Take BACK St. Patrick’s Day! New shirts from Courageous Priest.

For years I have disliked St. Patrick’s Day, not because I dislike St. Patrick (a great saint), but because of what the mob has turned it into.  And I don’t see at all any justification for dispensing from Friday penance during Lent when St. Pat falls on a Friday.  I. JUST. DON’T.

FIGHT BACK!

Here is a fundraiser for the site Courageous Priest.

They are selling St. Patrick’s Day tees to raise some money.  You get gear, they get cash.  Win – win.

SaintPatricksFeastDay-1455972577941

Yes…. click me now.

I think they are green enough.  No?

NB: I can’t really claim that these are my tees, exactly.  This is the graphic that the nice people at Courageous Priest sent me and so… hey!

Your best bet might be the hoodies.  And you can give them as gifts.  Get a couple to raffle off at the parish.

I am told that the offer ends on Thursday 3 March with guaranteed delivery for St. Patrick’s Day.

Click HERE

Posted in Events, Saints: Stories & Symbols, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged ,
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ASK FATHER: Using Latin in the Ordinary Form

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

For about a year now, we have been using Latin for the “Our Father” (sung, BTW) and “Agnus Dei” (also the Kyrie) but the rest is said in the vernacular. When I asked about it, my priest said he hopes to begin saying the EF and this is a way to slowly teach the prayers. Is there anything “wrong” with this? I mean much leeway is given in the other direction, so I like seeing change going more “traditional”.

Wrong with it?  On the contrary!  The more Latin in the Ordinary Form the better.

Latin is the proper language of the public sacred worship of the Latin Rite of the Roman Catholic Church.

The Council Fathers had intended that Latin be maintained while giving some space to the vernacular.

A great deal of content is lost in translation.

And if Father is moving toward also using the traditional form of Holy Mass, that’s great.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged
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LOUISIANA: Judge strikes down law requiring confessors to report abuse

seal of confessionHave you followed at all the court battle in Louisiana concerning the Seal of Confession and obligation to report certain crimes?

From CWN:

A Louisiana judge has ruled unconstitutional a new state law requiring priests to report sexual abuse that is mentioned in a sacramental confession.

Judge Mike Caldwell made his ruling in a long-running and complicated case in which Father Jeff Bayhi had been directed to testify about what a young woman reportedly told him in a confession. The young woman has said that she told Father Bayhi about being molested by a member of his parish. Father Bayhi had refused to testify, citing the inviolability of the confessional seal.

Judge Caldwell ruled that the state law making priests mandated reporters of sexual abuse was unconstitutional insofar as it applied to confessions, since it violated religious freedom.

In an earlier phase of the case, the Louisiana Supreme Court had said that Father Bayhi could be required to testify, because in this case the penitent had waived the protection of the confessional seal. Church officials pointed out that the seal cannot be waived, and a priest cannot reveal the contents of a confession under any circumstances. Last year the US Supreme Court had declined to hear the case.

Posted in GO TO CONFESSION, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, Religious Liberty | Tagged , , ,
11 Comments

The Producers differently… politically…

I don’t watch late night TV.  I am not publicly declaring myself for any particular candidate.  I am not declaring myself publicly against any particular candidate… unless she is a pro-abortion Leftist who would continue to destroy our constitutional rights, stack the SCOTUS with loons, depress the economy and obliterate our standing around the globe thus putting everyone everywhere in danger.

So, with that caveat – and I am not hereby indicating that I am either for or against Trump – this is clever and pretty funny. It was, I understand, in the late night Jimmy Kimmel Show (which I don’t watch).  Getting together Matthew Broderick and Nathan Lane,the original Broadway cast of the Producers, was a coup.

My guess is that they are against Trump.  You decide.   It’s still funny, even if you are for him.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

The moderation queue is ON.

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged
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Fun with Latin with Archbp. Léonard

Archbishop Léonard has some fun with Latin, imitating the way Roman professors spoke Latin. It still applies, by the way and also to the way the speak Italian.

Fun. He has funny descriptions of some famous profs, such as Fuchs, Lonergan, Gautier. It helps to know a little French.

Along the way he imitates an American prof who tells some classics about the mouse which grabs a Host, or what to do if a Host falls into a lady’s… décolletage.

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged ,
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Juventutem has a new President

I had an email from Juventutem (too bad about that J) saying that

Hungary’s Bertalan Kiss, has become the President of Fœderatio Internationalis Juventutem.   HERE

In addition to co-founding and leading the annual Hungarian pilgrimage, Peregrinatio Fidei, since 2012, Bertalan Kiss helped to organize Hungarian participation in the Populus Summorum Pontificum Pilgrimage to Rome, where he has exchanged thoughts and well-wishes with pilgrims from all over the world.

Also, the sent:

“Bertalan looks forward to meeting Juventutem members from many countries this summer at WYD Krakow.  While there are no tour operators known to be offering trips from North American, registration is now OPEN for those WYD pilgrims who would like to link their WYD registrations into the Juventutem group.”

Here is a photo of the undersigned with the new president following the Pontifical Mass celebrated by Raymond Leo Card Burke on 25 October 2014, part of the wonderful Summorum Pontificum Pilgrimage.

16_02_29_BertalanAndFatherZ

Posted in Events, Fr. Z KUDOS, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged ,
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Three years ago… Sede Vacante

Three years ago today, Pope Benedict XVI abdicated.

My posts from that sad, remarkable day, HERE.

For your interest and edification, Benedict’s Last Official Speech.

Posted in Benedict XVI | Tagged ,
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Talk about “gender theory”

This is amusing via PJ Media:

Time Magazine: Evelyn Waugh, Leading Woman Writer

This never would have happened back in my day. David Harsanyi caught the flub:

TIME magazine asks: “What do 1 million reading lists reveal about higher education today?” [Indeed, what?  Are students reading something other than text messages?] Well, what it reveals is that someone at TIME shouldn’t be writing about reading lists.

There are many unsurprising names compiled by the Open Syllabus Project. And according to TIME’s “analysis,” Toni Morrison, Jane Austen, and Virginia Woolf, all rank in the top 10. But for some reason, and this had me laughing out loud, George Eliot was accidentally included on the women’s list.

That’s a joke, in case you don’t get it…  [George Eliot is the pen-name of a women, Mary Ann Evans.]

In any event, college-aged women are devouring some eclectic authors, everything from the individualist tracts of Ayn Rand to the dystopian fiction of Margaret Atwood and Naomi Klein. But I was most excited to see Evelyn Waugh, author of Brideshead Revisited and Scoop, one of my favorite novels ever, sneaking in at #97. She is awesome.

Most of the names on the list are of persons of the female persuasion that you’ve never heard of. Here’s why:

MethodologyThe Open Syllabus Project collected 1.1 million syllabi (of an estimated 80 to 100 million in existence) in the U.S., United Kingdom, Australia and Canada that date from the past 15 years to compile a list of the 10,000 most-assigned books, short stories, journal articles and screenplays (the majority of the course assignments are from the past decade). TIME aggregated the top 10,000 titles by author, then used the Notable Names Database to confirm the author’s gender [sex] and generate a list of 100 most-read female authors.

Oops.

Time has issued a correction:

Correction: The original version of this story included Evelyn Waugh, who was a man.

The very masculine author of Black Mischief, Vile Bodies, Scoop and The Loved Onecould not be reached for comment.

It’s funny and sad at the same time.

Posted in Liberals, Lighter fare, You must be joking! |
9 Comments

27 Feb: St. Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows – Patron of Handgunners, seminarians, novices

St. GabrielToday is the feast of St. Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows, Gabriel Possenti, according to the calendar of the Novus Ordo. In the older, traditional Missal we find that 28 February was given to him.   27 February is the day he died and was born into heaven in 1862.

I visited his shrine beneath the great mountain Gran Sasso in Italy while I was in seminary.

Little Francesco Possenti came from a large family, 13 children, in Spoleto and was baptized in the same baptismal font as St. Francis of Assisi.

During a childhood illness he promised to become a religious if he were healed. This actually happened twice, but like many of us who make promises to God if He would only do something for us, Francesco forgot about it.  However, during a procession in honor of an image of Our Lady of Sorrows, Francesco finally felt strongly the calling to be a religious.  He took off for a Passionist house and noviatiate on the eve of his engagment.

When Francesco made his vows he was given the name in religion of Gabriel adding of Our Lady of Sorrows.  Gabriel made a special promise to spread devotion to Our Lady of Sorrows. His writings are imbued with this devotion and a special focus on the Passion of the Lord.  He was known for his perfect observance of the rule of the Passionists.

While still young was contracted tuberculosis.  He remained always in good spirits, never quitting his harsh mortifications however.  Before he could be ordained a priest, he died embracing an image of Our Lady of Sorrows.

Gabriel was canonized by Pope Benedict XV 1920 and declared him patron of Catholic youth. In 1959, Pope John XXIII named him the patron of the Abruzzi region, where he spent the last two years of his earthly life. His is also invoked by seminarians and novices. St. Gemma Galgani attributed to St. Gabriel the cure which led her also to her vocation as a Passionist.

Let us look at his Collect from the 1962 Missale Romanum.

COLLECT:
Deus, qui beatum Gabrielem
dulcissimae Matris tuae dolores assidue recolere docuisti,
ac per illam sanctitatis et miraculorum gloria sublimasti:
da nobis, eius intercessione et exemplo;
ita Genetricis tuae consociari fletibus,
ut materna eiusdem protectione salvemur.

LITERAL TRANSLATION:
O God, who taught blessed Gabriel
to reflect constantly upon the sorrows of Your most sweet Mother,
and through her raised him on high by the glory of holiness and miracles:
grant us, by his intercession and example;
so to be joined to the tears of Your Mother,
that we may be saved by her maternal protection.

Now here is the politically incorrect part of the story.  

From the Possenti Society:

In 1860, soldiers from Garibaldi entered the mountain village of Isola, Italy. They began to burn and pillage the town, terrorizing its inhabitants.

Possenti, with his seminary rector’s permission, walked into the center of town, unarmed, to face the terrorists. One of the soldiers was dragging off a young woman he intended to rape when he saw Possenti and made a snickering remark about such a young monk being all alone.

Possenti quickly grabbed the soldier’s revolver from his belt and ordered the marauder to release the woman. The startled soldier complied, as Possenti grabbed the revolver of another soldier who came by. Hearing the commotion, the rest of the soldiers came running in Possenti’s direction, determined to overcome the rebellious monk.

At that moment a small lizard ran across the road between Possenti and the soldiers. When the lizard briefly paused, Possenti took careful aim and struck the lizard with one shot. Turning his two handguns on the approaching soldiers, Possenti commanded them to drop their weapons. Having seen his handiwork with a pistol, the soldiers complied. Possenti ordered them to put out the fires they had set, and upon finishing, marched the whole lot out of town, ordering them never to return. The grateful townspeople escorted Possenti in triumphant procession back to the seminary, thereafter referring to him as “the Savior of Isola”.

Thus, some consider him to be the patron of shooters and handgun users.

For good reason. Thus endeth the lesson.

I think all you readers out there should consider concealed carry license courses and, afterwards, lots of training and practice.  Even if you choose, for one reason or another, not to carry, you will at least know something about firearms, laws, the training, and will also have received a heavy dose of how to de-escalate confrontations, avoid conflicts, increase your situational awareness, etc.  It is useful on many levels.

Ask St. Gabriel to help you in the process.  Be ready for when Garibaldi’s troops show up.

“I want to break my own will into pieces, I want to do God’s Holy will, not my own. May the most adorable, most loveable, most perfect will of God always be done.” St. Gabriel

Posted in ASK FATHER Question Box, Religious Liberty, Saints: Stories & Symbols | Tagged , , ,
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“This is the child that God wants to give to France.”

At the Getty Museum in Los Angeles there is now a splendid exhibit of tapestries of Louis XIV of France.

This exhibit prompted a friend to forward the following about the birth of King Louis XIV and about one of my favorite Marian titles.

“My child, this is not my Son, it is the child that God wants to give to France”

The King of France Louis XIII founded the church of Notre-Dame des Victoires (Our Lady of Victories) in Paris in 1629, in thanksgiving for the victory of the royal troops in La Rochelle against the Protestant Huguenots, whose surrender the king attributed to the intervention of the Virgin.

On December 8, 1629, the eve of the laying of the first stone of the church, and feast of the Immaculate Conception, Brother Fiacre, an Augustinian friar, saw the Virgin Mary in a vision. She presented to him the child that God wanted to give France, the future Louis XIV, saying: “My child, do not be afraid, I am the Mother of God… My child, this is not my son, it is the child that God wants to give to France.”

In this vision, reported to the King and the Queen, the Virgin asked for three novenas to be offered to Our Lady of Graces (a Marian shrine located in Cotignac, southern region of Provence), Our Lady of Paris and Our Lady of Victories. Brother Fiacre prayed these three novenas himself from November 8 to December 5, 1637.

Exactly nine months later, on September 5, 1638, the queen gave birth to a son, Louis, called “Dieudonné” (God Given). On account of the vision of Brother Fiacre, Louis XIII consecrated France to the Virgin Mary. On January 6, 1638, the text of the Royal Vow was adopted, and it was signed on February 10th. This document fixed the date of the official consecration of France to August 15th of the same year in the cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris.

An interesting Marian post for Our Lady’s Saturday.

Posted in Just Too Cool, Our Solitary Boast | Tagged , , ,
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