BOOK ALERT: Collected essays and reviews by the late, brilliant Fr. Paul Mankowski, SJ

Last September 2020, my friend Fr. Paul Mankowski, SJ, died, far too young. Fr. Mankowski was everything that several highly visible Jesuits are not: Catholic, deeply faithful and amazingly intelligent.  He was a Biblical scholar who taught in Rome for years and ran afoul of his Jesuit overlords, who kicked him around for a while and tried to keep him quiet.  He wound up teaching in these USA … until the end.

Jesuit at Large: Essays and Reviews by Paul Mankowski, S.J.

US HERE – UK HERE

One of his very best essays (not in this collection – waaaaay too hard) was in the famous “Five Cardinals Book” (Remaining in the Truth of Christ) which was issued at the time of the first problematic Synod (“walking together”) on the Family. Essay… a whole chapter. Very difficult. This book, you might recall, was delivered to all the members of the Synod in the mail boxes at the Paul VI audience hall, sent to them through the Vatican Post. The organizers caught wind of what was in those envelopes and then STOLE the books from the mailboxes… which is a crime under the laws of the Vatican City State.

George Weigel has put together a collection of some of Mankowski’s penned offerings. I have been looking through them, remembering quite a few after quite a few years.

They are all worth it and timely.

Take note of his review of Jesuit homosexualist activist James Martin’s dreadful book which has made the knees of so many bishops get weak, entitled “Pontifiex Minimus“.

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Daily Rome Shot 288

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Reaction to the cruel suppression in Guadalajara

I recently shared the sad news about the cold suppression of the faithful in Guadalajara by Francisco Card. Robles Ortega following the cruel and unnecessary Traditionis custodes.

I warmly invite you to resist this cruelty on the part of bishops and Rome by uniting yourself to an informal group committed to daily prayers and acts of mortification in defense of and for the preservation of traditional sacred liturgical worship.  From beneath the jackboot of Traditionis custodes rise up as a Custos TraditionisHERE

I received this press release.

Faithful Ask To Be Heard by Cardinal Francisco Robles Ortega
Monday, September 27, 2021

Press Release

More than 150 families left in distress

In view of the decree issued by Cardinal Francisco Robles Ortega in which he suppresses the quasi-parish of San Pedro en Cadenas in Guadalajara, Mexico, the parishioners who were once part of it are asking to be heard and for the mandate to be reversed.

Without previous dialogue on the part of the Archdiocese with the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter (FSSP) nor with the parishioners, the quasi-parish that had as its seat the Church of Our Lady of Pilar in the Historic Center of Guadalajara was eradicated, leaving the parishioners without a series of canonical rights and thus more than 150 families in distress who used to be part of it.

The mandate was issued with the justification of putting into effect the motu proprio Traditionis Custodes (Guardians of the Tradition) issued by Pope Francis in July of this year, where he points out a list of measures to be implemented regarding the Eucharistic celebrations under the Roman Missal of 1962, and leaving to the diocesan bishops the exclusive competence to authorize, in their dioceses, the use of that Missal. It should be noted that nowhere in the pontifical document does it suggest or mandate the suppression of parishes or quasi-parishes already erected under the previous motu proprio
Summorum Pontificum issued by Pope Benedict XVI or before.

For ex- parishioners, who received the news with great surprise, this measure has the forebodes an eventual extinction of the celebration of the Mass according to the Missal of St. John XXIII in the Archdiocese of Guadalajara especially because, despite an announcement in a press conference last July by Cardinal Robles Ortega indicating he would first dialogue with the FSSP, there were no conversations on the subject prior to the declaration.

The edict destroys the work of more than a decade of a devout and vibrant community and leaves the faithful with the uncertainty of who will be responsible in the long term for the celebrations of the Traditional Mass, since it does not ratify the priests of the FSSP in their pastoral responsibility for the faithful with whom they have labored since 2009. This is unfortunate since the priests of this society of apostolic life are experts in these celebrations and their charisma and reason for existing is to attend the parishioners who desire to attend so called Tridentine Mass.

Although the Eucharistic celebrations will continue, they will be limited to the existing ones without being able to celebrate masses for weddings, funerals, or first communions without seeking permission. Meanwhile the documents fails to specify from whom such permissions must now be sought. In addition, they will only be able to be held in the Church of Our Lady of the Pilar, San Javier de las Colinas and in the chapel of Casa Cristo Rey, where the priests of the FSSP in Guadalajara are located.

The parishioners are afraid of being left without the ancient rite that was used by the Catholic Church for more than 1,500 years and that was changed to the so-called Novus Ordo after the Second Vatican Council. The worry stems from that fact that around the world some bishops have eradicated these celebrations completely, such as in the Diocese of Alajuela, Costa Rica where they suddenly cancelled the only Latin Mass in the country and suspended the diocesan priest who celebrated it for deciding, in response, to celebrate the Novus Ordo in Latin.

Despite these measures, which the parishioners point out as cruel and unjust, they have reaffirmed their unwavering fidelity and service to the Catholic Church and the successor of St. Peter, hoping to be heard by Cardinal Francisco Robles Ortega.

FRUITS

In the little more than twelve years that the FSSP has been in Guadalajara, many people have returned to the Catholic Church and to the practice of their faith thanks to its apostolic work. During this time, the community has given the Church four priests, one religious sister, conversions and baptisms of non-Christian adults who are following an authentic spiritual growth. Parishioners participate in a variety of groups, catechesis, and apostolic work such as feeding the poor at hospitals, working in an orphanage, evangelizing in the street, conducting door to door missions, and attending the sick and dying in the hospitals at night and when people come to them because their own priests can’t be found.

Press contact
Mariana Mota
(228) 202 4695
What’s App 3310387495

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ACTION ITEM! Help 13 and 11 year olds raise money for a pregnancy center. – UPDATE

UPDATE:

From Xavier and Ronan.

We would like to thank you and your readers again for your support for The Pregnancy Care Center. We raised $12,197 with 102 donations, and we broke the record again for most money raised! This year’s Hike for Life raised more money for the Pregnancy Care Center than any other year. The money will be put to good use helping the moms and babies who are in need.

Thank you so much for your generosity! Our family is remembering you all in our prayers and Mass intentions.

You people make me get choked up a little sometimes.


Originally Published on: Sep 21, 2021 at 17:54

We are all looking for good ways to support the Church materially right now without our money going to… well… sub-optimal places.  I recently mentioned that purchases of wine support the wonderful Benedictine monks of Le Barroux.

Consider this.

Some time ago, two youngsters asked for my help to raise money for a pregnancy care center.   They’ve written again!

A few years ago you helped me raise money to help The Pregnancy Care Center by asking your readers to donate, and because of you and your readers’ help, we made the record for most money raised ever. My brother Ronan and I are raising money again this year, and because it was so successful last time, I was wondering if you would be interested in helping The Pregnancy Care Center again. If not, I completely understand that, I just thought I would ask in case you were interested. Some information about us and the Center (and a link to donate) is below if you would like to share. We are offering our daily Masses and rosaries for our donors in the month of September.

And their pitch for 2021!

Hello! We are Xavier and Ronan Howard from Wisconsin. We are 13 and 11 years old, and we are the 3rd and 4th out of 9 children. Coming from a big family, we love babies and want to help babies who are in danger of abortion. We are raising money for The Pregnancy Care Center of Rockford’s Hike for Life, and we were wondering if you would like to help us by donating. The Care Center is devoted to helping moms and babies who come to them in need. Since 1983, they have been saving babies from abortion, helping moms to care for them, and offering many other services.

Here is the link if you would like to donate. Any amount helps. We are offering our daily Masses and rosaries for our donors throughout the month of September.

https://secure.ministrysync.com/ministrysync/event/website/?m=5337757

Whaddya say?  Folks?

Their parents confirmed that I could post the photo they sent.

These are good kids from a great family.  They’ve served Mass for me.

Here is where they are right now.

UPDATE 21 September

A note from the boys…

Thank you so much for posting on your blog! We were able to raise more than $3,000 in a single day because of you and your readers, and donations came in the days after, too. Before you posted, we had gotten about 250 page views but only 11 donors, and now we are up to 55 donors. Most of them were your readers. Because of you, we reached our initial goal and have now raised it to the amount I raised 3 years ago. I have gotten some of my younger siblings to help us fundraise by posing for pictures. Here are the pictures in case you want to see.

We are praying for you and your readers in thanks for your generosity.


From 2018… 503%.

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Card. Sarah’s latest interview includes comments on liturgy and Latin and Tradition, Benedict XVI, the Synod, and Vatican II

Do you read French?  If not, use some online translation option and read the interview the great Robert Card. Sarah did at cath.ch.  HERE

The interviewer kept coming back around to questions about liturgy and Latin and tradition.  The Cardinals answers are worth pondering.

Just few tastes… I don’t have time to translate it all:

[…]

Walking together is the definition of the word synod.

No. What matters is not the walk, but the search for the truth. Truth does not arise from consensus, it precedes us. If we dialogue, if we meet, it is because we seek together the truth that sets one free. Each comes with his vision, his ideas. But if I’m being honest, I have to admit that my vision is incomplete and be prepared to embrace the other’s more complete and true vision.
If we look at what is happening on the German synodal path, I don’t know where it will lead us. Towards a total reinvention of the Church? We will take what everyone says to establish a consensus. But the truth of the Church is ahead of us. It cannot be made by us.

[…]

Respect for the liturgical form is therefore central for faith.

I am in awe of other religions. Muslims, Buddhists, all pray the same way. I don’t understand why we Christians are fighting over these issues. Faith is a gift from God. We waste too much energy in unnecessary liturgical conflicts.

[…]

You don’t want a lukewarm Church.

The Church must speak a precise clear language that speaks doctrine and morals. Many bishops are silent or say vague things for fear of the media and negative reactions. We must ask the grace of God to increase our faith and to grow in his love. We don’t pray enough.

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Daily Rome Shot 286

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WDTPRS – 26th Ordinary Sunday: Out of our gourds with anger at God for not conforming to our will

We explore the mystery of true mercy this 26th Ordinary Sunday.

Perhaps we can pick up something helpful for dealing with the cruelty with which those of a traditional leaning are being treated by the papalatrous Modernists right now.  Perhaps they can pick something up from this about kicking people when they are down.

Our Collect for Sunday, slightly different from its ancestor in the ancient Gelasian Sacramentary, is also in the 1962 Missale Romanum for the 10th Sunday after Pentecost.

Deus, qui omnipotentiam tuam parcendo maxime et miserando manifestas, gratiam tuam super nos indesinenter infunde, ut, ad tua promissa currentes, caelestium bonorum facias esse consortes.

A consors is someone with whom you share a common destiny (cum, “with” + sors “lot, fate, destiny”).  Parco means, “to spare, have mercy, forbear to injure; forgive.”  We see this verb often in our prayers.  Think of the responses during the litanies: “Parce nobis, Domine… Spare us, O Lord!”

LITERAL VERSION:

O God, who manifest Your omnipotence especially by sparing and by being merciful, pour Your grace upon us unceasingly, so that You may make us, rushing to the things You have promised, to be coheirs of heavenly benefits.

OBSOLETE ICEL (1973):

Father, you show your almighty power, in your mercy and forgiveness. Continue to fill us with your gifts of love. Help us to hurry toward the eternal life you promise and come to share in the joys of your kingdom.

CURRENT ICEL (2011):

O God, who manifest your almighty power above all by pardoning and showing mercy, bestow, we pray, your grace abundantly upon us and make those hastening to attain your promises heirs to the treasures of heaven.

We can slip into the trap of associating justice only with the exercise of power.

Today we affirm the other side of power’s coin: mercy.

Nevertheless, the affirmation of God’s mercy does not diminish God’s justice.

One of the ways God reveals Himself as “almighty” is by being forgiving and sparing.

God knows all things which ever were, are or will be, as well as how each human action impacts every other throughout history.

For God, balancing mercy and justice is no problem at all.

For us, however, this balancing act is exceedingly difficult.  Our will and our limited intellect are wounded.  We struggle with passions. It is hard to see what is good and right and true and then rein in our emotions. We oscillate between being just and then being merciful. Bringing the two streams of mercy and justice together in just the right way is a tremendous challenge.  When we encounter a person who does this well, we are deeply impressed by him and hold him up as an example of wisdom because he seems to act more clearly as an image of God.  His example moves us because we know that we too must conform to God’s image.

When I catch myself out of balance with mercy and justice, I call to mind God’s will for Jonah.   God sent Jonah to Nineveh to tell them of their destruction by God in forty days.  For a change, the Ninevites believed this prophet and started doing penance, such that God did not destroy them.  Jonah was furious that they were not destroyed.

Let’s see that whole passage and find the flow the God’s teaching Jonah about compassion and peace in the Lord’s will.  This is chapter 4:

But this [God sparing the city because they did penance] was very displeasing to Jonah, and he became angry. 2 He prayed to the Lord and said, “O Lord! Is not this what I said while I was still in my own country? That is why I fled to Tarshish at the beginning; for I knew that you are a gracious God and merciful, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love, and ready to relent from punishing. 3 And now, O Lord, please take my life from me, for it is better for me to die than to live.” 4 And the Lord said, “Is it right for you to be angry?” 5 Then Jonah went out of the city and sat down east of the city, and made a booth for himself there. He sat under it in the shade, waiting to see what would become of the city.

6 The Lord God appointed a bush, [Heb kikayon varying versions, castor oil plant, and in LXX gourd vine, Jerome says “ivy”] and made it come up over Jonah, to give shade over his head, to save him from his discomfort; so Jonah was very happy about the bush. 7 But when dawn came up the next day, God appointed a worm that attacked the bush, so that it withered. 8 When the sun rose, God prepared a sultry east wind, and the sun beat down on the head of Jonah so that he was faint and asked that he might die. He said, “It is better for me to die than to live.”

9 But God said to Jonah, “Is it right for you to be angry about the bush?” And he said, “Yes, angry enough to die.” 10 Then the Lord said, “You are concerned about the bush, for which you did not labor and which you did not grow; it came into being in a night and perished in a night. 11 And should I not be concerned about Nineveh, that great city, in which there are more than a hundred and twenty thousand persons who do not know their right hand from their left, and also many animals?”

Jonah seems to get everything wrong.  He is “out of his gourd”, if we go with the Septuagint. But God tries to bring him around.

I have to add this.  In the Abruzzi region of central Italy there is a tiny, amazingly well preserved jewel of a 12th c. Romanesque church, Santa Maria in Valle Porclaneta.  The pulpit is magnificently carved with reliefs, including Jonah sitting under his gourd vine.  God is above and the worm is below.  I think it captures the prophet perfectly.

Let’s not be out of our gourds with anger because God does not punish the wicked in the way we would like him to.

One way in which we act the most according to God’s image, behaving as Christ’s good consortes, is precisely when we act with compassion.

In biblical language, such as the Hebrew racham, compassion is often interchangeable with mercy.  The Latin word compassio comes from Latin cum+patior, “to suffer/endure with” someone.  We are moved when we witness suffering and attendant compassion because they reveal in a mysterious way who we are as human beings and how we ought to act.

In a famous passage from the Council’s Gaudium et spes, we are taught that Christ came into the world to reveal man more fully to himself (GS 22).  Christ did this in His every word and deed during His earthly life.  His supreme moment of revelation to us about who we are was His Passion and death on the Cross and subsequent rising from the tomb.  When we imitate His Passion, in sacrificial love and in the genuine “with suffering” which is compassion, we act as we were made by God to act.   In sincere and concrete acts of compassion we, in our own turn, reveal man more fully to himself!  We in turn show God’s image to our neighbor.  Only the stony, cold and dead are not to be moved by examples of genuine compassion rooted in the sacrificial love which is charity.

Pope John Paul II wrote in his first encyclical, Redemptor hominis 9, that “man cannot live without love”.  By this he meant both the love we give and the love we receive.

Unmerited acts of charity, mercy, and compassion make visible to our neighbor the God after whose likeness we ourselves are fashioned.

In sincere and concrete acts of compassion, in our biblical “bowels of mercy” (Colossians 3:12), we in our turn reveal man more fully to himself.

Individuals can by their example effect great changes in a society.

If one person can do much, how much more could be done by armies of men and women thirsting for holiness and righteousness (i.e., a Church), striving to act in compassion, justice and mercy?

By His justice, God will give us what we deserve.

By His mercy, He will not give us certain elements of what we deserve.

By His pouring forth graces upon us, God gives us what we do not deserve.

God’s justice must be received with joyful trepidation, whether we want it or not.

God’s mercy we must beg for with humble confidence.

God’s grace, unmerited by us, we embrace with exultant gratitude.

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This is the sort of person whom the House voted that it’s okay to kill up to birth

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