Here it is from Madrid.

The Sun is up and Virgo rises with the Crescent Moon at her feet. The other orbs are above in Leo forming 12 in all.
Beautiful!
And they just closed the door to my flight.
Rumors are bouncing and binging like pinballs. Ooo the excitement! What will it be? Sites are rushing to talk about sources and possibilities. How exciting it all is. “I’m first!”
Sometimes that’s great and benign. Other times you are hurting your cause.
What some of you eager beavers out there in tradblogdom don’t seem to get is that hype sometimes diminishes impact.
Not always – but sometimes.
This is probably one of those times.
New document? Sure have at. But other – moves, keep your powder dry, as it were.
So, one of these days exercise a little control. Don’t you get this yet?
If not, this is a little paternal – not filial – correction.
UPDATE:
Not to worry. Anyway, its out now, by someone who doesn’t respect embargoes… again.
One wonders what impact it will have, if any.
This is the kind of note that make all the flak worthwhile:
A thousand times, thank you for your blog. I’m a Catholic in no small part because of this blog. When I first entered the Church ten years ago, I fell under the influence of liberals who taught me it was OK to live in sin as a gay man. I fell away from the faith eventually. Through the years, my own conscience told me this was not the life I wanted to live. Your faithful words have supported my decision to leave the homosexualist life, that was death. I could tell I was on the slippery slope again you spoke of last Sunday. Today I went to Confession and the FSSP priest (which I also learned about from your blog) reminded me that though this cross is “big and bloody and difficult,” the Lord will help me bear it. Thank you for standing up for the truth on which I have staked my life and eternal salvation. Please pray for me, as I do for you.
I am sure that God will bless this fellow a hundred fold for the suffering that he has had to endure in trying to live a good and holy life. It is hard for me to imagine the trials people with such attractions feel. However, I am convinced that if they bear their crosses and persevere, their place in heaven will be very high indeed.
Here’s another point.
When we fall and commit a sin, we can get back up again, go confession and move forward. I say the same thing to straight couples who may be living together in an irregular situation which, for some reason, they can’t change, as I might say to a same sex couple: live continently and be ready to suffer, don’t put yourselves in occasions of sin if you can help it, again be ready to suffer, use the sacraments well, use sacramentals to help to keep off the attacks of the Enemy of the soul.
If you fall… get back up and keep trying.
Our Church is for sinners. The only Church I want to belong to is the Church Christ gave to sinners. This is not the Church of the pure, only. We are all in this together.
If we ponder the gift Christ gave us as a Church, the effects of absolution are quite simply breathtaking.
With absolution, provided that you are sincere, that you’ve done your best to confess your mortal sins without intentionally hiding anything, that you want sincerely to amend your life, then…
Your sins are taken away, obliterated, gone from your soul never to be held against you. They are not merely covered over. They are eradicated forever. They are washed clean out of your soul by the Blood of the Lamb. You might remember them (with sorrow), but they are no longer yours. Penance must be done in reparation for them, but they have been irrevocably forgiven.
There is nothing that we little mortals can do that is so bad that that absolution given by the priest – who is Christ in that moment – can’t perfectly forgive. Therefore, never hold back.
With absolution also come graces not to sin in the future. God doesn’t just forgive us and forget us. His care is ongoing through graces. You can also call upon the baptismal and confirmed character that you have in time of temptation and trial.
Remember…
So, everyone, give thanks to God, for He is good, and His mercy endures forever. I rejoice in this feedback, as Christ enjoins all to rejoice for conversion of sinners and the return of our prodigals.
FATHERS: If you don’t hear confessions, how can men like this amend their lives and live?
Finally….
GO TO CONFESSION!
UPDATE:
There is a good interview [HERE] of Peter K by Aurelio Porfiri, whom I just met in Rome. It’s good. Porfiri is a composer of sacred music. At the Pontifical Mass in St. Peter’s for the Summorum Pontificum conference we heard his Mass and Te Deum.
___
Against the back ground of present controversies, I’ve been thinking.
Again, NOTHING that we undertake as a Church will succeed unless it is rooted first and foremost in the proper liturgical worship of God.
Hence, I need to plug Peter’s book again.
From a reader:
I am a Youth Minister at a parish and have probably a dozen young men (age 12-19) who are discerning calls to the priesthood and are interested in seminary. I have young priests at the parish, but they are reluctant to “push too hard.” What can we do to get these men into seminary? How can I, as a lay man, continue to give them hard-identity Faith that translates into them continuing their formation in college seminary?
For a response I turned to a priest who is a vocation director for his diocese.
GUEST RESPONSE: Fr “Diocesan Vocation Director”
Keep the young men involved in the life of the Church, serving at the altar, good service opportunities, prayer/retreat opportunities, a few Hail Marys per day for protection of their vocation and allow them to interact with the priests on a personal level.
Secondly, help them see that the Lord’s call can pass them by, the Lord has a plan for our life where we can do the most amount of good and achieve holiness with greater ease so don’t avoid His invitation because the disposition or situation may pass you by.
Thirdly, no one can make the vocational decision for you; be a man and choose to respond to the invitation. If the Lord wants you to do something else, He has to make it clear through the situation and circumstances of their state in life.
Tell the men why they have the qualities needed to be a good priest and the impact their life as a priest will have on thousands of others.
We honor soldiers and volunteers that give of themselves during disasters but in the long run their work primarily focused on earthly results and peace but how much more should the priesthood be honored because they are called to stand in the trenches of hell in people’s lives and bring the light of Christ there.
Priesthood is a noble and honorable calling which every man should want to pursue; Hoorah!
Here is a VESTMENT PROJECT UPDATE. There is news about two projects, as a matter of fact.
First, there is progress on the reversible, Shantung silk travel vestments.
I have received a couple donations for these vestments. I’ll embroider the names of the donors on the eventual pouches to be made for each set. You will be remembered in prayer that way.
A reversible travel vestment, in two colors, with all the parts from Gammarelli will be, according to the estimate I received, about €600 (c. $715). Not bad at all.

The fabric is being cut.


The trim is being measured.

Here is something fun. I got just a little extra fabric so that I could have miniature antependiums made for my travel altar to match the travel vestments. A Roman altar has a grand antependium of the color of the Mass. For example, the other day in Rome we saw this:
So, I will have little reversible antependiums for my altar. Here is the preparation.

That one will be black and, reversed, green, also with silver trim.
And if you don’t recall the altar, here it is set up when I first received it.

I know. Better than a lot of parishes, right? The ULTIMATE priest gift. HERE
There is also progress on another project.
Quite some time ago, we of the TMSM had a set of red vestments made for Pontifical Masses. This is how they have been employed. For example, we had once a Mass for the intention of persecuted Christians on the Feast of the Most Precious Blood. The other day, the bishop celebrated the Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross.

We are having more red chasubles made to match the set so that we can use them for priestly ordinations next June 29! The fabric is being cut. In addition, we have also having several more white chasubles made with the diocesan coat-of-arms, again for ordinations in a couple years from now. The dollar is strong these days. Who knows where it will be if things keep going in the world the way they are?
Yes, I know… they need to take better photos. It’s still good to see.

Ready to go to the workers.

So, that it a bit of an update.
Again, I have donations for two of the four sets (THANKS! M&JS and JS). The combinations will be:
White (gold trim) & Red (silver)
Black (silver) & Green (silver)
Violet (silver) & Rose (silver)
White (gold) & Blue (silver)
I suppose the donors should be able to choose which one to support, no?
From a reader…
QUAERITUR:
Maybe this question is too broad, but here goes: What is so difficult about saying/learning the EF? My pastor recently mentioned that he simply does not have time to learn the EF well enough to say it himself (he is open to it and even attended some local Juventutem events, but he is the sole priest in charge of two large parishes). As an outside observer, I realize that learning how to pronounce the Latin may be a bit difficult, and a priest needs a bit of help learning where to start, but isn’t everything the priest says and does in a TLM (especially a low mass) provided in the books? And if not, couldn’t new books be written to provide for details in the margins or more clear directions in the priest’s native language to guide him right though? It seems that a lot of smart and not-so-smart men learned to say mass over the last 500 years, I would presume the same should still be able to hold true today.
There are a lot of factors to consider.
First, many priests are up to their eyeballs in tasks. One more task gets to be daunting. We have to have compassion and patience when considering their time.
I know, I know… this is a really important task, and it touches on the very identity of every priest of the Roman Rite. Who are we if we don’t know our Rite? And we don’t know our Rite, if we don’t also know the Usus Antiquior, the TLM, which is arguably the expression of the Rite which is richer and has the greater track record by far. Hence, many tasks a priest has on his plate ought to be set aside for this more important project. But we all know what human nature is like.
Another aspect is, surely, that many priests have heard that it is sooooo haaaaard to learn the older Mass, and, not knowing Latin well or at all, they are simply intimidated. Moreover, some intimidated priests who are serious and pious, in their desire to do it well and without mistakes, hesitate to start because they are afraid they won’t do a good job of it. Of course a lot – and I mean a lot of really dumb priests in the past learned how to say Mass and the world continued to spin on its access. If they could do it, we can do it.
There’s one guy I know who is pretty nervous about the whole thing. I’m about to ship him a box of Depends with a sharply worded note.
REALLY! It’s NOT THAT HARD!
There is a Latin phrase: Fabricando fabri fimus… we become carpenters by doing carpentry. We have to get our of our heads and get our hands dirty, as it were. Also, we mustn’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good. That’s a killer.
It really helps some men to be shown what to do, one on one. Listening to recordings of the Latin can be useful. Doing a workshop, if possible, can be productive.
Priests should be encouraged, enjoined, badgered, beckoned, cajoled, urged, wheedled, exhorted, implored and pressed to learn the older form, for his own sake, and for the sake of the congregation he serves.
Also, be willing to step up and provide anything and everything he needs.
Father says, “I don’t have the books.”
You reply, takingthe paper from your pocket, “Here are several editions, Father, which would you like?”
“I don’t have the right vestments.”
“Father Z says that Gammarelli in Rome is not too expensive and they do good work. Which colors would you like? I’ll order them.”
“My Latin isn’t very good.”
“Here are some great resources. Let’s work on it together. I’ll bring the wine and cheese.”
The knock on effect of knowing the traditional ways pays back a thousand fold all the efforts paid to learn them.
Fathers, you CAN do this! You SHOULD do this! Your life as a priest will change once you know the older form and people will be grateful for the ongoing dividends your efforts will provide.