CQ CQ CQ #HamRadio Sunday – first field day!

Busy day. This morning I had an Extraordinary Form Mass, a blessing of woman before childbirth, Ordinary Form Mass, a First Holy Communion, and a traditional Baptism, with a “churching”, followed by a cookout at which the adults were outnumbered by the children under 10 about 5:1.

Just a couple shots.

The church is St. Mary’s in Pine Bluff, WI, just to the west of Madison.

IMG_8960

The new Communicant with his cake.

IMG_8966

It being Wisconsin there were unparalleled brats.

IMG_8967

Cheesy potatoes in the background.  There were beans and potato salad and amazing organic all beef hotdogs.

After a nap… for it is a day of rest, and it being a perfect day, cool, sunny, no bugs, I decided to take the HR rig on the road.

I drove back to the parish and set up in the beautiful garden by the cemetery on the top of the hill.

IMG_8972

Before setting up, I remembered the dead, so many nearby, and said the Angelus with the ringing of the bells in the church tower below the hill.

IMG_8970

This is the first time I have set out outside my residence.

IMG_8973

Sub tegmine fagi.

I was joined by my local Elmer and, later, the pastor. We had some chat around topics beyond radio.

Back at the Steam Pipe Trunk Distrubution Venue, I can now enjoy a dram.   The parents of the baptizata gave me drop of the craythur.

IMG_8978

Thinking back, perhaps I should have scheduled a Blood Moon Disaster Tetrad Shemitah Event, with images of a lunar eclipse over a falling stock market ticker and burning cities on the QSL card.

Perhaps next event might be a All Saints Day in the cemetery.  Think of the possibilities.

Posted in Ham Radio | Tagged , ,
13 Comments

Edward Pentin’s next installment about last year’s Synod

“Innocent III could say crazy things, and almost no one would know until a year or so later! Now it’s two clicks and it’s gone around the blogosphere.”

Everyone should pay attention to a new installment of Edward Pentin’s wrap up of last years Synod.  HERE

Pentin spoke with Prof. John Rist, who is a collaborator in the Fine Cardinals Book™ and is a great expert in Patristic Theology, Late Antiquity, and ethics.  He destroyed Card. Kasper’s so-called basis in the Fathers for his “tolerated but not accepted” plan to admit adulterers to receive Communion.  Full disclosure, I had courses from John Rist at the Augustinianum and we are friendly.

Thus, Edward…

In my new eBook “The Rigging of a Vatican Synod? An Investigation into Alleged Manipulation at the Extraordinary Synod on the Family”, published this week by Ignatius Press, Professor Rist lays out the controversial meeting in the context of the Church’s history – a perspective for which many readers have noted their appreciation. He also explains the way in which it marks a break with how such assemblies have been conducted in the past.

Here is an excerpt.  Believe me, you want to read it all, if nothing else, to hear the mind of John Rist at work:

“I suspect that Kasper, at least, and possibly the pope, didn’t really expect the kind of intense opposition that they’ve actually run into”, he said. “Cardinal Burke might have been thought to be one such person. ‘[He’s a] nuisance, get him out of the way.’ But I don’t think they expected the wholesale opposition of most pro-life groups. That they didn’t again shows they don’t really understand the world they live in.”

He continued: “Again there are parallels in the not too distant past. I mean when Pope Paul VI promulgated Humanae vitae [his encyclical confirming the Church’s opposition to contraception], he seems to have been genuinely surprised at the hostile reaction in the Church. Again, he shouldn’t have been! And again it shows how those at the top are blind: that maybe they are doing the right thing, but they don’t understand the world they’re living in. The same problem we are coming up against now.”

Although Rist does not fully agree with Cardinal Burke’s culturally more traditional side, he does see the American cardinal as acting contra mundum [against the world], like Saint Athanasius of Alexandria, the fourth-century saint who fought the heretical Arian bishops (and emperors) in defense of orthodoxy.

“It’s a very good thing that there are people like that”, Rist said. “But I think what really annoys some of the people around the pope, if not the pope himself, is that they really didn’t expect to find that kind of resistance. Well, Henry VIII didn’t expect Fisher to resist either.”

He added: “It seems to me that among both bishops and people there are three groups. There are the people like Burke who want to maintain a traditional line. There are liberals. In between, there are people who are just watching the wind and will do what they think the pope wants them to do. When Benedict was in post, they did what Benedict wanted them to do.”

Read the whole thing and get the ebook.

It’s Cold War stuff.

The Rigging of a Vatican Synod?
An Investigation of Alleged Manipulation at the Extraordinary Synod on the Family

Posted in One Man & One Woman, Synod | Tagged , , ,
44 Comments

CQ CQ CQ #HamRadio Saturday – of Vatican Radio and Geomagnetic Storms

phantom ham radio operatorOn the cusp of Sunday last, sleepless, I turned on my rig and heard on 40m at 7250 Vatican Radio’s morning broadcast of Mass in Latin (OF). The celebrant sounded French. You can get VR’s Rome station 105FM perfectly over the interwebs, of course…. now.

This called up from memory my first year of U.S. seminary. I would turn on a tiny short wave radio, a German Philips about the size of a cigarette pack with a wire attachable antenna, and try to hear Vatican Radio. Those were hard days. So hungry were we for sanity that even Vatican Radio sounded good. It was as if I… we … were in the gulag listening to a contraband radio hidden under the barrack’s floorboards as the searchlights flashed passed the barred wooden shutters. Lookouts peered through cracks in the walls for the patrolling guards. Those were hard days, I can tell you. The walls and wire, the dogs, the food – or lack of it. The constant psychological manipulation, incessant harassment and punishment for tiny infraction like citing Trent or wearing black socks. But we made it. I made it, at least. I tunnelled out of there and went to Rome to finish up. But the scars… the scars… they will never leave me now. Even now I can see the faces of the men who were lost. The faces…

But on to happier themes.

On the suggestion of one of you commentators, I reached out to the esteemed artist Daniel Mitsui about the possibility of designing a QSL card, not only for me, personally, but perhaps also for a couple special events I have in mind.

If Mr. Mitsui is interested (he isn’t the swiftest of correspondents), perhaps he would take commission for QSL cards. This could be a new niche for him. I especially like guiding your attention to him, not only for his fine sacred art, but also because he has a daughter who has needed a lot of medical attention… and you know what that entails.

Speaking of my seminary days, K4MIA is running an event in honor of MIA/POWs this month. I heard him the other day at 14.260. There was quite a pile up and the big signals were simply overpowering me. Also, the guy running the event, “Mike”, though he seems like a great fellow, is pretty pokey in getting those QSOs acknowledged. Also, he has in interesting way of approaching the contacts. He will call for individual numbers, for example, just people in 2 or in 4. I could’ve strangled him the other night when he took a whole bunch of calls from different regions in order… 1, 2, 3… and only ONE call from 9. Grrrrrrr. And I have a lot of travel coming up. Frustrating.

I am developing some ideas for special events.  I’m looking for a way to use the Vatican’s station (HV0A) sometime when I am in Rome. I know a priest in Rome who is a ham.  Perhaps he’d like to cooperate in this venture. I’d also like to do a special event in honor of Card. Burke, perhaps for an anniversary, using the station of the Sovereign Order of the Knights of Malta (1AoC), also in Rome. The later could generate some attention for the charitable works of the Knights.

Anyway, this morning (Saturday) I turned on the rig and heard a little less noise on 20m. I have presently strung up a dipole in an inverted V, but it slopes at about a 45 angle for reasons that depend on the layout of the balcony. I’ve got about a 1.25 SWR. I also have a vertical.

Right now, afternoon (Saturday), I hear some fierce contests going on. I don’t quite get what they are reciting back and forth.  A new thing!

In any event… that’s my ham radio update.   I will turn the rig on later.  Maybe we can find each other.

There were great auroras last night, I hear. The geomagnetic storm is subsiding now, according to Spaceweather, but it could flare up again as Earth passes through the wake of the CME. NOAA forecasters estimate a 70% chance of polar geomagnetic storms on 12 September.

Posted in Ham Radio | Tagged , , , ,
88 Comments

ASK FATHER: Priest continues to use old, outdated translation for Mass

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Pater, our parish priest has this book “Vatican II Weekday Missal” which he uses to celebrate Holy Mass. The problem that it is the old translation of the Missal.

My question is, when we attend that Mass using the old translation, does the bread and wine transubstantiates into the Body and Blood of Christ? Is that Mass valid or not?

If he sticks to the book, the text as it is in the now outdated and illicit book, he consecrates validly.  Provided there are no other serious problems, Mass is celebrated.

He should not be using that book.  He is obligation to use the current translation.

You might drop him a note asking, politely, why he is using the outdated and illicit text.  I suspect that his reason is that he doesn’t like the new one, for one reason or another.  If he persists in using the outdated text, you should inform your diocesan bishop, with a copy of the priest’s response.

If that doesn’t produce any results, you should notify the Congregation for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments.

By the way… if he doesn’t like the new translation, he can always use the proper language our our sacred worship, Latin.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged , ,
24 Comments

The final target of the Third Hijra: Rome and the Catholic Church

On this anniversary of 9/11 I call to mind a post about the “Islamic Cultural Center” to be build near the site of the World Trade Center, but which was really a rabat,

The first rabat appeared at the time of the Prophet.

The Prophet imposed his rule on parts of Arabia through a series of ghazvas, or razzias (the origin of the English word “raid”). The ghazva was designed to terrorize the infidels, convince them that their civilization was doomed and force them to submit to Islamic rule. Those who participated in the ghazva were known as the ghazis, or raiders.

After each ghazva, the Prophet ordered the creation of a rabat — or a point of contact at the heart of the infidel territory raided. The rabat consisted of an area for prayer, a section for the raiders to eat and rest and facilities to train and prepare for future razzias. Later Muslim rulers used the tactic of ghazva to conquer territory in the Persian and Byzantine empires. After each raid, they built a rabat to prepare for the next razzia.

[NB:] It is no coincidence that Islamists routinely use the term ghazva to describe the 9/11 attacks against New York and Washington. The terrorists who carried out the attack are referred to as ghazis or shahids (martyrs).

I don’t think that we are really taking stock of what is going on in the West.

“Immigrants” are pouring into Europe across the Mediterranean via Lampedusa. “Immigrants” are pouring into Europe through Turkey toward Germany.

There is an outstanding piece at 1 Peter 5 by Andrew Biezad

Samples:

The Final Hijra: A Warning on the Refugee Crisis

[…]The world is reaping what has been sown. [That is, what the West has wrought in the Middle East.] Hundreds of thousands of people have been displaced and are on the move, a massive sea of humanity flowing into Western Europe. They are also threatening to overrun the borders into Eastern European nations. The American and Western European governments are saying this is a “refugee crisis,” and the news media, like good propagandists, run images of a few poor women and children, while neglecting to show us the rest of the situation. Not displayed is the mass of overwhelmingly young, healthy, well-dressed males, carrying the latest smart phones. Far from the starving widows and orphans one might imagine upon hearing the word, “refugee,” these men have come to riot, rampage, and destroy.

[NB] Lest anyone allow themselves to be deceived, this is not a normal migration – it is a hijra.

“Hijra” does mean “migration “ in Arabic. But it carries a deeper connotation. In Islamic history, the hijra was the event in 622 AD, when Muhammad and his small cult fled the city of Mecca to Yathrib, both of which are in what is today Saudi Arabia, and the latter which Muhammad renamed “Medina,” which means “the city.” This act marks three of the major events in Islam, which are:

  1. The beginning of the Islamic calendar
  2. The creation of the first Islamic government
  3. The prolific use of violence and torture to propagate Islam

At the time when Muhammad made the hijra with his followers, Medina was a city with a Jewish majority, which had peaceable relations with the other pagan Arabs. By the time Muhammad launched his band of raiders from that same city eight years later to conquer Mecca in 630, most of the pagan and Jewish populations were either converted to Islam, had fled, or were dead. The few survivors were forced to pay an extortion tax — called a jizya — to Muhammad and his followers. This was the only way they would be granted permission for their continued existence under Muhammad’s new Caliphate.

In Islamic law and applied theology, the idea of the hijra pertains to the movement of a group of Muslims from a predominately Muslim area to a predominately non-Muslim area, with the goal of establishing Islam’s dominance in it. After Muhammad’s death, Muslims have counted two great hijras in the West. The first was the great Islamic expansion from 632 to 750, when Islamic armies conquered all of the territory from what is today central France to Uzbekistan. The second hijra included the Turkish migrations that resulted in the fall of Constantinople, and reached its zenith with Islamic armies besieging the gates of Vienna in 1683. It was during this last encounter that the horde was driven back by Polish Catholic forces into the Balkan Peninsula, breaking the strength of the Ottoman Empire.

The battle began on September 11th, 1683. [No, it is not a coincidence.]

After the Battle of Vienna, European regimes began to rapidly colonize the Middle East, and the remains of the Ottoman Empire diminished, eventually being formally abolished by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in 1923 – but not before purging over a million Armenian, Assyrian, Pontic Greek, and Turkish Christians from its lands between 1915 and 1917. Muslim “revivalists” beginning as early as the 18th century reminisced about a return to the practice of “orthodox” Islam, and posited that in so doing, they could bring about a revival of the same bestial force which conquered so much of the world and subjected so many countless peoples under Islam’s burdensome yoke. The first hijra conquered Jerusalem in 638. The second hijra conquered Constantinople in 1453. Two of the three oldest and holiest cities for Christians were conquered by Muslims.

Except for Rome.

This, now, is the third hijra. According to certain voices in the Islamic world, it will be the final hijra, the one that will conquer Rome.

In Islamic circles, there has been a long-held belief that Christianity — and specifically, the Catholic Church — is the main obstacle impeding Islam’s domination of all humanity under one religious and political system. Therefore, in order to realize this vision, the Christian faithful must not only be converted to Islam, but their sacred spaces must be taken from them and given to the dar Al-Islam – “the house of Islam.” If the Islamic conquest of Jerusalem led to the end of Christianity as the dominant religion in the Holy Land, and the same was true in the Byzantine Empire with the fall of Constantinople, the conquest of Rome and the Islamization of St. Peter’s Basilica would mean the effective destruction of the Church worldwide, and its replacement with Islam. [I call the mind the “peace tree” planted in the Vatican Gardens and the prayer of the Imam.  HERE  Be sure to follow the links and read about what that may have symbolized.]

[…]

We are witnessing the beginning of the next great Islamic invasion. It may well represent an existential crisis for the West.

When the time comes, will we be ready to fight them? Everything we know and love is at stake.

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, pray for us.

St. Francis of Assisi, pray for us.

St. Lawrence of Brindisi, pray for us.

St. Pius V, pray for us.

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, Pò sì jiù, Semper Paratus, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, The Religion of Peace | Tagged , , ,
50 Comments

Aurora Alert!

But wait!  There’s more… from my email…

GEOMAGNETIC STORM: A stream of solar wind hit Earth’s magnetic field on Sept. 11th, sparking one of the strongest geomagnetic storms of the year and auroras in multiple US states. This continues a trend of relatively high geomagnetic activity that began on Sept. 7th.  High-latitude sky watchers could see more auroras tonight.

This is likely why the 20m band stinks right now.

Update from Spaceweather

SEPT 11TH GEOMAGNETIC STORM: During the early hours of Sept. 11th, a high-speed solar wind stream hit Earth’s magnetic field. The impact sparked a strong (Kp=7) geomagnetic storm and Northern Lights in the USA as far south as Wisconsin and Washington State. In Alaska, “the entire sky was moving like sea waves in colors of green and purple,” reports aurora tour guide Marketa Murray, who took this picture outside Fairbanks:

“This was the most beautiful night in a long time,” she says. “Our guests were crying and couldn’t catch their breath.”

More breathtaking auroras could appear tonight. NOAA forecasters estimate a 55% chance of geomagnetic storms on Sept. 11-12 as the solar wind continues to blow.Aurora alerts: text or voice

 

Published on: Sep 9, 2015 @ 10:56

Tonight it might be worth going outside (if you don’t have too much light pollution) to see if there is Aurora Borealis in view.  I don’t know about you Southrons, however.

From Spaceweather:

RED AURORAS OVER VIRGINIA: Geomagnetic storms are underway on Sept. 9th. Solar wind is pouring through a crack in Earth’s magnetosphere, sparking G2-class storms and bright auroras around the Arctic Circle. Last night, Northern Lights spilled south from Canada all the way down to the Virginias. Darren Shank sends this picture from rural Spruce Knob, WV: [Pretty far south]

Posted in Look! Up in the sky! | Tagged
15 Comments

Office Depot defends Planned Parenthood from prayers

How ’bout this? From Breitbart:

OFFICE DEPOT REFUSES TO PRINT COPIES OF PRO-LIFE PRAYER

Office Depot has refused to print copies of a pro-life prayer on the grounds that to do so violates company policy of printing material that “advocates the persecution of people who support abortion rights.”

Maria Goldstein, 42, ordered 500 copies of “A Prayer for the Conversion of Planned Parenthood” at Office Depot in Schaumburg, Illinois, for distribution at her Roman Catholic parish’s Masses Sunday. The prayer was composed by national director of Priests for Life Father Frank Pavone, a Breitbart News contributor.

The handout, according to the Chicago Tribune, also included statistics about abortion in the United States and at Planned Parenthood, the nation’s largest abortion provider, which is currently under investigation by Congress after being exposed for its practices of harvesting the body parts of aborted babies and selling them on the open market.

Pavone’s prayer asks God to “Bring an end to the killing of children in the womb, and bring an end to the sale of their body parts. Bring conversion to all who do this, and enlightenment to all who advocate it.”

The prayer also denounces “the evil that has been exposed in Planned Parenthood and in the entire abortion industry.”

Karen Denning of Office Depot defended her company’s refusal to make copies of the prayer, stating that company policy forbids “the copying of any type of material that advocates any form of racial or religious discrimination or the persecution of certain groups of people.”

“It also prohibits copying any type of copyrighted material,” she added. “The flier contained material that advocates the persecution of people who support abortion rights.”

[…]

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, Liberals | Tagged , , ,
36 Comments

ASK FATHER: Giving Latin Church children sacraments before the usual ages.

Baptism_Sainte-Chapelle_MNMA_Cl23717 sacramentsFrom a reader…

QUAERITUR:

My husband and I could potentially have our three children (ages 5, 2, and infant) receive their remaining Sacraments of Initiation while on an extended visit with family in a different state. Though Latin Rite, we attended an Ukrainian Catholic Church when we ourselves lived in that state. Before we approach our priest and theirs, we were wondering if there’s any reason why would shouldn’t pursue this option.

Prompting this are a few things:

1) we do not live in a diocese with the restored Rite, and 2) our eldest has special needs and is on his own timetable for the reception of the Sacraments.

By “remaining Sacraments of Initiation” I presume you mean Confirmation and First Holy Communion. Presumably all three children are already baptized. I’m not exactly certain what you mean by the “restored Rite”. Has the diocese in which you live not yet implemented the liturgical books promulgated after the Council? Or do you consider the allowance for the use of the liturgical books in force in 1962 under the provisions of Summorum Pontificum to be the “restored Rite?”  Or (and if I had to bet money, I would guess this is what is meant) do you mean the restored order of the sacraments, where Confirmation is put before First Holy Communion and is administered at about the age of reason?

While all Catholic Churches are in full communion with each other, and sacramental sharing is ordinarily acceptable, there is a lot to be said for living the traditions and practices of one’s own Church.

We Latins respect the traditions of the Eastern Churches, but we also respect our own traditions and practices.  (This is one reason why I think that our Latin churches should look like our Latin churches and not be made over as quasi Eastern churches.)

To introduce a Latin child to reception of the Holy Eucharist before the age of reason is not in keeping with our venerable tradition and practice. Canon 913 speaks of administering the Blessed Sacrament to children once they have sufficient knowledge. This ties into can. 97, wherein the age of reason is presumed to be 7.

While our Eastern brothers administer this sacrament to infants, that is not our Latin tradition. Again, we respect their tradition, but we also respect our own.

It is also to be asked: Under normal circumstances, what benefit is there in having one’s children receive the sacraments apart from the other children of their own parish?

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Both Lungs, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged , , , ,
42 Comments

UPDATE: Pope Francis in a “town hall” TV broadcast on ABC

Check out the update I added about the MSM coverage of the Pope’s great moment on abortion in ABC’s otherwise cringeworthy “townhall”.  Below.

____ ORIGINAL Published on: Sep 5, 2015

While I am confused about why ABC (and not other networks or all networks) was given a special privilege by the Pope’s handlers for a special TV “town hall” event, there was a good moment.

It was packaged by the network with teasers as if it were reality TV.  I haven’t watched regular network TV (with its commercials) for quite a while, but wow … just… wow.  I feel a little dumber now.

Anyway, in this “town hall” we saw the human condition on display as it might be anywhere.  This was supposed to be a lead up to Pope Francis visit to these USA. Most of what happened was not especially important for expressing something about these USA, even the illegal immigrant part…. sorry… ABC called them undocumented. 

However… there was a golden moment.

He congratulated a young single mother who made the choice for life for her unborn daughters.  He said that she could have killed them but she respected the life in her womb and he thanks and congratulated her for making that choice… in sincere and strong words and emotion.

Emotion ruled the day, it had a liberal agenda, and it was not a little manipulative, but that’s all we can expect in the MSM now.  They took the usual tack that this is the first Pope who has ever smiled… ever said a kind word… ever kissed a baby.. that he’s the most wonderfullest fluffiest Pope ehvur!  Gosh, he’s so humble.  And thing with the nun.. meh.  God bless her for her work.  The timing… meh.

But that one moment… was gold.

I can endure a lot of for a moment like that which ABC was pretty much forced to broadcast.

On another network last night, Fox, there was, simultaneously their expose about Planned Parenthood.

It was a good day for babies on American TV.

Full video HERE  for the golden moment, tune in at about 19:00 following, if nothing else.

I’m interested in your reactions to the ABC thing.  I haven’t seen the Planned Parenthood thing on Fox yet.

UPDATE 10 Sept:

Breitbart has this:

TIME MAGAZINE CENSORS POPE’S MESSAGE ON ABORTION

In Pope Francis’ historic “virtual town hall” organized by ABC News last week, he used such blunt language to describe abortion as killing that Time magazine has felt the need to tone it down by deleting the offensive expressions.

In speaking with a young single mother of two, Rosemary Farfan, Pope Francis spontaneously congratulated her for not aborting her children.

After listening to her testimony, Pope Francis thanked her and told her he knows “it’s not easy” to be a single mother.

I know that people can sometimes look askance at you. But I’ll tell you one thing. You’re a brave woman because you were capable of bringing these two daughters into the world. You could have killed them inside your womb and you respected life, you respected the life you were carrying inside you and God will reward you for that and He does reward for you for that. Don’t be ashamed. Hold your head high. ‘I didn’t kill my daughters. I brought them into the world.’ I congratulate you.

The Pope’s references to “killing” seem to have been too much for Time, which published an article purporting to convey Francis’ “Top 5 Messages for Americans.”

Time said that the Pope’s second message is that “single mothers should never be ashamed.”

Its transcription of the Pope’s words to Rosemary Farfan, however, censored out some of the Pope’s most significant statements:

I know that people can sometimes look askance at you. You’re a brave woman because you’re capable of bringing these two daughters into the world. You respected the life you were carrying inside you and God is going to reward you for that and he does reward for you for that. Don’t be ashamed. I congratulate you.

Time put the above paragraph in quotation marks as if it were the entire text of the Pope’s statement. In reality, as a quick comparison with the Pope’s actual words shows, it elided Francis’ two references to killing as if he had never said them.

Of course, Time magazine wasn’t alone. The New York Times, the Washington Post, the LA Times, and USA Today didn’t bother reporting on the Pope’s references to abortion at all, since a strong pro-life message doesn’t fit within their narrative of what they want this Pope to be. But at least they didn’t resort to actually fudging Francis’ words.

If this is a foretaste of how the mainstream media will be reporting on the Pope’s upcoming visit to the United States, one can expect a very selective message, manipulated to conform to politically correct canons.

Posted in Francis | Tagged ,
33 Comments

“Is there anything still worth fighting for?”

I don’t watch a lot of TV, and when I do it is usually news or news commentary stuff on cable, and then usually Fox, and even then I am more often than not multitasking.

However, from time to time (if the volume isn’t turned down) I catch a strain of music that penetrates through the logorrhea and turn to look at what is going on. Not rarely it happens that what caught my ear was the music of an NRA commercial.

Here is a sample.

I can’t help but make a connection with what is also going on within the Church.

We have to rise up and fight now for our Catholic identity and doctrine, wielding especially the spiritual weapons of prayer and fasting.

BTW… there is also a spot with Milwaukee Sheriff David Clarke about Law Enforcement Officers which is worth your time.  As a matter of fact, quite a few of those commercials are pretty darn compelling.  Try one on media dishonesty which strikes home (apply as well to the catholic media).

Now… watch the libs melt down.

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, New Evangelization, Si vis pacem para bellum!, Synod, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
3 Comments