Your Sunday Sermon Notes: 7th Sunday after Pentecost (N.O. 17th Sunday)

Too many people today are without good, strong preaching, to the detriment of all. Share the good stuff.

Was there a GOOD point made in the sermon you heard at your Mass of obligation for the this 7th Sunday after Pentecost?  17th Sunday of Ordinary Time in the Novus Ordo.

Tell about attendance especially for the Traditional Latin Mass.

Any local changes or (hopefully good) news?  I know there is a lot of BAD news.  How about some good news?

A taste of my thoughts from the other place: HERE

[…]

The cultivation image emerges in our Gospel reading from Matthew 7:15-21 wherein Christ Himself is the divine metaphor-mixer.  Our Lord starts by warning against false prophets, wolves in sheep’s clothing. Externally they seem harmless.  In reality they are lethal. He does not say that we shall know them by their words, their theological degrees, their fancy rings and brightly colored sashes, but “ex fructibus eorum cognoscetis eos … by their fruits you shall know them” (v. 20).  The metaphor of good fruit and bad fruit is found in Old Testament prophecy and wisdom literature, symbolizing the moral and spiritual condition of individuals and nations. For example, in Isaiah 5:1–7, Israel is compared to a vineyard planted by the Lord, expected to yield good grapes but instead producing “wild grapes,” symbolizing injustice and unrighteousness. This failed harvest leads to divine judgment. Similarly, Jeremiah 24 presents a vision of two baskets of figs, one with good figs representing the faithful remnant, and the other with bad figs, signifying the corrupt and unrepentant. Ezekiel 17 uses a parable of a vine transplanted by an eagle, reflecting Israel’s political betrayal and spiritual decay. Throughout, fruit stands for deeds.  Good fruit corresponds to justice, obedience, humility before God, and bad fruit to idolatry, oppression, rebellion. The metaphor thus conveys divine expectations and impending judgment.  Speaking of judgment, the Book of Revelation begins with the Lord of Hosts judging churches for their works. “I know your works” (Rev. 2:2, 2:19, 3:1, etc.).

[…]

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Daily Rome Shot 1401

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

A.I. is helping us to decipher partial, fragmentary ancient Latin inscriptions.  HERE

There’s something perfect about this.

And this…

Look! Down in the mud!

What a surprise. Jesuits all over this thing.

I’ll make it better with this. Too fun.

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Archb. of Detroit fired two distinguished seminary profs. Why? – UPDATED – Canonist Ed Peters also fired!

UPDATE on: Jul 25, 2025 at 18:55

Here’s an interesting tidbit.

From Facebook about one of the social events of the year in Detroit.

Seminarians, priests, benefactors, and friends of Sacred Heart Major Seminary gathered at Huntington Place in downtown Detroit on Thursday, June 12 for the 2025 Archbishop’s Gala.
The Seminary’s biggest fundraiser, this annual event supports the students, staff, and operations at Sacred Heart Major Seminary.

UPDATE on: Jul 25, 2025 at 18:39

GOOD FOR HIM!

UPDATE on: Jul 25, 2025 at 17:46

I just learned that the well-known canonist Ed Peters has also been “ecclesiastically euthanized” from his long-held post at Sacred Heart Seminary.

This has a very bad look to it.

I wonder what the bishops who have sent their seminarians to Sacred Heart think about this.

I wonder if any bishops – other than the usual suspects – will consider Sacred Heart, and don’t mean the one at Hales Corners, WI.

I understand that Sacred Heart seminary is a separate legal entity from the Archdiocese and that the Archbp is head of the board.  BUT… if he doesn’t want someone there, they won’t be there, and if he wants to keep them there, it is hard to imagine that they would be let go anyway.

Ralph Martin
Eduardo Echeverria
Ed Peters

… no long listed on the faculty.  HERE

Pour décourager les autres?


Originally Published on: Jul 25, 2025 at 13:16

In two “daily” posts I’ve written about this. HERE and HERE  It deserves its own entry.

Archbishop Edward Weisenburger removed Ralph Martin and Eduardo Echeverria from their positions at Sacred Heart Major Seminary on July 23, both theologians told the National Catholic Register separately.  HERE and HERE

Weisenburger has been giving his all to Detroit for about 5 months, since 18 March.  In record time, by June, he had shut down numerous Traditional Latin Masses.  He has also used raw force to ban ad orientem posture from Novus Ordo liturgies in the archdiocese.  Most competent commentators think that is ultra vires since he is effectively forbidding them to obey the rubrics which, also the for the Novus Ordo, are officially in Latin.  But, hey, he has power and there hasn’t been anyone around who would try to stop him from picking on priests and the faithful in this way.   Now he is having a go at seminarians by removing two highly respected and competent formators.

Ralph Martin has been known for years for his involvement in the charismatic movement.  However, he is quite the solid theologian and he has of late spoken with urgency about problems in the Church and signs of the times.  If you are interested in his most recent video, check this out.  HERE  He talks about two kinds of death (one of them is the in popular concept of “sin”).  He has called out heresy in high places.

Martin in the NCReg:

“When I asked him for an explanation, he said he didn’t think it would be helpful to give any specifics but mentioned something about having concerns about my theological perspectives,” Martin said in a written statement Thursday afternoon.

“This news came as a shock,” Martin said. “I have contributed much to the seminary over more than twenty-three years. I even helped introduce and lead, up until yesterday, our flagship pontifical degree program, the Licentiate of Sacred Theology Degree in the New Evangelization.”

I can recommend a couple books by Martin.

First, A Church in Crisis: Pathways Forward

US HERE

Also, Will Many Be Saved?: What Vatican II Actually Teaches and Its Implications for the New Evangelization

US HERE

Eduardo Echeverria.  He declined to comment because of a non-disclosure agreement.

However, he was a contributor to an important book about “sense of the faithful” (sensus fidelium) a topic which goes to the heart of many moving pieces in the Church today including darling issues for those who are striving to undermine teaching on faith and morals.  If you want lots of “walking together” and approval of sodomy you will appeal to a false version of sensus fidelium.  It is critically important today to know what sensus fidelium is and isn’t.   Hint: in order to have the “sense of the faithful” you have to be faithful.  Right?

However, that will be unpopular with certain people.

Here’s THE BOOK to read on the subject.  It is not easy but it is illuminating.

The Faith Once For All Delivered: Doctrinal Authority in Catholic Theology

This a daring selection of essays by prominent orthodox Catholic scholars published by Emmaus Academic Press.

US HERE – UK HERE

The book includes a Foreword and Introduction written by Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke, and an Afterword authored by Robert Cardinal Sarah.

The book was turned down by a couple of major Catholic publishers because of at least one essay/author they were afraid about.

Echeverria’s essay, in the second part of the book, is: “Saint Vincent of Lérins and the Development of Christian Doctrine”.

Again, this is an important book and if you are in it, you will probably be hated by who are striving to undermine teaching on faith and morals

The essays in the first part of this collection seek to answer the question, “What went wrong with Catholic theology since the Second Vatican Council?”

Following a brief account of the movement in modern theology from its philosophical basis in Kant and Hegel to the nouvelle théologie and later progressivist theologies of the twentieth century, the writings of Karl Rahner, Walter Kasper, and Bernhard Häring are treated as representative of principal problematic trends, and the concept of heresy is surveyed as it has been understood in the past and as it operates in the Church today.

The essays in the second part indicate the way forward for Catholic doctrinal and moral theology, examining and distinguishing the orthodox use of the sources of theology of magisterial teachings, the deposit of faith in its development, the sensus fidelium, Sacred Scripture, and Church councils and synods.

Edward Feser’s treatment of the Magisterium is deeply instructive and was challenging to the direction Francis was taking. The same is true of John Rist’s masterful commentary on contemporary heresies. These essays are especially valuable in debunking the current German synodal way and stand as a warning about the seemingly unending drive for synodality (“walking together”).

It will be interesting to see who replaces them.  My money is on recently transitioned Dyna Moore of the Transgendered Daughters of Charity and perhaps Fr. Bruce Hugalot of the Sing A New Faith Community Into Being Faith Community in Libville.

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Daily Rome Shot 1400

I was sent a photo of the new chalice case for my little antique silver chalice in Rome which is kept at The Parish™.  This was a surprise!

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

A priest of the Diocese of Fulda (Germany) has finally had enough of the jackassery of his confreres and bishops.  He issued a letter saying that he no longer wants to be associated with them.  It’s quite something.  HERE

Too bad he didn’t leave any bank accounts with interest…

I think what the Archbishop of Detroit did to Ralph Martin needs to be well known. Have you seen any of Ralph Martins videos?

Well! I never….

Grrrr… I know this church. Something must be done about Eurabia.

White to move and mate in 4.

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Hey Fathers!  How about a clerical Guayabera shirt for the hot summer days?  I have one.  Super practical and cooler in more ways than one.  All sorts of lay clothes and hats, too.

Our Price: $70 (there are different kinds)

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Daily Rome Shot 1399 – More blood in Detroit

During this Jubilee in Rome at The Parish™ the Archconfraternity of the Most Holy Trinity of the Pilgrimage and Convalescents has reengaged in the work of their founder, St. Philip Neri.  They cannot do all that St. Philip did, such as house pilgrims and care for them in the hospital he built, but they can given spiritual instruction to pilgrims and symbolically wash their feet.

Word is getting around about this.  They’ve been written up and there have been video news.

Recently a large group of young people from “up north” (Lombardy) came to The Parish™ during their jubilee pilgrimage.  They received some information about the history of jubilees and the spiritual significance of what they were doing.  Then members of the Archconfraternity washed their feet.

Here are a few shots.

This practice was for all the members of the Archconfraternity back in the day, including high nobility and even reigning Popes who were members. There was at least one instance in which the Pope washed feet while the Duke of Tuscany held the basin.

Welcome registrant:

GoneFishing

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

And now more really bad news from Detroit.

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ASK FATHER: Can a Pope incur a “latae sententiae” excommunication which is reserved to the Apostolic See? What would happen then?

In a comment under another post, a reader here began to opine about whether a Pope could get himself excommunicated.

There are several questions involved in this and I – a mere dilettante in these matters – cannot be entirely sure about responses. However, I can take a stab at it, hoping that true experts out there might chime in.  (Calling Dr. Peters!… Calling Dr. Peters!)

Even if I get something wrong in my concluding solution, which I will happily admit and rectify is someone can demonstrate where I put my foot wrong, you might still learn something about censures and their effect and their removal…. and who can do it.

The first question involves the fact that the Pope, the Roman Pontiff, is the Church’s Legislator. He is the law giver. St. Thomas Aquinas argues that the sovereign/lawgiver is exempted from the law according to its coercive force, but by his own will he is subject to the law by its directive force. In short, Popes should obey the laws they promulgate. STh, I-II, q.96, a.5, ad 3. However, some think that the Pope is is not bound at all by law. That seems a stretch. Hence, a Pope should obey the laws, but he cannot be coerced by them. If he disobeys laws he commits a moral failure even if, legally, he cannot be coerced by any council, tribunal or judge. He is, however, morally accountable to God and the Church.

Moving on to the next part.

Can a Pope can incur a latae sententiae excommunication which is reserved to the Apostolic See?

A latae sententiae excommunication is a penalty incurred automatically upon committing certain grave offenses, without the need for a formal declaration (can. 1314). Some of these excommunications are reserved to the Apostolic See, meaning only the Pope, or those to whom he has delegated authority (e.g., the Apostolic Penitentiary), can absolve the censure. Examples include desecration of the Eucharist (can. 1367), physical attack on the Roman Pontiff (can. 1370 §1), and absolution of an accomplice in a sin against the sixth commandment (can. 1378 §1). The censure underscore the seriousness of the offenses and the need for papal reconciliation because they strike at the heart of the Church’s identity and their scandal is deep.

What would happen if a Pope, for example, publicly desecrated the Eucharistic species.  This would ordinarily result in a latae sententiae excommunication which is reserved to the Apostolic See.

I here leave aside what is assumed for all excommunications, namely, that the fictional Pope in question is of sound mind, knows what he is doing, knows it is a mortal sin, is not being coerced and… deliberately does it anyway.

Excommunications have consequences.

Someone who has incurred a latae sententiae excommunication which is reserved to the Apostolic See (hereafter LSERAS) loses ministerial and governance faculties (can. 1331 §1).  Hence, such a Pope (he cannot be coerced) morally should seek reconciliation and absolution of the censure.  Until then, he should not function as Pope.  He’s still the Pope, however.  (NB: He does not lose his office due to not having Catholic faith in the Eucharist.  He believes in transubstantiation or he wouldn’t have bothered.)

How does he come to be reconciled?  The LSERAS is reserved to himself and he cannot absolve himself.

The lifting of the censure is reserved to the Roman Pontiff or to one to whom that authority has been delegated.  I leave aside the issue of danger of death.

There may be a solution. That Pope has recourse to the one to whom he previously delegated his authority to absolve LSERAS, namely, the Apostolic Penitentiary.

The Apostolic Penitentiary is one of the three tribunals of the Roman Curia, responsible for matters of the internal forum, especially those concerning the forgiveness of sins, absolution from censures, dispensations, and indulgences. It handles cases reserved to the Holy See, particularly absolution from excommunications reserved to the Pope (LSERAS). It acts with utmost confidentiality and primarily addresses issues involving conscience, including cases where public scandal may result. The Major Penitentiary, usually a cardinal appointed by the Pope, heads the tribunal. Its work ensures the faithful can receive spiritual reconciliation even in the gravest cases.

Moreover, this work of reconciliation is so important that the Apostolic Penitentiary does not lose its mandate upon the death or resignation of a Pope.   Almost all offices of the Roman Curia are automatically vacated when there is Sede Vacante.  NOT the Apoostolic Penitentiary, because the work of reconciliation of souls, being the suprema lex of the Church, must go on and there must be some entity that handles the graver cases even when there is no Pope.

Therefore, I suspect – again, I am not 100% sure about this – that some Pope who committed a delict that would normally incur a LSERAS could make his confession to the Major Penitentiary and then receive from him absolution from the sin and a lifting of the censure.

Once absolved of sin and censure, he could resume exercising ministry and governance.

What the fall out would be is another matter.

Barring recourse to the Major Penitentiary, I suppose the only other solution would be to resign the See of Peter, and THEN have recourse to the Apostolic Penitentiary or to the next Pope.  At that point I suspect that that former-Pope’s successor would dismiss the ex-Pope from the clerical state and assign him to a life of penance, such as … being the new Pope’s personal driver.

Salvo meliore iudicio.

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Daily Rome Shot 1398

Work goes on.

This is from Fr. McTeigue. It is about the Biden Administration and child trafficking.  It involved also NGOs of religious groups.  Get it? Alarming doesn’t begin to describe this.  I need to WARN you that this is so awful, so horrific that no child should be anywhere NEAR where you listen to this.  It is an interview with J.J. Carrell, former Senior Leader for the Border Patrol. I had heard a long time ago that hundreds of thousands of children crossing the border were missing. One would have a suspicion about why. This lifts up the rock.  Again… be advised.  HERE

 

The Tour de France is on. Yesterday the stage went up Mount Ventoux. A couple years back they route went through the vineyard of the monks of Le Barroux who have revived the ancient vineyards of the Avignon Pope’s.

Buy wine from Benedictine monks who use ONLY the traditional Roman Rite.

OPPORTUNITY
10% off with code:
FATHERZ10

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From “The Private Diary of Bishop F. Atticus McButterpants” – 07-12-25 – Lunch with Fr. Tommy

Dear Diary,

A week since Fr Tommy and private eye and the whole Patsy “thing”. “Thing” hah! “Things” is mostly quiet now. Still jumpy. Not sleeping well. No new threats today. That’s a win.

I havnt written yet about what went on.

Fr. Tommy. He pulled my fat HAH! from the fire. I’m determined to reward him. I started by inviting him to a special private lunch – I called ahead for the good stuff – at that ribs shack out on 38. He used to like it.  I ordered the “Bishop’s Platter”. They openly says it’s named after me. I don’t deny it. It’s not all YOU can eat, but I sure can!  All about me? Hah!  Ribs and pulled and brisket, that cornbread which can make even Dozer cry, and a vinegar slaw tempts the dead to rise. Tommy was pretty quiet.  Cassock too.  Making a point.  Silence. Dissected a brisket sandwich.  I’ve known T a long time and what he did for me back there was … I was worried.  At one point he murmured “Do you think we’ll ever get back to normal?” I laughed and told him, “Tommy, normal in Libville? Trick question?” I offered him the last rib. He declined but he perked up. Chester didn’t refuse.  I’m pretty sure the waitress called him “your eminence.” She wasn’t talking to me.  Tommy?  Contrary to what you see, it’s like I’m becoming invisible these days.  Anyway, he pulled himself out if his mood and engaged talking about some liturgy and sanctuary changes at his parish he was making as if I weren’t the boss of him.

Fr Gilbert drove me and Tommy.  G might not be the fullest lumpia on the platter but he sat apart near the car.  He’s a good one and his mom makes great lumpia.   I see what I did there.  HAH!

Speaking of boss.  Chester. Damn.  He thinks he earned a promotion. He’s taken to sitting in my desk chair like he’s the bishop now. And he won’t get out unless someone opens the fridge in the common area down the hall.  He stole most of my breakfast today too.  Right up on the table!!  I guess he thinks he owns tables now.  I locked the door and  made more.  And one of my rings is missing.  I don’t want to know … or look for it.

Chancery – everything’s normal on the surface. It doesnt feel right. Dunno.  Fr Gilbert keeps smiling n missing his off ramps n walking C like nothing happened.

The oddballs in the the tribune canon law office are said to be spending more time together.  Should I do something?  Is that a thing?  Even paranormals have enemies.  The VG’s got no clue.  I should make some changes but.. at this point?

I’m tired. I’m turning in early. I might make a cup of that calomine Mrs K talks about. We’ll see what tomorrow brings.

Idea: New Pope now.  Monsignor Tommy?  He needs more than lunch with me even if that’s a LOT HAH!

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Daily Rome Shot 1397

What’s up at The Parish™?

Restoration means more than fostering the use of the Vetus Ordo.

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

Of course he is…

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22 July: Feast of St. Mary Magdalene – A rocky history. Like the saint herself?

Georges_de_La_Tour_Repentant_Magdalen_400

I saw this painting a few years ago in the Prado as part of a great exhibit of Georges de La Tour. 31 of his 40 known paintings were together.

In 2016, the Congregation for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments, headed by the great Robert Card. Sarah, issued a decree making – for the Novus Ordo, mind you – what was the Memorial of St. Mary Magdalene into a Feast.

In the Novus Ordo, 22 July is now the Feast of St. Mary Magdalene.

She also now gets her own Preface.

In an explanatory article, the then-Secretary of the then-CDW, Archbp. Arthur Roche, (gulp, now Prefect) says that Francis expressly desired the elevation of this to a Feast.

In the decree we find some of the reasons.

I’m sure you can puzzle this out.

Nostris vero temporibus cum Ecclesia vocata sit ad impensius consulendum de mulieris dignitate, de nova Evangelizatione ac de amplitudine mysterii divinae misericordiae bonum visum est ut etiam exemplum Sanctae Mariae Magdalenae aptius fidelibus proponatur. Haec enim mulier agnita ut dilectrix Christi et a Christo plurimum dilecta, “testis divinae misericordiae” a Sancto Gregorio Magno, et “apostolorum apostola” a Sancto Thoma de Aquino appellata, a christifidelibus huius temporis deprehendi potest ut paradigma ministerii mulierum in Ecclesia.

English release of the same: “Given that in our time the Church is called to reflect in a more profound way on the dignity of Woman, on the New Evangelisation and on the greatness of the Mystery of Divine Mercy, it seemed right that the example of Saint Mary Magdalene might also fittingly be proposed to the faithful. In fact this woman, known as the one who loved Christ and who was greatly loved by Christ, and was called a “witness of Divine Mercy” by Saint Gregory the Great and an “apostle of the apostles” by Saint Thomas Aquinas, can now rightly be taken by the faithful as a model of women’s role in the Church.”

Here is the Preface:

Vere dignum et iustum est,
æquum et salutáre,
nos te, Pater omnípotens,
cuius non minor est misericórdia quam potéstas,
in ómnibus prædicáre per Christum Dóminum nostrum.

Qui in hortu [sic … horto!!!] maniféstus appáruit Maríæ Magdalénæ,
quippe quae eum diléxerat vivéntem,
in cruce víderat moriéntem,
quæsíerat in sepúlcro iacéntem,
ac prima adoráverat a mórtuis resurgéntem,
et eam apostolátus offício coram apóstolis honorávit
ut bonum novæ vitæ núntium
ad mundi fines perveníret.

Unde et nos, Dómine, cum Angelis et Sanctis univérsis
tibi confitémur, in exsultatióne dicéntes:
Sanctus, Sanctus, Sanctus Dóminus Deus Sábaoth…

It’s hortus, -i not -us.  Good grief.

Note that quippe a conjunction, when paired with a pronoun, quae gives us a reason or a cause.   We thus say something like, “as one in fact who” or “inasmuch as she”. Usually you see this with subjunctive.. but… well….  Apostolatus is 4th, so its genitive is apostolatûs.  That manifestus seems repetitive, since we have apparuit right away.  But manifestus, can mean, along with “evident” and so forth, “palpable”.  Manifestus is formed from manus and fendo, and as such indicates that one hits something with the hand.  That’s why something is “palpable, evident, clear, manifest”.

I thought it might be an adverbial use, but it probably isn’t.  There’s a perfectly good manifeste available in Latin. Augustine of Hippo in Contra epistulam Parmeniani 4,8 wrote: Quem proptera saepe nomino, quia ita manifestus apparuit, ut ubicumque fuerit nominatus nullus se ignorare respondeat.  Leo the Great in tr. 71 wrote: Et licet reuolutio lapidis, euacuatio monumenti, depositio linteorum, et totius facti angeli narratores copiose ueritatem dominicae resurrectionis adstruerent, et mulierum tamen uisui, et apostolorum oculis frequenter manifestus apparuit, non solum conloquens cum eis, sed etiam habitans atque conuescens, et pertractari se diligenti curioso que contactu ab eis quos dubitatio perstringebat admittens.  The phrase manifestus apparuit also happens to appear manifestly in old Prefaces in versions of the Gelasian Sacramentary, such as in the Liber sacramentorum Augustodunensis: Vd. <per Christum dominum nostrum>. qui post resurrectionem suam omnibus discipulis suis manifestus apparuit. et ipsis cernentibus est elevatus in caelum. ut nos diuinitatis suae tribueret esse participes: Et ideo cum angelis.  In any event, the construction is well attested.  If we go farther afield and look for manifeste, manifestius, etc., with forms of appareo we get lots of occasions from Classical writers such as Quintillian, Pliny Elder.  In Latin Fathers we find it in Cyprian of Carthage, Novatian, Augustine of course, often,  It’s a commonplace.

Back to the Preface.

The decree states that conferences will have to work out their translations of the preface.

MY LITERAL ATTEMPT:

Truly is it worthy and just, advantageous and salutary, that in all things we proclaim You, Father Almighty, whose mercy is not less than (Your) power, through Christ our Lord – Who, manifest, appeared in the garden to Mary Magdalene, for indeed she loved Him while he was living, saw Him on the Cross dying, in the sepulcher sought Him lying, and, being the first, adored Him from the dead rising, and He honored her with the duty of apostleship in the presence of the apostles, so that the good news of new life would reach unto the ends of the earth.  Whence we also, O Lord, with Angels and Saints, profess to you, saying in exultation: Holy, Holy, Holy Lord God of Hosts….

Here is the “working translation” of the Preface:

Preface of the Apostle of the Apostles

It is truly right and just,
our duty and our salvation,
always and everywhere to give you thanks,
Lord, holy Father, almighty and eternal God,
whose mercy is no less than His power,
to preach the Gospel to everyone, through Christ, our Lord.
In the garden He appeared to Mary Magdalene,
who loved him in life,
who witnessed his death on the cross,
who sought him as he lay in the tomb,
who was the first to adore him when he rose from the dead,
and whose apostolic duty was honored by the apostles,
that the good news of life might reach the ends of the earth.
And so Lord, with all the Angels and Saints,
we, too, give you thanks, as in exultation we acclaim:
Holy, holy, holy Lord, God of power and might …

Roche explained in his article that this act in the present ecclesial context, and thus it responds to the desire to reflect more deeply on the dignity of women and the new evangelization, and the mystery of divine mercy.  I admit that all of those are mysterious, but I digress.  Roche includes some nifty quotes about Mary Magdalene, too.  I’m sure the English of that article will soon be available.  I’m not going to translate it here, for lack of time.

There is something weird in Roche’s explanation, however.

At the end, after trotting out some Thomas Aquinas about Mary Magdalene as “apostolorum apostola“, he writes:

Perciò è giusto che la celebrazione liturgica di questa donna abbia il medesimo grado di festa dato alla celebrazione degli apostoli nel Calendario Romano Generale e che risalti la speciale missione di questa donna, che è esempio e modello per ogni donna nella Chiesa.

Therefore it is just that the liturgical celebration of this woman should have the same level of feast given to the celebration of the Apostles in the General Roman Calendar and that it underscore the special mission of this woman, who is an example and model for every woman in the Church.

That’s odd.  Mary Magdalene has been a favorite saint of mine ever since, well…. ever.   The Church’s tradition, particularly Gregory the Great, mostly identified as the same person, Mary Magdalene, the woman with the jar of nard, and the sister of Lazarus and Martha.  Certainly she was at the foot of the Cross and at the tomb on the morning after the Resurrection.  There’s no evidence that she was a prostitute or the adulteress brought to the Lord in John 7.  In Mark 16:9 we read that the Lord had performed an exorcism for her: “But he rising early the first day of the week, appeared first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom he had cast seven devils.”  This is also in Luke 8:2: “Mary who is called Magdalene, out of whom seven devils were gone forth”.   Augustine thought these were perhaps the seven deadly sins or vices.

It may have been on this foundation, along with some ambiguity about various Marys in the Gospels, that she was conglomerated into also being a fallen woman who then repented.

At least from that tradition we got some really great paintings!

Also… and here is something for you who are interested in art history… some day when you have time, check out the strong similarity of paintings of “penitent Magdalene” and of dying Cleopatra with the asp at her breast.  Warning: some of them can be a little spicy.  But I digress.

In any event, in the Novus Ordo – Mary Magdalene now has a Feast, which happens also to be the same level as the celebrations of the Apostles.

That doesn’t put her on the level of the Apostles.  Sorry, it just doesn’t.  Watch how some libs and feminists will do just that.  

His scriptis, this was overdue.  I’m glad that – in the Novus Ordo – Mary Magdalene has her Feast.

Here is an interesting point dropped to me by a reader about how Mary Magdalene was honored in Holy Mass before the Council.

Before 1960 or so, Mary’s celebration merited a Creed!  (For those of you who don’t know, in the older form of Holy Mass the Creed is said a lot more often.)  Here’s a shot of her formulary from a Missal from 1947.

Here is her formulary from 1962.  No Creed.  Kind of a demotion.

A rocky history, this feast.

Perhaps like the saint herself?

UPDATED:

From the Dictionnaire Latin-Français des Auteurs Chrétiens by Albert Blaise and redone by Henri Chirat.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, SESSIUNCULA |
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