UPDATED WITH AUDIO: On hearing Sir James Macmillan’s “A European Requiem”

UPDATE 8 Aug 2017

MacMillan’s piece is first up.  Then at about 42:45 Beethoven’s 9th starts.

____

Originally Published on: Aug 7

Would that I were in London and able to attend the Proms.  I would have very much enjoyed hearing the premiere of Catholic composer Sir James Macmillan’s A European Requiem.  I’ve just finished watching the BBC archived broadcast.  Whew.

If you want more on Macmillan and this piece, may I direct you to Damien Thompson (a darn good music critic, if you ask me) who wrote about it at The Spectator?  I can quite easily believe that the nattering radio commentators didn’t have clue.  Damien called the new piece “gloriously subversive”.   Surely he is right.  This “Requiem” is for Europe, and Europe’s Western Civilization.

It even has a counter-tenor.

Damian found the right word: lament.  What it sings and sounds indeed brings on the pensivehead.  It seems to be too late for Europe.  Whatever else might be over there across the herring pond, in a few decades Europe, as described by, for example, Joseph Ratzinger, may be no more.

Damian points out the irony of the new composition’s juxtaposition with Beethoven’s 9th Symphony (think unofficially canonized EU anthem).

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Posted in Cri de Coeur, Pò sì jiù, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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Thanks from seminarian: The BIRETTA PROJECT!

The other day, HERE, I mentioned that new seminarians of the diocese, gathered for their annual week with the Extraordinary Ordinary, have been measured for their birettas as part of the ongoing BIRETTAS FOR SEMINARIANS PROJECT.

So far, this project has met with real success.  We are furnishing future priests of your parishes with proper cover.

Today I received a nice note of thanks from a seminarian of the FSSP in Denton:

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Want some lío?  We’ve got your requested lío right here, in lot’s of sizes including size 7½!

¡Hagan lío!

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, ACTION ITEM!, Seminarians and Seminaries | Tagged ,
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Wherein homsexualist activist Jesuit Fr James Martin is schooled

Libs attempt to defend their dissent from doctrine – especially about morals (read: sex) – by claiming that the Church’s teachings have not be “received”.  That is, if a large number of people say they don’t agree with the Church on some point, therefore the Church can’t claim that people must accept it.  Moreover, because the teaching hasn’t been “received”, the Church ought to change it’s teaching.   That’s liberal dissent in a nutshell.  It’s pretty much an exercise in dishonesty.

I see today at First Things a piece by Gregory Brown of the Witherspoon Institute which vivisects Jesuit homosexualist activist Fr James Martin’s claim in his new (bad) book about building “bridges” between the Church (the institutional Church, of course) and homosexuals.   Martin claims – wait for it –

“Theologically speaking, you could say that these teachings have not been “received” by the L.G.B.T. community, to whom they were directed.”

Hence, the Church should change her teachings.

Martin, as the First Things article points out, makes an appeal to the sensus fidelium in his claims about the need for teachings to be “received”.  Martin:

To take a theological perspective, a teaching must be “received” by the faithful. It’s a complex topic (and I am no professional theologian) but, in general, for a teaching to be complete [?] it must be appreciated, accepted and understood by the faithful. The tradition is that the faithful possess their own inner sense of the authority of a teaching. That’s the sensus fidei or sensus fidelium. You can find out more about it in the Vatican document Sensus Fidei.

No.  That isn’t the sensus fidelium.

The sensus fidei fidelium is real and serious.  However, the problem with lib claims about the sensus fidei fidelium is that the sensus has to be that precisely of the fidelium… the FAITHFUL.  You have to be faithful to the Church and her teachings to have the “sense/grasp/perception” of the Faith.  To bring in Augustine: Nisi credideritis non intelligetis… Unless you will have first believed you will not understand.

At the end of the First Things piece, Brown writes:

As I read and reread Fr. Martin’s interviews, I am struck by a persistent ambiguity. Whether given a banal or radical sense, his remarks do not cohere very well with the Vatican document he cites. Why mention the theology of reception at all, if he just meant to make a tactical point about the scale of the Catholic-LGBT divide? Fr. Martin agrees that the rejected teachings are magisterial—so the rejection of them cannot spring from any intuition “infallible in itself with regard to its object,” the Catholic Faith.  [BINGO!]

The topic is one that requires clarification. Ever since the document’s release in 2014, progressive Catholics have treated the sensus fidei as a kind of magic bullet licensing dissent on, well, exactly those issues you would expect. The sensus fidei—the spontaneous intuition that the faithful have on account of their connaturality to God—sounds very exciting, because it is. But it is not quite as exciting as certain theologians want it to be.

Yes, indeed.  There is great need for a solid book which tackles a) the concept of sensus fidei fidelium and also the b) level or weight of magisterial teaching and documents which communicate those teachings.

The other day I posted about old categories of censures and warnings about teachings which strayed from Catholic doctrine to be avoided, or ways of speaking about teachings which were deficient enough to warrant a warning.  HERE

These old categories are useful… but they are not often used today.  Are the ever use today?  That is, by someone who isn’t an Unreconstructed Ossified Manualist like me?

To buy CLICK HERE.

Posted in Liberals, Sin That Cries To Heaven | Tagged , , ,
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URGENT: for priests

Molteni Giuseppe La confessioneToday at Crisis Fr. George Rutler is the purveyor of salutary advice to young priests.  HERE

Of particular interest to me, since I harp on the need for frequent confession:

The Holy Mass is the heart of the Christian life, but to be that, it must proceed from the Sacrament of Confession. With exquisite subtlety the Risen Christ prompted Peter to confess before he sent him out to offer the Eucharist to the heart of the empire. The parish priest should not let a day pass without some time in the confessional, and if no one shows up, that time can be one of prayer, and eventually the people will come. Weekly confession should be the goal for the priest himself. Often the Anti-Christ will tempt the priest to absent the confessional for one reason or another just before a seriously burdened penitent is about to ask to be heard. Humble confessions heard in the sacred tribunal often inspire the priest beyond anything the penitent could understand. Humility is never discouraged by a good examination of conscience, for the Good Physician always has a cure for sickness of soul, be it a defect of the intellect or a weakness of will.

Fathers… GO TO CONFESSION!

Fathers… HEAR CONFESSIONS!

If you don’t, you are running the risk of eternal perdition.  No, really!  We still believe that stuff!

Remember also:

Of course an examination of conscience goes hand in glove with the need for confession and absolution.

Again, for priests, I share now something that a priest friend in my native place, Fr TD, sent me recently.   This is posted at the site of God’s Plan For Life.

UPDATE NB: There is a serious hole in this examen, however, as pointed out in a comment below.  There is nothing about liturgical worship.  One the first things mentioned in the Code of Canon Law is the duty of the pastor to see to the Eucharist, which is not only the Blessed Sacrament, but also its celebration.  It is a constant disappointment to me that, when I read offerings from certain bishops and muckity-mucks about “what the Church needs”, they almost never bring in liturgy.   However, we are our rites.  No initiative we will undertake with all good will can succeed if it is not rooted in and returning to proper sacred liturgical worship of God.

That said…

Examination of conscience for pastors

Introduction

This examination of conscience is designed for all pastors as they eagerly strive to meet the challenges of our time. It assumes that the pastor who is exploring its contents has already achieved self mastery of the emotions and therefore it omits the many questions that are typically included in a general examination of conscience written for all members of the Church. It focuses on the fundamental mission of the Church which is to proclaim the Good News, to combat sin and save souls for everlasting life. These weighty core values should form the epicenter of every pastor’s mission directed toward a culture that in large part does not “repent of their murders, their magic potions, their unchastity, or their robberies.” Rev. 9:20. The examination of conscience may seem very challenging. Indeed, that is what an examination of conscience is supposed to do! A zealous pastor will quickly see that this examination has the potential to greatly assist in propelling the entire Church forward toward its glorious destination.

Preaching

“When Jesus finished these words, the crowds were astonished at his teaching, for he taught them as one having authority, and not as their scribes.” Mt 7:28

  1. Do I preach with authority?
  2. Do I claim the authority given to me by Christ and his Church?
  3. Is my tone emboldened by truth, faith, righteous authority to rebuke sinners, as well as meekness and humility, with each tone appropriate for the time, place and audience?
  4. Do I present the Gospel as a choice with serious consequences for acceptance or rejection? Or do I dilute the message, presenting the Gospel as a proposal, that is, something which can be implicitly rejected without consequences.
  5. Do I avoid difficult parts of the Gospel under the guise of being more loving and gentle?
  6. Do I proclaim the problem of sin and the call to repentance?
  7. Do I mention specific sins that are rampant in our culture in our time?
  8. Do I proclaim the Particular and General Judgments of Jesus?
  9. Do I proclaim the Particular and General Judgments of Jesus while at the same time acknowledging that they apply to me?
  10. Do I imitate as closely as possible the powerful teaching ministry of Jesus Christ?
  11. Do I humble myself in the presence of righteous believers?

“But we will more fully understand this power of discernment if we study the example of the first shepherd. For Peter, who by God’s authorization held the position of leadership in the holy Church, refused immoderate veneration from Cornelius (though the latter had acted well by humbly prostrating himself before Peter), but Peter recognized him as an equal saying: “Arise, do not do this, for I am also a man.” But when he discovered the sin of Ananias and Sapphira, he immediately showed the extent of power he had over others. For by his word, he ended their lives when he overtook them with his penetrating spirit. He had a self-awareness that he was the head of the Church in the battle against sin, but he did not acknowledge this honor when he was in the presence of upright brethren. In one case, holy conduct merited the communion of equality; in the other, avenging zeal revealed the just use of authority.”[1]

Teaching while preaching

“About this we have much to say, and it is difficult to explain, for you have become sluggish in hearing. Although you should be teachers by this time, you need to have someone teach you again the basic elements of the utterances of God. You need milk, (and) not solid food.
Everyone who lives on milk lacks experience of the word of righteousness, for he is a child. But solid food is for the mature, for those whose faculties are trained by practice to discern good and evil.” Hb 5:11-14

  1. Do I study and teach the meaning of Scripture, the Catechism of the Catholic Church, Papal Encyclicals and Church documents?
  2. Do I expound on the finer points of these invaluable sources?
  3. Do I teach the Ten Commandmentsand explain how they must be fulfilled in Spirit and Truth?
  4. Do I teach the seven capital sins – pride, greed, jealousy, anger, lust, gluttony and sloth? [3]
  5. Do I teach virtues and vices and how vices may be disguised as virtues? [2]
  6. Do I make any of the following excuses[5] when it comes to the more difficult moral teachings?

o    Talking about serious moral issues would scandalize the children.

o    It’s okay to talk about these matters in RCIA, marriage preparation classes and to provide pamphlets on these issues in the vestibule, but not at the pulpit.

o    These issues are contentious. They will produce strife and discord.

o    Collections will go down.

o    People will go to another church because they don’t want to hear this.

o    When the bishop talks about it, I’ll begin to talk about it.

o    I’m not prepared to speak about these issues because I wasn’t trained in the seminary for this.

o    The recent clergy sex scandals make it impossible for me to talk about sex today. I have no credibility.

  1. Am I mindful that if I do not warn a sinner and rebuke his sin, the Lord will hold me responsible for the sinner’s death? Ez 3:18-20
  2. Do I teach the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit – wisdom, understanding, counsel, fortitude, knowledge, piety and fear of the Lord?
  3. Do I teach and foster the charismatic gifts of the Holy Spirit – expression of wisdom, expression of knowledge, faith, healing, mighty deeds, prophecy, discernment and tongues?
  4. Do I teach the five precepts of the Church?[4]
  5. Do I teach on issues of social justice and urge the laity to participate in the building of a just society by establishing a hierarchy of values with prominence given to the right to life?
  6. Do I strive to protect the souls entrusted to my care by warning them about heresies?

Prayer

  1. Am I faithful and regular in daily prayer, including the Divine Office?
  2. Do I pray the Rosary as earnestly requested by Our Lady of Fatima?
  3. Do I implore those encharged to my pastoral care to fervent daily prayer, including the Rosary?
  4. Do I invite those encharged to my pastoral care to frequent the Sacrament of Reconciliation?
  5. Do I offer up all sufferings, annoyances and inconveniences to Christ for atonement of sins?
  6. Do I foster prayer meetings?

Obedience

“Priests must be pure, very pure. They should not busy themselves with anything except what concerns the Church and souls. The disobedience of priests to their superiors and to the Holy Father is very displeasing to Our Lord.” Words of Our Lady of Fatima spoken to little Jacinta.

  1. Do I place obedience to God as my number one priority?
  2. Do I implement the requests of my religious superiors?
  3. Do I obey my religious superiors in their requests that I live very modestly so as to imitate Christ and not bring scandal?
  4. Am I faithful to my religious or priestly vows?

References

  1. The Book of Pastoral Rule by St. Gregory the Great. Translated by George E. Demacopoulos; St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press. Crestwood, New York, 2007, section 6, p. 64.
  2. ibid, section 9, page 76.
  3. Catechism of the Catholic Church, Second Edition, Part Three, Section One, Chapter One, Article 8, Section V, Paragraph 1866, Libreria Editrice Vaticana, Citta del Vaticano, 1997.
  4. ibid Part 3, Section One, Chapter Three, Article 3, Section II, Paragraph 2041-2043.
  5. Getting Beyond “I Can’t” By Fr. Daniel McCaffrey, STD  and Fr. Matthew Habiger, OSB, PhD.

The questions above cannot possibly explore every aspect of the pastoral spiritual life. For example, missing are questions involving the diligent performance of the Sacraments. While important, these are well governed by ritual rules of discipline and generally do not present difficult challenges. The questions above are tuned and focused on the difficult challenges of our time, a time when authoritative preaching has faded while the world labels evil good and good evil. This examination was composed by Brian Murphy and first posted September 15, 2016.

Endorsed by:

Very Rev. Charles Wright, OSB, Oceanside, CA
Rev. Matthew Habiger, OSB, Atchison, KS
Most Reverend Timothy Freyer, Orange, CA
Rev. Frederick Parke, Jacksonville, FL
Rev. John Putnam, Huntersville, NC
Rev. John Paul Hopping, Maplewood, MO
Rev. Shenan J. Boquet, President, Human Life International, Front Royal, VA
Fr. Tom Cusack, St. Columbans, NE
Most Reverend James D. Conley, Lincoln, NE

The moderation queue is ON.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Mail from priests, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged ,
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Wherein a popular beer is renamed to honor priests

Remember the recent story about the priests who denied entry to a pub in Wales because the bouncer didn’t know what they were wearing… who they were?   They were eventually admitted with apologies and applause and it all worked out.

As a follow up, I read now that the same priest-excluding Welsh pub has renamed one of their offerings in honor of the priests.

From Wales Online:

[…]

After spotting one of the priests called Reverend James drinking a popular beer – The Rev James – the company who own the chain, Brains, are renaming the ale to “The Thirsty Priests”.

The beer, described as a “rich, warming ale with a clean, rewarding finish” will be on sale soon in the capital’s pub.

It also has a witty slogan, which reads “saving souls and satisfying thirsts”.

Tim Lewis, PR Manager for Brains, said: “We wanted to do something as a ‘thank you’ to the priests for taking the misunderstanding in such good spirits.

“We thought what could be better than renaming The Rev James, their favourite ale, in their honour.

“It had to be something that captured the light-hearted nature of the story and we think the ‘Thirsty Priests’ is perfect.

[…]

Fun.

Remember also to support the wonderful Benedictines of Norcia who make spectacular beer!

 

Posted in Lighter fare, Mail from priests, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged ,
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Your Transfiguration Sunday Sermon Notes – PHOTOS and AUDIO

UPDATE:

One of you readers sent…

Hey Fr. Z !

Our priest loved your post and so we had the blessing of the grapes today along with a beautiful homily he prepared ! Thank you !

____ Originally Published on: Aug 6

Was there a good point made in the sermon you heard during the Holy Mass in fulfillment your of Sunday Obligation? Let us know.  Good points, please.

For my part, I explained that today’s Feast, Eastern in spirit, was made universal in the West by Pope Callixtus III in honor of the defeat of the Islamic invaders at the Siege of Belgrade in 1456.  Sultan Mehmet was trying to get his toes into Europe.  God threw them back.  Huzzah!

Also, I spoke about the blessing of grapes…. and I blessed grapes.

Moreover, I spoke about how our rites transform us and that we are our rites.

A taste of Sunday where I was…

Asperges – the Deacon is transitional and is studying in Rome, the Subdeacon is the Vocation Director for the Diocese… how fortunate are we here?!?

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All we have to do now is say, “Solemn Mass today”, and everyone knows what to do without rehearsals.

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These are vestments from the Pontifical Set, which is now complete.  Gammarelli sent the final pieces last week (e.g., extra large dalmatics, additional copes, etc.).  Not bad, huh?  PLEASE DONATE!   HERE

Action shot.

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A couple of the seminarians joined us.

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This what we do.  How about you?

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged ,
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Feast of the Transfiguration of the Lord: Celebrating the defeat of Islam in 1453

After the Muslims took Constantinople in 1453 after a 53-day siege, Sultan Mehmed II went next for Hungary, first attacking Belgrade.  It didn’t go well for Mehmed.  The siege turned into a counterattack which overran the Muslim camp. The Islamic invaders were forced to retreat.

In 1456 Pope Callixtus III made the Feast of the Transfiguration of the Lord a feast of the universal Church in honor of the defeat of Islam at Belgrade.

The word transfiguratio is interesting in itself. In classical, post-Augustan Latin Pliny used this for “a change of shape”. However, that is not what happened with Christ on the mountain, probably Mount Tabor in Galilee not far from Nazareth.

What happened?

If we see Christ’s Baptism at the Jordan as the beginning point of His public life, and the Ascension as the end, then the Transfiguration its zenith.

The accounts of the Transfiguration are found in Matthew 17:1-6, Mark 9:1-8, and Luke 9:28-36. Also, 2 Peter 1:16-18 and John 1:14 refer to it.

Scripture tells us that a week or so after Jesus and the disciples were at Caesarea Philippi (where Christ gave Peter the “keys”) Jesus took Peter, James and John to a high mountain. They were surrounded by a bright cloud, like that in which God spoke to Moses. Christ shone with light so dazzling it was hard to see. On either side of Him were Moses the Lawgiver and Elijah the Prophet. A voice was heard, as at the time of Jesus’ Baptism: “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased; listen to him”. The Gospels of Matthew and Mark use the Greek word metemorphothe for what happened. St. Jerome in his Vulgate chose transfiguratus est. The Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark and Luke) expand the event saying “his face did shine as the sun: and his garments became white as snow,” or “as light,” according to the Greek text. This brightness has been taken to be a glimpse of Christ’s divinity shining through His flesh. Christ allowed the three key Apostles to see this so as to strengthen them before His Passion soon to follow.

Getting back to the word transfiguratio, it clearly points to a dramatic change, though in Christ’s case not one of form or shape. The word is from the preposition trans with figura. A figura is “a form, shape” but also in philosophical language a “quality, kind, nature, manner”. Most interesting to me is the mean of figura as a “form of a word” or “a figure of speech”. Think of the Prologue of the Gospel of John 1:14, recited by priests for centuries at the end of Holy Mass: “we have beheld his glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father”.

In the Prologue of John the Evangelist says that Jesus the Son is the divine logos, the Word: “In the beginning was the Word….” A word is an utterance which projects the concept of the speaker. The Jews has used Hebrew memra, God’s creative or directive word or speech which manifests His power in the mind or in matter, as a substitute for the divine Name of God.

Jerome’s choice of a word with the root figura or “figure of speech” is very apt in many ways, and its draws our imaginations into the realm of God’s eternal uttering, His eternal rhetoric.

COLLECT (Novus Ordo):
Deus, qui fidei sacramenta
in Unigeniti tui gloriosa Transfiguratione
patrum testimonio roborasti,
et adoptionem filiorum perfectam mirabiliter praesignasti,
concede nobis famulis tuis,
ut, ipsius dilecti Filii tui vocem audientes,
eiusdem coheredes effici mereamur.

LITERAL WDTPRS VERSION:
O God, who in the glorious Transfiguration
of your Only-begotten Son
strengthened the sacrament of faith by the witness of the fathers (Moses and Elijah),
and in a marvelous way foreshadowed the perfect adoption of children,
grant to your servants that,
hearing the voice of Your beloved Son himself,
we may merit to be made the same Son’s coheirs.

NEW CORRECTED ICEL (2011):
O God, who in the glorious Transfiguration
of your Only Begotten Son
confirmed the mysteries of faith by the witness of the Fathers
and wonderfully prefigured our full adoption to sonship,
grant, we pray, to your servants,
that, listening to the voice of your beloved Son,
we may merit to become co-heirs with him
.

In the Transfiguration, God reveals more fully the Sonship of Jesus and, thus, reveals in Jesus, our own sonship.

When the Father reveals the Son as Son, He is telling us about His own life, how He generates the Son and how the Holy Spirit from all eternity is the love between them. Fortified with this knowledge, we can participate in the life of the Trinity in a fuller way. Because of our unity with Christ in our common human nature, the way to divine sonship is opened up. He is the Father’s Son by nature, but we by grace. God makes us His children through a perfect adoption… adoptio perfecta. From God’s point of view, it is perfect (“brought to completion”) because God puts His seal and mark upon us. From our point of view, it will be perfect only when we see God face to face in heaven.

Because of this adoption, the adoptio filiorum and adoptio perfecta, an eternal inheritance awaits us. We merit a patrimony.

St. Leo the Great (+461) said in a sermon (s. 51):

“In this mystery of the Transfiguration, God’s Providence has laid a solid foundation for the hope of the Church, so that the whole body of Christ may know what a transformation will be granted to it, and that the members may be assured that they will be sharers in the glory which shone forth in their Head.”

We are already sons and daughters by God’s adoption, but that sonship is not yet completed.

We lack the final essential component: perseverance in faith and obedience for the whole course of our lives. Even the Apostle Peter, his eyes dazzled by the Lord on Mount Tabor, failed to see what was happening. The great St. Augustine in a sermon on the Transfiguration (s. 78, 6), addresses Peter, and through Peter he really addresses us: “Descend the mount, O Peter. You wanted to rest on the mountain. Come down.”

We still have work to do in this life before we can rest.

Citing the same passage of Augustine the CCC 556 takes up this same theme:

Peter did not yet understand this when he wanted to remain with Christ on the mountain. It has been reserved for you, Peter, but for after death. For now, Jesus says: “Go down to toil on earth, to serve on earth, to be scorned and crucified on earth. Life goes down to be killed; Bread goes down to suffer hunger; the Way goes down to be exhausted on his journey; the Spring goes down to suffer thirst; and you refuse to suffer?”

Offer your trials as reparation for sins.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The Religion of Peace, WDTPRS | Tagged , , , , , , ,
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ASK FATHER: Validity of absolution of accomplices in sexual sins

confessional print adjustedFrom a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I have two questions about c. 977, which bars a priest from absolving an accomplice in sins against the sixth commandment of the Decalogue except in danger of death (on pain of excommunication, per c. 1378).

First, is the term “accomplice” to be understood as referring strictly to those who have taken part in impure acts with the priest, or does it extend to those who have been accomplices in other ways, such as a wingman or pimp, or a brother priest who has learned of what he’s done and responded with a high five?

Second, the canon mentions absolving the accomplice, not strictly absolving the sins[For example, absolving a censure and not a sin?] Is a priest barred, except in danger of death, from absolving someone with whom he has ever sinned against chastity?

This is a disgusting topic.  However, in light of some of the antics of certain infamous priests reported recently in the media, we need some straight talk.

Canon 977 says:

The absolution of a partner in a sin against the sixth commandment of the Decalogue [Absolutio complicis in peccato contra sextum Decalogi] is invalid, except in danger of death.

That’s pretty straight forward on one level.

In just one scenario, say a priest tells a person, “It’s okay. I’ll give you absolution afterward”, that absolution would be invalid.  In another scenario, say a priest has some sexual contact with a person and then, later, sees that person on the pavement bleeding out after having been struck down by a flying shark from one of those shark-filled tornadoes. He could give absolution validly because there is danger of death.  In another scenario, the priest’s accomplice winds up days later in the priest’s confessional and confesses the sin, the priest does not validly absolve.

Let’s also make a distinction.  There are ways in which we can participate in the sin of another person.  You suggest some in your question.  The ways in which we can also share in the guilt of another person’s sin are:

  1. By counsel (to give advice, one’s opinion or instructions.)
  2. By command (to demand, to order, such as in the military.)
  3. By consent (to give permission, to approve, to agree to.)
  4. By provocation (to dare.)
  5. By praise or flattery (to cheer, to applaud, to commend.)
  6. By concealment (to hide the action, to cover-up.)
  7. By partaking (to take part, to participate.)
  8. By silence (by playing dumb, by remaining quiet.)
  9. By defense of the ill done (to justify, to argue in favour.)

So, say a priest – this is so disgusting – gets set up by another person, a “middleman” with someone for sins against the Sixth Commandment.  Can the priest absolve the “middleman” validly?  I would say that the absolution would be invalid.  Even though the priest would have sinned with a different person, the middleman was also an accomplice.  The middleman was certainly a participant in the sin of the priest and other person by providing #1 in the list above.

One of the reasons why I conclude in this way is because of a situation that arose in the wake of dissent from Humanae vitae back in the 60s and which is surely revving up against in light of the confusion caused by Amoris laetitia.

Let’s consider can. 1378:

Can. 1378 §1. A priest who acts against the prescript of can. 977 [above] incurs a latae sententiae excommunication reserved to the Apostolic See.

§2. The following incur a latae sententiae penalty of interdict or, if a cleric, a latae sententiae penalty of suspension:

[…]

2/ apart from the case mentioned in §1, a person who, though unable to give sacramental absolution validly, attempts to impart it or who hears sacramental confession.

[…]

So, unless there is danger of death (when a priest can validly absolve), if a priest tries to absolve an accomplice, the absolution is not only invalid, he automatically incurs an excommunication (the lifting of which is reserved to someone with faculties from the Holy See), and he is automatically suspended from the exercise of Holy Orders.

Let’s move to the next step.

In the wake of Amoris laetitia, which is objectively ambiguous, some priests hold – probably as they did before Amoris – that the civilly divorced and civilly remarried, or indeed those who are living together in some arrangement or other outside of true marriage, can have sexual relations and also receive Communion.

If a priest suggests to someone in the confessional that she can have sexual relations with a person who is not truly her husband, the the priest become an accomplice in a sin against the Sixth Commandment!  The priest is an accomplice by facilitating, approving of, the sin that the woman would soon commit upon his advice in the confessional.  The priest, an accomplice in this case, a kind of “middleman”, would incur the suspension.  The priest didn’t do the deed, as it were, but his advice was a key element.

Working our way back, I think that were a priest to try to absolve a “middleman” who arranged for the same priest someone with whom he might sin against the Sixth, the priest could not validly absolve that “middleman”, who is a key accomplice in the sin.

How about someone, a “cheerleader” if you will, who were to give such a priest the “high five” afterward?  I am a little less certain about that.

Being a “middleman” is concrete and before the fact, without whom the sin would not have happened.  A “high five” from the “cheerleader” would certainly be sinful, because he participates in the sin of another through praising the sin and sinner (#5, above).  That “high five” is after the fact.  The sin took place with or without the “high five”.  However, were that cheerleader to prompt and lead the priest to do it again, that’s another matter.

This is an unpleasant topic.  However, it is also an opportunity to make some distinctions about how we can participate in the sin of another.  It is also a good warning to priests out there who think that, because of Amoris laetitia they can tell people that they can have sexual relations with those to whom they are not truly married.

Fathers… you are in BIG TROUBLE.

Lastly, if I understand your final question, can a such a priest validly absolve an accomplice from a censure without himself incurring a censure?  I don’t know.

I think the canon intends absolution of sins not absolution of censures.

In general, lifting or absolution of censures can be together with the absolution of sins.  However, there are specific formulas of absolution of censures before giving absolution for sins.  For example, this morning, after celebration of the TLM, I heard confessions and gave absolution in the older, traditional form.  First, the priest absolves any censures to the extent that the absolution is needed and his (my) faculties allow.  Only after the lifting of censures does the priest (me) then absolve the sins.  It’s a two-step process.

Furthermore, the post-Conciliar book published by the Holy See for the Order of the Sacrament of Penance includes specific forms for absolution of censures.  So, in the normal and orderly way of doing things, a priest should absolve the censure before absolving sins.  In my own work as a confessor, I have on several occasions had recourse to the Holy See to obtain the faculty to absolve some censure or other.  In those cases, I was given the faculty and I absolved the censure, independent from absolution of sins.  

That said, I think that the canons we have dealt with concern absolution of sins.

The moderation queue is ON.  Canonists and priests, especially, are welcome.  Otherwise, I may be restrictive.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Canon Law, GO TO CONFESSION, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged , ,
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Wisconsin: Victory for free speech v. demonic gender ideology, homosexualist agenda

muslim homosexualThere are some good things happening in Wisconsin, not the least of which are the growing number of priests who say the Traditional Latin Mass and the places where the TLM is celebrated.  For example, on Sunday, we will have a Solemn Mass for the Feast of the Transfiguration.  HERE

On another note, from Family Policy Alliance:

Wisconsin: Favorable Court Decision for Wedding Photographer

A Wisconsin judge says a work-from-home photographer does not have to comply with city and state “public accommodations” laws that might have forced her to photograph same-sex weddings.

“This is a huge win for free speech in Wisconsin,” said Julaine Appling, president of Wisconsin Family Action. “No one should be threatened with punishment for having views that the government doesn’t favor.”

Earlier this year Amy Lawson, a professional photographer and blogger who works out of her Madison home, filed what is known as a “pre-enforcement challenge” lawsuit against the City of Madison and the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development, alleging that the city’s public accommodations ordinance and the state’s public accommodations law prohibit her from conducting her business, Amy Lynn Photography Studio, according to the dictates of her conscience and beliefs. Lawson argued the ordinance and law even force her to use her creative expression in support of activities she doesn’t agree with, including same-sex marriage and abortion.

Dane County Circuit Court Judge Richard Neiss determined in a court hearing in the case Amy Lynn Photography Studio v. City of Madison that he would issue an order that declares Lawson and her home-based business are not subject to the city’s public accommodations ordinance or the state’s public accommodations law. Both the state and the city agreed to this resolution.

“What this decision means,” Appling explained, “is that creative professionals in Wisconsin and in Madison, those who, like Amy, don’t have storefronts, have the freedom to determine what ideas they will promote using their artistic talents. In other words, the City of Madison and the State of Wisconsin can’t punish these professionals for exercising their freedom of speech artistically, even if the city or state disagrees with what they are saying.”

The jackboots of the demonic gender ideology thugs and their homosexualist agenda activist allies, are marching a little less loudly.

And sodomy is still a Sin That Cries To Heaven.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Si vis pacem para bellum!, Sin That Cries To Heaven | Tagged ,
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Challenge Coin Update

17_06_26_coin_obverse_02_det-200I have received several emails from priests who have upcoming Jubilees as well as from men who will soon be ordained.  They, too, want to have challenge coins made as I did for my 25th.  They wanted to know where/how I had mine made.

After I produced the design (I used the coat-of-arms on the side bar and then sought the help of a fellow who has helped with graphics on this blog, the great Vincenzo), I shopped around various sites looking for options and estimates.  There are lots of options, gentlemen.  My advice: If you want to do this, do not dawdle!  This can take a goodly chunk of time.  Start waaay in advance of the date you want to start distributing them.  Also, depending on the options you ask for and the number of coins you order, it won’t be cheap.  Lastly, have them numbered.  Mine are in a numbered series, engraved on the edge.

Next, this is fun.

I’ve been giving them – personally and by post – to some close friends and some particularly persistent and generous benefactors.   A few have been sent out in gratitude on receipt of a donation sent specifically for the purpose of getting one.  (Thanks!  That is defraying the cost of the coins, which is helpful: see the sidebar.)

Also, I have slowly but surely started to receive some coins from military and LEOs.  This is where the really fun part is.  When I get a coin, I send my coin.   I’ve already received a few spiffy one, too.  I’ll soon need a display case.

17_08_05_NYPD_HolyName_01I have a lot of travel coming up, including a trip this month to NYC where I hope personally to give a couple of my coins to the NYPD LEOs who gave me my first: NYPD Holy Name Society coins.  How cool is that?  They inspired me finally to get off my bum and get mine made, and so I am now honor bound to get my coins to them, and not by post.

In September, I’ll be in Rome for the 10th anniversary of Summorum Pontificum and I’ll take a few for friends and Swiss Guards.  As a matter of fact, a former Swiss Guard contacted me about having coins made for the Guards.  Again, very cool.

Anyway, LEOs and military, priests, etc., I’m open to exchanges.  The last one I got was from a cop in Salt Lake City.  He included a nice letter telling me about himself.  I’m mailing mine back to him today.

For those of you who don’t know how this works (imagine them being read really fast as at the end of a radio ad)

CHALLENGE COIN RULES (as I understand them – there are variations):

  1. Coin checks are allowed at any time, any place.
  2. Honor requires that people being challenged know the rules: explain beforehand if necessary.
  3. The challenge is initiated a) by drawing your coin, holding it in the air by whatever means possible and state, scream, shout or otherwise communicate that you are initiating a coin check; b) by firmly placing it on the bar, table, or floor in such a way that it produces an audible noise which can be heard by those being challenged.
  4. If you accidentally drop your coin and it makes an audible sound upon impact, then you have initiated a coin check.
  5. The challenger states if the challenge is for a single drink or for a round for a group.
  6. The response consists of all those persons being challenged producing their coin(s).
  7. If you are challenged and you are unable to respond, you must buy the specified a) single drink or b) round of drinks for the challenger and the group being challenged.
  8. You are allowed only four steps to retrieve your coin.
  9. If everyone being challenged responds in the correct manner, the challenger must buy a round of drinks for all those people he challenged.
  10. Failure to buy the drink or round is a most heinous and highly despicable delict. 
  11. “Coin” means a coin, not a belt buckle or other.
  12. If you hand someone a coin, you’ve given him your coin.  But if someone just wants to look at it, he is honor bound to give it back.
  13. Purposely giving a coin establishes a fraternal bond.
Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Just Too Cool | Tagged
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