EPIPHANY traditions: exorcisms, blessings, special chants, eggs, etc.

Let’s be clear about something.  Epiphany falls on 6 January.  Always has, always will.  This year, the year of grace 2018, 6 January is a Saturday.

Great feasts have vigils.  Vigils are moments of penance, preparation, recollection.  We fast before our feasts.

In the ancient Church, Epiphany was more important than the feast of the Nativity, celebration of which developed later.

In the Western, Latin Church, on Epiphany we traditionally mark manifestations or revelations of the Lord’s Divinity during His earthly life.  So, the Vespers antiphon for Epiphany sings of the acknowledgement of the Lord by the heathen Magi, the Baptism of the Lord by John when the Father’s voice was heard, and the first public miracle the Lord worked at the Wedding at Cana.  All three were manifestations, epiphanies, of the Lord’s Divine nature.

On the preparatory Vigil of Epiphany, today, there is a custom of blessing special “Epiphany Water”.     It was once reserved to bishops, but priests can do it.  The texts are wonderful and the accompanying rites are beautiful.  It is carried out in the context of a service like Lauds or Vespers.  There is a long exorcism against Satan and apostate angels, which includes:

Therefore, accursed dragon and every diabolical legion, we adjure you by the living + God, by the true + God, by the holy + God, by the God who so loved the world that He gave His only-begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but shall have life everlasting; cease your deception of the human race and your giving them to drink of the poison of everlasting damnation; desist from harming the Church and fettering her freedom. Begone Satan, you father and teacher of lies and enemy of mankind. Give place to Christ in whom you found none of your works; give place to the one, holy, Catholic, and apostolic Church, which Christ Himself purchased with His blood. May you be brought low under God’s mighty hand. May you tremble and flee as we call upon the holy and awesome name of Jesus, before whom hell quakes, and to whom the virtues, powers, and dominations are subject; whom the cherubim and seraphim praise with unwearied voices, saying: Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of hosts!

There are exorcisms of salt and water, of course, before their mixing, and the Te Deum is sung. It is seriously, in-your-face CATHOLIC, and therefore boldly to be done everywhere.

On Epiphany there are special blessings for chalk for marking the doors of homes to be blessed, along with a special home blessing.  We also bless gold, frankincense and myrrh.  Bring all your myrrh to church for a blessing.

Also, on Epiphany we sing what is known as the Noveritis.  This is the solemn announcement of the movable feasts –  from the Pontificale Romanum – for the year now underway. (Remember that Epiphany isn’t supposed to be a movable feast!)  The dates of Easter, etc., change every year, so you have to adapt the chant each year.  For this year’s chant, go HERE for a PDF with the proper dates in Latin, in Gregorian notation.  The chant is rather like the Exsultet.

In some countries, we bless salt, bread and eggs, which were then distributed to the poor.  It would be great to have these things blessed, and perhaps take them to a food shelf (along with other foods that can be blessed).

 

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Head exploding juxtapositions (literal and figurative)

Here’s a jocular head exercise for the readership.

Today I saw a video (sent by an old staffer of the COL Forum) about drone warfare.

It’s terrifying. Watch this, please, and try not to freak out about the potential misuse of this tech.

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Okay… are you scared yet? It is like something that the Avengers will have to stop.

The audience was applauding.

Shifting gears, over at New Liturgical Movement – whiplash? – David Clayton also has a piece about drone warfare. HERE

This time, it is about sacred music and the power of a single note sung continuously alongside the melody, much as you hear in Byzantine chant and some medieval music. He talks about acoustics. Many modern churches – designed to look more like municipal airports than sacred temples of God – have dreadful acoustics. What kind of music can help them out. He also nimbly goes off into architecture (i.e., harmonious proportion). He includes some embedded videos of the sort of music he is talking about. His a good examples. Here is one of my one.

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You can feel your head about to explode after a bit, and not in a bad way.

So… drone warfare, ladies and gentlemen.

On an entirely different level, I note that the German bishops conference this year made a lot of money. From Handelsblatt:

Germany’s Catholic Church counts its many financial blessings
Controversial church taxes brought in a record €6 billion last year, a Handelsblatt investigation has uncovered. Transparency is still as interpretational as scripture in Germany’s 27 Catholic dioceses.

[…]

That’s a head exploding amount of money. Not bad for a year. Of course, they Germans also caved in on Amoris laetitia. They found emanations of penumbras which allowed them to admit those who are divorced and remarried to Holy Communion.

Shifting gears, who else made more money this year?

Lifesite reports that big-business abortion – Planned Parenthood – beloved and defended by the DNC,…

New Report: Planned Parenthood Abortion Business Makes More Money Than Ever Before

The Planned Parenthood abortion business released its newest annual report over the New Year’s weekend. The report indicates the abortion company made more money than ever before.

Although Planned Parenthood bills itself has a woman’s health organization, in reality it is little more than an abortion business. Multiple exposes indicate that it does not provide adoption referrals or prenatal health care for women, but it does more abortions than any other company in the United States.

The report shows that the abortion organization had a record income of $1.46 billion and the fifth highest annual profit—$98.5 million—in its history.

In fact the newest annual report indicates that Planned Parenthood killed over 320,000 unborn children and abortions. That is well over one-third of all the abortions that take place on an annual basis in the United States.

[…]

Talk about head exploding….

Not as much as the head-swelled German bishops, however.

BANG!

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ASK FATHER: Are blessings, holy water, etc., less effective if Latin isn’t used? Wherein Fr. Z rants.

From a reader… who picked up on something I wrote about blessings and holy water in the traditional form compared to the new, post-Conciliar form… HERE

QUAERITUR:

“The exorcisms of the salt and water are to be done in Latin.”

Father, how essential is this? I had my house blessed using the old rite at my insistence, but the priest knew little Latin and so used English at his insistence. Is the holy water any less efficacious?
God bless

The last thing that I intend to do is introduce doubts about the efficacy of blessings or the validity of sacraments.

Holy Church has provided for translations of Mass and other sacraments (Novus Ordo).   Even before Vatican II the Church allowed for some blessings of sacramentals, etc., in the vernacular.  Let’s look at that for a moment.

For example, I have a copy of an officially approved edition of the Collectio Rituum (a selection of commonly used texts from the larger Rituale Romanum) for use in these USA.  It is dated 1954.  There are side by side texts for most of the rites in Latin and English, meaning that the priest can choose either Latin or English.  However, within some rites, such as the blessing of holy water and the rite of the sacrament of baptism, only the Latin text is given, without the English in a side by side column (though the English is provided in a footnote).  That means that – in 1954 – the Latin was be used.  This is the case whenever there is an exorcism to be performed (as in the case of salt and water) and the forms of sacraments (“I baptize you…”, confirmation of the marriage bond, etc.).

Hence, in 1954 the Church didn’t compromise on the language to be used: for the really important bits, exorcisms and forms of sacraments, Latin was to be used.  For the parts of the rites that were more instructive, descriptive, hortatory, the vernacular could be chosen at will.

That makes sense.  When we are dealing with blessings and so forth, we are dealing with popular devotions.

I have also a US Collectio Rituum from 1964.  Remember that, according to Summorum Pontificum we use the books in force in 1962, not later.  The 1964 edition refers in the introductory decree to the 1954 edition (which I have) and then also a 1961 adaptation of the 1954 edition (which I don’t have).   However, in the 1964 edition, even for forms of sacraments (“I baptize you…, etc.”) the Latin and English are on facing pages.  In the 1954 facing columns are used, but that’s just a formatting point.  So, in 1954 Latin was obligatory for some things.  In 1964 (an edition which we technically shouldn’t use) English could be used.

I don’t know what the 1961 reveals.  Maybe someone out there has a 1961 Collectio.  Was the change already made in 1961?

Nevertheless, 1961 or not, the fact that the Church had allowed for the vernacular in 1954 for some of the rites of sacraments and blessings is significant.  When I baptize, I use the English for everything that can be read in English according to the 1954 edition and I use Latin for exorcisms and forms of sacraments.

That makes sense.

Latin is our language as Latin Rite Catholics.  Moreover, time and time again I hear from exorcists about the efficacy of Latin.

Does this mean that not using Latin in, say, the exorcism of salt and water before their blessing and mixing makes for “weaker” holy water?   I don’t know.  I have no way of telling.   For example, I haven’t made a study of the reactions of the possessed to different waters blessed with different languages.

But I remain convinced that, whatever the vernacular does or doesn’t do, the Latin DOES without a doubt.  Since Latin presents no special challenges to me, I use Latin for these clearly important bits, bits so important that the Church insisted that they remain in Latin not a very long time ago.

Abandoning Latin in the Church was and is spiritually dangerous.

What does it mean for our identity as Catholics of the Latin, Roman Church, not to use the language of our sacred worship and rites?  It erodes our identity.  That’s dangerous on many levels.

There are practical reasons for the use of Latin … or for its abolition.

Some people, when an opening for use of the vernacular was created, wanted to use people’s mother tongue for well-motivated pastoral reasons.  I am all for that (as I describe in my own practice, above).

However, others were not benign in their move into the vernacular.

These others – let’s call them “libs” –  intended to change practice and doctrine.  One way to accomplish that was to slam shut the doors of the Church’s vast, rich, long-acquired wisdom and devotions and music, etc., by creating a less well-educated clergy, dependent on translations and commentaries, incapable of reference of primary texts and without the indisuputable forma mentis and the genius, the Romanitas, that training in Latin imparts.   To effect the sweeping innovations concerning law and faith and morals, they had to get rid of Latin and all that it implied for world-view, clerical formation, sacred worship, popular devotion.

Slam the treasury shut. Let the Devil in through “some fissure”.

And, yes, I think some of the people who worked – and who now work – to effect these innovations in the Church are servants of Satan.   Most of them are manipulated dupes.  A few of them – buried deeply behind the scenes – were and are conscious agents of the Enemy of our souls.

Training in any languages beyond the mother tongue has a powerful impact on a person.  Training in Latin, however, is particularly powerful.  There’s something inherent in the language that is special.   Moreover, constant use of Latin in the Latin, Roman Church has over many centuries “consecrated” it as our sacred language.  Religions have their sacred languages.  We have ours.  It provides for us the opposite of the Tower of Babel.  Latin is our anti-Babel, with – by now – Pentecost overtones.

And, I repeat, the Devil really hates it.  That’s good enough for me.  “Libs” hate it.  That’s also good enough for me.  If they don’t want it, then I am confident that that’s what we need.

So, was your home not blessed because the priest didn’t use Latin?  I would never say such a thing.  I’m sure it was.  Was the blessing as “strong” as it could’ve been were it in Latin?  I don’t know for sure, but probably, since this sort of invocative blessing didn’t involve any exorcisms, etc.  When the priest blesses, the priest blesses.  Was your home less blessed because the priest used English for the exorcisms of the salt and water in the traditional blessing of the holy water used after he blessed your home in English?   I don’t know about “levels” or “degrees” of blessings.  I would love to have Benedictometer, to test the level of local blessings.

Maybe “libs” are the meter?  I should start showing them more sacramentals and watch for reactions.  But I digress.

On another point, what happens if the place or thing is blessed more than once?  Is it more blessed?  At what point should it glow in the dark?  It doesn’t work that way.  At least it hasn’t for me.

All I know is that I will always use Latin when I bless holy water.  I will always use Latin for the important bits, such as forms of sacraments and exorcisms.

I am never going to leave anyone with the slightest whisp of a doubt about what just happened.  When you come to me for blessings or sacramentals or sacraments, I owe that to you.  It is my duty to make sure that you have no doubt as to what happened.  Latin always resolves that and the vernacular can resolve that.

The Church has always been concerned that people don’t fall into the trap of seeing blessings and sacramentals and sacraments as a kind of theurgy or magic.   We are confident that, when the priest blesses, God blesses in the person of the priest.  We are confident that, when the priest exorcises, God exorcises.  We are confident that when the priest consecrates items or places or persons, God acts in the priest to constitute them as blessed or consecrated, to tear from from the grip of the Prince of this world and set them apart for the King and the advance His Kingdom.  The efficacy of the blessings depends ultimately on God, who desires what is good for us.

It seems to me that at the same time as we saw the war on Latin arise, we also saw a decline in prayers against Satan, such as the canceling of the “Leonine Prayers” with the Prayer of St. Michael the Archangel.  We saw around the same time an increase of what can only be demonically driven movements in the world.  Coincidence?

We have nothing to lose by using Latin and, if the millennial experience of the Church teaches us at all, probably a great deal to gain for our identity, and for our well-being of body and soul.

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BOOK NOTES – What I’m receiving and reading about the “spirit of Vatican II”, the Devil, priests in history

I have a lot of books stacked up.  Happily, I receive them from authors and publishers.  I can’t possibly get to them all.  But I can get to some.

For example…

Among the books I have recently received I note especially…

Slaying the “Spirit” of Vatican II With the Light of Truth by Fr. Robert J. Araujo S.J. and The Bellarmine Forum with an introduction by the great Bp. Paprocki.

US HERE – UK HERE

First, I love the title.  Second, I love the fact that the title is over the name of a writer with “SJ”.  Third, Bp. Paprocki.  Fourth, I have an essay in it.  What’s not to like?

Here are photos of the table of contents.

Unfortunately, this is not yet available also for Kindle.  C’mon!  Get with it!

Next, here’s a provocative title…  again, not for Kindle… yet…  GRRRR….

The Devil’s Role in the Spiritual Life: St. John of the Cross’ Teaching on Satan’s Involvement in Every Stage of Spiritual Growth by Cliff Ermatinger

US HERE – UK HERE

I look forward to drilling into this book.  It is heavily salted with quotes from St. John of the Cross, an author I would like to know more about, and the themes are presented thematically.  Given that today there are some foolish writers who deny or repudiate the use of any martial imagery when it comes to our Catholic lives, I immediately read through the chapter on “Spiritual Warfare”, which covers time-honored wisdom of John of the Cross, a great spiritual warrior standing on the shoulders of many others.

Also, last night I wound up and sleepless because I read into the depths of the night in a book I recently wrote about in these electronic pages.  HERE

Heroism and Genius: How Catholic Priests Helped Build—and Can Help Rebuild—Western Civilization by Fr. William Slattery

US HERE – UK HERE

This is really good.   Last night I read about Alcuin and his influence on Charlemagne and his subsequent heritage, passed on through other clerics.  It is very well written.  There stuff in this book I’ve never heard of before… and I’ve heard of a lot.

So… here’s some good reading ideas for you!

 

 

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Midweek Lighter Fare

And now a tune from Death and the Marginalia.

The video was made by HERE

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ASK FATHER: How long does holy water stay blessed?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I got to wondering about the properties of holy water. Since so much water has been blessed before and recycled throughout time, does the church have comments about the length that water stays “holy”? Or is it a possibility that the tap water from the faucet could contain holy water if the water stays blessed to the end of time?

Speaking of wondering… I have sometimes wondered about the effective range of a blessing… 20 meters?  I’m pretty good with a 9mm at that range, but not with an aspergilum.   But I think I could manage a blessing at some distance.

But, duration of the blessing?  That depends on what is being blessed.   Let’s make a few distinctions.

Firstly, let’s think about things that go bad or get corrupted and those that don’t.

For example, we have food stuffs, obviously meant for relatively quick consumption.  If on the Easter Vigil I bless all sorts of foods people bring to church, I know that they will be consumed quickly.  If I bless, for example, wine, it could be years before it is consumed, but it will be consumed.  If I bless salt… salt is really stable, so it will endure as long as it is not diluted by water, etc.   But, blessed wine that is opened can corrupt, as can blessed sausages and cakes etc..  As in the case of the accidents of bread and wine remaining in the Eucharist, if the elements are corrupted and they cease to be what they were (wine turns to vinegar, etc.) they stop being blessed.

Water can go bad.   If you let water stagnate (not move) it can develop algae and get nasty in a hurry.  I am sure that no one wants to use that.  This is probably one of the reasons why, in the traditional blessing of Holy Water, exorcised and blessed salt is added.   Salt makes the water inhospitable to many critters.   There is also a scriptural, symbolic basis for adding salt to water, and the blessing prayers reference it.  The prophet Elijah poured salt into the waters at Jericho.  Our Lord talks about salt.  Holy Church has used blessed salt since her earliest years.  For example, it is placed on the tongue of those to be baptized in the rite of baptism.  In ancient times, salt was given to catechumens several times before they were baptized.

Next, things are blessed because God blesses them.

God blesses things on His own or through those who can bless, usually the priest in the case of the constitutive blessing.  Contrary to the horrid Books of Blessings (which I will never use, because the texts don’t bless things), there are two kinds of blessings.  The invocative blessing calls down a blessing by God on a person while the constitutive blessing establishes something as a blessed thing in a way that persists.  A more solemn and deeper version of this is the consecration.  For example, we bless medals and statues and water and so forth, but we consecrate altars and cemeteries.  People can be consecrated, too, as in the case of religious and the ordained.  If the bishop blesses you on the way out of church, you have received a blessing.  If the bishop consecrates you at solemn profession or ordination, then you are thereafter a consecrated person.

By the way, abuse of a consecrated thing, place or person is the sin of sacrilege.  If you vandalize a church, you commit two sins, destruction of property and sacrilege.  Both must be confessed.  If you visit the Diocese of Libville and, irritated after one of Bishop Fatty McButterpant’s sermons you bust him in the chops, you have to confess two sins: you hit a person and you hit a consecrated person, which is sacrilege.  There are mitigating circumstances for your guilt, of course… but I digress.

Back to blessings.

God blesses things and people, usually through God’s agent.

Sure, God can bless a faucet such that whatever water might issue forth from thence would be blessed water.  Perhaps that’s what God does with the spring that popped up at Lourdes.  Apparently many miraculous healings have occurred in conjunction with contact with “Lourdes water”.  God can do that.  I don’t know how to do that.  It is well beyond the pay grade of a human being, ordained or not, to bless a faucet or spring such that it will thereafter produce holy water in perpetuity.

So, turn on the faucet and I can bless what is in the sink or the container underneath, but that’s it.  And as long as that water is water (it hasn’t dried up and it hasn’t turned into a mass of green algae clogged goo) it is blessed.

On another note, sometimes I get questions about adding more regular water to holy water to increase its quantity.  Is it, for example, possible to add less than 50ml to 100ml and get 150ml?   25mm to 100ml?   If at the offertory the priest can up to 20% of water to the wine in the chalice without making substance of the wine doubtful, can less than 20ml be added to 100ml of holy water to produce 120ml… and so on and so on?

This practice isn’t forbidden.  Neither is it recommended.  It seems to me that people do this because they want holy water and Father isn’t blessing enough or often enough.  Hence, they creatively figured out a work around.

I would not do this.

Instead, work on Father to bless more water (hopefully with the older, traditional Rituale Romanum).

We are dealing with a sacramental.

“Sacramental” reality is not less real than what we perceive by our senses.  Blessed water is perceptibly saltier than usual, but so is regular water that has salt added.   We can’t taste test it and tell the difference.

Demons can tell the difference.

The Enemy really hates holy water.   One of the explicit purposes of holy water is to put demons to flight wherever it is sprinkled.  In exorcising and blessing the salt used for holy water, the priest says: “may [it] rid whatever it touches or sprinkles of all uncleanness and protect it from every assault of evil spirits.”  In exorcising and blessing the water: “I exorcise you so that you may put to flight all the power of the Enemy, and be able to root out and supplant that Enemy with his apostate angels”.  In blessing the combined water and salt: “Let whatever might menace the safety and peace of those who live here be put to flight by the sprinkling of this water”.

Heavy lifting, indeed!

St. Teresa of Avila in chapter 31 her autobiography explains how she was being tormented by demons.   She used holy water against them and wrote:

“From long experience I have learned that there is nothing like holy water to put devils to flight and prevent them from coming back again. They also flee from the Cross, but return; so holy water must have great virtue.”

Demons can tell the difference, even if we can’t

So, why use anything iffy?

BTW… just for your additional instruction, here is a side by side comparison of the older, traditional rite of blessing holy water, and the newer, post-Conciliar rite.  I won’t concern myself with matching them up because I have plenty to do today.

Read these and then ask yourself which you would rather use.

Try to find the specific words of blessing in each version.

ORDER FOR THE BLESSING OF HOLY WATER OUTSIDE MASS

1391  The celebrant begins with these words:

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.

All make the sign of the cross and reply:

Amen.

1392  The celebrant greets those present in the following or other suitable words, taken mainly from Scripture.

May God, who through water and the Holy Spirit has given us a new birth in Christ, be with you all.

All make the following or some other suitable reply.

And with your spirit.

1393  As circumstances suggest, the celebrant may prepare those present for the blessing in the following or similar words.

The blessing of this water reminds us of Christ, the living water, and of the sacrament of baptism, in which we were born of water and the Holy Spirit. Whenever, therefore, we are sprinkled with this holy water or use it in blessing ourselves on entering the church or at home, we thank God for his priceless gift to us and we ask for his help to keep us faithful to the sacrament we have received in faith.

READING of the WORD of GOD

1394  A reader, another person present, or the celebrant reads a short text of Sacred Scripture.

[VARIOUS POSSIBLE SCRIPTURE READINGS]

PRAYER of BLESSING

1396  After the reading, the celebrant says:

Let us pray.

All pray briefly in silence, then with hands outstretched, the celebrant says the prayer of blessing.

Blessed are you, Lord, all-powerful God,
who in Christ, the living water of salvation,
blessed and transformed us.
Grant that, when we are sprinkled with this water or make use of it,
we will be refreshed inwardly by the power of the Holy Spirit
and continue to walk in the new life we received at baptism.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.

R. Amen.

1397  Or:

Lord, holy Father,
look kindly on your children,
redeemed by your Son
and born to a new life by water and the Holy Spirit.
Grant that those who are sprinkled with this water
may be renewed in body and spirit
and may make a pure offering of their service to you.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.

R. Amen.

1398  Or the celebrant says:

O God, the creator of all things,
by water and the Holy Spirit
you have given the universe its beauty
and fashioned us in your own image.

R. Bless and purify your Church.

O Christ the Lord, from your pierced side
you gave us your sacraments
as fountains of salvation.

R. Bless and purify your Church.

O Holy Spirit, giver of life,
from the baptismal font of the Church
you have formed us into a new creation
in the waters of rebirth.

R. Bless and purify your Church.

1399  After the prayer of blessing, the celebrant sprinkles those present with holy water, as a suitable song is sung; as circumstances suggest, he may first say the following words.

Let this water call to mind our baptism into Christ,
who has redeemed us by his death and resurrection.

R. Amen.

 

RITE FROM THE ROMAN RITUAL

(Priest vests in surplice and purple stole)

P: Our help is in the name of the Lord.
R: Who made heaven and earth.

 

Exorcism and Blessing of Salt (necessary for Exorcism of Water)

 

P: O salt, creature of God, I exorcise you by the living + God, by the true + God, by the holy + God, by the God who ordered you to be poured into the water by Elisha the prophet, so that its life-giving powers might be restored. I exorcise you so that you may become a means of salvation for believers, that you may bring health of soul and body to all who make use of you, and that you may put to flight and drive away from the places where you are sprinkled; every apparition, villainy, turn of devilish deceit, and every unclean spirit; adjured by him who will come to judge the living and the dead and the world by fire.

R: Amen.

P: Let us pray. Almighty and everlasting God, we humbly implore you, in your immeasurable kindness and love, to bless + this salt which you created and gave to the use of mankind, so that it may become a source of health for the minds and bodies of all who make use of it. May it rid whatever it touches or sprinkles of all uncleanness, and protect it from every assault of evil spirits. Through Christ our Lord.

R: Amen.

Exorcism and Blessing of Water

P: O water, creature of God, I exorcise you in the name of God the Father + Almighty, and in the name of Jesus + Christ His Son, our Lord, and in the power of the Holy + Spirit. I exorcise you so that you may put to flight all the power of the enemy, and be able to root out and supplant that enemy with his apostate angels, through the power of our Lord Jesus Christ, who will come to judge the living and the dead and the world by fire.

R: Amen.

P: Let us pray. O God, for the salvation of mankind, you built your greatest mysteries on this substance, water. In your kindness, hear our prayers and pour down the power of your blessing + into this element, made ready for many kinds of purifications. May this, your creature, become an agent of divine grace in the service of your mysteries, to drive away evil spirits and dispel sickness, so that everything in the homes and other buildings of the faithful that is sprinkled with this water, may be rid of all uncleanness and freed from every harm. Let no breath of infection and no disease-bearing air remain in these places. May the wiles of the lurking enemy prove of no avail. Let whatever might menace the safety and peace of those who live here be put to flight by the sprinkling of this water, so that the health obtained by calling upon your holy name, may be made secure against all attack. Through Christ our Lord.

R: Amen.

(Priest pours exorcised salt into the water, in the form of a cross – three times)

P: May a mixture of salt and water now be made, in the name of the Father, + and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. +

R: Amen.

P: The Lord be with you.
R: And with your spirit.

P: Let us pray. O God, Creator unconquerable, invincible King, Victor ever-glorious, you hold in check the forces bent on dominating us. You overcome the cruelty of the raging enemy, and in your power you beat down the wicked foe. Humbly and fearfully do we pray to you, O Lord, and we ask you to look with favor on this salt and water which you created. Shine on it with the light of your kindness. Sanctify it by the dew of your love, so that, through the invocation of your holy name, wherever this water and salt is sprinkled, it may turn aside every attack of the unclean spirit, and dispel the terrors of the poisonous serpent. And wherever we may be, make the Holy Spirit present to us, who now implore your mercy. Through Christ our Lord.

R: Amen.

 

 

I, for one, will never use the newer form.  Eh-vur.

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Did you know that there was a “British Teilhard Association”? No one else did either, it seems.

From the Catholic Herald:

British Teilhard Association dissolves due to lack of members

The move comes just weeks after Pope Francis was asked to remove the decades-old official warning against Teilhard’s works

A British association dedicated to Jesuit thinker Teilhard de Chardin dissolved on New Year’s Eve due to falling membership.

The association announced the decision on Twitter on Monday, but added that its website would continue as a newly constituted ‘British Teilhard Network’.

The move comes just weeks after the Pontifical Council for Culture asked Pope Francis to remove the decades-old official warning against Teilhard’s works.

Pierre Teilhard de Chardin wrote a series of best-selling theological works in the first half of the 20th Century in which he drew on his studies as a palaeontologist in an attempt to reconcile the faith with evolution.

He became famous for his theory of an “Omega Point”, mankind’s ultimate destination. He saw all of human development in terms of evolution, an upward movement towards a final goal, of which the Incarnation was a decisive moment.

Although many found his works helpful in reconciling their faith with new scientific discoveries, the Congregation of the Holy Office condemned them, writing that they “abound in such ambiguities and indeed even serious errors, as to offend Catholic doctrine”.

Pope Pius XII condemned Teilhard’s work as a “cesspool of error”, and the Vatican placed an official “monitum”, or warning, against it.

However, last year the Pontifical Council for Culture voted unanimously to ask Pope Francis to remove the warning, saying “albeit some of his writings might be open to constructive criticism, his prophetic vision has been and is inspiring theologians and scientists.”

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PODCAzT 160: Bishops of Kazakhstan issue “Profession of the immutable truths about sacramental marriage” AUDIO

As the controversy erupted at the irruption of Amoris laetitia, I opined that, even though the document could be read in a properly orthodox way, those who were inclined not to support the Church’s teaching would say it meant something innovative but justifiable under the light of “mercy”, and those who were inclined to defend and teach with clarity what the Church teaches would stand their ground. Amoris laetitia caused a kind of “decomposition reaction” in the Church, if you recall your basic chemistry.  It’s breaking down the unity of the Church.

This breaking of unity is in increasing evidence.  Bishops conferences have developed different policies that contradict each other.  For example, step over the border from Germany into Poland and the divorced and civilly remarried who don’t live continent lives and who don’t have a firm purpose of amendment cannot be admitted to Holy Communion.  Step back across the border from Poland into Germany, and they can be.  One small step for an adulterer, one giant disaster for doctrine.   Other examples of decomposition can be found in statements from the Bishops of Malta and of Buenos Aires in Argentina.

There must, of course, be counter reactions to try to reestablish the integrity of the Church in her unity of doctrine.

The other day I received a text from the Bishops of Kazakhstan (including the great Bp. Schneider) which addresses certain truth about sacramental marriage.

It is very good.

As a preamble, you will want to scan quickly what canonist Ed Peters says about it.  HERE  He makes a couple of distinctions which head off what will be the backlash and denial on the part of libs, who will whipped up by the New Red Guards against this statement.

Peters makes three helpful observations.  First, he reminds us that the Kazakhstani bishops are talking about sacramental marriage, even though much of what they say applies to other marriages.   Second, when we write about “marriage” we can’t always put in every possible qualifier.  Third, Peters points to the minuscule number of cases to which the Pauline and Petrine Privilege apply, or which are ratum sed non consummatum.

Now let’s look at the statement of the Bishops of Kazakhstan.  Or rather, let’s hear it and look at it.

I rant at the end.

BONUS: At the end, I include several minutes of bells of a well-known church in EuropeCan anyone identify the church?  I made the recording on the street near the church, so you might hear the occasional motorbike.

UPDATE:

I read on Twitter that

Two Italian Bishops, + Luigi Negri, archbishop emeritus of Ferrara-Comacchio and +Carlo Maria Viganò, former apostolic nuncio to the United States, have joined the bishops of Kazakhstan in putting their names to the Profession

UPDATE:

Interview with Bp. Negri HERE He said:

Faced with the grave confusion in the Church regarding the issue of marriage, I believe it is necessary to put forward again the clarity of the traditional position. It seemed right to me to sign because the content of the [document’s] position is what I have widely presented over the past years — not only in recent months – at every step of the efforts I dedicated to the theme of the family, life, procreation, and the responsibility to educate and form young people. These are issues of absolute importance which the Catholic world as a whole does not seem to be very aware of.

Card. Pujats of Riga has signed on. HERE

 

Profession of the immutable truths
about sacramental marriage

After the publication of the Apostolic Exhortation “Amoris laetitia” (2016) various bishops issued at local, regional, and national levels applicable norms regarding the sacramental discipline of those faithful, called “divorced and remarried,” who having still a living spouse to whom they are united with a valid sacramental matrimonial bond, have nevertheless begun a stable cohabitation more uxorio with a person who is not their legitimate spouse.

The aforementioned rules provide inter alia that in individual cases the persons, called “divorced and remarried,” may receive the sacrament of Penance and Holy Communion, while continuing to live habitually and intentionally more uxorio with a person who is not their legitimate spouse. These pastoral norms have received approval from various hierarchical authorities. Some of these norms have received approval even from the supreme authority of the Church.

The spread of these ecclesiastically approved pastoral norms has caused a considerable and ever increasing confusion among the faithful and the clergy, a confusion that touches the central manifestations of the life of the Church, such as sacramental marriage with the family, the domestic church, and the sacrament of the Most Holy Eucharist.

According to the doctrine of the Church, only the sacramental matrimonial bond constitutes a domestic church (see Second Vatican Council, Lumen Gentium, 11). The admission of so-called “divorced and remarried” faithful to Holy Communion, which is the highest expression of the unity of Christ the Spouse with His Church, means in practice a way of approving or legitimizing divorce, and in this meaning a kind of introduction of divorce in the life of the Church.

The mentioned pastoral norms are revealed in practice and in time as a means of spreading the “plague of divorce” (an expression used by the Second Vatican Council, see Gaudium et spes, 47). It is a matter of spreading the “plague of divorce” even in the life of the Church, when the Church, instead, because of her unconditional fidelity to the doctrine of Christ, should be a bulwark and an unmistakable sign of contradiction against the plague of divorce which is every day more rampant in civil society.

Unequivocally and without admitting any exception Our Lord and Redeemer Jesus Christ solemnly reaffirmed God’s will regarding the absolute prohibition of divorce. An approval or legitimation of the violation of the sacredness of the marriage bond, even indirectly through the mentioned new sacramental discipline, seriously contradicts God’s express will and His commandment. This practice therefore represents a substantial alteration of the two thousand-year-old sacramental discipline of the Church. Furthermore, a substantially altered discipline will eventually lead to an alteration in the corresponding doctrine.

The constant Magisterium of the Church, beginning with the teachings of the Apostles and of all the Supreme Pontiffs, has preserved and faithfully transmitted both in the doctrine (in theory) and in the sacramental discipline (in practice) in an unequivocal way, without any shadow of doubt and always in the same sense and in the same meaning (eodem sensu eademque sententia), the crystalline teaching of Christ concerning the indissolubility of marriage.

Because of its Divinely established nature, the discipline of the sacraments must never contradict the revealed word of God and the faith of the Church in the absolute indissolubility of a ratified and consummated marriage. “The sacraments not only presuppose faith, but by words and objects they also nourish, strengthen, and express it; that is why they are called “sacraments of faith.” (Second Vatican Council, Sacrosanctum Concilium, 59). “Even the supreme authority in the Church may not change the liturgy arbitrarily, but only in the obedience of faith and with religious respect for the mystery of the liturgy” (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1125).

The Catholic faith by its nature excludes a formal contradiction between the faith professed on the one hand and the life and practice of the sacraments on the other. In this sense we can also understand the following affirmation of the Magisterium: “This split between the faith which many profess and their daily lives deserves to be counted among the more serious errors of our age.” (Second Vatican Council, Gaudium et Spes, 43) and “Accordingly, the concrete pedagogy of the Church must always remain linked with her doctrine and never be separated from it” (John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris Consortio, 33).

In view of the vital importance that the doctrine and discipline of marriage and the Eucharist constitute, the Church is obliged to speak with the same voice. The pastoral norms regarding the indissolubility of marriage must not, therefore, be contradicted between one diocese and another, between one country and another. Since the time of the Apostles, the Church has observed this principle as St. Irenaeus of Lyons testifies: “The Church, though spread throughout the world to the ends of the earth, having received the faith from the Apostles and their disciples, preserves this preaching and this faith with care and, as if she inhabits a single house, believes in the same identical way, as if she had only one soul and only one heart, and preaches the truth of the faith, teaches it and transmits it in a unanimous voice, as if she had only one mouth”(Adversus haereses, I, 10, 2). Saint Thomas Aquinas transmits to us the same perennial principle of the life of the Church: “There is one and the same faith of the ancients and the moderns, otherwise there would not be one and the same Church” (Questiones Disputatae de Veritate, q. 14, a. 12c).

The following warning from Pope John Paul II remains current and valid: “The confusion, created in the conscience of many faithful by the differences of opinions and teachings in theology, in preaching, in catechesis, in spiritual direction, about serious and delicate questions of Christian morals, ends up by diminishing the true sense of sin almost to the point of eliminating it” (Apostolic Exhortation Reconciliatio et Paenitenia, 18).

The meaning of the following statements of the Magisterium of the Church is fully applicable to the doctrine and sacramental discipline concerning the indissolubility of a ratified and consummated marriage:

  • “For the Church of Christ, watchful guardian that she is, and defender of the dogmas deposited with her, never changes anything, never diminishes anything, never adds anything to them; but with all diligence she treats the ancient doctrines faithfully and wisely, which the faith of the Fathers has transmitted. She strives to investigate and explain them in such a way that the ancient dogmas of heavenly doctrine will be made evident and clear, but will retain their full, integral, and proper nature, and will grow only within their own genus — that is, within the same dogma, in the same sense and the same meaning” (Pius IX, Dogmatic Bull Ineffabilis Deus)
  • “With regard to the very substance of truth, the Church has before God and men the sacred duty to announce it, to teach it without any attenuation, as Christ revealed it, and there is no condition of time that can reduce the rigor of this obligation. It binds in conscience every priest who is entrusted with the care of teaching, admonishing, and guiding the faithful “(Pius XII, Discourse to parish priests and Lenten preachers, March 23, 1949).
  • “The Church does not historicize, does not relativize to the metamorphoses of profane culture the nature of the Church that is always equal and faithful to itself, as Christ wanted it and authentic tradition perfected it” (Paul VI, Homily from October 28, 1965).
  • “Now it is an outstanding manifestation of charity toward souls to omit nothing from the saving doctrine of Christ” (Paul VI, Encyclical Humanae Vitae, 29).
  • “Any conjugal difficulties are resolved without ever falsifying and compromising the truth” (John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris Consortio, 33).
  • “The Church is in no way the author or the arbiter of this norm [of the Divine moral law]. In obedience to the truth which is Christ, whose image is reflected in the nature and dignity of the human person, the Church interprets the moral norm and proposes it to all people of good will, without concealing its demands of radicalness and perfection” (John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Familiaris Consortio, 33).
  • “The other principle is that of truth and consistency, whereby the church does not agree to call good evil and evil good. Basing herself on these two complementary principles, the church can only invite her children who find themselves in these painful situations to approach the divine mercy by other ways, not however through the sacraments of penance and the eucharist until such time as they have attained the required dispositions” (John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Reconciliatio et Paenitentia, 34).
  • “The Church’s firmness in defending the universal and unchanging moral norms is not demeaning at all. Its only purpose is to serve man’s true freedom. Because there can be no freedom apart from or in opposition to the truth”(John Paul II, Encyclical Veritatis Splendor, 96).
  • When it is a matter of the moral norms prohibiting intrinsic evil, there are no privileges or exceptions for anyone. It makes no difference whether one is the master of the world or the “poorest of the poor” on the face of the earth. Before the demands of morality we are all absolutely equal” (emphasis in original) (John Paul II, Encyclical Veritatis Splendor, 96).
  • “The obligation of reiterating this impossibility of admission to the Eucharist is required for genuine pastoral care and for an authentic concern for the well-being of these faithful and of the whole Church, as it indicates the conditions necessary for the fullness of that conversion to which all are always invited by the Lord“ (Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, Declaration on the admissibility to the Holy Communion of the divorced and remarried, 24 June 2000, n. 5).As Catholic bishops, who – according to the teaching of the Second Vatican Council – must defend the unity of faith and the common discipline of the Church, and take care that the light of the full truth should arise for all men (see Lumen Gentium, 23 ) we are forced in conscience to profess in the face of the current rampant confusion the unchanging truth and the equally immutable sacramental discipline regarding the indissolubility of marriage according to the bimillennial and unaltered teaching of the Magisterium of the Church. In this spirit we reiterate:
  • Sexual relationships between people who are not in the bond to one another of a valid marriage – which occurs in the case of the so-called “divorced and remarried” – are always contrary to God’s will and constitute a grave offense against God.
  • No circumstance or finality, not even a possible imputability or diminished guilt, can make such sexual relations a positive moral reality and pleasing to God. The same applies to the other negative precepts of the Ten Commandments of God. Since “there exist acts which, per se and in themselves, independently of circumstances, are always seriously wrong by reason of their object” (John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation Reconciliatio et Paenitentia, 17).
  • The Church does not possess the infallible charism of judging the internal state of grace of a member of the faithful (see Council of Trent, session 24, chapter 1). The non-admission to Holy Communion of the so-called “divorced and remarried” does not therefore mean a judgment on their state of grace before God, but a judgment on the visible, public, and objective character of their situation. Because of the visible nature of the sacraments and of the Church herself, the reception of the sacraments necessarily depends on the corresponding visible and objective situation of the faithful.
  • It is not morally licit to engage in sexual relations with a person who is not one’s legitimate spouse supposedly to avoid another sin. Since the Word of God teaches us, it is not lawful “to do evil so that good may come” (Romans 3, 8).
  • The admission of such persons to Holy Communion may be permitted only when they with the help of God’s grace and a patient and individual pastoral accompaniment make a sincere intention to cease from now on the habit of such sexual relations and to avoid scandal. It is in this way that true discernment and authentic pastoral accompaniment were always expressed in the Church.
  • People who have habitual non-marital sexual relations violate their indissoluble sacramental nuptial bond with their life style in relation to their legitimate spouse. For this reason they are not able to participate “in Spirit and in Truth” (see John 4, 23) at the Eucharistic wedding supper of Christ, also taking into account the words of the rite of Holy Communion: “Blessed are the guests at the wedding supper of the Lamb!” (Revelation 19, 9).
  • The fulfillment of God’s will, revealed in His Ten Commandments and in His explicit and absolute prohibition of divorce, constitutes the true spiritual good of the people here on earth and will lead them to the true joy of love in the salvation of eternal life.

Being bishops in the pastoral office those, who promote the Catholic and Apostolic faith (“cultores catholicae et apostolicae fidei”, see Missale Romanum, Canon Romanus), we are aware of this grave responsibility and our duty before the faithful who await from us a public and unequivocal profession of the truth and the immutable discipline of the Church regarding the indissolubility of marriage. For this reason we are not allowed to be silent.

We affirm therefore in the spirit of St. John the Baptist, of St. John Fisher, of St. Thomas More, of Blessed Laura Vicuña and of numerous known and unknown confessors and martyrs of the indissolubility of marriage:

It is not licit (non licet) to justify, approve, or legitimize either directly or indirectly divorce and a non-conjugal stable sexual relationship through the sacramental discipline of the admission of so-called “divorced and remarried” to Holy Communion, in this case a discipline alien to the entire Tradition of the Catholic and Apostolic faith.

By making this public profession before our conscience and before God who will judge us, we are sincerely convinced that we have provided a service of charity in truth to the Church of our day and to the Supreme Pontiff, Successor of Saint Peter and Vicar of Christ on earth .

31 December 2017, the Feast of the Holy Family, in the year of the centenary of the apparitions of Our Lady at Fatima.

+ Tomash Peta, Archbishop Metropolitan of the Archdiocese of Saint Mary in Astana

+ Jan Pawel Lenga, Archbishop-Bishop of Karaganda

+ Athanasius Schneider, Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Saint Mary in Astana

 

Posted in One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, PODCAzT, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , , , ,
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A new year, a new membership – LMS @latinmassuk

When I find an organization or cause that I like or that I use, I try to support it.

For example, I really like Our Lady of Hope Clinic, about which I have written. I like Team Rubicon.

I really like the TMSM! PLEASE DONATE!

I also like the work of the Latin Mass Society in England & Wales. Hence, I signed up for a membership today.  (You would think they have a special membership for priests who celebrated Holy Mass in the traditional form.. but no.)

You might do the same and join. HERE They’ve been fighting to good fight for a long time and many good things are happening there these days.

This is not the time to rest on successes.  This is the time to push forward.

The tank has only one gear.

Another good UK thing is the Catholic Herald. I’ve been writing a column for them for a long while now. It appears in the print and in the digital editions. You might subscribe. I think it is useful for Americans to read about what’s up in the UK. They are at a different stage in the culture war we are engaged in. With a subscription you get access to the whole archive. HERE

¡Hagan lío!

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, "How To..." - Practical Notes, Be The Maquis, Brick by Brick, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, New Evangelization, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
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Your Sunday and Holy Day Sermon Notes

Were the good points made in the sermon you heard during your Mass of Sunday obligation and at Mass for 1 January?

Let us know.

For my part, I spoke about the figure of the prophetess Anna, who was a widow for many decades.  By praying and fasting at the Temple day and night she lived the aspirations of the Psalmist: “One thing I have asked of the Lord, this will I seek after; that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life. That I may see the delight of the Lord, and may visit his temple.”  And she did.

Anna must have wondered what was in store for her when she was widowed at such a young age.  The lot of widows could be precarious in ancient times.  She had a discipline of life and fulfilled the virtue of religion.  God rewarded her with the sight of the Messiah.  Thereupon, with joy, she shared what she had seen with others.

I added as an aside that Anna had come to the Temple “at that very hour” and saw the Lord.  Hence, it is a good idea always to arrive in church on time for Mass… and see the Lord.

Of all the universes that God could have created, He created this one, into which He called us into being at a specific point in time and place.   We have something to do here.  It is often a mystery to us and hard to determine.  But the virtue of religion and perseverance are keys.

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