St. John Vianney’s things

The Novus Ordo calendar has St. John Vianney – confessor, the other kind of confessor too, draft dodger, Legion of Honor recipient, patron of priests, for the Feast today, 4 August.  In the traditional calendar, he is celebrated on 8 August.   This is one of those movings of saints’ days that I don’t fret about much.  Originally St. John was observed on 9 August and John XXIII moved him to 8 August and Paul VI moved him to his death date or “birthday” into heaven, dies natalis, 4 August.

Over the years, thanks to a friend, I’ve been able to celebrate, even solemnly, using objects owned by St. John Vianney.  For example, an amice…

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And a ciborium.

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Letter of Francis to priests

Today, Sunday 4 August, in the Novus Ordo calendar Feast of St. John Vianney, Patron of Priests, a Letter of Francis to priests was released. Perhaps it was released in anticipation of the Feast of St. John Vianney celebrated on 8 August in the traditional Roman calendar?

The Letter addresses some aspects of The Present Crisis™.

HERE

Posted in Francis, Mail from priests, Priests and Priesthood, The Coming Storm | Tagged , ,
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ASK FATHER: Priests who bless with their fingers in the Greek icon “ICXC” style

From priest…

QUAERITUR:

At the moment I’m at a presbyteral retreat. When you get a bunch of priests together, you’re bound to see the whole range of liturgical “sensibilities,” leaving aside entirely the dinner table conversation… [For sure.  I look forward… no… I anticipate most gatherings of priests with a measure of dread.  An exception would now be that great retreat/conference held by the St. Paul Center, which I just attended.]

Anyhow, when they give blessings, I notice that some priests attempt to contort their hand in the form of the Greek “ICXC,” or at least the form seen in many icons, where the first and middle finger are straight up, and the rest of the fingers down (and not to mention the “bear paw,” the “eagle claw,” etc.)  [Good descriptors.]

It’s my understanding that the way for Latin Rite priests to bless is with all 5 fingers straight up, and the palm turned to port. I remember even reading a dubium, or a rubric, or something something saying as much, but my search hasn’t returned anything.

What do you think?

I think that priests of the Latin Church should behave like priests of the Latin Church.  Let the West be Western and the East be Eastern.  We have our ways of doing things which are entirely proper and good.

And worse than the Greek icon thing is the palm turned outward sweep, and also the “claw” as you say, which look less like a liturgical gesture and more like the rubbing of a steamed up mirror in which the self-admiring priest can see himself being profound and simply wonderful.

In the matter of the actualization of hands for blessings, let us turn to old manuals of liturgy, books of ceremonies.  We are, after all, delighted to be Unreconstructed Ossified Manualists in doctrine and liturgy is doctrine in its most sublime manifestation, whence and back to flow all good things.  These old tomes are consistent about hands.

Isn’t it interesting that the books have paragraphs on what to do with your hands?  The Roman liturgy congregation even specified these things.  How wise is Holy Mother Church!  After all, our hands are one of our most important means of interpersonal communication.  We have happy gestures and angry gestures, some famous and pretty much universal across borders and centuries.  And don’t get me started about Italians.  One thing we note, however, is that when people don’t know what to do, their hands reveal their lack of ease.  This is especially the case with children.  And since priests who are liturgically ignorant are as childish (or womanish) as men can be, the Church told us exactly what to do with our hands.

So, here’s how Latin, the Roman priest blesses, making the sign of the Cross on himself or over others or over objects, liturgically, which is never wrong.

Caveat: Don’t be robotic.

First, the little crosses at the Gospel.  Nearly everyone gets this wrong.  The priest or deacon’s palm of the left hand is put upon the book, straight fingers and thumb pressed together.  With the right hand, straight fingers pressed together and thumb extended out at an angle but on the same plane as the fingers, he makes a small cross in two distinct strokes, lifting the hand for each, with the end or near end of his thumb at the beginning of the Gospel text.  The whole arm with hand moves, not just the thumb, making twitchy jerks. Then, he puts his left palm, still with thumb and fingers together on his chest, and, with his right hand, still straight and with thumb out a little, he traces small crosses on his forehead, lips, and breast below his left hand.  The downward stroke is first and, lifting up and resetting, the transverse follows from left to right.  The whole arm with hand moves, not just the thumb, making twitchy jerks.  The motions should be distinct and not wavy.  Mutatis mutandis this is also for the altar at, for example, at the Last Gospel.  Bottom line: open hand, not balled-fist.

Next, blessings over people, objects, places.  The dimensions of the Sign of the Cross is proportioned to the size of the object.  For example, blessing the oblata on the altar: just stick to the oblata on the altar, not a foot on either side of the corporal.  For a rosary, you don’t have to throw your shoulder out of joint.  For places and people, the Sign would be larger, much as the same size as when the priest makes the Sign upon himself.

Sticking to liturgy, and this is always right for blessing people outside of a liturgical setting, again, unless the left hand is instructed to be on the altar, etc., the left goes upon the chest.  The right hand, with straight fingers and thumb pressed together and pointing heavenward, is held with little finger toward whomever is to receive the blessing. NOT PALM OUT.   He traces the Sign of the Cross with distinct strokes.  Did I mention, NOT PALM OUT?  Raising his hand, as described, to about the height of his own forehead, as if crossing himself, he begins the downward stroke, again to the point where he would sign himself, while saying, “Pater et Filius or Patris et Filii“. At the nadir he might pause almost imperceptibly to make the stroke more distinct.  Then he raises his hand back up on the same vector as the downward stroke to the point where he will make the transverse stroke.  Moving his hand – parallel to the floor or footpace – towards his own left to about the point where he would sign himself he again pauses almost imperceptibly.  From thence he moves arm and hand, fingers always pointing up and little finger always toward the people, all the way to the right in a straight line to to where he would make the Sign on his own right shoulder while saying, “et Spiritus Sanctus or Spiritus Sancti“.  After that imperceptible pause, he then should put his hands together, palms together, before his chest and go on to the next privileged task of his priesthood.

Blessing with an object like a relic or a monstrance would be different, of course.  Giving blessings when you are Pope would be different, too.

One might object that we see Popes and saints depicted or in photos with hands raised in blessing with their two small fingers tucked down, not quite like the Greek icon thing, but probably symbolizing the three Persons and two Natures.

Sure.  Why not.  Keep in mind that Popes traditionally bless a little differently.

Who am I to judge?

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There’s a little more to this, by the way.

There is a theory that Peter himself gave the blessing this way, so that’s why Popes and others do it now.  For example, legend has it that the Spanish of Castile has a coronal fricative, an lisped “s”, perhaps because a king had a lisp and the court then took it on also. It’s probably not true, se non è vero, è ben trovato as the rather charred Giordano might have said without receiving the papal blessing.  That said, there is a theory that the papal blessing developed because Peter had – I’m not making this up, this is really someone’s theory – Peter had ulnar or median nerve (running shoulder to pinky) damage which caused his two small fingers to curl in. Evidence for this is supposedly in a fresco in the Catacombs of Domatilla.  Peter is depicted with shorter ring and pinky fingers.  The idea is that Peter would never willingly have blessed with a hand like a claw or fist, but rather with a more peaceful open hand.  The Bishop of Rome has been imitating Peter’s never damage ever since.  Buy it?  We could also get into the difficulties of making the Vulcan greeting sign, but that might get us off track.  Meanwhile, the two tucked fingers from that nerve damage really is described  in old medical books as “Pope’s Hand” or some such.  That’s when people knew something, even when they weren’t Catholic.

As for blessing with the Greek icon fingers, no. Just, no.

Alas, with the systematic demolition of Catholic identity in the Latin Church over the last few decades, some (priests) have gotten it into their heads that to recover reverence we have to import Eastern art, architecture, music, etc.  NO.  Make it STOP!  We have our own heritage.  In some cases we assimilated some elements from the East (as in Venice, etc.), but organically and harmoniously.

We need our Western patrimony returned in its full splendor.  In that way we can appreciate the Eastern even more.

Another with Pius – who turns out smiled years before Francis was elected.  Lots of pictures with Pius with fingers bent, or slightly bent even with straight hand.  Damage?

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St John Paul II of happy memory, straight handed.

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But then there’s this official portrait.

Benedict at his last audience… sigh.

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Sometimes, you play things fast and loose, as when Benedict once forgot to give the blessing and, laughing, came back to the window!  Still new at the Pope thing.

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Don’t any of YOU priests put your hand on the lectern!  Unless you are the Pope.

We could multiply examples of variations of blessings of people by Popes in photos and films.  Cui bono?

But, liturgically, learn the RIGHT ROMAN WAY FOR PRIESTS and stick to it. And, as my old pastor used to say, “When you’re right, you can’t be wrong.”

Bl. Pius IX adds:

“The Book of Blessings… just say NO!”

Heh.

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JUST TOO COOL: Ancient Roman Tchotchke

This is so amazingly cool that I have to share it.  A friend alerted me to this story.  I would very much like to see this exhibit at the Ashmolean.  Perhaps Fr. H might take it in and discuss it with Pope B14.

From MOLA:

‘I went to Rome and all I got you was this stylus!’ Rare inscribed Roman writing implement discovered beneath Bloomberg’s European HQ goes on display
A unique Roman stylus, with the most elaborate and expressive inscription of its kind is set to go on display for the first time in a new exhibition at the Ashmolean: Last Supper in Pompeii.
It was discovered by MOLA archaeologists during excavations for financial technology and information company Bloomberg’s European headquarters in London, on the bank of the river Walbrook – a now lost tributary of the Thames. The iron stylus – used to write on wax-filled wooden writing tablets – dates to around AD 70, just a few decades after Roman London was founded. [When the Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed.]
The Bloomberg dig uncovered more than 14,000 artefacts revealing what life was like for the first Londoners, including the first written reference to the name of the city. 600 of the finds are now on display at London Mithraeum Bloomberg SPACE.
Of over 200 styluses recovered from the site, only one was found to have an inscription. Inscribed styluses are exceptionally rare: archaeologists have found only a handful of examples from across the whole Roman Empire to date, and the Bloomberg inscription is the finest, unparalleled in the length, poetry and humour of its inscription.

A unique inscribed Roman stylus uncovered by MOLA archaeologists during excavations for Bloomberg's European headquarters in London. The inscription has been highlighted in yellow (c) MOLA
The inscription has been painstakingly examined and translated by classicist and epigrapher Dr Roger Tomlin. It reads:
‘ab urbe v[e]n[i] munus tibi gratum adf(e)ro
acul[eat]um ut habe[a]s memor[ia]m nostra(m)
rogo si fortuna dar[e]t quo possem
largius ut longa via ceu sacculus est (v)acuus’

‘I have come from the City. I bring you a welcome gift
with a sharp point that you may remember me.
I ask, if fortune allowed, that I might be able (to give)
as generously as the way is long (and) as my purse is empty.’

In other words: the stylus is a gift to remind the recipient of its sender; the sender acknowledges that it is a cheap gift and wishes that they could have given more. Its tongue-in-cheek sentiment is reminiscent of the kinds of novelty souvenirs we still give today. It is the Roman equivalent of ‘I went to Rome and all I got you was this pen’, providing a touching personal insight into the humour of someone who lived nearly 2000 years ago.
The letters of the inscription are tiny and exceptionally difficult to read, and their survival reflects both the excellent preservation of the Roman artefacts from Bloomberg and the careful work of MOLA’s conservators. It is possible that similar inscriptions on other Roman styluses have simply not survived or been identified.
The inscription even contains spelling errors from which it is possible to get a sense of the scribe’s train of thought. The final –m in nostram, for instance, has been missed off where they appear to have run out of space. [Or… perhaps the final vowel was nasalized and pronounced with lip rounding rather than a bilabial stop? That’s weak, since other final m’s appear.]
As ‘the City’ referred to is very likely Rome, the stylus suggests a direct link between Roman Italy and the province of Britannia. At this time Londinium lay near the edge of the Empire but, far from a being a provincial backwater, it had grown into an important centre for commerce and governance, interconnected with the wider Roman world. The stylus and its inscription highlights the crucial role that writing and literacy played in allowing traders, soldiers and officials to keep in contact with peers, friends and family, some of whom lived over a thousand miles away.

It is easy to lose track of the fact that people in those times had much the same concerns and habits that we have. Also, though their tech was lower than ours, they did have an amazing postal system. When Christianity was finally legitimized by law, bishops so taxed the system with their missives that it put a serious strain on the imperial postal system.

A lesson to learn is that leaders of the Church today should make better use of the tech that we have to communicate the messages they want to get out. I had a post on this issue the other day. HERE

And speaking of Pompeii…. this is amazing and a bit horrifying…

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What does @JamesMartinSJ say about the “gay” desecration of the Montréal church? – UPDATED

UPDATE 3 August 2019:

Still nothing from James Martin on this.  We know he has seen it by now.

Is this important?

Someone sent me a link to an article at the detestable New Ways Ministry about the event. The creators of the event described what they were up t.  You need a strong stomach.

“Its a queer love story produced by Matthew Richardson–and the church leaders were happy to host it.”

“They welcomed me, my message, and our creation with open arms,” said Richardson,the show’s creator and a former Cirque Du Soleil performer. Hallelujah is one of five dances he will direct as part of his CircusQueer Project. The video is deeply intimate in a deeply Catholic setting. In a review by the San Diego Gay and Lesbian News (SDGLN), dancers Guillaume Paquin and Arthur Morel Van Hyfte are described as “only [the] heart” of the video, while, “the church [is] its body, taking on perhaps the most important role in the video: an example of inclusivity through servanthood.” The entire 5 minutes and 33 seconds performance can be seen at the end of this post.”

Yes.  This is important.  It truly was a desecration.

___ Originally published 2 August 2019

This is upsetting.  It is better that some of you do not click on the link.  No, really!  I won’t post images.

I want to know what Jesuit Fr. James Martin has to say about this.

The issue, reported with video at Gloria.TV.  (WARNING)

Homosexual Orgasm Celebrated in Montreal Church (Video)

Two homosexuals performed an erotic dance inside Saint Peter Apostle in Montreal on May 1, 2019, for a film shoot.

It used Jeff Buckley’s sexualized adaptation of the song Hallelujah by Leonard Cohen.

Buckley explained to the Dutch magazine OOR: “The hallelujah is not a homage to a worshipped person, idol or god, but the hallelujah of the orgasm.”

This took place in a church of the Archd. of Montréal, under the aegis of Archbp. Christian Lépine. It seems that this is the at least tacitly approved “gay” parish run by the Oblates of Mary Immaculate (O.M.I.) HERE

Hence, it is exactly the sort of place that the Jesuit homosexualist Martin promotes.  Consider that he has publicly stated that “gays” (I hate that word) should freely kiss in churches.  This desecration in Montréal is on the logical trajectory of such statements.

Fr Martin should make a public statement about what happened in that church.

For my part, I consider it a desecration of that church and the celebration of something demonic. That church needs to be ritually purified.

Fr. Martin… what say you?

It may be that he already has said something about this.  Perhaps you readers know.  It that is the case, please let us know.

Comment moderation is ON.

UPDATE

As I read this disgusting account, my memory made a strong connection to a scene in the most recent book by Michael O’Brien: Voyage To Alpha Centuari.

US HERE – UK HERE

As I have written before, I suspect that O’Brien is a bit of a mystic.  His books have been useful to me in deciphering the signs of the times.

In the book, on the new planet they find a temple in which they find also documents about the satanic rites celebrated there.  Some of the travelers decide to reenact them.  O’Brien’s description is lurid.

Day 369: Green Day again. A year has passed since the previous exercise in elevating our cosmic sensitivities, or “interplanetary bio-consciousness” as it is called officially. There are few people onboard the Kosmos at present, so the green banners, scarves, and neckties were scarce here. Down on the planet, however, festivities were in full swing. On the panorama screen, I watched a few celebrations at various stations, dominated by an incompatible mixture of ecological cant and jargon and an any-excuse-for-a-party attitude, seasoned with mystical music. One particularly nauseating performance occurred in the temple itself. There, accompanied by the piped-in music of flutes and drums, a bevy of maidens danced around the black altar cube. They were dressed in diaphanous green gowns that left nothing to the imagination. Somewhat frenzied, nearly erotic, and definitely euphoric, the ten young women twirled and pranced and sang in praise of a cosmic “lord” who held fire in one hand and arrows in the other. Their choreography resembled a coil, winding and unwinding hypnotically as they chanted. At the head of the dance, leading it all, was the old Russian psychiatrist lady who had been so offended by me looking at her scar years ago. She was now without doubt far into her eighties, which was unfortunate, since her gown was the flimsiest of all, nearly transparent. With flailing arms, she repeatedly let fly full-throated cries rising from her arching abdomen, a crone-nymph on hallucinogens. As the event progressed, a soft, male voice-over informed the viewers of our need to reconnect to primitive “spirituality”, which entailed, apparently, a “rediscovery of the phallic” (thankfully not acted upon, at least not on screen, as far as I know, which isn’t saying much) and a “reintegration of light side and shadow side” for the sake of universal harmony. (Ay, caramba! I turned it off and went for a long walk.)

O’Brien, Michael D.. Voyage to Alpha Centauri: A Novel (Kindle Locations 8050-8065). . Kindle Edition.

The downfall of Numenor also comes to mind.  I just reread The Silmarillion with its tale of how Sauron, disguised in fair form, falsely humbled himself and ingratiated himself in the counsels of the kings to the point that he instituted worship of Morgoth/Melkor involving human sacrifice of those who resisted.

The fruit of the Forbidden Tree, the Golden Calf, queer dances, earth worship.  It’s all the same.

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Fishwrap’s latest spittle-flecked nutty about Card. Burke

The Biological Solution keeps rolling up stats and the Demographic Deluge soon to hit the Church will empty pews in the burbs.   What will be left?   Hard to say.  However, I think it will involve the steadily growing traditional communities, with their greater knowledge of and commitment to their Faith and their large, young families.

Meanwhile, at that perennial promoter of all things corrosive to the Faith, Fishwrap (aka National Sodomitic Reporter), there is an op-ed about something the aging hippies and their younger dupes truly fear:

Editorial: Cardinal Burke is a living symbol of a failed version of church

Pretty funny, really. If anyone embodies failure, it’s Fishwrap.

Fishwrap says with open anti-nomian, “non serviam” hubris, that this is in the print issue – still “fishwrap”! – with the title “Burke’s church is statute-bound, static .”

What set them off? Card. Burke participated in the annual Napa Institute confab, whom they have gnostically labelled “far right”.  Believe me.  Napa isn’t “far right”.  But when you are that far off the edge of the Left, everything looks right and far.

What are Burke’s faults?   He thinks that non-Christians should convert and accept Christ.  He thinks that the Church has a history of teaching about capital punishment that can’t be ignored.  He doesn’t think married men should be ordained.  Etc.

Let’s not waste more time on this.   We can sum up the analytical powers and insights of the Fishwrap by how they captioned the photo at the top of their green-inked whine.

Can you read the small type at the bottom? If not: “U.S. Cardinal Raymond Burke waves to the congregation after celebrating Mass at Sts. Peter and Paul Church in Cork City, Ireland, July 7. (CNS/Cillian Kelly)”

Fishwrap‘s writers don’t recognize that the Cardinal is blessing not waving.

That is hardly a surprise.  This op-ed is the sort of dreck you produce when your whole vision is the reduction of the supernatural to the natural.

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2 August until midnight: “Portiuncula” Plenary (or Partial) Indulgence

From midnight tonight to midnight tomorrow2 August, you can gain the “Portinuncula” Indulgence.

This indulgence seems to have been granted directly by Christ Himself in an appearance to St. Francis.  The Lord them told Francis to go to Pope Honorius III, who, as Vicar of Christ, who wielded the keys, would decree it.

Catholic Encyclopedia

St. Francis, as you know, repaired three chapels. The third was popularly called the Portiuncula or the Little Portion, dedicated to St. Mary of the Angels. It is now enclosed in a sanctuary at Assisi.

The friars came to live at the Little Portion in early 1211. It became the “motherhouse” of the Franciscans. This is where St. Clare came to the friars to make her vows during the night following Palm Sunday in 1212 and where Sister Death came to Francis on 3 October 1226.

Because of the favors from God obtained at the Portiuncula, St. Francis requested the Pope to grant remission of sins to all who came there. The privilege extends beyond the Portiuncula to others churches, especially held by Franciscans, throughout the world.

A plenary indulgence is a mighty tool for works of mercy and weapon in our ongoing spiritual warfare. A plenary indulgence is the remission, through the merits of Christ and the saints, through the Church, of all temporal punishment due to sin already forgiven.

To obtain the Portiuncula plenary indulgence, a person must visit the Chapel of Our Lady of the Angels at Assisi, or a Franciscan sanctuary, or one’s parish church, with the intention of honoring Our Lady of the Angels. Then perform the work of reciting the Creed and Our Father and pray for the Pope’s designated intentions.

You should be free, at least intentionally, of attachment to venial and mortal sin, and truly repentant. Make your sacramental confession 8 days before or after. Participate at assist at Mass and receive Holy Communion 8 days before or after.

BTW… the faithful can gain a plenary indulgence on a day of the year he designates (cf. Ench. Indul. 33 1.2.d). You might choose the anniversary of your baptism or of another sacrament or name day.

My friend the great Fr. Finigan, His Hermeueticalness, has some excellent points and suggestions in his post about the Porticuncula indulgence.  HERE

Also, HERE, Fr. Finigan wrote about the requirement that we not have any attachment to sin, even venial.  He offers quite a hopeful view of what sounds like a difficult prospect.  I warmly recommend it.

Regarding “the Pope’s intentions”, this means intentions designated by the Pope.  However, some people have wondered how strict this is, or what to do it the intention is… odd.   I wrote about this issue HERE.  Read that post.  However, here’s an excerpt:

Click

Because we are Unreconstructed Ossified Manualists, and we love our old dependable compendia of theology with its sober and thorough analyses, we can turn to the manual by Prümmer.

Prümmer says that the intentions of the Holy Father for which we are to pray have a tradition of five basic categories which were fixed:

1. Exaltatio S. Matris Ecclesiae (Triumph/elevation/stability/growth of Holy Mother Church)
2. Extirpatio haeresum (Extirpation/rooting out of heresies),
3. Propagatio fidei (Propagation/expansion/spreading of the Faith)
4. Conversio peccatorum (Conversion of sinners),
5. Pax inter principes christianos (Peace between christian rulers).

These five categories were also listed in the older, 1917 Code of Canon Law, which is now superseded by the 1983 Code.

However, they remain good intentions all.

 

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Bishops and the Internet – positive developments

Recently, His Excellency Most Reverend Donald Hying, Bishop of Madison, has been issuing brief – a just a couple minutes at a time – video messages via YouTube.  He’ll tackle a topic in a single spot or in a short series.  Right now his videos are about “vocation”. His channel is HERE.

This use of social media is excellent.

I bring this up today because I just discovered that another bishop, of Gallup, is using podcasts.  H.E.M.R. James Wall has his podcast – or CrosierCast – to which you can subscribe on iTunes of Soundcloud.  HERE His latest is “Tolkien, Part 1: Free Will and Fate in Western Myth”. I will remind the readership that recently Bp. Wall began to celebrate ad orientem versus in his cathedral. HERE

Back in 2009 I wrote a piece for the UK’s Catholic Herald in which I dealt with the critical importance of online ministry.   I posted my op-ed HERE.   I just re-read it.  It is still timely even though it is now a decade old!  Sheesh.  Inter alia I opined that every diocese should have a “vicar for online ministry”.  I see that some bishops… younger bishops… are taking matters into their own hands.

Back then I wrote:

Catholics intuitively look for leadership from priests, to be sure, but in a special way from diocesan bishops.  I have met only a handful of bishops who actually grasp that there is an internet. Few take it seriously.  On the live internet stream of the November meeting of the USCCB a bishop observed that, while he appreciated reducing paper consumption by giving him a CD-ROM disk, he didn’t know how to use it.   I met a prelate in Rome, working in social communications, who didn’t know how to turn on his computer.  An American Cardinal quizzed me about my footprint in cyberspace and mused, “More people read you in a day than read me in a week in our newspaper.”  As a new generation of bishops emerges, episcopal savvy about modern tools of communication will improve.  Nevertheless, bishops can’t themselves be the point men for a diocese’s online ministry.

Oh, my prophetic soul.

Now, for you readers…

Do you know of other bishops who are offering something like this via social media? I mean something substantive, worth tuning in for.

 

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More on the systematic attack on John Paul II’s Magisterium. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

A systematic attack is being waged on the teaching legacy of John Paul II.  Without fail, also look at THIS about the “purge” of the last remaining “Wojtylians”.

The latest front in the attack is the intentional demolition of the Institute for Marriage and Family that bears the sainted Pope’s name.  Faculty has been dismissed or sidelined or isolated such that they will have no influence or power.  The statutes have been changed.  People with 180° divergent views are now considered for faculty (e.g. Chiodi).

The students at the Institute aren’t taking it.  They issued an open letter.  HERE The third point they make is the salient point:

3. Why should one continue studying at the John Paul II Institute if it does not seem to propose anything new with respect to what can be found in the curricula of secular universities and what is oftentimes offered there in more attractive and efficient ways?

The powers that be aren’t being entirely forthright.  HERE  First, they denied the existence of the students’ letter.  Then they denied they received it prior to its publication.  So the students published everything, with the dates.

HERE I wrote about the method of “creeping incrementalism” employed in this systematic attack on the teachings of John Paul II and, in fact, the perennial teachings of the Church on morals.  In retrospect:

  • Kasper’s address
  • two rigged Family Synods
  • Amoris laetitia 
  • 5 dubia without answers
  • Chiodi’s talk at the Gregorian
  • changes at the Pontifical Academy for Life

What happens in Rome doesn’t stay in Rome.  This is coming your way, to a diocese near you.

 

At CNA read a piece in which the VP of the Institute says that, since Francis ordered the changes to the Institute, they’ve been trying to do so in continuity with the Institute’s identity.  But that isn’t what’s happening now.

The vice-president of the Pontifical John Paul II Institute in Rome said that changes to the school’s governing structure and academic program are a serious threat to its identity, and to the important pastoral ministry it supports.

“It seems to me that the identity of the Institute is seriously threatened, so it is necessary to present, with respect but clearly, the objective problems within the recent changes, and warn of the danger to the original mission of the Institute, which Pope Francis has clearly said he wants to preserve, not just as a piece of the past, but precisely because it is a source of renewal and a pathway for the Church’s accompaniment to families,” Fr. Jose Granados, DCJM, told CNA July 31.

This guy was a consultor to the CDF, btw, which is going to undergo its own calvary.

He particularly underscores the elimination of the teaching of MORAL THEOLOGY.

“Precisely at this point is also the importance of morality, which the Institute has cultivated from the light of love, as a way to fulfill our vocation to love, and as the ability to achieve a beautiful and full life. As in this way of love it is essential to recover the language of the body, John Paul II entrusted to the Institute his Catechesis about human love, where he outlined a theology of the body that has continued to develop in these years with great fruitfulness.”

In the “theology of the body,” Granados said, Pope St. John Paul II “calls us to truly reread the language of the body, a language inscribed in us by the Creator, and which is based on the sexual difference of man and woman open to life. From this anthropological unitary vision, a faculty has been cultivated and enriched, expanded across all continents in different sections, where the study of each discipline enriches the others, avoiding that fragmentation so typical of university work today. The sharp break we observe these days, blurring the memory of this living tradition, which is preserved especially in people, endangers this rich heritage,” the priest concluded.

What it looks like some people, who wield a lot of delegated power, are trying to do is precisely what we see in the secular sphere: detach sex from procreation.

Our Blessed Mother told the last Fatima seer Sr. Lucia (as communicated to the late dubia Cardinal Carlo Caffarra – founder of the JPII Institute) that the Devil’s last battlefront is the family. From the beginning the “father of lies” deceived people into thinking that God hasn’t told the truth and that we can be the arbiters of our own “right” and our own “wrong”. The lie of sex divorced from procreation is the goal.  That is the goal behind attacks on John Paul II’s magisterium.  What else could it be?

This is a signal development for the whole of the Church.

It truly is a signal from Rome to “sleeper cells”, those who have been keeping their heads low for the last couple decades.

Most of us can’t do anything about this.  But we can all do something about who we are, where we are.  We all have a sphere of life which we can influence.  How ought one react to the antics of the New catholic Red Guards across the pond?  Ongoing conversion. Intention Catholic living.  Acts of reparation for sins against the Sacred Heart and Immaculate Heart of our Blessed Mother.

Imagine the grace tsunami that could be unleashed were every single person who reads this to, right away:

  • Right away say the Rosary in reparation for sins
  • Make an examination of conscience
  • GO TO CONFESSION ASAP
  • Take on a mortification of some kind for a time with purpose

Each of you are a spiritual force in this vale of tears, more or less activated and engaged.

Engage.

Posted in New catholic Red Guards, Pò sì jiù, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged
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Your Good News

Do you have good news to share with the readers?  Let us know.

For my part, I admit to having been a little down lately.  Today, I had, in rapid succession, three great consolations.  My spirits are lifted.

And, for more earthly good news, tonight I found sole on sale at the store.  Sole Meuniere, with some fries and a little of my remaining Sauce moutarde a la Normande.  It was left from the Rôti de Porc I made on Sunday for me and my neighbor.

Frankly, I’ll pack up some of this, too, for my neighbor.

Moreover, I am listening to a good reading via Audible to The Silmarillion.  I haven’t been in it for a long time.  Amazing.  When I was a teen, I wrote to Tolkien with questions about this work, which had been mentioned but not published… and he wrote back.  Beautiful memories.  I am thinking of old friends and different days.

US HERE – UK HERE

Posted in Fr. Z's Kitchen |
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