REMINDER: Super new book from Anthony Esolen: An Annotated Reading of the Prologue of John

I’m reposting this because… wow.  What a book.

This book just keep rewarding and rewarding.

In the Beginning Was the Word: An Annotated Reading of the Prologue of John

US HEREUK


When Anthony Esolen and Angelico Press team up… well… it just doesn’t get any better than that.

I was really excited at the notification that Anthony Esolen (whose translation of the Divine Comedy is terrific) had written an in depth reflection on the Prologue of the Gospel of John.   I’m working through it now.

As a priest who uses the Vetus Ordo, the Prologue is “daily bread”, for it is recited at the end of almost every Mass.

If you frequent Mass in the Vetus Ordo your active participation will be massively increased through reading and weighing Esolen’s work.   And – think about it – give a copy of this book to every priest you know who says the Vetus Ordo.

So, far, every single page has been enriching.

In the Beginning Was the Word: An Annotated Reading of the Prologue of John

US HEREUK

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Daily Rome Shot 424, etc., and a memory

I shot this photo on the Feast of the Cathedra of Peter in 2006 from my window.

Today’s Fervorino from daily Mass. HERE

WORDLE 10

OPPORTUNITY
10% off with code:
FATHERZ10

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Daily Rome Shot 422, etc., and an homage to a great priest

I learned that my friend, the amazing Luigi Card. De Magistris died recently, days short of his 96th birthday.  He was a legend.

My office window in the Palazzo del Sant’Uffizio was open to the interior courtyard of the building.  The window was covered with a lattice of massive iron bars, rather like a jail cell or a zoo.  Thus it was that I first became acquainted with De Magistris, who had an apartment in the Palazzo.  He was also a member of the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei”.  He regularly walked past my window.  Eventually he would stop and chat the through bars, relating amazing anecdotes or pieces of advice.  Having gotten to know each other that way, we occasionally had some longish walks… he was a great walker.   He had stories that amazed, from the time of the preparatory period before Vatican II and the Curia.

Eventually he was made Regente and then pro Major Penitentiary and consecrated bishop. He should have been made Cardinal at that time, but I think everyone knew that he knew where all the skeletons were.    He took a few stands that were not popular and was known to be quite traditional, which was not… fashionable.  I think he was treated quite badly by JP2.

In any event, De Magistris could be spotted all over Rome, having a brisk walk, always in cassock and usually with his Roman clerical flat hat.  If stopped for a greeting, he would stand with his hat held in both hands before his chest and, on parting, would cover and then tip it in your direction.  Coming to and from the sacristy in St. Peter’s for morning Masses he was precise in his clerical etiquette and would use the customary greetings in Latin, standing aside for vested priests, etc.

De Magistris was one of the many amazing figures I was privileged to know during my many years in Rome.

Even though the formation and ethos that shaped them has nearly vanished, I hope we shall see their like again.  Lore and the clerical culture needs to be passed along to new generations, ne pereant.

Today’s daily Fervorino.  HERE

WORDLE 09

ENGLISH LATIN

I did pretty well today!

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At Crisis…. Screwtape to Wormwood on “A Certain Diocese”

At Crisis, the piece in question begins thusly.   My emphases

My dear Wormwood,

I want to applaud you with regard to the work you have undertaken in one of the Enemy’s foremost dioceses in the Americas. For far too long, that detestable place has flourished virtually unchecked by us. But since the enthronement of our beloved Pachamama in Rome, events have gone better than I expected! These humans never cease to amaze me with how easily corruptible they are.

Now let us discuss this opportunity you have with the promulgation of the motu proprio Traditionis Custodes (I am claiming full credit for that mockery of a title) and the responses to the Dubia issued by our English friend who covets a red hat. These documents have certainly stirred things up worldwide, but they can be of great aid to your sowing of division in that diocese.

I highly recommend you keep whispering into the ears of the Enemy’s top man there. Thus far, you have done well exploiting his false sense of obedience to his Roman authorities. If this was a bishop formed during the Middle Ages your remonstrations would not have worked. But the Enemy’s Church is now filled with so many weak and compliant men that your task is easier to accomplish. This bishop has already restricted the Enemy’s sacraments in that detestable ancient rite. This has caused immediate dissension amongst the priests and their faithful. Confusion and anger are great weapons!

Set your sights on the so-called Traditional Latin Mass. It must be expunged from that diocese. It is offered in far too many parishes, 21 at last count. Also, more than half the priests there have taken it upon themselves to learn that Mass with all its rubrics.

Now is not the time to relax your efforts. Devoted nephew, let me remind you of our long-term goal here: the ruination of that diocese that has been a source of our angst for far too long. You know well the outcomes we desire:

[…]

You can find the rest there.

 

 

Posted in Lighter fare, Our Catholic Identity, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, Traditionis custodes | Tagged
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Official communiqué of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter

As we wait for the next shoe to drop – something from the Congregation for Religious – there is this official news from the FSSP

Official communiqué of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter

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Exceptionally cringeworthy Fr. Jackass and his final “rock on” guitar blessing. (NB: CHICAGO…. CUPICH….) – UPDATE

UPDATE: 22 Feb 2022

It’s a good thing some of those videos were downloaded first.  And I imagine that some folks in Chicagoland will drop in from time to time, with their phone cameras, just to enjoy the show.

Originally Published on 20 Feb ’22


This.

BUT… the TLM has to be suppressed.    Because!

 

This abomination is the last few minutes of THIS.

___

More

Holy Family Catholic Community in Inverness, IL in the Archdiocese of Chicago.

HERE

This is IN the Archdiocese of Chicago where the PEOPLE who want the TLM are being brutally and cruelly marginalized by Archbp. Cupich.

In Chicago, this is OKAY.  The TLM?  Suppress.

Their YouTube channel HERE

What else are they doing and saying there?

___

If you thought that this was a one off… this is is CHICAGO….

21 Feb 2022:

As if that wasn’t “gay” enough, there’s this page: HERE

I’ve said it before, I’ll say it again…

… a lot of motivation of the attack on Traditional sacred worship (really, on the people who want it) is not so much about liturgy, it is about something else.  The real goal is non-celibate (non-continent) homosexual clergy.   The TLM and what it teaches and those who want it stand in the way of that goal.    The TLM might have adherents who are also sinners, but they don’t say that what is sinful is good.  That’s part of the hatred of the left for the TLM and the traditional teaching of the Church against sodomy.

Therefore, they attack. People are pushed to the peripheries.   The worse the attacks are, the more eager and impatient they are getting to grab that brass ring.

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes: Sexagesima (Novus Ordo: 7th Ordinary) – BONUS VIDEO

Too many people today are without good, strong preaching, to the detriment of all. Share the good stuff.

Was there a GOOD point made in the sermon you heard at the Masses for the Septuagesima Sunday (Novus Ordo: 6th Ordinary Sunday).

Tell about attendance especially for the Traditional Latin Mass.  I hear that it is growing.  Of COURSE.

Any local changes or (hopefully good) news?

Those of you who regularly viewed my live-streamed daily Masses – with their fervorini – for over a year, you might drop me a line.

I have some written remarks about the TLM Mass for this Sunday – HERE

AND…. did you know that these Gesima Sundays have Roman Station churches assigned to them?

Here is a great initiative which gives a view of the Roman Stations.  Very well done.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

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Daily Rome Shot 422, etc.

Daily Mass Fervorino and Last Gospel and Leonine Prayers in Latin.  HERE

WORDLE 08

English and Latin

Use your phone’s camera!

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Giving the diocese your proverbial 2¢.

For those of you who, fed up, are tempted to give to your local diocese your proverbial 2¢.

From my correspondent:

 I wrote to you a bit ago about sending Cardinal Cupich my two cents.  I did and received my thank you letter from him.

I am reminded of a priest friend who, when billed by the diocese to pay for his (horrid) seminary years (I won’t say ‘formation’), sent in something so small that it cost more to process the check than they got from it.  They asked him to let it accrue and send a larger amount.  Eventually, he taped their postage guaranteed envelop to a concrete block.  They stopped sending bills.

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WDTPRS – 7th Ordinary Sunday: Rational things and a student’s prayer

Let us look at the Collect for the upcoming 7th Sunday of Ordinary Time, Novus Ordo.

Praesta, quaesumus, omnipotens Deus,
ut, semper rationabilia meditantes,
quae tibi sunt placita, et dictis exsequamur et factis
.

Note the spiffy separation of et dictis…et factis by the verb.  Rationabilis is an adjective meaning “reasonable, rational”.

A Biblical source for part of the oration could be John 8:28-29:

So Jesus said, “When you have lifted up the Son of man, then you will know that I am he, and that I do nothing on my own authority but speak thus as the Father taught me.  And he who sent me is with me; he has not left me alone, for I always do what is pleasing to him (quae placita sunt ei, facio semper).”

SLAVISHLY LITERAL VERSION:

Grant, we beg, Almighty God,
that we, meditating always on rational things,
may fulfill those things which are pleasing to You
by both words and deeds.

I chose “rational” partly because of an association I made with a prayer attributed to St Thomas Aquinas which we students, trying to be serious and rational beings (cf. Aristotle, Nichomachean Ethics 1,13 ), recited before philosophy classes:

Concede mihi, miséricors Deus, quae tibi sunt plácita, ardenter concupíscere, prudenter investigáre, veráciter agnóscere, et perfecte adimplére ad laudem et gloriam Nominis tui.  Amen. …

Grant me, O merciful God, to desire eagerly, to investigate prudently, to acknowledge sincerely, and perfectly to fulfill those things which are pleasing to Thee, to the praise and glory of Thy Name.  Amen.

When we submit to God’s will and pursue what is good and true and beautiful, we are as God wants us to be.

OBSOLETE ICEL (1973):

Father,
keep before us the wisdom and love
you have revealed in your Son.
Help us to be like him
in word and deed.

Dreadful.  Good riddance.

CURRENT ICEL (2011):

Grant, we pray, almighty God,
that, always pondering spiritual things,
we may carry out in both word and deed
that which is pleasing to you.

I chose “rational things” for rationabilia.  The newer, corrected ICEL has “spiritual things”, which is certainly defensible.  The French language dictionary of liturgical Latin by Albert Blaise revised by Antoine Dumas, for rationabilis, gives us “spirituel”. Blaise/Dumas also cites the ancient version of the very Collect we are looking at today, identifying it for the 6th Sunday after Epiphany in the 8th century Gregorian Sacramentary.

We are creatures made in the image and likeness of God.  We are made to act like God acts, using the gifts and powers of intellect and will He gave us.  These faculties are wounded because of Original Sin, but they still separate us from irrational animals.  Thus, we can distinguish between “acts of humans” (such as breathing and digesting) that are not much different than what brute animals do except that a human does them, and human acts (like painting, repairing a car, conversing, choosing to love) which involve the use of the higher faculties.  We must be interiorly engaged and focused with mind and will on the action we, as agents in God’s image, are carrying out.

This is important for understanding “active participation” in the liturgy.

Many people think “active participation” means carrying things around, clapping, singing, etc.  We can do all those things and actually be thinking about the grocery list or wondering what the score of the game is.  We all have the experience of catching ourselves whistling without have realized we were doing it, reading and not remembering what we just read.  We are doing something, but we are not acting as “humanly” as we ought.

That is not the kind of participation we need at Mass.

We must be actively receptive to what is taking place in the sacred action of the liturgy.  Watching carefully and quietly, actively receptive listening to the spoken Word or to sacred music, can be far more active than carrying things around, and so forth.  Active receptivity requires concentration and desire, mind and will.  It looks passive, but it isn’t.  We actively submit to Christ, the true actor in the Mass, and we actively receive from Christ.  He gives us what we need, not as if to passive animals, but as to His actively receptive and engaged images.

Inner participation leads to outward expression. The outward can also spark the inward.  The former, however, has logical priority over the latter.

Participation at Holy Mass in the Extraordinary Form can help us recover a deeper, fuller, more conscious and proper active participation in the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite.  This is also why our priests must always be faithful to the official texts and rubrics.

Oh… one more thing.

The most perfect form of active participation is the reception of Holy Communion in the state of grace.

IN THE STATE OF GRACE… and not just when people give themselves permission because of their “conscience”, which can be deceived in self-deception.

Let us be pleasing to GOD and not only to ourselves.

Hence, GO TO CONFESSION!

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