ASK FATHER: “I messed around with a Ouija board years ago and I believe spirits attached to me from it.”

From a reader…

I messed around with the ouija board years ago and I believe spirit’s attached to me from it I have renounced using this and have nothing to do with it anymore can I ask you to please cast these demons out of me and away from me if you could Father thank you God bless you.

Everyone: Do NOT mess around with Ouija boards.  Those things are spiritually dangerous avenues for demonic activity against you, including the worst kinds.  If you have one, break it, burn it, put the ashes into flowing water, such as a river or stream.

To the questioner:

Friend, what you need is confession, frequent Mass, daily prayer, and a life of a virtue.  These are the ordinary means of salvation.

If you don’t have those things going on in your life right now, then you have a bigger problems than demons.

If… if… you are living the fullness of Catholic life, and you have this concern about demons anyway, you should contact your local chancery and request a meeting with the diocesan exorcist.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged ,
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YOUR VOICEMAIL: This makes the labor of this blog worth it.

Your voice mail.

It has been a while since I checked voice mail, and I feel badly about that.  However, what I do not feel bad about is one of the messages I received from reader.

In a previous voicemail he said that he had read many times on the blog about the Apostolic Pardon.  Since his father was close to death, he arranged for a priest to come who gave his father Last Rites including the Apostolic Pardon.

All other rewards aside, this sort of thing makes the labor of this blog worth it.

My sincere condolences for his loss.  I will remember his father at Mass.

Today, as a matter of fact, I celebrated Mass for the intention of a monthly donor.  His wife emailed to inform me that he passed away.   I remember all my benefactors at the Lord’s altar, both living and deceased.  You will not be forgotten.

While I have been remiss in listening lately to voicemail, and some of them I can no longer access, I will try to be better with it in the future.

Some notes about voicemail:

  • I do NOT answer these numbers.  EVER.
  • In 99.999999% of the time I will NOT call you back.
  • I may email.
  • Keep the messages short and clear.
  • The max length is two minutes (which is probably too long).
  • Don’t shout.

Skype
WDTPRS

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Skype USA
651-447-6265

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It’s happening, exactly as I have been saying for years.

At The Catholic Thing today there is a piece by Michael Pakaluk, “Is Vatican II ‘Spent’?

My immediate answer is, yes.  It was “spent” almost as soon as it ended.  It is “time bound” and not very “evergreen”.  Bits of it are evergreen, of course, as when it deals with perennial truths, such as why the Lord came into this world (GS 22), how Mary is the Mediatrix of grace (LG 62), and “full, conscious and active participation” in sacred worship is desirable (SC 14), etc.

What does Pakaluk say?

Honesty might seem to require us to say that the Council is now a dead letter: Or better to say, not that it is dead, but that it has achieved whatever it could achieve.

After the “Vatican II is valid” blah blah, he makes the point that a “pastoral Council” (whatever that is), is practical as well as limited by the extent to which it is received.    Frankly, very few people have paid attention to what the Council really said over the last almost 60 years, though a lot of rubbish has been undertaken in the name of the Council.

Also…

the teaching of the Council lacked incisiveness apart from a firm adherence to certain key ideas that were clarified, rather, in JP II’s encyclicals.

Moreover…

We need another Council that diagnoses, indeed, but also anathematizes, brings to an end an implicit schism by drawing lines as to who belongs and who does not.

I got to that line and shuddered a bit.  A new Council… NOW?   Heck no.  My blood runs cold at the thought of today’s bishop’s meeting about anything more than then their lunch orders.

That said… yes, we need proper diagnoses, clarity about some issues.  A Council?  Think about what a magnificent success the last few Synods have been.  Get back to me.  I’ll wait.

We do need to move forward regarding the Second Vatican Council.  Important?  Yes.  More important than other Councils?  Well… the wreckage wreaked in its wake has been monumental in important spheres of the Church’s life.   Important?  Sure.  It is one Council in a chain of many.  It looms large in our view because it is the one closest to us.  It is, however, hardly one of the more important Councils.

So, let’s move forward, not by forgetting the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council but by putting it in its proper place, as somewhat bound to a context that no longer applies (the early 1960’s) and taking it at its word: it’s a pastoral Council (whatever that means) that did not intend to define doctrines, etc.   And results varied.

That said, there are progressivists out there who view Vatican II as if it were the be all and end all of all Councils, a super-dogma (even though it defined no new dogma.. formally), through which all liturgy, law and doctrine (Cult, Code and Creed) must be REinterpreted.  Some of these are so dogmatic in their view of the superness of Vatican II that they are close to not even being our co-religionists.  They have, in effect, put their view of Vatican II into their modernist blender and a golden calf came out.

If you don’t have it, get it through my amazon link!

Remember what Ratzinger wrote in Spirit of the Liturgy about the golden calf in the context of immanentism?  They wanted a religion that was easy.  Hence, all that old stuff about propitiation and transcendence has to go.   Hence, the ironically titled Traditionis custodes.  If there was ever a joke in the title of a document, this would be it.

Moving forward in this post, look at the piece in First Things by Clement J. Harrold (a junior research fellow at the St. Paul Center for Biblical Theology – think, Scott Hahn), “Tradismatic Trentecostalism”.

Those of you who have been reading this blog for a while know my prediction about the future.  As the demographic sink-hole keeps evacuating large swathes of self-identifying Catholics… and catholicsunder the sands never to be seen darkening the door of a church again, there will be a smaller, more intense church comprised of committed Catholics who, out of necessity, will band together.  I foresee a time when more charismatic types, along with converts from Evangelical communities, will fuse together with Catholic traditionalists.  There will be frictions for a while, but the fusions will be awesome, as a greater attention to Scripture, the gifts of the Spirit and works of mercy are undergirded by traditional sacred worship.  I believe that the magnet which will draw and bind them and blend them will be the Traditional Latin Mass, notwithstanding the vicious and pusillanimous attacks on it – and on the people want it – by craven, weathervane watching prelates.

As a matter of fact, the charismatic, Evangelical, trad conjunction is already taking place.  Talk to young people who are committed to the Faith.  It is happening.

The First Things piece focuses on Steubenville, which had strong charismatic renewal connections at its origin.  Over time there increased also an orientation to “tradition”.

As graduate student ­Maria Therese remarked: “Franciscan exemplifies the reality that tradition and charism are not opposed to each other but are fundamental pillars which build up the Church.” For my part, I am a student of the Latin language and see great beauty in the ancient rite, though I typically attend the Novus Ordo and routinely listen to praise and worship music, much of it written by Evangelical Protestants.

In a Church where 70 percent of the faithful no longer believe in the Real Presence, legitimate ­differences between charismatics and “trads” pale in comparison to the differences that separate orthodoxy from heterodoxy. Faithful Catholics of all stripes increasingly find themselves allies against the common foe of a corrupt Church and a post-­Christian world. In the words of Jacob, a recent graduate now studying for the priesthood, “it is primarily the youth who are working through the false dichotomy of charismatic and traditional divisions in the Church.” The “tradismatic” spirituality found within the student body of Franciscan is a vibrant synthesis, one that modern Catholicism ought to prize.

Yet this synthesisis ­unwelcome in some quarters. Some in the episcopacy view the movement toward greater reverence and tradition with alarm and disdain. Pope Francis’s recent motu proprio Traditionis Custodes, which attempts to restrict severely the celebration of the Latin Mass, betrays this sentiment. Nostalgic for their vision of the 1970s Church, the Holy Father’s advisors cannot seem to understand either the charismatic zeal or the love of tradition that characterize many of today’s Catholic youth.

Frankly, what the “advisors” see terrifies of them because – as it may be – they are no longer true believers. What they see makes them feel guilty for their loss of faith.  So they attack it… no.. they attack the people who obviously do believe and are ready to stand up for their Faith, who want something that isn’t watered down with buzz words to the point of insipidity.

Tradismatics, Tradicals, ­Trentecostals, Born Again Catholics: These are what the Church of tomorrow will be made up of,…

Exactly what I have been saying for years now.

And it is happening, exactly as I have been saying for years now.

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, Pò sì jiù, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , ,
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Daily Rome Shot 418, etc.

WORDLE

Sheer guess in English today.   It seems that Latin oranges can be used twice.  English, too?

Good one today.  The net is there!  Mate in 4.

White to move.

Use your phone’s camera!

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Priest invalidly baptized for 27 years. But those “rigid”, traditional priests who stick to the words are the problem! It’s a Vatican 2 thing.

I’ve probably had half a dozen emails about this disaster today, so I will post on it and comment.

It is reported at lib outlets CNN and NPR, that a priest of the Diocese of Phoenix ordained in 1995, 27 years or so, for his entire priesthood has been using an invalid form for baptism.

This priest, Fr. Andres Arango, “baptized” saying, “WE baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.” The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith determined that in the Latin Church this is an INVALID form for the sacrament.  The person who administers baptism must say, “I baptize you…”. That means that all those people were, technically and really not receiving the graces of the other sacraments they received. Baptism is the foundational sacrament which make you able to receive the other sacraments.

The stories say that he originally in Brazil.  I can only guess at the disastrous formation this priest received in Brazil in the 90’s.  He was some 20 years in Brazil before going to Phoenix.

This raises some points.

Firstly, YOU lay people have to know what is what when you go to receive a sacrament.  You have to study in advance and KNOW what the MATTER and FORM of sacraments are.   You should know the form for the two-fold consecration of the Eucharist, the words of absolution (at least the minimum), the words for baptism, etc.  Is confirmation important enough to you to study about it ahead of time?  Matrimony?  When you love you long to know.  However, added motivation is now self-defense.   WHO CAN TELL what sort of B as in B, S as in S, priests got in seminary.  If it was anything like what we got, in the hell that was my modernist, morally compromised seminary… watch out!     Folks, you need to know what’s what.

Secondly, I say this with respect to bishops who accept new priests, pastors of parishes who get a new assistant or even a visiting priest on a “mission” weekend.   Find out it they know what they are doing.  Bishops, check that the priest knows the words of absolution.   That might create an awkward moment or two, depending on the priest.  The well-formed priest will understand exactly why he is being quizzed and will readily accept it.  Anyone who get’s his back up… watch out.  Check the words of consecration and the form of absolution.    I have gotten into the box with a priest visiting to preach for a mission weekend.  I literally had to drag him through the correct form of absolution with a not too subtle suggestion that, if he didn’t use the right form (which I provided) he would be hearing from someone else.  That’s a priest to priest thing.  Be careful if Father get’s it wrong, but don’t take it if he doesn’t say the proper form, either.  Anyway, you pastors, who knows what sort of crazy is happening in the confessional when a visit comes: it’s best to lay down the parameters: “Father, thank you.  You are welcome here.  Thanks for being willing to hear confessions.  People here need be sure that the proper form of absolution is used, and not some personal formula.  Please use only and exactly the approved form for every absolution.  Thanks!”

Thirdly, Bishops, if you are the sort who has his panties in a twist about the TLM, maybe you should rethink your position.  Are the guys using the traditional books likely every to go astray when it comes to matter and form?  On the other hand, are you sure you know what’s going on at St. Idealia where the priest has for years been using Welch’s grape juice for Mass (true story).  Do you know what the “Eucharistic bread” is made of at “Sing A New Faith Community Into Being Faith Community”?  Do you know for sure what form of absolution is being used at “Engendering Togetherness Community of Welcome” when “reconciliation” is celebrated with deep, cleansing breaths and yoga pants on the 5th Saturday of the month when the moon is full?

Fourth, if you have videos of baptisms, review them.  No.  Really.  Review them.

Fifth, if you are a priest who is making things up… KNOCK IT OFF.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, B as in B. S as in S., GO TO CONFESSION, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World | Tagged , ,
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Daily Rome Shot 418, etc.

Latin was hard today.

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ASK FATHER: Is it a sin to ask God to strike down an enemy of the Church?

michael_fighting_the_dragon1From a reader:

Is it a sin to ask God to strike down an enemy of the Church?

Christ the Lord has commanded us to love our enemies (Matthew 5:44).

Love for “enemy” comes in different forms.  It can be expressed different ways.    We all know about “tough love”.

That said, we must be vigilant that hatred toward our enemies is vigorously resisted.  We obey Our Lord.

If they are our enemies because they are opposed to the Church, opposed to goodness, then our love for them means that we desire they be converted.    When and if they do, we must be ready, not to forget but to forgive.  The one thing the Lord went back to explain in teaching His disciples how to pray, is the need to forgive, and that if we do not forgive, we shall not be forgiven.

I forgive my enemies.  I forgive you for what you have done to me.  I forgive you for your evil deeds against the Faith.  Convert or risk Hell.  I’d rather see you in Heaven.  Therefore, I pray that God will visit upon you exactly what is the very best for your soul.   I pray that you will accept it.  He knows all of us better than we know ourselves.

Love for our enemies means that we will their good.  That is, we will their salvation.

There are many enemies.  They are personal, human and angelic.  Angels cannot change their minds, so praying for fallen angels is pointless.

Living breathing human beings can change.  Praying for them is obligatory.

Can we – ought we – pray that God strike down the enemies of the Church?

Yes.

Consider the Book of Psalms.

The unfashionable “maledictory – cursing – psalms” (5, 6, 11, 12, 35, 37, 40 52, 54, 56, 58, 69, 79, 83, 137, 139, and 143) call for judgment and disaster to fall upon the enemies of God and God’s people.

Some of the “maledictory psalms” were edited or even wholly excluded from the revised psalter used in the Novus Ordo Liturgy of the Hours, but that’s a different crock of bagna cauda.

Some of these psalms, when we pray them, will probably reduce the thoughtful Christian to tears and true reverent fear of God, knowing that there but for God’s grace go we, sinners all.

Holy Scripture is full of prayers offered for the defeat of the enemies of God.   Some will sputter that that was then and this is now.  That was the Old Testament and this is the New Testament.  Those people are virtually Marcionites.

We certainly are within our rights to use the psalms in our prayers.  All of them.

You know what?  Living is hard and there are dangers for us in the Church Militant, in this vale of… what was it a vale of again?  “Mourning and weeping in this vale of… vale of… of… hugs, fluffy kitties and daisies!  That’s it!”

There really are enemies of things good, true and beautiful who wish us harm.

There are many traditional prayers that ask God to visit calamity upon our enemies, not out of hatred or vengeance, but out of legitimate desire for peace and their their good.  True charity aims at the good of the other.  Therefore, sometimes we wish calamity on people if that is what it will take to turn them around and amend their lives.

Strong stuff.  We are not use to this sort of thing these days.

For example, in the traditional Missal we have the Mass “Pro defensione ab hostibus… For defense from enemies“.  Here is the Collect, in my translation:

Shatter to pieces, we beseech Thee O Lord, our enemies’ pride and by the might of Thy hand throw to the ground their insolence.

Some might object that we should, because the Lord says to “turn the other cheek”, simply allow ourselves to be attacked, allow the wicked to rise up in the Church and to abuse the faithful, twist the Church’s teaching and worship.  It is one thing to turn one’s own cheek.  It is another to turn the cheeks of your wife and child and all your neighbors, brothers and sisters in the Faith.  Depending on one’s state in life, some must rise and resist.

Can we argue that, by being somewhat passive, as if we were being like a lamb before the shearers (Is 53:7), we are being more Christ-like?  Sure.   I had an email not long ago that suggested Benedict XVI gave up his active ministry in the Church, that he finally did “run from the wolves”, precisely because by doing so the wolves and their wolfish plots would be exposed to the light of day.   Similarly in Robert Graves novel I Claudius the old Emperor does nothing to stop the vile predations of the up and coming Nero precisely because he knows that when people saw him for what he was, they would rise up and restore the Republic.  “Let all the poisons that lurk in the mud, hatch out.”  That was a fantasy, of course.   It didn’t work.

Truckers in Canada and 9.7% inflation in these USA might produce some action, however.  But I digress.

No matter what, we can and must pray and fast for and against enemies: for their conversion and against their plans.  We pray for the protection of Our Holy Mother the Church against all enemies.  We pray that those who oppose Her to be stopped.

Stopped.  That’s the first step.  In the Collect, above, we ask God to throw down their insolence and pride.  If it takes throwing them down to get through to that pride, then so be it.  Whatever it takes to remove the threat they represent and to secure for ourselves peace so that we can live our vocations properly.

As it says in the Post Communion for the same Mass:

O God, our Protector, look down and defend us from the perils of our enemies: so that, once all trouble is removed, we may with free minds serve Thee.

If the actions of enemies reveal that we (Church, country, families) won’t be safe without them losing the ability to breathe… then we purify our motives, ask God for help (for us to be effective and to not sin, and against or upon them to give them graces and/or sufferings adequate to change their minds and hearts.

Adequate.  Not more than is necessary.   As in what one learns in firearms training, first try to avoid conflict, then try to deescalate, and if there is no other option and you truly fear for your life or the lives of others, then you can use adequate force to stop the threat.  Once the threat is stopped, you stop using force.  If a punch will work, you don’t use a gun.  If the threat runs, you don’t shoot him in the back.  If it requires deadly force, you don’t keep shooting once the threat is down.

Purify our motives.  In the Secret for the Mass for Defense from Enemies, the priest prays:

O Lord, by the power of this mystery, may we be cleansed from our own hidden sins and delivered from the snares of our enemies.

In our prayer we desire the conversion of hearts.  When our enemies do convert, rather than continuing to seek bloody revenge, we rejoice in the magnificent grace of Almighty God who desires not the death of the sinner, but that he be converted and live. (Ezekiel 33:11)

We must examine our consciences and purify them.

Meanwhile:

Aedificantium enim unusquisque gladio erat accinctus.

And now, a prayer. It’s from a movie, but it has some great elements.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Moderation is ON.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Pò sì jiù, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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Daily Rome Shot 417, etc.

Today’s Fervorino.

WORDLE 02

For 10% off use the code:
FATHERZ10

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Wordle 01

I have discovered Wordle.   I saw that eminent canonist Ed Peters was doing this, but it took a while for me to take that first step and even see what it was about.    It took longer for me to try it.

My first attempt

So… Wordle.   I sometimes do Sudoku on my phone.  Of course I play a lot of chess and am studying a new language (animi caussa).  Gotta keep my mind working.

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CQ CQ CQ: Ham Radio – #ZedNet reminder – 13 February ’22

Fellow hams, here’s a reminder about ZedNet for Sunday 13 February ’22 – evening at 2000h EST. (0100h ZULU Monday).

We now have the site running:  http://zednet.xyz

Zednet exists on the…

  • Yaesu System Fusion (Wires-X) “room” 28598, and 83466 which is cross-linked to
  • Brandmeister (BM) DMR worldwide talkgroup 31429 (More HERE)
  • Echolink  WB0YLE-R

Fellow hams who have access locally to a Yaesu System Fusion repeater, a repeater on the BM network, or a multi-mode hotspot registered with BM can get on and have a rag chew…. 24/7/365

Want to get involved? WB0YLE provided a Bill Of Materials, with links, for what you need. HERE  THIS WAS UPDATED on 22 March 2021

I created a page for the List of YOUR callsigns.  HERE  Chime in or drop me a note if your call doesn’t appear in the list.

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