20 July 1969 – Man on the Moon – 50 years ago

Today is the 50th anniversary of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walking on the Moon – 20 July 1969.

As a little kid I spent my summers in Montana and Wyoming, riding and running like a swift browned animal.  The summer gang that formed was all about capture the flag, barbed wire scratches, horse sweat-soaked cut offs, lemonade, rope swings at the creek, shooting things and blowing stuff up with firecrackers. But that summer I also built models of all the manned spacecraft and was welded to the TV and coverage of Apollo 11 on the 2 channels available.  Yep, 2. And the rabbit ears had to be right.

I have vivid memories of that first moonwalk.  I remember, in the middle of it, going outside and looking up at the moon in an un-light-polluted velvet-black sky. Sheer wonder. Breath catching perfection.

I’m sure you have your own memories, if you were old enough to be aware and enjoy and marvel at that amazing event.

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That formative experience is indelibly burned into me.

How grateful I am to have grown up in those days. It’s a different world now.

Can we make America that way again, without some cataclysm to shock common sense back into us? I fear that we can’t, but I pray that we will. Maybe we can work to make it happen in the spheres of life entrusted to us.

Here’s a video which mentions the 1969 moon walk and what it’s like be a citizen of the greatest nation on Earth.

It’s a high school prom, it’s a Springsteen song, it’s a ride in a Chevrolet
It’s a man on the moon and fireflies in June and kids selling lemonade
It’s cities and farms, it’s open arms, one nation under God
It’s America

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Posted in Events, Look! Up in the sky! | Tagged
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Beans, beans, the musical fruit

For an incisive look into Massimo “Beans” Faggioli of the now-ridiculous Villanova, check out 1 Peter 5 today.  Skojec has him firmly in the cross-hairs.

HERE

Beans is a pretty smart guy, but instead of doing something serious and helpful with his smarts, he is making a living by being a provocateur.   That won’t last, I’m afraid.  Skojec writes of his “transitive significance”.   His latest bit about people he doesn’t like being “devout schismatics” is a flatulent case in point.

Posted in Liberals, The Drill | Tagged
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Pres. Trump running for Pope

I know that all you readers love Pres. Trump, unequivocally and unreservedly.

Here is something pretty funny from a site called A-CNN (Alium-Cepa News Network – get it?).

It seems that Pres. Trump is now running for Pope and that he is making stump speeches.

Here’s a sample…

[…]

I don’t have to do this, when you think about it. I really don’t. I’m rich. I’m really, really, rich. I built a great company; a tremendous company. I employ thousands and thousands of people. So my friends, they ask me, they say Donald, you have everything you can dream of. You’re rich, you have an amazing wife, an amazing family, you’re very successful, why run for Pope? And I say, you know what? I have to run. My Church needs me. The Catholics need me. I have to make the Catholic Church great again. I have to.

(Cheers, applause)

You know, it’s a sad thing to say, but the Church is in such bad shape; terrible shape under Francis. The Catholic Church doesn’t win anymore. We just don’t. When is the last time Catholics won anything? Lepanto? When was that, the 1500’s? We don’t win anymore. But, let me just say, Under a Trump papacy, we are going to win again. We are going to win so much. We are going to win so much you are all going to be sick of winning, ok? But right now, it’s terrible. Just the other day, I see the Pope is praising Martin Luther. Martin Luther! Can you believe it?

(Boos)

Our Pope is over there praising Martin Luther; meanwhile millions of Hispanics are converting to Protestantism in Latin America. It’s true. We are losing millions and millions of people to the Protestants and our Pope does nothing. He does nothing. And I have nothing against the Protestants. Many of them are good people. I employ thousands of Protestants. I used to be a Protestant. But their leaders are just too smart for our leaders. We have people in power in the Church today who have no idea what they are doing. They are incompetent. All our leaders do is “dialogue.” We don’t convert anymore, we “dialogue.” What the hell is dialogue? Excuse me, but shouldn’t we be converting these people? If we have the Truth, why aren’t we converting them? But we don’t convert, we “dialogue”, and we lose millions and millions of these people to Protestantism. They are saying if the head of the Catholic Church thinks it’s ok to be Protestant, why convert? Why do we need to convert? Let him convert. Let the Pope convert. That’s what they’re saying. They’re laughing at us. There is no respect there. No respect. When I’m Pope, they are going to respect us again, let me tell you.

[…]

And of course he has a lot to say about Vatican II and the way seminaries are being run, women who look like Hillary distributing Communion, building a big beautiful altar rail, trads.

It’s very funny.  You have to read it with The Donald’s voice in your head.

Posted in Lighter fare |
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Building recruits for the New catholic Red Guards! 

From LifeSite. You can see what they are doing, even before the upcoming Synod is rigged. Let the rigging begin!

EXCLUSIVE: Speakers at Vatican-run youth meeting call for women’s ordination, LGBT inclusion

VATICAN CITY, July 19, 2019 (LifeSiteNews) – A Vatican-sponsored meeting for young Catholics in Rome in June featured speakers[Chosen ahead of time because of their views.  This wasn’t an accident.] who called for “deaconesses,” the administration of sacraments by women, “revolution”, “LGBT” inclusion, and “structural change.”

Young Catholics at the event loudly applauded when such calls were made while calls for missionary discipleship were met with little enthusiasm.  [Of course they applauded.  Young people will generally applaud that they think will get them attention by annoying older people.]

The International Youth Forum, consisting of almost 250 young people from around the world, gathered between June 19 and 22 to discuss Pope Francis’ post-conciliar exhortation “Christus Vivit.” The pontiff published the document on April 2, 2019 following the October 2018 Synod of Bishops on Young People, the Faith, and Vocational Discernment. Some of the young people at the June Forum were auditors at the October Synod. The event was organized by the Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life.

The general theme of the Forum was: “Young people in action in a synodal [“walking together”] Church.”  [See what they are doing?]

LifeSiteNews spoke to two participants, a young man and a young woman, on the condition of anonymity, not only for their sake, but for the sake of their sponsoring bishops. The first Forum participant told LifeSiteNews of feeling uneasy as a progressive agenda was put forward by numerous speakers while participants cheered.

“The reaction to different open-floor comments and speakers quickly developed a pattern of being loud and supportive of those demanding structural change and diversity, ‘revolution’ or greater support for social issues such as the environment and [then maintaining] an almost deafening silence for those talking about evangelizing our cultures with theology of the body, being missionary disciples united in Christ, or growing in personal holiness,” the young woman told LifeSiteNews.  [Almost as if the organizers had planted cheerleaders in the group to give signals.  It takes a while for the patterns to organize, but they do.]

LifeSiteNews’ known and trusted source was particularly troubled by the enthusiastic reception of Austrian theology student Eva Wimmer’s demand for women’s ordination.

“During the first panel we heard from a handful of youth synod auditors talking about their experience of the synod process. During this, there was a call that in ten years time it would be ‘normal for women to be deaconesses and administering the sacraments’,” the female source said.  [Remember Antonio Gramsci?  Saul Alinsky?]

Wimmer also said, according to the source, that she dreamed of a Church in which women do not merely catechize for baptism but baptize, and do not merely teach marriage preparation but perform marriages and indicated that she was for greater inclusion of “LGBT” people in the Church. [The exaltation of sterile sexual selfish self-gratification.  She’s the Synod’s perfect young spokesdupe.]

LifeSiteNews has reached out to Wimmer by email for comment, but she did not respond.

John Paul II declared in his 1994 Apostolic Letter Ordinatio Sacerdotalis that “the Church has no authority whatsoever to confer priestly ordination on women.” He added that this “judgment is to be definitively held by all the Church’s faithful.”

‘Few seemed Christ-centered’

Meanwhile, such topics as holiness and conversion largely fell by the wayside.

“While important issues such as migration, climate change and youth suicide were frequently mentioned, we seemed to be missing the crucial point – holiness, our evangelistic mission inherent of our baptism, and self-transformation – for only when we are united with Christ, can we heal families, heal our culture and ultimately bring us all back to the one true Catholic Church of God,” the source said.

The young people had been invited to discuss ways in which the ideas of “Christus Vivit” could be implemented in their home diocese to attract more young people to life in Christ. The source said that she sensed that many of her colleagues were not “Christ-centered.”

[…]

More on this trainwreck there.

Building recruits for the New catholic Red Guards!

Posted in Liberals, New catholic Red Guards, Synod, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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New music from the London Oratory: Sacred Treasures of Spain!

Last May in Rome, on the steps of Ss. Trinità dei Pellegrini, I ran into Charles Cole, director of the magnificent boys choir at the Brompton Oratory in London.  He said that they had a new disc coming of sacred music from Spain.  They would also tour these USA.

It’s out!

The choir of the London Oratory – if you haven’t heard them, you’ve missed out – will tour these USA and they have a new disc of music.  The site for the tour HERE

Sacred Treasures of Spain

US HERE – UK HERE

Here is the press release:  HERE

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Posted in The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged
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Toxic Masculinity and Sequels

I just saw this tweet from my friend, the Rush of Madison on WIBA, Vicki McKenna:

A smarter radio commentatrix is not to be found.

So, I admit. I look forward to the new Top Gun, even though I am deeply suspicious of these sorts of things.

How many sequels live up to the originals?

UPDATE:

I read that some people think that the movie caves into the ChiComs because the original patches on Maverick’s jacket were changed: no more Taiwan.  Fluctus in simpulo?

UPDATE:

Full Dress Blue with large medals.  One wonders about what sort of ceremony this is.  Official visit?  Change of command?

BTW.. “Maverick”, great call sign, no?

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ASK FATHER: Traditional “Supplied rites” after emergency or modern rite baptism

From a reader on Twitter…

QUAERITUR:

How can you get the traditional rites “supplied”?

The idea is this.  If someone needed to be baptized in the case of danger of death, and the minimal but valid form was used with the pouring of water – think: infant dying in a hospital and a nurse baptizes quickly – then it would be good to have the rites that were not used in the otherwise valid baptism provided at another time, ideally as soon as possible.  Those rites, in the traditional form, included exorcisms and so forth.

Let’s get something straight.   We must be wary wary wary of sliding into the trap of sacramental minimalism, the dreadful notion that so long as the sacrament was valid, then nothing else really matters.   That’s rubbish, of course.

Our rites were handed down to us for reason.  Much of what we do is of Apostolic origin, or is very ancient.  I liken each of our rites to a precious jewel in a beautiful setting.

nce upon a time upon a time, our forebears received the jewel from Christ and the Apostles and their successors and then provided a setting that would highlight its beauty, emphasize its strong points.  Our forebears polished and beautified and improved the setting as their understanding of the precious beauty of the gift deepened.

Their work of polishing and improving was slow and patient, never hasty, flowing from profound reflection in dialogue with the times changing around them.

Then it was time to pass that jewel in its setting, prepared with so much respect and awe and love, to their heirs.   In turn, their heirs received their patrimony with respect and awe.  In turn, they spotted small things that could be done to make the setting more decorous, more fitting, more apt to communicate the beauty of the jewel.

Then – bammo – a group came along and started to pry things off and rearrange everything and, without so much as a by your leave, make a new setting that hearkened less to the attitude of our forebears in the Faith and more to the attitude of the world… not to mention the flesh and the devil.

By an amazing set of circumstances however, the jewel’s integrity was protected and the knowledge of the former setting remained.

In an amazing gift inherent in the Christ-given, therefore a divinely imbued reality, even while the jewel could be admired in, say, the Museum of Modern Art, it could also be admired in its original-yet-organically developed setting at the Metropolitan.  [Yes, yes, junior … I know the stupid provocation made by libs that trads see the Church as a museum…. yawwwwwn.  Just listen.This is a little bed-time story to get my point across.]

Our rites were lovingly developed and polished and cared for to emphasize what, over many centuries, our forebears learned and understood in them.  Then, with great love they handed them down to us.  Good night.

No, we are NOT liturgical and sacramental minimalists.   WE ARE OUR RITES!  They shape us.  They explain us.   They express us.  Change them and we change.   When we change them, it’s only in a way that is deeply considered, very slow, and organically in harmony with what we’ve received.

Hence, there are many elementS in the traditional rite of baptism which, while not necessary for validity, are nevertheless rich with meaning and which enrich us because WE ARE OUR RITES.

How can you get the traditional rites “supplied”?   Go to a priest or bishop who is likely to know something about the traditional rites and ask him about them, and whether you or someone in your care is a good candidate for them.  Sorry, I have no idea where you are, so I can’t recommend anyone.  And, YES, this is permitted.   There are specific rituals laid out in liturgical books for how the priest is to do this.

It is, without question permitted for those who were baptized in an emergency situation with the minimal form.   Remember: there is no distinction between the traditional minimal form of baptism and the modern form of baptism.  It is the same.   There is a trinitarian form while water is delivered by pouring, sprinkling, immersing, on the skin of the head or, if absolutely necessary and the head can’t be reached, another part of the body.

Say someone is baptized in a minimal way, because of an emergency.   That person would be a great candidate for the rest of the traditional being supplied.

Say someone is baptized with the post-Conciliar, modern rite.  It wasn’t an emergency or minimalist.  It was the whole form, properly done.   I don’t think this is a good candidate for supplied ceremonies.

The Catholic who is discovering his patrimony will know that the modern form chopped out a lot of things that were done in the traditional form.   As a matter of fact, on realizing that they didn’t get all that they might have in the traditional form, they start to feel a little cheated, like they received something second best.    At this point, although we are not minimalists, we have to stress that, “Yes, you are truly baptized!  That sacrament is valid and operative in you as it is valid and operative in those who received the older rites!”

Look at this this way.

The modern form of ordination to Holy Priesthood doesn’t, in my opinion, hold a candle to the rich significance of the traditional form.   I really wish that I could have been ordained in the traditional form.   But I am not, therefore, going to go to some bishop and say, “Please supply the parts of my ordination that I didn’t get to have in the modern rite?”   Nope.  Those who are being ordained these days in the traditional form are not more a priest than I or my brethren ordained in the modern rite.   On a personal note, I have also the honor to say that I was ordained by the Roman Pontiff and a saint, John Paul II.  So there!  Also, I was ordained as a deacon and as a priest – both ordinations – entirely in Latin, though in the modern form as revised by John Paul II.  So, I really wish that John Paul had ordained me with the traditional rite.  But I am not less a priest because he used the modern form and I am not more a priest because the Pope ordained me.  (By tradition I get to wear something distinctive because the Pope ordained me, but that’s a far less important issue.)

Allow me to ramble, again, but to the point.

Paul VI revised the rites of ordination.  It was … not good.  For example, the rites omitted to describe what the ordinands were signing on to: celebration of the Eucharist and absolution of sins.   But that’s what priests are for!   Hence, smart people noticed the omission and started to ask if the rites were valid, because rites always describe what they are conferring.   John Paul II in 1990 put back into the ordination rite for priests explicit questions to the men to be ordained about their intention to do as the Church wants them to do, namely, confect the Eucharist and forgive sins.   So, in an analogy with baptism, a bishop who knew his stuff and men who knew their stuff could probably be validly ordained merely by the laying on of hands and then the consecratory ordination prayer with the valid form, there’s a lot missing and that stuff that’s missing is really important: that stuff revels what the Church intends to do in that man’s soul for the good of his soul and for the Church.  The priest’s hands were/are anointed with chrism.  The priest received a chalice with wine and a paten with a host.  If he didn’t receive those things, he would still be a priest.  But… whew… what a deficit.

The same goes for the use of a minimum form of baptism or the whole rite of baptism.   And, I think, the use of the traditional form or the modern form.

And, just to be clear, the full rites are not just for the benefit of the one receiving the sacraments but also for the benefit of those who are witnessing their administration.  They learn and benefit from the rites because WE ARE OUR RITES.

It seems to me that those who were validly baptized in the full modern ritual are not candidates for the supplied rites from the traditional form.  They can, however, be the recipients of blessings by the priest.   If they are concerned about being under the domination of the prince of the this world because they didn’t receive the pre-baptismal exorcisms, then they can ask for blessings and pray approved prayers their own.  And, remember, they can receive the EUCHARIST and the SACRAMENT OF PENANCE, which are mightier than the “sacramentals” worked in the first stages of the baptismal rites.

This leaves open the question of converts to Holy Church who were validly baptized in their protestant sects.   Should they, on being admitted to the Church, right away be supplied with the traditional elements that they didn’t get before, outside the Church?

I, for example, was baptized in the Lutheran church of my parents.  It wasn’t an emergency.  They would have followed the whole rite as it was at the time.   Should I seek the supplied ceremonies?

Should it be it the practice now to supply ceremonies using the traditional rite for Protestant coverts to Holy Mother Church?   That wasn’t the practice back in the day.  It isn’t the practice how.   Could it be done?  I think I’ll let that go for now, since this is getting long and I am typing it in an airport before my delayed flight.

 

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged ,
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Sick-Call Sets and You

From a reader…

Hello Father,

Old time follower here (chat room and bird feeders at Sabine Farm). Thought you might find this picture interesting. I’m a cradle Catholic in my 70s and I just unpacked these from old family boxes. I remember these hanging on the walls in my relatives homes when I was little.  Of course we don’t have Extreme Unction anymore which really confuses me.  Oh well!

Thank you for your work all these years.

Firstly, you are welcome.

What you have found, dear reader, is a commonly known as a “Sick Call” Set.   These wall Crosses had inner compartments in which you would have candles and so forth so that you would be ready for when the priest arrived, bringing the Blessed Sacrament.   You see the holes into which you would put the candles.

When deployed…


And there were/are more elaborate sets, too.

The idea was that everything should be prepared for the coming of the KING into the house!

You mention that there is no more “Extreme Unction”.  On the contrary.   This is another name for the Sacrament of Anointing of the Sick.   “Extreme” applies especially to those who are “in extremis”, that is, the last moments of their lives.   The sacrament can be administered to those who are not necessarily in danger of immediate death, but there has to be some urgency and possibility of death due to interior causes such as sickness (not external threats such as battle) looming for the sacrament properly to be administered.

So, be assured that the Church does have “Extreme Unction” now, though it is usually called by another name.

I think every home should have a sick call set.  For example US HERE – UK HERE.

Posted in Our Catholic Identity | Tagged
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17 July 1794: “Mother, permission to die?”

In 1794, the Place de la Nation on the east side of Paris was called the Place du Trône-Renversé… Toppled Throne Square.

In 1792 a guillotine was set up here and the killing began.

Robespierre and Barère made terror an instrument of governance: “Terror is nothing more than speedy, severe and inflexible justice; it is thus an emanation of virtue”, quoth Robespierre.   Soon to be the motto of the DNC once The Squad takes over.

On 17 July of this same year, 1794, 11 Discalced Carmelite nuns of the Carmel of Compiègne, together with three lay sisters and two tertiaries were guillotined and buried in a mass grave in the nearby Picpus Cemetery. They had for a while been living with English Benedictine nuns, who were forbidden their native England. The Carmelites dedicated themselves to prayer for the restoration of peace in France and for the Church. Hence, they were arrested, shifted to Paris, and publicly murdered for the encouragement of the mob.  It sounds rather like what the Left does to people who raise their voices in the public square.  First it’ll be razors on Twitter, then physical attacks on streets then round ups of the “unwoke”.

As the Carmelite nuns, aged 30 to 78, went to the razor, they renewed their vows and sang the either the Salve Regina or the Veni Creator Spiritus, accounts vary.

One by one they knelt before the prioress and asked permission to die.

“Permission to die, Mother?”
“Go, my daughter!”

Here is the dramatized scene.

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Some think that’s funny.

On 28 July, Robespierre experienced the guillotine.  The Reign of Terror ended a few days after the martyrdom of the Carmelites.

Coincidence?

For more, see To Quell the Terror: The Mystery of the Vocation of the Sixteen Carmelites of Compiegne Guillotined July 17, 1794 by William Bush. US HERE – UK HERE

I wonder if I will have the strength of mind and will in that moment to sing that hymn or antiphon? This is something to make a plan about. Fathers! You might start thinking now about the moment when you are put up against the wall like our brother Bl. Miguel Pro.  Make a plan.

Do you suppose the Tricoteuse, the Knitting Women who sat near the guillotine erected at the Place de la Révolution (now the Place de la Concorde) made side trips? HERE

Posted in Modern Martyrs, Saints: Stories & Symbols | Tagged , ,
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Day 1 – St. Paul Center Priesthood Conference

I’m in WV for the St. Paul Center (East Coast) conference/retreat for priests in West Virginia.

The trek from PIT by shuttle van was uneventful, if a little bumpy.   The location for this conference, Oglebay Resort and Conference Center, is impressive.  They have chosen well.  The land is beautiful and the facilities excellent.

Last night we had a first talk by Scott Hahn, who introduced the primary theme of these next days: holiness.

The sessions start with prayer, one of the liturgical hours depending on the time.

Hahn tried to provide a view of “the holy” that goes beyond our sense of holiness when in its presence (which reduces the creator to the reaction of the creature) and beyond righteousness (which reduces the holy to ethics).   This was very helpful.   Of course, both our reaction and our ethics are necessary in the pursuit of holiness, but holiness can’t be reduced to them.   He also said that the major crisis we face in the Church (and everywhere) is the loss of the sense of God and God as holy, of holiness.  What thrilled me, and I do mean thrilled, is that he also went to liturgy.   When he started talking about Isaiah 6 and the cleansing of the prophet’s lips with the coal, I nearly hyperventilated.   Moreover, this morning’s talk, by Prof. Bergsma, was about Isaiah, and it started with the description of the calling and cleansing of Isaiah before he could be anointed for the prophetic task.   Anyway, I was pretty engaged.

There is a good bookstore available.  Of course they are pushing books of the speakers pretty hard, but there are other things as well.

This was a great sight.  Sets of St. Thomas Aquinas, Latin/English facing columns, beautifully bound.   One Africa priest was sighing over them.  He, a student of systematic theology, will eventually return to his native place to teach.  He said that he had already saved and spent a lot on English only volumes.  If only he had known about these!

Frankly, the complete Summa is only $320, which is an amazing price. I have a couple of these volumes, commentaries on St. Paul, but I don’t have any of the others.

After the evening talk, there was some convivium including an open bar.  Quite a few of the brethren spent a couple hours hanging out.   I had some good conversations.

Also, the food has, so far, been good.  I took a big step today in that, for the first time in my life, I willingly helped myself to some grits (bowl not pictured).   After admitting this to my table companions, I was knowingly advised to eat the grits together with my scrambled eggs.

Grits.  Hmmmm.

I am not sure that I will have more grits tomorrow.   We’ll see.

We are on a break now.   The group has gone off for Mass.

AHHH!  That’s another thing I wanted to point out.

When I had written to the organizers of the conference about the possibility for priests who don’t want to concelebrate or who prefer the Traditional Mass (not to mention Divine Liturgy), I received a note back immediately that they would do their best to provide such a possibility.

Sure enough.  When I registered, I was hunted down and told and shown what my options were for celebration of Mass on my own or TLM.   Very friendly and accommodating.   

What that means, is that they are tradition friendly here.   Fathers, if you are in any way hesitant about such a conference because you think you’ll be railroaded into concelebration or funneled into only the Novus Ordo, put that aside.   Yes, for the group sessions we say the hour from the Liturgy of the Hours.  But, hey!  Say your office on your own.  And I did bring a minimalist Mass kit just in case.

So,

  • great talks so far
  • good food
  • international and diverse
  • great conversation
  • open bar
  • tradition friendly

Win.

More later.

UPDATE:

One of the wings of the place is dedicate to the late Sen. Robert Byrd.

Just one angle.  It’s a beautiful place.

Ralph Martin on New Evangelization.

At supper I was seriously tempted to go back for seconds.  Alas, I didn’t take photos at the beginning.

But… it was very Eastern European.

Pirogi.

Pork and kraut, cabbage rolls, smothered chicken.

And there’s this!

Everything was really good.

Back in the conference room after supper… sigh… Liturgy of the Hours.  It seems that what we sang was a translation of Telluris alme conditor.  Oh yeah?  Look.  This is not a big deal.  The gains here are great.

Scott Hahn gave an energetic talk which reassumed a lot of what he said yesterday.  However, he delved into the concept of working out our salvation with “fear and trembling”.  And, yes, he went to liturgy again!

After the conference talk, there was a reception.  I had great conversations with a priest from Australia and a priest from Iowa.   Then for a few minutes I watched a few young guys play a card game that I couldn’t make out at all.  Clueless.  No idea what the heck was going on.  Definitely  generational thing.

Cribbage anyone?

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