Did you know that there was a “British Teilhard Association”? No one else did either, it seems.

From the Catholic Herald:

British Teilhard Association dissolves due to lack of members

The move comes just weeks after Pope Francis was asked to remove the decades-old official warning against Teilhard’s works

A British association dedicated to Jesuit thinker Teilhard de Chardin dissolved on New Year’s Eve due to falling membership.

The association announced the decision on Twitter on Monday, but added that its website would continue as a newly constituted ‘British Teilhard Network’.

The move comes just weeks after the Pontifical Council for Culture asked Pope Francis to remove the decades-old official warning against Teilhard’s works.

Pierre Teilhard de Chardin wrote a series of best-selling theological works in the first half of the 20th Century in which he drew on his studies as a palaeontologist in an attempt to reconcile the faith with evolution.

He became famous for his theory of an “Omega Point”, mankind’s ultimate destination. He saw all of human development in terms of evolution, an upward movement towards a final goal, of which the Incarnation was a decisive moment.

Although many found his works helpful in reconciling their faith with new scientific discoveries, the Congregation of the Holy Office condemned them, writing that they “abound in such ambiguities and indeed even serious errors, as to offend Catholic doctrine”.

Pope Pius XII condemned Teilhard’s work as a “cesspool of error”, and the Vatican placed an official “monitum”, or warning, against it.

However, last year the Pontifical Council for Culture voted unanimously to ask Pope Francis to remove the warning, saying “albeit some of his writings might be open to constructive criticism, his prophetic vision has been and is inspiring theologians and scientists.”

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PODCAzT 160: Bishops of Kazakhstan issue “Profession of the immutable truths about sacramental marriage” AUDIO

As the controversy erupted at the irruption of Amoris laetitia, I opined that, even though the document could be read in a properly orthodox way, those who were inclined not to support the Church’s teaching would say it meant something innovative but justifiable under the light of “mercy”, and those who were inclined to defend and teach with clarity what the Church teaches would stand their ground. Amoris laetitia caused a kind of “decomposition reaction” in the Church, if you recall your basic chemistry.  It’s breaking down the unity of the Church.

This breaking of unity is in increasing evidence.  Bishops conferences have developed different policies that contradict each other.  For example, step over the border from Germany into Poland and the divorced and civilly remarried who don’t live continent lives and who don’t have a firm purpose of amendment cannot be admitted to Holy Communion.  Step back across the border from Poland into Germany, and they can be.  One small step for an adulterer, one giant disaster for doctrine.   Other examples of decomposition can be found in statements from the Bishops of Malta and of Buenos Aires in Argentina.

There must, of course, be counter reactions to try to reestablish the integrity of the Church in her unity of doctrine.

The other day I received a text from the Bishops of Kazakhstan (including the great Bp. Schneider) which addresses certain truth about sacramental marriage.

It is very good.

As a preamble, you will want to scan quickly what canonist Ed Peters says about it.  HERE  He makes a couple of distinctions which head off what will be the backlash and denial on the part of libs, who will whipped up by the New Red Guards against this statement.

Peters makes three helpful observations.  First, he reminds us that the Kazakhstani bishops are talking about sacramental marriage, even though much of what they say applies to other marriages.   Second, when we write about “marriage” we can’t always put in every possible qualifier.  Third, Peters points to the minuscule number of cases to which the Pauline and Petrine Privilege apply, or which are ratum sed non consummatum.

Now let’s look at the statement of the Bishops of Kazakhstan.  Or rather, let’s hear it and look at it.

I rant at the end.

BONUS: At the end, I include several minutes of bells of a well-known church in EuropeCan anyone identify the church?  I made the recording on the street near the church, so you might hear the occasional motorbike.

UPDATE:

I read on Twitter that

Two Italian Bishops, + Luigi Negri, archbishop emeritus of Ferrara-Comacchio and +Carlo Maria Viganò, former apostolic nuncio to the United States, have joined the bishops of Kazakhstan in putting their names to the Profession

UPDATE:

Interview with Bp. Negri HERE He said:

Faced with the grave confusion in the Church regarding the issue of marriage, I believe it is necessary to put forward again the clarity of the traditional position. It seemed right to me to sign because the content of the [document’s] position is what I have widely presented over the past years — not only in recent months – at every step of the efforts I dedicated to the theme of the family, life, procreation, and the responsibility to educate and form young people. These are issues of absolute importance which the Catholic world as a whole does not seem to be very aware of.

Card. Pujats of Riga has signed on. HERE

 

Profession of the immutable truths
about sacramental marriage

After the publication of the Apostolic Exhortation “Amoris laetitia” (2016) various bishops issued at local, regional, and national levels applicable norms regarding the sacramental discipline of those faithful, called “divorced and remarried,” who having still a living spouse to whom they are united with a valid sacramental matrimonial bond, have nevertheless begun a stable cohabitation more uxorio with a person who is not their legitimate spouse.

The aforementioned rules provide inter alia that in individual cases the persons, called “divorced and remarried,” may receive the sacrament of Penance and Holy Communion, while continuing to live habitually and intentionally more uxorio with a person who is not their legitimate spouse. These pastoral norms have received approval from various hierarchical authorities. Some of these norms have received approval even from the supreme authority of the Church.

The spread of these ecclesiastically approved pastoral norms has caused a considerable and ever increasing confusion among the faithful and the clergy, a confusion that touches the central manifestations of the life of the Church, such as sacramental marriage with the family, the domestic church, and the sacrament of the Most Holy Eucharist.

According to the doctrine of the Church, only the sacramental matrimonial bond constitutes a domestic church (see Second Vatican Council, Lumen Gentium, 11). The admission of so-called “divorced and remarried” faithful to Holy Communion, which is the highest expression of the unity of Christ the Spouse with His Church, means in practice a way of approving or legitimizing divorce, and in this meaning a kind of introduction of divorce in the life of the Church.

The mentioned pastoral norms are revealed in practice and in time as a means of spreading the “plague of divorce” (an expression used by the Second Vatican Council, see Gaudium et spes, 47). It is a matter of spreading the “plague of divorce” even in the life of the Church, when the Church, instead, because of her unconditional fidelity to the doctrine of Christ, should be a bulwark and an unmistakable sign of contradiction against the plague of divorce which is every day more rampant in civil society.

Unequivocally and without admitting any exception Our Lord and Redeemer Jesus Christ solemnly reaffirmed God’s will regarding the absolute prohibition of divorce. An approval or legitimation of the violation of the sacredness of the marriage bond, even indirectly through the mentioned new sacramental discipline, seriously contradicts God’s express will and His commandment. This practice therefore represents a substantial alteration of the two thousand-year-old sacramental discipline of the Church. Furthermore, a substantially altered discipline will eventually lead to an alteration in the corresponding doctrine.

The constant Magisterium of the Church, beginning with the teachings of the Apostles and of all the Supreme Pontiffs, has preserved and faithfully transmitted both in the doctrine (in theory) and in the sacramental discipline (in practice) in an unequivocal way, without any shadow of doubt and always in the same sense and in the same meaning (eodem sensu eademque sententia), the crystalline teaching of Christ concerning the indissolubility of marriage.

Because of its Divinely established nature, the discipline of the sacraments must never contradict the revealed word of God and the faith of the Church in the absolute indissolubility of a ratified and consummated marriage. “The sacraments not only presuppose faith, but by words and objects they also nourish, strengthen, and express it; that is why they are called “sacraments of faith.” (Second Vatican Council, Sacrosanctum Concilium, 59). “Even the supreme authority in the Church may not change the liturgy arbitrarily, but only in the obedience of faith and with religious respect for the mystery of the liturgy” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1125).

The Catholic faith by its nature excludes a formal contradiction between the faith professed on the one hand and the life and practice of the sacraments on the other. In this sense we can also understand the following affirmation of the Magisterium: “This split between the faith which many profess and their daily lives deserves to be counted among the more serious errors of our age.” (Second Vatican Council, Gaudium et Spes, 43) and “Accordingly, the concrete pedagogy of the Church must always remain linked with her doctrine and never be separated from it” (John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris Consortio, 33).

In view of the vital importance that the doctrine and discipline of marriage and the Eucharist constitute, the Church is obliged to speak with the same voice. The pastoral norms regarding the indissolubility of marriage must not, therefore, be contradicted between one diocese and another, between one country and another. Since the time of the Apostles, the Church has observed this principle as St. Irenaeus of Lyons testifies: “The Church, though spread throughout the world to the ends of the earth, having received the faith from the Apostles and their disciples, preserves this preaching and this faith with care and, as if she inhabits a single house, believes in the same identical way, as if she had only one soul and only one heart, and preaches the truth of the faith, teaches it and transmits it in a unanimous voice, as if she had only one mouth”(Adversus haereses, I, 10, 2). Saint Thomas Aquinas transmits to us the same perennial principle of the life of the Church: “There is one and the same faith of the ancients and the moderns, otherwise there would not be one and the same Church” (Questiones Disputatae de Veritate, q. 14, a. 12c).

The following warning from Pope John Paul II remains current and valid: “The confusion, created in the conscience of many faithful by the differences of opinions and teachings in theology, in preaching, in catechesis, in spiritual direction, about serious and delicate questions of Christian morals, ends up by diminishing the true sense of sin almost to the point of eliminating it” (Apostolic Exhortation Reconciliatio et Paenitenia, 18).

The meaning of the following statements of the Magisterium of the Church is fully applicable to the doctrine and sacramental discipline concerning the indissolubility of a ratified and consummated marriage:

  • “For the Church of Christ, watchful guardian that she is, and defender of the dogmas deposited with her, never changes anything, never diminishes anything, never adds anything to them; but with all diligence she treats the ancient doctrines faithfully and wisely, which the faith of the Fathers has transmitted. She strives to investigate and explain them in such a way that the ancient dogmas of heavenly doctrine will be made evident and clear, but will retain their full, integral, and proper nature, and will grow only within their own genus — that is, within the same dogma, in the same sense and the same meaning” (Pius IX, Dogmatic Bull Ineffabilis Deus)
  • “With regard to the very substance of truth, the Church has before God and men the sacred duty to announce it, to teach it without any attenuation, as Christ revealed it, and there is no condition of time that can reduce the rigor of this obligation. It binds in conscience every priest who is entrusted with the care of teaching, admonishing, and guiding the faithful “(Pius XII, Discourse to parish priests and Lenten preachers, March 23, 1949).
  • “The Church does not historicize, does not relativize to the metamorphoses of profane culture the nature of the Church that is always equal and faithful to itself, as Christ wanted it and authentic tradition perfected it” (Paul VI, Homily from October 28, 1965).
  • “Now it is an outstanding manifestation of charity toward souls to omit nothing from the saving doctrine of Christ” (Paul VI, Encyclical Humanae Vitae, 29).
  • “Any conjugal difficulties are resolved without ever falsifying and compromising the truth” (John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris Consortio, 33).
  • “The Church is in no way the author or the arbiter of this norm [of the Divine moral law]. In obedience to the truth which is Christ, whose image is reflected in the nature and dignity of the human person, the Church interprets the moral norm and proposes it to all people of good will, without concealing its demands of radicalness and perfection” (John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris Consortio, 33).
  • “The other principle is that of truth and consistency, whereby the church does not agree to call good evil and evil good. Basing herself on these two complementary principles, the church can only invite her children who find themselves in these painful situations to approach the divine mercy by other ways, not however through the sacraments of penance and the eucharist until such time as they have attained the required dispositions” (John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Reconciliatio et Paenitentia, 34).
  • “The Church’s firmness in defending the universal and unchanging moral norms is not demeaning at all. Its only purpose is to serve man’s true freedom. Because there can be no freedom apart from or in opposition to the truth”(John Paul II, Encyclical Veritatis Splendor, 96).
  • When it is a matter of the moral norms prohibiting intrinsic evil, there are no privileges or exceptions for anyone. It makes no difference whether one is the master of the world or the “poorest of the poor” on the face of the earth. Before the demands of morality we are all absolutely equal” (emphasis in original) (John Paul II, Encyclical Veritatis Splendor, 96).
  • “The obligation of reiterating this impossibility of admission to the Eucharist is required for genuine pastoral care and for an authentic concern for the well-being of these faithful and of the whole Church, as it indicates the conditions necessary for the fullness of that conversion to which all are always invited by the Lord“ (Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, Declaration on the admissibility to the Holy Communion of the divorced and remarried, 24 June 2000, n. 5).As Catholic bishops, who – according to the teaching of the Second Vatican Council – must defend the unity of faith and the common discipline of the Church, and take care that the light of the full truth should arise for all men (see Lumen Gentium, 23 ) we are forced in conscience to profess in the face of the current rampant confusion the unchanging truth and the equally immutable sacramental discipline regarding the indissolubility of marriage according to the bimillennial and unaltered teaching of the Magisterium of the Church. In this spirit we reiterate:
  • Sexual relationships between people who are not in the bond to one another of a valid marriage – which occurs in the case of the so-called “divorced and remarried” – are always contrary to God’s will and constitute a grave offense against God.
  • No circumstance or finality, not even a possible imputability or diminished guilt, can make such sexual relations a positive moral reality and pleasing to God. The same applies to the other negative precepts of the Ten Commandments of God. Since “there exist acts which, per se and in themselves, independently of circumstances, are always seriously wrong by reason of their object” (John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Reconciliatio et Paenitentia, 17).
  • The Church does not possess the infallible charism of judging the internal state of grace of a member of the faithful (see Council of Trent, session 24, chapter 1). The non-admission to Holy Communion of the so-called “divorced and remarried” does not therefore mean a judgment on their state of grace before God, but a judgment on the visible, public, and objective character of their situation. Because of the visible nature of the sacraments and of the Church herself, the reception of the sacraments necessarily depends on the corresponding visible and objective situation of the faithful.
  • It is not morally licit to engage in sexual relations with a person who is not one’s legitimate spouse supposedly to avoid another sin. Since the Word of God teaches us, it is not lawful “to do evil so that good may come” (Romans 3, 8).
  • The admission of such persons to Holy Communion may be permitted only when they with the help of God’s grace and a patient and individual pastoral accompaniment make a sincere intention to cease from now on the habit of such sexual relations and to avoid scandal. It is in this way that true discernment and authentic pastoral accompaniment were always expressed in the Church.
  • People who have habitual non-marital sexual relations violate their indissoluble sacramental nuptial bond with their life style in relation to their legitimate spouse. For this reason they are not able to participate “in Spirit and in Truth” (see John 4, 23) at the Eucharistic wedding supper of Christ, also taking into account the words of the rite of Holy Communion: “Blessed are the guests at the wedding supper of the Lamb!” (Revelation 19, 9).
  • The fulfillment of God’s will, revealed in His Ten Commandments and in His explicit and absolute prohibition of divorce, constitutes the true spiritual good of the people here on earth and will lead them to the true joy of love in the salvation of eternal life.

Being bishops in the pastoral office those, who promote the Catholic and Apostolic faith (“cultores catholicae et apostolicae fidei”, see Missale Romanum, Canon Romanus), we are aware of this grave responsibility and our duty before the faithful who await from us a public and unequivocal profession of the truth and the immutable discipline of the Church regarding the indissolubility of marriage. For this reason we are not allowed to be silent.

We affirm therefore in the spirit of St. John the Baptist, of St. John Fisher, of St. Thomas More, of Blessed Laura Vicuña and of numerous known and unknown confessors and martyrs of the indissolubility of marriage:

It is not licit (non licet) to justify, approve, or legitimize either directly or indirectly divorce and a non-conjugal stable sexual relationship through the sacramental discipline of the admission of so-called “divorced and remarried” to Holy Communion, in this case a discipline alien to the entire Tradition of the Catholic and Apostolic faith.

By making this public profession before our conscience and before God who will judge us, we are sincerely convinced that we have provided a service of charity in truth to the Church of our day and to the Supreme Pontiff, Successor of Saint Peter and Vicar of Christ on earth .

31 December 2017, the Feast of the Holy Family, in the year of the centenary of the apparitions of Our Lady at Fatima.

+ Tomash Peta, Archbishop Metropolitan of the Archdiocese of Saint Mary in Astana

+ Jan Pawel Lenga, Archbishop-Bishop of Karaganda

+ Athanasius Schneider, Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Saint Mary in Astana

 

Posted in One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, PODCAzT, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , , , ,
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A new year, a new membership – LMS @latinmassuk

When I find an organization or cause that I like or that I use, I try to support it.

For example, I really like Our Lady of Hope Clinic, about which I have written. I like Team Rubicon.

I really like the TMSM! PLEASE DONATE!

I also like the work of the Latin Mass Society in England & Wales. Hence, I signed up for a membership today.  (You would think they have a special membership for priests who celebrated Holy Mass in the traditional form.. but no.)

You might do the same and join. HERE They’ve been fighting to good fight for a long time and many good things are happening there these days.

This is not the time to rest on successes.  This is the time to push forward.

The tank has only one gear.

Another good UK thing is the Catholic Herald. I’ve been writing a column for them for a long while now. It appears in the print and in the digital editions. You might subscribe. I think it is useful for Americans to read about what’s up in the UK. They are at a different stage in the culture war we are engaged in. With a subscription you get access to the whole archive. HERE

¡Hagan lío!

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, "How To..." - Practical Notes, Be The Maquis, Brick by Brick, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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Fr. Z’s Predictions for 2018

2018 Predictions

1. Pres. Trump will acknowledge North Korea a nuclear state to diffuse the military option.
2. The building of The Wall will begin.
3. Justice Kennedy will resign from the Supreme Court, and Pres. Trump will get another pick.
4. Pope Francis – still Pope – will beatify Pierre Teilhard de Chardin with the intention to canonize him and declare him Doctor of the Church.
5. The Synod on Youth will discuss “viri probati”, which will be approved as a step to making clerical celibacy optional.
6. The Holy See and Palestine will establish full diplomatic relations, Nunciature in Bethlehem.
7. The number of places with Holy Mass ad orientem will grow quietly but significantly.
8. Card. Sarah will be transferred to Propaganda and Archbp. Roche will takeover at CDW.
9. Doctrinal evaluation of professors and theological writings will be devolved to local episcopal conferences.
10. Fr. Z will still not be a Monsignor.

How did I do last year?  HERE

1. ObamaCare (aka “Affordable” Care Act) will be repealed. [+0 – Sort of… the mandate was.]
2. Construction will begin on The Wall. [+0 – Prototypes were made]
3. Pres. Trump’s first international trip will be to Jerusalem. [+1]
4. Pres. Trump will appoint two Justices to the Supreme Court. [-1 – Alas, he only got one]
5. Pope Francis will not respond to the Dubia and will, in fact, double down. [+1]
6. Card. Burke will emerge unscathed from the Knights of Malta controversy. [-1]
7. Curial reform will still not make significant progress. [+1]
8. The number of places in which Extraordinary Form (TLM) Masses are offered will continue to grow. [+1]
9. Applications to seminaries will continue to drop. [+1]
10. Fr. Z will still not be a Monsignor. [+1]

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You couldn’t make this up if you tried.

And you thought Adoptionsism was bad!

Via ijr.com:

Report: Church in Sweden Calls Jesus Gender Neutral: He ‘Is Not Very Masculine in Physique’

A church in Västerås reportedly bought an advertisement in a Swedish newspaper days before Christmas, inviting those in the area to celebrate the birth of Jesus with worship, Christmas music, and a Christmas crib. But it did it using a gender neutral pronoun[Gender neutral Jesus!]

The word used was “hen,” which is the gender neutral alternative to “hon” (she) and “han” (he).

Swedish news-magazine Expressen originally reported the story in Swedish, according to Dangerous blog. IJR translated it into English. [According to Dangerous: “Sweden is at the forefront of the social justice movement, and not even Christianity is exempt from the progressive push for inclusivity of genders other than male and female and a full embrace of the ‘gender spectrum.’”]

Susann Senter, who’s the female dean of the church, explained:

“There are many who have heard from us via Facebook, but I have also received positive reactions. We did not want to sex the little child right away […]  [They didn’t want to “sex” the God man!]

Theologically, we are talking about Jesus as true God and man. A human is not just ‘he.'”  [Generic man.  Not even a kouros.]

She also went on to say that how people are treated based on their gender [not “gender”, “sex”!] has been a frequently discussed topic at the church. She added that although Jesus Christ was a man, her interpretation of the Bible makes him “beyond man or woman.[ummm…. Meta-Human!]

Senter continued:

“If I’m a little provocative, most 19th and [20th century depictions] of Jesus are quite feminine. He is gentle, has curly hair and is not very masculine in physique.” [So… a Jesuit?]

The dean concluded that “it is a strain that we always talk about God as ‘he’” and that “we can not change the texts in the Bible, but we can change our way of highlighting this.”  [I think there are a lot of people who would disagree that can’t change texts in the Bible.]

Somethings are beyond parody.

What’s really funny is that today, 1 January, has traditionally been celebrated as the… wait for it…

Feast of the Circumcision.

Posted in Pò sì jiù, You must be joking! | Tagged
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ASK FATHER: Antisemitism among “traditionalist” Catholics – UPDATED

UPDATE 31 Dec 2017:

The original questioner wrote:

Thank you so much for your guidance in response to my query. I had never even considered that my heartache could be used as an opportunity to grow in holiness! Rereading my words, the Lord also pricked my conscience regarding my own bitter prejudice against Arab Christians, which fairly sang out from the page. It would seem I have work enough to do removing the beam from my own eye. Please remember me in your prayers, Father, and rest assured of your place in mine.

Originally Published on: Dec 30, 2017

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

First of all, thank you so much for your blog, I visit often and thoroughly enjoy your wit and unabashed orthodoxy. I am a convert with both Jewish and Protestant backgrounds, by the Grace of God, now a Catholic for five years. I am drawn powerfully to the Latin Mass and have serious difficulties with Vatican II. That said, whenever I visit traditionalist sites online, I am invariably slapped in the face with the gleeful antisemitism that seems to be a prerequisite to “belonging” in such cases. I’ve lived in Israel. I love the country and the Jewish people. I see no reason to be ashamed of this. I was sickened, literally became nauseous, by a ‘devout’ woman who took umbrage to the fact that I felt compelled to question a certain priest’s position that the Holocaust never happened. Fr. William something or other – not important. I have been told that I must purge myself of Zionist lies. That the “indigenous” Palestinians will one day be free of the Jews – these same Jews who stand with the West (those in the West willing to stand) against the scourge that is, and will be, the Islamic threat. And I am tired, so very tired, of hearing about the beleaguered Christian Arabs – whom I personally saw attacking Jews alongside with Muslims during the hudna of 2003, a part of the Second Intifada. These Christians will kill Jews, the only people keeping the Muslims from killing them. I ask you, Father, why is hating the Jews a membership due of the traditionalist Catholic. I will not abandon Christ over this, I will not go back to Judaism – I am in the bark of St. Peter, and with God’s help, will remain there until my dying breath. I cannot abandon the One who would not abandon me – but I need to know why Jews and Israel are such a problem. In truth, I need to hear someone say that this is wrong. If you cannot be that one, so be it – but explain your position to me, nonetheless. The Jews and the Muslims need conversion, as every human being does – I do not ascribe to the Nostra Aetate, we cannot go against Christ’s own commandment and call ourselves faithful, but how to leave the wound of antisemitism behind without leaving the Word? Please tell me that is possible.

First of all, congratulations on your determination to come into the Church.  By doing so, you brought to bloom both your Jewish and Protestant roots.

I am sorry you have had negative experiences.  Provided that there were no misunderstandings or miscommunication, Catholics ought to abhor the things that have been said to you by traditionalists.

Keep in mind that these folks are individuals, and that they only speak for themselves, or perhaps for smallish blogs and/or organizations, as the case may be.  They do not speak for me or the vast majority of traditional Catholics, or the Church.

The Church recognizes that antisemitism is a sin. That said, there are tiny pockets of antisemitism in the Catholic Church, just as there are tiny pockets of racism and other forms of ignorance and hatred.

Mind you, the Church is not a Church of the spotless and the pure.   The Church which Christ founded is precisely of and for sinners. Else, who is there for Christ to save? If any man says he is not a sinner he is a liar (cf. 1 John 1:8).

Sometimes the Church is described as a “field hospital”.  If we are going to take that analogy seriously – and not just blurt it in a shallow, sentimental way – then let’s keep firmly before our faces the fact that, in “field hospitals” many ugly things happen.  There is a lot of blood, screaming, pain and, quite often, death.  Even with the great improvements in combat medicine and field hospitals, despite the heroic work of the personnel many who go in don’t come out alive, and many who do live are scarred.

The Church remains the spotless Bride of Christ, but we her members are not spotless.

Some who are in the Church will not go to heaven, despite the efforts of their pastors and loved ones, because of their black hearts and sins or even from sheer neglect and indifference.   Some will not go to heaven because of the damage they are doing within the Church herself.

Not all will be saved.  God will sort them out and he cannot be fooled.

As far as the State of Israel is concerned, both I and the people I know are its strong supporters.  We detest terrorism directed against Israelis. Although the Holy See is not without its tremendous blind spots when it comes to the State of Israel, each Pope since St. John Paul II has recognized Israel as a sovereign state.  No other Christian church or denomination can do that.

I hope that, as you continue to settle into the Church and to find its bright and beautiful chambers along with its dark corners and cellars, you will calmly distinguish between what we might be able to call traditionalist and, on the other hand traditional Catholics, the latter being the group to which you and your friends belong.

I doubt my words here can take all of the sting from what you experienced, but perhaps they can help you sort out what is going on if you encounter it again.

Remember that it is a spiritual work of mercy to bear wrongs patiently.

I may take some comments by email only.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Hard-Identity Catholicism | Tagged
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FINAL DAY for 2017 tax-deductible charitable donations – help a GREAT cause!

Sometimes people want to make donations, but they are not sure about how.  Is the organization doing something good?  The end of the year is upon us.  This is it for 2017 donations.

Here’s a pitch for the Tridentine Mass Society of the Diocese of Madison.  I am president of the TMSM.  It is a 501(c)(3) organization, so your donations are tax deductible.

We are doing our best, with the support of the bishop (the Extraordinary Ordinary) to elevate all liturgical boats by promoting the generous implementation of Summorum Pontificum.  We help priests and sponsor Masses in the Extraordinary Form.  We have Pontifical Masses here with the bishop.

In the last few years, we have made sets of vestments for the worthy celebration of Mass, including a fantastic set for the diocese, with the coat of arms of the diocese and of the bishop.

Please help us.

The next three projects:

I’ve asked for an estimate for

  • folded chasubles to match our violet pontifical set
  • dalmatic, tunic, humeral veil and antependium to make our simple rose set, solemn
  • new pontifical set in black, with the addition of folded chasubles

Again, we need your help to make this happen.

There are three ways to give:

  1. Continue To Give HERE
  2. PayPal HERE
  3. Check by snail mail (no fees!)Tridentine Mass Society of Madison
    733 Struck St.
    P.O. Box 44603
    Madison, WI 53744-4603

Make out big checks and send them right away!

UPDATE:

BTW… I’ve been searching – in vain – for a black fabric that I really like. However, I am considering this option, which Gammarelli has in stock.

In the background you can see the cut up fabric for our first big project, the gold pontifical set, a glimpse of which is in the photo at the top.

UPDATE:

I’ve been doing some research and calculations.

Regarding that photo of the black chasuble above, given the expense of the fabric, a Pontifical set would probably cost some $17K. That’s why I continue to research fabrics. Also, I saw something at Watts in London that I really like. I think they are also quite expensive.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged ,
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UPDATE: Snail-mail Christmas Cards to Fr. Z – 2017

UPDATE: Dec. 30

More cards…

  • Austen, TX* (prayers)
  • Summit, NJ (thanks, Sisters!)
  • Rome (thanks, Father!)
  • Cincinatti, OH (cool stamps)
  • Bridgewater, MA
  • Davenport, IA (thanks, Father, and congratulations)
  • London (I really look forward to a visit there)
  • Newinton, CT
  • San Diego, CA (thanks for the Masses)
  • Southlake, TX
  • Plano, TX (prayers for Kate)
  • St Thomas, VI (a visit, maybe in the depths of February? It’ll be below 0°F tonight)
  • Bedford, IN
  • St. Mary, MO (great words)
  • Falmouth, NS*
  • Kailua, HI
  • Delmar, NY (thanks for the Masses)
  • Eagan, MN (The Best™)
  • Kenai, AK
  • Janesville, WI*
  • Mililani, HI
  • Hutchinson, MN*
  • Sartell, MN* (you are welcome, and thanks)
  • Franfort, KY (I just saw the tree recently)
  • Rochester, MN*
  • El Dorado, KS
  • Arlington, TX
  • St. Paul, MN
  • Wylie, TX
  • Madison, WI*
  • Shelbyville, KY (thanks for the prayers and the offer – I must do something this year)
  • Yellowstone National Park, WY (how does one get to live there, I wonder?)
  • Green Lane, PA
  • Calabasas, CA
  • Minnetonka, MN* (classmate from waaaay back)
  • Scituate, MA
  • Owego, NY
  • Bowie, MA
  • Arlington, VA
  • Newton Highlands, MA (nice card)
  • Markt Schwaben, Bayern  (Schützenverien! Sounds fun.)
  • Card from Alaska, but mailed from Boston with holy cards… so mysterious.
  • Fredericksburg, VA
  • Bottesford, Leicestershire (I guess now I must visit Blighty soon!  And donation to SPORCH lady because of the horrible vandalism she suffered  HEREdone.)

And… wow… Broken Arrow, OK!

UPDATE: Dec. 23

Here are more cards!

  • Chicago, IL (yes, “storm clouds continue to gather”)
  • Mt Clemens, MI
  • Glendale, AZ
  • Hudson, WI
  • San Jose, CA*
  • Bee, NE (a card from the Benedictines in Gower!)
  • Lincoln, NE (wow, that’s a huge family)
  • Chicago, IL
  • Daniels, NJ
  • Taopi, MN
  • Oxnard, CA
  • Toldeo, OH
  • Bedford, TX
  • Irving, TX
  • Monterey, CA
  • Plymouth, MI*
  • Fairbault, MN
  • Metairie, LA
  • Harrisburg, PA*
  • Mt. Clemens, MI
  • Houston, TX
  • Toledo, OH (again, prayers and 73)
  • Dillwyn, VA
  • Lake Mills, WI
  • Crosse Pointe Farms, MI
  • St Paul, MN
  • Dallas, TX* (quite a chapel… I’d like to see it someday)
  • Dallas, TX
  • Boca Raton, FL
  • Somerville, MA (best wishes for your studies)
  • Sabattus, ME
  • W. St. Paul
  • Brooklyn, WI*
  • Bethesda, MD (looks like a Bernese)
  • London, ENGLAND (“Mount Pleasant Mail Centre”)
  • New Orleans, LA (if we don’t ask for miracles, we won’t receive them)
  • Belleville, MI

Frankly, that last one wasn’t Christmasy.  It contained an FBI challenge coin.

Meanwhile, these are the sorts of messages that make what I do worthwhile.

Wichita, KS … sent a pamphlet distributed in their parish about ad orientem worship:

UPDATE: 22 Dec

And more…

  • Kenai, AK*
  • Grawn, MI
  • Pasadena, MD (with a donation to the TMSM!)
  • Grand Rapids, MI*
  • Fort Wayne, IN
  • Mesa, AZ
  • Hamilton, ON
  • Menoken, ND (and a cat named “Strider”)
  • Shawnee, OK* (with a commemorative medal)
  • Calgary, AB
  • Leawood, KS
  • Howard Beach, NY (interest in Gregorian Masses)
  • Abo, FINLAND
  • Portsmouth, ENGLAND (good luck with the ribs and thanks for the Mass!)
  • USAG Stuttgart, GERMANY
  • Louisville, KY
  • Woodinville, WA (great note, I hope the ham thing works out, and THANKS for that UPS long ago)
  • Schenectady, NY
  • Voorhees, NJ (with Fatima cards!)
  • Fridley, MN
  • Aurora, CO
  • St. Louis, MO (thanks for the Amazon Gift Card)
  • SWEDEN
  • Cincinnati, OH (thanks, also, for the Amazon Gift Card)
  • Chester, VT (thanks for the suggestion, and, yes, I too am a fan of the 2nd amendment
  • Alliston, ON (wow… that’s all I can say)
  • Oakland, CA (thanks for the novena)
  • Winterport, ME* (For your project there – “The only easy day was yesterday!”)
  • Fort Wayne, IN (cute kids and thanks for the novena)
  • W. St. Paul, MN
  • Fitchburg, WI
  • Peosta, IA
  • Pewaukee, WI
  • Valencia, CA (thanks for the Amazon Gift Cards)
  • Snohomish, WA (9th grader who prays for Fishwrap and is thinking about the priesthood)
  • Covina, CA
  • Tampa, FL (thanks for the coffee card)
  • Dayton, OH
  • Mankato, MN (nice calligraphed card)
  • St. Paul, MN (thanks, IFP brother – Merry 73!)
  • Cashton, WI (good looking kids)
  • Vero Beach, FL
  • New Haven, CT (with a CD of music for the 2nd Mass of Christmas)
  • Tisdde, SK … who sent the following

And a special mention goes to:

Fr. Gordan J. MacRae

Please, dear readers, in your kindness, say a Rosary and offer Masses for Fr. MacRae, who has been so poorly, unjustly treated, falsely accused and wrongly imprisoned.

Got to his site and send him a donation.  He can receive snail mail and donations under conditions.  HERE

UPDATE: 16 Dec

More cards have come.

  • Rockford, IL
  • St. Louis, MO
  • Alcoa, TN
  • Fayetteville, AR! (Thanks for the old holy cards.)
  • Rochester, MI
  • Very cool glossy card with Portuguese image!
  • Boise, ID
  • Tiverton, RI (Thanks! Hope to see you soon.)
  • Boston, MA (great holy cards)
  • San Francisco, CA! (neat kids’ card)
  • Iowa City, IA
  • Japan… Kyoto?
  • Thaxton, VA
  • Co. Cork (thanks for the novena)
  • Washington, DC (get well and see you soon)
  • NY, NY?
  • Denton, NE

UPDATE: 13 Dec

More cards!

  • Fresno, CA
  • Stanley, NC
  • Pine Grove, PA
  • Loudonville, NY
  • Palm Beach Gardens, FL
  • Seattle, WA
  • Chula Vista, CA
  • Carol Stream, IL
  • Carol Stream, IL (Okay, no return address. – I suspect that’s a mail sorting location.)
  • Owensboro, KY
  • Greer, SC!
  • Atherton, CA

UPDATE: 8 Dec

Some Christmas cards have come in!

  • Harrisburg, PA
  • Berkley, OH*
  • Columbia, PA* (thanks for the amazon gift cards!)
  • Plainfield, IL
  • Westchester, PA* (ditto)
  • Santa Fe, NM
  • Kingston, ON

One card contained a beautiful calligraphed greeting and even a small 2018 calendar:

In another, there was a hand written note… the sort that puts the human face on the readership…

___ Originally Published on: Dec 6, 2017

If you would like to send me Christmas greetings or cards, please send by snail mail, if possible with really cool stamps.

As I did last year, I’ll try to post all the places whence they arrived from around the world.  Also, I find the notes and letters which describe the year people have had to be interesting and, often, moving.  I read them all.

I have a US PO BOX address.

Fr John Zuhlsdorf
Tridentine Mass Society of Madison
733 Struck St.
PO BOX 44603
Madison, WI 53744-4603

PAST ADDRESSES ARE VOID

If you need to send anything that requires a signature, such as gold bars, a Bugatti Chiron, bearer bonds, cases of Pappy Van Winkle, complete Pontifical Mass vestment sets … you know, the usual stuff, get in touch with me for an alternate address.

Please! DON’T send perishable food items. I am sure they would be wonderful, and neither poisonous nor hallucinogenic… mostly. But, please, just don’t.

If you put glitter in the card, I’ll probably recite the Maledictory Psalms against you.

Thanks in advance for your kind cooperation in this matter of great importance.

Have a wonderful Advent!

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WDTPRS – Sunday 31 Dec – Holy Family: We must pray that God be appeased.

Sunday in the Octave of Christmas, in the Novus Ordo calendar, is the Feast of the Holy Family.  In the traditional calendar, the Feast of the Holy Family will be celebrated on Sunday, 7 January.

murillo heavenly earthly trinitiesOur liturgical, seasonal context is Octave of the Nativity of the Lord.  An “octave” is a period of eight days when liturgical time is suspended during an octave and the feast continues uninterrupted.  In imitation of creation and the final summation of the universe at the end of all things, we rest within the Christmas mystery and consider it from different angles in our liturgical worship.

God in His divinity came to light as our brother in our humanity.  He came to save us from our sins and reveal us more fully to ourselves (cf Gaudium et spes 22).

When He came in His first coming, He came to be a part of a human family.

In the infant Christ, with Mary and Joseph humbly and protectively bent over Him, we see who we really are more fully than ever we could before His birth.

The presence of Christ in the midst of His Holy Family is an icon of how He should be present in the midst of every family.

That is how important a family is.

That is also why the powers of Hell will attack the very concept of the family at its roots.

Hell will attack the family and its members, destabilize it, even while drowning Holy Church’s defending and clarifying voice in the public square.  When we detect the malodorous fruits of Hell in society, we know the family is on its heals.

Sister Lucia, the long-lived seer at Fatima, told the late-Card. Caffarra (R.I.P.):

“A time will come when the decisive battle between the kingdom of Christ and Satan will be over marriage and the family.”

I have no doubt in my mind that this is so.

Here is the Super oblata, the Prayer over the Offerings – in several ways more interesting than the Collect – for Holy Mass in the Ordinary Form:

Hostiam tibi placationis offerimus, Domine, suppliciter deprecantes, ut, Deiparae virginis beatique Ioseph interveniente suffragio, familias nostras in tua gratia firmiter et pace constituas.

Deprecor, by the way, is not just “to pray”, but “to pray earnestly.”

This Super oblata is essentially the same as the Secret of the Mass of the Holy Family found in the older form of the Missale Romanum though the word order has been changed a bit since 1962.

One might at this point ask, “Why change it around like at all?”  Partly for style, partly for emphases.

LITERAL ATTEMPT:

We offer Thee this sacrifice of appeasement, O Lord, humbly bent down in earnest prayer, so that, as the recommendation of the virgin Mother of God and of blessed Joseph intervenes, you may establish our families firmly in Thy grace and peace.

This oration – in the context of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass which Satan and the fallen hordes hate and undermine with relentless attacks – grounds the family in Christ’s self-oblation on the Cross.

“But Father! But Father!” some of you are beefing, “Appeasement? Pfft. You are an ignorant troglodyte.  You said that this prayer grounds the family in the Cross, but – HAH! HAH! – the Cross isn’t mentioned the prayer!  We are now an Easter People guided by the spirit of the Council.  We want the happy image of rising, not all your dark pessimism.  You throwbacks put the Cross into everything and put it in front of altars because YOU HATE VATICAN II!”

Libs.

That placatio means “a pacifying, appeasing, propitiating”.   Propitiation… appeasement… because of our sins… Sacrifice… Cross….   Get it now?  I know that most of those words are foreign to you.

As the family in general goes, so goes society.

It is fitting that we should use the language of appeasement in begging Him to form and shape our families.

What do we find as we look around today?

Legal abortion, growing legalization of euthanasia, high divorce rates, young women disposing of newborn infants in garbage cans, scientific experimentation on living human beings, experiments in cloning, the distortion of physical, sexual differentiation in favor of post-modern, deconstructed, personally, selfishly chosen “gender” , same-sex “marriage”Jesuits, “gay” Nativity scenes in St. Peter’s Square….

The concept of the family is breaking to pieces and some figures within the Church are wielding the wrecking bars.

We even have a weakening of the concept of the indissolubility of marriage in the minds of many within the Church today because of the objective lack of clarity in a papal document, which some are instrumentalizing to change the teaching of the Lord Himself!

If God does not strike us down, then He owes Sodom and Gomorrah an apology.

God’s image and likeness are being profaned now in more horrible ways than ancient sinners could have and on a scale that they wouldn’t have been able to conjure.

CURRENT ICEL (2011):

We offer you, Lord, the sacrifice of conciliation, humbly asking that, through the intercession of the Virgin Mother of God and Saint Joseph, you may establish our families firmly in your grace and your peace.

Pray that God might be appeased.

Get on your knees and beg God to forgive us all, to guide and enlighten those whose influence might start to set the ship back on course.

Do penance for their sins of commission and omission in defense of marriage and the family as well as your own.

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ACTION ITEM! 31 DEC & 1 JAN – New Year’s Plenary INDULGENCES ALERT!

FATHERS!  Tell your people.

Catholics can gain a Plenary Indulgence on New Year’s EVE, 31 December (EnchInd. 26) be the recitation or the singing of the Te Deum.

To gain the indulgence the usual following conditions must be met.

1. Sacramental confession and Communion within a brief time (about 20 days)
2. The prescribed good work (for 31 Dec. the recital of the Te Deum)
3. Prayers for the Pope’s designated intentions (1 Our Father, 1 Hail Mary)
5. Detestation of and detachment from even venial sins (without which only a partial indulgence can be gained), at the time of the indulgenced work.

Catholics can gain a Plenary Indulgence on New Year’s DAY, 1 January (EnchInd. 26) be the recitation or the singing of the Veni Creator Spiritus.

Same conditions.

For the sake of those legitimately impeded, confessors can commute both the work prescribed and the conditions required (except, obviously, detachment from even venial sins).

Indulgences can be applied either to oneself or to the souls of the deceased, but they cannot be applied to other persons living on earth.

For the Te DeumHERE

For the Veni Creator SpiritusHERE

For your edification you might listen to some musical settings of the Te Deum.  In Gregorian chant there are Solemn and Simple tones.  There are numerous orchestral and choral settings.

Perhaps you have a favorite setting?

This is kinda fun.  When the French get it right, it’s pretty awesome.  With the great organ of the Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris.  From Les Grandes heures liturgiques à Notre-Dame de Paris.  US HERE – UK HERE –

Be CAREFUL with the volume!

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Indulgences… don’t leave life without them.

Did you know that there is a partial indulgence attached to recitation of your customary prayer after a meal?  “Agimus tibi gratias… We give Thee thanks, o Lord,…”.

Think about it.

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