Synod notes: The Final Report is coming. I’m not optimistic.

Based on my vacuuming up bits of information via conversations and emails.

Today the members of the Synod are going over the draft of the Final Report.   God help us all.

I am not optimistic, given the breakdown of the orientations of the small groups I posted yesterday.

Pray.  They vote tomorrow.  The Kasperites must be soundly defeated.  Defeated not by a little, but soundly.

South African Card. Napier Fox one of the drafting committee for the Final Report doubts that Communion for divorced and civilly remarried will be found clearly in the Final Report. If that is true, the Kasperites won’t be able to claim outright victory.

There is a video of a presser during which liberal Fishwrap journalist Robert Mickens (fired by The Tablet – HERE) by Card. Napier.  Mickens took aim, through Napier, at Edward Pentin who wrote The Rigging of a Synod.  Mickens clearly hates Pentin’s book.  Napier slapped him down. Start at 42:15.

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Also, read Pentin’s post at the National Catholic Register.  HERE The Germans think “mercy” can be shown to civilly divorced and remarried Catholics and others in irregular situations in the “internal forum” (i.e., the Confessional). And watch Fr Carlos Errazuriz, professor of canon law at the University of Santa Croce, dissect the German position.

Also, to understand really well how the Kasperites’ minds work, there is Robert Stark in Catholic World Report. HERE

 

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ASK FATHER: Are deacons permitted to distribute Communion in the Extraordinary Form?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

In the Extraordinary Form of the Holy Mass (EF), are Deacons (either transitional or permanent) allowed to distribute Holy Communion? Or is this a faculty reserved to only the Priest and Bishop?

On the Correct Handling of Contradictions Among the People

Summorum Pontificum makes it clear that, in celebrating the Holy Mass according to the 1962 Missale Romanum, the rubrics of that Missal are to be observed.  See also Universae Ecclesiae.

On the other hand, the celebration of the Extraordinary Form should not be seen as the proverbial fly frozen in amber.

We are not going back in time to recreate 1962.   (That said, we are re-presenting AD 33!).

In 1962, deacons were considered extraordinary ministers of Holy Communion. In certain circumstances they were permitted to distribute Holy Communion.

In 2015, deacons are now considered by law to be ordinary ministers of Holy Communion.

The distribution of Communion to the faithful is something that is proper to their diaconal ordained state.

Therefore,…

Let a hundred deacons blossom!

Let them assist at regular celebrations of Solemn High Masses!

Let them assist in choro properly dressed in cassock, surplice, with biretta!

Let them place a stole upon their shoulder for the reception and distribution of Holy Communion!

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged ,
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Notes on the Synod: Where do the “small groups” stand?

While I was traveling a Friendly Roman Observer did some analysis of how the small groups or circuli minores are coming down… for the Kasperite (non) Proposal (boo!) or for the doctrine of the Church.  I’ll share it here, somewhat edited.

The small group reports from this the third and final week are HERE.

There were 13 small groups in five languages.

Regarding the Kasperite Proposal (to allow civilly divorced and remarried Catholics to go to confession and Holy Communion without requiring of them sexual continence), the breakdown is more or less as follows:

  • 4 groups in favor of Kasperitism (of which, 2 groups want the matter decided in the internal forum, i.e., by the penitent, but in conversation with a priest in Confession).
  • 1 group sort of in favor of Kaspertism
  • 3 groups opposed to Kaspertism
  • 1 group divided on Kasperism
  • 1 group with no recommendation on Kaspertism
  • 1 group asking Pope to establish a commission to study the Kasper Proposal
  • 2 groups asking the Pope himself to decide about the Kasper Proposal.

So, the Kasper Proposal has not been completely defeated.

Today (Wednesday) and tomorrow the commission appointed by the Pope will draft a Final Report.

On Friday the draft will be discussed by the Synod Fathers, and amendments will be suggested.

On Saturday the revised draft will be voted on.   (So, they say.)

That product, the Report, goes to the Pope.  He can decide whether to make the Report public or not. The Pope will decide if he is going to issue a document about the questions, and if so what kind of document and with what authority.

Posted in Francis, Synod |
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Cool WOTD – “maril” (Tolkien connection!)

From the OED Online’s Word of the Day:

Your word for today is: maril, n.

Your word for today is: maril, n.

maril, n.
[‘ An ornamental binding material with a variegated grain, made from scraps of coloured leather mixed in a resin, compressed, and dried.’]
Pronunciation: Brit. /ma?r?l/, U.S. /m??r?l/
Etymology: < -maril (in Silmaril, any of three mystic jewels featuring in works by J. R. R. Tolkien (1892–1973)): see quot. 19741, although Smith notes elsewhere in the same work that it subsequently occurred to him that the word could also be analysed as < mar- (in marbled adj.) + i- (in inlaid adj.) + l- (in leather n.).
Bookbinding.
An ornamental binding material with a variegated grain, made from scraps of coloured leather mixed in a resin, compressed, and dried.
1974 P. Smith New Direct. in Bookbinding x. 59 The first book on which experiments with early maril were tried was a copy of The Lord of the Rings… A name had to be found to describe this material… I remembered the name Silmaril in The Lord of the Rings and thought that the word had the right ‘ring’ to it, especially the ‘maril’ part which was short.
1974 P. Smith New Direct. in Bookbinding x. 59 Each volume reveals one or other facet of feathered, sectioned and maril onlays.
1978 Book Collector Summer 176 When I first visited the binder’s studio in 1969, he was experimenting with planing flat sections of maril to make decorative boards, but this has not been developed due to..the possibility of achieving the same effect by onlaying.
1989 New Bookbinder 9 26/1 One of the most remarkable innovations was the making of maril, which opened up for book-artists the whole range of fluid and broken surfaces.

I had always thought that, were I to have my own proper space with some elbow room, I’d like to take up bookbinding.

On that note, I urge everyone to get a Kindle!  HERE

 

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged , , ,
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My View For Awhile: Back to Rome

This afternoon I head to Rome.

I checked in and used some miles to upgrade.

The screen on this flight is a little different… hmmmm…

And there is a very odd fellow in the window seat.

Anyway, the day is underway.

More later.

(Honestly… what were the odds that I should turn on this particular movie, on the eve of my departure, right at that scene with the date?)

Meanwhile… back in Rome itself…. my friend the Great Roman Fabrizio sent photos as he entered S. Maria in Trivio to pray at the tomb of Saint Gaspar del Bufalo (+1837), “hammer of freemasons”.

I have been attached to him since my seminary days in Rome when I was assigned to help on Sundays at San Nicola in Carcere.  Saint Gaspar started a confraternity there.  There is a plaque and inscription about that in the apse, but it is now covered up by a painting.

Here is the saint.

As The Great Rome writes: “Napoleon’s police tried to tame him and Freemasons tried to kill him many times.  He triumphed.

His answer to the French commissar asking him to sign his submission to emperor should be the motto of every pope and bishop requested to yield to the world: ‘non posso, non debbo, non voglio!’  That’s how a Roman priest says ‘No’ when he wants to be talkative.”

“I can’t.  I musn’t.  I don’t want to.”

St. Gaspar, pray for us.

UPDATE:

This is more like it for these posts.

  

Flight delay ….

  
How I love rushing for a flight connection because of an unexplained delay.  I really like that.  These days I build a little extra time into my itinerary so I don’t have to rush.   At least the gates are fairly close.  there is a strong chance my bag will come with me to Rome.  

Meanwhile, no drama in the boarding process so far.   Hopefully we can make up time.  Departing froma small airport helps a lot.

  
I liked the announcement.  “No use of tobacco products and e-cigarettes is not a allowed.”

Where’s my snoose?!?

  

UPDATE:

We made up time and the taxi was short and the next gate was close.

  
Boarding soon.  This is when I start to crave a cheeseburger.

UPDATE:

As I said above, I used miles to upgrade.  It’s not a Delorean but it’s managable.

   
   
Once upon a time I flew business or first pretty often.  It’s been a loooong time and I have lots of miles.  Hopefully this will help my adjustment on arrival.  Eastward travel is a greater challenge for me and my sojourn is short.  I need to function when I hit the ground.

The music may make me slit my wrists.

Doors closed.

UPDATE:

I managed to write a column for the UKs best Catholic weekly, The Catholic Herald, eat something and then sleep for a few hours.  Breakfast time has us about an hour out.

 UPDATE:

Almost to my place.

  
 

Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged ,
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Sam Gregg on “primacy of conscience”

Sam Gregg of Acton Institute has a great piece today at Crisis about the topic of “conscience”.  My emphases.

An Archbishop and the Catholic Conscience

Conscience is one of those subjects about which numerous Catholics today are, alas, sadly misinformed. Despite great Catholic minds such as Thomas Aquinas, Thomas More, and John Henry Newman discoursing at length on the question, some Catholics speak of it in ways that have little in common with the Church’s understanding of conscience.

The latest Catholic to be embroiled in controversy about conscience is Archbishop Blase Cupich of Chicago. While recently discussing the question of whether those who have (1) not repented of sin and/or (2) not resolved to go and sin no more may receive communion, Archbishop Cupich stated: “If people come to a decision in good conscience then our job is to help them move forward and to respect that. The conscience is inviolable and we have to respect that when they make decisions, and I’ve always done that.” Referring specifically to people with same-sex attraction, he noted that “my role as a pastor is to help them to discern what the will of God is by looking at the objective moral teaching of the Church and yet, at the same time, helping them through a period of discernment to understand what God is calling them to at that point.”

This isn’t the first time that Archbishop Cupich has raised eyebrows. Many will recall what some regard as the effective equivalence he made between Planned Parenthood’s selling of body-parts and problems like homelessness and hunger.

Then there was his more recent speech to the Chicago Federation of Labor. Alongside a defense of religious liberty, most of the Archbishop’s address simply reiterated Catholic social teaching about unions. Perhaps it wasn’t the occasion to say such things, but absent from Archbishop Cupich’s remarks was any reference to the numerous caveats stated by popes—such as those detailed by Blessed Paul VI (who no-one would describe as a gung-ho anti-union capitalist) in his 1971 apostolic letter Octogesima Adveniens(no.14) and Saint John Paul II’s 1981 encyclical Laborem Exercens (no.20)—concerning the very real limits upon what unions may do. Unfortunately, modern America is awash with examples of what happens when unions (in collusion with business executives who go along to get along) ignore those limits, as broken cities such as Detroit know all too well.

Aspects of Archbishop Cupich’s comments about conscience, however, will remind some of arguments made by various theologians in the 1970s and ’80s as part of their effort to legitimize dissent from Catholic moral teaching. Certainly, Archbishop Cupich stressed the importance of priests conveying the Church’s objective moral teaching to people who consider themselves marginalized by that teaching (presumably because it does not and cannot affirm some of their free choices). [NB] But a significant omission in the archbishop’s statements concerned why conscience is inviolable. As Vatican II stated in Gaudium et Spes, conscience draws its inviolability from its “obedience” to the truth, or what the Council called the “law written by God” (GS 16).

So where is this truth and law to be found? On one level, we discover it in the natural law. Saint Paul famously stated (Rm 2: 14-16) that this is knowable by everyone who possesses reason, including those who don’t know the Word of God revealed in the Hebrew and Christian Scriptures. For people, however, who also believe in Christ and accept that the fullest account of Christ’s life and teaching is to be found in the witness of the Catholic Church, the very same truths about morality are also expressed, confirmed, and enriched by that same Church’s moral teaching.

These simple points lead to profound conclusions. One is that conscience doesn’t create its own truth. Nor is it above truth. The oft-used phrase “primacy of conscience” makes no sense in Catholicism unless we accept that conscience’s authority is derived from every person’s responsibility to know and live in the truth encapsulated in the divine and natural law. In Newman’s words, “Conscience has rights because it has duties.”

It follows that conscience cannot be construed as a mandate for us to depart from the truth whenever it clashes with our desires. Catholicism has never held that conscience is somehow superior to the divine and natural law. To claim, therefore, that our conscience somehow authorizes us to act in ways that we know contradict what Christ’s Church teaches to be the truth about good and evil is, at a minimum, illogical from the Catholic standpoint.

[…]

Please do read the rest over there.

Posted in The Drill | Tagged ,
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Before heading to Rome, noodles, differently.

Before I head to Rome (tomorrow, Wednesday – click the flag) I had to charge up with a different cuisine.

I was in my native place for a couple days.  I had, among other important appointments, a meeting of my literary group (founded 19 years ago!).  We read Francis Thompson.  Interesting guy!  Next time, probably some Browning.

Anyway, I had Chinese when I hit town.

Starting with soup dunplings.  Now demoted to the 2nd best xiao long bao I’ve had.

Noodles with veg.

Pork in garlic sauce.

My dining companion had orange beef, which he was kind enough to let me sample.

Finally, the platitude cookie.

The next day, after my morning appointment, I dashed into downtown Minneapolis for ramen.  Having had a couple visits to Tokyo now, I have sampled good ramen.  This place in MSP has good ramen!

First, gyoza. Wonderfully crunchy and spicy!  I don’t know what is in that sauce, but… wow.

Tonkotsu ramen.

So, now it is off to Rome and a whole different way to treat noodles.

Time to pack.

Go Cubs.

 

Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged , ,
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Where does “reconcile” come from? UPDATES

Ernout MeilletI received a couple notes about where the word “reconciliation” comes from. Odd.

Anyway, rather than write it all out here is a page from a dictionary of Latin etymology, Ernout Meillet.

It derives from ancient words for “call”.

Look that voice (entry) for concilium to get to the roots beneath “reconcile”, etc.

Click for larger…

15_10_20_concilium

That page should take care of that question.  Yes, I know it’s in French, but just about anyone can see what’s going on.

Since the voice sends you to calo, I’ll take you to calo.

Click for larger…

15_10_20_concilium_02

15_10_20_concilium_03

English etymological dictionaries will take you back to Sanskrit and Indo-European forms meaning, in some way, “call”. HERE and HERE

UPDATE:

I get it now.  Chicago’s Archbishop Cupich (a member at the Synod this year) apparently opined that reconcile comes, somehow, from the Latin word cilia, which he said meant “eyelash”.

No.

First, cilia is plural of cilium, which means “eyelid”.  And, no, “reconcile” isn’t from cilium.  It has to do with being brought together by calling.

Anyway… on a hunch, with a raised eyebrow, I looked up concilium in St. Isidore of Seville’s Etymologies, VI, 16.11.

This is what I found.

15_10_20_concilium_05

LATIN HERE  “Unde et concilium a communi intentione dictum, quasi comcilium. Nam cilia oculorum sunt.”

So… I will cut His Excellency a break (on this, at least), for it seems he is living in the past!  Checking the insights of Isidore? Who died in AD 636?  The last great scholar of late antiquity?  Bridge figure to the Medieval period? I like it.

It’s still wrong, but it is fun!

BTW… do check the famous Internet Prayer, which I wrote many year ago now.  Isidore is mentioned.

HERE

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ACTION ITEM! Support Our Lady of Hope Clinic!

I have an ACTION ITEM for you good readers. You have been generous to causes I have mentioned in the past.  Sometimes people have a hard time finding causes to support.  This is one of them that I admire.

RIGHT NOW… they have a “matching grant” going on.  Every donation to the clinic from now to the end of the year will be matched, so your donation does double duty.

I have written about Our Lady of Hope Clinic before.  This is one of the worthiest causes I have seen for a while and it could use your help, wherever you are.

Read more HERE and HERE

This could be a new model for health care in a rapidly changing – disintegrating – time.  The “Affordable” Care Act really… isn’t.  It is going to be harder in the future for people to get health care, not easier.  And for those without much bucks?

They have a DONATION page.

Tell them Fr. Z sent you.

Contact Julie Jensen, Director of Development, at Julie   -AT- ourladyofhopeclinic -DOT- org, or by calling (608) 957-1137.

I was recently in the clinic a couple times for … something.  It was like a meeting of the United Nations in there!  They said that whenever I mention them on the blog, they get donations from all over.

In the clinic you see a sign on the wall explaining that
20131104-083959.jpg
“Our Lady of Hope Clinic practices medicine consistent with the teachings of the Catholic Church”

Therefore, they will not refer for abortion, prescribe contraception, refer for sterilization, refer for in vitro fertilization, etc.

And…

“We will practice in complete accord with the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church.”

This is a worthy cause.

I suggest that it is a model that may be duplicated in other places, especially as the chaos really starts to begin in healthcare in these USA.

Posted in ACTION ITEM!, Our Catholic Identity, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged , , ,
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VIDEO: Wherein Card Arinze explains “conscience”

The mighty Francis Card. Arinze gave a video interview to LifeSite.  He reminds everyone of what real primacy of conscience is in the Church’s teaching.  He clarifies that we have the responsibility to have a properly formed conscience.

We cannot simply claim “conscience” as justification for sin.

He speaks of the responsibility of bishops and priests to form people’s consciences properly.

He explains (perhaps to Synod members along with everyone else) what “adultery” is.

Posted in The Drill | Tagged ,
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