Fr. Z’s Kitchen: Pasta e ceci alla Romana

Yesterday The Great Roman™ sent me a photo of a fine bowl of pasta e ceci in the Roman style.

This is a good lesson about custody of the eyes.   We tend to want what we see.   I immediately wanted some of that pasta e ceci.     Since I can’t go to Rome, I brought, as I often do, Rome to me.

At the store I could not find any dry chick peas, but I did find a couple of remaining cans.

Here’s my set up.

The soffritto is simple.  Olive oil, anchovies, garlic.

Let it dissolve together, slowly.  Don’t use high heat.

Add some tomatoes.

In go the ceci.  Did you know that the Latin word for chickpea is cicer?  As in Cicero?  The famous ancient Roman orator, was Mr. Chickpea.  Plutarch, who wrote biographies, said that one of his ancestor’s had a nose with a cleft tip that looked like cicer.  It is more probable that his family, based around Arpinum, made their living in the chickpea business.  Other famous Romans had family names from legumes, such as Piso (peas), Lentulus (lentils) and Fabius (beans).

Note the chopped rosemary leaves and sage.

In goes the broth.

Simmer for 15.

In goes the pasta.   You can use just about any kind of short, small pasta.  You can break up (or use up saved up short pieces of) long pasta.  I used bucatini.

After another 10 or so.

A grind of parmigiano and pepper and some dabs of really good olive oil

Yum.

Later in the day we will give singing Vespers a shot, live-streamed at church.  This is a good Roman day.

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes – 1st Passion Sunday 2020 (TLM)

Was there a good point made in the sermon you heard at the Mass that fulfilled your Sunday Obligation?  WHOOPS!  You probably are in a place where you don’t have an obligation, either because the bishop dispensed it or there are no Masses!

However, perhaps you saw a Mass with a sermon over the interwebs.

Was there a good point? There are a lot of people who don’t get many good points in the sermons they must endure.

For my part… to an empty church.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 |
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POLL: Veiling and covering images on 1st Passion Sunday 2020, 5th of Lent

We are really getting into it now.

From this Sunday, traditionally called 1st Sunday of the Passion, it is customary to veil images in churches. In the Gospel in traditional Form of the Roman Rite we hear:

Tulérunt ergo lápides, ut iácerent in eum: Iesus autem abscóndit se, et exívit de templo. … They therefore took up stones to cast at Him; but Jesus hid Himself, and went out from the temple.

What is going on where you are?

This is a fine old tradition. It has to do with deprivation of the senses and the liturgical dying of the Church in preparation for the Lord’s tomb and resurrection. We do this to sense something of the humiliation of the Lord as he enters His Passion, something of His interior suffering.

We are also being pruned during Lent. From Septuagesima onward we lose things bit by bit in the Church’s sacred liturgy until, at the Vigil, we are even deprived of light itself. The Church is liturgically dying.

Let’s have a poll.  Let us know what you saw!

Anyone can vote, but only registered and approved users here can add comments.

At my Latin Rite church, for this 1st Passion Sunday (5th of Lent) - 2020 - I saw:

View Results

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29 March – LIVE Sunday Mass (TLM) 0730 CDT

I’ll say Mass at 0730 this morning. In Europe you switched to daylight savings.

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPOv8zi09j0w0JlN1OTXXOQ

That’s the parish channel rather than my personal channel.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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@MadisonDiocese : Bp. Hying’s Decree altering conditions for gaining Plenary Indulgences

This could be a model for other dioceses.

Below is a decree from Most Reverend Donald J. Hying, of the Diocese of Madison, by which he grants that people within the Diocese of Madison can gain plenary indulgences without confession and Communion, provided they have contrition for their sins and have the intention of receiving these sacraments as soon as possible.

This is possible under Enchiridion Indulgentiarum 25.

Under normal conditions, to gain a plenary indulgence, you do the prescribed work and also make a good  sacramental confession, receive Eucharistic Communion, and say prayers for the intentions designated by the Sovereign Pontiff, which must be fulfilled in the several days (20, actually) before or after the indulgenced work is performed with the proper disposition.  A proper disposition means, for a plenary indulgence, being in the state of grace and having no attachment to sins, even venial.  Yes, that is possible.  The decree, below, might have made that “freedom from attachment even to venial sins” a little more explicit, but it is nevertheless implicit in the phrase “provided they have contrition for their sins”.

Have a look.

Decree granting permission to obtain indulgences outside of the usual conditions Print
Bishop Hying’s Letter
Thursday, Mar. 26, 2020 — 12:00 AM
Protocol #: 015-2020

Whereas, during this time of disease, it has been necessary to take such drastic measures as the cancellation of all public celebrations of the Holy Mass in order to protect the public health by slowing the spread of contagion;

Whereas these measures, though necessary, have the unfortunate effect of making it temporarily impossible for most of the faithful to receive sacramentally the graces of Holy Communion, and difficult for them to receive the graces imparted in the celebration of the other sacraments;

Whereas it is therefore all the more essential for the faithful in these times to avail themselves of the extra-sacramental graces given abundantly by God through his Holy Church, especially the grace of the partial or total remission of the temporal punishment owed to sin, which the Church concedes to the faithful who partake in specific works to which the Church, custodian of the great treasury of the merits of Christ and the saints, attaches an indulgence;

Whereas, however, the protective measures mentioned above constitute an obstacle to the perfect fulfilment of the usual conditions which the Church, by the power of loosing and binding entrusted to her by Christ, requires for the reception of indulgences, namely, sacramental confession, Eucharistic Communion, and prayer for the intention of the Sovereign Pontiff, which must be fulfilled in the several days before or after the indulgenced work is performed with the proper disposition;

Therefore, by virtue of the faculty granted to local ordinaries in n. 25 of the Manual of Indulgences, I hereby grant permission for all the faithful of the Diocese of Madison wherever they are, as well as anyone actually present within the diocese, to gain plenary indulgences without confession and Communion, provided they have contrition for their sins and have the intention of receiving these sacraments as soon as possible;

Nevertheless, I urge the faithful who take advantage of this permission to make a Spiritual Communion soon before or after performing an indulgenced work, without prejudice to the requirement of receiving sacramental Communion as soon as it becomes possible,

And I exhort all the faithful to obtain indulgences, particularly by partaking in indulgenced works that are especially suited not only to this penitential season of Lent but also to these difficult times, among which I make special mention of the following:

• The devout recitation of the rosary, including in a family setting (#17 in the Manual of Indulgences),

• The reading of sacred scripture for at least half an hour from a text approved by the competent authority (#30),

• The pious Way of the Cross celebrated in those churches that remain open, or for those who are impeded from celebrating in a church, reading and meditating on the Passion and Death of Our Lord Jesus Christ for at least a quarter of an hour (#13),

• Devout reception of the Papal Blessing, which I will impart via broadcast after the celebration of Mass on Wednesday, March 25, the Solemnity of the Annunciation (#4);

I remind the faithful that, although Mass cannot currently be publicly celebrated, Churches are generally open to the public for prayer and devotions, as well as sacramental confessions when possible, provided that no large groups accumulate and appropriate protective and hygienic measures are always taken,

Lastly, I inform or remind the faithful of the indulgences conceded today by the Apostolic Penitentiary, which include indulgences for the faithful suffering from the Coronavirus, health care workers, and the dying.

Given at Madison this 20th day of March, in the year of our Lord 2020.

 

+Donald J. Hying
Bishop of Madison

William D. Yallaly
Chancellor

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ASK FATHER: Blessing sacramentals over a live stream on the internet

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

During this time of plague, may priests live-stream the blessing of sacramentals? A priest has asked parishioners who want to have these objects blessed to prepare water, salt, etc., view the blessing ritual online, and presumably follow any instructions given. Would such a blessing be efficacious? The area of this parish is under lockdown and people cannot bring the objects to the priest for blessing.

NO!

I am convinced that this would result in nothing.

There is a difference between an invocative blessing, that calls a blessing down on people or perhaps critters, and a constitutive blessing or consecration, that results in a lasting state. We can bless or consecrate some things and places and some people (in the case of religious, priests) such that they are sacred things, places or persons.

The blessing of water, salt, oil, etc., is meant to remove these things from the realm of the Prince of this world and hand them over to the King. They are constituted as blessed things so that they can be of use in putting to flight demons and to help the state of our bodies and souls. To do that, they first need to be exorcised. Then they are blessed with a constitutive blessing.

That can’t be done over the internet.

I’m afraid that attempts to do this will result in nothing special. However, people will use things that haven’t been blessed, and that’s problematic in itself.

It would be wrong to offer such a blessing and, in a lasting way, harmful for our understanding of what sacramentals are and what they are for.

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28 March – Holy Mass (TLM) Saturday 4th Week of Lent – LIVE VIDEO: 1200h CDT (GMT/UTC -5)

Today I am again going to attempt to LIVE stream Mass at NOON (Central Daylight Time = GMT/UTC -5). Holy Mass (TLM) Saturday 4th Week of Lent with a commemoration of St. John of Capistrano.

HERE

  • I have permission from the bishop to use this Votive Mass on Ferias of Lent.
  • You can find an English translation of the Mass formulary HERE.  Scroll down use use the 1960 setting.
  • I will say a prayer for a Spiritual Communion at the very beginning for those of you who cannot make a Eucharistic Communion.  I will also make a “Statement of Intention” (which every priest should recite before Mass).

I wonder… should a give a “fervorino” or not?  Not much feedback on that.

My YouTube Channel HERE

An Act of Spiritual Communion

My Jesus, I believe that Thou art present in the Blessed Sacrament. I love Thee above all things and I desire Thee in my soul. Since I cannot now receive Thee sacramentally, come at least spiritually into my heart. As though Thou wert already there, I embrace Thee and unite myself wholly to Thee; permit not that I should ever be separated from Thee. Amen.

Gesù mio, io credo che sei realmente presente nel Santissimo Sacramento. Ti amo sopra ogni cosa e ti desidero nell’ anima mia. Poiché ora non posso riceverti sacramentalmente, vieni almeno spiritualmente nel mio cuore. Come già venuto, io ti abbraccio e tutto mi unisco a te; non permettere che mi abbia mai a separare da te.
Così sia.

 

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ASK FATHER: Best practices for following a Mass which is live-streamed on the internet or broadcast on TV

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

What are your thoughts about what to do during streamed Masses? I tend to think that in this time where it is impossible to attend Mass, it is at least beneficial to be united with one going on someplace else, with the preference for a live Mass, instead of a recording. Do you recommend the usual postures and actions? I’m feeling a little funny about kneeling in front of a TV, regardless of Who is being broadcast. In human terms, I would stand up if you, the Pope, or the President walked into my room, but I wouldn’t do it if you just appeared on a webcast.

That’s a really good question.

I think you can do as you please.   If you want to kneel, kneel.  If you prefer to sit, okay.

It could be a good practice to follow carefully the prayers of the Mass.  If you are able to make a Spiritual Communion, that would be great.

I wonder what others who read this might pitch in.

If some of you are watching Masses live streamed on the internet, what are your practices?

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, LIVE STREAMING | Tagged
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Wherein a seriously annoyed Fr. Z rants – UPDATED

UPDATE

Concerning something I ranted about below, I read this at CNA:

Updated: Springfield, Mass. diocese rescinds policy permitting nurses to anoint

Thanks be to God.

One hour after the publication of the story below, the Diocese of Springfield informed CNA that it has rescinded its permission for nurses to conduct the physical anointing during the celebration of the anointing of the sick. The diocese declined comment regarding the decision to rescind its policy.

BTW… my old pastor drilled it into me that if a person is dying and not compos sui, Anointing is the sacrament to give, because it can also forgive sins in that circumstance.  And there’s this, from a priest friend…

Speaking of the Sacrament of Anointing, I think it would do well to remind priests of the following: “There is also the common opinion that if Extreme Unction is the only hope of salvation, e.g., if the dying man has not been to confession for a long time and can be absolved only conditionally now because unconscious, there is a grave obligation of the pastor to give Extreme Unction even at the peril of his life.”  (Kilker, Adrian Jerome, Extreme Unction: A Canonical Treatise (New York: B. Herder Book Co., 1927) 108)

OORAH!

THAT’s the attitude that has been LOST!

THIS is the time to RECLAIM IT!

____ Originally Published on: Mar 27, 2020 at 15:21

I am disturbed to serious anger when I have a sense that bishops are giving priority to the worldly over the spiritual in this time of pandemic, as if they are functionaries of the CDC rather than successors of the Apostles.

For the most part, I think bishops and priests are good men.  They are, however, men of their own epoch, not another.  We live in a radically secularized world now, where there is little sense of the transcendent.  This is the result of the relentless onslaught of the world, the flesh and the Devil, ratcheting up by orders of magnitude over the last decades.  Also ratcheting down has been the sense of the sacred, because of the stripping of sacred worship and catechesis of the sense of the sacred, the transcendent.  I suspect that many priests and bishops are really immanentists.  They are, deep down modernists.  That is, they reduce the supernatural to the natural at every turn.  I don’t like that idea, but, right now, I think we have evidence that it’s true.

Also, many of these otherwise good men are getting really bad advice.   Instead of giving priority to the transcendent and spiritual, some around them are mired in the material and temporal.  I’ll bet that lawyers and insurance company reps are calling the shots in some places.

Are the temporal concerns important? OF COURSE THEY ARE!  But when they shove out the sacred and the spiritual, they are the realm of the Prince of this world, the Enemy of the soul.

And those who promote such an attitude are the agents of the Enemy in doing so, witting or unwitting.

How comes this rant, today?

I had a note from a priest friend saying that, in his diocese:

The Sacrament of Reconciliation is to be suspended except for those in danger of death. All other means of providing the Sacrament should cease. In particular the practice being observed of “stational penance” via automobile “drive throughs,” etc., is not an appropriate celebration of the sacrament and should be discontinued. [Put your coffee cup down…] The necessary human interaction crucial to the celebration of the sacrament is impeded through the lack of full proximity and the ability to offer counsel and direction is hampered by the distance between the confessor and the penitent.”

That is entirely rubbish.  There is NOTHING WRONG with “drive through”, make-shift confessionals.  That B as in B and S as in S about “proximity” probably comes from the gooey sentimentality of those priests who want to put their hands on people during their confessions, which is both unnecessary for the sacrament, a little creepy, and more than a little an invitation to a lawsuit.  A priest can validly absolve from quite a distance.  He surely can, if the penitent is just a few, or even, say, 10 feet away.  We’ve been over this.

“Necessary human interaction”, properly understood (that is, not as this diocese put it) means that the penitent can confess sins (the matter) in a way that reasonably maintains the secrecy of the content confessed, and the priest can impart absolution (the form).   Matter and form.

Another thing: “ability to offer counsel and direction is hampered by the distance”.  Again, this is sentimentality.  It has nothing to do with the valid administration of the sacrament.  Making a confession is not the equivalent of spiritual direction.  When a priest can give a good insight or answer a question, that’s great.  But this is not the time for restricting the sacraments that can otherwise easily be administered without danger of contagion.

I suspect that whoever wrote this B as in B, S as in S, gives long rambling “advice” to penitents, who are otherwise itching to get on with it.   A pox on priests who ramble!  If we don’t want penitents to ramble, neither should we!

This is rubbish.  I find this appalling.

And also

Masses in open areas around the property of our churches are also discouraged as they cannot guarantee adequate distancing and protections of the members of the assembly.

This is a judgment call, of course.  But I think it is far too restrictive.  What’s “adequate” distancing?    What “protections” do there have to be outside?  Good grief.

And then there is this.

In the current state of the pandemic, the celebration of the Sacrament of Anointing of the Sick [don’t pick up that coffee cup yet!] cannot be fully administered as a gloved hand cannot administer the anointing.

TOTAL FAIL.

Whoever wrote this needs a remedial course in the Sacrament of Anointing.

“cannot be fully administered as a gloved hand cannot administer the anointing”…?!?

First of all, a sacrament is either administered or it isn’t.  It isn’t either “partially” or “fully” administered.   You don’t get part of a sacrament, so fully is pointless.  It’s like saying “very unique”.  It’s either unique or it isn’t.  A woman is either pregnant or she’s not.  You are either validly anointed or you are not.

Also, more importantly, a priest or bishop can anoint with a gloved hand!

The anointing can be done with an instrument, such as a cotton swab, or a tong or forceps that pinch the cotton ball with the Oil of the Infirm.   If that is possible, then so is anointing with the thumb in a nitrile glove!  The glove is an instrument, a tool.   As a cotton used for the oil should be disposed of properly, and anything used to clean the instrument as well, so too a glove.

WHY IS THIS HARD?

The manual of moral theology by Sabbetti-Barrett even has a point on this:

“in casu necessitatis, v. gr., tempore pestis, posse diversas unctiones fieri, mediante penicillo, quia in hoc sacramento nulla requiritur impositio manuum sicut in Confirmatione;”

I’ll translate for the sake of the folks in that chancery… keep in mind that a penicillum is “a brush/stylus, a small sponge” and also that different places on the body are anointed in the traditional rite – hence:

“In the case of necessity, that is, in time of disease, the different anointings can be done using an instrument, because in this sacrament imposition of hands is not required, as it is in Confirmation;”

The madness doesn’t stop there.

In another diocese, I’m told that the bishop gave permission to have a nurse apply the oil, do the anointing, while the priest gives the form from the doorway.

NO! NO! NO!

The priest has to do it!  He can use a swab or tongs, even a long one, and a glove, but he has to do it.  Neither can one person pour the water at a baptism while another says the Trinitarian formula.  NO! In Prümmer we read concerning the minister of the sacrament of anointing:

Si plures sacerdotes hoc sacramentum administrant taliter, ut alli faciant unctiones et alii pronunient formam, sacramentum videtur esse invalidum, quia requiritur, ut idem minister applicet materiam et pronuniet formam.

For that chancery…

If many priests administer this sacrament in that way [it is a discussion of several priests giving the sacrament at the same time], in such a way that some do the anointings and others pronounce the form [of the sacrament], the sacrament is considered to be invalid, because it is required that the same minister [of the sacrament] apply the material [the oil] and pronounce the form.

The one and same priest has to do both!  Apply the oil and say the words.

And what just came out of Newark, as of 25 March?

The Sacrament of Reconciliation is suspended until further notice with the exception of an extreme emergency.

All churches and adoration chapels must be closed and locked until further notice. Private prayer in any parish building must be discontinued until further notice.

Good heavens!  It’s like a war… not on the virus, but on the people of God!

A week or so ago, in a live sermon for Sunday Mass (also on YouTube) I mentioned that when the Lord miraculous fed the 5000, he had seen the sick in the multitude and he had compassion on them.  He didn’t send them away even though the Apostles were urging Him to.

This time, their successors are in charge, and getting their way.

Please, dear readers, get down on your knees and pray for these bishops of ours.  Pray for fortitude for priests, who have to endure this stuff.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liberals, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Pò sì jiù, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants, You must be joking! | Tagged ,
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ACTION ITEM! BISHOPS and PRIESTS – Exorcise and bless!

Luke 4:40-41:

When the sun was setting, all those who had any that were sick with various diseases brought them to Him; and He laid His hands on every one of them and healed them. And demons also came out of many, crying out and saying, “You are the Christ, the Son of God!”

Mark 1:32–1:34

At evening, when the sun had set, they brought to Him all who were sick and those who were demon-possessed. And the whole city was gathered together at the door. Then He healed many who were sick with various diseases, and cast out many demons; and He did not allow the demons to speak, because they knew Him.

Matthew 8:16-17:

That evening they brought to him many who were possessed with demons; and he cast out the spirits with a word, and healed all who were sick. This was to fulfill what was spoken by the prophet Isaiah, “He took our infirmities and bore our diseases.”

Mark 6:7, 12-13:

And [Jesus] called to him the twelve, and began to send them out two by two, and gave them authority over the unclean spirits.   So they went out and preached that men should repent. And they cast out many demons, and anointed with oil many that were sick and healed them.

A few points:

  • There is a strong connect between the Lord healing physical ailments and the casting out of demons.
  • The Lord sends the Apostles with His authority and they heal and cast out demons.
  • The Church has Christ’s authority and the Apostolic Succession.  Priests, sacerdotes (priests and bishops) can wield this power by the authority of the Church.
  • Bishops have this authority by their office.  Priests share in the bishop’s ministry and the bishop can give them his authority to give certain blessings and to use certain rites of exorcism.
  • Most of the Church’s blessing prayers and many of her liturgical orations explicitly ask for salus animae et corporis… health of mind and body.
  • Exorcists report that the older, traditional rites of exorcism and the blessing of sacramentals are more effective than the newer rites.

I urge that bishops…

  • pronounce the long St. Michael Prayer over their entire dioceses using the Rituale Romanum Title XI, Ch. 3.  Then they should bless the diocese.  They should do the same in their cathedral churches and the chancery offices and their own residence.   They should use Holy Water blessed with the traditional Rituale Romanum.
  • give their priests permission to use Title XI, Ch. 3.  Ask the priests to exorcise the buildings of their parish, and the grounds, and the rectory.  And then bless them.  I can send recordings of the prayer to PRIESTS.  HERE
  • use the “Prayer in Times of Epidemics”.  HERE

Let us priests do what only we can do. 

Priests can say Title XI, Ch. 3 privately.  However, I am assured by an exorcist friend that when the priest has direct permission from the bishop to use the right, the impact on demons is magnified by leaps and bounds.   Demons are legalists.  The added authority is agony for them.

Anyone can practice the guidelines put out by authorities.  Anyone can engage, prudently and attentively, in works of mercy.   The work of mercy that priests can perform most effectively is precisely to be priests.   Let them use all the best, most effective tools and weapons of the spiritual battle against the presence pandemic. 

Fathers, say Mass and use Latin, and use the traditional Roman Rite.   This is a chance to LEARN IT.  Use the older Rituale Romanum.  If you need help with the Latin, I can help.  There are already some things posted.  I can post more.

Lay people: Ask your priests and bishops to do these things.  Ask them what they are doing.  Offer all encouragement you can.

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, "How To..." - Practical Notes, ACTION ITEM!, Be The Maquis, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm | Tagged , ,
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