#ASonnetADay – 74. “But be contented when that fell arrest…”

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Happy #NavyDay !

Today is Navy Day, which is not to be confused with observance of the Birthday of the Navy on 13 October.

As it turns out, Navy Day derives in part from the birthday of the once Assistant Secretary of the Navy in 1922, who happened to be Theodore Roosevelt (who promoted the expansion of the Navy). Also in 1775 on this day the first ships were purchased by the Continental Congress which were the core of a new Navy.

Alas, the last official military observance of Navy Day was in 1949.

But we don’t care.

Happy Navy Day!

On a more somber note, one of the readers here asked for prayers for the family of a friend, the USN pilot who died in a training crash recently in Alabama, LT Ross, also married to a Navy officer.  R.I.P.

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ASK FATHER: Use of a microphone during Traditional Latin Low Mass. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I have recently begun to attend the Low Mass. Is there a rule that forbids the celebrant from using a small microphone so that his voice can be heard by the congregation? I know Latin and would like to hear it! Thank you.

Good question.

First, let me point out that there are times when Father isn’t talking to you.  There are times when he is speaking so intimately that not even nearby servers can hear.  There are times when only the servers should hear.  There are times when everyone should hear.

In that later case, there is nothing “wrong” with using a microphone.

However, the use of the microphone itself creates its own set of difficult dynamics.  I refer you, for example to the observations of Marshall McLuhan (“Liturgy and the Microphone,” The Critic, 33/1 (October–December 1974): 12–17) about the long-term effect the microphone had on sacred worship.   For example, when people could hear everything, much was “de-mystified”.  Rather… de-mystery-ized.

Also, when it came to preaching, the fact that a preacher with a mic has to use only a fraction of his energy to get his voice to the last pew reduced both his appearance of conviction and.. indeed… his conviction.   Oratory is far far more than a written text.  It is also delivery.   And there is a relationship between speaker and text.

Microphones are not “bad”.  They have their uses.   They are tech.  So is the design of a church, the curvature of the apse, the vaults of the ceiling.  These create the church’s acoustics.

At a Low Mass, I would rather have a priest raise his voice for the readings in Latin and for the orations, those parts which everyone should hear.   However, depending on the priest’s Latin… well.  Results could vary.

FATHERS!  LEARN LATIN!  LEARN THE TLM!   Don’t be WUSSES!  You CAN do it!

There is nothing about sacred liturgical worship which should be easy or effortless. 

Sure, easy and effortless from the point of view of familiarity and then execution.  However, lots of effort goes into making something effortless.  When I worked as a musician, back in the day, my playing was effortless in sense, only because of countless hours of practice.  When I read Latin today it is effortless only because of decades under my belt.  When I celebrate a Missa Cantata is it not hard because I’ve done a lot of them.  That doesn’t mean it isn’t work.  It can be strenuous and effortless in different ways.

But, Fathers, you won’t know the joy, unless you start.   You would never have known the exhilaration of riding a bicycle for the first time, or realizing you really could swim, until you soloed down that sidewalk or got thrown off the end of that dock.

GROW UP and LEARN IT!

These times and the spiritual needs of the people beg for something more than what we have been doing.

By the way, one of the reasons why sacred worship should be sung is precisely to help it be heard!

That said, you might know that there are prayers for vesting in sacred vestments for Mass.

Here is a prayer – tongue in cheek – for vesting with the clip-on mic wireless mic.

Concede, Domine, virtutem labiis meis et prudentiam ad Tuam proclamandam veritatem, ut per indigni servi Tui vocem, vox Tui tonitrui in rota contremat terram.

Perhaps you readers who have Latin can render this into accurate and yet smooth English providing also the verses alluded to in the prayer.

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#ASonnetADay – 73. “That time of year thou mayst in me behold…”

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ASK FATHER: Is a vote for “the lesser of two evils” still a vote “for evil”?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

If Biden is rabidly pro-abortion (he is), and if Trump is not completely pro-life (he supports abortion in cases of rape, incest, health of mother), and if both candidates support homosexual “marriage” (they do), then even if one votes for “the lesser of two evils”, does it stand to reason that one is still voting for evil?

Let me preface this with what Pius XII said, back when Communists were threatening to take over in post-WWII Italy.  When important issues press, Catholics have an obligation to vote.

Pius said this to priests in 1946:

The exercise of the right to vote is an act of grave moral responsibility, at least with respect to the electing of those who are called to give to a country its constitution and its laws, and in particular those that affect the sanctification of holy days of obligation, marriage, the family, schools and the just and equitable regulation of many social questions. It is the Church’s duty to explain to the faithful the moral duties that flow from this electoral right.

He said this to priests in 1948, and I write this on the October Feast of Christ the King, which stressed the social Kingship of Christ:

The Catholic Church does not tell Catholics to avoid all involvement in politics simply because there is injustice, greed, ambition, just to mention some of the evils involved. The Church teaches us that all our involvement in politics ought to be motivated, inspired, and directed by the Church’s social teachings, and in particular by the Social Kingship of Our Lord Jesus Christ. Voting, as well as involvement in political campaigns, must have as its ultimate motive these higher, supernatural principles, that the law of God, the Ten Commandments, and the rights of the one true Church be acknowledged publicly in society.

These are critical times and this election is the most important of our lifetime.   Our common responsibility toward each other for the common good points to a strong obligation to vote if at all possible.

And yet some will say, voting for the lesser of two evil candidates is still a vote for evil, lesser though it may be.

The Church’s teaching and moral distinctions help us with this problem.

There are times when we must act but, in acting, means that we have to tolerate evils which we do not will.   It is permissible to tolerate the lesser of two evils for the common good.  It is permissible to vote or campaign for a candidate whose party platform contains evils with which we do not agree.  However, this toleration depends upon a hierarchy of issues, certain things having preeminence over others.  For example, if a candidate is solidly pro-life and against abortion, and the other is solidly pro-abortion, the choice is obvious, because of the preeminence of the right to life.     At the same time, if one candidate is in the main against abortion but would permit it in cases of incest, etc. etc., and the other candidate is for abortion up to the moment of birth, the choice is obvious, because one can tolerate the lesser of two evils.

Many people vote only about their own prosperity and personal good.  However, we have to think about the common good.  Hence, candidates who would promote things that tear at the very fabric of society, such as homosexual “marriage” must be excluded.   However, in the case that one candidate is solidly in favor of same-sex unions and the other merely accepts settled law (such as Obergefell), the choice is obvious.   Of course their position on the right to be born is even more important than this issue.  There is a hierarchy of values.

Say a candidate is better than another on some really important issue, such as the right to be born, but he is not great when it comes to other issues, provided that he is better than the other candidate, it is permissible to vote for him even through his pro-life position is not perfect.

Do not let the perfect be the enemy of the good.

As a voter you have a set of principles for choosing how to vote as elected legislators do.  Think about it this way.  Legislators have to vote on laws.  Some laws are flawed, forbidding some things, but still permitting others that are evil.  However, passing that law is a step in the right direction.  St. Thomas Aquinas taught that we can act to limit possible evil.  In that case, the object of the will is a possible good, not an impossible good (STh I-II q. 13, a5). St. John Paul II taught in Evangelium vitae that it is legitimate for a legislator to vote for a more restrictive law regarding abortion if the alternative is a less restrictive law.

“This does not in fact represent an illicit cooperation with an unjust law, but rather a legitimate and proper attempt to limit its evil aspects, in order to prevent worse legislation from being adopted” (EV 73)

It is not an absolute moral obligation to vote, especially if there is no perfect candidate.  However, in times of serious crisis, I think the obligation is even stronger than in times of relative stability and peace.

St. Augustine teaches correctly that only in heaven will there be vera iustitia… true justice.  He teaches that government is a necessary evil because of the fall of mankind in Original Sin.  Government is a kind of necessary evil.   Most of our social structures are a result of sin.   The fact that they are are inflictions, in a sense, does not dispense us from participation in society.  We must be involved precisely as Catholics striving to live as if we already are citizens of the City of God.   It is our work here to bring Christ to all the corners we are able to influence.  Voting is a way to do that, even though the whole thing is sub-optimal in light of what awaits us in heaven.

We cannot simply opt out.

BTW.. on the issue of homosexual civil unions, I think Pres. Trump’s position is that now we have settled law.  On the other hand, look at the rabid resistance to Trump on the part of the homosexualists.   They don’t like him, which is significant.

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ASK FATHER: Can einkorn flour be used for the Eucharist? It is lower in gluten.

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Einkorn is a variety of wild wheat that has a different gluten structure than modern wheat. Some people with gluten sensitivities can tolerate it better.

Would it still be valid material for the holy eucharist?

Here is the wiki entry for Einkorn, not to be confused with Einhorn, which is a unikorn.

Einkorn is a species of wheat, either wild or domesticated, of which each spikelet has one grain only.  This is a really ancient variety of wheat, at least 10000 years old.    Einkorn is of the genus triticum.

The Church teaches that by divine institution – hence, it cannot be changed – that the matter for the Eucharist is to be bread from wheat – triticum – and wine from grapes.

If Einkorn is a wheat, then bread made from einkorn flour is wheat bread.  Therefore it is valid matter for the Eucharist.

If you stop to think about this most of the wheat we have today are, by and large, modern strains that have been bread… no… bred.   This wheat might be more like that which was in use in Christ’s own time than some of the wheat we have since developed.

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28 October 2020 – Feast Sts. Simon and Jude: MASS FOR BENEFACTORS

Wednesday 28 October will be my birthday.  Because my benefactors are great gifts to me, I will say Mass for the intention of my benefactors – I keep track of you – on Wednesday at Noon CDT (Deo volente).

It will be the Feast of Sts. Simon and Jude.  I happen to have a 1st class relic of St. Simon the Apostle!

While I remember benefactors at every Mass, living and deceased at the respective Memento in the Roman Canon, I regularly say Mass for the intention of my benefactors.  It is my duty, honor and pleasure to do so.

Some of you subscribe to give a monthly donation via PayPal or Continue to Give.  Some of send occasional donations through those means or sometimes via snail mail to me P.O. Box (address on the sidebar – do a CTR_F for “Struck” to find it fast.   Others send items from my wish list.

It is all greatly appreciated. When something comes in, it’s a real moral boost.   Today I received some Black Rifle Coffee and an amazon gift card (alas, there was no gift slip in the envelop with the card, so I don’t know who sent it but God does!).

There are some lean days, however, for the monthly subscription option.  Today is one of them.

Also, could I – please – remind you to use my affiliate link to enter Amazon when shopping online?  Links for these USA and the UK are on the sidebar.

I cannot see what you purchase, but I get a small percentage of each purchase.  This is a major issue for me.  So, thanks in advance.

I’m also singing for my supper by posting #ASonnetADay.

So, please consider subscribing to send a monthly donation. That way I have steady income I can plan on, and you wind up regularly on my list of benefactors for whom I pray and for whom I periodically say Holy Mass. I even added “Sonnet Lover” option.


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VIDEO: Autopsy of a really slick LIE

I am watch the Senate debate on the nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court.   I watch recordings at high speed when possible.

Right now I was just infuriated by a serious LIE by omission uttered by the serpentine Sen Feinstein.

There are different ways to lie.  This is one of them: omission, exclusionary detailing.

Watch this.

In regard to Barrett’s position about Roe v. Wade, pro-abortion Feinstein slyly LIED about Barrett’s position.

Feinstein said that Barrett would not call Roe v Wade a “super precedent“.  A super precedent is a precedent that is so important that no one challenges it.

Examples of a super precedent is Marbury v Madison or Mapp v Ohio or  Brown v. Board.   No one challenges the exercise of judicial review, or that the 4th Amendment is incorporated against states through the 14th Amendment, or that the 14th Amendment prohibits states from segregating school on the basis of race).  Those are super precedents.

Constant challenges to a law demonstrate that the law is not a super precedent.  Stare decisis still might hold, however.  Laws can be important precedents without being super precedents.

There are constant challenges to Roe v Wade: hence, Roe is not super precedent.

But listen to what sidewinding Feinstein does.   She says (at 1:05 below) that Barrett would not say that Roe v Wade is a super precedent.  Then lying Feinstein shifts the terms (at 1:25) and moves into the category “settled law” (re: Griswold) and “important precedent” (Casey and ROE), hoping you don’t catch the slight of hand.

HERE

Slithery Feinstein is too smart not to know what she did.    She lied by misrepresentation, exclusionary detailing.

Barrett did NOT say that Griswold, Casey and Roe were NOT precedents.  She didn’t say that they were important precedents.  Barrett understands that cases might come before her on the Court that deal with these precedents, and so she is bound not to discuss them.  The problem is they are constantly being challenged, which slippery Feinstein herself acknowledged.  Barrett rightly said that Roe is not a super precedent.

Ooooo… this is … Jesuitical.   She is as bad as some clergy who screw language into pretzels to deceive without seeming to deceive.

Except that the clergy, for example, those who by omission, who teach only part of the Church’s teachings about certain moral issues, are worse, because by their false teaching they can lead souls to HELL instead of merely be left on the Court of Appeals rather than the SCOTUS.

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#ASonnetADay – GUEST SONNET by John Donne – “Death be not proud,…”

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes – Christ the King (NO: 30th Ordinary) 2020 – POLL: Francis same-sex unions topic during homily?

Was there a GOOD point made in the sermon you heard at the Mass for your Sunday, either live or on the internet? Let us know what it was. Also, are you churches opening up? What was attendance like?

For my part…

I was asked by a reader about a poll.   Good idea.

Anyone can vote, but only registered and approved readers can post comments.   I would very much appreciate your accounts of what your Sunday preacher said about Francis’ approbation of civil union for homosexuals.

Choose your best answer.

At Sunday Mass (25 Oct 2020 - in PERSON or via "tech") the priest/deacon, about Francis' comments on same-sex civil unions...

View Results

 

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