“The solution is staring the bishops in the face”

The pastor of the parish where I came into the Church was downright disgusted with the Archdiocese’s approach to vocations and the priest shortage crisis that would follow. He used to compare the geniuses of the vocations office et al. to those who during a potato famine sat around talking about how they were going to die from starvation rather than planting other crops and going fishing.

Today I read in the newest number of the Catholic Herald an article about a way to save the Catholic Church in England.

The subtitle:

The solution is staring the bishops in the face

Indeed it is.

The writer presents some cold facts and then gets to it.  Let’s jump in media res with my emphases:

[…]

Without denying that church closures are often inevitable, they are not always the only solution to too many churches. Indeed, several dioceses in north-west England are quietly pioneering another model, of which other “church rich, but priest-and-parishioner poor” bishops might well take heed.

The basic model is simple: lift a surplus-to-requirements church out of the normal parish system and give it to a niche group that can do something distinctive with it. Some of the original parishioners will stay and adjust (and be quite happy to do so); others will go off to provide a welcome boost to the numbers of nearby parishes. By allowing this group to spread its wings, and do something distinctive, it can then attract like-minded people from the surrounding area. Perhaps in any one parish there might be only two, or three, or five people for whom this is “their thing”, but over a wide area – especially in a large town or city – those few soon add up.

After all, most people already drive to church and a significant number of Mass-goers frequent a church that is not, strictly speaking, their own. This happens most obviously in places like London (how many of those attending the Oratory do you suppose actually live within its parochial boundaries?). But it is a perfectly common practice throughout the whole country.

Take my own home town of Preston, in the Diocese of Lancaster. Three grand old churches have recently been given over to the traditionalist Institute for Christ the King (St Walburge’s and English Martyrs) and the Syro-Malabar Church (St Ignatius, or rather the Cathedral of St Alphonsa as it is now). While these three are only a mile apart, there are more than a dozen other Catholic churches within a three-mile radius. So there’s no shortage of options for these churches’ original worshippers, looking for what they’re liturgically used to. I have visited St Walburge’s on a number of occasions, and it is genuinely thriving. In fact, they’re now setting up a school. I’ve also been to the Archdiocese of Liverpool’s own experiment in this area: St Mary’s, Warrington, entrusted to another traditionalist order, the FSSP. It too is doing just champion, as we say in Lancashire.

This basic model is, I’ll wager, worth exploring further, and with other groups. If it can work in Preston with both Extraordinary Form (EF) devotees and Keralan-diaspora Syro-Malabars, with whom else might it work? (As a curious side note, while I’ve seen the idea of EF communities criticised for being cliquey and divisive, I’ve never heard the same allegations against dedicated churches for Eastern Catholic groups.)

[…]

He goes on to talk about the possibility of reviving ethnic, personal parishes as well as the Ordinariate.

It is staring bishops in the face.  I think there are some bishops who would burn the diocese to the ground and sew the land with salt before they would let a parish go entirely Extraordinary Form.

So, let’s start planning how to starve together rather than growing crops and going fishing.

Reason #10 for Summorum Pontificum.

 

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, "How To..." - Practical Notes, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
8 Comments

UPDATED – Wherein faithful canonist Ed Peters guts papolatrous dilettante Stephen Walford

We’ve seen Stephan Walford before. HERE

He is, in essence, papolatrous.  He’s also pretty nasty, when it comes right down to it.  He blasts away at La Stampa against anyone who dares to have quizzical thoughts about Amoris laetitia.

Canonist Ed Peters looks at Walford’s comments on canon law. It’s kinda gory… and fun. I remember one crisp November day sitting on a bench in Central Park and eating a sandwich from Pastrami Queen while up in a tree a large hawk of some sort ripped the guts out of a squirrel. HERE (for Peters’ article, not the squirrel thing). Nearby a dad told his kids that birds didn’t go to the store for meat in plastic packages. At which point the hawk drew out a nice long bit of intestine, eliciting a vigorous, “EEEEWWWWW!”

But I digress.  Let’s see Ed Peters’ version of hawk and squirrel … with my emphases and comments:

Nooo, Canon 17 does not let us undercut Canon 915 and what it protects

A professional knows the limits of his knowledge. An amateur does not know the limits of his knowledge. A dilettante does not know that there are any limits to his knowledge.

Based on the biographical interview he granted to the Catholic Herald, it seems that Stephen Walford is a professional pianist and an amateur theologian (one’s dearth of formal education in a complex discipline being an obstacle, but not a complete bar, to one’s achieving some knowledge of at least some topics within that discipline), rather as I am a professional canonist and an amateur, I dunno, Latinist or woodwind player. Nothing wrong with being a professional, of course, or an amateur; but dilettantes are something else. If, having watched “Searching for Bobby Fisher” and knowing how the horsey moves, I started opining publicly on the Sicilian [Defense] opening, what would I be? A dilettante. And chess, mind, is a little thing. [There are only 288+ billion possible positions after four moves apiece, btw.]

Now, in regard to canon law, which Walford repeatedly invokes in the course of trashing as “dissenters” anyone who questions the text and certain applications of Amoris laetitia and its progeny, Walford is simply a dilettante unaware that most of his purported explanations of canon law have little or no connection to what the law really means—and sometimes, not even to what it says. And canon law, mind, not to mention the doctrine it works to protect, is a big thing. [Ultimately, law is in the service of the salvation of souls.  A Big Thing™.]

It is difficult to discuss law, of all things, with people who not know what it actually says. For an example of Walford’s misstating what the law (here, Canon 915) says, see his claim that “canon 915 refers to ‘obstinate’ and ‘persevering’ manifest grave sinners.” Of course, John Paul II’s Canon 915—aware that the Church cannot and does not judge souls or determine who is personally culpable for sin or if so by how much—does no such thing. Rather, this papal norm responds to objectively reckoned and publicly observable situations of sin and, in an unbroken line of practice going back to Scripture, directs ministers of holy Communion to withhold that most august Sacrament from persons who, by their public conduct, have placed themselves within the purview of the canon.

Confusing “sinner” and “sin” is, I grant, quite common in this debate and even several ranking prelates seem to think that externally-made assessments of personal culpability (however that oxymoronic task is to be accomplished) are relevant to the operation of Canon 915. But what can I say that has not been said before? Treating “sinner” and “sin” as equivalents is something a professional would avoid, while an amateur, intrigued by the distinction once he saw it, would, hopefully, stop treating the terms as synonyms. [Eeeeewww!]

It is not, however, Walford’s mistaking the plain text of Canon 915 that attracts my attention, but rather his attempt to explain what Canon 17—a norm little noticed in this debate, for good reason—means and allegedly how, by reading Pope Francis’ words in Amoris through in its light, “a path maybe opened to reception of Holy Communion” for divorced-and-remarried Catholics.

As we are talking about canon law, I suggest we start with the canon. The whole canon.

[…]

There’s more gut-ripping available at Ed Peters’ blog In The Light Of The Law.  If you don’t have some squirrel handy, you might make popcorn.

UPDATE:

Meanwhile… watch this tweet exchange, to which I was alerted…

Do you see what poor Walford did there?  Poor thing.

Also…. this…

Once again…. his seriously thin skin aside, do you see what Stephen “the poor thing” Walford did there?

 

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, "How To..." - Practical Notes, Canon Law, The Drill | Tagged , , ,
8 Comments

“The world needs proud warriors, animated by their faith” – OORAH!

There was a meeting in Chicago this week of Catholic young people.  Something called SLS18.

As it happens, the actor Jim Caviezel made a surprise appearance and gave a heck of a short speech about courage.

He talks about “happy talk”.  He tells these young people to be bold, to be warriors.

Rev. Mr. Kandra posted a video some participant shot with a mobile phone of the large screen at the conference.  VIDEO UPDATED (Higher quality)

¡Hagan lío!

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

I think the Chicago meeting has something to do with Focus.  It looked pretty good. On Twitter I opined that this might be a real Catholic universe in opposition to the “bearded Spock” parallel universe of the annual Three Days of Darkness in LA.

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, Fr. Z KUDOS, Just Too Cool, Our Catholic Identity, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged
9 Comments

“To be deep in history is to cease to be Protestant.”

As convert I read with interest the stories of other converts at the Coming Home Network run by Marcus Grodi.  His is, I think, also the best of the shows at EWTN.

Today a story at CHN caught my eye partly because the writer references the great phrase of Bl. John Henry Newman:

“To be deep in history is to cease to be Protestant.”

The post is worth a few minutes of your time.  It is instructive and edifying.  The writer, formerly a Baptist, started looking into early Church writings on baptism and BAMMO.

Also, that great phrase is on some of my swag HERE

Here is a shot of the regular sized coffee mug… I’ll bet you could put your yogurt and granola in it too.

To be deep in history
And the larger one.

 

T

There is also now a MEGA-size.  Very handy.  I use that size all the time now.

Anyway…

One of the benefits I derive from sales of these mugs, etc., is that I can use the credit to send mugs to priests and bishops who do great things!

 

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged , ,
1 Comment

JUST TOO COOL: TLM missal in Braille

From the Catholic Herald:

Extraordinary Form missal to be produced in Braille for the first time

An Order of Mass for the older Latin form of the liturgy is to be produced in Braille in what is believed to be the first of its kind.

The Latin Mass Society is working to produce the missal with the help of the UK-based Torch Trust, a Christian charity that supports people with sight loss.

Joseph Shaw, LMS chairman, said the idea for the Order of Mass came from supporters. “It is demand-driven,” he said.

He said that LMS was also preparing a large-text “Bishop’s Canon”, which contains the Canon of the Mass and other important texts, for use by priests with poor eyesight.

Braille was invented in the 19th century by the French Catholic musician Louis Braille. He had been a pupil at the world’s first school for the blind, which had been set up decades earlier by Valentin Haüy, another Catholic, in Paris.

A Braille missal already exists for the new English translation of the Mass. The Xavier Society for the Blind, an American organisation, has produced Braille versions of the Catechism and the New American Bible.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged
5 Comments

FATHER ASKS: Planning for computer upgrade, practical pointers

As this new year comes in, I foresee the day down the line when I may have to get a new computer.  What I am using is working for now, but tech doesn’t last forever.  Moreover, I am a firm subscriber to Zuhlsdorf’s Law.

Zuhlsdorf’s Law

Murphy was an optimst. Therefore…

When you need your technology to work, that is when it will fail.
The extent of the failure is proportioned to the urgency of the need.
When you want to show someone the great gizmo or program you have, that is when it won’t work.

Hence, we have to have backups for our backups and we have to have a plan.

I have been thinking about the unpleasant move to a new computer.  I don’t have one in mind yet.  I thinking about it.

I have PC at home. On the road I have a Mac.  I also use the Mac for somethings at home, but the PC is the workhorse.

I’ll bet some of you have practical pointers gained from experience.  I’ve done this a couple times and I know that I have to have a good plan in place before I make a move.

Some of the things that occur to me to wonder about…

  • Programs that promise to transfer data to a new computer.
  • Partitioning the drive.
  • Monitors.

Right now I have four, yes four, monitors going, two run from USB gizmos.   They all form one desktop.  I am considering simply getting one really big monitor or HD screen.

Something that I must have is a Virtual Box that runs Windows XP and multiple virtual drives so that I can use an extremely useful ancient text database that won’t work on 64bit.

Also, here’s a question for you tech savvy types:

These days memory is getting cheaper.  USB drives now pack 1TB.  What are the uses/advantages of cloning a system onto a USB drive?

I’d welcome some discussion on these and related points.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes | Tagged
23 Comments

Is the #AmorisLaetitia agenda just the warm up for the full assault on #HumanaeVitae?

If the unrepentent sinner, unshriven and without a firm purpose of amendment, can officially be admitted to Holy Communion, it’s game over for discipline in the Church.  It’s over for authoritative teaching on faith and morals.

If Christ was wrong about marriage and divorce, then He isn’t God and everything we are doing is pointless and idolatrous.

In the Catholic Herald:

There’s a movement to undermine Catholic morality – Communion is just the start
by Ed Condon

Modern-day Pharisees are trying to get round the Church’s teaching on objective right and wrong. Their next target? Humanae Vitae [It’s always about sex, isn’t it.]

I am going to risk a prediction: 2018 will be the year we see an end to the fighting over Amoris Laetitia.

This might seem rather presumptuous, given that just this week five bishops [Kazakhs + 2 Italians – and now Card. Pujats.] have underscored the Church’s traditional teaching on the reception of Communion by the divorced and remarried. The bishops’ statement is a positive delight to read for its clarity of thought and expression – especially after some of the tortured sophistries we have had to endure of late.

The document unflinchingly reminds us that some things are just wrong, and no amount of personal reflection or mitigating circumstances can change that.

Seeming to address directly the various interpretations of that single contentious footnote in Amoris Laetitia (the one Pope Francis cannot remember), the five bishops quote St John Paul II: “The confusion created in the conscience of many faithful by the differences of opinions and teachings … about serious and delicate questions of Christian morals, ends up by diminishing the true sense of sin almost to the point of eliminating it.” This describes all too well the results, and I would say the intentions, of many of the opaque and tendentious “pastoral” guidelines which have followed Amoris Laetitia.

The doctrinal errors in interpreting Amoris Laetitia are part of a serious movement afoot in the Church to undermine her clarity of thought and expression on the moral order, especially regarding marriage, sexuality and personal conscience. What drives this movement? Let’s be clear: it has nothing to do with helping divorced and remarried Catholics. [Exactly.] Those of us who work in marriage tribunals, where canonists and priests have more contact with such couples on a daily basis than most working in bishops’ conferences have in a year, can tell you that the divorced and remarried are, in the vast majority of cases, desperately seeking clarity from the Church, not to be told to “do whatever they think is right.”  [That’s why this push of false “mercy” without truth is destructive and evil.]

Those so vocally opposing a “legalistic” approach, in which some things are objectively right or wrong, show themselves to be a peculiar kind of Pharisee. The law of the Church, including canon law, is made up of Divine Law, which no power on earth can change, and ecclesiastical law, which the Church promulgates on her own authority to better help the faithful understand their situation, live in accord with Divine Law and, ultimately, get to heaven.  [Remember: If Christ is wrong, then he isn’t God, we are all idolatrous, and the Eucharist really is just what it is more and more becoming in the eyes of the poorly catechized and their “pastors” who don’t shepherd them: the white thing they put in my hand before we sing the song – my token that I am okay just as I am.]

Contrast this with many of the “interpretations” of Amoris Laetitia which call for the divorced and remarried to be admitted to Communion, even if they are living as husband and wife. Some are arguing that canon law can be twisted to vindicate a person’s situation through their desire for it to be different, even if they have no intention to change it. Essentially, as long as someone wishes they were really married, or wishes they were able to live according to the truth that they are not, that is close enough.

It is a nonsense solution which, even if it could technically be argued to satisfy ecclesiastical law (which it does not), would do nothing to change the Divine Law regarding the sinfulness of living with someone who isn’t your husband or wife as if they were. Those who think it could, do so from a dangerously flawed and warped legalistic mentality, one which thinks that the Church makes laws, and we get to heaven by following them. In fact, the Church uses law as a means of guiding us towards God’s truth, not reinventing it. Canon law is a tool, not a means of salvation. It is a light for our steps. Those using tortured philosophical and legal rationales to justify what the Church knows and says to be wrong are marking out a very different path, with a different destination.  [Ironically, the antinomians who label the faithful as “legalistic” are the real legalists.]

The push for a change, or “development,” in Church teaching regarding the divorced and remarried has much wider implications. The real goal is to spin the Church into an abdication of her objective and absolute moral authority, especially in the realm of human sexuality. [It’s always about sex, isn’t it.  And that means that, in the long run, it’s about more ways to abuse women.] The language of “personal conscience” is being used to dress up the grave evil of moral relativism. Those fighting for it are the remnant and inheritors of the liberal generation of the 60s and 70s.

Which brings me to the reason I am predicting that the debates around Amoris Laetitia will come to an end in 2018. The reason is not that the Communion issue will be resolved, but that the faction will move on to their real agenda. This year will mark the 50th anniversary of the issuing of Humanae Vitae, Pope Paul VI’s affirmation of the dignity of human sexuality, and the intrinsic and unbreakable link between the unitive and procreative aspects of the sexual act. [It’s always about sex, isn’t it.]

Last year the National Catholic Register’s Edward Pentin quoted a “well-respected Church figure” as telling him during the 2014 family synod: “Of course, you realise this is all about Humanae Vitae. That’s what I think they’re after. That is their goal.” Pentin says the current mood in Rome suggests his source knew what she was talking about. I have to agree with him: the efforts to “interpret” Amoris Laetitia and the Church’s teaching on the indissolubility of marriage will prove to have been a mere dress rehearsal for an all-out assault upon Pope Paul’s great encyclical[I’m afraid he’s right.]

At the time of the cultural and sexual revolution, the Church spoke powerfully and prophetically against the inevitable consequences of what was happening. In the last half-century, Paul VI’s encyclical has proven ever more prescient and relevant. It is a bitterly comical irony that, just as wider society is beginning to wake up to the consequences of a sexual ethic based solely on consent and the pursuit of personal fulfilment, the Church is having to defend herself against those within who deny not just the Church’s teaching, but the last 50 years of history which have so convincingly vindicated it.

Alas, we had better buckle on the armor.

Watch the activity of the New catholic Red Guards.  Keep an eye on what they write and at whom they take aim.

Posted in Liberals, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, Pò sì jiù, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
10 Comments

INTERNET PRAYER UPDATE: ARABIC and TELUGU! – UPDATED AUDIO

One of you kind readers has helped me start the New Year on an upbeat.

Here is a translation of the now widespread Internet Prayer in

ARABIC
LISTEN

صلاة قبل الولوج الى الأنترنت

. ايها الأله العظيم، الكلي القدرة،الأبدي،الذي خلقتنا على صورتك وأمرتنا ان نسعى وراء كل ما هو جيد وحقيقي وجميل، وخاصة من الشخص الألهي ، سيدنا يسوع المسيح ابنك الوحيد، امنحنا، نحن نتوسل اليك من خلال شفاعة القديس ايزيدور، الأسقف والطبيب، خلالرحلتناعبر الأنترنت، سوف نوجه ايدينا وأعيننا فقط لما يرضيك وأن يمنح الصدقة والصبر لكل النفوس التي نواجهها من خلال المسيح ربنا، امين.

UPDATE:

The fellow who sent the recording wrote, saying:

Please pray for this family with me – they have been away from “home” (Syria – Damascus, then the Wadi al Nusra, or the Christian Valley) for 2.5 years now since the war has been raging.

And also a version in…

TELUGU (spoken in S.E. India):

ఇంటర్నెట్ లోనికి ప్రవేశించటానికి ముందు ప్రార్థన:

సర్వశక్తిమంతుడవు మరియు శాశ్వతమైన దేవుడా, మీ రూపములో మమ్ము సృష్టించినవారా, మమ్ము మంచివాటిని, నిజమైనవాటిని మరియు అందమైనవాటిని వెతుకునట్లు చేసేవారా, ప్రత్యేకంగా మీ దై వీక ఏకైక కుమారుడైన, మా ప్రభువైన యేసు క్రీస్తు అనుమతి ద్వారా, మేము మిమ్ము తిమాలుకొనుచున్నాము. పునీత ఇసిడోర్ బిషప్ మరియు వైద్యుడుగారి మధ్యవర్తిత్వం ద్వారా, మేము ఇంటర్నెట్ ఉపయోగించేటప్పుడు మా చేతులు మరియు కన్నులు మీకు ఆనందం కలిగించేటట్లుగా, మేము ఎదుర్కునే అన్ని ఆత్మల తో ఓర్పుతో సేవ భావంతో ప్రవర్తించేటట్లుగా, మా ప్రభువైన క్రీస్తు ద్వారా. ఆమెన్.

I look forward to having recordings of both of these.

Also, I really do want to have an updated and corrected version in KLINGON.

Anyone?

When sending a new version, please send the TITLE and also a RECORDING by a native speaker of the language. It would be good also to run it by a Catholic priest of that language, to make sure that the idiom is correct.

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged , ,
3 Comments

6 Jan NASHUA, NH – Pontifical Mass with Bp. Libasci – first since 1960s – UPDATED: Minneapolis!

This is no just a Pontifical Mass where there hasn’t been a Pontifical Mass for decades.  I really like the fact that it is advertised by the diocese on their diocesan website and facebook page.

That caught my eye.

Not all diocese put these events on their websites.  In fact, even where the TLM is well-received there isn’t much support on the diocesan websites.

Fr. Z kudos. 

The Mass is in the morning!

Saturday 6 January 2018
9:00 AM

St. Stanislaus Church
43 Franklin St
Nashua, NH 03064

MEANWHILE…

On Saturday, 6 January, there will be another Pontifical Mass at All Saints in Minneapolis at 9AM.

They are singing Palestrina’s Missa Aeterna Christi Munera and Victoria’s O Magnum Mysterium.

 

Posted in Events, Just Too Cool, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged ,
4 Comments

BLOCKED by the New catholic Red Guards. How about you?

In the last couple of days I’ve discovered that I’ve been blocked on Twitter by Fr. Thomas Rosica (@FatherRosica) and by Massimo “Beans” Faggioli (@massimofaggioli).

I am not sure why I clicked on a tweet reference to Rosica, since I can’t remember the last time I purposely looked at his feed. I don’t recall ever tweeting to or about him or retweeting. Hence, I don’t know when I was blocked or why.

But, I think we all know why.

I also am not sure when I was blocked by Beans. It had to be pretty recently, however.

It was my intention to respond to his notion that the Kazakhstan bishops and the others who are aligned with them are like those who dissented from Humanae vitae. That is so weird as to be an intentional “click bait” to gain attention, start a fight, and aim his own clique at a target.

No one seemingly as bright as he could seriously think such a thing.  Ergo, it has to be something else.

Concerning Beans and others of their side of the street, all one needs to do is look at the responses they provoke on Twitter to see that they are sowing bitter division. They post or tweet something and immediately different sides go at each other. It’s like something from the Mad Max. That can’t be helpful.

Granted, Twitter is often acrimonious.  Distance and anonymity mask stupidity, cowardice and hate.  However, what they provoke, as does the combox at the Fishwrap and other outlets in their camp, raises division and hate to new levels.  I call it the “fever swamp”.

Mind you, they have an agenda. I believe they know exactly what they are doing.

Firstly, it keeps their traffic high.  My traffic was a lot higher before I imposed moderation on the combox.  I simply had to.  I won’t be part of the “fever swamp”.   But their side has another agenda in addition to simple click bait.

These are cadres of the New catholic Red Guards. It’s their job to whip up the mob and aim them at those who have been designated enemies. I’m reminded of…

RULE 13. “Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it.” Cut off the support network and isolate the target from sympathy. Go after people and not institutions; people hurt faster than institutions.

Anyway, it might be interesting to know other faithful Catholics have been blocked and by whom. Some cross-referencing could be illuminating.

Meanwhile, please do me a kindness and follow me on Twitter. @fatherz

UPDATE:

Just to show that blocking is futile, here is the loony and provocative tweet by Beans. Don’t try to follow the reasoning.

Meanwhile… perhaps he is developing his skills in self-parody.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged , , ,
30 Comments