Advent is here again. ACTION ITEM!

GO TO CONFESSION!

Advent is more about the Second Coming of the Lord than the first.  Do penance to celebrate well the First Coming of the Lord at Bethlehem.  That will include also a thorough examination of conscience.   Then…

GO TO CONFESSION!

Fathers, hear confessions.  Preach about the Sacrament of Penance during Advent.  Talk about the difference between venial and mortal sin, and don’t downplay the later.  Teach your flock about the need to confess sins in both KIND and NUMBER.   Help them prepare for a good confession.  Tell them not to ramble and not to hide anything.

Fathers…

GO TO CONFESSION!

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Jesuits and Drag Queens. Tautology?

From the Louis Joliet Society.

Drag Queen Story Hour Brought to You by Catholic, Jesuit Marquette University

The Louis Joliet Society has learned that Marquette University hosted a Drag Queen Story Hour as part of its Community Day celebration on October 12, 2019 at the university’s Haggerty Museum of Art

According to an article about the event in the student-produced  Marquette Wire, “The Haggerty used to hold Family Days once a semester, but this is the first time the event is being held after being rebranded to Community Day. Family Days was also based around an exhibit on display at the Haggerty at the time, but the activities were targeted toward a different audience.”

Evidently!

Everyone should be pleased that Wisconsin’s premiere Catholic educational institution has courageously joined the bandwagon of depraved lunacy hell-bent on warping children (the American College of Pediatricians calls these events “child abuse”), mocking women and, most importantly, mocking God. Once again, note: this is NOT some rogue student group activity. This is a Marquette University funded event. Presumably tuition dollars are at least part of this funding.

[…]

I’ll bet it has full endorsement from certain homosexualist Jesuit quarters.

Posted in Jesuits, Sin That Cries To Heaven | Tagged , ,
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30 Nov 1969 – 50th Anniversary of imposition of the Novus Ordo – PODCAzTs Revisited

It has been 50 years. 50 long years. Some might say, “Only 50? It seems longer.”

Note the bizzare photo of a Novus Ordo being celebrated in the Sistine Chapel.

Originally Published on: Nov 26, 2019 at 16:27

FIFTY years ago on 30 Nov 1969 the Novus Ordo went into force.  It was the 1st Sunday of Advent.

In 2009, the 40th anniversary of that momentous change, I did three podcasts about the imposition of the Novus Ordo at Advent of 1969.   These podcasts – now a decade old – remain fresh today.

Since the blog was updated, I no longer have a way simply to embed all three recordings.  Here are links.

We Pope Paul VI (+1978) in General Audiences in at the end of November 1969 on the subject of the changes people were about to experience.

The pop music selections were all hits from 1969.   Their choice is also part of my commentary.

For the first of these three, the Audience was exactly 50 years ago, today, 26 November 1969.

093 09-11-16 40 years ago… Paul VI on the eve of the Novus Ordo

094 09-11-20 40 years ago… Paul VI on the eve of the Novus Ordo (Part II)

095 09-11-24 40 years ago… Paul VI on the eve of the Novus Ordo (Part III)

I will note that since 2007 the use of the 1962 Missale Romanum… and the pre-55 Missale… is statistically exploding.  At the same time, demographics in the Church across the board are plummeting.  The Masses with the traditional form are packed with young people, young families.

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New Registrations, Users – tips

There has been quite an influx of registrations lately.  Thanks.

You only have to register if you want to comment.

I should note that I don’t automatically approve every registration.  If you don’t cooperate with a little biographical information to prove that you are not a bot or a spammer who deserves to roast in the deepest cinders of Hell, I won’t approve you.  You don’t need much to prove you are real.  Some people include their confirmation name or maybe their parish or some Catholic tidbit.  It isn’t much and they can’t be seen by anyone but me.

If you have a hard time logging in, drop me a line and I will try to help.  I am not always at my computer, however.

You might review The Rules.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes |
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PRIEST HUNT: Europe – Mozarabic Rite

I was contacted in regard to finding a priest in Europe who can travel and who can celebrated the Mozarabic Rite.

Yes, you read that correctly.

Drop me a line.  HERE

 

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PODCAzT 179: Kwasniewski on the myth of ancient Communion in the hand

We welcome as our guest… Peter Kwasniewski and an article he recently posted at LifeSite about Communion in the hand.

Not long ago, surveys from the Pew Research center uncovered that a huge number of Catholics do not believe in the Church’s teaching about transubstantiation. This is so even among regular church goers. It seems to me that this could only be so among regular church goers, slightly more likely to have had a little catechesis of value, that the have seen with they own eyes for decades the lack reverence shown by priests and congregants for the Eucharist. Rather, they have not see much reverence shown for the Eucharist from priests or coreligionists. Hence, because lex orandi lex credendi, because they way we pray has a reciprocal relation with what we believe, they just don’t believe that under the appearance of bread and wine we have Christ whole and entire, Body Blood Soul and Divinity. They see hosts treated casually, handled by anyone and everyone, literally handled, and they conclude that the hosts must not be that important. They hear the suboptimal music, see the cheap vestments, watch the sloppy ministry at the altar, note the fact that everyone goes to communion without a single admonishment about confession, and they conclude that the Host isn’t much after all. Very many people have come to see Communion as, “they put the white thing in our hand and then we sing a song”. Communion is a sign of nonjudgmental affirmation a sign that you are in the club.

A major contributor to the diving numbers who believe the Church’s teaching on the Eucharist has to be distribution of Communion in the hand. The conga line style, and the gimme gesture to sticking hands out, the fact that hordes of the non-ordained themselves troop up to tabernacles and altars and take sacred vessel all diminish what should be, contrarily, built up and augmented with all possible decorum and gravity. You can’t blame people for not believing. They’ve not been handed down what to believe and how.

At LifeSite, there is a good piece by Peter Kwasnieski dated  26 November 2019: Debunking the myth that today’s Communion in the hand revives an ancient custom

That was one of the canards raised by the innovators, a false archeologizing legitimization of protestant style Communion. They said that in the ancient church that’s how it was done, hence, we should do it too. That ignores entirely the fact that, over centuries, as our understanding of the Eucharist grew, so did our rites surrounding the Eucharist. As we learned more and appreciated more and more God’s gift, we adjusted our practice. So, when we see a backsliding to Communion in the hand, we know that something is not right. Moreover, Communion in the hand was not, in the ancient, as advertised.

I am going to read this article by Kwasniewski. Some of you don’t have a lot of time to read. Some of you have a hard time reading. But you can listen. This information deserves wider distribution. And you can always go to the site and print the piece and hand it out.

As you listen, tune your ear for …. I’ll try to mark off the quotes so they are easier to identify.

You hear in this PODCAzT the wonderful Benedictine nuns of Gower Abbey.  US HERE – UK HERE

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Decorum, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, PODCAzT | Tagged , , , , , , ,
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Sunday 8 Dec 2019 – Madison, WI – Card. Burke – Pontifical Mass at the Throne for the Immaculate Conception

On Sunday 8 December 2019, at 10 AM at St. Mary’s Church in Pine Bluff, WI, His Eminence Raymond Leo Card. Burke will celebrate a Pontifical Mass at the Throne in the traditional Roman Rite for the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, Patroness of the United States.

St. Mary’s in Pine Bluff is located 7 miles west of US 12 (Beltline) south of the intersection of County Road P and Mineral Point Road.

St. Mary’s in Pine Bluff
3673 County Road P
Cross Plains, WI 53528-9179
Email: catholic@tds.net
Phone: (608) 798-2111

stmarypinebluff.com

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ASK FATHER: Lighting Advent wreath during Mass – REVISITED

From a reader some years back.

QUAERITUR:

Father, is it appropriate to replace the penitential rite with the lighting of the advent wreath?

No.

Just… no.

The longer explanation is, course, Nooooooooo.

Attention to the wreath during Mass seems like the triumph of low information sentimentality over good Catholic common sense.

I think there is a blessing for a wreath that can be used during Mass in the Ordinary Form on the 1st Sunday of Advent only, and only in countries where it has been approved.  That doesn’t apply to other Sundays of Advent.  Also, in no way does it substitute for the penitential rite of Mass.  You bless the thing, light the candles, Mass goes on as it should according to the book.

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ASK FATHER: How to pray the “Cursing Psalms” against our enemies?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Can you once again address the maledictory Psalms and how to use them? I think you last did so over 3 years ago. Thank you!

Wow.  Another third rail question today.

This is what I wrote three years ago in post #87060.


How to pray the “Cursing Psalms” against our enemies

field daySaturdays are my field days.  I field strip my computers (scan, defrag, update etc.), police the Cupboard Under The Stairs, do laundry, try to fill up a garbage bag or two (that’s satisfaction), police both the fridge (especially on a wake-up) and my conscience.  Well, that last one I do everyday.  Which it ain’t easy in these days of political electioneering and ecclesiastical goat rodeos on nearly every front.

This morning a couple friends with whom I have an instant message group going – often hilarious – mentioned the “maledictory psalms”, also known as the “cursing psalms” and “imprecatory psalms”. They call for judgment and disaster to fall upon the enemies of God and God’s people.

Since I’ve been using the Bux Protocol™ a lot these days, the reference to the maledictory psalms got me thinking about posting on this difficult topic: how to pray for enemies.

Christ the Lord commanded us to love our enemies (Matthew 5:44).  And yet a couple dozen or so psalms – which all Christians can use for prayer – seem to wish some pretty dire things on our enemies.  And, yes, we have enemies.

Love for “enemy” can be expressed different ways.  Love for our enemies does not mean that we must hope that they prosper or succeed in their wicked ways.  Love, charity, means that we will their true good. We pray for their salvation.  We ask God to use the necessary corrections, chastisements, whatever, to punch through their pride and turn their minds and hearts, even if that means suffering unto loss of limb and life.

A standard list of the maledictory psalms will include – and alert that Psalms are numbered differently in various editions of Scripture and in newer and older books you might consult – 5, 6, 11, 12, 35, 37, 40 52, 54, 56, 58, 69, 79, 83, 137, 139, and 143.  Many of these psalms were “edited” or even wholly excluded from the revised Psalter used in the Liturgy of the Hours.   However, there are lot’s of maledictions, curses and imprecations throughout the Psalter: 5:10; 6:10; 7:9-16; 10:15; 17:13; 18:40-42; 18:47; 26:4-5; 28:4; 31:17, 18; 35:3-8; 40:14; 54:5; 55:9, 19; 56:7; 58:6-10; 59:ll-15; 68:2; 69 (most of the psalm); 70:2-3; 71:13; 79:6, 12; 83:9-17; 104:35; 109:6-20; 129:5; 137:7-9; 140:8-11; 141: 10; 143:12; 149:6-9.

Of special note are Ps 55, 108, and 136 which give libs a serious case of the collywobbles (except perhaps if they use it against defenders of doctrine and law).

So, what to make of these psalms?

First, since they are the inspired word of Almighty God, we can safely say that they are not bad and they can be used for prayer.   St. Augustine believed that every word of the Psalms was Christ speaking to the Father, but in different voices, as the Head, the Body and both together, Christus Totus.  I’ll go with Augustine.

That said, it might make the Christian scratch her head when we pray “Blessed be he that shall take and dash thy little ones against the rock” (Ps 137:9).

How to use these psalms in prayer in a way that is pleasing to God and that does not imperil our own salvation by spurring us to soul killing hatred?  Isn’t this a serious consideration in these times of aforementioned political circuses and ecclesial misadventure?

One of the best explanations of the maledictory psalms – and therefore how to pray for our enemies – I’ve run across came in a comment made on this very blog under another entry I wrote about the maledictory psalms (thanks Henry Edwards!). Namely, …

In the Introduction (by Pius Parsch) to the Baronius edition of the 1962 Roman Breviary [US HERE – UK HERE], we read that

As Christians we may never wish evil upon a sinner directly and personally, but [NB] these [curse] psalms have nothing to do with personal enmities. The theme of all our praying is God’s kingdom and sin, and the curse passages in the psalms are expressions of absolute protest against evil, sin and hell. Try changing the curses into an expression of divine justice and you pronounce them no longer with your own mouth, but with the mouth of Christ and the Church. The curse thus resembles the woes that our Lord addressed against the Pharisees. There is something quite stirring and grand about these curses. The all-just God steps before us as we pray and warns us of the punishments of hell.  [NB: warns us!]

In regard to Psalm 108 (109)—perhaps the most maledictory of all the so-called curse psalms and omitted entirely from the LOH psalter—he says that

Psalm 108 is a curse formula and very difficult to reconcile with the Christian idea of prayer. Let us suppose that the Church or Christ Himself is praying this psalm. Then the curses become no longer wishes, but rather the solemn sentence of divine justice upon unwillingness to repent. With tears in her eyes the Church prays these terrible words–just as Jesus once declaimed his eightfold “Woe is you . . .” against the Pharisees. At the opening of the psalm, the Church laments. In the following two sections, where curses and punishments are asked for, a picture of the everlasting hell is painted for us. The petition which comprises the fourth part of the psalm can be a prayer of the individual soul; I stand terrified before the picture I have seen: “Have mercy on me, a poor weak mortal!”.

While there is a great deal more to be said about the maledictory psalms, that seems a good place to pause so that I can do my job and admonish you.

We members of the Church Militant have enemies.  There are the relentless, ineluctable foes which are the world, the flesh and the Devil.  There are also the agents of the Devil among us, outside the Church and, verily, inside.

We must strive not to hate enemies, to love enemies with the love that is charity, the love that desires what is truly good for them.  If they are doing great harm to our persons, families, nation and Church, yes, we can pray for their conversion or for their ruin lest they continue to do harm and lest they go to Hell.  For example, HERE. And while we pray for and against our enemies (and bear wrongs patiently), we must see to it that we don’t go to Hell, either.

As we soldier on through this vale of tears, we must constantly field strip our consciences while asking God for all the graces we need to do His will and to conform ourselves to His will and ways.

And now, from St. Paul’s Second Letter to Timothy 3:11-17:

Persecutions, afflictions: such as came upon me at Antioch, at Iconium, and at Lystra: what persecutions I endured, and out of them all the Lord delivered me.  And all that will live godly in Christ Jesus, shall suffer persecution.  But evil men and seducers shall grow worse and worse: erring, and driving into error.  But continue thou in those things which thou hast learned, and which have been committed to thee: knowing of whom thou hast learned them;  And because from thy infancy thou hast known the holy scriptures, which can instruct thee to salvation, by the faith which is in Christ Jesus. All scripture, inspired of God, is profitable to teach, to reprove, to correct, to instruct in justice, That the man of God may be perfect, furnished to every good work.

Finally, since I am trying to fulfill my mission to keep as many of you out of Hell as I can…

GO TO CONFESSION!

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ASK FATHER: “I utterly reject Bergoglio, so how can I remain a Catholic?” Fr. Z’s rant and beatdown.

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Now, to the point: How can I remain a Catholic when I UTTERLY reject Jorge Bergoglio as a false prophet of the devil? I can in no way continue to acknowledge him during Mass. Going to TLM doesn’t alleviate my doubts. My conscience absolutely forbids me from ever again listening to or acknowledging that man.

This is quite a dilemma for me. I am seriously considering heading to the Orthdox Church or finding a conservative evangelical church.

Hmmm.  That seems like a “No” vote for Bergoglio.

I am not going to get into the arguments for or against Francis as pope or antipope. For what I have to say to the idea of leaving the Church because of him, one way or another, I don’t have to get into that controversy.

Why?  Holy Catholic Church is indefectible.  This is one of the three attributes of the Church, along with authority and infallibility.

Your question holds two possible implications.  First, “I don’t like Bergoglio, so I’m going somewhere else.”  That’s just whining, like a kid who doesn’t like broccoli and goes hungry.

Otherwise, your implication is that if Francis isn’t really the pope, the Vicar of Christ, then somehow the Church is now defective and you might as well go some place else.

No.  And NO!   And HELL NO!

If we believe Christ’s promises – and I sure do – then we hold that the Church will not fail even to the end of the world when He returns to take all things to Himself and submit them to the Father.

The Petrine Ministry is part of the fabric of the Church as the Lord designed.  Somehow, until the ending of the world, the Church – and hence the papacy – cannot fail, even though we don’t know how.

As necessary as the papacy is, a pope is Christ’s VICAR, not Christ himself. As the sardonic Latin acrostic puts it, a VICARIUS is Vir Inutilis Carens Auctoritate Rare Intelligentiae Umbra Superioris, that is, “A useless man, lacking authority, rarely of intelligence, the shadow of his superior.”  That’s every pope, compared to Christ.

It is dangerous to place too much emphasis on any pope.

Look, friend, popes come and popes go.  There have been long periods of time between popes.  There have been long periods of time when there was terrible confusion about who was the real pope.  Even saints got it wrong and backed the wrong guy.  For centuries people had no idea who the pope was, even his name, and they lived good Catholic lives, minding their own business and trying to be holy in their vocations.

Popes can be good.  Popes can be bad.  Popes can have short or long pontificates.  Popes can be talented or doddering.  Popes can be charming or jerks.  Popes can be holy of sinful.   Popes can be important or insignificant.

Only one thing is clear about popes, and the Romans get this right: Muore un papa se ne fa un altro… A pope dies, you make another.  We make another until Christ returns.  Somehow that’s the way our Church will always be even if we don’t like the choice.

As for your chicken-livered notion about going outside the Church, I’ll offer what Lumen gentium 14 teaches:

14. This Sacred Council wishes to turn its attention firstly to the Catholic faithful. Basing itself upon Sacred Scripture and Tradition, it teaches that the Church, now sojourning on earth as an exile, is necessary for salvation. Christ, present to us in His Body, which is the Church, is the one Mediator and the unique way of salvation. In explicit terms He Himself affirmed the necessity of faith and baptism and thereby affirmed also the necessity of the Church, for through baptism as through a door men enter the Church. Whosoever, therefore, knowing that the Catholic Church was made necessary by Christ, would refuse to enter or to remain in it, could not be saved.

Refuse to enter or refuse to remain in the Church knowing that the Catholic Church is necessary?   Bad odds.

These are hard times.  Confusing.  Fearful.  Dangerous.  But these are the times into which God called us to live.   That means he offers us the graces we will need to live our vocations well.   It could be that you have to completely tune out of the larger churchy news and put your nose to your personal grindstone and live your vocation well.

God didn’t call us into existence at random, but rather with a plan and a purpose for every one of us.  He called YOU, friend, into this life HERE and NOW, not at some other time and place.  These are the circumstances of our lives.  We are the soldiers of the Church Militant God wants NOW.  Are you suffering? Embrace it.  Offer it in reparation.  Are you afraid?  Throw yourself at the feet of the Mother of God and beg her protective mantle.   Clasp onto St. Joseph, Defender of the Church.

Fast.  Give alms.  Pray.  But don’t be a coward.

Either pick up your Cross and your sword and get your ass back to the lines or go crawling off somewhere.  We’ll do your duty along with our own.  Run for the hills.  Good luck with that.

I will not run.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Be The Maquis, Francis, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , , , , ,
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