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.

Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to |
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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.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, GO TO CONFESSION, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The Drill | Tagged , , , , ,
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Daily Rome Shot 25

Photo by Bree Dail.

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Are you doing Christmas shopping online? PLEASE come here FIRST. ACTION ITEM!

Are you doing Christmas shopping online?

PLEASE come here FIRST. I warmly invite you to use my Amazon links to enter Amazon for your shopping. I will get a small percentage of all sales. I can’t see what you buy, so don’t worry about that.

US HERE – UK HERE

The percent that comes from your online shopping is a major portion of my income, as it turns out.  And I have got to get that income up.

ALSO, I consider you to be among my benefactors because of the help you give.  I regularly pray for and say Mass for the intention of my benefactors.  It’s the right thing, and a pleasure, to do.

Some people who have to do purchasing for their business or job through amazon will use my link and it really helps.  And please suggest it your friends?  Get the word around?

Use Fr. Z’s links…. Use Fr. Z’s links…. Use Fr. Z’s links…. Use Fr. Z’s links…. Use Fr. Z’s links…. Use Fr. Z’s links….

Once you enter through one of my links, everything you get in that session will be credited to me.  If you leave and go back to shop again later, PLEASE use my links again.  They are always at the top of the RIGHT SIDE BAR.

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Shop Amazon Gift Cards – Instant Delivery or Free One-Day Shipping

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#ASonnetADay – 118. “Like as, to make our appetites more keen…”

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Daily Rome Shot 24

Photo by Bree Dail.

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Christmas in St. Peter’s is cancelled, but apparently this Mass is okay. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

As reported by CNA, Francis cancelled Christmas liturgies for the public.

And yet… apparently a Mass like this is okay.

Here’s a public service announcement. If you love good music, don’t… just… don’t. Unless, perhaps, you are in need of a moment of penance. In that case click HERE for a musical highlight. The juxtaposition of the image of the soaring dome of St. Peter’s and the out-of-tune guitars and pitch challenged singers says a great deal about the state of things in Rome.

For the whole thing… not that I recommend it, except for the strong.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Look… this is part of a wider issue.

The Devil always tells you what he is up to. He gives you signs that he is at the bottom of it. There will be something beautiful, for example, and, when you look closely you find something strikingly out of place and usually hideous once you think about it.

A demonstration of that now stands in St. Peter’s Square, the vile Nativity scene of 60’s and 70’s vintage. Vatican News trumpets its goal to “transit truth and beauty” through artistic creativity. HERE  Fail.  The report is absurd, full of mouthings about the pandemic, blah blah.  It is as if it were written about an entirely different work of “artistic creativity”.

Think about it.

It’s like they are openly saying, we are dragging the Church back from the time of John Paul II and Benedict XVI into the 60’s and 70’s again.

Moreover, and worse, it is as if they are openly mocking the mystery of the Nativity of the Lord by doing so.  Mockery in the guise of sophistication.

You can tell that the people who made it had some artistic game.  So did artists like Picasso, Bacon and de Kooning.  When they wanted to they could create beautiful things.  But their worldviews became so twisted that they eschewed beauty for the savagely ugly.  The drew and painted the way they did both because were terrified of death and because they hated their subjects.

That’s not all that is going on the Square.

Remember that other monstrosity in St. Peter’s Square, that black hunk of junk depicting refugees?  It was only supposed to be in the Square for a while, I think.  But… set up in September of 2019, the gawdawful thing is still there.   From Crux we learned: “It’s unclear how long the sculpture will remain in St. Peter’s Square, but Crux can confirm that it will be longer than “one week,” as some Italian news outlets have reported. In order to install the 3 1/2 ton sculpture at the crack of dawn on Monday, a section of cobblestones were removed from the square.”

Dogs bark at it.  I’m not making that up.

How about renting out the Sistine Chapel to Porsche?

And remember the projection onto the facade of St. Peter’s?  On the Feast of the Immaculate Conception in 2015?  At the time, in that post, I remarked that we didn’t see humans, except a pair of hands planting a tree.  That’s a good person, you see, not like the vile “virus” of humanity infecting Mother Earth which must be extirpated.  And, in retrospect, irony oozes from that event and my post.  Since then, the Vatican has betrayed the Chinese Church and has slithered into bed with globalists and population control fanatics, bent on reduce the number of people because of, you know, Gaia.  At the time of that post in 2015, I even remarked, ”

What’s next?  A change to the Litany of Loreto?  St. John Paul II inserted two titles of Mary into the Litany by which we invoke her intercession… Holy Mary… “Mother of the Church” and “Queen of the Family”.  What looms on our horizon now?

Holy Mary, innocent of carbon footprint… pray for us.
Holy Mary, conceived without climate change… pray for us.

As it turns out Francis did try to put into the Litany three more titles.  HERE Not that anybody actually uses Litanies today other than traditional Catholics.  As it happens, I keep forgetting to remember to add them to my book.  My bad.   The three titles are not in themselves bad, of course, though the Litany gets a little ponderous.

In the wake of this nasty Nativity scene, maybe we will get more… like… Queen of climatologists … Vanquisher of carbon emissions… Protectress against homophobes… Help of the trans…

The Devil tells you what he is up to.  You can see patterns emerge if you pay attention.

Mater ecclesiae… ora pro nobis.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, What are they REALLY saying?, Wherein Fr. Z Rants, You must be joking! | Tagged ,
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#ASonnetADay – 117. “Accuse me thus, that I have scanted all…”

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