.  I suspect that a lot of priests and bishops balk not just because they don’t know what to do – and they don’t like being seen not knowing what to do – but because they frankly have to much to do and this is another thing… and a BIG thing at that.  They will have to learn to say Mass in a language they probably haven’t studied, which is intimidating.  Be ready with solutions for every possible thing that can be a speed bump or spike strip thrown in the way.

Which brings us to the priest himself.  You have to handle the guy with serious TLC.  Do not get up in his face or press him.  Be persuasive.  Also, make sure your group is visibly participating in the life of the parish.  Don’t just chopper in and chopper out.  This is important after you get what you want!  Be an important component in the parish.  Keep in mind that, these days, priests are (absurdly) moved every 6 or 12 years, to the detriment of continuity and spiritual paternity of the priest and parish.  You could in a few years be faced with Joseph’s situation when a new Pharaoh came.

Each parish and priest will be different.  But these tips are, I think, indispensable even if the priest is 100% aboard and just waiting for the request.  HE will have to answer to challenges from other priests and maybe the bishop.  Be sure that everything he reports is positive.  Be part of the solution, not a problem to be solved.

3) How do you see the future of the Extraordinary Form?

Some years ago, lay friends used to say to me that one day the Novus Ordo would disappear and the Traditional Latin Mass would once again be the Mass of the Latin Church.  At the time, I shrugged that off as impossible and that the Novus Ordo wasn’t going away.  At the same time, I remembered conversations with Card. Ratzinger years ago which shaped my thought about the old Mass: there should be side by side celebrations and then, as I put it, market forces would prevail.  Either people would flock to the TLM and stick with it, or it would be tried and people would reject it.  Either way, we shouldn’t fear the results.   Also, there is the matter of the “gravitational” pull I think will take place, but let’s leave that.

However, right now I am also looking at demographics.  Demographics suggest, soon, a massive falling away from the Church and a sharp decline in the numbers of priests.  Suburban parishes will die.  On the other hand, TLMs are populated with committed Catholics with lots of children.   Moreover, I keep hearing from seminarians and the newly ordained that the majority in ordination classes each say – or want to say – the TLM for their First Mass.  It could very well be that when the dust and rubble settle, the Usus Antiquior will indeed be the predominant form.  This might take a while.  But even in the shorter term, say 10 years, we might see a entirely different landscape.   And we might have to factor in persecution from outside the Church, which could clarify some people’s values.

In addition, a little while ago I wrote about another trend… early trend, I’ll admit… it seems that Catholics from the more “charismatic” side of things are discovering Tradition and the TLM and they are getting into it.  That has terrific potential for explosive growth.

In any event, the trajectory is good.  The number of TLMs available since Summorum Pontificum has grown tenfold.  There is no sign that this is slowing down.

I’ve been fighting this battle since the late 80s and early 90s of the last century.  I don’t know if I, at my age, will see the results of this race against the Biological Solution and the agents of the world, the flesh and the Devil.

Bonum certamen certo, cursum consumo, fidem servo.  I am glad the young bucks are running with the batons.  Before too much longer I’ll have to change those tenses to perfects.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged , , ,
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@JamesMartinSJ praises preaching by a religious sister. Let’s consider what he praised!

Once upon a time, when you could recognize religious by the habits they wore, a Jesuit was riding grandly in his carriage when he spotted a Minim, of the the order founded by St Francis of Paola, on foot and begging as the mendicant he was. As he passed the little friar, this grand Jesuit chortled in Latin, “Minime! Minime! Semper minimus eris!” (Hey Minim/Shorty! Hey Minim/Shorty! You’ll always be the least!) To which the Minim duly replied, “Jesuita! Jesuita! Non ibat Jesu ita!” (Hey Jesuit, Jesuit! Jesus didn’t get around that way!).

The Jesuit was caught in his hypocrisy.

You could still hear this barb in Rome, back in the day: “Iesuita! Non Iesu ita!” (A Jesuit, but not like Jesus.)  Fair or unfair, it writes itself.

Speaking of Jesuits, James Martin posted this bit of virtue signalling from high atop his carriage.

Martin once posted that he was “stupefied” that women weren’t allowed to preach.  Isn’t he amazing?

I remind the readership that Jesuits reject women, unlike the Benedictines, Dominicans, Franciscans, Augustinians, Carmelites… etc.

So, what does “distinguished” Sister have to say about the Assumption?  Let’s see what Martin is praising.

BTW… this seems to be a set piece for the video, not during a Mass.  Also, Osiek taught at the dreadful Chicago Theological Union for a long time and is involved in FutureChurch.  You wouldn’t know she is a RSCJ, Religious of the Sacred Heart.   You could tell immediately that she is a religious, but not because of an identifying habit.

Quotes and paraphrases…

“The feast of the Assumption means that Mary is just as good as the guys.”

We tend to talk about Christ’s Ascension as if he did it on his own and Mary’s Assumption as if she needed some help.

But Jesus and Mary are not the first to have gone “somewhere up there where God is”.  In addition to Elijah and Enoch, Livy said that mythic Romulus, and Roman Emperors was taken up.

“So, the Ascension of Jesus, the Assumption of Mary are by no means unique. Rather, they conveyed a message to their world. Jesus and Mary rate with the great ones.”  (I am not making this up!)

Then she says that inclusion of Mary’s Assumption was “early”, 4th or 5th century.  (Patently absurd.)

Then she mocks the image of the Assumption by Murillo.

Going on, she likens the image of the woman and child in Revelation, threatened by the dragon.  To protect the child the woman must flee, just like all the immigrant mothers who must flee to protect their children.  (I am not making this up… this is what the Jesuit thinks we need!)

“Look out those who sit on thrones of worldly power.”  (Wow… she’s really subtle.)

Anyway, after an struggle with the clutch and stick shift of linear thought she goes to another gear about 1 Cor 15 and finishes with a quote from Chesterton’s Regina Angelorum.  This part had zero to do with the first part of her “sermon” and was therefore the best part.

Meanwhile, I contacted a priest friend who had to study at CTU back in the day.  I asked him about Osiek and he responded with a single word: “Heretic”.  I mentioned that I would post about Martin and Osiek’s “sermon”.   “A perfect combo”, quoth he.

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VIDEO: 1950 – Pius XII infallibly proclaims the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary

In 1950 my late pastor, Msgr. Schuler, was in Rome on a Fulbright working on the manuscripts of Giovanni Maria Nanino, the successor of Palestrina for the Sistine Chapel.  He had great stories about being a priest in Rome in that Holy Year and, specifically, of the Proclamation of the Dogma of the Assumption.

It was a different world.  Think about it: the war had ended just 5 years before.

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Shoot up in Philadelphia – cops injured. I’m a simple guy and I’m worried.

I spent a lot of my youth in squad cars, police stations and jails.

Before, you libs nod and sputter, “That explains a lot.  That’s why you HATE VATICAN II!”

My folks were cops.

I grew up surrounded by cops, who were a major component of all activities and events, with their families, too.  Great people.  This was wholesome America in tough times and places.  It was a gift and honor.

My default position is that cops are family.

I have LEO friends all over.  There’s something about old cops, old soldiers and old priests… we get each other… we get along.

I’m watching the situation in Philadelphia.  Cops serving a warrant take fire and the perp is still penned up as I write.

I got on the phone to my mother tonight.  In her day, she and her partner served a lot of warrants.  The world has changed. Now, full SWAT teams go. I  texted tonight with a couple of cops still on the job, one of whom ran SWAT in a major city.  He once had a warrant situation that went sideways with serious injuries and a truly horrific ending.  I wound up going to the hospital to visit the officers.

Friends, our society is changing.   Support Law Enforcement.  One of the most evil things I’ve seen in the last few years is the rise of hostility toward cops.

The same attitude has infected the Church.  Anti-nomian libs and bad guys set against Tradition are infesting our Church.  Parallel theological shootouts are going to happen.

Apparently, in Philly the perp is live streaming on Facebook, or some such.  As I write.

DAMN.  How does that work??!?!

These cops had to deal with being shot at through the walls and floors.

Digression.   Did you know that overturned wooden tables don’t protect you from gun fire? You might be less visible, but even small caliber rounds go through walls, floors, cars. You know what? Sometimes anti-gun morons will say something like, “Why didn’t the cops shoot the gun out of his hand?” The sheer IGNORANCE is….

A change to laws. background checks, wouldn’t have stopped this.

I’ll stop.

I don’t know.  As a priest, I yearn for calm and mercy even toward this guy.  Who knows what life circumstances have driven these poor souls to this point?  Who knows how high this guy is?  Who knows?  I can’t imagine how horrible his youth was compared to mine.  It’s hard to understand it.  But these people in general have had no moral examples, no upbringing except by the jungle, and no hope.

But, can I please say it and not be entirely misrepresented?

I’m a simple guy.

It’s getting to the point where some of these perps want to go out in a blaze.  They say this guy is LIVE STREAMING.  This is the apex of his life?  (Now short.)

If he is taken, however, taken alive… I think they should be… here it comes… made example of.

Charlies Daniels made a compelling argument.

Charlie Daniels Band – Simple Man

I ain’t nothin’ but a simple man
They call me a redneck I reckon that I am
But there’s things going on
That make me mad down to the core.

I have to work like a dog to make ends meet
There’s crooked politicians and crime in the street
And I’m madder’n hell and I ain’t gonna take it no more.

We tell our kids to just say no
Then some panty waist judge lets a drug dealer go
Slaps him on the wrist and then he turns him back out on the town.

Now if I had my way with people sellin’ dope
I’d take a big tall tree and a short piece of rope
I’d hang ’em up high and let ’em swing ’til the sun goes down

Well, you know what’s wrong with the world today
People done gone and put their Bible’s away
They’re living by the law of the jungle not the law of the land
The good book says it so I know it’s the truth
An eye for and eye and a tooth for a tooth  [Lex talionis… not so much…]
You better watch where you go and remember where you been
That’s the way I see it I’m a Simple Man.

Now I’m the kinda man that’d not harm a mouse
But if I catch somebody breakin in my house
I’ve got twelve gauge shotgun waiting on the other side

So don’t go pushing me against my will
I don’t want to have to fight you but I dern sure will
So if you don’t want trouble then you’d better just pass me on by

As far as I’m concerned there ain’t no excuse
For the raping and the killing and the child abuse [! hear that,”brethren”?]
And I’ve got a way to put an end to all that mess

Just take them rascals out in the swamp
Put ’em on their knees and tie ’em to a stump
Let the rattlers and the bugs and the alligators do the rest

You know what’s wrong with the world today
People done gone and put their Bible’s away
They’re living by the law of the jungle not the law of the land
The Good Book says it so I know it’s the truth
An eye for and eye and a tooth for a tooth
You better watch where you go and remember where you been
That’s the way I see it I’m a Simple Man

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Now the libs will have a spittle-flecked nutty and say that I am against Francis and the change to CCC 2267 about capital punishment.

A lot happens between apprehension and penalty.

The rot in society was caused in large part because THE CATHOLIC CHURCH abandoned being The Catholic Church.  After decades, we are seeing the inevitable results across the board.

UPDATE: He eventually was talked down and came out on his own. Do I still think a stump and gators are the answer. Ask me again late.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Cri de Coeur, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged
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ASK FATHER: Priest puts up scandalous “gay” flag for annual public “pride” week. Bishop: zero help.

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I’m asking for some advice/direction on a frustrating and too common issue.

A local parish priest in my diocese has been flying the pride flag outside his parish for the second year in a row for pride week. The parish priest was confronted about the public scandal (several times now) this has created and brushed it off as “youthful ignorance”. [!] The bishop was then spoken too who said last year and again this year that “I spoke to Father X and he has agreed to take the flag down on Saturday” (after the pride week ends).  [Indeed.]

So my question is how are the faithful to respond to this public display of disobedience to Church teaching? Would I need to contact Rome now or is there someone else before it gets to that step?

There’s a lot going on in this message:  “second year”… “after hubris week… YOU are “ignorant”… the probably intimidated or compromised bishop won’t take a real stand….

First, how many people are engaged on this issue?  It seems to me that you could get organized (and see other suggestion, below) and schedule a meeting with the priest and work through the issues with him, hear his side. Remember, he might be homosexual and, therefore, personally invested in this scandal.  If that’s the case, then don’t expect a reasoned position or good treatment when you challenge him to affirm the Church’s teaching about homosexual actions.

You might at that point explain to him what is going to happen next to your annual giving in the parish for the next year.  You are all cutting back on your giving: too late to change that now, after two years of this public scandal.  The next time shame week rolls around, you will review your decision: no flags, etc., giving restored to normal levels – flags, etc. deeper cuts yet.

In response to his accusation of your ignorance, to dispel his “mature ignorance”, bring to that meeting screenshots or clippings of what “gay” parades for these shame weeks look like.  Ask the parish priest if he knew about their demonic, scandalous antics in front of the world… in front of children.  Why he is supporting that sort of behavior with a public display?  Is he being paid?  Is this from pressure from donors?

If the priest or bishop comes up with some pabulum about needing to be inclusive and welcoming to Catholics who feel they have been marginalized, then have in your pocket your written petition, signed by at least 50 people, for the Traditional Latin Mass to be celebrated in your parish.

In the Illustrated Dictionary of the Modern Church, you’ll find a photo of TLM petitioners next to the entry for “marginalized”, as well as by, “systematically abused”, “ignored” and “heart-broken”.

Look, I have no idea who your priest or bishop is, but I fear that you are not going to get very far.  Write to Rome… fine.  Good luck with that these days.  They will refer you back to the local bishop.  The local bishop probably didn’t issue a public statement or put anything in writing about his dealings with the priest and the agreement they made, so everything is either deniable or at least delay-able.

If the people in charge are personally invested, you have little recourse.  The only thing that remains for you is your wallet, fasting and praying, and your map to another parish.

I feel for you.

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