I picked this up from a tweet.
The Dems logo for the DNC…

Satanic Symbol.

Rotated…


UPDATE:
The branding was done by Wide Eye and by Zero. I found out about it HERE
Wide Eye has worked with… from their site…

Zero, offices in NYC and MKE, work with…

#ASonnetADay – SONNET 15. Waiting for a ride. pic.twitter.com/4mEsHfQxMP
— Fr. John Zuhlsdorf (@fatherz) August 22, 2020
From a reader…
QUAERITUR:
Father: In my diocese those who receive on the tongue
must go to the end of the line. Then the priest/deacon/whatever uses hand sanitizer between each communicant, as if we are all
“Unclean”!The Host tastes only like hand sanitizer and NOT like bread at all! Father, I feel that this is a real desecration of the Body and Blood of Our Lord! Am I correct? It just seems so wrong!
*sigh*
Friend, I get it. When I purify the chalice, I get a strong does of hand sanitizer.
If you are getting a little bit on a Host, don’t worry. You are still receiving Communion.
Offer up this unintended treatment to the Eucharistic Lord.
Eventually this will pass.
How I pray that more and more people will reassess their Faith.
UPDATE: See an important comment added below.
From a reader…
QUAERITUR:
i always thought that tattoos were somehow sinful. but today’s third lesson from Matins about St. Jane of Chantal makes me question that. what is the Church’s teaching on “body modifications” like that?
First, I am impressed that you are looking at the lessons from Matins.
The Lesson in question says that St. Jane de Chantal:
“When her husband was killed while hunting, she made a vow of continence, and she so mastered herself that she did not hesitate to act as godmother to the son of the man who killed her husband. Lest later on she should be moved from her determination to observe chastity, she renewed her vow and inscribed the most holy Name of Jesus on her breast with a hot iron.”
I am tempted to say, if you want to mark yourself up, want it badly enough that you would be willing to do it yourself with a red hot iron. Any less zeal than that, you probably shouldn’t get a tattoo.
There were Old Testament prohibitions against marking the body, along with a lot of other prohibitions that we are no longer bound by under the New Covenant.
There is nothing sinful in itself in getting a tattoo. That said, there are other factors which would make getting a tattoo sinful, such as the topic or aspect of the tattoo, why you got it, etc.
For example, during our Traditional Mass Pilgrimage to the Holy Land last February, a few of the men got Jerusalem Cross tats on their arms for completing the pilgrimage. They went to a place on St. George Street which, it seems, has been in the business since the crusades and have been using the same stencil blocks for hundreds of years. I don’t see anything wrong with that. And their martyrdom will be assured when the Dems take full control.
On the other hand, it seems to me that mapping the whole body is an exaggeration. Frankly, I find it revolting.
Again, motives and content make a different.
Finally, you could be committing a sin if you are so stupid as to choose a tattoo inflicter who isn’t very good. And you could be committing a sin if you are so stupid as to neglect checking your spelling or verifying that that cool looking Chinese phrase really does mean “World Peace” and not “Turkey Sandwich”.
Remember. Hangovers last a day. Tattoos…. longer than that.
Problems with rhymes that… don’t.
#ASonnetADay – SONNET 14. pic.twitter.com/Zgs44LYh2X
— Fr. John Zuhlsdorf (@fatherz) August 21, 2020
PLEASE use the sharing buttons! Thanks!
Registered here or not, will you in your charity please take a moment look at the requests and to pray for the people about whom you read?
Continued from THESE.
Let’s remember all who are ill, who will die soon, who have lost their jobs, and who are afraid.
I get many requests by email asking for prayers. Some are heart-achingly grave and urgent.
As long as my blog reaches so many readers in so many places, let’s give each other a hand. We should support each other in works of mercy.
If you have some prayer requests, feel free to post them below.
You have to be registered here to be able to post.
I still have a pressing personal petition.
ALSO… I’ve been in touch with a friend, T, who asked for prayers “to save my marriage and family”. I’d appreciate it if you good people would CONTINUE to ask the Holy Family all to intercede. I have reason to believe that there is demonic interference because of the involvement of a third party who is a busy-body and trouble-maker.
#ASonnetADay – SONNET 13.
Time is running out! pic.twitter.com/BNiGEPaycu
— Fr. John Zuhlsdorf (@fatherz) August 20, 2020
It will not surprise you that Fishwrap (aka National Schismatic Reporter) has come down firmly in the pro-abortion camp. One of its most important, show-cased writers, the disciple of Sr. Margaret Farley, the open lesbian Jamie Manson.
This could be next to the entry for “scandal” in an Illustrated Dictionary of catholic Insanity.
Jamie picks up where Heidi left off (praising the nutty extremist AOC and calling her the future of Catholics):
AOC embraces reproductive justice, and other Catholics should, too
[…]
The piece aroused the indignation of some Catholics who oppose the right to access abortion care, arguing that, Ocasio-Cortez’s pro-choice position is untenable with the Catholic faith.
What they don’t consider, however, is that Ocasio-Cortez doesn’t view the issue of abortion simply as an issue of reproductive rights. She views it through the more comprehensive lens of reproductive justice.
[…]
The rest of this article is a pro-abortion argument.
There is no other way around it.
Fishwrap is openly pro-abortion.
The Bishop of Madison put it exactly right in a curt Tweet:
No matter how it is nuanced, “reproductive justice” calls for the destruction of unborn human lives to remain legal. https://t.co/RETY9bmIgp
— Bishop Donald Hying (@bishophying) August 20, 2020
Try adding this prayer to your daily prayer routine for, say, 8 days.
Pray to St. Joseph, patron of the diocese where the offices of the Fishwrap (aka National Schismatic Reporter) are located! Pray that all the writers and staff of that heterodox and destructive publication either covert to orthodox Catholicism or else that they are driven to closure. Pray also that the bishops of these United States of America develop the courage to strip that publication of the word “Catholic” in their title.
De
ar St. Joseph, Terror of Demons and Protector of Holy Church, Chaste Guardian of Our Lord and His Mother, hear our urgent prayer and swiftly intercede with our Savior, whom as a loving father you defended so diligently, that He will pour abundant graces upon the staff of that organ of dissent the National catholic Reporter so that they will either embrace orthodox doctrine concerning faith and morals or that all their efforts will promptly fail and come to their just end. Amen.

Truly AWESOME new complete set of St. Thomas Aquinas’ Summa Theologica. They are doing his entire body of work in beautiful volumes. CLICK
Dr. Peter Kwasniewski, a board member of the Aquinas Institute— the folks who are publishing, for the first time, the Opera Omnia of St. Thomas Aquinas in parallel Latin & English, in some 60 blue hardcover volumes — sent me notice of important things afoot to share with readers.
This is quite interesting. And I will draw your attention especially to the end of Peter’s summary! And if you haven’t seen the new, blue volumes of Aquinas… wow. Just… wow. For just the Summa US HERE – UK HERE
Peter wrote:
The Aquinas Institute is now launching Online Discussion Classes, at two levels:
- An undergraduate Liberal Arts Curriculum consisting of 12 accredited courses in humanities, philosophy, and theology. This is for students ready to do college-level work, students already enrolled in state universities looking for a way to fulfill general education requirements with worthwhile courses taught by orthodox Catholics; or folks of any age who want to fill in gaps in their own education. Courses begin the week of September 21st.
- A Graduate Theology Curriculum, also consisting of 12 integrated courses, equivalent to an MA in theology. We are hoping that adults looking for a more serious engagement with theology, including priests, religious, catechists, schoolteachers, and parents, will check out this program; there is nothing like it anywhere in the USA. Courses begin the week of September 14th and may be taken one by one or in combination.
Both programs are built on two principles:
- Great Books or primary sources: we read authors like Plato and Aristotle for philosophy, Augustine and Aquinas for theology, Dante and Shakespeare for humanities.
- Discussion: the classes are not lectures but conversations guided by experienced professors. The faculty for Fall 2020 hail from Wyoming Catholic College, the International Theological Institute, Our Lady of Guadalupe Seminary, and Baylor University.
The cost is comparable to similar online programs, and scholarships are available.
The first three Liberal Arts courses will be:
- Gods and Heroes in Ancient Greece, with Dr. Jason Baxter;
- Tools of Philosophy, with Jacob Terneus;
- Salvation History I, with Dr. Vincent DeMeo
The first three Graduate Theology courses will be:
- The Book of Job, with Dr. Nathan Schmiedecke
- Existence and Attributes of God, with Dr. John Mortensen
- Church Fathers I, with Dr. Michael Foley
These courses, these books, these teachers—ah, to be a student once again! I strongly urge you to check out the Aquinas Institute website and these academic offerings. Let other people know about it, too—anyone you’ve heard express an interest in continuing their education, or who wishes to supplement a secular program, or wants to make up for gaps in the formation they received at other institutions in the past (just think of what most clergy get in their seminaries… shudder).
Yes, I can attest to the horror show that was seminary in my day. My time in seminary in these USA was among the most miserable of my life. My Roman seminary days were marked mostly by the tension of learning Italian while studying in Italian and also realizing the mediocrity of the offerings.
These are different days. None of this sort of thing was an option back in the day.