Daily Mass Fervorino and Last Gospel and Leonine Prayers in Latin. HERE
WORDLE 08
English and Latin

Use your phone’s camera!
Daily Mass Fervorino and Last Gospel and Leonine Prayers in Latin. HERE
WORDLE 08
English and Latin

Use your phone’s camera!
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.
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!
Daily Mass Fervorino. Litany of Loreto after Mass. HERE
WORDLE 07
Latin is the harder puzzle, I think.
Today’s Mass Fervorino. I include the Litany of the Sacred Heart from after Mass. HERE
WORDLE 06
Latin Wordle is tough.
In your charity please pray for the repose of the soul of the late Bp. Remi De Roo, Emeritus of Victoria, BC. He was 97. Story HERE
This fellow was a committed modernist and has need of our prayers.
You will perhaps remember him from this video is from the May 2008 Call To Action meeting in San Jose, CA.
PUT DOWN HOT BEVERAGES.
It is amazing to imagine, but this sort of thing is STILL going on in some places.
BUT… the TLM has to go.
From a reader…
QUAERITUR:
Hello I am thinking about trying crickets. Are they okay to eat on Fridays of Lent? Or any Friday as a meatless option? They are a complete protein which makes them very nutritious.
Gives another layer of meaning to Saltimbocca!
Sure! Good choice. And, as a bonus, I hear they are cheap…. cheap…. cheap….
Perhaps you can have them like fries with your braised Giant Burrowing Cockroach.
Your culinary choice has the Unreconstructed Ossified Manualist stamp of approval!

Demonic ritual bowl on the altar of St. Peter’s Basilica at the end of “Walking Together With Pachamama”, Oct 2019
I’ve been spending a lot of time recently in the Old Testament, seeing how again and again and again the People whom God chose broke covenant after covenant after covenant. God punished them with afflictions to bring them back and then loaded more and more laws on them to teach them how dependent they were on Him. It got so bad that God eventually saddled them with nearly impossible responsibilities in a second book of Law to be left outside the Ark (unlike the Decalogue) so that it would be a witness against them and some of the laws were, as Ezekiel says, “bad”, precisely to strip them of their pride.
A poignant lesson is to be drawn from the fall of Solomon and the chastisement of the Davidic Kingdom. God permits the Northern Kingdom to be separated with those tribes, with a King not of the Davidic line, Jeroboam, while keeping Juda in the South, retaining the “scepter” but greatly reduced, with an heir of David by Solomon but from an Ammonite woman, a wicked King Rehoboam. In the North, Jeroboam makes not one but two calves of gold, which leads to their destruction and scattering by the Assyrians. Rehoboam, in the South, also set up idols and even male cult prostitution. Tell that to certain Jesuits and highly placed prelates! Eventually, Babylon.
Idolatry and filthiness.
What happened in the separation of the North and South is a kind of foreshadowing of the sad fact of schism in the Church. Schism results from bad, even wicked leadership in the Church.
At the core of so much division and suffering is idolatry and its corrosive moral consequences.
Thus to my topic.
At Crisis, Eric Sammons writes what a lot of people think but are afraid to say for fear of the scorn of modernists.
Modernists reduce the supernatural to the natural. That the essence of their deviation from God.
Sammons writes:
Pachamama Did This
When the story of Covid is one day told, historians will speculate as to the cause of both the virus itself and the worldwide reaction to it. The hubris of playing with nature in our labs will surely be mentioned. Many historians will likely emphasize the sociological implications of fear on a massive scale. And of course one cannot ignore the growing authoritarianism that found a spark to light its fuse.
However, what I believe is the root cause will most likely remain hidden: Pachamama.
You read that correctly: I believe that the Covid pandemic and the horrific response to it were directly caused by the veneration of this pagan idol in the Vatican by prelates, priests, and lay people. In October 2019 a false idol was set up in the heart of the Catholic Church, and soon after all hell broke loose on earth.
Bishops worldwide locked the doors of our churches. The dying were denied Last Rites. Catholics could not find priests to hear Confessions. Governments forced citizens into lockdowns. Children were forcibly masked for hours each day. The unvaccinated were treated like lepers. Small business owners lost their life’s work with the stroke of a governor’s pen.
Would this have happened if Pachamama had been kept out of Rome? I do not think so.
[…]
He gives his ideas about how to get out of the mess we are in. I have my own, and they all involve… you guessed it… proper sacred liturgical worship, the exact OPPOSITE of idolatry. The greater the problem, the greater the need the serious worship, not half measures.
Coincidently, when the Novus Ordo was being imposed, the Leonine Prayers were abandoned. Things got worse.
Coincidently, when Pachamama’s demon cult bowl was placed at the direction of Francis on the altar of St. Peter’s Basilica, there were already machinations afoot to attack the Traditional Latin Mass and the people who desire it. Things have gotten worse.
I suspect that now that people who desire something good are being marginalized and attacked by their pastors, their sufferings will bring great graces of renewal to the Church. For this reason, people should willingly join their own mortifications to those sufferings and help to raise the tide.
I, for one, would really like to know where that bowl went. Who has it? Where is it preserved? Somewhere within the borders of the Vatican City State? Somewhere in the precincts of St. Peter’s or nearby? Where is that damned bowl? It could very well be a cursed object, like a fortuna, along with being an object of a demon cult.
Today’s Fervorino.
WORDLE 05
It’s my 5th Wordle day. I’d be interested in the word choices you used to find your way, but I don’t want to get into spoilers. Maybe from the day before? I had a pretty good combo today. Then the process of elimination started.
I also learned that there is a New Testament Greek Wordle. No thanks! Enough time on this.
3:16 isn’t just in John.
I have an action item for you. Below, I am pushing a couple of books, one old and one new. Here on my treasure chest, this blog, I am channeling my inner Matthew 13:52.
But first, a rant from your sponsor!
Even as the powers-that-be, frightened and confused by the faith of those who desire traditional sacred liturgical worship, ratchet up their instruments of torture for the same and try to return the Church to their beloved 70’s and 80’s, let us all remember that this is 2022, not 1972 or 1982.
Today is there alternative sources of news about the Church and the world. After years of Benedict XVI’s “Marshall Plan” for the Church and the world via Summorum Pontificum, there are many more priests who know how to celebrate the TLM, there are books [NB!] and cards and vestments, etc. etc., which were not available before.
STATUS QUAESTIONIS: Things are so much better than they were before, even under the hammer blows from below.
The only way to the end of this persecution is to go through it to the other side. We have to press FORWARD.
On that note, here is good news.
Just as the “Jailers of Tradition” make their attempt to suppress people who desire the 1962 Missale Romanum, and they suppress the Sacred Triduum in some places, there is now a new guide for the ceremonies of the PRE-1955 Triduum.
It was crafted by dom Alcuin Reid who had prepared the updated edition of Fortescue-O’Connell.
The Ceremonies of Holy Week and the Vigil of Pentecost Described by Alcuin Reid: According to the Missale Romanum editio XXIX post typicam 1953.
I love this. Traditionis custodes and the Dubious Dubia come out to repress people who want the obviously subversive and frightening 1962 Rites and this resource, about the even more terrifying pre-55 Triduum. I love it, love it, love it.
The tank has one gear, and that is FORWARD. And, with wondrous irony, forward is the past.
My apologies for this first photo, the cover is cloth (which is nice!) and it still has some of the debris from packaging. I was eager to take a photo. The lettering is impressed in gold.

Another… cleaned up and with different light.

They are still taking pre-Orders. From the Pax Inter Spinas site:
To pre-order The Ceremonies of Holy Week & The Vigil of Pentecost Described and benefit from the pre-publication price: please email us (including the number of copies you wish to order and your postal address). We will send a PayPal invoice including the exact postage cost.
The publishing concern is part of the Benedictine monastic community they are building.
Note the elegant typeface, too, with ligatures!

Samples.


There are the full, solemn ceremonies and the humbler, scaled down versions where multiple clerics are not available.

I’ve always enjoyed these liturgical… what would be the correct printing term: glyphs?
It would be great if there were hex codes for them.

Dear Reader, it is important that we buy these books and distribute them to priests and seminarians.
First, the publishers need to know that there is a market for them, even in the face if Traditionis custodes. Second, to use a chess analogy, these books are the counter-play to the threats from the queened pawns looking fire down those diagonals. Scripta manent.
Second, with the book I link below, even apart from videos that could be pulled deplatformed from the mainstream internet – before we get the alternative structure in place for that!! – a man could teach himself how to say the TLM and do all manner of traditional rites, like baptisms and marriages, etc.
Third, perusing these books help priests to understand who they are at the altar. They shape his identity, supplement the priestly formation that he didn’t get and reshape some of the bad parts. They will affect the way he says Mass and carries out rituals, his ars celebrandi, which in turn will have a knock-on effect with congregations.
I just got off the phone with a priest friend who said that he and another priest were training young guys, seminarians, etc., to celebrate the TLM. Like clockwork we nearly at the same time said, “And they will never say the Novus Ordo again in the same way.” It is amazing to see the light bulb go on, as a priest finally grasps why you do certain things in the Novus Ordo, or how much better it is in the TLM.
The only way out of these days we are in is to go through them. We can be swept by the current against the rocks, or we can control our direction by pushing ahead stronger than the current.
Here is the update to Fortescue-O’Connell for the 1962 Roman Rite, which of course includes the post-1955 Triduum:
The Ceremonies of the Roman Rite Described