ACTION ITEM! Support a worthy apostolate: TREASURES OF THE CHURCH

Not too long ago, I posted about a miraculous healing that occurred in New York, Long Island area.  The occasion was a presentation about holy relics by Fr. Carlos Martins, who has an apostolate called Treasures Of The Church.

It is a fantastic apostolate and I know Fr. Martins, whom I consider a good friend.

You might remember that, a few years ago, the body of St. Maria Goretti was brought to these USA and she was taken to many parishes around the country.  Fr. Martins organized that tour.

PRIESTS AND BISHOPS!   

If you want to do something amazing for your people, a great moment of evangelization, contact Treasures Of The Church.  Ask if Fr. Martins could come with his amazing presentation about relics.  He has told me about spectacular conversions and physical healings that have come about from contact with the astonishing collection of holy relics he brings and displays.

Dear readers, drop in at the site – Treasures Of The Church.  There is a donation button.  The apostolate depends on donations.  People are looking for good causes these days.  Along with those I have always presented – the TMSM of which I am president, the Military Archdiocese, Our Lady of Hope Clinic – you can hardly imagine a better cause than Treasures Of The Church.   Send him a donation and tell him I sent you.

BTW… the schedule on the website shows that Fr. Martins will be working in Wisconsin and Minnesota during the rest of April and into May.

Posted in ACTION ITEM!, Saints: Stories & Symbols, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged , ,
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ASK FATHER: Face mask vesting prayer in Latin?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Dear Father, do you know a good vesting prayer in Latin, or could you compose one, for putting on a facemask?

The questioner seeks to tickle the funny bone, of course.

As you know there are beautiful and quite serious prayers that priests and bishops ought to be saying when they vest for Mass, each piece having its own prayer. There are also prayers for washing hands before vesting and also for the cassock and surplice for servers.

The prayers are important. An exorcist friend told me that one of the people he was helping was able to see, during Mass, the demons attacking the priest and, like armor, his vestments and the holy angels protecting him.

That said, we can also have a sense of humor.

I once posted a prayer for the clipping on the microphone (I hate those things).

Here is something I cobbled up for your amusement.

Ad personam dum in faciem imponitur

Dómine, qui me indígnum Tuam índuisti in persónam, fac ut quámvis personátus isto faciáli integuménto ad sacra mystéria accédo, fidélium tamen ánimas ad Te condúcere váleam et coram Te Tuam claritátem una cum eis fácie ad fáciem videámus.

You can ponder your own perfect and yet smooth translation after your purchase of delectable…

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Latin, Lighter fare, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged ,
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#ASonnetADay – Sonnet 154. “The little Love-god lying once asleep…”

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Happy Talk Like Shakespeare Day 2021!

In the past, National “Talk Like Shakespeare Day” has like a prefatory defalcator stealthily crept in upon my dawning awareness.  Not so this year.

During this last year, under the inspiration of Sir Patrick Stewart and at the admonition of a reader, I undertook to record my own surely inadequate readings of all 154 of the Bard’s well-known Sonnets.   Well- known, I say, though not will much conviction.  I suspect that their reading in the schools has been scant of late.  Indeed I speculate that fewer and fewer young skulls-full-of-mush have been exposed to the opera of Avon’s Swan.  It’s, after all, racist… or something.

On this 113th day of the year I have of yore posted short vignettes gleaned from the Bard’s lesser know oeuvres.  Last year, for example, we read part of Two Gentlemen of Corona.    On another anniversary of Will’s birth – and also his death! – two dies natales on one day – we explored A Most Tragikal Hystory of Obama I and The Trumping of the Shrew.

This year I became distracted from Shakespeare’s lesser know play Trump’s Ballots Lost – a dark comedy involving fraud and elder abuse – by my alarming discovery that some of the pages I was studying were actually signed by Christopher Marlowe.  No, really… Christopher Marlowe.  Over and over again on the margins with increasingly unsteady hand.

I’m still working on deciphering the wretched thing, hastily scribbled as it was on the back of cocktail napkins and stained paper placemats from some thermopolium in Deptford.   It’s an abruptly unfinished play called, The Tragical History of the Rise and Fall of Doctor Fauci. A curious work, along with a sonnet possessed of a rather inept incipit, “Here’s looking at thee, Kyd, thou three inch fool…”.   That “three inch fool image could only be ripped off from the “shrew play”, though the beginning of that phrase also rang a far off bell.  It’ll come to me.

Bottom line: I think that “Here’s looking at thee, Kyd” and and Doctor Fauci were really written by Shakespeare himself and not Marlowe at all, though Shakespeare took great pains to make it look like Marlowe’s work!  The practicing of the signature, the strange choice of paper, from Deptford.  Think about it.

Anyway, I’ll get these out to the readership in good course.

Meanwhile, Happy Talk Like Shakespeare Day!

And remember this sage advice you male readers out there….

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Posted in Lighter fare, Poetry | Tagged , ,
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IRELAND – extreme COVID-1984 repression – OUTDOOR confession illegal

The last acceptable prejudice.

I, for one, welcome our Great Reset Overlords.

I won’t ever again have to tell you to…

GO TO CONFESSION!

(While you still can.)

Posted in Religious Liberty, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged
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Daily Rome Shot 137

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#ASonnetADay – Sonnet 153. “Cupid laid by his brand and fell asleep…”

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#ASonnetADay – Sonnet 152. “In loving thee thou know’st I am forsworn…”

Posted in Poetry, Sonnet A Day | Tagged ,
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Daily Rome Shot 136

Photo by Bree Dail.

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Watch and think

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Posted in The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged
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