Is this building a… ?

At Church Pop there is a quiz.

Here is a sample.

Quick… is this building a:

Modernist Church … or a… Communist Building?

Posted in Liberals, Lighter fare, You must be joking! | Tagged ,
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ASK FATHER: Sick at home in bed movie list

From a reader:

QUAERITUR:

I am home sick with bronchitis and have been passing the day away sleeping and watching movies, which got me thinking when I visited your blog. If you had a top 10 movie list of your favorite movies (i.e., the ones you love most), what would your list look like?

Hmmmm… really fast and off the top of my head and working from my phone…

And there is also THIS.  And THIS.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, The Coming Storm | Tagged
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RNS smear of Card. Burke

Liberal Religion News Service is less and less careful to pretended objectivity when it comes to coverage of Catholic matters.  Crux, by the way, took what follows lock and stock.

Watch how they paint him, smear, with words and premises which you are simply supposed to accept.

Pope Francis sidelines, but probably can’t silence, conservative Cardinal Burke

By Josephine Mckenna
Religion News Service November 11, 2014
In demoting American Cardinal Raymond Burke from his powerful perch at the Vatican, Pope Francis has sidelined an outspoken conservative agitator — for now.

The pope moved the feisty former archbishop of St. Louis from his role as head of the Vatican’s highest court to the largely ceremonial position of patron of the Knights of Malta on Saturday.

Francis has effectively exiled one of his loudest critics, but Burke’s supporters — and his opponents — warn that his position at the Catholic charity may actually give him more freedom to exercise greater influence and even rally opposition to papal reforms.

In other words, the stunning demotion may remake Burke into St. Raymond the Martyr, the patron saint of Catholic conservatives. [?]

“His position as patron of the Knights of Malta is Rome-based and mostly ceremonial,” wrote Edward Pentin for the conservative National Catholic Register.

“He is nevertheless likely to continue and perhaps even step up his defense of the Church’s teaching in the face of continued efforts to radically alter pastoral practice in the run-up to next year’s second synod on the family.”

Burke is well-known for his uncompromising [and we all know that’s bad] stance on abortion, homosexuality, and the sanctity of marriage, and his passion for doctrine is matched only by his passion for the elegant finery of his office. [Is she psychic?]

Wearing the vibrant red robes of a cardinal for the first time on the day he was appointed by Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI in 2010, he used one word to describe the greatest threat to the Church: “secularization.” [Imagine such a thing!  But look at how she put that.  She moves from the “vibrant red robes” – which even the new cardinal darlings of the liberal media were wearing at the time of their consistory, to “secularization”. Another manifestation of Burke Derangement Syndrome™?]

During the global bishops’ Synod on the Family held at the Vatican last month, Burke bitterly complained that conservative views were being stifled amid initial signs of a more welcoming approach to gays and lesbians. [Which is about the worst crime there is these days.  God forbid that anyone should uphold the Church’s actual teachings.  Remember: those who now defend doctrine are the new “dissenters”.]

But he raised the ante in an interview with Spanish Catholic weekly, Vida Nueva, at the end of October when he made a direct attack on Francis’ leadership.

“At this very critical moment, there is a strong sense that the Church is like a ship without a rudder,” Burke said. “Now, it is more important than ever to examine our faith, have a healthy spiritual leader, and give powerful witness to the faith.” [Do these liberals ever quote other things Burke has said about Francis and about his own service and respect?]

His departure is no surprise, and observers say it had little to do with the conservative blowback that upended the synod or rumors that he snubbed the pope at the concluding Mass in St. Peter’s Square. [This is irresponsible.  It was made amply clear that, customarily, only a certain row of prelates greet the Pope after a Mass in the Square.  Burke wasn’t in that row.]

Italian media began speculating about his demotion as early as September; Burke himself confirmed his imminent removal from the corridors of power at the Vatican in a recent interview.

Asked by a reporter who had told him of his pending departure, Burke shot back: “Who do you think?”

[…]

It is open season on Raymond Card. Burke.  The liberals have their knives out.

Remember when Card. Kasper suggested that there was going to be negative consequences in the press for those who were on the opposite side of the positions he was proposing? HERE

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Biased Media Coverage, CRUX WATCH, Liberals | Tagged , , , ,
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Why do liberals have a spittle-flecked nutty about the cappa magna? Wherein Fr. Z rants.

Last night I watched the BBC (on demand) coverage of the Remembrance Sunday ceremonies in London. No one does ceremony and music like the British.

The sober ceremony, with its essentially unchanging script, got me thinking about the need we human beings have for outward signs and for, above all for decorum.

Decorum can mean several things.  It is a technical term from ancient rhetoric for that which is apt in this time and place and for this audience so as to achieve your goal.  It also has do with that which is apt in society, boundaries for social behavior.

God knows that we, as human beings, need outward signs to grasp something of the mystery of our encounters with Him and about His plan for us (see St. Augustine, Letters 54-55).  God also knows that we need boundaries for our interactions.

What a devastating mistake is this slide into ever greater informality we have been inflicted with for some decades now.

What a mistake it is to strip away the outward signs of propriety or decorum.

Within Holy Church this applies to our liturgical worship as well as to our social interaction.  Today I posted about a video documentary on the cassock.  HERE  I think the stripping down of ecclesiastical garb has also played ruinously with our Catholic identity across the board.  I don’t mean to say that clerics should be constantly focused on garb.  However, I do think bishops, priests and deacons ought to know how to dress properly according to station and occasion.  Sometimes it is necessary to put on all the gear.  Sometimes, not all the time.  This self-respect, and respect for office, and respect for neighbor, must in turn have a knock on effect among the laity.  Proper dress demonstrates respect for self, for office, for vocation and for others whom a priest is ordained to serve.

We need decorum.

It seems to me that this is one of the reasons why the liberals who suffer from Burke Derangement Syndrome™ consistently mention the cappa magna.  It is as if they are … scared of it.

The fact is that the use of the cappa is still foreseen today for use outside Rome. It is still proper ecclesiastical garb. Liberals fixate on cappas.  They fixate on vestments in a way is truly bizarre.  Reading their philippics is like watching someone struggle with serious disorders.

In my experience, based on the Pontifical Masses I have been involved with, the prelates generally endure all the pontifical gear.  They submit themselves to what the rites and to what decorum both require.

They put them on because they understand that the garb and the rites are not about them.  They endure the discomfort with a cheerful submission because they love the Church and the people they serve, who in turn want to celebrate the sacred mysteries with decorum and reverence.  They submit to the dictates of decorum because, as good churchmen, they want to foster the virtue of Religion, love for the Church and her rites and teaching, and respect for the role of the successors of the Apostles.  It isn’t about them.

This is the exact opposite of the liberal approach to liturgy and garb.  What liberals do screams that its all about them.

I think that liberals instinctively grasp that humility underlies the symbolism of the traditional vestments, the prayers of the older form of  Mass, and even the use of items like the cappa, which underscore the dignity of office and not the person.  Humility and submission to authority is what they can’t stand, and so they heap ridicule on the rites, the garb and, especially, the people who use them. It’s like a sickness.

It’s not just that they despise the old ways.  They despise the people who revere tradition.  They despise the people because of their own contempt for authority.  Furthermore, they know how wrong it is for Catholics to despise these things and these people and so they lash out with personal attacks.

Decorum is about respect, for our forebears, for our neighbor, and for our posterity.

Finally, I have to ask:

Why do they not write and talk this way about Eastern Catholics with their spectacular golden crowns and magnificent vestments? Even when we Latins put on all our gear, we we don’t do crowns. An attack on traditional Roman garb and ways is an attack our Eastern brethren too.  Not to mention the Orthodox.  Liberals are particularly taken with things Orthodox these days (cf oikonomia).

UPDATE 12 Nov:

Ann Barnhardt recently made a similar connection between the way a nation treats its fallen soldiers and our Catholic liturgy. HERE

Posted in Liberals, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, Throwing a Nutty, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , , , , , , , , ,
56 Comments

Thank you, Veterans.

Posted in Events, Fr. Z KUDOS | Tagged ,
6 Comments

Last original WWII Navajo Code Talker, a Marine, dies on the birthday of the Corps

The last Navajo Code Talker, Chester Nez, USMC died on 10 November 2014, the 239th birthday of the Corps. They played a vital role during WWII.

From AZCentral

Marine veteran Michael Smith wept Wednesday when he heard about the death of Chester Nez, the last of the original Navajo Code Talkers.

Smith, from Window Rock, who had met Nez several times, described him as a “quiet, humble” Navajo Marine.

Smith said that the passing of Nez — the last of the first 29 Navajo men who created a code from their language that stumped the Japanese in World War II — marked the closure of a chapter in the story of a special group of veterans.

Nez died Wednesday morning in Albuquerque, where he lived with his son Michael. He was 93. His family said he died of kidney failure.

“It’s the chapter about the first Navajo Code Talkers coming to a close,” said Smith, 52, whose late father was also a Code Talker, but not one of the original group. “People talk about it, and you never think it’s going to happen in your lifetime. They are carrying the past with them.

“To see this in a lifetime, it’s sad. I hope it makes us (Navajo people) stronger.”

Other Navajo veterans echoed Smith’s words in the Navajo language, saying Nez “baa hane’ yée éí t’áá kódiíji’ bíighah silíí’,” his life story ends here.

Smith said that creating the code “was a unit effort. As Marines we are all one. We fight as one with the tools that we are given.”  [A good approach to life.  ‘rah.]

The Code Talkers

Nez grew up in the tiny New Mexico Navajo community of Chi Chil Tah, in Jones Ranch, N.M.

Nez was attending the Tuba City Boarding School when the U.S. Marines came looking for young boys to help in World War II. Nez, in an interview three years ago, told The Arizona Republic he signed on with other friends because they were eager for an adventure that would allow them to see what was on the other side of the buttes.

[…]

Read the rest there.

R.I.P.

Posted in Just Too Cool | Tagged , ,
6 Comments

¡VIVA LA SOTANA! A video about …

A reader sent me a a link to a video trailer for a Spanish language documentary about the cassock.

Yes, the cassock.

While the video struck me as being perhaps a little saccharin. I’ll give them a pass for being a bit romantic about the cassock. I place it in the context of a country and culture where, within living memory, men were put against the wall and shot for wearing one.

In these USA it hasn’t been the custom to use the cassock as regular, daily street dress. This stems from the time of the Councils of Baltimore, which are no longer in force. They were reacting to virulent anti-Catholicism. The Council’s did establish long-standing clerical decorum in these USA. Younger men are using the cassock more often as street dress. I guess I am a little old fashioned, in that I don’t. Ironic.

Also, I remind the reverend clerical readers out there that the new edition of the Directory for the Ministry and the Life of Priests issued by the Congregation of Clergy places the cassock in the FIRST place for clerical dress. Other forms of clerical dress are the exception… approved exceptions, but exceptions nonetheless.

There are lots of problems today that really ought to be discussed in terms of decorum.

So, here is the trailer, which is in Spanish.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

The cassock. Tool of the New Evangelization?

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, Mail from priests, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, Priests and Priesthood, Seminarians and Seminaries | Tagged ,
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A palindrome for St. Martin’s Day

From a reader from back on 11/11/11:

I thought that you and your readers might find this legend of Satan, St. Martin of Tours, and two exquisitely long palindromes, to be of interest particularly on this palindromic day of 11/11/11.

From The Book of Days, Vol. II, R. Chambers, ed., W. & R. Chambers, Ltd., London & Edinburgh, 1864, p. 568:

“Martin, having occasion to visit Rome, set out to perform the journey thither on foot. Satan, meeting him on the way, taunted the holy man for not using a conveyance more suitable to a bishop. In an instant the saint changed the Old Serpent into a mule, and jumping on its back, trotted comfortably along. Whenever the transformed demon slackened pace, Martin, by making the sign of the cross, urged it to full speed. At last, Satan, utterly defeated, exclaimed:

‘Signa te signa: temere me tangis et angis:
Roma tibi subito motibus ibit amor.’

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged ,
3 Comments

Good comments on Card. Burke and on a serious translation error

I had intended to write today about the translation error in the English version of the recent Synod’s final document.  However, over at The Catholic Thing, Robert Royal covers the issue well and says many of the same things I had intended to say, and he does so masterfully.  I urge you to read his piece.

Royal also comments on the demotion of Card. Burke, saying:

There’s a double sadness here. Pope Francis clearly approved these moves – whether they were instigated by him personally or by advisers he listens to. But it’s precisely voices like Burke’s that he needs to keep around. He’s already hearing plenty from often unreliable counselors like Cardinals Maradiaga, Marx, and Kasper. The last in particular seems more and more incoherent as he tries to explain precisely why marriage is indissoluble and yet those in a second sexual relationship – though not a marriage – may be absolved and return to receiving Communion. The only way that’s possible is if God repeals the Law of Non-contradiction. I don’t think that’s on his to-do list.

But there’s more and, I think, worse. I’m not especially given to conspiracy theories in sacred or secular contexts. But there’s some – let’s say – systemic problem within the Vatican that having a loyal truth-teller like Burke around helps to correct.

Read the rest over there.

And thanks to the reader who left me a voicemail (see sidebar).


WDTPRS


020 8133 4535


651-447-6265

Posted in The Coming Storm, The Drill | Tagged , , ,
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An evil site and occasion of sin. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

UPDATE BELOW (Fishwrap closed it’s comments.)

___ Original Published on: Nov 9, 2014 ___

If ever you needed proof of what an evil site and occasion of sin the National Schismatic Reporter (aka Fishwrap) has become, just have a look at the combox under the shameful post by Michael Sean Winters about the reassignment of Card. Burke. HERE

I undershot when I used the image of a “Lord of the Flies Dance” to describe what was about to happen once Card. Burke was demoted from his position as Prefect of the Signatura.

Like and admire Card. Burke or dislike and scorn Card. Burke… no one should ever treat another person in public the way they are treating Card. Burke – and each other – over there.

I blame the editors of the Fishwrap, in general, for their hypocritical policies concerning their combox, and Michael Sean Winters, in particular, for fostering such hostility and lack of charity.

I am forced to conclude that that is what they want.

Bishops who read this blog:  I implore you to consider looking in on the combox over there under that entry before your meeting later this week.   You cannot stop what is going on over there, I’m afraid.  But there is something you can do.  The display of sheer viciousness in their combox should demonstrate why there should be a formal demand from bishops far and wide that they remove the word “Catholic” from their title.

And if you ever wondered why I don’t allow an open combox here – once upon a time I did – both the combox at the National Schismatic Reporter regarding Card. Burke and that of Crux on the same matter should convince you that my policy is correct.

BTW… what I saw at Crux isn’t, in the main, as barbaric and twisted as what I saw at Fishwrap.

More and more I am using the moderation queue function here.

I want to provide a space for open discussion, I really do. But I cannot allow the sort of savagery that anonymity and a lack of consequences seems to bring out from people.  I am sure that were I to have an open combox again, as other sites do, my traffic here would skyrocket far beyond what it already is, which is pretty darn high.

The spiritual cost would be too great. I would be cooperating in evil.

That’s what Fishwrap is doing.  And they invite it and provide occasions for it.

We see horrific violations of charity and reason all over the internet in comboxes of blogs and on media websites. I try to tamp that down here, though some of it filters through. Far far less than what you see at Fishwrap, however, and for that I am grateful.

Conservatives and traditionalists certainly have their wickedly vicious commentators, who, emboldened by anonymity and a lack of immediate consequences, puke their bilious dreck into public view. It is one of the greater concerns I have in my life and work here.

But I have to say that what you see from liberals outstrips the bile of conservatives by orders of magnitude.

Let me remind you of something. When you post something on the internet, there are consequences, both for you and for others.

You may be a matter of scandal to others, weakening their faith. Direct ad hominem attacks are horrid and unfair, especially when lobbed into the arena with cowardly anonymity. You endanger your immortal soul when you do these things. I sincerely fear that many of the commentators in the combox at the Fishwrap are in danger of going to Hell. Anyone who can write some of the things you see over there has to be spiritually sick in dangers ways.

But that may be expected from a site that actively and openly promotes dissent from the Church’s teachings.

There is plenty of room and even a great need today for sharp rhetoric and blunt responses. But we must stick to issues and not make direct personal attacks.  I am not saying that we should never have fights.  We must have fights, as a matter of fact, when the stakes are high.  In fighting, however, we mustn’t become subhuman, agents of the Devil.

We have to be ready in our participation in the comboxes of the internet, to take some hard knocks.  If we choose to descend onto the digital sand of the arena, we are going to take some hits.  That’s okay.  But do so after having put on the armor of God and after having recalled the Apostle’s urgent admonition in 1 Peter 3.  When he tells people to be prepared to give answers, he says, first, they should sanctify Christ in their hearts and then, after, to do so with “with modesty and fear, having a good conscience”. Why?

That whereas they speak evil of you, they may be ashamed who falsely accuse your good conversation (anastrophe – manner of life, not just how we talk) in Christ.
For it is better doing well (if such be the will of God) to suffer, than doing ill.

Let the activity in the comboxes of those sites – if you dare to look into them – be a stimulus for some of you to examine your consciences and consider well your own participation in online comboxes…. at least my combox.

Let’s all be better.

I can’t catch everything here that violates decorum.  I have no staff.  So I ask you to participate, even vigorously, but to police yourself.  Think about what you are about the post.  Think before posting.

We can all fail in charity, but let’s not make that our default position.

The combox, for this entry, is closed.

UPDATE 10 Nov 1544 GMT:

I received an email from a reader:

Father,

When I went to the site just now (granted, here on PST), there was a sign that says “Comments are now closed.” And some of the comments had already been deleted.

Remaining comments are still of bottomfeeding variety, though.

There’s no proof like a few time-stamped screenshots, though.

This is at Fishwrap under that horrid post:

Editor’s note: Because the comments on this blog post have become unacceptable, NCR editors have decided to remove the Disqus thread for this post.

Meanwhile, Fishwrap is at it again with a new post on Card. Burke from CNS.  HERE  Never mind that it isn’t from a Fishwrap writer, they picked the worst possible photo of the Cardinal and they opened the combox.  Their usual viciousness has started up again, just as they intended.

Again, as the bishops meet, they should watch what Fishwrap is doing.

UPDATE 1757 GMT:

One of the prime movers of the nastiness about Card. Burke in the combox of the Fishwrap is one “Bill Freeman”:

This seems to be, as one of you readers pointed out to me in an email, the same fellow about whom Deacon Kandra wrote a blog post.  HERE

Here is his bio at the site “Progressive Catholics” HERE

What’s your background?

Unlike many ceremony officiants, I didn’t just go online and get ordained. After 35 years as a Roman Catholic deacon, I was ordained a priest in the independent Catholic movement on November 19, 2011.

I am a priest with the United American Catholic Church. My ministry is centered at the Friar Mychal Judge Pastoral Center in Northern Virginia where I am a chaplain working with the sick and those at the end of life, their families and caregivers. As part of that ministry, I oversee a worldwide Prayer Request Wall. I have an active wedding ministry with Progressive Catholic & Interfaith Weddings.

Enough said.   This is the sort of influence that drives the combox at Fishwrap.

At least Freeman uses his real name. I have to give him that.  That’s a notch above the cowards over there.

UPDATE 2040 GMT:

Fishwrap has closed their combox under the CNS piece that they reposted.  I am told by a reader here, however, that it is still possible to see the discussion through Disqus.

What is far more worrisome, however, is the new piece by Robert Mickens about Cardinal Burke.

First, allow me to remind you that Mickens was fired by the ultra-liberal English magazine The Tablet for his public comments about Benedict XVI.  It was bad enough that not even The Tablet could stomach it.  HERE

Mickens piece is as nasty, as the main entry, as the Fishwrap’s combox usually becomes.

His main notion is that Card. Burke and people who participate in the Extraordinary Form, a tiny minority, are sick weirdos.  No one should pay attention to them. He spends some ink dumping on John Paul II and Benedict.   The whole thing reeks of the usual smug liberal fantasy about their self-proclaimed moral superiority.

Here is a sample:

Burke, during these past six or so years in Rome, has emerged as perhaps the most liturgically and doctrinally “retrodox” prelate in the church. His name has become synonymous with the cappa magna and other outlandish ecclesiastical attire dating to a bygone era. He prides himself on being a fervent pro-life activist, though others would call him an overzealous anti-abortionist given his insistence that capital punishment and war, though rarely permissible, are not intrinsically evil. On the flip side, he makes his the loudest voice in the room — as he showed during the last synod gathering — in order to remind the whole world that sexual love between two people of the same sex is always an intrinsic evil. [This may be the root of the Fishwrap’s hatred of Burke.]

The cardinal’s fan base is made up mainly of Tridendine Mass devotees and proponents of the so-called “reform of the reform” of the liturgy, as well as other socially conservative Catholics. They all march (though some seem to just sleepwalk) under the banner of the “hermeneutic of continuity,” a phrase they mistakenly attribute to Benedict XVI. (The retired pope actually espoused a “hermeneutic of reform,” defining it as “a combination of continuity and discontinuity at different levels” and “innovation in continuity.”) [Ironic that he should mention him in this way, after what he did to Benedict on Facebook.]

Fortunately, the Burke groupies are a tiny minority within the much, much wider church. But, unfortunately, a good part of this minority seem to be seminarians (especially in English- and French-speaking areas), and a good number of priests ordained in the last five to 10 years. And then there are the bishops. [Your Excellencies… are you paying attention?] Lamentably, there seem to be no lack of them. At least the loudest ones. And the United States would seem to have more than its fair share.

This last point, however, exposes the incoherence of what Mickens is pushing.  If there are so few of these retro-weirdos around, why the worry?  If Burke’s “followers” are so insignificant in number and so marginal, why does Mickens dedicate so much space and energy to trashing them?

Could it be a) that they are not so insignificant and could it be that b) these liberals can’t afford even the existence of just one person telling the truth?

Mickens’ vilification of Card. Burke and others who might be in harmony with him comes from deep fear.  These people are terrified.  The clock keeps ticking and they are going to run out of steam without getting what they want.  In the meantime, the number of young priests who want solid, traditional Catholicism is growing and there is nothing they can do about it.

Wherever Mickens’ sour hatred comes from, it is frankly shocking to see something like this from a publication that has the word “Catholic” in the title.

The Catholic Bishops should not give the NCR a pass for this.

Posted in ACTION ITEM!, Biased Media Coverage, Cri de Coeur, Dogs and Fleas, Green Inkers, Liberals, Our Catholic Identity, Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Drill, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , , ,
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