
Photo by The Great Roman™

Today’s fervorino HERE

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 4th Sunday after Epiphany (Novus Ordo: 4th 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
There was a BIG rally in Chicago today to ask Mary to soften the heart of Card. Cupich, who is actively attacking Catholics who desire traditional sacred worship.
Remember: an attack on the RITE is really an attack on the PEOPLE who frequent that rite. We are our rites.
I hear over 200 people showed up in the freezing cold.
Some things from the web.
Before the Rosary Rally, our family attended the ICKSP’s Shrine in Chicago. There was an overflowing, standing room crowd for the TLM on this first Sunday of the month.@EricRSammons @OnePeterFive @rtf_media @TaylorRMarshall @pontificatormax @liturgyfilm @chesterbelloc3 pic.twitter.com/rnD31KKukp
— Tridentine Brewing (@TridentineBrew) February 6, 2022
Huge turnout today to pray for the Latin Mass Chicago…
May Our Lady soften the heart of Cardinal Cupich that he will immediately remove all the restrictions he placed on the Traditional Latin Mass in the Archdiocese.
More photos: https://t.co/Z4OVjO0slN@TaylorRMarshall pic.twitter.com/VG09mQniC6
— Mater Dolorosa (@MaterDolorosa92) February 6, 2022
This is so edifying, and great to see. No letting up! https://t.co/E13XhRERta
— Cream City Catholic (@CCityCatholic) February 6, 2022
Today, concerned Catholics descended on Holy Name Cathedral in vast numbers to plead the intercession of Our Lady. United, we are confronting the many crises facing our Catholic Church. “For when two or more are gathered in my name, there am I in the midst of them.” Matthew 18:20 pic.twitter.com/XguGYJibKR
— Coalition for Canceled Priests (@canceledpriests) February 7, 2022
Before the Rosary Rally, our family attended the ICKSP’s Shrine in Chicago. There was an overflowing, standing room crowd for the TLM on this first Sunday of the month.@EricRSammons @OnePeterFive @rtf_media @TaylorRMarshall @pontificatormax @liturgyfilm @chesterbelloc3 pic.twitter.com/rnD31KKukp
— Tridentine Brewing (@TridentineBrew) February 6, 2022
I have always admired those in the Church who can think big, create projects, and bring them to completion.
Hence, I found this project fascinating. I’ve been following the videos.
The SSPX is building a huge church in Kansas dedicated to the Immaculate Conception. Apart from the fact that this is a new church, on a huge scale, that looks like a church (and then some!), the video is interesting from the point of view of the details of the construction. It’s worth viewing just to see how they use scaffolding to get into the cupola and prepare it with sprinklers so that the heads coincide with the stars that will be painted in the dome.
It is not necessary to build churches that look like municipal airports.
Each age of the Church and each cultural ethnic region has its own self-descriptive art forms. Church architecture expresses the Catholic identity of those who build it. If you look around at a lot of our churches, built in the past few decades, that’s pretty frightening. It’s as if they either didn’t know the Faith, or they hated it.
The space we choose to create for our sacred liturgical worship both shapes and reveals our identity. Worship interiorized leads to outward expression, both in our concrete acts in life and in the “ornamentation” of our liturgical action. All of these components express and form.
Liturgy is doctrine. Doctrine informs our minds and hearts. Hearts and minds hunger for more. Grace builds on nature. Love compels us back to worship and further study of the Faith.
Everything we are and all to which we aspire must begin in our worship and be brought back to it.
This is why the attack on Tradition is suicidal. But, there are some want to commit suicide and bring others with them. They don’t realize it, but those who actively attack traditional liturgical worship are ecclesial suicide bombers. It’s all so very sad. It urges us to try to understand what made them want that. They weren’t born that way, they were made into that. We, for our part, have to examine ourselves carefully to discern what part in their mortal devolution we may have played.
I digress.
These days we see grand churches such as the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Wisconsin and the new Cathedral in Knoxville.
It is not obligatory to build ugly churches.
This is fantastic advice!
With first images from Amazon’s RINGS OF POWER series beginning to pop up on all social media and a trailer looming, do yourself a favour and read the SILMARILLION once more without THEIR images in your head.
It is probably the last chance. pic.twitter.com/aYdewVgNdS
— Eduard Habsburg (@EduardHabsburg) February 5, 2022
This Sunday is another liturgical unicorn, that rarity of coinciding prayers in the Vetus and Novus Ordo. This Sunday’s Collect is the same in the pre-Conciliar, 1962 Missal for the 5th Sunday after Epiphany and in the new-fangled Missal that the Council Fathers didn’t mandate and couldn’t have imagined when they voted for Sacrosanctum Concilium, the Novus Ordo of Paul VI.
Our prayer presents imagery of a family and, on the other hand, of soldiers.
Familiam tuam, quaesumus, Domine,
continua pietate custodi,
ut, quae in sola spe gratiae caelestis innititur,
tua semper protectione muniatur.
Custodio, common in military contexts, means “to watch, protect, defend.” Innitor, also with military overtones, means “to lean or rest upon, to support one’s self by any thing.” Caesar and Livy describe soldiers leaning on their spears and shields (e.g., “scutis innixi … leaning upon their shields” Caesar, De bello Gallico 2.27). Munio, is a military term – sensing a theme? – for walling up something up, putting it in a state of defense.
When applied to us humans, pietas, which gives us “piety”, is “dutiful conduct toward the gods, one’s parents, relatives, benefactors, country, etc., sense of duty.” Pietas is also one of the seven Gifts of the Holy Spirit (cf CCC 733-36; Isaiah 11:2), by which we are duly affectionate and grateful toward our parents, relatives and country, as well as to all men living insofar as they belong to God or are godly, and especially to the saints. In common parlance, “piety” indicates fulfilling the duties of religion.
However, applied to God, pietas usually indicates His mercy towards us.
SUPER LITERAL RENDERING:
Guard Your family, we beseech You, O Lord,
with continual mercy,
so that that (family) which is propping itself up upon the sole hope of heavenly grace
may always be defended by Your protection.
OBSOLETE ICEL (1973):
Father,
watch over your family
and keep us safe in your care,
for all our hope is in you.
Look at this contrast!
NEW CORRECTED ICEL (2011):
Keep your family safe, O Lord, with unfailing care,
that, relying solely on the hope of heavenly grace,
they may be shielded always by your protection.
“Watch over your family, …with continual mercy/religious dutifulness,…” invokes the images soldiers as well as that of a father checking into the bedrooms of his children as they sleep. He listens through the night for sounds of distress or need.
The Church is not afraid to combine images of family and soldiering, the symbiotic exchange of duty, obedience and protection. Putting the military imagery in relief helps us to hold both sets of images in mind as we hear Father lift our Collect heavenward during Holy Mass.
We Catholics are both a family, children of a common Father, and a Church Militant, a corps (from Latin corpus, “body”).
Many of us when we were confirmed by bishops as “soldiers of Christ” were given a blow on the cheek as a reminder of what suffering we might face as Christians.
We ought rather die like soldiers than sin in the manner of those who have no gratitude toward God or sense of duty.
We ought to desire to suffer if necessary for the sake of those in our charge.
In this Collect we beg the protection and provisions Christ our King can give us soldiers while on the march. We need a proper attitude of obedience toward God, our ultimate superior, and dutifulness toward our shepherds in the Church, our earthly parents, our earthly country, etc.
Our prayer reminds us that we belong to communities in which we have unequal roles.
There is a profound interconnection between the members of a family, but also inequality.
Children are no less members of the family than their parents, but they are not their parents’ equals. Even the young Jesus– the God man – was subject to Mary and Joseph (Luke 2:51). As Glorious Risen King and Judge, Christ will subject all things to the Father (1 Cor 15:27-28). We are all members of the Church, but with unequal roles.
As St. Augustine said, “I am a bishop for you, I am a Christian with you” (s. 340, 1).”
Our times are dominated ever more by relativism and the obtuse madness of secular humanism.
Both the military and the family and Holy Church (the human dimension, of course) are being eroded, systematically broken down, even from within the ranks of the “officer corps”, the Churches “fathers”, priests and bishops.
And… these days… the attacks are mounting on faithful priests and bishops while those who abandon Catholic doctrine and discipline to curry favor with the world (et al.), are praised and elevated. This is more and more a problem and, one day, it will burst forth in open and vicious persecution, perhaps in the next wave of attacks on the Church’s body of doctrine on moral issues: the coming war on Humanae vitae.
Hierarchy and discipline provide the protection needed by marching troops and growing children. We members of the Militant Church, disciples of Christ, need discipline and fidelity, dedication, pietas, from our officers/shepherds so we can attain our goal.
We need nourishment and discipline in the sense of instruction (Latin disciplina) and sacraments.
Parents and pastors (priests) must fulfill their own roles toward us with pietas, religious and sacred duty!
Their pietas requires fidelity and, above all, sacrifice, being the first to step out in our defense, forming good plans, sounding a clear and certain trumpet to lead us.
I saw quite a piece at The Remnant about a priest – Father James Mawdsley – who, in unmistakable terms, called out Francis and Roche and those others who have been trying to oppress the faithful who desire traditional Catholic liturgical worship.
The intro at The Remnant, says that he once belonged to the FSSP. He left them so they would not be blamed for what he said! And do any of us believe that there would NOT be reprisals against the FSSP? It also says that, as a layman, he was imprisoned and tortured in Burma for protesting human rights abuses. In solitary, he had a conversion that lead to priesthood.
Here is the video.
As I read through the piece and saw the video, something dawned on me. I’ve had contact with him before.
There is going to be a lot of suffering in the time to come. However, at the end of the Holy TLM, the priest recites the Prologue of the Gospel of John (check out Esolen’s incredible new book HERE). At the end of that “Last Gospel” for Mass, the priest repeats – day in and day out – “we saw His glory, the glory of the Only-begotten of the Father”, which is a reference to Christ’s Passion and death on the Cross, which will come many chapters later in John. In the Roman Canon, after the consecration at the Supplices te rogamus, the priest bows before the altar. Speaking of participation in that altar, when he rises the priest makes the sign of the Cross over the Host, the Precious Blood and then crosses himself. The priest is the one offering the Sacrifice. That’s what priests do. But in these case the priest is also the one being sacrificed. This series of small gestures link to form an icon of such enormity that it will take a priest decades truly to get his mind around it. There is nothing like it in the Novus Ordo.
So, there is going to be a lot of suffering in the time to come.
Please pray for priests.
UPDATE 06 Feb 22:
Here is a video interview with Fr. Mawdsley, to give you a sense of him.
At and after about 17:00 he has a particularly good insight.