PODCAzT 183: Bp. Schneider’s call for a Crusade of Eucharistic Reparation – ACTION ITEM!

Bp. Schneider has called for a Crusade of Eucharistic Reparation. He released a text on his site, Gloria Dei, about sins against the Blessed Sacrament, offences against our Lord in the Eucharist, and the need of such a coordinated campaign.

Let’s hear what Bp. Schneider has to say in his text. I will try to set off in some audible way when he is quoting something at length. He has a few extended quotes and without a written text in front of you it might get a little confusing.

Tune your ear for his argument about how the Lord, though now risen and unable to suffer as we do, nevertheless is still wounded by irreverence toward Him in the Eucharist.   Also, carefully attend to the quotes from St. Peter Julian Eymard.

I read the whole text from Bp. Schneider’s site, make some comments after with some recommendations for ACTION! and then read also the PRAYER that Bp. Schneider attached for the same Crusade.

I pray that this offering may bear fruit.  The audio recording is offered especially for those who may find it hard to read texts or who, pressed with cares, can benefit from a reading.

https://zuhlsdorf.computer/podcazt/20_08_01.mp3
WE ARE OUR RITES!

 

Posted in ACTION ITEM!, Cri de Coeur, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Mail from priests, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, PODCAzT, Sin That Cries To Heaven, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , ,
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1 August: Feast of Blessed M. Stella and her Ten Companions, the The Martyrs of Nowogrodek – FOLLOW UP

Trying to get this under the wire.  Next year I will do better.

1 August is the Feast of Blessed M. Stella and her Ten Companions, the The Martyrs of Nowogrodek, in Nazi occupied Poland in 1943.  Now in Belarus.

I wrote about them HERE.

Our battle for the Church in these troubled time, The Present Crisis, has to be fought on many levels.

What might not be wrought through the intercession of these Eleven Sisters?

The artwork for the Beatification image painted by Jerzy Kumala (1998).

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Notes about how the relics of the Old Testament Maccabees martyrs reached Rome

This is an interesting day liturgically. It is the Feast of the Holy Maccabees, Old Testament Martyrs, and it is also the Feast of St. Peter in Chains associated with the Basilica of St. Peter ad vincula in Rome. The connection between the two is that the relics of the Maccabees are in a sarcophagus in the crypt of St. Peter ad vincula. Of all the relics of Old Testament figures these are probably the most important because of their weight for both Christians and Jews. It is fitting that the Basilica is one of the places most visited by Jewish visitors to Rome, because of the mighty statue of Moses by Michaelangelo, intended for the tomb of Julius II, is housed there in.

I learned a long time ago, that it is best to believe the claims that certain things are where they have for centuries said to be. However, in the case of the relics of these Old Testament figures, I have often wondered about how they got to Rome, or were even preserved.

Interesting things about this interesting feast.

NLM has an interesting article on the Holy Maccabees: HERE

Fr. Hunwicke, about the Maccabees, cites Benedict XVI’s Jesus of Nazareth, vol. II: HERE

I read a fascinating article HERE:  Margaret Schatkin, “The Maccabean Martyrs”, in Vigiliae Christianae Vol. 28, No. 2 (Jun., 1974), pp. 97-113.

Schatkin traces the Maccabee relics from interment after their death to their location in Rome. She uses Patristic sources as well as ancient Jewish writings. Some of the more modern scholarship she works with was, surprisingly, by Card. Rampolla, whose election as Pope after Leo XIII had been been infamously vetoed in the conclave to make way for the election of St. Pius X.

The place of the martyrdom of the Maccabees and preservation of their remains seems to have been Antioch, possibly at the Jewish Synagogue. Once Christianity was the official religion, Christians often seized synagogues and converted them to churches. The cult of the martyrs was well established in the East by the time of Sts Gregory Nazianzus and John Chrysostom and Augustine writes of their cult in Antioch (s. 300.6). It seems that Justianian translated the relics to Constantinople. However, perhaps some of the relics were moved from Antioch to Rome, which is why the Martyrologium Romanum on 1 August says that they were deposited in St. Peter in Chains during the pontificate of Pelagius I (d.561): Eorum reliquiae Romam translatae in eadem Ecclesia sancti Petri ad Vincula conditae fuerunt. It could be, according to sermons associated with or actually by Leo I, that there was a cult of these martyrs in Rome in the 5th c. The Leonine material says that the Feast of the Maccabees was joined to the Feast of the newly dedicated “Eudoxian Basilica” Sancti Petri ad vincula.

In 1867, a 5th or 6th c. sarcophagus was found under the altar of St. Peter in Chains. It had seven compartments each containing clothes containing ashes and bones which is consistent with what St. John Chrysostom said about them. There were also inscriptions on lead which indicated that also the their mother and Eleazar’s relics were included.

St. Bernard of Clairvaux wrote a treatise about why the Maccabees were privileged with a feast equal to Christian martyrs. (He seems not to have considered the Holy Innocents.) He argues that they were making a confession of faith, which is how the early Christian martyrs died. Chrysostom suggests that, because they were before Christ’s redeeming Sacrifice, and the greater fear of death, their martyrdom was superior to that of Christians.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Saints: Stories & Symbols | Tagged
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Washington DC: young people chalk “Black Pre-born Lives Matter” on sidewalk and are ARRESTED!

This, in the nation’s capital:

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Lammas – Loaf Mass Day – 1 August

Call it what you will, 1 August, Feast of St. Peter in Chains, Feast of the Holy Maccabees, it is also

Lammas.

Noooo…. not the big hairy sheep.

Lammas is Anglo-Saxon hlaf-mas or Loaf Mass.   This is a first fruits  harvest feast, for making bread and bringing it to church.  Sometimes the loaves were pretty fancy.  There were even processions.

There is a great post about Lammas at the wonderful blog of The Clerk of Oxford.

There are beautiful customs that help us link the spin of your planet around your yellow star with the mysteries of salvation.  What a beautiful rhythm, year in and year out.  Each year the mysteries don’t change, but we do.  Each year we are able to harvest something different from them even as they take root in us and form us.

Here’s a reminder about one that is coming up in August.  On 15 August, Assumption, it is customary to have  herbs and flowers and fruit blessed.  COVID be damned!  Get your priest to bless some of these things on the Feast of the Assumption!

I’ve written about the Assumption blessing HERE.

Today, however, if you are able to bake, how about baking a loaf of bread?  Perhaps something even fancy or decorated?  At least go and get a loaf of some really good bread.   Sometimes something as simple as a piece of good bread and a little cheese or some jam is pretty satisfying!

This Owl Bread I spied at wiki is pretty spiffy.

On a serious note, I think that Lammas is also a date for some pseudo-pagans who are into dangerous rites that summon demons… ’cause that’s what those idiot rites do.  When you eat your bread – whenever you eat anything – say your prayers!  Ask for God’s blessing as you thank Him.  And perhaps you might say a a prayer to your Guardian Angel to give you protection from all the demonic activity going on right now.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Just Too Cool, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged
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ACTION ITEM! A priest’s request for prayers – IMPORTANT UPDATE!

UPDATE 31 July 2020:

GREAT news.   I have in the past written about the Seven Sisters Apostolate.  This is one of the best initiatives I know.  I am grateful to them.

I was contacted by some women who want to form a Seven Sisters group for the priest who asked for prayers.   I gave them his name and location.  This is simply something that must be done.

Ya’ know… there are discouraging days writing this blog, dealing with the knucklehead stuff you don’t see.  To have been a conduit in this development for the priest who asked for a hand… wow.  Just.  Wow.

Let there be sung Non nobis and Te Deum.


ORIGINALLY Published on: Jul 27, 2020 ______

I asked for permission to post this.   A priest asks for prayers.

From a priest… my emphases:

Dear Reverend Father,

Thank you for all you do. It’s had an effect greater than we may know this side of the grave.  I’ve followed your blog for years, even secretly in the dark days of the gulag that was called a seminary.  From greater attendance to the sacraments, to trying – and failing – to learn the Traditional Mass, you have been a great influence for the good.

After years of abuse as a seminarian – mental, verbal, and much worse – I was ordained as the first local priest in nearly two decades to my diocese.  As a curate it has not been better. As the young-ish mad conservative that needed to be kept from ruining the diocese, obviously my pro-Catholic proclivities were scrupulously observed and punished.

To some consternation after only a very few years of priesthood I have guided a fine young man to entering the seminary this September.  Thankfully, he is a far better man than I, and will by the grace of God be a better priest. Please God, the stain of my reputation will not cause him too much hardship.

God has also blessed many other initiatives richly.  The power of prayer and personal penance, however slight I can offer, must be remembered by priests. I can see the results, and thank God His mercies.

Natural attrition seems to be necessitating me becoming a pastor of a parish soon.  I am a very flawed man, but want to be a good priest of Jesus Christ and His Holy Church.  This parish, of a geographical size comparable to a medieval Irish kingdom, needs a great deal of love and God’s grace. I am deeply afraid, and yet filled with the hope that comes from trusting in the Lord.

This is very embarrassing – but St. Paul tells us to be fools for Christ’s sake.  I am begging, as all of us are beggars before God, for you to solicit prayers for my future parish.  After 50 years and more of abuse of all kinds, they are in nearly unimaginable need.  I am not the man for the job, but I am the only man to do the work. Please pray for this enormous but unremembered parish.

Be assured of my thanks, my prayers, my penance, and a Mass for your intentions.  Never hesitate to ask for my aid.

 

Posted in ACTION ITEM!, Cri de Coeur, HONORED GUESTS, Mail from priests, Urgent Prayer Requests | Tagged ,
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A cause of today’s ecclesial schizophrenia: priests don’t know Latin

This is for priests and bishops in the Latin Church who don’t know Latin.

Fathers, most of you who are not quite senior now did not get Latin in your education years.

You were cheated.

If you entered formation after the 1983 Code was promulgated, and you were denied Latin, those who were in charge of your formation did you a terrible injustice.  The 1983 Code absolutely requires Latin during seminary formation.  The Latin Church’s law – can. 249 – requires that seminarians be “very well trained” in Latin.  The English translation of that canon is weak, by the way.  Perhaps the one who made the translation was trying to hide the truth.

What does it mean for the identity of the Latin Church and of her members if the priests of the Latin Church do not know any Latin, the language of worship, law and theology – Cult, Code and Creed – back into the depths of her origins?   This could point to the ecclesial schizophrenia we see on all sides now: disorganized behavior and speech, being out of touch with reality, erratic and disorganized.

Fathers, correct the problem.   START LEARNING LATIN.

“But… but… but… it’s tooooo haaaaard.  I don’t have tiiiiiiiime!”

This is the Feast of Ignatius Loyola.   Ignatius, after his conversion in 1521, had to get the proper foundational education so that he could move forward in his new mission.  At 33 years old he started attending a basic public grammar school in Barcelona so that he could later go to university.  Ignatius sat with school children to learn Latin.   He then studied Latin and theology for the next ten years.

Imagine.  What might have happened had Ignatius whined about Latin being “toooo haaaard”, or not have “enough tiiiiime”!  What might that have meant for the Counter-Reformation?

You could, Fathers, start your transformation today on this Feast of St. Ignatius… Patron of Late Latin Students? … by signing up NOW for, for example, DUOLINGO’s Latin course.

Duolingo is online or on your phone.  I know people who have used it effectively.  You can get out of a course what you put into it.

This method, which I have seen a little, has the advantage of being contained so that, on a daily basis, you can make progress without dedicating massive amounts of time.   Is it perfect? Hardly.  Are there better methods?  Yes.  Would it be worth pursuing those better methods?  Sure.  HOWEVER, this is something that you can do RIGHT NOW.  Click clickity click and you are AT IT.

I know someone who has made amazing progress with French using Duolingo.  He has been at it now every day for almost a year.

You can get out of a course what you put into it. 

A little bit every day.  Brick by brick.  Minutatim.  By degress.

An article about learning Latin with Duolingo at Catholic World Report.

Men.  Look at this image.  It is from a series of illustrations of a life of St. Ignatius.

Barcinone ut se ad animorum salutem instruat prima Grammaticae elementa annos tres, et triginta natus addiscit; furente ac rumpente se Daemone, qui importunis rerum caelestium gaudiis avocare alio eius animum frustra conatur.

In Barcelona, so that he may train himself for the saving of souls, at the age of thirty-three he studies the first elements of Grammar; but is taken out of himself and distracted by the Devil who in vain tries to call his mind elsewhere by importunate enjoyments regarding heavenly things.

Fathers!   Don’t be like the kids in the foreground, fooling around when they ought to be paying attention.  Don’t allow the Devil to distract you with things that you think are important but really aren’t.

Fathers!  Be like Ignatius, who was humble enough to go to elementary school with children to get his Latin.

Take the simple step I’ve suggested.   Brick by brick.

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Fr. Z’s Kitchen and NEW BOOK: Patum Piperium and Christ The Liturgy

A little while ago, a reader in Blighty sent me some Patum Piperium, having described his use of it as a fine smear over well-toasted bread.

“Patum Piperium!”, I piped up. “That’s interesting!”

He sent me some.  It is very good.  Essentially, what we have in Patum Piperium – “Gentleman’s Relish”, apparently developed in the early 19th c., is a very strong flavored butter with at least 60% anchovy and a secret concoction of herb.

Having enjoyed a few breakfasts of toast with Patum and strong black tea, and having seen that Patum is prohibitively expensive to ship to these USA, I determined to make my own.  I ranged about the interwebs, looking for the solutions of others, since it was a cosmic inevitability that others have had the same desire.   I found various attempts, which all circled about the same basic concept: flavored butter, lots of anchovy, herbs to taste.

This morning – it being Friday – I decided to make my own patum, which I knew wouldn’t be Piperium, but which would be pretty good anyway.    A taste test was in order.  Besides, today is the Feast of St. Ignatius Loyola, and there’s something really fishy about the Jesuits.

Most of the mis en place for this experiment.  As it turned out I didn’t use any of the Lea & Perrins.  The small white container is the official Gentleman’s Relish.

I won’t bore you with the process.  However, I ground together, extremely finely, dried thyme and white peppercorn.   Pinch of nutmeg and a smattering of mashed garlic.  I used anchovy paste from a tube because it’s what I had and politically incorrect butter.   More anchovy than butter.

The color of my Patum isn’t like that of the original.  I suspect that the anchovy they use has been desiccated, which would account for the color and the intense flavor.  You really do want to use only a fine smear on your toast, or it gets to be a little too much.  If the bread is good, you want to taste it, after all.

For consistency, I had just been working the butter and paste together so my patum was rather loose, whereas the Patum came from the fridge.

Since today is the feast of the founder of the Jesuits, there was only one possible mug to use.  HERE

I must say that my patum was tasty.  It wasn’t as intense as Patum Piperium, so I used a little more.   It matched well with the tea, which was as black as the outer edge of your galaxy.

Perhaps it should be called Patum Zedperium?

And, while I have your attention, I just received this from the increasingly admirable Angelico Press.  The title is absolute catnip for me.

Christ The Liturgy by William Daniel

US HERE – UK HERE

I’ve read now the introduction and spot-read here and there throughout.  The intro instantly grabbed my attention with the summation of an alluring short story about a couple who find 100 year old blueprints for a house. They wind up conforming their lives to the period in which the house was designed, as do the workers who build it.  Get it?   Liturgy?

As I read, I did mental fist pumps, interiorly shouting “YES!” as I crunched my toast and Zedperium.

The writer worked with John Milbank and Catherine Pickstock (which explains the density of his sentences).  He seems to come from a Protestant background, for he attended Calvin College, Duke Divinity and Nashota House.  And, in the list of people he acknowledges, I recognized not a single name other than Stanley Hauerwas.

Do I care that this is not an overtly Catholic book on liturgy?  No, I do not.   This guy is on target.  From Chapter 4:

What is often misunderstood about liturgical action, specifically as it regards Christian liturgy, is that it is neither performative nor initiative. That is, it is not a performance before God to somehow please God or curry favor, nor is the Christian to understand herself as one who initiates contact with God. As outlined in the first chapter, this is a gross misinterpretation of liturgy that stems from a mistranslation and misunderstanding of the word and meaning of leitourgia. Any claim that liturgy is instigated by, or an experience simply to be taken in or enjoyed by, humans reduces liturgical action to a temporary, flattened affair that has little or nothing to do with God, save the gross objectification of the same. Such a reduction bears an implicit, disenchanted anthropology, a conception of humanity that is biological at the best and animalistic at worst. Liturgy, however, does not originate in human action, even though it implicates humanity in its activity and elicits human participation. Liturgy is about creative agency of God who in Christ has gathered human nature into divine reciprocity, a reciprocity that is without beginning or end. The human’s participation in this eternal action is medial by nature. That is, the human is caught up in the divine self-relation of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Liturgy hereby names the self relation of eternal reciprocity that God himself is. To worship, therefore – to participate in the liturgical action – is to be involved in an action that begins outside of human agency yet implicates the human in divine agency. In short, liturgy for the human is a medial matter.

And imagine my surprise when I, who talk and write about an the apophatic elements of an encounter with Mystery in liturgical worship, as I spotted his reference to a kata-apo-phatic exercise.

Again, this fellow worked with Milbank and Picstock.  Hence, I am not surprised that he has a section about “metaxological” liturgy.   I have only a fuzzy idea about what the heck that means, but I look forward to reading it.  I think it must have something to do with the “middle voice”, as in Greek grammar.  He talks about the middle voice in his intro.

The author’s intent, inter alia, is to demolish the lib canard that was shoved down our gullets for decades that leitourgia is the “work of the people”.  GAG.   He writes about “liturgical habitation”, with all that the polyvalent word “habit” brings with it.   I liked this part, for his description of Chapter One:

“I go on to show how vital is Paul’s usage of leitourgia for understanding the worshipper’s involvement in Christian liturgy and why the modern mistranslation falsifies her participation in divine action and denigrates the worshipper’s involvement in liturgical action.”

Notice something fun in there?   He does this throughout the intro.

I have often written on this blog and said in talks that the false notions of “active participation” that have dominated our churches, whereby all sorts of lay people have to be drawn into carrying a bowl or reading something, is the opposite of empowering the laity.  It is actually a vile form of condescending clericalism, in the worst sense of the word.

Chapter Two… get this! …

“I bring Gregory of Nyssa and Maximus Confessor into conversation with phenomenology, especially Maurice Merleau-Ponty, to show how one’s bodily comportment through habitual actions creates certain conditions of possibility for perceiving oneself as a participant in divine action.”

I can’t help but cite a little more.

“In the final chapter, “The Grammar of God,” I deal explicitly with the middle voice as a hermeneutic key for faithfully understanding the nature of Christian liturgy as the work of one for the sake of the many.”

and…

“The purpose of this book is to challenge the reader to reimagine liturgy as it is and is to be experienced by the worshiper, namely as transcendent. Transcendent, however, in a way that gathers the temporal in the celestial through participation in the eternal liturgy who is Jesus the Christ.”

Folks, this is heavy reading.  However, even if you have to punch above your weight when engaging this book, you’ll get a lot out of it.  I suspect there will be more than one “Ah hah!” moment in it for me.

Today, by the way, as the last day of July, would be a great moment for about 1000 of you readers to buy this book (or, hey!, anything!) through my Amazon link.   This has not been a great month.

Christ The Liturgy by William Daniel

US HERE – UK HERE

 

Posted in Fr. Z's Kitchen, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, REVIEWS | Tagged ,
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ACTION ITEM! Prayers for Msgr. Charles Pope, tested positive for COVID

The website of St. Cyprian parish in Washington DC reported a couple days back that my friend Msgr. Charles Pope has tested positive for the Coronavirus, COVID.

They and all the rectory inhabitants will have to quarantine themselves for a while.

Today we learned that Herman Cain, who ran for president some years ago, has died after contracting COVID.  Pray for him and pray for the recovery of all who are ill.

I wrote:

A prayer for a miracle: the sudden, complete and lasting obliteration of COVID-19.

Posted in PRAYER REQUEST |
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Fr. Z Swag In The Wild

Someone spotted Z-Swag “in the wild” and sent me a screenshot.  This is from a video, HERE.  An interview by Taylor Marshall with a young fellow, Cameron O’Hearn.  Apparently he is making a documentary – news to me! – about the Traditional Latin Mass.

Where is it?

What is that?

This is from my “Lex Orandi Lex Credendi” line.

For your car in stickers or magnets.

How to get your own?

HERE

 

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