Ash Wednesday – Fasting, Abstainence, and You together with notes on alligator, endothermic moonfish, and muskrat

According to the 1983 Code of Canon Law for the Latin Church, Latin Church Catholics are bound to observe fasting and abstinence on Ash Wednesday.

Here are some details. I am sure you know them already, but they are good to review.

FASTING: Catholics who are 18 year old and up, until their 59th birthday (when you begin your 60th year), are bound to fast (1 full meal and perhaps some food at a couple points during the day, call it 2 “snacks”, according to local custom or law – call it, two snacks that don’t add up to a full meal) on Ash Wednesday and on Good Friday.

There is no scientific formula for this.  Figure it out.

ABSTINENCE: Catholics who are 14 years old and older are abound to abstain from meat on Ash Wednesday and on all Fridays of Lent.

In general, when you have a medical condition of some kind, or you are pregnant, etc., these requirements can be relaxed.

For Eastern Catholics there are differences concerning dates and practices. Perhaps our Eastern friends can fill us Latins in.

You should by now have a plan for your spiritual life and your physical/material mortifications and penitential practices during Lent.

You would do well to include some works of mercy, both spiritual and corporal.

I also recommend making a good confession close to the beginning of Lent.  Let me put that another way:

GO TO CONFESSION!

“But Father! But Father!”, some of you are saying anxiously, “What about my Mystic Monk Coffee?  I can drink my Mystic Monk Coffee, can’t I?  Can’t I?”

You can, of course, coffee with and as part of your full meal and two “snacks”.  No question there.

How about in between meals on Ash Wednesday?

The old axiom, for the Lenten fast, is “Liquidum non frangit ieiuniumliquid does not break the fast”, provided – NB – you are drinking for the sake of thirst, rather than for eating.

Common sense suggests that chocolate banana shakes or “smoothies”, etc., are not permissible, even though they are pretty much liquid in form.  They are not what you would drink because you are thirsty, as you might more commonly do with water, coffee, tea, wine in some cases, lemonade, even some of these sports drinks such as “Gatorade”, etc.

Again, common sense applies, so figure it out.

Drinks such as coffee and tea do not break the Lenten fast even if they have a little milk added, or a bit of sugar, or fruit juice, which in the case of tea might be lemon.

Coffee would break the Eucharistic fast (one hour before Communion), since – pace fallentes  – coffee is no longer water, but it does not break the Lenten fast on Ash Wednesday.

You will be happy to know that chewing tobacco does not break the fast (unless you eat the quid, I guess), nor does using mouthwash (gargarisatio in one manual I checked) or brushing your teeth (pulverisatio).

Concerning the consumption of alligator and crocodile – HERE  I included notes also on the eating of endothermic moonfish, peptonized beef, and muskrat… just in case.

If you want to drink your coffee and tea with true merit I suggest drinking it from one of my coffee mugs.  I’d like to offer an indulgence for doing so, but that’s above my pay grade.

I just happen to have available a “Liquidum non frangit ieiunium” mug!  HERE

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Stupid Idea: Sand in holy water fonts during Lent. Fr. Z opines.

You would think that this stupid idea would have been eradicated by now but, no.

I am sure that in some places you readers will see that Holy Water has been removed from the stoops – at the beginning of Lent – and replaced with sand.

No Holy Water.  Sand.  This is a REALLY BAD IDEA.

If you go into a church where you see this lunatic scheme… for the love of God, do NOT bless yourself with sand.

Stupid.

I’ve written about this quite a few times over the years, for example HERE and HERE. It’s amazing that it still crops up. Here’s the deal:

Someone put this question to the Congregation for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments.  They responded.  Enjoy.

The emphases are mine:

Prot. N. 569/00/L

March 14, 2000

Dear Father:

This Congregation for Divine Worship has received your letter sent by fax in which you ask whether it is in accord with liturgical law to remove the Holy Water from the fonts for the duration of the season of Lent.

[NB] This Dicastery is able to respond that the removing of Holy Water from the fonts during the season of Lent is not permitted, in particular, for two reasons:

1. The liturgical legislation in force does not foresee this innovation, which in addition to being praeter legem is contrary to a balanced understanding of the season of Lent, which though truly being a season of penance, is also a season rich in the symbolism of water and baptism, constantly evoked in liturgical texts.

2. The encouragement of the Church that the faithful avail themselves frequently of the [sic] of her sacraments and sacramentals is to be understood to apply also to the season of Lent. The “fast” and “abstinence” which the faithful embrace in this season does not extend to abstaining from the sacraments or sacramentals of the Church. The practice of the Church has been to empty the Holy Water fonts on the days of the Sacred Triduum in preparation of the blessing of the water at the Easter Vigil, and it corresponds to those days on which the Eucharist is not celebrated (i.e., Good Friday and Holy Saturday).

Hoping that this resolves the question and with every good wish and kind regard, I am,

Sincerely yours in Christ,
[signed]
Mons. Mario Marini [Later, the Secretary of the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Deinow with God.]
Undersecretary

Did you get the part where the Congregation said: “is not permitted”?

Holy water is a sacramental.

We get the powerful theology of its use in the older Roman Ritual in the prayers for exorcism of the water and salt used and then the blessing itself.  The rite of blessing holy water, in the older ritual, is powerful stuff.  It sounds odd, nearly foreign to our modern ears, especially after decades of being force fed Novus Ordo pabulum.

Holy Water is a power weapon of the spiritual life against the attacks of the devil.

I would ask these priests:

  • You do believe in the existence of the Enemy, … right?
  • You know you are a soldier and pilgrim in a dangerous world, … right?
  • So why… why… why would these liturgists and priests REMOVE a tool of spiritual warfare precisely during the season of LENT when we need it the most?

Holy water is a sacramental.

It is for our benefit.

It is not a toy, or something to be abstained from, like chocolate or television.

So, don’t stand for this nonsense.  If the Holy Water has been removed… clamor for its return!

BTW… in seminary, when the out to lunch and in part degenerate faculty did this dopey stuff to us, seminarians – even the libs – retaliated.  Some of our responses, small beach chairs of tooth picks with drink umbrellas… a golf ball… cigarette buts… some quick sprouting beans and a little water.

Just ideas.   Were someone to encounter this sandy dopiness and were they to do something like this and were they to send photos… well… I don’t know what I’d do!

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BOOK NOTES: New from Peter Kreeft and a one-day KINDLE sale on the Rumer Godden’s In This House Of Brede

I am starting on a new book from Ignatius Press by Peter Kreeft – always good – who has written a fictional conversation about the Eucharist between three religious figures of the 20th century:

C.S. Lewis
J.R.R. Tolkien
Billy Graham

Intriguing, no?

Kreeft is really good at this genre which he calls a “supposal”.  For example, did you know that Pres. John F Kennedy, Aldous Huxley and C.S. Lewis – all three – died on the same afternoon, 22 Nov 1963.  Kreeft wrote a conversation between them, meeting at their judgment.

Kreeft is thoughtful.  He states clearly in the introduction that he does not attenuate the Catholic position of the Eucharist, even as he is fair to the positions of Lewis and Graham.

Check it out.

Symbol or Substance?: A Dialogue on the Eucharist With C. S. Lewis, Billy Graham and J. R. R. Tolkien

US HERE – UK HERE

A helpful reader alerted me to a one-day sale on the Rumer Godden book, In This House Of Brede.  Kindle version, $1.99.  HERE (not sure about UK).   This was made into a movie with Diana Rigg.  HERE

Do you not have a Kindle?   Oh dear… oh dear…

US HERE – UK HERE

Kindle… reading joy.

Also, I have so many books – publishers send things – that I appreciate receiving books for Kindle.  Thanks to readers who send books from my wishlist.

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ASK FATHER: Separating priest from altar in the Novus Ordo

From a reader…

I have a question about the GIRM. If I’m reading it correctly everything except from the Offertory through Communion Rite must be done from the chair, and the missal and chalice placed elsewhere except for those times. Until recently, the parish priests said the collect, prayer after communion, etc. from the altar. Almost the whole TLM is said from the altar or the foot of the altar. From my pew, the instruction does not make sense in the context of liturgical tradition. In a larger sense, the language of the GIRM seems to make praying at the altar an act in some bigger play, which will negatively affect our understanding, especially when combined with the extra extraordinary (in number not office) ministers, and lectors walking all over the “worship space.” Am I reading the GIRM correctly? If so, what is the basis for the language of the GIRM?

You raise an important point.

Let’s consider a few initial points.

Priesthood is for sacrifice.  There is no sacrifice without priests.  The place of sacrifice is the altar.  The priest and the altar are intimately bound together, so much so that the priest kisses the altar when he arrives or when – in the traditional rite – he turns from it or when he leaves it.  He – traditionally – dresses in ritual fashion to go to it.  The altar itself – traditionally – is also to be ritually clothed in its own matching vestment, the antependium.

In 1969 – most people have never heard this and digging up information about it is hard – Paul VI issued an edition of missal for the revised “Novus Ordo” of Mass that had to be withdrawn immediately because there was heresy in the introductory comments.  The distinction of the priesthood of the laity by baptism and that of the priest by ordination was blurred.  Another missal would be released which cleaned that up.  However, you can see what was going on back in the day.

In 1968 Paul VI issued a rite of ordination to the priesthood which – while valid – left out of the interrogation of the ordinations the questions explicit language about offering the sacrifice of the Mass and about hearing confessions and absolving sins, activities which pretty much sum up the work of the priest.  In 1990 John Paul II issued a revision of Paul VI’s rite which corrected these lacunae, making these aspects of priesthood explicit.  The problem was that the rites themselves should tell us what they are conferring.  The Paul VI rite didn’t.  It was murky.  Some, therefore, argued that it wasn’t valid for holy orders.  That was wrong.  However, had that rite continued for a long time, to the point that even the bishops conferring the sacrament had murky notions about priesthood, then… well… problems.  Michael Davies dealt with all of this in a good book (US HERE – UK HERE).

And now we turn to the issue of separation the priest from the altar in the Novus Ordo for significant periods of time in the Mass and the introduction of myriad of lay people into the sanctuary.

Keep in mind that when the Word of God is proclaimed, Christ is present.  Christ is pre-eminently present in the Eucharist, but He is also present in the reading of Scripture.  The Fathers of Vatican II wanted to expand and open up a greater use of Scripture.  One way to emphasize the importance of Scripture was to give its proclamation it’s own place.  In the ancient Church there was often in a large raised ambo, with steps up both sides, from which readings were sung.   In the Solemn Mass of the Roman Rite, while the priest celebrant read the readings at the two corners of the altar, the Subdeacon and the Deacon would go to their proper places in the sanctuary and, in the case of the Gospel, facing liturgical north, for the readings.  Thus, the traditional rite also emphasized the reading of Scripture by location and by singing.  Alas, one of the things that – I think – pushed the ignorant and scholarly alike to implement radical changes to the Roman Rite is because they had gotten it into their heads that the LOW Mass was the paradigm of the Roman Rite and not the SOLEMN Mass.  At Low Mass everything is kept strictly at the altar.

We could briefly touch on the “chair” of the “presider”.  This is an echo of the “seat of Moses” whence the law was interpreted, the curule chair of Roman officials and Emperors, etc.  It is a symbol of teaching authority and governance.   The use of the chair by the priest embodies these aspects of the man’s priesthood.  However, once again, the use of the chair was present in the Solemn Mass.  At times the priest, with deacon and subdeacon, could go to sit when it was proper to wait for the choir to complete its chants.   So, the chair was ever present in the sanctuary, but there was a desire to emphasize it.  Unfortunately, this was exaggerated in many places.  I think we all have seen churches in which the tabernacle was removed from the central position and the “presider’s chair” was put there, thus giving the priest a perch grander than anything where Caesar ever parked.  We have seen altars offset from the center of the sanctuary (if it could still be called that) so that the ambo would have a place of equal dignity nearby.

That last point reminds me of something… that table of the word and table of the sacrifice.  What most people don’t get today is that the reading of Scripture at Mass is itself a priestly, sacrificial offering.  Reading Scripture at Mass is not a performance moment (ohhhh… how many dreadful readers are there?).  Reading Scripture at Mass is not primarily a didactic moment, though it is also didactic.  Readings are to be raised on high to God much like the cloud of incense that rises in an offering back to the Father.  Christ is being offered to the Father, for Christ is in every word that is proclaimed.  Hence, as we decorate the rest of the elements of Mass, it is fitting to sing the readings, as an act of sacrificial love.

It seems to me that we are slowly recovering from the enthusiastic madness of the 60’s and 70’s.  Surely the side by side use of the traditional Mass, according to the vision of Benedict XVI and Summorum Pontificum, will bring these issues to the fore.

Finally, as a convert I am highly sensitive to the differences of Protestant and Catholic world views.  I don’t recall the source off hand, but not too long ago I heard someone comment that the whole of the Protestant revolt could be summed up as an attack on the priesthood, and therefore on sacrifice.   Surely the desire to bridge the gap toward Protestants influenced those who ran beyond the mandates of the Council Fathers.  It is, in way, still functioning today, but in a subterranean way.  What do I mean?   This emphasis on “clericalism” today, as a way of dodging the real problems behind The Present Crisis, reflects a subtle attack on the Catholic understanding of priesthood, a reduction of the role of priest to “minister”, an attenuation of the vital concept of sacrifice and, therefore, the true meaning of the altar.

Perhaps some of these thoughts will help you as you gaze at the goings on the Novus Ordo sanctuary and the TLM sanctuary, how they overlap and harmonize, how they diverge and conflict.

___

Afterthought:

You might go back and listen to three podcasts I did some years back on the implementation of the Novus Ordo at Advent of 1969.

095 09-11-24 40 years ago… Paul VI on the eve of the Novus Ordo (Part III)
094 09-11-20 40 years ago… Paul VI on the eve of the Novus Ordo (Part II)
093 09-11-16 40 years ago… Paul VI on the eve of the Novus Ordo

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Fr. Z makes a suggestion. The last video of the late, great Bp. Morlino.

From what I have picked up, many people these days look at annual diocesan fundraising drives and campaigns with deep suspicion or even resentment.  I have received numerous emails asking about the morality of cutting off money to dioceses or to parishes because of, especially, The Present Crisis and feckless, untrustworthy leadership.

All of us understand our obligation to provide for the needs of the Church.  However, all of us want our contributions to mean something and not to see them go down some rat hole.  I am often asked about trustworthy causes to which you can donate.

I will repeat what I have posted in the past and suggest the TMSM, of which I am president, and also the wonderful Our Lady of Hope Clinic.

Right now, however, I’d like also to suggest a contribution to the Diocese of Madison, in remembrance of the Extraordinary Ordinary, the late, great Bishop Morlino.  He really stood up tall when The Present Crisis flamed up.

You might take a moment to watch this video.   I know… I know… I dislike these annual campaign videos too.  However, this one has the last video taken of Bp. Morlino.  It was recorded the day before he had his heart attack and subsequent death.

It is bittersweet, to be sure.

I can say this: contribution to the Madison campaign will accomplish good things.  I know what is going on around here.   For example, we have more seminarians than many dioceses that are far larger.  Yesterday, the Vocation Director and a seminarian and I had breakfast after our celebration of a Sunday TLM.   We are carrying on on the trajectory set by our late chief.  One of the things we spoke about was the upcoming 1st Mass of a man to be ordained in June: once again a TLM 1st Mass.

There is a Memorial Fund for Bp. Morlino, aimed at building a new cathedral.  The old one was the victim of arson many years ago.

HERE

There is the annual campaign.

HERE

In any event, … here is the annul appeal video.  Featured in it also are the parents of our aforementioned Vocation Director.

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Shrovetide: Collop Monday

We have arrived at the final days of Shrovetide.  “Shrove” is from “shrive”, “to absolve a penitent”.

On this day one customarily in earnest began to consume the leftover meat in the house, before Lent began.

Remember: once upon a time Latin Church Catholics were more serious… about everything.

Hence, today we would eat collops – slices of bacon – reserving the bacon fat for pancakes and so forth on Tuesday, when we would consume the last of the animal fats… Fat Tuesday, Mardi Gras.

In this time of “carne-vale” we would, as Catholics, say “good-bye – Latin vale!” to meat.

So, have some bacon today.  Perhaps bacon and eggs?

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QUESTION for readers: FAST STB

Do any of you readers out there know of any – officially accredited – schools/programs of study whereby someone could complete an STB quickly?  In less than 3 years?

How about by distance learning?

The idea would be to get that basic theology degree, STB, which is a prerequiste for a, for example, JCL.

Moderation queue is ON.

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Upcoming Amazon Synod and discussion of the matter (wheat) for the Eucharist

I saw something interesting at Crux about the upcoming, 6-27 October, Amazon Synod.

“Amazon” Synod… who will be the first to quip that they will try to sell out the Church?

Apparently on the agenda for the Amazon Synod will be the question of ordaining married men to the priesthood because of priest shortages.

Another point may be rethinking – get this – the matter use for the Eucharist.   There was a 25-27 February seminary on the upcoming Synod with some of the primary riggers.  Crux says (my emphases):

Another issue Taborda said is likely to come up during the synod is the possibility of replacing bread used in the consecration of the Eucharist with yuca – a shrub native to South America which is commonly cultivated as an annual crop in tropical regions, where it is popular to eat the root of the plant.

The reason for proposing the change, Taborda said, is because the bread normally used in Latin rite Masses turns into a pasty mush during the Amazonian rainy season due to the intense humidity, meaning “it’s not bread, and if it’s not bread, it’s not the Eucharist.”

In the Amazon, bread is made out of yuca,” he said. And while changing material used in the Eucharist is “a very complex question,” he believes it should be decided by the local bishops and will likely be mentioned during the October discussion.

For the Eucharist to be confected validly, only bread of wheat may be used.  In the Latin Church we use only unleavened bread, as Christ used at the Last Supper (cf. Matthew 26:17, Mark 14:12, Luke 22:7).

If memory serves, and perhaps one of you can hunt this up, early missionaries to Asia attempted, through “inculturation”, to adapt the matter for the Eucharistic species to local products, such as rice.  I think this was done by Jesuit missionaries and that they had to be corrected either by the Superior General or by the Roman Pontiff.   Surely one of you out there will have the reference.

Anyway, no wheat… no Eucharist.  Use of yuca would result in idolatry.

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WDTPRS – 8th Ordinary Sunday: The “Barque of Peter” on turbulent seas

Let us has a swift look at the Collect for the upcoming 8th Sunday of Ordinary Time.  This formulary doesn’t present itself each year because of the vagaries of the Moon.  This year, in the Ordinary Form, there are more “green” Sundays than usual before Ash Wednesday ushers in Lent. In the Extraordinary Form, the traditional form, this Sunday is Quinquagesima.  Lent is around the corner.

COLLECT (2002MR):

Da nobis, quaesumus, Domine,
ut et mundi cursus pacifico nobis tuo ordine dirigatur,
et Ecclesia tua tranquilla devotione laetetur.

This prayer was in the 7th century manuscript called the Veronese Sacramentary, though it is surely much older.  It was prayed on the 4th Sunday after Pentecost where it remained for centuries in the Missale Romanum until it was moved in the 1960’s.  In the pre-Conciliar Missale Romanum we find the adverb pacifice.  The Novus Ordo redactors changed this back to the more ancient pacifico which goes with ordine.

Some vocabulary with the help of our jam-packed Lewis & Short DictionaryCursus can mean anything from “course, way, journey” to “course of a ship”, the “flow of conversation” and “postal route”. Dirigo is “to give a particular direction” or “to lay or draw a straight line”.  It was used, among other things, to indicate ordering an army to march to a certain point or to direct or steer a ship on its course.  Ordo means too many things to get into in depth.  Suffice to say that it can refer to the “methodical arrangement, class or condition.”  By extension it is applied to everything from the “orders” of the clergy, the way trees are planted, the lines of an army, or the banks of rowers in a ship.” And of course, it refers to the order of the prayers of Holy Mass. Cursus and ordo, conceptually related, set up a nice internal chiasmus, putting us, nobis, at the center of the construction.  Pacificus is a composite of pax and facio meaning “peacemaker” or “peaceable”.  Among the things devotio means are “fealty, allegiance, piety, devotion, zeal.”

I think tranquilla is ablative and that it goes with devotione instead of being nominative and thus matching up with Ecclesia.

Our Collect’s vocabulary gives us military and nautical imagery.

Try reading this prayer with the mental image of a ship.  Our ship’s great Captain sets our course upon the sea.  The Captain is so great that He can command the waters and winds.  I can see the ship as the Church in the world, the Church Militant.  We call the Catholic Church the “Barque of Peter”.  The sea it sails upon is the deep and turbulent world we live in.  The Captain is our Lord Jesus Christ, who calmed the stormy waters and commanded Peter to walk to Him upon them.  He entrusted His ship to Peter to steer it in His stead.  Once all has been made “ship-shape and Bristol fashion”, the Captain and His sailing-master use our zeal and work to steer the ship upon the course He sets, carrying us its crew to a safe haven.

The imagery almost vanishes when we have to wrench it out of Latin and into English.

LITERAL RENDERING:

Grant us, we beg, O Lord, both that the course of the world be set by your methodical peace producing plan for us and that your Church may be made joyful by means of tranquil devotion.

OBSOLETE ICEL (1973 translation of the 1970MR):

Lord,
guide the course of world events
and give your Church the joy and peace
of serving you in freedom.

Quite simply dreadful.

CURRENT ICEL:

Grant us, O Lord, we pray,
that the course of our world
may be directed by your peaceful rule
and that your Church may rejoice,
untroubled in her devotion
.

The translators thought tranquilla was nominative rather than ablative.  You decide.  Either way, this version is a great improvement over the dreadful obsolete version and it maintains the sense of the Latin original.

Before the creation of the universe God knew each one of us and desired us and loved us.  He called us into existence at a precise point in His great plan.  He gives us a part to play in that plan. He gives us the tools and talents we need to fulfill it.  If we devote ourselves to our state-in-life and strive to carry out His will, God will give us the actual graces we need because we are furthering His great plan.  In keeping with the imagery of the prayer, I suggest that our devotion can be like the wind the Captain uses to direct our courses.  We are more than just the “hands on deck”, hauling a rope or swabbing the deck.  We are not merely being pushed along. We play a vital part in the actual forward motion of the ship.  We truly depend on Him and Him alone. We do not of ourselves merit what He provides.

This could be a point of reflection as you receive Holy Communion devoutly and frequently.  Mysteriously, it is His plan and will that His work becomes our work and ours His.

He gives Himself to us so that we can be wholly His.

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VIDEO – Pontifical Swiss Guard

Have you seen this?

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