The Vatican v. The Knights of Malta – High Drama – UPDATE

17_01_01_SCV_SMOMUPDATE 5 Jan 2017:

The UK publication The Tablet (aka The Pill) claims to have seen letters indicating that Pope Francis did not want the Albrecht von Boeselager thrown out as Grand Chancellor and then suspended from the Order.

Their headline… just to help, I’m sure:

EXCLUSIVE: CARDINAL BURKE AND GRAND MASTER FESTING DEFIED WISHES OF POPE BY SACKING GRAND CHANCELLOR

All along I have been concerned that this dust up would be used by Card. Burke’s haters to harm him in some way.

_____

ORIGINALLY Published on: Jan 1, 2017

I am watching the kerfuffle between the Vatican and the Knights of Malta with a measure of amusement.

To be more precise, I watch the dust up between the Vatican City State (SCV) and the Sovereign Military Order of the Knights of Malta (SMOM).

As you know a high muckity in the SMOM was given the heave-ho for having been involved in things that no Catholic should be involved in. The upper echelon of the SMOM are actually a type of religious, who make vows and such.  Insofar as he violated Catholic principles he was ousted.

Enter The Pope.

Pope Francis indicated that he would set up a commission (what else?) to study the situation.

The SMOM promptly said, “Mind your own business.”  More HERE

What’s with that?  If SMOMs are Catholic and religious, shouldn’t the Pope be able to get involved?  Insofar as they are religious, perhaps yes.  However, insofar as the SMOM is recognized as its own sovereign country, no!   They are a sovereign state, just as the Vatican City State is a sovereign state.   So, the head of one state (SCV’s Pope) has no authority to interfere with the internal governance of another sovereign state (SMOM).

Thus we are witnessing in our times the …

Diplomatic Tiff Between The World’s Two Smallest Countries!

My spies tell me that San Marino may get involved with peace keeping troops.

Furthermore, Monaco and Liechtenstein have both offered to host the Peace Talks.

Andorra remains, for the time being, neutral.

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“…the language demons fear the most…”

At Catholic Gentleman we find an interview with “Mixed Martial Arts” fighter, Bas Rutten.  Biretta tip to a reader –   o{]:¬)

In the interview we find:

14. You say frequently, “Deo gratias!” This is Latin for “Thanks be to God.” Just curious: Do you happen to go to a Mass that is in Latin?

Yes, I do. I also do my rosary in Latin and learned a whole bunch of other prayers in Latin as well. It’s the language demons fear the most, and the universal language of the Church.  I find it more reverent and a higher form of prayer.

The more I pray, the more I see everything in my life as getting better, not only in regards to the Faith, but also for myself and automatically my family and friends. The more prayers I memorize the more it develops my brain, the easier it becomes for me to memorize scripts, whether it’s for movies, TV or commentating jobs. YES, it takes time to memorize, but it will help me with a whole bunch of other things as well.

Many people only train their bodies; not realizing you can train your brain and your soul as well.  Our biggest fights are not with mortal flesh but with the fallen angels.  Another great fighter once said something to that effect…

Do I hear an “Amen!”?

Memorize prayers in Latin.

Promote the study of Latin.

Support sacred liturgical worship in Latin.

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Vigil of Epiphany: Blessing of Epiphany Water

Wonderful customs come with the Feast of the Epiphany.  Real Epiphany is 6 January, by the way.

On Epiphany we can bless gold, frankincense and myrrh.  Please bring all your spare, unblessed myrrh to your priest… and your gold.  Bring lots of gold to your priest… or to me if your priest isn’t around.

By the way, we use pure frankincense in our thurible.  I just bought a bunch more which I will bless.

On Epiphany there is a blessing for homes.  There is also the famous blessing of chalk which can be used then to mark the lintel of the house.

On the Vigil of Epiphany, however, there is a special blessing for Epiphany Water.  Here is a photo from a couple years ago, of yours truly blessing Epiphany Water.

I should be blessing a lot more tonight, as it turns out.

The Rite is very cool.  It begins with the Litany of Saints, with a couple special petitions about the blessing of the water to follow. Satan and the demons are then driven from the place with a mighty prayer.

This is NOT a prayer for lay people to recite. Period. Understand? Just don’t.

Exorcism against Satan and the apostate angels [In Latin, of course. The “+” is where the celebrant makes the Sign of the Cross.]

In the name of our Lord Jesus + Christ and by His power, we cast you out, every unclean spirit, every devilish power, every assault of the infernal adversary, every legion, every diabolical group and sect; begone and stay far from the Church of God, from all who are made in the image of God and redeemed by the precious blood of the divine + Lamb. Never again dare, you cunning serpent, to deceive the human race, to persecute the Church of God, nor to strike the chosen of God and to sift them as + wheat. For it is the Most High God who commands you, + He to whom you heretofore in your great pride considered yourself equal; He who desires that all men might be saved and come to the knowledge of truth. God the Father + commands you. God the Son + commands you. God the Holy + Spirit commands you. The majesty of Christ, the eternal Word of God made flesh + commands you; He who for the salvation of our race, the race that was lost through your envy, humbled Himself and became obedient even unto death; He who built His Church upon a solid rock, and proclaimed that the gates of hell should never prevail against her, and that He would remain with her all days, even to the end of the world. The sacred mystery of the cross + commands you, as well as the power of all the mysteries of Christian faith. The exalted Virgin Mary, Mother of God + commands you, who in her lowliness crushed your proud head from the first moment of her Immaculate Conception. The faith of the holy apostles Peter and Paul and the other apostles + commands you. The blood of the martyrs and the devout intercession of all holy men and women commands you.

Therefore, accursed dragon and every diabolical legion, we adjure you by the living + God, by the true + God, by the holy + God, by the God who so loved the world that He gave His only-begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but shall have life everlasting; cease your deception of the human race and your giving them to drink of the poison of everlasting damnation; desist from harming the Church and fettering her freedom. Begone Satan, you father and teacher of lies and enemy of mankind. Give place to Christ in whom you found none of your works; give place to the one, holy, Catholic, and apostolic Church, which Christ Himself purchased with His blood. May you be brought low under God’s mighty hand. May you tremble and flee as we call upon the holy and awesome name of Jesus, before whom hell quakes, and to whom the virtues, powers, and dominations are subject; whom the cherubim and seraphim praise with unwearied voices, saying: Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of hosts!

The salt and water are exorcised, blessed, blended.

At the end of the rite the Te Deum is sung.  Spiffy.

Epiphany and its Vigil.  Very ancient and very cool feast.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Just Too Cool, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged , , ,
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A wonderful photo to cheer you up

One of the best things I’ve seen for a while.

A moving truck near the White House.

17_01_05_WH_moving_truck

Biretta tip to Pamela Geller –   o{]:¬)

Meanwhile, in just a few short days…

17_01_05_Trump_oath

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Clericalism: bad and good

At The Catholic Thing there is a post today by Fr. Mark Pilon about clericalism.

I am for clericalism.  That is to say, I am for good, beneficial clericalism.  I am against bad clericalism.   Both Pilon and I make distinctions.  Here is the beginning of his piece.  I’ll add my own views below.

My emphases and comments:

Fr. Mark Pilon: To suggest that a Catholic is not bound by the Church’s teaching because he can’t understand it insults the believer’s dignity.

The pejorative notion of clericalism has a number of different meanings. For many Protestants and secularists, this term simply means that the clergy have, and exercise, too much authority in the Catholic Church. Just how that’s their business is a mystery, unless they assume that the Church is somehow subject to their ideas and should conform to them. [Do I hear an “Amen!”?]

For Catholics, clericalism usually refers to a kind of dominance of laity by clergy outside of their rightful spiritual authority. Pope Francis often speaks of this form of clericalism, in the way that clergy behave either in their regular daily pastoral work or in the political sphere.

St. Jose Maria Escrivá, the founder of Opus Dei, identified another kind of clericalism in those who try to turn the laity into pseudo-clerics – and identify the truly “committed” layperson as someone who directly serves the Church, rather than someone who is immersed as a Christian in social and political life.

But there is yet another form of clericalism that seems just as widespread today. [NB] This is the clericalism that assumes that many of the laity are simply incapable of really understanding the Church’s teachings or are incapable living up to them when the demands are high. This is the kind of subtle but deadly clericalism Pope Paul VI hinted at in Humanae vitae.  [This may also be at the core of Chapter 8 of Amoris laetitia. In AL ch. 8 there seems to be a presumption that people cannot live up to the moral standards which the sacrament of matrimony implies.  Matrimony is, as Christ Himself teaches and as the Church has always held, indissoluble. If someone civilly divorces and then takes up with someone else, cannot separate from that person for some good reason, but still want to return to the sacraments, then the only path forward is to live in continence with that partner as “brother and sister”.  However, Amoris and many who interpret Amoris in a liberal way assume that the moral requirements matrimony are too hard for people to live.  Therefore, they look for ways around the commitment to continence and still give access to the sacraments.]

[…]

To fulfill a difficult moral law always involves a struggle – for some people, a very great struggle. But the believing Christian will not lightly absolve himself from responsibility for personal failure at the expense of denying the power of God’s grace. And the assumption by some clergy and theologians that most laity are simply incapable of either understanding the truth of certain moral laws or of fulfilling them is not exactly a way of recognizing or promoting the dignity of laypeople. [Exactly.]

[…]

This is a good distinction.  Some clerics assume that lay people are not able to live according to the demands of Christian morality.  They set lower and lower bars in the name of “compassion” or “mercy”.  This is, in effect, terribly condescending.

I’ll add another kind of clericalism, related to something that Pilon mentioned, pandemic among the liberal Left.  Especially in liturgical contexts – which have a knock on effect in every other aspect of the Church’s activity –  libs blur the distinction between lay and cleric and say, “I’ll let you do something I am supposed to do.”  The subtle message: “You are not good enough with your baptismal dignity: I have to raise you up.” This condescending liberal arrogance is a terrible form of clericalism. Want to see true clericalism?  Scratch a liberal and see what happens.

On the other hand, there is a sound, healthy “clericalism” which consists in a clear sense of priestly identity that sets the priest apart from the people on account of his ministry at the altar.  There should be a clerical culture in the Church, among clerics, who need to support each other.  This doesn’t mean that clerics must exclude lay people from every facet of their lives.  It does mean, however, that priests must withdraw from lay people on occasion, into their own company (even with steak dinners, good wine and cigars).  Clericalism, in a healthy sense, is concerned with the identity and holiness of the priest.

 

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Coming to a neighborhood near you?

How would you feel were your parish church to be vandalized and desecrated?  Yes, yes, I know that many of them already were, by the vandals within the Church who wreckovated so many beautiful churches and who build so many monstrosities based on effectively unchristian notions.   But consider… consider the invasion or your church, beautiful or not, by people who simply want to destroy out of hatred of our Faith.

From Robert Royal at The Catholic Thing:

Some European newspapers have reported lately – very quietly – that, according to police in Germany’s North Rhineland/ Westphalia region, from 2011 to 2016 there were 3500 cases of vandalism/desecration of Christian churches. About two per day in only one region of Germany, every day for the past five years.

[…]

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, pray for us.
St. Lawrence of Brindisi, pray for us.
St. Pius V, pray for us.
Martyrs of Otranto, pray for us.
Our Lady of Victor, pray for us.
St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle.

Posted in The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice, The Religion of Peace | Tagged , ,
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How Pope Francis handles abuse cases and the CDF

At the American Conservative see Rod Dreher’s piece “Pope Francis & Child Abusers”. Dreher references Doughery’s “blockbuster” column at This Week.

The Catholic Church has long been plagued by sickening scandals involving priests abusing children. And there is reportedly another scandal coming — this one of the pope’s own making.

Two people with direct ties to the Vatican tell me that Pope Francis, following the advice of his clubby group of allies in the curia, is pressing to undo the reforms that were instituted by his predecessors John Paul II and Benedict XVI in handling the cases of abuser priests. Francis is pushing ahead with this plan even though the curial officials and cardinals who favor it have already brought more scandal to his papacy by urging him toward lenient treatment of abusers.

In 2001, the Vatican instituted a massive reform in how it handled the cases of priests who abused children. The power to deal with these cases was taken away from the Congregation of the Clergy and the Roman Rota (the Vatican’s Court), and placed in the office of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF). Subsequently, the volume and speed with which the Catholic Church defrocked abuser priests went up. This was Pope Benedict’s legacy of trying to confront “the filth” in the Church.

Recently, Pope Francis had the Vatican’s secretary of state, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, request an opinion from the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, led by Cardinal Francesco Coccopalmerio, regarding the possibility of transferring competence to deal with abuser priests from the CDF back to Clergy and the Rota. Coccopalmerio’s office responded with a positive answer.

And although it was not mentioned in media reports, Pope Francis also discussed this “reform of the reform” on child abuse when he met with his special advisory group, the Council of Cardinals, in mid-December, an official with direct knowledge of the meeting told me. The press office of the Vatican did not respond to requests for confirmation or comment.

[…]

So why revert?

Perhaps because the CDF has taken a tough, rules-based approach to the issue of child abuse, which clashes with the more personal autocratic style of this pope. Or perhaps because reforming the reform would reward his allies, and humiliate an antagonist.

Rumors of this reform have been circulating in Rome for months. And not happily. Pope Francis and his cardinal allies have been known to interfere with CDF’s judgments on abuse cases. This intervention has become so endemic to the system that cases of priestly abuse in Rome are now known to have two sets of distinctions. The first is guilty or innocent. The second is “with cardinal friends” or “without cardinal friends.”

And indeed, Pope Francis is apparently pressing ahead with his reversion of abuse practices even though the cardinals who are favorable to this reform of reform have already brought him trouble because of their friends.

The Holy Father seems to be targeting the CDF for special treatment these days. The translation of competence in the matter of abusers from CDF to some other dicastery could be a sign that he intends to do even more to diminish the CDF.

Moreover, Dreher links Doughery’s piece to the case of the Chilean bishop relayed by the Fishwrap.  I wonder that he did not include the case of the Argentinian scandal.

Meanwhile, Ross Douthat tweeted out…

At the same time that this is coming out Jesuit-run Amerika posted an AP story about Pope Francis as “zero-tolerance”.

The moderation queue is ON.

Posted in Clerical Sexual Abuse, Francis, Priests and Priesthood, Self-absorbed Promethean Neopelagians, Sin That Cries To Heaven, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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Shared Communion with Protestants? Sacrilege and Blasphemy

UPDATE:  

From a friend in email:

It would seem to make little difference in pastoral practice at this point, I think, to admit Lutherans to Communion:  most of our own Catholic people don’t believe in the Real Presence and probably are approaching without the requisite dispositions — they probably have not been to confession in a long time and are not in a state of grace.

You are dead on right.   Many of the people in our pews are de facto Protestants… if they are Christian at all.

That said, we must resist any formalizing of indifference to Catholic doctrine and identity.

___ ORIGINAL  Published on: Jan 3, 2017 ___

I suspect that this topic will heat up during this next year, 2017, especially in light of the anniversary of the Protestant revolt.

From Edward Pentin at National Catholic Register:

Theologian: Shared Communion With Protestants Would be Blasphemy and Sacrilege
Msgr. Nicola Bux reflects on the possibility this pontificate is sympathetic to Protestant theologian Jürgen Moltmann’s theory of “open Communion.”

If the Church were to change its rules on shared Eucharistic Communion it would “go against Revelation and the Magisterium”, leading Christians to “commit blasphemy and sacrilege,” an Italian theologian has warned.

Drawing on the Church’s teaching based on Sacred Scripture and Tradition, Msgr. Nicola Bux, a former consulter to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, stressed that non-Catholic Christians must have undertaken baptism and confirmation in the Catholic Church, and repented of grave sin through sacramental confession, in order to be able to receive Jesus in the Eucharist.

Msgr. Bux was responding to the Register about concerns that elements of the current pontificate might be sympathetic of a form of “open Communion” proposed by the German Protestant theologian, Jürgen Moltmann.

The concerns have arisen primarily due to the Holy Father’s own comments on Holy Communion and Lutherans, his apparent support for some remarried divorcees to receive Holy Communion, and how others have used his frequently repeated maximabout the Eucharist: that it is “not a prize for the perfect, but a powerful medicine and nourishment for the weak.”

The debate specifically over intercommunion with Christian denominations follows recent remarks by Cardinal Walter Kasper[I’ll bet you are shocked to find his name in this piece.] who, in a Dec. 10 interview with Avvenire, said he hopes Pope Francis’ next declaration will open the way for intercommunion with other denominations “in special cases.”

The German theologian said shared Eucharistic communion is just a matter of time, and that the Pope’s recent participation in the Reformation commemoration in Lund has given “a new thrust” to the “ecumenical process.”

[…]

I look forward to inter-Communion and hope to be able to distribute the Eucharist to as many former Protestants as possible after their conversion.

That’s the only way this priest will ever do it.

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liberals, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Pò sì jiù, You must be joking! | Tagged , , , ,
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‘They’ll lynch us!’, Catholics beg for assistance in evicting illegal migrants

A dire notes as the year begins.

First, from Express about Catholics under siege at a parish near Milan.

‘They’ll LYNCH us!’ Church PLEADS with police for assistance in evicting migrants

A CHRISTIAN priest has pleaded for help in evicting a group of migrants squatting in a nearby building – with the church warning “we can’t wait for them to come and lynch us”.

They said the group of “North Africans” were chasing church-goers, scaring children and putting the area “under siege”.

They also said a collection box at the church in Italy had been forced open – sparking a furious reaction from Father Francesco Inversini.

He said the migrants, sheltering in a building near the church of Cristo Re in Milan were “free to do” anything.

The church’s administrator, who only wanted to be identified as Tommasso for fear of reprisals, went further.

He warned the migrants were part of an ongoing crime spree in the area – and claimed the church’s staff could be lynched if police do not do anything.

Tommasso said: “I do not say my name because those guys can kill me, but here, parents and parishioners are angry.

[…]

There’s some video.

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, pray for us.
St. Lawrence of Brindisi, pray for us.
St. Pius V, pray for us.
Martyrs of Otranto, pray for us.
Our Lady of Victor, pray for us.
St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle.

Posted in The Drill, The future and our choices, The Religion of Peace | Tagged ,
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Fr. Z’s Predictions for 2017

Right out of the gate this year!

  1. ObamaCare (aka “Affordable” Care Act) will be repealed.
  2. Construction will begin on The Wall.
  3. Pres. Trump’s first international trip will be to Jerusalem.
  4. Pres. Trump will appoint two Justices to the Supreme Court.
  5. Pope Francis will not respond to the Dubia and will, in fact, double down.
  6. Card. Burke will emerge unscathed from the Knights of Malta  controversy.
  7. Curial reform will still not make significant progress.
  8. The number of places in which Extraordinary Form (TLM) Masses are offered will continue to grow.
  9. Applications to seminaries will continue to drop.
  10. Fr. Z will still not be a Monsignor.

How did I do last year?  HERE

1. Francis will still be Pope. [+1]
2. Pres. Obama will continue to trample on the US Constitution. [+1]
3. The Holy Year of Mercy will be under-observed. [+1]
4. Applications to seminaries will drop. [+1]
5. Donald Trump will be the GOP nominee. [+1]
6. Controversy will continue to surround the Synod of Bishops when
priesthood is discussed. [-1]
7. Curial reform will not make significant progress. [+1]
8. The number of places in which Extraordinary Form (TLM) Masses are
offered will continue to grow. [+1]
9. Former-Father Greg Reynolds will still be excommunicated. [+1]
10. Fr. Z will still not be a Monsignor. [+1]

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