D. Arlington @arlingtonchurch – Devastated faithful petitioning @BishopBurbidge to ease restrictions he imposed on Catholics who want the Tradition Roman Rite

Take note… I saw this at CNA:

‘Devastated’ Traditional Latin Mass devotees petition Arlington bishop to ease restrictions

Supporters of the Traditional Latin Mass are petitioning Bishop Michael Burbidge of Arlington, Virginia, to lift restrictions he recently imposed on the celebration of the sacraments in the Extraordinary Form.

“In the spirit of the Synodal Path that the church has embarked upon, we humbly ask that you engage in consultations with the faithful of each parish church potentially affected by restrictions on the Traditional Latin Mass,” says the petition, which was published on the petition website Change.org on Jan. 14.

“And we pray fervently that you might offer permission to allow the Extraordinary Form and other traditional sacraments to continue across the Diocese of Arlington.”

The petition had garnered more than 1,000 signatures by 6 p.m. EST on Tuesday, Jan. 18.

[…]

In early January, Burbidge issued a statement concerning the celebration of the Mass in the Extraordinary Form in the diocese. While Burbidge did not restrict any of the existing Latin Masses in the diocese, he said there is to be no “scheduling of new celebrations of the Sacraments (such as baptisms and weddings) in the Extraordinary Form.”

[…]

The petition adds that the laity have been “devastated” at the new restrictions, and that there is a “profound sense of loss and grief at the prospect of losing the ability to celebrate the Mass and other sacraments in the Old Rite.”

“At a time when there is so much darkness and despair in the world and in our country, we find the Extraordinary Form of the Mass to be a beacon of light and hope — one which touches our hearts and nourishes our Catholic Faith,” says the petition.

[…]

Some take-aways from this.

First, consider the harshness of saying, “No more weddings, funerals!” to people who have returned to the Church because of the TLM, who have grown up with the TLM as their primary experience of Mass, who are simply strongly attracted to it for whatever reason. Think of a large traditional family – which is almost repetitive! – in which all the older children were able to be married with older Ritual and Nuptial Mass and then along come the younger siblings and the bishop says to them, “Sorry, you can’t have what your family grew up with. Too bad. It’s for your own good and you are not being marginalized.” Think of the wishes of a dying man or woman and family, who want the consolation of a traditional Requiem Mass. The bishop says, “Nope, too bad. You chose to die at the wrong time so, NO. Have a great day!” It is so cruel. And now think about how at the next parish over, the funeral mass looks like a clown car with balloons crashed a canonization ceremony. But a traditional Requiem? Forfend!

Second, if your bishop has imposed overly restrictive policies – or bullied his priests – do not roll over and die. Pray for him. Do penances in reparation for his action. Petition him respectfully, as is due to his office, and intensely. Support your priests who are under fire.

Third, let’s be clear about something.   The restrictions being imposed under the shadowy Francis’ legacy document Traditionis custodes and the Dubious Dubia are really NOT restrictions on “the traditional Roman Rite”.  The restrictions are on the people who want the Vetus Ordo.  This is a move against people.

Lastly, be a true Custos Traditionis, an authentic “guardian of Tradition” rather than what some of the bishops have become, “jailers of tradition”.  Read more about that HERE   

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ASK FATHER: Can a dying Catholic receive the Apostolic Pardon if there is no priest present?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Can a Catholic receive the Apostolic Pardon if he/she dies without a priest present. I read somewhere that, even in the absence of a priest, the Catholic Church grants a plenary indulgence to all Catholics at the moment of death if they are disposed to receive it.

This is a very good question.  Thank you for asking.

We know about, or ought to know about, the Apostolic Pardon, or Blessing, before death.  This is a remission of temporal punishment due to sin for one who is properly disposed (in the state of grace).  Thus it is to be imparted by the priest primarily after sacramental absolution and anointing.   The Apostolic Pardon can be given once during the crisis.  If the person recovers, the Pardon could be given once again if there is a relapse.

HOWEVER… what if a priest is not available?

That happens, as we have seen to our great sadness in this time of COVID-1984 Theatre.

Just as an aside, if the whole COVID thing has in fact been overblown to keep people in the state of fear, and therefore people died (for whatever reason) without the sacraments because priests were forbidden access… imagine for a moment the implications for the judgment of those who were responsible for whipping up the terror and causing the restrictive policies.  I digress.

The Church provides for those who are dying when there is no priest.  A person who is in articulo mortis, near death, can obtain a plenary indulgence provided that they had a habit of prayer in their lifetime.  The use of a crucifix to look at is very helpful to obtain this indulgence.

If this seems a little vague, that’s okay.  There is flexibility here in that, often, at the point of death, people are unable to speak, and so they cannot perform the work of a vocal prayer.  However, if they had the habit of prayer, especially certain prayers – think of the daily Rosary, praying the Angelus or Regina Caeli as a regular daily practice, praying the canonical hours – that stands in the place of the prayers that the dying person certainly would have offered he if could have.

So, it is habitual prayer that substitutes.

This one of the reasons why I have, on this blog and in preaching, tried to get the point across that we should “practice” dying, through mortifications and prayer.

If we want to be good at playing the piano, we have to practice.  If we want to be good at just about anything we have to apply ourselves so that we get good at it and it becomes easier to do.   Virtues, for example, are habits that we must develop through repetition and effort.  If something is hard to perform, we don’t have the virtue.

In a similar way, if we want to make a good death, we should “practice” those aspects of dying that we can control: daily penances, reflections on death while healthy and active, prayers to God for a good death by whatever means He wills, prayer for the dying and the dead, etc.

Think about this, and the fact that one say you are going to die.

Does this issue of the plenary indulgence at the point of death make you consider establishing regular habits of prayer?

Remember, the priest might not get there in time.

Moreover, because the priest might not be right there when it is time…

Regularly… GO TO CONFESSION!

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Four Last Things, GO TO CONFESSION, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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Daily Rome Shot 392

Today’s Fervorino, including Prayer against the Pandemic from after Mass.

Use your phone’s camera!

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Online classes, courses opportunities – UPDATED

I had mentioned the good opportunity for priests to work on Latin in an online course with Joseph Shaw, at Oxford, Chairman of the Latin Mass Society.  HERE He is offering discounts for clergy.

Also, the esteemed Dr. Robert Royal has been offering a course on The Confessions.  It might be a little late to get involved. Check it out.  HERE  I warmly endorse Dr. Royal’s courses.  I followed the tripartite courses on the Divina Commedia.  Although I know it quite well, I gained some great insights.   The for Augustine’s Confessions.  New perspectives are great and these are outstanding for “beginners”.

Another course will be offered by Dr. Edmund Mazza, very bright and traditional, with a great sense of humor.  He is offering an online class on “World History and Church History”.  I have a sneaking suspicion that it is not going to be entirely irenic, when the topic is aimed at one particular end of the spectrum.   It starts 1 February.  HERE

UPDATE -20 Jan 2022:

I received a note from Romanitas Press that priests can sign up for a 12 session course on how to celebrate the Traditional Latin Mass. HERE

How wonderful it would be were a whole bunch of priests from Chicago to sign up!

Also, perhaps you might consider sponsoring a course for a priest whom you know.

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Qui distinguit bene docet. Fr. Hunwicke opines.

It is a day of contrasts.

I had posted about “A Tale of Two Archbishops”.  Now I see Fr. Hunwicke making distinctions about contrasting pairings.  Qui distinguit bene docet.  My emphases.

Ecclesial disorders

CLERICALISM versus SACERDOTALISM

“If the word had not come to have as offensive a sound for many as ‘clericalism’ itself, the old term ‘sacerdotalism’ might well be used to describe the reconciling principle of the primitive church, so dear to S Paul, ‘that there are diversities of ministries, many members, yet but one Body’, in which they find their hierarchic unity; and that all are necessary to the perfection of the Church, the Body of Christ. Clericalism, I take it, means in itself simply undue exaltation of the person and importance of the minister, whether he claims priestly character and special sacramental power, or not. ‘Sacerdotalism’, on the other hand, means simply the belief that certain men are given by God certain priestly powers on behalf of their fellows, which their fellows have not got. These are not the same thing … the pre-Nicene Church was certainly not ‘clericalist’, but it was profoundly ‘sacerdotalist’.”

So wrote Dom Gregory Dix; he went on to quote I Clement XLI, with its emphasis on the Bishop, presbyters, deacons, and laics having each their own tagma. [In classical Greek the ordering of military units, such as a battalion.  Similarly in NT Greek, “things that have been arranged in order”.] He loved to point out that the Puritan liturgical drafts which were promoted as replacements for the Prayer Book were profoundly clericalist, with page after page of ministerial monologue.

(En passant, [Also an action in chess, which I employed yesterday.] I must protest against the dishonest, thoroughly mendacious, implication in the disgraceful documentation accompanying Traditionis custodes, that affection for the Authentic Use of the Roman Rite is fomented by self-seeking clerics. Quite the opposite is the truth. Traddidom is lay-based, lay-driven, and lay-dominated. Most of its academic writers seem to be lay men and lay women, and very fine scholars they are, too. Perhaps clergy are too scared … now … tell me … why should that be?)

PAPACY versus ULTRAPAPALISM

Just as Clericalism and Sacerdotalism need to be distinguished because they are so often and easily confused, so the Petrine Ministry, and Bergoglian Ueberhyperpapalism, need to be kept carefully separate because they are so radically different. The just and proper exercise of the Petrine Office as a remora [“a drag, brake”, by analogy with the nasty, pertinacious sea critter with suckers that latch on to other sea critters and create, inter alia, a drag.] against novelty and a guarantee of the unchanging Apostolic Tradition, the Deposit of Faith, is a million miles from the wicked corruption memorably described by Joseph Ratzinger as “the impression that the pope really can do anything”.

[…]

I promise that if you go to read the rest, you will find at least one gem.   HERE

Posted in Mail from priests, The Drill | Tagged
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NEW PROJECT “100!” Wherein Fr. Z asks for help. – UPDATED

UPDATE 9 Feb 2022

A few are still coming! Thanks!

UPDATE 5 Feb 2022

I am happy to report that we hit the “100!” goal.

That doesn’t mean that you have to stop!


One year ago, when a tectonic plate shift in life took place, I started a campaign for 200 new monthly donation subscribers.

Your response was a source of great consolation and encouragement.  Today, when donations arrive earmarked “200!”, like a battle cry, it’s a boost for my day.

Given the vicissitudes of life now – tectonic plates continue to shift, don’t they? – I must start another campaign.  While I would really like to get another lift like the amazing “200”s, I’ll start with the “100!”s and, hopefully even more will respond.

Here’s my request for at least “100” of you to sign up for a $10 monthly donation.

I am grateful for larger donations, of course.  I don’t want to limit you to $10/mo.   If someone signs up for, say, $20, and tells me it is for this “100!” target, I’ll be doubly happy.  It’ll be like one person doing the lifting for two.

“Many hands make light work.”

One thing you should consider is that, these days, almost all the daily Masses I offer, I say for the intention of my benefactors.  It is my open, and stated intention.  It is my pleasure as well as my duty to pray for you who are so good to me.

Firstly, there’s Paypal. This is easy.

There is this link: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/fatherz/

Also,


Some options



Some of you might think to increase what you are giving.  Instead of changing your already established donation by $10, perhaps simply add a new one with that particular purpose: “100!”.  If you need to contact me because it is hard to figure out, drop me a line: HERE

Next, there is Venmo.  I can’t set up a regular donation subscription on Venmo, but if you simply told me you were going to do this monthly, I’d believe you. Add a note like, “100!” so I can tabulate it for my project drive.  HERE I got a notice yesterday of a “200!” donation via Venmo, which was a very pleasant point in the evening.

You can aim your phone at this.  It should work.

I also have signed up for Wise (once called “Transferwise”), especially for those of you OUTSIDE these USA.  I invite you to take a look.  There are a few hoops to jump through but it doesn’t take long.  HERE  This is a really cool service that can take any currency and then I can, with change fees that are a tiny fraction of what bigger services gouge, move it to a US bank.

There are also snail-mail options, including the P.O. Box of the TMSM of which I am still “prez”.

Fr. John Zuhlsdorf
733 Struck St.
PO BOX 44603
Madison, WI 53744-4603

Someone will regularly check that P.O. Box and forward my mail, so this is a slow, but sure method.

Please, dear readers – new and old – I could use some help.  I still have moving issues: storage, insurance (gasp), repairs, I need a new roof, and recently my three major kitchen appliances have begun to mutiny (water leaks, etc.), including the lower coil in my oven starting on fire.  That was exciting, and not in a good way.

Thanks to all of who visit here. I appreciate your time, attention, participation, prayers, and support.

It has been hard to slog forward this last year. Some days have been better than others. But, with a set jaw, the only way out of this is forward and through it. Powerful forces are arrayed against us now and they must not be allowed to bash us down into silence with their bullying and Stasi tactics. Persevere.


UPDATE 19 Jan 2022

Some kind folks have sent donations.  Thank you!  I am not sure if they are for “100!” or not.  One is from a “200!” donor.  I’ll try to sort it.

CB – 100! Venmo (V)
DS – Paypal (P)
OK – P
CN – P
MF – V
EA – V
SP – 100! P
KC – 100! Continue To Give (C)
MdeM – 100! V
DC – 100! P
KT – 100! V
LG – 100! P
JK – 100! V
RT – 100! P
PA – 100! P
BLS – 100! P
MM – 100! V

17

UPDATE 120 Jan 2022

KL – 100! P
JO – 100! P
DS – 100! P
SD – 100! P
BE – 100! P
JV – 100! P
CK – 100! P
CC – 100! P

25
_

MH – 100! P
PR – 100! P
TC – 100! P
JS – 100! P
JB – 100! P
PLFFC – 100! P
SN – 100! P

32

__

EC – 100! P
SS – 100! P
MC – 100! P
LH – 100! P
LE – 100! P
JG – 100! P
SP – 100! P

39

__

21 Jan 2022

DG – 100! P
JM – 100! P
SD – 100! P
JC – 100! P
JM – 100! V
JF – 100! V

45

___

22 Jan 2022

ME – 100! P
SP – 100! P
JH – 100! P

48

And thanks to the many of you who have made one time donations, which are not monthly subscriptions.  The monthly method helps me to budget, but every bit is deeply appreciated.

24 Jan

CH – 100! P
KB – 100! P
MB – 100! P
KB – 100! P
JL – 100! P
KC – 100! P
DK – 1oo! Wise (W)
GI – 100! W

56

25 Jan

DD – 100! P
JG – 100! V
GS – 100! V
SS – 100! P
MF – 100! P
KK – 100! P

62

21 Jan 2022

CC – 100! V
GF – 100! P
AR – 100! V

RD – 100! P
JD – 100! P
JH – 100! P

68

31 Jan

AS – 100! – P
MB – 100! – P
KZ – 100! – P
JW – 100! – P
AW – 100! – P
CAS – 100! – P
AM – 100! – P
MdeM – 100! – V
AH – 100! – P
SAS – 100! – P

78

MF – 100! – V
EW – 100! – V
RC – 100! – P
CN – 100! – P
AD – 100! – P
DS – 100! – P
DvH – 100! – W
R&KL – 100! – Snail Mail
MT – 100! – P
JP – 100! – P
JH – 100! – P
EB – 100! – P

90

SLH – 100! Snail Mail
CAS – 100! SN
MJM – 100! SN
PJM – 100! SN
EAC – 100! SN
CJH – 100! SN
CHM – 100! SN
JPMcG – 100! SN
RWH – 100! SN
PEG – 100! SN
TJW – 100! SN

101

UPDATE 9 Feb 2022

T&MK – 100! – Snail Mail
DD – 100! – SM

103

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Daily Rome Shot 391

Photo by The Great Roman™

Daily Mass Fervorino.

The book I mentioned by Kennedy Hall from good old faithful TAN, Terror of Demons: Reclaiming Traditional Catholic Masculinity.

Effeminacy is undermining and sapping the vigor from the Church and larger society. It is a tool and temptation from Hell and it must be resisted. Hall writes:

Effeminacy does not mean “femininity,” as femininity is a perfection, like masculinity. Effeminacy is a different word entirely, and in its etymology, we find a definition for things like “softness” in its Latin usage. The Greek word for effeminacy in the New Testament is malakia, which means “softness.”
St. Thomas defines effeminacy as a reluctance to suffer due to an attachment to pleasure. He explains that effeminacy is a vice opposed to perseverance. In essence, effeminacy is a vice that is opposed to the cross, which is an unfortunate characteristic that might explain the multitude of soft men who reject life’s redemptive sufferings in pursuit of temporal pleasure.

As I have mentioned before, effeminacy is not the jesuitical limp-handed lisping of a confused boy-man with a streak of sullen teen-age girl purple across his half-shaven skull full of mush.   Women can be effeminate, too.   We want women to be feminine, not effeminate.  We want men to be neither, but rather, both virile and masculine.  Get the distinction?

There is another kind of effeminacy, by the way.  It’s the sort whereby, in defiance of their wiring, they relate to others more as women might than men, thus leading to one of the wisest premonitory insights I ever received from a bishop about clergy: “There are old women of both sexes.”  Another analogy about how some of clergy with power work is: high-school mean-girls in the bathroom.

Posted in Sermons, SESSIUNCULA |
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A tale of two Archbishops

It is the best of times, in that God has called us into existence now, to be His team according to His plan.

It is the worst of times, in that God has called us into existence now, when from our limited perspective things are flying apart at the seams.

At National Catholic Register (never to be confused with the National catholic Reporter (aka Fishwrap aka National Schismatic Distorter), there is a piece regarding the implementation of Traditionis custodes – the Plessy v. Ferguson legacy document of the Francis Regime – that contrasts the cruel, clerical rigidity of one midwestern Archbishop with the pastoral and flexible application made by another.

The piece tells about how, after the auxiliary bishop of St. Paul and Minneapolis, who handled most of the pontifical ceremonies of the Vetus Ordo was translated to Crookston, Archbp. Hebda stepped in to administer Confirmation using the Traditional Roman Rite… after a snow storm typical of my native place, Minnesota.

The peroration:

Archbishop Hebda’s approach to both forms is one that would be preferable to see coming from Rome — an openminded, tolerant approach that does not see the two forms of the Roman Rite as a source of division. I truly hope that those in Rome see the pain they are causing so many devout Catholics so that the Church can move forward in unity embracing both forms of the Roman Rite.

Rather than hunting down priests, one after one, to unperson them for voicing doubleplus ungood Oldthink, Archbp. Hebda acted like a bishop interested in his flocks true good (charity) rather than make a harsh display of rigidity to impress clerical climbers elsewhere.

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A bishop’s prayer petition for this Week of Christian Unity: for Catholics who want the Traditional Latin Mass

From Bishop Thomas Tobin of Providence, RI.

Posted in Fr. Z KUDOS, Traditionis custodes | Tagged ,
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Your Good News

Do you have good news for the readership today? Great things happening? Some victories or accomplishments? Clear movements and moments of grace?

There is so much bad news in the Church and the world right now, what with lunatic political office holders and shepherds determined to oppress their flocks. Let’s have some good news.

  • For my part, I made a couple of DX QSOs today using a rig remotely, which I haven’t done for a long time.  I tried to get Rodriguez Island but, no joy. But Italy and Slovakia boomed in.
  • I was victorious yesterday in a tough game in which I used the Albin Gambit.
  • The alstroemeria in the Two Trinities chapel has never been as nice.  I guess more time in the dark really helps them bloom and last longer.
  • A great text chat with a super-determined and faithful, traditional Catholic family man: they drive 2.5 hours each way with little kids for a Sunday SSPX Mass, because it is the closest TLM they have.
  • More Christmas cards came yesterday and there was a large donation to the TMSM.
  • I had supper with the local priest last night, which was very pleasant.
  • Tonight Dr. Royal’s very good online course on Augustine’s Confessions will continue. Worthwhile. New insights.
  • Some very useful things arrived from my amazon wishlist… there were no packing slips except in one box, so I am not sure whom to thank but… THANK YOU. These days I have been saying Mass for my benefactors almost every day. You are remembered by me and God knows who you are even when I am in the dark.
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