7 May – HOLY MASS (TLM) – Votive Mass “Christ Eternal High Priest”- 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 a Votive Mass in honor of “Christ the Eternal High Priest”.  With a commemoration of St. Stanislaus, martyr.

  • 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.

Posted in LIVE STREAMING, SESSIUNCULA |
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6 May – HOLY MASS (TLM) – Mass “begging the grace of a good death” – LIVE VIDEO: 1200h CDT (GMT/UTC -5)

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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).

It is an Easter Season Feria. Today I will celebrate Mass “to beg the grace of a good death… ad postulandam gratiam bene moriendi“.  I will say Mass in the vestments I have put aside for my burial – the first time I’ve ever used them for Mass.

  • 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.

 

THANK YOU to my flower donors! And HUGE thanks to a viewer for the new RELIQUARY (from my wishlist), which now holds a relic of St. Therese de Lisieux.

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

 

Posted in Four Last Things, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged
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As Masses open up, priests told to DROP Hosts onto hands, Communion on the tongue is banned

As public Masses start up again, people are sending notes with indications from different dioceses about distribution of Holy Communion.

Under the excuse of being “realistic” and so forth, chanceries are writing for their bishops – I prefer to believe that the bishops themselves are not so awful – that Communion in the hand is obligatory and that people do not have a right to receive on the tongue.

Sed contraRedemptionis Sacramentum says “Quamvis omnis fidelis ius semper habeat pro libitu suo sacram Communionem ore accipendi,…”

[92.] Although each of the faithful always has the right to receive Holy Communion on the tongue, at his choice, if any communicant should wish to receive the Sacrament in the hand, in areas where the Bishops’ Conference with the recognitio of the Apostolic See has given permission, the sacred host is to be administered to him or her. However, special care should be taken to ensure that the host is consumed by the communicant in the presence of the minister, so that no one goes away carrying the Eucharistic species in his hand. If there is a risk of profanation, then Holy Communion should not be given in the hand to the faithful.

NB: “Always” and “right”.

Moreover, if Communion in the hand isn’t bad enough… and it is an abomination… now priests are being told that they are to drop the Host onto people’s hands.

They are to DROP the Host.

DROP. THE. HOST.

One of the sad and ironic advantages to this period of closure of Masses is that there have been millions fewer sacrilegious Communions received each Sunday by un-confessed and tepid or rebellious Catholics.   Millions of “Body” blows that the Church didn’t have to absorb.  Now priests are being told to drop Hosts onto palms.

Recently, Robert Card. Sarah, Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments, answered a questions about reception of Communion.  HERE

There is already a rule in the Church and this must be respected: the faithful are free to receive Communion in the mouth or hand. […]  The devil strongly attacks the Eucharist because it is the heart of the life of the Church. But I believe, as I have already written in my books, that the heart of the problem is the crisis of faith in the priesthood. If priests are aware of what the Mass is and what the Eucharist is, certain ways of celebrating or certain hypotheses about Communion would not even come to mind. Jesus cannot be treated like this.

Certain things would not even enter into their minds.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Pò sì jiù, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, The Coming Storm, You must be joking! | Tagged , ,
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What happens when men live together without the influence of women?

I was sent this fun video. What happens when men live together without the influence of women? Things either get really barbaric or really efficient.

This is one of them.

Buster Keaton and Joe Roberts.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged
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VIDEO: Fr. Finigan on the English Martyrs!

My good friend, His Hermeneuticalness, Fr. Tim Finigan, has posted a wonderful short video talk about the English Martyrs, whose Feast was celebrated yesterday in England.

You won’t be disappointed!

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Posted in Mail from priests, Modern Martyrs, Saints: Stories & Symbols | Tagged ,
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5 May – HOLY MASS (TLM) – St Pius V – LIVE VIDEO: 1200h CDT (GMT/UTC -5)

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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).

The Mass is in honor of St. Pius V, Pope and Confessor.  Prayers added “Pro concordia servanda”.

  • 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.

I’ll add a “fervorino” (short sermon).

THANK YOU to my flower donors! And HUGE thanks to a viewer for the new RELIQUARY (from my wishlist), which now holds a relic of St. Therese de Lisieux.

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

 

Posted in LIVE STREAMING, SESSIUNCULA |
3 Comments

ASK FATHER: Organ donation for research after death

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

My husband has been diagnosed with ALS. He would like to be cremated when the time comes, but before he would like to donate his brain to medical research. I understand cremation is ok as long as ashes are not spread but is it legit to donate a body part for research? I really wouldn’t know where to look in the Catechism for this answer.

First, may God help you both in what is to come.  It could be an opportunity for many graces and great reparation for the sins of others if offered to Christ as a gift.

In 1956, Pope Pius XII declared to eye doctors about cornea transplants that:

In the first place, it is necessary to condemn a morally erroneous judgment which is formed in the soul of a person but usually influences his external conduct and consists in putting the corpse of a human being on the same plane as that of an animal or even a simple “thing”. The dead body of an animal can be used in almost all its parts. The same can be said in regard to the dead body of a human being considered from a purely material aspect, that is to say, from the standpoint of the elements of which it is composed. For some people this attitude constitutes the final criterion of thought and the ultimate principle of action.

Such an attitude implies an error in judgment and of rejection of psychology and of the religious and moral sense. For the human corpse deserves to be regarded entirely differently. The body was the abode of a spiritual and immortal soul, and essential constituent of a human person whose dignity it shared. Something of this dignity still remains in the corpse. We can say also that, since it is a component of man, it has been formed “to the image and likeness” of God, which extends far beyond the general vestiges of resemblance to God that are found in animals without intelligence and even in purely material and inanimate creatures. In a way the words of the apostle Paul apply even to a corpse: “do you not know that your members are the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you?”

Finally, the dead body is destined for resurrection and eternal life. This is not true of the body of an animal, and it proves that it is not sufficient to visualize “therapeutic purposes” for a proper evaluation and treatment of the human corpse.

On the other hand, it is equally true that medical science and the training of future physicians demand a detailed knowledge of the human body, and that cadavers are needed for study. What we have just said does not forbid this. A person can pursue this legitimate objective while fully accepting what we have just said.

It also follows from this that a person may will to dispose of his body and to destined it to ends that are useful, morally irreproachable and even noble (among them the desire to aid the sick and the suffering). One may make a decision of this nature with respect to his own body with full realization of the reverence which is due to it, and with full attention to the words which the apostle Paul spoke to the Corinthians. This decision should not be condemned, but positively justified.…

Unless circumstances impose an obligation, we must respect to the liberty and spontaneity of the parties involved.

 

Pope John Paul II in the 1995 encyclical Evangelium Vitae,

86. “There is an everyday heroism, made up of gestures and sharing, big or small, which build up an authentic culture of life. A particularly praiseworthy example of such gestures is the donation of organs in a morally acceptable manner with a few to offering a chance of health and even of life itself to the sick who sometimes have no other hope.”

The Catechism of the Catholic Church says:

2296 “Organ donation after death is a noble and meritorious act and is to be encouraged as an expression of generous solidarity.”

There is, of course, more to be said about the the timing of the removal of organs.  However, these quotes can give some orientation of organ donation for the purposes of research.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box | Tagged
8 Comments

Your Good News

I think we are all in need of some GOOD news.

For my part, today, I GOT A HAIR CUT. Sorely needed.

I trust that you have even better news than that. My hope is that, during this challenging time and in many cases hardships, there have been new and good discoveries or changes in your spiritual lives and perhaps even your relationships.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
25 Comments

4 May – HOLY MASS (TLM) – St Monica – LIVE VIDEO: 1200h CDT (GMT/UTC -5)

Click To Contribute

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).

The Mass is in honor of St. Monica. Prayers added “Pro Salutis Vivorum”.

  • 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.

I’ll add a “fervorino” (short sermon).

THANK YOU to my flower donors! And HUGE thanks to a viewer for the new RELIQUARY (from my wishlist), which now holds a relic of St. Therese de Lisieux.

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

 

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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Your Sunday Sermon notes – 3rd Sunday after Easter (4th 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 | Tagged
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