Let’s raise the standards

There is strain between the Church’s laity and leadership. Rather, strain between the people in the pews and the hierarchy. Leadership is something other. It can be found on either side of the Communion rail.

May I recommend to the readership – especially to the hierarchical leadership – a good book?

I’ve written about it before.

More and more my thoughts turn to the kind of New Normal that we want. We are going to pay and pay and pay, and then pay some more, for the lockdown imposed on our nations and economy and churches. This is going to hurt, friends, and the hurting hasn’t even started yet.  As the Fat Man laid down in Rule VIII: “They can always hurt you more.

We are going to new a new style of priest, king, prophet in our hierarchy, in our chanceries and parish offices.  New style… maybe with a lot of old in it.  I’ve ranted about that recently, and pointed my finger at myself.  Je m’accuse.

Read this.  I’ve been recommending it to priest friends for a while now:

US HERE – UK HERE

It is not a complete manual, but it does bring home the fact that when the mission fails, it is often leadership that failed.  And leadership isn’t limited to the commanding officer.  The whole team has to own the mission and its objectives.  The leader needs to bring people into that vision and help them to embrace it for themselves.  Everyone has to believe in the cause they are fighting for.  Leaders have to own it first.

Let’s raise the standards.

(That’s a double entendre, by the way, about something risky, not risqué.)

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, "How To..." - Practical Notes, ACTION ITEM!, Be The Maquis, Hard-Identity Catholicism, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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12 May – HOLY MASS (TLM) Sts. Nereus & Achilleus, etc. – LIVE VIDEO: 1200h CDT (GMT/UTC -5)

I will LIVE stream a Traditional Latin Mass at NOON Central Daylight Time (= GMT/UTC -5 and ROME 1900h).

Today I will celebrate Mass in honor of Sts. Nereus and Achilleus, Domitilla and Pancratius. I will add prayers “Pro infirmis”.

Will you please subscribe to my channel? HERE

NB: My good friend Fr. Chris Basden is at the Shrine of St. Augustine in Ramsgate, England.  They are trying to get their YouTube stream going.  They need 1000 subscribers.  Could you give them a hand and subscribe?  HERE

  • NB: You can find an English translation of the Mass formulary HERE.  Scroll down. Use the 1960 setting.
  • We can say the Regina Caeli together, since the Angelus bells are usually ringing when the live stream starts.
  • I will say a Spiritual Communion prayer at the very beginning for those of you who cannot make a Eucharistic Communion. 
  • I will also recite in Latin the traditional  “Statement of Intention” (…a hint to priests).
  • After Mass and the Leonine Prayers, I will recite a prayer in Latin “In time of pandemic” followed by a blessing with a fragment of the Cross
    For texts of Prayers before Mass for each day of the week, in versions for laypeople and for priests: HERE

Click To Contribute

THANK YOU to my flower donors!

And HUGE thanks to viewers for yet more new RELIQUARIES (from my wishlist).  The new one’s now have relics of St. Thomas Becket and St. Joan of Arc.

Alas, Amazon sent something wrong instead of other (taller) reliquaries on my list.  I am going to have to sort that out with them.  But it is a good problem.

Finally, one of you sent a quite generous gift card.  There was no gift slip with it! I don’t know who you are.  But thank you.

Posted in LIVE STREAMING |
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@BishopStika issues a Decree for @knoxdiocese and people react. Wherein Fr. Z makes an entreaty

___ Originally Published on: May 11, 2020 at 19:42

I has come to my attention via LifeSite that His Excellency Most Rev. Richard Fr. Stika, Bishop of Knoxville on 6 May issued a DECREE (it says “decree”) which says, inter alia, that “Reception of Host on the tongue is strictly prohibited at this time.”

I believe the bishop is acting ultra vires in this matter, but that’s not why I am writing this today.

Obviously Bp. Stika got push back, and rightly so. People have the right to make their concerns known both to him directly (preferable as a first step) and the Holy See. However, the push back that he received is a mixed bag.

Then Bp. Stika issued a Tweet that was pretty inflammatory.

Wow.  Harsh, much?

So, Bp. Stika would, in effect, censure people who want Communion on the tongue, which is their right (cf. Redemptionis Sacramentum), with a kind of interdict.

If he intends to include Communion at celebrations of the TLM in this, then he is doing something pretty provocative and, again, I believe beyond his authority (cf. Summorum Pontificum and Universae Ecclesiae).

An “interdict” bans a person from receiving the Eucharist.  Interdicts can be incurred through the sinful commission of a delict, as when one incurs an excommunication, automatic or declared.  If a interdicted person violates the interdict, they are to be expelled or the sacred rite suspended.   Also, interdict is the penalty to be imposed when someone, stirs up hatred of the local ordinary bishop because of some act of ecclesiastical authority (cf. can. 1373).

Folks, don’t stir up hatred of your bishop because of some act of ecclesial authority!

Back in the day there was an excommunication that also made a person vitandus, someone to be avoided.  This is no longer part of the 1983 Code.    However, some times I have observed that bishops are perfectly happy to punish with the older Code.   I’m not saying that that is what Bp. Stika is doing.  But his reaction reminded me of that.

Bp. Stika, to whom I have not hitherto paid a lot of attention, is very active on Twitter.   As far as I can tell, he is not among those bishop who war on the TLM and those who desire it.  That’s a good thing, right?

However, Stika also posted this, in the wake of his tweet, above:

I can’t disagree with him on this.  I’ve been at this thing for over three decades.  When the Id of Traddom gets going, things can get ugly fast.  I am convinced that this is because the Enemy knows that the only viable path to renew the Church’s identity and life in a lasting way is through recovery of Tradition.  The Enemy is probably rather content with vast swaths of the Church at the moment, and doesn’t need to exert attention in those spheres where people have only vague notions about the Catholic Faith, or erroneous ideas, or who are simply drifting along.   Instead, the Enemy is going to make sure that his really opponents are divided in bitter factions and atomized into ineffectiveness.   Tradition has to be repressed through constant temptation and prodding of those who desire it. They are real the threats.

Back to Bp. Stika’s somewhat understandable reaction to the reactions:

Really?

I read some of the tweets people, many anonymous (aka cowardly) bequeathed to Bp. Stika. Some of them were truly infra dignitatem Christianam. They were beneath Christian dignity.  On a human level I get why Bp. Stika would point out their bad behavior.

At the same time, I wonder why Bp. Stika felt the need to troll people who want to receive Communion on the tongue.  In effect, that is what he did.   For sure, he was being trolled. But he doesn’t have to “fight back”. He is a diocesan bishop, for Pete’s sake.

If what some trads and others did in attacking Bp. Stika like jackals was infra dignitatem, so too I wonder if a bishop sending out tweets that he must know is going to bring those reactions isn’t also bordering on infra dignitatem.

“This will rile them up!”, followed by, “Let people see who they are!”

What I should like to see are some mutual apologies and then far calmer discourse.

It seems to me that that is what Christian charity suggests and our recognition of different roles in the Church suggests.

If the people of Knoxville (read: any diocese) don’t like what Bp. Stika (read: any bishop) did, they have channels of recourse.  The sands of time are flowing: this situation won’t last forever. We shall see what he himself does about his Decree in the future. Moreover, no one is compelled to receive Communion at Mass.  You can opt to stay in your pew and make a Spiritual Communion.

If you are being treated unjustly by any bishop or by any priests, God knows it.  If they have sinned in imposing unjust decrees or enforcing them, they will be accountable at their judgment.  Don’t sin in response.

Time will tell.  Later, you will remember this moment when the diocese – any diocese, not just Knoxville – asks you for something.   Let’s hope that the air has been long cleared in a cordial way and we have a “new normal” better than the “old normal”.

If you are strongly against Communion in the hand, and if you are going to go to Mass, and if you know that when you go forward to receive you will not be given Communion on the tongue, then you have to ask yourself what your motive is for going forward. The Communion rail isn’t the place for protests.

I put out a general plea to all in – call it what you will – traddom, the tradosphere, traddies, trads, traditional whatever – please don’t act like jackasses right now.  If you perceive yourselves to be mistreated, maintain your dignity.  If those who mistreat you are to blame, so be it.  This isn’t the time of the lex talionis.

What happens is that some priest or bishop pokes you in the eye.  You turn around and poke him in the eye.  The situation builds and rapidly becomes ridiculous.

Satan and demons win.

You – nay rather, WE – all lose.  WE lose dignitas.  WE lose standing.  WE lose credibility.  You lose it for yourself and for others.  You also lose, sometimes, habitual grace.  And when that happens, the whole Church is wounded.

This sort of thing has to stop.

Yesterday, in the Epistle for the 4th Sunday after Easter, St. James said:

Know this, my beloved brethren. Let every man be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger, for the anger of man does not work the righteousness of God.”

James goes on to say after that pericope:

“If any one thinks he is religious, and does not bridle his tongue but deceives his heart, this man’s religion is vain.”

Meanwhile, Paul writes to the bishop Timothy:

“Preach the word, be urgent in season and out of season, convince, rebuke, and exhort, be unfailing in patience and in teaching.” (2 Tim 4:2)

 

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11 May – HOLY MASS (TLM) Sts. Philip and James – LIVE VIDEO: 1200h CDT (GMT/UTC -5)

I will LIVE stream a Traditional Latin Mass at NOON Central Daylight Time (= GMT/UTC -5 and ROME 1900h).  I received an email that there may be fire alarm testing today!  I don’t know when.  

Today I will celebrate Mass in honor of Sts. Philip and James, Apostles. I will add prayers “Tempore Mortalitatis”.

Will you please subscribe to my channel? HERE

NB: My good friend Fr. Chris Basden is at the Shrine of St. Augustine in Ramsgate, England.  They are trying to get their YouTube stream going.  They need 1000 subscribers.  Could you give them a hand and subscribe?  HERE

  • NB: You can find an English translation of the Mass formulary HERE.  Scroll down. Use the 1960 setting.
  • We can say the Regina Caeli together, since the Angelus bells are usually ringing when the live stream starts.
  • I will say a Spiritual Communion prayer at the very beginning for those of you who cannot make a Eucharistic Communion. 
  • I will also recite in Latin the traditional  “Statement of Intention” (…a hint to priests).
  • After Mass and the Leonine Prayers, I will recite a prayer in Latin “In time of pandemic” followed by a blessing with a fragment of the Cross
    For texts of Prayers before Mass for each day of the week, in versions for laypeople and for priests: HERE

Click To Contribute

THANK YOU to my flower donors!

And HUGE thanks to viewers for yet more new RELIQUARIES (from my wishlist).  The new one’s now have relics of St. Thomas Becket and St. Joan of Arc.

Alas, Amazon sent something wrong instead of other (taller) reliquaries on my list.  I am going to have to sort that out with them.  But it is a good problem.

Finally, one of you sent a quite generous gift card.  There was no gift slip with it! I don’t know who you are.  But thank you.

Posted in LIVE STREAMING |
2 Comments

Your Sunday Sermon notes – 4th Sunday after Easter (5th of Easter) 2020

Was there a good point made in the sermon you heard at the Mass for your Sunday, either live or on the internet? Let us know what it was.

For my part…

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Sermons, Wherein Fr. Z Rants |
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10 May: St. Job

Many of the figures in the Old Testament are commemorated by Holy Church as saints.

Here is the entry in the 2005 Martyrologium Romanum:

1. Commemoratio sancti Iob, admirandae patientiae viri in terra Hus.

We could talk about Job all day and into next week or next year.

Posted in Saints: Stories & Symbols |
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Wherein Fr. Z rants and points a finger

In another post, I commented on some good points made by Joseph Shaw in a piece at HPR.

I want to return to Shaw’s piece for some final points.  Picking up toward the end…

[…]

It certainly would not have been the way I would have chosen to do it — I have previously argued for the restoration of a longer Eucharistic fast — but the enforced infrequency of Holy Communion will do much to restore the fame eucharistica, “eucharistic hunger,” the lack of which Pope John II so lamented. It is to be hoped that priests will encourage the Faithful who are able to receive less frequently to make the most of it when it is possible, by careful preparation, ideally including fasting, an act of perfect contrition (or, if possible, sacramental Confession), and prayer, and to follow it with a serious thanksgiving.

[…]

Good stuff here.

First, I have had an informal poll about increasing the length of the Eucharist fast on the sidebar of this blog for a while now.   Frankly, the present fast of one hour before Communion is a joke.  The reduction of the Eucharistic fast from three hours to one before Communion, is merely one of many signals given – perhaps unwittingly, at first – by the post-Conciliar Church that the Eucharist just isn’t that important.

There were quite a few signs which bolstered a stronger Catholic identity.  For example, women using chapel veils.  Like them or hate them, veils are signals.  Families were recognizable as Catholic when they headed to the church on Sunday – in their Sunday best – even because a little girl had a little hanky or piece of tissue bobby-pinned to her hair.  A full church with half or more of the heads covered in veils signaled not nothing, if you get me.

The fact that Catholics did not, by law, eat meat on Fridays was an obvious signal to a wider society.

These are just a couple of examples.

Moving to another point, think about how for the past few decades most of our churches are before and after Mass.  Is there silence?  Is the atmosphere one of recollection and preparation before and awe and thanksgiving after?   I’d wager that most parish churches are busy and noisy and distracting before and after Mass.  After Mass… right.  How many people are left after Communion?

I once popped into a parish church on a Sunday while visiting my mother in her town.  I can’t say for sure, but of the congregation, perhaps half a dozen were under 30.  At Communion about half the congregation headed for the doors. After the final blessing and truly horrid song – maybe the reason many left? – the place erupted in chatter.

We’ve removed so many of the signals that what we do in church is important that you can’t blame people who treat the place like a McDonald’s.

I point my finger at priests.  Including myself.  Je m’accuse.

These days when libs want to obliterate something, they blame “clericalism”.  It’s a handy label, rather like how the Left shouts “Racism!” if you challenge their math… or anything else.   The modern, post-Conciliar priest is to be not the mediator between the people and God’s altar, not the one who renews the Sacrifice, blesses and absolves.  No, he is to be a nice guy who affirms you and gives you the white thing to make you feel good about being with other people before you sing a song.   Before Mass, the priest is supposed to joke around with the myriad servers and “Eucharistic Ministers”.  After Mass – er “liturgy” – the priest is supposed to be at the front door saying “Have a nice day!” rather than in the sacristy or sanctuary.

A “sacristy priest”, oh dear, worst of the worst of clericalism.

But sacristies are important.  They are signals.

Priestly practices have knock on effects.

Just as his ars celebrandi – his manner and attitude and style at Mass – have a effect on the participation and comprehension of people in the pews, so too does the priest’s habits of preparation before Mass and his thanksgiving after.

Sometime ago I wrote about how a feature in old Roman sacristies hit me.

Sacristies usually have or once had a niche with a kneeler and a framed plaque with the preparation prayers priests would say before and their acts of thanksgiving after Mass.  These prayers are also in the traditional Breviarium Romanum.

Not only that.  There are or were sinks in sacristies with a sign or sometimes an inscription in the marble or painted on the wall with the prayer that the priest would say as he washed his hands before putting on his vestments.

Fathers… did you know that there is a prayer for washing your hands before putting on your vestments?  And of course there were and are prayers for the donning of each vestment.  Did you get that in seminary?

There was etiquette for how priests were to acknowledge each other as they went to and returned from the altar.

The aptum.  The pulchrum.  Decorum.

Ritual, which brings discipline and which over time provides interior formation, surrounded the ritual of the Mass itself.

I wonder what would happen – think about this with me now – what would happen, what kind of knock on effect there would be on the wider Church, were priests to begin to do these things again.   If bishops were to do these things.

I can hear it now.

“But Father!  But… but… Fffff…. ‘ordained minister’!”, the libs writhe and howl.  “This is … is… pure CLERICALISM!   And it’s probably RACIST!   You… you… and your Latin and hats and books.  Your … your… prayers with ‘thee’ and all that begging and unworthiness.   We’ve grown up!  We’ve evolved and don’t have to grovel anymore.  No, we STAND!  We take because we are … are…. an EASTER PEOPLE!   But you don’t get any of that because YOU HATE VATICAN II!”

Let’s not lie about Vatican II.

Shaw, at the beginning of the HPR piece I mentioned at the top, had an outstanding line:

“What exactly is gained by not adding exorcised salt to the holy water?”

Perfect.

The Council said that in the liturgical reform, nothing was to be changed unless it was for the true good of the people.  The Council Fathers mandated that nothing was to be done unless it was in continuity with what we had before.

That’s not what we got.

What exactly is gained by not adding exorcised salt to the holy water?

Absolutely nothing.

What was lost?

A whole world.  An identity.

The results of which we see in our churches today.

The results of which we see reflected in Pew Research studies.

The results of which we see in the contempt shown for the people who desire traditional worship…. who desire salt in their Holy Water, as it were.

It was not for nothing that John Paul II in 1988 wrote in Ecclesia Dei adflicta 6:

“[B]y virtue of my Apostolic Authority I decree… respect must everywhere be shown for the feelings of all those who are attached to the Latin liturgical tradition, by a wide and generous application of the directives already issued some time ago by the Apostolic See for the use of the Roman Missal according to the typical edition of 1962.”

Sweet Jesus, have mercy.  To what point have we come if John Paul thought he had to command bishops to respect people’s feelings and to be generous to them in entirely legitimate matters?  And lately we’ve seen a Pope who ridicules them!  Bishops write in tones of disdain for people who “demand” Communion on the tongue and who have to be “accommodated”.

To what point have we finally arrived?  And whither?  QUO?

People who are attached to the Latin liturgical tradition – people who want salt in their Holy Water – are the most systematically marginalized demographic in the Church.

I want back all the SALT.

ALL the salt.

The Latin liturgical tradition John Paul wrote about means salt in the Holy Water.  Salt in the Holy Water is a metaphor for a whole identity.

Think about this.   The Church is the greatest expert in humanity that there has ever been.  Her practices were wise on profound levels that shaped us.

I mused, above, about a knock on effect through the priestly rituals surrounding Mass, his prayers before and after.

In fact, Holy Mother Church made sure that the people saw the priest ritually preparing to say Mass and to pray after Mass: the Prayers at the Foot of the Altar beforehand and the reading of the Last Gospel afterward.   These were remnants retained in the Missal from the priest’s preparation and thanksgiving that developed over the centuries.

The Church decided that you – for centuries – should see him do it.  That’s how important it is.

As Fr. Jackson put it in his splendid book there is “Nothing Superfluous” in the traditional rites.

And what did the usurpers of the Conciliar liturgical reform do?   They cut out the priest’s preparation before and his prayer after Mass, relegating anything that he might choose to do entirely to his private practice.

They also stopped adding salt to the Holy Water.

Yeah yeah… in the Novus Ordo Missal there’s an option for salt, but it’s not the same thing.

As I said, above, I am pointing a finger at myself.

I am often lax in making a traditional preparation before Mass and thanksgiving after.  I get distracted, impatient to get on with oh-so-important things I know I have to do.

Preparing for Mass and being recollected after can be hard in a parish setting where there has not yet been established a minimum of discipline in a sacristy. People want to talk to the priest.  The priest wants to talk to them.  There are things to discuss, etc.  All important, I’m sure.   In general, priests like talking to people.

But the knock on effect of that, of not preparing and not pausing after, is corrosive for priestly identity, not fortifying.  And if the priest’s identity is corroded, it follows as the night the day that his flock will feel the effects to one degree or another.

I wonder if people really, if it came right down to it, wouldn’t rather know that Father is praying and preparing before Mass, giving thanks afterward, rather than seeing him act like a or host with an hors d’oeuvre tray at a dinner party.  In his sacred Mass vestments.  They might be a little disoriented at first, not seeing him slapping people on the back as they go out. Over time, however…. I wonder.

This is something that lay people need to chime in about.  Priest or dinner party host.   Mediator who renews the Sacrifice or nice guy.

I know that there are multiple angles to this and a great depends on context but I can’t shake the feeling that what can be lost is far greater in long-term significance than what can be gained.

I have some work to do.  I’m going to put the salt back into my preparation before and my time after Mass.  I owe it to myself, to our forebears, and to you.

Posted in "But Father! But Father!", Decorum, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Pò sì jiù, Priests and Priesthood, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, Seminarians and Seminaries, The Drill, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , , , ,
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Joseph Shaw’s HPR article has food for thought about reception of Communion during COVID-1984

A reader alerted me to a fine article at HPR by Joseph Shaw of the UK’s Latin Mass Society.  He wrote something that pertains to my look, yesterday, at the guidelines issued by the Diocese of Little Rock.  I took strong exception to a dictate in those guidelines for a specific reason.   Shaw’s piece adds an interesting perspective.

After Shaw comments on the development of a strong social dimension to participation at Mass, to the detriment of the mysterious and ritual dimensions, he writes of the historical practice of distribution of Communion outside of Mass and its subsequent return to the context of Mass.  My emphases and comments.

[…]

The increasing emphasis on Mass as a meal began long before the Second Vatican Council. A major step in this direction was moving the reception of Holy Communion back into Mass, in the early decades of the twentieth century. For many centuries prior to this, Communion had been distributed outside Mass, and commonly (as the frequently of reception increased with the waning of the influence of Jansenism), between Masses. There is a parallel between this development, and the later encouragement of the distribution of Hosts consecrated at the same Mass, rather than those consecrated earlier and stored in the tabernacle. The meal symbolism is served by both changes. What may be lost is the sense of the eternity and singleness of the Mass and the Victim.

I have no strong personal objection to either historical development, but it is a fact that today the reception of Holy Communion outside Mass is once again going to become the norm, at least for a time. It seems that for many Catholics the very idea of reception outside Mass, except for the hospitalized and housebound, has become difficult to imagine, and much of the push-back against the banning of Mass with a congregation appears derive from the idea that if we cannot attend Mass, then we will not be able to receive Communion. [Exactly.  Thus, the loss of the sense of what Mass really is.] Indeed, so difficult has this been to imagine that many bishops and priests have failed to note that this remains a possibility, and one where the risk of infection can be managed in all sorts of ways: by limiting the number of communicants, if necessary to one; by the priest cleansing his fingers before and after the ceremony; by performing the ceremony outside, or in a controlled environment; and so on.

Clearly, a carefully controlled approach to distributing Holy Communion outside Mass will place a limit on the numbers able to receive, and even on the most optimistic view Catholics will have to get used to another aspect of standard past practice: infrequent Communion. Today, not only is Communion outside Mass hard to imagine, but for many Catholics so is attendance at Mass without the reception of Communion. This implies a casual attitude towards the reception of Holy Communion which perfectly accords with the placing of the meal-symbolism ahead of other considerations, but is not a positive development from other points of view.

[…]

Shaw is certainly right.   His point about it being “hard to imagine” not receiving Communion at Mass underscores a major crisis in the Church today: Have people been adequately catechized about what Mass is?

Have PRIESTS?

It seems also to me that Communion outside of Mass, and less frequently, may be a way forward as Chinese COVID-1984 continues or some other demon virus comes along.

My objection to the dictate in Little Rock about Communion after Mass only for those who want to receive on the tongue was not so much about that being after Mass.  While that seems unfair, given that Communion on the tongue need not be any riskier than Communion in the hand, it could be a viable way forward.  It was the tone of disdain in the Little Rock Dictate for the people who want Communion on the tongue that has no place in a diocesan document.

The sheer insensitivity of that tone underscored the fact that the single most systematically marginalized group in the Church today are those who desire traditional sacred worship.

At the same time, we have to be honest and admit that, sometimes, “trads” can be their own worst enemies when it comes to their dealings with clergy.

We can and must do better.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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“Scacci (-orum, m.pl.) sive ludus scaccorum est tabularis artis, ingenii, et stratagematis ludus.”

In addition to reading a lot of Latin every day, I’ve reprised the working of chess problems.  So, when I was looking back through the blog for something I had written I found some posts that I made last year at this time when I was doing some chaplain work at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Station.  One of them linked to a page about chess … in Latin.  HERE

Animi caussa… the names of the pieces.

  • rex, sive scaccus
  • regina (vel virgo, vel amazon, vel domina), sive dama (unde damicus ludus), vel fercia
  • turres, vel elephantes, sive rochi
  • episcopi (vel satellites, vel signiferi, vel cursores, vel sagittiferi), sive alf?ni
  • equites
  • pedites, vel pedini, sive pedones.

And how does the regina move, you ask?

Regina est potentissima omnium militum. Ei sunt potestates et episcopi et turris. Potest moveri passim quemlibet numerum quadratorum prorsum (sive sursum), rursum (sive deorsum), dextrorsum, sinistrorsum, et quemlibet in obliquum.

There are also descriptions of the history of the game, the notation for recording moves, etc.

If you are at all interested in chess and Latin, check it out.

UPDATE: The wiki entry now has:

  1. rex R (sive scaccus)
  2. domina D (sive fercia, regina, virgo, dama – v.e. Damicus ludus -, amazon)
  3. II turres T ( sive rochus, elephas, cyclops)
  4. II alfini S (sive sagittifer, curvus, calvus, senex, cornutus, episcopus, comes, stultus, morio[3], sagittarius, cursor)
  5. II equites E (sive equus, caballus, caballarius, miles)
  6. VIII pedites P (sive pedo, pedinus, rusticus)
Posted in Chess, Just Too Cool, Lighter fare | Tagged ,
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9 May – HOLY MASS (TLM) St. Gregory of Nazianzus – LIVE VIDEO: 1200h CDT (GMT/UTC -5)

Will you please subscribe to my channel? HERE

I will LIVE stream a Traditional Latin Mass at NOON Central Daylight Time (= GMT/UTC -5 and ROME 1900h).

Today I will celebrate Mass in honor of St. Gregory of Nazianzus.

  • NB: You can find an English translation of the Mass formulary HERE.  Scroll down. Use the 1960 setting.
  • We can say the Regina Caeli together, since the Angelus bells are usually ringing when the live stream starts.
  • I will say a Spiritual Communion prayer at the very beginning for those of you who cannot make a Eucharistic Communion. 
  • I will also recite in Latin the traditional  “Statement of Intention” (…a hint to priests).
  • After Mass and the Leonine Prayers, I will recite a prayer in Latin “In time of pandemic” followed by a blessing with a fragment of the Cross

Click To Contribute

ADDENDUM: For texts of Prayers before Mass for each day of the week, in versions for laypeople and for priests: HERE

THANK YOU to my flower donors!

And HUGE thanks to viewers for yet more new RELIQUARIES (from my wishlist).  The new one’s now have relics of St. Thomas Becket and St. Joan of Arc.

Alas, Amazon sent something wrong instead of other (taller) reliquaries on my list.  I am going to have to sort that out with them.  But it is a good problem.

Finally, one of you sent a quite generous gift card.  There was no gift slip with it! I don’t know who you are.  But thank you.

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