#ASonnetADay – 120. “That you were once unkind befriends me now…”

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Daily Rome Shot 27

Photo by Bree Dail.

 

 

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More bad news from the Vatican. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

Ed Pentin reports on more fresh hell from the Vatican.

What this boils down to, I think, is demonic gender bending theory and eventual ruthless population control/reduction through contraception (willing or not), sterilization (willing or not), and euthanasia (willing or not).   What this “gender equality” thing is wrapped up in fits together with the contraceptive and abortive mentality: separate actual procreation from procreative acts.  That ultimately must lead to using people as mere objects for your own end.   Hence, the outcome of this sewer of aligned goals, the cloaca maxima, will be eugenic population control.

I suspect that, however the Wuhan Devil got out of the lab, once out, it was seen as a way to test drive all sorts of societal engineering schemes, use populations as lab rats to see how far they could be pushed, repressed, humiliated through fear of death.   Fear is death is what has through the ages driven philosophy and religious longing.  However, once the sense of the transcendent was wiped out of the common consciousness, then it became easier to frighten people: they have no yearning for the life hereafter and see death as the final terminus.

The prime culprit in the West in the obliteration of a common sense of the transcendent is, of course, the Catholic Church.  The erosion of the transcendent and the exaltation of the imminent was wrought through the devolution of our sacred liturgical worship, firstly, along with enervation of our preaching.   Slowly but sure, as the bulwarks crumbled, the well-organized and patient forces of evil coalesced and began to have their way through academia, the entertainment industry, new reporting.

Now those forces have massive backing from atheistic Communism.   The well-organized and long-term thinking Communists, Masons and the homosexualist activists have finally pushed beyond the heterogeneous catalyst phase into a self-sustaining chain-reaction through society.

And rather than use the spiritual and material tools that the Church can use to combat this evil, her leaders are surrendering.

So, some news from the Vatican.

Vatican Launches Education Collaboration with UN to Promote Sustainability and Gender Equality

Former United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, the economist Jeffrey Sachs, and the director general of UNESCO are among those speaking at the little-publicized launch of a Vatican-U.N. collaboration aimed at educating the world in sustainable lifestyles, gender equality and a culture of peace and nonviolence.

The Dec. 16-17 Vatican Youth Symposium, hosted by the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, is serving as the launch for a collaboration between Pope Francis’ Global Compact on Education initiative, which invites a new humanism based on a global change of mentality, and Mission 4.7, a U.N.-backed advisory group of civil and political leaders aiming to meet the educational target (numbered 4.7) of the U.N.’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

The Vatican said the symposium is focusing in particular on the need to promote a new kind of education, “one that will overcome the current globalization of indifference and the culture of waste.” 

The SDGs are 17 interlinked goals drawn up by the U.N. General Assembly calling for urgent action to achieve “a better and more sustainable future for all.” The SDGs were created in 2015, the same year as Pope Francis published his environmental encyclical Laudato Si(On Care for Our Common Home), and their chief architect is Columbia University economist JeffreySachs, a population control advocate and ally of socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders.

SDG number 4 strives for “quality education” and within that goal, target 4.7 aims to “ensure all learners acquire knowledge and skills needed to promote sustainable development, including among others through education for sustainable development and sustainable lifestyles, human rights, gender equality, promotion of a culture of peace and non-violence, global citizenship, and appreciation of cultural diversity and of culture’s contribution to sustainable development.”

Now in its fifth year, this week’s Vatican Youth Symposium has always served to promote the SDGs, even though targets 3.7 and 5.6 include “sexual and reproductive health services” — U.N. codewords for abortion and contraception.

Each symposium, including the current one, has been jointly organized by both the Vatican and the youth branch of the Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN) — an organization also directed by Sachs and partially funded by the pro-contraception and pro-gender theory Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (in 2016 it gave $1 million to the organization). 

Ban Ki-moon, who was the U.N.’s secretary general from 2007-2016, is patron of the Mission 4.7 advisory group, along with Audrey Azoulay, the director general of UNESCO who is known for her promotion of “gender equality” and LGBT rights. Azoulay also took part in the re-launch of Francis’ Global Pact on Education in October.

Among Mission 4.7’s four co-chairs are Sachs and the chancellor of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, Bishop Marcelo Sánchez Sorondo. Members of its “high-level advisory group” include Jack Ma, founder of the Alibaba Group, the multi-billion-dollar Chinese multinational, also known as China’s equivalent of the online retail giant, Amazon, and Jennifer Gross, founder of the Blue Chip Foundation that aims to eradicate poverty by helping people achieve self-sufficiency. Other members include the heads of Scholas Occurrentes, an educational program for creating a culture of encounter backed by Pope Francis.

[…]

There’s more and you should have a look.

As the demographic sinkhole continue to yawn under the Church in the West – accelerated by the Wuhan Devil and perhaps soon by the US government puppet mastered by the ChiComs – we must continue to strive for a renewal, a revitalization of our sacred liturgical worship.

If we don’t fulfill the virtue of religion, we will be forever cast about like toys by the ever-more forceful coalition of evil powers.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, Si vis pacem para bellum!, Sin That Cries To Heaven, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices, What are they REALLY saying?, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , ,
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A good summary of why we are right to worry about the installation (not election) of Harris/Biden

While I have not abandoned hope at the gate of the hell that yawns before us, I am deeply alarmed.

A piece at Crisis today puts well some of my concerns.

Some bits and pieces to whet…my emphases

[…]

Aside from fervor for power, our new vice-president and president-assumptive fall outside of the usual historical groupings. In some ways, they stand alone.

[…]

While neither Biden nor his running mate stand out for selflessness or heroism or wit, they do satisfy the American appetite for firsts. Biden will be the oldest president to take the oath of office and the only commander-in-chief visibly impeded by early-stage dementia. He will also be the first “Catholic” president to celebrate abortion, and the only one to have officiated at a same-sex wedding…. Another first: never in our history has the electorate chosen—or had foisted upon them—an executive team so scant of intellect, character, charisma, or political philosophy.

The future court anthologizer of the wit and wisdom of Joe Biden will want to draw exclusively from his prepared speeches. There he does have a few vivid phrases to his credit—all of them, alas, plagiarized. When Joe is being Joe, off the cuff, he tends to maunder and make goofy boasts. …  Of late, his “gaffs” and slips have been of the Freudian stripe, as when he refers to the “Harris-Biden” team, or boasts of the “most extensive voter fraud organization in the world.” The wandering mind, like the wine-flooded brain, sometimes blurts the truth. In dementia veritas.

[…]

What was wanted, to fulfill the Obama legacy, was progressive vision—the vision of Kamala. Kindred spirits and all that. Or, as a poet friend of mine said, “spider sees eye to eye with spider.” …  The concealment strategy—along with mail-in votes, “glitch” prone machines, magic suitcases, speedy interstate ballot-delivery, etc.– worked to install, if not elect, Biden.

[…]

Even among pre-selected reporters, a “rogue” will occasionally shout out a rude question: “Mr. President, are you the ‘Big Guy’?”  “Did you lift the China tariffs because of Hunter’s deals?” “Which method of abortion, Mr. President, do you consider more humane, vacuuming or dismemberment?”

[…]

Clearly, such an off-putting V.P. choice—rejected even by her home state in the primary— would not give Biden the “bounce” that the much-maligned Palin brought to John McCain. So how did the 2020 Democratic ticket manage its historic win?  Could Biden’s magnetism account for it?

Or was the election stolen, despite “no wide-spread evidence of fraud”? To think that dirty tricks undid the will of the people is indeed an appalling thought. But more ominous yet is the possibility that the election truly reflected the will of the people.

Philosophers, from the ancients to Oswald Spengler, have warned that it is in the nature of all democracies to self-destruct. If America really elected Biden/Harris, we may have reached that borne from which there is no turning back. Spengler warned that “democracy becomes its own destroyer after money has destroyed intellect.

[…]

For a glimpse into how Harris’s domestic policy will impact Christians, google “Kamala Harris and David Daleiden.”  Or consult Planned Parenthood’s “9 Reasons to Love Kamala Harris.”  Once you translate into plain English the abortion giant’s smarmy euphemisms, you will have nine reasons to resist President Harris— and to pray, de profundis, that President Trump stops the steal.

Do I hear an “Amen!”?

St. Joseph, pray for us.

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Daily Rome Shot (not) 26

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16 Dec – Blood of St Januarius did NOT liquify. What more does this year need?

From what I understand via a phone message (I’m on an airplane) today in Naples the Blood of St Januarius did NOT miraculously liquify today!

St Januarius (d c 305), known in Italian as San Gennaro, is the patron saint of Naples where the faithful venerate vials of his dried blood which regularly liquefies on three days a year: 19 September (the saint’s feast), 16 December (anniversary of the 1631 eruption of the volcano Vesuvius which looms over the Bay of Naples), and the 1st Sunday of May (the day of the translation or moving of the saint’s relics to Naples).

Historically when his blood does not liquify… it’s a bad omen.

The Wuhan Devil.

Harris Biden.

Now this.

Posted in Global Killer Asteroid Questions |
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My View For Awhile: Party Edition

I’m off to the East Coast and praying for adequate weather.

My last flight – this is so strange – was on 16 July. At oh dark the airport ramp is mostly – this is so strange – empty.

So is the terminal.

Connection ought to be smooth though I’m going the wrong direction for my destination. I had to change flights last night. My original plan was to fly from another city (cheaper than the outrageous fees from MSN) and stay with friends. Getting underway to that town I had a call to inform me they had been exposed to the Wuhan Devil. Hence, change of plans.

I should get to my destination before the bulk of the bad weather has much of an effect and I am asking the Holy Angels to mitigate the whole storm.

My I just say that I hate these melodramatic face diapers?

UPDATE

Rosy fingered dawn for the trade-off.

UPDATE

Next leg.

A shot of the 934th Airlift Wing.

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#ASonnetADay – 119. “What potions have I drunk of Siren tears…” (The Bard gets it wrong.)

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Fervorino from a Votive Mass for the Deliverance from Death in Time of Pestilence (The Wuhan Devil)

I’ve been asked by a couple of people to post a fervorino from yesterday, for a Votive Mass in time of Pandemic.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, Sermons, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants |
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ASK FATHER: I have heard of “Apostolic Pardon” but “Apostolic Blessing”?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I have heard of “Apostolic Blessing” — is that the same thing but with a different name (eg: “reconciliation” == “confession” == “Sacrament of Penance”)?

I’ve written about the IMPORTANT Apostolic Pardon quite a few times.

The Apostolic Pardon is given to a dying person, hopefully with the all the Last Rites including Viaticum.  The Pardon imparts to a person in the state of grace a plenary indulgence which means remission of all temporal punishment due to sin.   Usually confession (when possible) and absolution are given before and/or anointing which can also have the effect of forgiveness of sins when a person is not sui compos.

Sometimes the Apostolic Pardon is called the Apostolic Blessing.  Why?  Because in the older, traditional form of the Pardon, the priest also blessed.  In the newer, post-Conciliar form he does not.

PRIESTS SHOULD HAVE A FORM MEMORIZED.

In the newer form the priest says:

Ego facultáte mihi ab Apostólica Sede tribúta, indulgéntiam plenáriam et remissiónem ómnium peccatórum tibi concédo, in nómine Patris, et Fílii, + et Spíritus Sancti. Amen.

“By the authority which the Apostolic See has given me, I grant you a full pardon and the remission of all your sins in the name of the Father, and of the Son, + and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.”

In the older, traditional form the priest says:

Ego facultate mihi ab Apostolica Sede tributa, indulgentiam plenariam et remissionem omnium peccatorum tibi concedo et benedico te. In nomine Patris, et Filii, + et Spirtus Sancti, Amen.

“By the Faculty which the Apostolic See has given me, I grant you a plenary indulgence and the remission of all your sins, and I bless you. In the Name of the Father and the Son + and the Holy Spirit. Amen.”

It is clear that this blessing/pardon does NOT function like the absolution given in the confessional.

However, you will want to say, “But the prayer says, ‘I grant you REMISSION of all your SINS’!”

We get into the weeds now with technical language about “forgiveness”.

In English, our different words for “forgive” all have about the same impact.  But in Latin they don’t.

For example, in the absolution after the traditional Confiteor the priest uses technical words to absolve…

Indulgéntiam, + absolutionem et remissiónem peccatórum nostrórum tríbuat nobis omnípotens et miséricors Dóminus. … May the + almighty and merciful Lord grant us pardon, absolution, and remission of our sins.

In this case, the three words do three different things.  Each term has a nuance of meaning for logical phases and, with each term, we are reconciled with the Church, ourselves and God in a different way – those different ways being all one way.

Indulgentia stems from God’s merciful love which is the forgiveness of the guilt.  Absolutio refers to the loosing of prescribed penances. Remissio is forgiveness not of guilt but of punishment due to the sin and reconciliation with the Church.

The whole formula is a relic from the penal code of the early Church and in the middle ages distinguishing THREE STAGES of reconciling the sinner with God and the Church.   The FIRST was internal forum… that’s like confession today and what followed was forgiveness of sin which is indulgentia.   In the form for anointing, this remains, “Indulgeat tibi Dominus quidquid per auditum … deliquisti”  The second was a canonical absolution from the prescribed penitence, an absolutio – loosing.  The third step was reconciliation and the reinstatement of the person to the peace of the Church, which is remissio.

For form could be rendered: “May Almighty God blot out the guilt of our sin, remit the punishment due to it, and restore us to His friendship.”

When the priest ascends the altar after the Prayers at the Foot of the Altar, he says two prayer (again, the Roman thing with stages)

Take away from us our iniquities, we beseech Thee, O Lord, that we may be worthy to enter with pure minds into the Holy of Holies, through Christ our Lord. Amen.
We beseech Thee, O Lord, by the merits of Thy Saints, whose relics are here, and of all the Saints, that Thou wouldst vouchsafe to forgive (indulgere) me all my sins. Amen.

Over the centuries the meaning of the terms has slid around a little, but that’s the basic through underlying the repetition of words that seem (in English) to mean the same thing.  In Latin, they didn’t and they still don’t.  Not exactly, at least.   The Roman “genius” works in that systematic way.

In sum, that “remissio” of the Apostolic Pardon or Blessing remits not the sins (which must be done through sacramental absolution or anointing) but rather the punishment due to the forgiven sins.

So… after all this… do you see how important it is for you to go to confession regularly?  None of us know the day or hour of our going to the Just Judge.

This is also why in the Litany of Saints we have that critical petition…

A subitanea et improvisa morte, libera nos, Domine.

From a sudden and unprovided death, save us, O Lord.

Sudden death is one thing.   It can be a grace, as opposed to a long, drawn out agony.   On the other hand, for some people the long agony is a grace, for it gives them the chance to repent and offer their suffering in reparation for their sins.

So, sudden or foreseen or long or quick… that’s one thing.

Unprovided is another. 

An “unprovided” death is a death without access to the last sacraments, especially absolution from a priest.

That’s a scary thought…. especially if you haven’t been to confession for a  long time.

When did you last go to confession?

Dear readers, one of the main reason I put myself into this blog, my force multiplier, is because every single one of you is going to die.  I want every one of you to enjoy the happiness of heaven.  Some of you, however, haven’t darkened the door of a confessional for a long time.  I tremble for you.

I beg you.

GO TO CONFESSION.

It might be your last.

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