Peter Kwasniewski: “Can anyone deny that there is a de facto schism in the Church?”

St. John Paul, Pope and Prayer Warrior, with one of the most powerful weapons of spiritual warfare.

ME! ME! ME!

I! I! I!

MINE! MINE! MINE!

We are living in an age when many people think they can do whatever the hell they want and there should be no consequences for them.

DO whatever they want?  HAH!  If only.  They think they can BE anything they want, despite the obvious.

The only think that can’t be allowed is for someone else to disagree with them or point to the obvious.

Okay… whew.  That felt good.

What set this off?

Peter Kwasniewski offered something at LifeSite which touches on the above.

He points out several seriously corrosive efforts underway, chief among them the systematic attack on the magisterium of Pope St. John Paul II.

He points to the absurdity of the divided situation where the divorced and remarried in Poland may not be admitted to Communion, but step over the border into Germany and they can be.  Ridiculous, right?   It is a symptom.

He writes:

The unfolding of events has brought a welcome clarity: Belial hath no concord with Christ, the faithful with the unbeliever (cf. 2 Cor 6:15). Can anyone deny that there is a de facto schism in the Church?

 

Posted in The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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D. Worcester – Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary granted canonical status

My friend Fr. Jay Finelli let me know a while ago that Bishop of Worcester has granted canonical status to the Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Still River, MA. He has this on his site:

Congratulations to my dear friends, The Slaves of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Still River, Massachusetts. On 27 October, the Most Rev. Robert J. McManus granted them canonical status as a Public Association of the Faithful. Check out the decree below.

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All Saints 2017 – 1 Nov- Holy Day of Obligation – Deliberately fail? Grave sin!

In these United States, be sure to check your parish schedules for Masses.

Wednesday 1 November 2017 is a Holy Day of OBLIGATION.

For our part, there will be a Missa Cantata at St. Mary’s in Pine Bluff, WI, in the Extraordinary Form

Remember that the Church can determine out obligations in this regard.  It is a Commandment of the Church that we are to fulfill our obligation on Sundays and other Holy Days of obligation. The Catechism of the Catholic Church explains our obligation in the section about the Third Commandment of the Decalogue:

2180 The precept of the Church specifies the law of the Lord more precisely: “On Sundays and other holy days of obligation the faithful are bound to participate in the Mass.” “The precept of participating in the Mass is satisfied by assistance at a Mass which is celebrated anywhere in a Catholic rite either on the holy day or on the evening of the preceding day.”

2181 The Sunday Eucharist is the foundation and confirmation of all Christian practice. For this reason the faithful are obliged to participate in the Eucharist on days of obligation, unless excused for a serious reason (for example, illness, the care of infants) or dispensed by their own pastor. Those who deliberately fail in this obligation commit a grave sin.

Canon Law

So, do check your schedules.

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PODCAzT 159: Catholics and Lutherans about Justification

On this 500th anniversary of the legendary nailing up of theses by Martin Luther, that spark the revolt that tore Christendom apart, and on this anniversary of the signing of the Joint

Today we will hear Avery Card. Dulles 1999 essay in First Things about the Joint Declaration On The Doctrine Of Justification by the Lutheran World Federation and the Catholic Church.

This essay is really helpful in understanding the differences of belief between Catholics and Lutheran about justification, which means, what we believe about how we are saved.  As Dulles puts it from the start:

One of the central themes of the New Testament, if not the central theme, is the way to obtain salvation. To be on the right road is, in New Testament terminology, to be justified. The corollary is that unless we are justified we are unrighteous and are on the road to final perdition. In other words, justification, as a right relationship with God, is a matter of eternal life or death. If it is not important, nothing is.

I mentioned that all students of theology, all seminarians and priests should have this fantastic reference…

US HERE – UK HERE

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Hard-Identity Catholicism, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, PODCAzT, Pope of Christian Unity, The future and our choices, What are they REALLY saying? | Tagged , , , ,
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The Three Living and Three Dead and YOU! Also, wherein @fatherz has an idea for @jamesmacm

I read a truly fascinating post at the blog of the British Library for Digitised Manuscripts.

It is about medieval trope of the Three Living and Three Dead.

Given the time of year this is, it is appropriate and helpful!

Excerpt:

The precise origins of the Three Living and the Three Dead are still somewhat mysterious, but there are many versions of the tale dating back to the 13th century, with the best-known coming from England and France.  The basic version of the story goes like this: three young noblemen are out hunting when they suddenly come across three corpses, which are in varying states of decay, but nonetheless still animated.  Unsurprisingly, the young men express shock and dismay at the sight, while the three corpses admonish them to consider the transience of life and to improve their behaviour before it is too late.

The dialogue between the two groups is sometimes explicit, as in the relatively early example above from the early 14th century De Lisle Psalter (Arundel MS 83).  Beneath a miniature of three kings encountering three corpses is an abridged version of the Anglo-Norman poem Le dit des trios morts et trios vifs which describes the ensuing conversation.  Interestingly, above this double-register miniature is a series of inscriptions in the English vernacular, giving additional voice to the characters.  The Three Living cry out: ‘I am afraid’ (Ich am afert), ‘Lo, what I see!’ (Lo whet ich se), and ‘Methinks these be devils three’ (Me þinkes hit bey develes þre).  And the Three Dead reply: ‘I was well fair’ (Ich wes wel fair), ‘Such shall you be’ (Such schel tou be), and ‘For God’s love, beware by me’ (For godes love bewer by me).

This is very cool stuff.  There’s even dialogue.

I had the image of this being made into a kind of Morality Play with music by… James MacMillan?

Otherwise… I’ll bet that this could be worked up into a, say, play for a Catholic High School.  After all… there are lots of zombie costumes available right now.

Funny!  Right?

Or… not.

PS: I am still hoping that MacMillan will set to music the poem by Gerard Manley Hopkins: The Leaden Echo and the Golden Echo.

Finally, everyone… you are all going to DIE!

So,…

GO TO CONFESSION!

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H.L. Mencken in 1923 about translation of sacred texts, liturgy. Hilarious, prophetic, applicable now.

One of you readers here sent this.  It is by H.L Mencken, an influential American columnist in the 20th c.  He was prodigiously clever, but clever enough to avoid being a fan of Nietzche and an enemy of religion.  He was universally read, but he wasn’t universally liked.  More on him HERE.  In 1931 the Arkansas legislature passed a motion to pray for Mencken’s soul after he had called the state the “apex of moronia.”  That from what some people would call a “Baltimoron”.  Yes, he was from that city.

In any event, a new round of liturgy wars that is probably going to erupt, now that we have Magnum principium and some a about it from Pope Francis that was as clear as mud about the principles of translation laid down in Liturgiam authenticam.   (Hint: Liturgiam authenticam is still in force, but Pope Francis suggested that some of it might not be.  But we don’t have any document explaining which parts and how, etc.)

So, about that whole “liturgy has to be understandable” thing that libs relentless push: It has to change all the Time!  It mustn’t be tooo haaaard for the simply people in the pew … blah blah blah.  Because that’s what liturgy is for, right?  “No mystery here, folks!  Keep moving.”  It’s enough to make you … I dunno… do what you do when you are exasperated by stupid.

The stupid!  IT BURNS!

Let’s see what religion hater Mencken wrote about translation.  Make popcorn and get a beverage in your Fr. Z swag mug. My usual treatment.

Holy Writ

by H. L. Mencken (from the Smart Set, October 1923)

Whoever it was who translated the Bible into excellent French prose is chiefly responsible for the collapse of Christianity in France. Contrariwise, the men who put the Bible into archaic, sonorous and often unintelligible English gave Christianity a new lease of life wherever English is spoken. They did their work at a time of great theological blather and turmoil, when men of all sorts, even the least intelligent, were beginning to take a vast and unhealthy interest in exegetics and apologetics. [In a way, this was a draw back of the Liturgical Movement, which put helpful explanations and texts into people’s hands: some people got the idea that they were now experts on liturgy. Even today there are those in the traditional camp who focus on how the book was moved to their liking or if the bell was rung properly, or if Father wiggled his left finger at the third comma in their old St. Joseph Missal… thus missing the point of why they are there in the first place.  These folks are few, but they can be vocal and unhelpful.  But I digress.] They were far too shrewd to feed this disconcerting thirst for ideas with a Bible in plain English; the language they used was deliberately artificial even when it was new. [REMEMBER: When the Roman liturgy shifted from Greek to Latin, the Latin used was NOT the Latin spoken in the streets, the “vernacular”.  It was highly stylized, drawing on old Roman prayer and concepts from philosophy, etc.] They thus dispersed the mob by appealing to its emotions, as a mother quiets a baby by crooning to it. [Keep in mind that Mencken hates religion.] The Bible that they produced was so beautiful that the great majority of men, in the face of it, could not fix their minds upon the ideas in it. To this day it has enchanted the English-speaking peoples so effectively that, in the main, they remain Christians, at least sentimentally. Paine has assaulted them, Darwin and Huxley have assaulted them, and a multitude of other merchants of facts have assaulted them, but they still remember the twenty-third Psalm when the doctor begins to shake his head, they are still moved beyond compare (though not, alas, to acts!) by the Sermon on the Mount, and they still turn once a year from their sordid and degrading labors to immerse themselves unashamed in the story of the manger. It is not much, but it is something. [It’s quite a lot, actually.  Those are moments of grace and opportunity to which not a few respond.] I do not admire the general run of American Bible-searchers — Methodists, United Brethren, Baptists, and such vermin. But try to imagine what the average low-browed Methodist would be if he were not a Methodist but an atheist!

The Latin Church, which I constantly find myself admiring, despite its frequent astounding imbecilities, [LOL! Not to mention imbeciles!] has always kept clearly before it the fact that religion is not a syllogism, but a poem. [Edging closer to the concept of MYSTERY… mysterium tremendum et fascinans.] It is accused by Protestant dervishes of withholding the Bible from the people. To some extent this is true; to the same extent the church is wise; again to the same extent it is prosperous. Its toying with ideas, in the main, have been confined to its clergy, and they have commonly reduced the business to a harmless play of technicalities—the awful concepts of Heaven and Hell brought down to the level of a dispute of doctors in long gowns, eager only to dazzle other doctors. Its greatest theologians remain unknown to 99% of its adherents. [And then came Twitter.] Rome, indeed, has not only preserved the original poetry in Christianity; it has also made capital additions to that poetry—for example, the poetry of the saints, of Mary, and of the liturgy itself. A solemn high mass must be a thousand times as impressive, to a man with any genuine religious sense in him, as the most powerful sermon ever roared under the big-top by a Presbyterian auctioneer of God. In the face of such overwhelming beauty it is not necessary to belabor the faithful with logic; they are better convinced by letting them alone[A famous English convert – Chesteron? – remarked that one of the reasons he converted is that when he went into Catholic churches, the people left him alone.  They weren’t slobbering over him in faux welcoming and glad-handing.]

Preaching is not an essential part of the Latin ceremonial. [Because we have more than just “words”.] It was very little employed in the early church, [Ummm… wrong.  Sorry, H.L.] and I am convinced that good effects would flow from abandoning it today, or, at all events, reducing it to a few sentences, more or less formal. [And can we stipulate that perhaps fewer priests and permanent deacons should have faculties to preach?] In the United States the Latin brethren have been seduced by the example of the Protestants, [HOW TIMELY!] who commonly transform an act of worship into a puerile intellectual exercise; instead of approaching God in fear and wonder these Protestants settle back in their pews, cross their legs, and listen to an ignoramus try to prove that he is a better theologian than the Pope. This folly the Romans now slide into. Their [lib] clergy begin to grow argumentative, doctrinaire, ridiculous. It is a pity. A bishop in his robes, playing his part in the solemn ceremonial of the mass, is a dignified spectacle, even though he may sweat freely; the same bishop, bawling against Darwin half an hour later, [These days, in favor of things that Darwin would have known eliminated certain lines from the gene pool… if you get my drift.] is seen to be simply an elderly Irishman with a bald head, the son of a respectable saloon-keeper in South Bend, Ind. [Si tacuisses, philosophus mansisses.]Let the reverend fathers go back to Bach. If they keep on spoiling poetry and spouting ideas, the day will come when some extra-bombastic deacon will astound humanity and insult God by proposing to translate the liturgy into American, that all the faithful may be convinced by it.

Marvelous.

And I had just read… I mean minutes before… this stupendously daft bit by the Wile E. Coyote of the catholic Left at Fishwrap and cadres of the New catholic Red Guards, Michael Sean Winters.   He is lamenting the agenda of the upcoming US bishops meeting:

The day Magnum Principium was issued, I remarked to a friend: “This directive from the Holy See presumes that the bishops’ conferences are even capable of having the kinds of discussions needed to bring about an effective translation, and I am not at all sure our bishops’ conference still has that capacity.” I remember the days when Archbishops Daniel Pilarczyk, Oscar Lipscomb, Rembert Weakland and Bishop Donald Trautman would discuss these issues posed by liturgical translations, drawing on years of scholarship and learning.

Oh dear.  I remember those days, too.

Mencken would have had a lot to say about them.

 

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Catholic League: Attack On Bishop Morlino Is Scurrilous ACTION ITEM!

From the Catholic League:

Attack On Bishop Morlino Is Scurrilous

October 30, 2017

Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments on recent attacks on Bishop Robert Morlino of the Diocese of Madison (Wisconsin):

Catholics in the Diocese of Madison are very fortunate to have such a brilliant and courageous leader in Bishop Robert Morlino. He is currently under attack by dissident Catholics, ex-Catholics, and those who never were Catholic, for merely upholding the teachings of the Catholic Church.

The uproar is wholly unjustified, and is indeed scurrilous. It was occasioned when the vicar general of the Diocese of Madison, James Bartylla, recently told his priests how to handle funeral rites for persons known publicly to have been involved in a homosexual relationship. His remarks were not meant as “official diocesan policy,” though they certainly had the backing of the bishop.

One would think from the reaction by DignityUSA, an organization that has long been in open defiance of the Church’s teachings on sexuality, and Faithful America, a left-wing group frequently at war with the bishops, that Bartylla had condemned homosexuals, barring them from a Catholic burial. That is a lie. He did nothing of the sort.

The vicar general’s comments were entirely measured. To begin with, he was not talking about the burial of homosexuals, per se; rather, he was addressing those instances where a homosexual was involved in a public union with his partner. What should a priest do when confronted by the family of the deceased about a person who was in such a relationship? Bartylla instructed them to “think through the issue thoroughly and prudently.”

The micro issue involved in this matter is the funeral rites for homosexuals known to be engaged in a public relationship. The macro issue is scandal.

Citing canon law, Bartylla said that “ecclesiastical funeral rites may be denied for manifest sinners in which public scandal of the faithful can’t be avoided….” Scandal, as defined by the Catechism, is “a grave offense if by deed or omission another is deliberately led into a grave offense.” In other words, causing scandal—inviting others to believe that it is morally acceptable to engage in sinful behavior—is the big issue.

The Catholic Herald offered a cogent statement on this subject two years ago. “Canon law makes it clear that funerals should be refused to manifest sinners to whom a Church funeral could not be granted without public scandal to the faithful.”

In 2014, Pope Francis illuminated the macro issue involved when he excommunicated members of the Mafia: their public profile made them “manifest sinners,” thus offering “public scandal to the faithful.” The central concern for the pope had nothing to do with crime—never mind public declarations of homosexuality—it had to do with sending the wrong signal to the faithful by acquiescing in the deeds of “manifest sinners.”

I know Bishop Morlino as a kind person who holds no animus against any person or group of persons. He deserves our support. Shame on those agenda-ridden activists who are out to smear him.

Let Bishop Morlino know of your support: officeofbishop@madisondiocese.org

Fr. Z kudos to the Catholic League.

May I suggest that, while words are welcome, deeds are doubly so.  Perhaps along with your words of support, you might add a donation to the Diocese, especially for the support of priestly vocations.  HERE  – NB: Look for St. Joseph Fund

CLICK!

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FRANCE: Court Orders Removal of Cross Above Statue of John Paul II

Mesdames et Messieurs…

Breitbart reports:

French High Court Orders Removal of Cross Above Statue of Pope John Paul II

The French administrative court has ordered the removal of a cross from a monument to Saint John Paul II in a public square in the northwest of France, saying it violates the secular nature of the state.
Italian media noted the irony of the ruling, remarking that the cross-removal is not taking place “in Raqqa, the capital of the Islamic State in Syria, but in Brittany, in the heart of Western Europe.”

[…]

The Church’s eldest daughter!

The New catholic Red Guards would be pleased.

Crush the Four Olds!

Posted in Pò sì jiù, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged ,
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UPDATE: Yes, the Rosary is a spiritual weapon. A cry for help from @massimofaggioli

I can only interpret Massimo “Beans” Faggioli’s confused statements about the Rosary as a cry for help.  Otherwise, what he has repeated is truly dreadful.

I have already posted a request to you readers to say the Rosary for him.  HERE

Now I see that he is at it again.

In Brussels there was an ecumenical service held in the cathedral of all places for “Reformation” Sunday.  Some young Catholics had the audacity to pray the Rosary.  The powers that be had them removed by the police.  HERE

Beans tooted on Twitter:

The Most Holy Rosary certainly IS a weapon. It is entirely proper to speak of the Rosary as a weapon.

Faggioli’s statement against thinking about the Rosary as spiritual weapon is a diabolical insinuation which, if taken seriously, could undermine how people pray and enervate our will to resist the attacks of the Enemy of the Soul with one of our most powerful spiritual tools.  It is, quite simply, wicked in its implications.  I hope and pray that he is merely confused.

Faggioli’s statement against thinking about Mary as a “human shield” is preposterous.  It flies directly in the face of centuries of tradition, prayer and Catholic identity.

One of the earliest Christian prayers which we possess is

Sub tuum praesidium confugimus, Sancta Dei Genetrix. Nostras deprecationes ne despicias in necessitatibus, sed a periculis cunctis libera nos semper, Virgo gloriosa et benedicta. Amen.

We take refuge under your protection, O Holy Mother of God; despise not our petitions in our needs, but deliver us always from all dangers, O glorious and blessed Virgin. Amen.

Pope Francis has spoken of this prayer and the protection that Mary provides.  HERE

What on earth is Faggioli up to?   Is it a cry for help in the shape of self-promotion?  “Hey!  Look at me! See how edgy I can be?”

Remember that he is one of the New catholic Red Guards.

Another writer of the New catholic Red Guards, Michael Sean Winters of the National Schismatic Reporter (aka Fishwrap) has also tried to undermine our use of the Rosary by objecting to referring to it as a “weapon”.  HERE

Coincidence?

Just do a search of the webs for “schutzmantelmadonna“.

It is hard to understand how Faggioli can be so obtuse when it comes to this odd notion of his.  But he has now repeated it.

Please place Massimo beneath Mary’s shielding mantle and say some or all of a Rosary for him.   Pray for him and against his influence on the unsuspecting.

Perhaps also ask Bl. Bartolo Longo to intercede for him with Our Lady and before the throne of God.

UPDATE:

Let me help Massimo in a concrete way:

At a Mass for the Assumption 2013 Pope Francis told the crowds:

“Mary joins us, she fights at our side. She supports Christians in the fight against the forces of evil. Especially through prayer, through the rosary. Hear me out, the rosary… Do you pray the Rosary each day? I don’t know, are you sure? There we go!”

And in his native tongue an extended quote with my emphases:

Ma questo non significa che [Maria] sia lontana, che sia staccata da noi; anzi, Maria ci accompagna, lotta con noi, sostiene i cristiani nel combattimento contro le forze del male. La preghiera con Maria, in particolare il Rosario – ma sentite bene: il Rosario. Voi pregate il Rosario tutti i giorni? Ma, non so… [la gente grida: Sì!] Sicuro? Ecco, la preghiera con Maria, in particolare il Rosario ha anche questa dimensione “agonistica”, cioè di lotta, una preghiera che sostiene nella battaglia contro il maligno e i suoi complici. Anche il Rosario ci sostiene nella battaglia.

But this does not mean that [Mary] is distant or detached from us; rather Mary accompanies us, fights along with us, sustains Christians in their combat against the forces of evil. Prayer with Mary, especially the Rosary – but listen carefully: the Rosary. Do you pray the Rosary every day? But I’m not sure you do [the people shout “Yes!”]… Really? So, prayer with Mary, especially the Rosary, has this “combative” dimension, that is of struggle, a prayer that sustains us in the battle against the evil one and his accomplices. The Rosary also sustains us in the battle.

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AUDIO Longer St. Michael Prayer. @fatherz calls upon priests and bishops! 

I’ve been mentioning – and finding mentions of – St. Michael often of late.

I’m praying the longer, mighty St. Michael Prayer daily now.  As a matter of fact, I just said it again as an important meeting about which I know is just getting underway.

It may be that you readers would like a recording, for your own use.  I’ve added it to the page.  HERE

Let’s stop temporizing and excusing.

It’s time for war.

I now call especially on priests and bishops:

Fathers!  You have the graces of office and of orders.  Each of you is alter Christus.  When you pray, God hears and the powers of Hell tremble.  Do your part.  Let’s stop kidding ourselves about what’s going on.  We can fight with awesome spiritual effect, if only we will buckle it on and DO IT.

Pray your vesting prayers.  Pray your Rosary.  Pray the Michael Prayer.  Pray the Litanies with your people.  Bless and distribute sacramentals.  Use the blessings in the Rituale Romanum.

For the love of God and neighbor, FIGHT!

Archangeli Michaelis interventione suffulti, supplices te, Domine, deprecamur, ut quos honore prosequimur contingamus in mente.

UPDATE:

On Twitter, Matthew Balan observed that Beans used the same term about the Rosary as a left wing, Muslim, UK politician: “weaponize”.  Reported at HuffPo.  She is pro-abortion, and so he doesn’t like the Rosary outside abortion clinics.

Interesting that they’re minds work similarly about praying the Rosary.

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