At the core of the rot

As a preamble, today at Crisis, two new pieces touch the same issue: virtues that govern what is owed to God and what is owed to man. These virtues are closely related. Justice governs what is due to another human person. Religion governs what is due to Divine Persons.

Hence, at Crisis there is a piece by Eric Sammons, “When Bishops Lose Their Authority“. He tackles what we are faced by when bishops (L’affaire McCarrick) screw up badly: we might not owe the screw-up respect but we owe respect for his divinely constituted office. His office comes from God and that divinely constituted element is governed by the virtue of religion.

Sammons goes on to paint a picture of a kind of Protestant revolt going on in the Church again today:

The vast numbers of Catholics who have stopped practicing the faith in recent decades make the Reformation look like a warm-up act. All those fleeing Catholics didn’t leave simply because many bishops failed to live up to their office, but if nothing else, these bishops essentially put a doorstop in place to keep the exit doors open.

So what can Catholics who want to remain in the Church do? Should we mentally reject the authority of bishops, yet attend Mass and receive the sacraments while keeping our distance from the hierarchy? I don’t think that’s the answer, for that way eventually leads to schism.

He goes on to argue:

Ultimately, our goal is to replace the men, not the office. […] One practical way to do this is via the pocketbook.

I made the financial argument yesterday as an alternative to building gallows. HERE

Tracking back to the other article in Crisis, Joseh G. Trabbic of Ave Maria University writes about “Political Implications of Religion as a Moral Virtue“.  I know a bit about this, from my work on Ambrose, Augustine and the Civil Virtues. Trabbic get’s into the philosophy, engaging with Aristotle in particular.   He eventually shows the deep problems with social liberalism.  It’s a good read.

It is interesting that Crisis has two pieces today that deal with the virtue of religion. They are timely.

We owe everything to God.  Hence, all of our decisions and acts and words eventually have to take God into account.  He is our origin and our goal, our very reason for being.  We owe God everything.  The primary way by which, collectively, we give to God what is His due is through our sacred liturgical worship.  Religio and cultus, cult, worship are nearly intgerchangable when it come to our collective duty to God, whereas devotio might better characterize how we live religion as individuals.

It seems to me that everything bad that we see going on in the Church today comes back to the denigration of our sacred liturgical worship and the loss of true devotion.   Are these the sole causes?  No, but they are at the core of the rot.

My call for a revitalization of our sacred liturgical worship and the recovery of solid, old fashioned devotions is an existential issue.

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged , ,
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ACTION ITEM! Spiritual Bouquet for Bp. Morlino

On 1 August, His Excellency Most Reverend Robert C. Morlino, the Extraordinary Ordinary, will mark the 15th anniversary of his installation as the 4th Bishop of Madison.

The TMSM has begun to gather a Spiritual Bouquet for His Excellency, especially in gratitude for what he has done to promote beautiful, sacred liturgical worship of God.

A Spiritual Bouquet is an offering of prayer and/or sacrifice for the benefit of a soul of another person.

Bp. Morlino has worked marvels in the Diocese of Madison in fostering vocations to the priesthood, promoting reverence for the Blessed Sacrament, offering faithful moral preaching, and advancing sacred liturgical worship.  In the later he has been exemplary.

We have an online form that you can use to pledge your own spiritual offerings for Bp. Morlino’s benefit.

Please fill out by Wednesday 29 July to be included, though prayers are welcome after this date of course.

>>HERE<<

 

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D. Madison – 29 July – Missa Cantata in the DOMINICAN Rite

I am pleased to inform the readership that in Madison, WI, at the parish staffed by the Order of Preachers, there will be a Sung Mass in the Dominican Rite.

On Sunday 29 July at Blessed Sacrament Parish, Fr. James Dominic Rooney, OP, will hold a Q&A session at 2PM followed by the Mass at 3PM followed by a reception.

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, "How To..." - Practical Notes, Just Too Cool, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged ,
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Concerning overly sweet cookies

I start with a photo of cookies.

They weren’t very good cookies; waaaay too sweet.  I don’t have much of a sweet tooth.  In general the sweet and, in other matters, the sentimental aren’t my first choice.  Never have been.  As I get older, and I won’t commit to this, I may be developing the tiniest mawkish corner in my beady black heart, which in general has been as cold as a frog on a mountain.  After all, I’m conservative, decidedly not a democrat, and I want traditional Latin liturgy back.

This morning, I awoke with a terrible start, as I did yesterday as well.

I was in one of those odd close-to-waking dream states.  Things were going along as normal: we were being invaded by the Chinese.   You know, the usual dystopian scenario.   Then, as I was driving in the dream, a little boy ran into view from the left, looking the other direction, directly in front of my car.   That’s when I literally jolted awake.

A couple days back, I went to a local rectory to meet with a few priests for lunch.  One of them was just ordained, a few weeks ago.  He told us that he had just had a funeral for a 5 year old boy who had been killed by a simply dreadful car neighborhood accident.  As it turns out, this little boy had gained the attention of the local police chief, a devout Catholic.  At an annual gathering of cops and firefighters, as most of the kids climbed over the big rigs, one little 5 year old boy was in a police uniform: he wanted to be a cop, which tugged at the chief’s heartstring a bit.  Here’s are a couple of photos, for the sake of your heartstrings.

As it turns out, this was the same little guy who was killed in the horrid accident, a neighbor backing up his car.

The boy’s parents wrote a note to poor driver, saying that he shouldn’t let his life be ruined by what happened.

The police department provided their full honor guard at the funeral.

What an intersection of experiences of the human condition.

At five, I assume that he hadn’t yet made his first confession and received the Eucharist, but he was baptized, thanks be to God.  He was already oriented to the good, true and beautiful in service to others, however childlike and idealized it may have been at his age.  There three types of people in the main: sheep, wolves and sheepdogs.  I think I know which he was.

It is probable that a combination of factors let this particular experience get under my skin.  I remember being five, clearly.  I ran a lot.  I grew up surrounded by cops.  As a priest, I’ve dealt with people who’ve lost children in terrible circumstances, one similar to this but in some respects more… frantic.

Learning about the origin of that cookie and hearing that this brand spankin’ new priest had to handle that funeral, and knowing that the cops turned out … got to me.  As I now write, it gets to me.

Law enforcement and the sacraments of the Church both exist because of Original Sin.

In the tangle of our minds and with the help of others, the teaching of the Church and the light of grace, we have to deal with the vicissitudes and sorrows of this life, which “come not single spies, but in battalions.”

A lesson to take from all of this might be the following.

As alluring as the things of this world are, and as wonderful as these other images of God in our lives are, we must carefully guard the throne of our heart first and foremost for God alone.  With God on that throne, we can love others in the right way, make any sacrifices that are needed, and even bear the losses that would otherwise break us to pieces.  In this earthly life, in this vale of tears, all created things, including the people in our lives, can be lost in the blink of any eye.  God alone is lasting and unwavering and sure.  Clinging to Him will bring us to eternal reunion with those whom we have lost in this life, please God.

The cookie that was too sweet was from the boy’s funeral luncheon.

Posted in Cri de Coeur, Four Last Things |
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Rage over Card. McCarrick and Total War

I had this note from a priestly reader:

Thank you for drawing attention to the Mme Defarge rhetoric of the Left (Catholic and otherwise) and for pointing out the danger of letting the Left provoke us also into a lynch mob mentality on our side. Remember St. Thomas More’s warning against those who would sweep away all law and due process to destroy the wicked wholesale! Everyone needs to take a breath and calm down about the McCarrick business.

Yes, those rumors have been around a long time; but without evidence or reliable testimony, it would have been detraction (and legally slander or libel) to destroy his reputation by proclaiming these things as certain. It’s different now that there is evidence; that was not so before. [I think there was evidence, it’s just that those who had it didn’t want to risk themselves by going public with it.] Many of those bishops and clergy who are now bitterly denounced by Right and Left as complicit really could not act upon mere rumors or suspicions. As with individual offenders, each case needs to be considered separately and according to evidence. We should not resort to collective vengeance, without regard for personal culpability. Beware of a lynch mob mentality: [NB]unsubstantiated accusations can be used to attack great priests like Fr Frank Phillips. The casualties of “total war” will be on both sides. It’s starting to sound like the French Revolution or the lead-up to the Spanish Civil War. [Which scares me.  It’s one of the reasons why I’ve taken up this issue.]

Orthodox and conservative and traditional Catholics need to remember:

one of the most destructive errors of the Left that it allows the idea of institutional/structural/collective sin to obscure personal sin and redemption. But don’t we hold out the possibility of redemption also for Cardinal McCarrick though he, of course, has to answer for his actions? If a bishop needs to resign or be punished, should not the way be open for hope and redemption even at the end of that road?

Didn’t Cardinal George warn against a kind of secularized Calvinism that declares that some are “totally depraved” and beyond redemption?  [Indeed he did.  He also made the observations that Americans are simultaneously hedonistic and puritanical.  He was on the right track with his readings of polarization.]

The Church needs to follow canon law and due process and not resort to media lynchings and extra-legal penalties. It’s the mentality of lawlessness that has got us in this mess in the first place. I am alarmed when a perceptive commentator like Hillary White begins to talk of “do-it-yourself gallows” for complicit bishops.

People are really upset.  Hillary White has the right to be upset.  However, “DIY gallows” should be out of bounds.  I dragged the Tricoteuse of the catholic Left, Madame Wile. E. Defarge over the rhetorical coals for his image of the guillotine for those with whom he disagrees.  I don’t think that “DIY gallows” is any better.  When we start talking – publicly – about enemies up against the wall, then we’ve started to visualize doing such things.

We don’t have to play bean-bag with each other, but some images are over the line.

Hillary, who is really angry, is probably trying to cause some bishops to feel some pain and fear with the gallows image.

John Zmirak at Stream has a suggestion that might in fact scare bishops a lot more than gibbets.  Let’s see what he has to say.

How Can Catholics Fight Back? With the Power of the Purse.

I once tried to explain the problems faced by faithful Catholics to my good friend Eric Metaxas. [author of good books on Bonhoeffer and Wilberforce US HERE – UK HERE] “Imagine you felt your salvation depended on staying inside a Church with apostolic doctrines, which is run by liberal Protestants.”  [Yeah.]

We Catholics have faced some version of that for most of my lifetime. In theory, the bishop is meant as the heir of the apostles to be the main teacher of doctrine. And a model of holiness.

[…]

No surprise that bishops find allies in pro-choice labor unions.  [Ouch!] And in money-sluicing Democrats who promise to keep the Church’s “charities” on life-support as government contractors. Remember when one brave bishop, Thomas Paprocki, ordered his local Catholic U.S. senator, Dick Durbin, to stop receiving Communion? That was after Durbin voted to keep on killing pain-capable, almost viable unborn babies. The very next week, the cardinal in Chicago, Blaise Cupich, did a Skype call thanking Durbin for his help on immigration. Just to make sure that Durbin suffered no political damage. And to slap Paprocki publicly in the face.

[…]

The only reason these Mainline liberal Protestants serving as Catholic bishops aren’t facing empty churches like their Episcopalian colleagues? That would be immigration. Some 40% of native born Catholics leave the Church. But Catholic numbers stay flat, instead of declining, thanks to Latin American immigration. One in four Catholic adults in the U.S. was born in another country. When many bishops tell us that immigration is the “future of the church,” they never say why. It’s because they’ve given up on the rest of us — the people who grew up here in their churches. Whose ancestors built the parishes they wreckovate. Who are still paying their bills with our donations[I just had to clench my hands a bit in anger.]

Many of those bishops have virtually ceased to preach, teach, or evangelize the faith. They’ve decided to simply import people, who (wouldn’t you know!) just happen to join up en masse as liberal Democrats. So the Democrats are the allies. Nasty, “harsh” Republicans (so what if they’re pro-life and pro-marriage?) want to shut down the blood transfusion. Then everyone would see just how ghastly sick the patient really is.

[…]

Lay Catholics have very little power to influence our pastors. Or our bishops. We used to wait for the papacy to fix things. To send letters to Rome, in the hope that the Vatican would rein in local abuses. We imagined that faithful orders and solid dioceses would simply outproduce the dying liberal religious orders and lavender seminaries. [That’s the Biological Solution.  Recently someone else said that the Biological Solution wasn’t working.  It is still working, but it is working on all of us. Hence, our side has to work harder.  But here we go with the practical suggestion from Zmirak.]

[…]

One leverage, other than prayer, which faithful laymen have is financial. As much as they draw from the taxpayer, the bishops’ main source of income is Sunday collections. (They get 8%, every week, from every parish.)

How much will these bishops get? That is in our hands. Quite literally, in the checkbooks we hold. And there are things we can do. On a grand scale, I’d like to see faithful Catholics of means set up formal escrow accounts. (For the national initiative, we could lightheartedly take the name “St. Escrow’s.”) Those accounts will receive the monies those Catholics would otherwise have given to their bishops. Annually, a board of faithful laymen will review each bishops’ decisions, and pay him what he deserves.

For ordinary Catholics? Well, a very faithful priest in an appallingly liberal diocese once offered this suggestion. If you have a good pastor and parish, but don’t want to fund your bishops’ open-borders or big government activism — or his gay-dominated seminary — do this: Each week or month write your pastor a personal check.Make it out to him, not the parish. He can do it with it what he wills, and you’ll trust him to spend it wisely. The bishop’s not entitled by any law, canon or civil, to one red cent.

[…]

According to the Precepts of the Church, we have an obligation to support the Church materially.  How we do that is not spelled out.  The obligation is a serious one, however.

I think gallows rhetoric is over the top.  I also think it is less effective than checkbook rhetoric.  You have to consider your audience.  Whom are you really trying to persuade?  And to do … what exactly?   After the venting is done, and you feel a little better, what is it that you truly want to accomplish?

The end, the point or purpose, of rhetoric is to discover the best means to persuade, to move your listeners to do something, to feel something, to learn and be edified.  First of all, you have to know clearly what you want to accomplish.   Aristotle in his writings on rhetoric talks about the personal character of the speaker: we have to know ourselves. He says you have to know your audience.  Then you have to choose the topics, arguments, words and ornamentation of language which will bring the audience to the goal you have determined.

What is it that we want to accomplish?

Do we just want to hurt or ruin or is it something else?

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , , ,
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Marriage, unrealistic ideals and Paul VI’s advice

Some committed Catholics today, like Donatists, think that one strike is the only and permanent strike, without possibility of conversion, penance and return to the path of holiness.

Some others today, on the other hand, claim that the Church – for example in the writings of the 19th Ecumenical Council – laid down ideals for people to live. But because they are ideals, and not practical and rooted in “lived experience”, we shouldn’t insist on them. After all, ideals are, well, ideal and not reality. Right?

Speaking of Humanae vitae, we find in section 25, Paul VI’s words to Catholic married couples who fall into sin.  Let’s read it:

For this reason husbands and wives should take up the burden [aka “ideal”] appointed to them, willingly, in the strength of faith and of that hope which “does not disappoint us, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.  [aka “grace”] Then let them implore the help of God with unremitting prayer and, most of all, let them draw grace and charity from that unfailing fount which is the Eucharist. If, however, sin still exercises its hold over them, they are not to lose heart. Rather must they, humble and persevering, have recourse to the mercy of God, abundantly bestowed in the Sacrament of Penance. [GO TO CONFESSION!] In this way, for sure, they will be able to reach that perfection of married life [aka “ideal”] which the Apostle sets out in these words: “Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the Church…  Even so husbands should love their wives as their own bodies. He who loves his wife loves himself. For no man ever hates his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it, as Christ does the Church… This is a great mystery, and I mean in reference to Christ and the Church; however, let each one of you love his wife as himself, and let the wife see that she respects her husband.”

We have ideals to live.  If we fall from the ideal, we must get up, turn, and return to the Father’s house through the door of the confessional.  Then, as Paul says, we can have the strengthening nourishment of the Eucharist, and only then.

Paul’s words are realistic and, because they are the TRUTH, they are comforting.   They reflect authentic mercy.  They do not condemn.  They correct and teach.

 

Posted in GO TO CONFESSION, Hard-Identity Catholicism, One Man & One Woman | Tagged ,
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We should tread carefully.

Comment moderation is ON.

These days the gulfs that already yawn between different parties in the secular world as well as within the Church are becoming wider still.

If there is any sort of controversy or disagreement, someone demands that someone else’s head be lopped off. A good example of this came yesterday from the shrill needle of the tricoteuse of the catholic Left, MSW, who shrieked for the elimination of Fr. Dwight Longenecker from ministry.  What was Longenecker’s crime? In a tweet he made a connection between the homosexualist agenda and clerical sexual abuse. Whether it is Chad Pecknold or Fr. Longenecker, for Madame Defarge there is only one response.

I hope that the Catholic Right doesn’t fall into the soul-annihilating trap of such shrill and bloody tactics.

More and more I have a sense of menace surrounding all that is good, true and beautiful in the Church.

The Enemy is at work.

It is also as if we have, in secular life and ecclesial life, almost reached the tipping point.

It is hard to explain what I mean. By way of a historical example, in post-war Italy, when Christian Democrats were struggling with Communists for power, the Communist philosopher Antonio Gramsci recommended to his comrades that they let the CD’s take parliament.  The Commies would focus on the schools, with the result that, in a few decades, people would ask the Communists to take everything over.  It’s a long and patient game of creeping incrementalism, cooking frogs in pots, etc.

In the secular world, decades and decades of control of academia by leftists and liberals have finally sufficiently reduced the percentage of the population who think, rather than merely emote, or who know history, rather than only what was on their Snapchat screen a moment ago, or … well, you know what I mean.  It feels as if they are just about ready to make their definitive moves to seize greater control. You can find hints of this in what is going on in US public discourse – if it can be dignified with the term – from the Democrats. They have swerved sharply to the Left and their responses are, in effect, lots of shouting and screaming and accusing and demanding.  They offer even more free stuff and, if I am right about the lowered percentage of the population who can think, they might just succeed with their seductions in the not too distant future.

If you want to know what that world would look like, try the amusingly scary short novels of Kurt Schlichter.

The secular Left is becoming a self-righteous, virtue-signalling mob.  If they stay in this course, there will be violence in the streets.  Sorry.. even more violence in the streets.

These days we have been treated to more head-hunt howling in the Church.  Card. McCarrick’s misdeeds, and the de facto cover up by the powers that be, have sparked rage and calls for action.

My concern is that the calls for action will drive a whole other group of people into a mob, also driven by self-righteousness and virtue-signalling.

By this post, I in no way suggest that no one should be called to account for misdeeds.  I do, however, see a trend in the way people deal with each other in conflict: they want their opponents, or the objects of their disappointment or opprobrium not just to be called to account, but to be ruined.   They want the opposition not to be persuaded, but to be crushed.  Not converted, but obliterated.

I thank God every day that I belong to a Church which was established for sinners, and not for the perfect.   Even though I am confident that God is forgiving, and the the Sacrament of Penance has its promised effects, with each passing year I feel more heavily the burden of the sins I have committed and confessed.  I trust in God’s mercy, if not that of my neighbor.   I would hope for compassion from my neighbor, but I don’t realistically expect it… anymore.  Not today.  Not in the present environment.

We should tread carefully.  I don’t doubt that there will soon be more violence in rhetoric and even physical violence in the streets.  I don’t doubt that past misdeeds and also completely false and invented accusations will become the modus operandi of the Left.

I can’t shake the feeling that this beast is coming, and it is slouching just around the corner.  Horrors have happened in history.  With every other kind of disaster, man made or natural, when we are comfortable we think that bad stuff happens to other people, in other places, not to us.   Until it does.

People were behind the Reign of Terror, the Russian Revolution, the rise of Nazism, the Cultural Revolution, the Khmer Rouge Killing Fields, the Rwandan Genocide, Boko Haram and Islamic terrorism.  People are behind slavery, torture, human trafficking, drug culture, big-business abortion.

We are people too.  If you think bad things can’t happen where you are, just watch people in a grocery store before the hurricane hits or at the department store the day after Thanksgiving.  Just watch a four-way stop intersection for a while if you want proof of actual sin, or into the eyes of a testing 2 year old for proof of Original Sin.

Let us not close ourselves off to compassion to each other.  Also, a serious individual examination of conscience is needed.  Then…

GO TO CONFESSION!

 

Posted in GO TO CONFESSION, The Campus Telephone Pole, The future and our choices |
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PODCAzT 163: 25 July 2018 – 50th anniversary of promulgation of ‘Humanae vitae’

Here is an audio offering in which I read the post, here-under. Hopefully this will allow more people to absorb a few of my poor thoughts on this important anniversary. Let’s start with a taste of the text…  there’s some mood setting music along the way, just to get the flavor of the times.

__________

1. Humanae vitae tradendae munus gravissimum, ex quo coniuges liberam et consciam Deo Creatori tribuunt operam, magnis semper ipsos affecit gaudiis, quae tamen aliquando non paucae difficultates et angustiae sunt secutae.

Quod munus sustinere si omni tempore coniugum conscientiae arduas facessivit quaestiones, at recens humanae societatis cursus eiusmodi mutationes invexit, ut novae quaestiones sint exortae, quas Ecclesiae ignorare non liceat, utpote quae cum rebus conectantur, tantopere ad hominum vitam et felicitatem pertinentibus.

The transmission of human life is a most serious role in which married people collaborate freely and responsibly with God the Creator. It has always been a source of great joy to them, even though it sometimes entails many difficulties and hardships.

The fulfillment of this duty has always posed problems to the conscience of married people, but the recent course of human society and the concomitant changes have provoked new questions. The Church cannot ignore these questions, for they concern matters intimately connected with the life and happiness of human beings.

Thusly, does Paul VI begin to teach in Humanae vitae.

As we close in on the 40th anniversary of the death of Pope Paul VI, 8 August 1978, we observe today, 25 July, the 50th anniversary of Paul’s seventh and last, his boldest and most controversial, encyclical Humanae vitae.

The Devil is at work in attacks on Humanae vitae. Be wary. When you read or hear someone undermining Humanae vitae you have encountered an agent of Hell. Be vigilant. The Enemy, like a roaring lion, is roaming about seeking whom he may devour. Resist the attacks of Hell, strong in our sure Faith. For those of you who struggle with the Church’s teaching, remember that through suffering you can come to glory, the glory to which Christ has called us. In your fidelity, Christ will strengthen you and ready you for heaven.

Some of you younger readers might not have the background on Humanae vitae even though you know that in this encyclical, Paul VI affirmed the Church’s teaching about artificial contraception for the purposes of avoiding (ending?) pregancy.  Remember that some contraceptives are really abortifacients.

In 1963 John XXIII assembled a commission to study the question of artificial contraception in the light of modern times, developments, and questions. Oral contraceptives (abortifacients?) appeared in 1960. He did not want the issue discussed at Vatican II, even though the somewhat overly optimistic and rather too anthropocentric Gaudium et spes included a section on marriage. John died in 1963 and Paul was elected. He expanded the commission to 72, including physicians, women, bishops, cardinals, theologians. In 1966 the commission issued a majority report (64 of 69 voting members) and a minority report. The majority suggested to Paul that artificial birth control is NOT intrinsically evil and that couples could make their own decisions about using it. The minority included Americans, a Jesuit, Fr John Ford, and lay theologian Germain Grisez. Their report read in part:

If contraception were declared not intrinsically evil, in honesty it would have to be acknowledged that the Holy Spirit in 1930, in 1951 and 1958, assisted Protestant churches, and that for half a century Pius XI, Pius XII and a great part of the Catholic hierarchy did not protect against a very serious error, one most pernicious to souls; for it would thus be suggested that they condemned most imprudently, under the pain of eternal punishment, thousands upon thousands of human acts which are now approved. Indeed, it must be neither denied nor ignored that these acts would be approved for the same fundamental reasons which Protestantism alleged and which they (Catholics) condemned or at least did not recognize. Therefore one must very cautiously inquire whether the change which is proposed would not bring along with it a definitive depreciation of the teaching and the moral direction of the hierarchy of the Church and whether several very grave doubts would not be opened up about the very history of Christianity.

Remember that Anglicans had allowed contraception in 1930 and other Protestant groups permitted it thereafter.

Also note that the reports did not discuss natural family planning.

Moreover, note that that quote from the minority report stressed the fact that a change of teaching in this important matter would erode the entire body of the Church’s teaching and the truth claims of Christianity.  That’s how Hell works, from the serpent in the garden ever after: “Did God really tell you that?”

The majority of the commission wrote also a rebuttal to the minority report. In 1967 the reports and rebuttal were leaked to the press, which unleashed a hurricane of speculation that Paul was going to reverse the Church’s teaching that artificial birth control for avoiding (ending) pregnancy is intrinsically evil. Thus, the leaks – the work surely of some agent of the Devil – fueled an expectation that the Church was going to cave.

Far and wide priests started telling people that they could use artificial contraception. Perhaps some of them were well-meaning. All of them, however, like the serpent, told an objective lie.  But it was, in effect, too late for the truth in that decade of upheaval.  Remember what was going on in the 1960’s.

The Vietnam War was ongoing. Vatican II had closed in 1965, and those who hijacked the Council’s interpretation were spreading lies about its meaning and implications. The Jerusalem Bible was published in English. The Consilium, in the name of the Council, had wrecked havoc with our liturgical worship, thus cementing in people’s minds the impression that if Mass could change, anything could change, including any moral teaching. In 1966 in San Francisco, the Church of Satan was founded. The Index was abolished. In 1967, Vietnam protests are increasing. In the UK homosexuality is decriminalized. The Naked Ape is published. The Cambodian Civil war starts up. The “Be In” takes place in San Francisco’s Golden State Park, which heralds in the so-called “Summer of Love”. Pope Paul issued Populorum progressio. The Beatles released Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Heart’s Club Band. Later in the 1967 they produce Magical Mystery Tour. The Six Days War takes place. Thurgood Marshall is appointed to the Supreme Court. Karol Wojtyla is made Cardinal. So-called “race riots” take place, for example in my home city of Minneapolis. I got personal reports on that from my mother, the first woman on the department. The musical Hair opens on Broadway. Nicolae Ceaucescu becomes dictator of Romania. Gabriel García Márquez’s novel One Hundred Years of Solitude is published. In 1968… oh my 1968 – all hell breaks loose. This is a year marked by protest for good and for evil. The Prague Spring starts. North Korea seizes the Pueblo and in Vietnam the Tet Offensive starts. The movies 2001 and Planet of the Apes and Rosemary’s Baby come out. Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy are assassinated. And, on 25 July, Paul issues Humanae vitae.

Against this background, Paul rejected the commission’s majority report which had effectively approved contraception. Paul began work on an encyclical with the help especially of the Pontifical Theologian, Mario Luigi Ciappi, OP, later a cardinal. It is said that Paul wanted Archbp. Karol Wojtyla to participate, but the Communists wouldn’t left him leave Poland. Hence, Wojtyla’s approach found in his important 1960 Love and Responsibility was not reflected in the encyclical. UPDATE: [Perhaps that needs to be revised in light of what I found today, after making the podcast, at LifeSite. HERE ““These three essential facts,” reported by Marengo, “contradict his interpretation that Wojtyla had little influence on the preparation of the encyclical,” Melina said.” ]

The encyclical upheld the Church’s traditional teaching. The liberal world – inside and outside of the Church – is still going bananas because of Paul’s bold teaching.

There was a war of open dissent on Paul’s teaching. Theologians and even bishops abandoned Paul.

Resistance to Paul’s encyclical was dramatic and organized in both the secular and ecclesial worlds. It has continued ever since to this day. These days you usually hear from the Enemy’s agents that what the Church taught in Paul’s encyclical is not binding because it has not been “received”. The idea being that if the majority of people don’t want to accept a teaching, then it isn’t really an official teaching.   They invoke the sensus fidelium, or sense of the faithful against the teaching on contraception, saying that since so many Catholics use contraception, and since the Church has to repeatedly issue the teaching, then it isn’t really a teaching or it is a teaching that can be changed. The problem with that argument is that the key to understanding the sensus fidelium is that you have to be fidelis, faithful, to have it.   The mere fact of being baptized Catholic doesn’t mean you have a Catholic sense of things.  Were one to inquire among the truly faithful, instead of simply polling those who are nominally Catholic, one would obtain a different result.

In any event, in 2017 Pope Francis allowed some scholars to look into the archives of the drafts, etc., that produced Humanae vitae, to reconstruct how it was eventually produced. Their work will be instrumentalized by dissenters to undermine the encyclical’s authority rather than support it. They will try to deconstruct the teaching, disassociate it from Paul’s own thought by showing that the teachings were someone else’s thought. That would be specious, of course. If a Pope puts his signature on a document it becomes his document, in every word. Libs should keep in mind that if they can do that to Humanae vitae, then that same process can be worked upon the documents which they support. Thus, the entire body of the Church’s teachings on faith and morals would be undermined, attacking the very fabric of the Church herself.

Today is the 50th anniversary of promulgation of Humanae vitae.

To my mind, Paul’s decision to reject the majority report and to promulgate Humanae vitae was an example of the intervention of the Holy Spirit. Paul was in many respects less than strong when it came to matters of the world’s influence on the Church. To do such a thing suggests that something more, something uncharacteristic, something supernatural was at work in Paul. Consider that Sr. Lucy, the last of the seers of Fatima, wrote to Card. Caffarra that ‘The final battle between the Lord and the kingdom of Satan will be about marriage and the family.’ Indeed, as we examine all the problems that beset us today, ultimately erosion of marriage and the family are at their core.

I’ll repeat what I offered at the beginning.  I am compelled to say that the Devil is at work in attacks on Humanae vitae. Be wary. When you read or hear someone undermining Humanae vitae you have encountered an agent of Hell. Be vigilant. The Enemy, like a roaring lion, is roaming about seeking whom he may devour. Resist the attacks of Hell, strong in our sure Faith. For those of you who struggle with the Church’s teaching, remember that through suffering you can come to glory, the glory to which Christ has called us. In your fidelity, Christ will strengthen you and ready you for heaven.

___


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Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, PODCAzT, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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Film from 1934 Chicago

Here is an interesting bit of video from 1934 in Chicago, dealing with Church stuff.  Toward the end, you see a procession into church and you hear some of the liturgical music.  In other words you get a  sense of how our liturgical situation has truly devolved.

However, there are not only churchy things. There is also a shot or two of a bicycle race, which is appropriate given that today we watched the 16th stage of the Tour. And if, in the 1934, there was also a shot of a demonstration, there was a race disturbing demonstration in the Tour today. Idiots.

Compilation of street scenes in Chicago, Illinois, US during the year 1934. These films were taken with early Movietone sound cameras. Condensed/worked on footage and sound

0:07 – Street shots; crowd outside Union Station (May 8)
1:45 – Demonstration for unemployment relief (Nov 24)
5:21 – Bicycle races (Oct 21)
7:02 – Crowded group awaiting news (Aug 27)
9:43 – Payout for Chicago teachers (Aug 27)
10:58 – Parade and speeches at the opening of new post office (Sep 28)
13:13 – Arrivals at Cardinal Mundelein’s residence (Nov 20)
16:12 – Procession and crowds gathered outside church service (Nov 20)

Posted in Just Too Cool, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged
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What Catholics do when the Church’s Body is being torn apart

We live in confusing times.  Confusion racks the Church, like horses pulling limb in four directions.  Confused faithful even wonder about the indefectibility of the Church or their continued membership. Confusion like this is a sign of the Devil’s work.

Do not be afraid.  Do not lose heart.  Do not give up.

For a while now, I have been telling people in person and on this blog that when something confusing comes their way, it is time to get out your trustworthy catechisms and even found study groups.  ¡Hagan lío!

Fathers!  Get up into that pulpit with your catechism and, with finger to page, explainto  people what the Church truly teaches.   The pulls of confusion upon the members of the Church are painful. They are also opportunities to get out there teach the truth.

To teach it you must know it.  Nemo dat quod non ‘got’.

Here is a great resource for life and limb in the Church. 

At a website called Whispers Of Restoration there is a page that link you to Traditional Catechisms.  It’s pretty amazing.  You can find them all, from the 1555 Catechism of St Peter Canisius to the 1874 Familiar Explanation of Christian Doctrine to the 1949 classic My Catholic Faith.

This is a terrific resource which you should take time to explore.  Say a prayer for the team that made it.  It is clearly a labor of love.

Meanwhile, here are a few links to good catechisms to purchase.

We have multiple catechisms at our disposal.   Chief among them are these.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church.
US HERE – UK HERE (There are many editions.  Look around.)

The Catechism of the Council of Trent for Parish Priests.
US HERE – UK HERE (There are many editions.  Look around.)

Also, the Baltimore Catechism, which has different volumes for different ages (US HERE – UK HERE).  It’s so useful, in its Q&A format.

And the Catechism of Pius X is also great.  (US HERE – UK HERE).  There are many good resources available.

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, "How To..." - Practical Notes, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Our Catholic Identity, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged
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