26 Dec: St. Stephen the Protomartyr, his Archconfraternity, the Octave

In addition to Boxing Day, and the day good King Wenceslaus went out, it is the feast of St Stephen. I hope all your snow is neat and crisp and even.

For my part I was content with 50 and green.

St. Stephen’s feast has been celebrated this day since the earliest centuries of the Church’s life.

We are also in the Octave of Christmas. Octaves are mysterious. For Holy Church time is suspended so that we can rest in the mystery of the feast.  In her wisdom, Holy Church “stops” her clock so that we contemplate the mystery of the feast from different angles, through different lenses.

St. Stephen reminds us of the consequences of discipleship.  He is usually depicted surrounded by people who are beating him to death with rocks.

Today, agents serving the “mystical body of Satan” – witting and unwitting – use Twitter to do that.

As I said, there are consequences of discipleship.

Are you ready for consequence in the days remaining to you?   Consequences can be more or less dramatic.  I think we need to get our heads into mental places wherein we can imagine even dire consequences.

I also congratulate all the members of the Archconfraternity of St. Stephen!  This is a guild of altar boy that started in England.  The first chapter ever outside of England was at my home parish of St. Agnes, in St. Paul.  In the sacristy there was a letter from the Archbishop of Westminster approving the chapter and each year on this day the new boys were enrolled.

I am enrolled!  Just after I entered the Church.

We asked the Archbishop of Westminster for permission to start one here as well.  Hopefully, this new year will see it rise up!

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Rome Shot 33

 

 

Photo by Bree Dail.

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#ASonnetADay – GUEST Poet – G.K. Chesterton “The House Of Christmas”

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R.I.P. – Fr. Reginald Foster, OCD

UPDATE 27 Dec 2020:

Telegram from Francis to the Superior of the Carmelites:

Originally Published on: Dec 25, 2020 at 11:10

I had a note this morning that my old friend and Latin mentor, Carmelite Fr. Reginald Foster died on Christmas. He was a Carmelite of Holy Hill, WI.

I owe Reggie a terrific debt for the gift of his knowledge of the Latin language that he passed on and good years of friendship. He was a rara avis if ever there was one, simultaneously jovial and irascible. He was one of the smartest, keenest minds I’ve ever known.

He said a lot of things that shocked people and wasn’t in the least the picture of the cleric.  I think that a lot of the time, he said things to shock because he was a little bored.  He had 1000MHz more brain speed than any one in the room, and a virtually photographic memory.   If he got on your case about something, holy angels help you.  However, he was astonishingly kind.  When I was studying with him in Rome during one of the really intense summer courses for advanced students I had a tumble and badly injured my ankle. Foster came to visit me every single day… bringing homework sheets – the legendary LUDI DOMESTICI.

Fr. Foster could veer from curmudgeon to Samaritan in an instant, and he could be both at the same time.  Many were the times I spotted him in Rome sitting on a curb with a homeless guy or giving him his sandwich out of his briefcase.   Affable and gruff.  Chipper and brusque.  And I found that, once you got past the first layer of the encounter and he relaxed a bit, the man truly was a priest down to his nails.   He suffered at the hands of his order and ecclesiastics and he was not happy at all about certain clerical doings.

Foster was, of course, for years in Rome writing Latin for the Holy See and also teaching. Thousands of priests passed through his “experiences” and, today, when we read important documents of pontiffs past, we are often reading Reggie’s Latin.

In his last years he had physical ailments, which were not entirely not his fault.

I will pray for my old friend, whom I’ve known since the early ’80s, and I commend him to Our Lady of Mount Carmel.

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#ASonnetADay – GUEST Poem – Christina Rossetti, “In the bleak midwinter”

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MUSIC: London Oratory Schola – Sacred Treasures of Christmas @LondonOrat

Charles Cole of the London Oratory let me know in advance about a new recording of Christmas and Epiphany music.

This boys choir is one of the finest in the world.

It has “seasonal” sections, so there is music appropriate through the Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin. Amongst the composers represented are Victoria, Guerrero, Palestrina, Lassus, Clemens, Sheppard and Tallis.

This album is wonderful.    I’m so glad to have it.

Sacred Treasures Of Christmas

US HERE – UK HERE

Here is just a few tastes of some tracks.

Sacred Treasures of Christmas from London Oratory Schola on Vimeo.

He also said that they are going to re-release

Sacred Treasures of Spain – for a while unavailable…

US HERE – UK HERE

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Bad Liturgical Idea #7548023

How ridiculous are things getting?

This is an indication.

From Core77:

Industrial Designer Solves Problem of Social-Distancing Priests Baptizing Babies with Squirt Guns

Joshua Skirtich’s 3:16 Magnum Baptism squirt gun

How does a priest baptize a baby while adhering to social distancing? Industrial designer Joshua Skirtich observed the new trend of using squirt guns loaded with holy water.

[… pictures of dopey priests pointing squirt guns at babies… ]

It’s obviously disturbing to see an adult pointing any type of firearm-like device at a baby. Skirtich came up with something far better. Here’s his project:

3:16 Magnum

Recently, Catholic priests began using squirt guns loaded with holy water to baptize from afar. Photos of these Covid-19 Baptisms showcase uniformed men holding vibrant, plastic, toys for what is normally a serious, sacred ceremony. I initially thought to redesign the gun as a joke, but later realized it as a serious opportunity to design a premium squirt gun – something that has never really had a reason to exist.

The gun’s silhouette is a cross, the most important symbol of Christianity. The red cross floating in acrylic doubles as crosshairs (to aim with) and another nod to Christianity.

Three holes in the barrel signify ” the father, the son, and the holy spirit,” a doctrine used to explain the complex structure of God being three entities at once. During a baptism, the priest will say “I baptize you in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.”

No.

Just, No.

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#ASonnetADay – 126. “O thou, my lovely boy, who in thy power…”

And so we come to the end of the “Fair Youth Sonnets”.

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Rome Shot 32

Photo by Bree Dail.

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Rome Shot 31

Photo by Bree Dail.

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