Daily Rome Shot 133

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged
5 Comments

#ASonnetADay – Sonnet 149. “Canst thou, O cruel! say I love thee not…”

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
1 Comment

Daily Rome Shot 132

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
3 Comments

Your Sunday Sermon Notes – 2nd Sunday after Easter (3rd of Easter – N.O.) 2021

Was there a GOOD point made in the sermon you heard at the Mass for your Sunday (obligation or none), either live or on the internet? Let us know what it was.

Too many people today are without good, strong preaching, to the detriment of all. Share the good stuff.

Also, are your churches opening up? What was attendance like?

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged
8 Comments

#ASonnetADay – Sonnet 148. “O me! what eyes hath Love put in my head…”

Posted in Poetry, Sonnet A Day | Tagged ,
1 Comment

Before “Alleluia!”, comes “Eli! Eli! Lama sabachthani?” – Wherein @FatherZ rants.

At The Catholic Thing Russell Shaw pressed on a neuralgic point in a discussion of what I call the “demographic sink hole” that is opening inexorably under the Church in these USA.

While at toward the end he brings up an optimistic angle to the crisis, the current facts are grim. Referring to recent Gallup survey numbers (HERE), Shaw reminds us that there has been a drop among self-identifying Catholics from 76% to 58% in two decades.

The American Church: Going, Going . . .

[…]

Take Sunday Mass attendance. Back in 1970, reports the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, 54.9 percent of American Catholics went to Mass every Sunday. A half-century later, on the eve of the pandemic, that had fallen to 21.1 percent. And now, the Center for Church Management at Villanova University projects an attendance rate in the neighborhood of 12 percent by next year or the year after.

Who can say where this decline will bottom out? Working from pre-pandemic numbers, Stephen Bullivant in his illuminating study of Catholic “disaffiliation” in the United States and Great Britain finds Mass attendance rates in both countries declining for the last fifty years “with no sign of abating.”

[…]

The positive point?

Shaw quotes Ratzinger in 1969 about a future spiritualized and simplified Church. Then, this:

After all, as a threadbare mantra of post-Vatican II Catholicism puts it, we are an Easter people. And doesn’t dying have to come before rising, for the American Church as much as for any of us?

How many times did we hear that phrase in seminary and elsewhere. “We are an Easter people! Alleluia is our name!”

Shaw rightly underscores that, before “Alleluia!” comes “Eli! Eli! Lama sabachthani?”

Which of those are we experiencing as a Church right now?

In this time of kenotic simplification, one group of Catholics in these USA is growing and growing strong: Catholics who want traditional sacred worship. The numbers are encouraging. During the last year quite a few younger priests have learned the traditional form of Holy Mass and have implemented it in their parishes. I don’t think we have accurate stats right now, because many of these initiatives have been handled quietly.

Two things are absolutely necessary to carry this forward, for the good of the Church and, frankly, the nation, is for these good people – who just want to be Catholic – to commit themselves to solid involvement in their parishes and chapels, not merely to drive in on Sunday and drive away until the next Sunday.

Firstly, never underestimate the power of an invitation.   By that I mean that you should be inviting to others to go with you to Holy Mass or to church for confession and other events.  Invitations can be grace-filled, pivotal, life-altering moments.  COVID has demoralized many.  It’s time to get to work.

Then, “be ready to give reasons for the hope that is in you”. And, going on with the next part of that line from 1 Peter 3:15: “do it with gentleness and reverence”. The Greek says, with prautes (mildness of disposition, humility) and phobos (fear, reverence).  To do that, you have to expand your knowledge of what you are about, your Cult, Code and Creed.  When you love something you want to share it with others.  When you love something you want to know more about it.  Perhaps this can be accomplished by forming “base communities” of authentic faith which will meet regularly to go over catechisms, current and traditional, and Scripture with reliable Catholic tools.

Consider these two imperatives in light of concrete encounters with new-comers at your TLM church or chapel.

Engaging with new-comers to a TLM is a liminal moment.   Some may be coming because they were invited, others out of curiosity.  No matter the motive, their arrival among you could be a pivotal faith life event for those new-comers.

It may be that what they experience there changes their lives.

You can be of help in that moment or you can harm.

What’s it going to be?

“With gentleness and reverence”.   With gentleness because these are people and these are tough times.  With reverence because this is in some way or another a Spirit-filled moment, not to be underestimated or squandered.

In his piece at The Catholic Thing, Shaw quoted Ratzinger:

On the brink of what may strike many as a gloomy future, it’s helpful to recall a prescient utterance by Joseph Ratzinger (the future Pope Benedict XVI), back in 1969.

Though he has been frequently quoted as predicting that “the Church will become small and will have to start afresh more or less from the beginning,” and adding that the process of shrinkage would be “hard going” and involve “tremendous upheavals,” he nonetheless also said this:

When the trial of this sifting is past, a great power will flow from a more spiritualized and simplified Church. [People who had lost sight of God] will discover the little flock of believers as something wholly new. They will discover it as a hope that is meant for them, an answer for which they have always been searching in secret.

Posted in Our Catholic Identity, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged ,
7 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 131

Photo by Bree Dail.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged
1 Comment

#ASonnetADay – Sonnet 147. “My love is as a fever longing still…”

Posted in Poetry, Sonnet A Day | Tagged ,
6 Comments

The “trowel” and the “sword”.  That’s what is needed now.

The other day we saw at the liberal outlet Religion New Service an absurd piece about supposed “liturgical reform” by a Jesuit.  It contained an attack on people who attend the Traditional Latin Mass. “Children and young people should not be allowed to attend such Masses.”  HERE

Today at Crisis there is a response to that piece.   There are several good points.  Among which…

[I]t’s still delightful to see Fr. Reese openly admit the power of the traditional Mass to draw souls. Only authoritative force, he believes, can stop children and young people from attending it!

The fact is, the Traditional Latin Mass is growing and growing fast.  It is not going away.  One senses that there is coordinated, incremental attack on Tradition mounting from high circles.   The Saint Peter’s Suppression was a sidewise attack on the Traditional Mass, which was more and more being celebrated each morning in the Basilica.   Now this RNS piece comes from a Jesuit.

What traditionalists are doing may appear peaceful, but we progressives know it is violent. They are violently tearing the focus of religion away from our utopia of love, tolerance, and well-being. They are setting their sights on something otherworldly, something outside, something higher. Their every genuflection is in rude defiance of the dogma we’ve so carefully instilled in the Church: God is more within than without; He is to be found in ourselves, in the spirit of our times, in the community, in interaction with other human beings. As Fr. Reese says, “More important than the transformation of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ is the transformation of the community into the body of Christ so we can live out the covenant we have through Christ.”

Modernism, the essence of which is the reduction of the supernatural to the natural, is alive and well in the Church.  Quite a few of the catholic Left seem to be immanentists.

They are predictably frightened by the resurgence of Traditional Mass, with its strong intimation of transcendence.

As the demographic sinkhole continues to yawn under the Church in these USA and elsewhere, the Traditional Latin Mass is growing.   All manner of truly stupid attacks have been and are being made on it and on the people who prefer it.   All in vain.

It seems to me that those who desire traditional sacred liturgy should do their best to shore up their gains and even get ready for more serious attacks, even persecution.   Think of Nehemiah.  After the Babylonian Exile, the Jews returned to Jerusalem.  The walls of the city had to be rebuilt.  Because various enemies threatened to attack, as the Jews worked on the walls they were armed.   The rediscovered Law was read to the people and the feasts were reestablished.

You who desire our traditional sacred liturgy need to work with your trowels in one hand and your swords in the other.   By “swords” I mean, rosaries and by “trowels” I mean corporal and spiritual works of mercy, active works at the parish or church, your concrete involvement.   You need to pray on your knees specifically in gratitude for the opportunities for worship which you have and for protection for your priests.   As nervous nellies of the hierarchy see the growth of the traditional Mass, instead of rejoicing and supporting the faithful in their charge the nervous nellies will have pangs of anxiety.   People tend to fear what they don’t understand. Too few have taken the time to learn the older forms and then spend enough time involved in their celebration to get familiar with the ethos in which they were not reared.  This is one reason why traditional Catholics remain the signal most marginalized group in the Church.  Any amount of energy and attention, TLC, will be rained down on other special groups.  Traditional Catholics occasionally get a handful of dirt.  It is the rare prelate who get it about these seriously committed Catholics.  As the demographic sink hole expands, I wonder how many have figured out that these people have close to 100% Mass attendance and are in general more generous in the collection than others.   I wonder how many priests and bishops realize that, were a little TLC be shown them, these young, committed Catholics would go to the wall for them.

Hence, the “trowel” and the “sword”.  That’s what is needed now.

Excel in prayers and in good works.

 

 

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Be The Maquis, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged
15 Comments

Feast of an incorruptible

Today is the feast of St. Bernadette Soubirous.  I am reminded by her feast of a post I wrote some time ago about “incorruptibles”, saints whose bodies do not decay in the normal course of such things.  HERE

According to the CDF document Cum sanctissima, one could celebrate her feast using the Traditional Latin Mass.  In the older, traditional calendar today is IV class.

If you are looking for something to do tonight, you might consider watching the classic movie Song of Bernadette.

US HERE – UK HERE

Posted in Saints: Stories & Symbols | Tagged
10 Comments