CQ CQ CQ This is Whiskey Delta Tango Papa Romeo Sierra … ECHOLINK & APRS

UPDATE 6 Sept:

No, I haven’t worked on my General in the last week or so, and, No, I haven’t done anything with Echolink yet.  However, the other day I did figure out today how to send APRS messages with my handheld.  I sent a few test messages and I also was able to spot myself on the map.   Since I am in Grand Rapids, MI at the moment, I may have another try at it.   Shouldn’t be all that different, I suppose.

Yes… that worked:

IMG_2252.PNG

73

_____

ORIGINAL Published on: Aug 6, 2014

Or I should say this is Kilo Charlie Niner Zulu Juliette November

This morning I chatted briefly with one of the congregants after Mass who is also a frequent commentator here and who is also a HAM radio operator.  Our chat reminded me that I have left these matters languishing for a while.  No, I haven’t done my General exam yet.

We may need these skills when … you know.

So!  Here’s a little contact just to rev things back up.

Who out there is on the air?

73

UPDATE 6 Aug:

There have been a couple developments.  Not only have many hams chimed in, there is some talk of using Echolink.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Ham Radio, Just Too Cool, Lighter fare, Semper Paratus, TEOTWAWKI, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged , ,
65 Comments

“What was once a request to live and let live has now become a demand for approval.”

I warmly recommend to the readership a column by Francis Card. George, Archbishop of Chicago.   His Eminence knocks this one over the fence.

We enter in medias res.  You can find the whole thing HERE:

[…]

In recent years, society has brought social and legislative approval to all types of sexual relationships that used to be considered “sinful.” Since the biblical vision of what it means to be human tells us that not every friendship or love can be expressed in sexual relations, the church’s teaching on these issues is now evidence of intolerance for what the civil law upholds and even imposes. What was once a request to live and let live has now become a demand for approval. The “ruling class,” those who shape public opinion in politics, in education, in communications, in entertainment, is using the civil law to impose its own form of morality on everyone. We are told that, even in marriage itself, there is no difference between men and women, although nature and our very bodies clearly evidence that men and women are not interchangeable at will in forming a family. Nevertheless, those who do not conform to the official religion, we are warned, place their citizenship in danger.

When the recent case about religious objection to one provision of the Health Care Act was decided against the State religion, the Huffington Post (June 30, 2014) raised “concerns about the compatibility between being a Catholic and being a good citizen.” This is not the voice of the nativists who first fought against Catholic immigration in the 1830s. Nor is it the voice of those who burned convents and churches in Boston and Philadelphia a decade later. Neither is it the voice of the Know-Nothing Party of the 1840s and 1850s, nor of the Ku Klux Klan, which burned crosses before Catholic churches in the Midwest after the civil war. It is a voice more sophisticated than that of the American Protective Association, whose members promised never to vote for a Catholic for public office. This is, rather, the selfrighteous voice of some members of the American establishment today who regard themselves as “progressive” and “enlightened.”

The inevitable result is a crisis of belief for many Catholics. Throughout history, when Catholics and other believers in revealed religion have been forced to choose between being taught by God or instructed by politicians, professors, editors of major newspapers and entertainers, many have opted to go along with the powers that be. This reduces a great tension in their lives, although it also brings with it the worship of a false god. It takes no moral courage to conform to government and social pressure. It takes a deep faith to “swim against the tide,” as Pope Francis recently encouraged young people to do at last summer’s World Youth Day.

Swimming against the tide means limiting one’s access to positions of prestige and power in society. It means that those who choose to live by the Catholic faith will not be welcomed as political candidates to national office, will not sit on editorial boards of major newspapers, will not be at home on most university faculties, will not have successful careers as actors and entertainers. Nor will their children, who will also be suspect. Since all public institutions, no matter who owns or operates them, will be agents of the government and conform their activities to the demands of the official religion, the practice of medicine and law will become more difficult for faithful Catholics. It already means in some States that those who run businesses must conform their activities to the official religion or be fined, as Christians and Jews are fined for their religion in countries governed by Sharia law.

[…]

Outstanding!

Fr. Z kudos to Card. George!

Posted in Fr. Z KUDOS, Liberals, One Man & One Woman, Our Catholic Identity, Religious Liberty, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged , , , , , ,
24 Comments

$9 for a Whopper? Are you out of your mind?

I have recently seen some discussion of what would happen were the minimum wage to be raised in these USA.   Here is one interesting take, that includes some links to other articles that are worth pursuing.

From Truth Revolt:

On Friday, The Daily Signal released a graph demonstrating the full impact of what would likely happen if a $15-per-hour minimum wage went into effect across the country.

The graph stems from a report by James Sherk, senior policy analyst in labor economics at The Heritage Foundation, which demonstrates that top fast-food restaurants like McDonalds and Taco Bell would have to boost prices by 38 percent to make up for increased labor costs. Suffice it to say, the before and after price differences are staggering.

[…]

I don’t eat at these places very often.  Once in a while when I am traveling I’ll swing into a place for a burger of some sort.  So, it’s a rare stop, but I do use them.   As I was looking at those price changes, however, my first thought was, “Sheesh, if those are going to be the prices, I think I’ll just pick a nicer place to eat that has better food!”  $9 for a sub?  Are you kidding me? $9 for a Whopper?  Are you out of your mind?

I’m no economist, but it seems to me that, if this goes into effect, these stores are going to lose a lot of customers and, eventually, there must – as night follows day – be a huge loss of jobs for both young people just getting into the work force and even from some older folks who want to make a buck.  Revue goes down be cause of fewer customers, but wages skyrocket because of the minimum wage.  What does that mean?  These stores will cut their staff and stop hiring.   Everyone loses.

Posted in The Drill, You must be joking! | Tagged , ,
63 Comments

VIDEO: Fr. Sirico on problem of multiculturalism

At the moment I am in Grand Rapids, MI.   No, this is not an Acton event.  I am visiting the parish of Fr. Robert Sirico (who happens to head up Acton Institute), to speak at a function and, frankly, to have a little R & R.

As I was arriving, Father was just returning from having done an interview with Neil Cavuto of FNC.   He spoke about multiculturalism.   The video is worth a watch.  Cavuto asked several guests about multiculturalism and the abandoning of Judeo-Christian cultural roots.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

 

Posted in Our Catholic Identity, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices, The Religion of Peace | Tagged , , ,
5 Comments

ASK FATHER: Do I need special training or blessing to make vestments?

From a readerette:

I have a priest that I dearly love who is approaching his 10th anniversary of ordination, and I want to make him vestments. I am an skilled seamstress and embroideress, so that is not the issue. But I am wondering if it is ok for me to make these or do I have to get special training or a blessing from the bishop or something before I make them? I have checked on the internet and in the local library and have found nothing on the subject, I was wondering if you have a source that might be able to help.

First, thanks for using the feminine forms “seamstress” and “embroideress”. English is a wonderful language. We should use more of it more often.

Anyone can make vestments, man, woman, Catholic, non-Catholic, non-Christian. This is not a problem. You don’t need a special blessing from anyone, though I can’t see why you couldn’t ask for one as you begin your work. We should ask for blessings more often, as well.

There is no special training other than, perhaps, experience and helpful tips from others. This would be important when attempting to make something like the extremely difficult cassock. The collars of a cassock and how it falls are tricky in the extreme. I have seen some attempts at cassocks that look hardly better than a flour sack dyed black cut up the middle. Quantum potes, tantum aude!

It would be a really good idea to have at hand a model for your work. Get a good example of the vestment you are trying to make. Ask Father how it is used, how it is supposed to be worn. What pitfalls there may be. Off the top of my head, for example, if you line a chasuble or dalmatic, make sure that you aren’t going to bake Father. The lights in a sanctuary can contribute a lot of heat, not to mention the weather. Your lining might make that vestment a real burden. Also, a lining that is all shiny and elegant and silky and pretty – to your eyes at least – might make that chasuble a chore to wear, as it’s slick interior makes it to slip around or constantly slip back as the weight of the larger, longer, back portion drags it backwards or sideways.  There is one set of vestments that I am inflicted with from time to time – nice to look at, no doubt – that are seriously annoying.  I am constantly pulling them back into positions.

Oh, the horrible hardships we poor priests have to shoulder!

Anyway… if you think you can do the work well, have at! Good luck! Do your very best with the very best materials. Our liturgical worship deserves nothing less.

Perhaps readers here can chime in with more tips.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged
35 Comments

St. Patrick’s Day Parade

I suspect that some of you clicked on the link when you saw the headline because you want to read my predictable rant about the “gay” thing in the St. Patrick’s Day Parade in New York and the local archbishop’s involvement in the same.

I suspect you know what I would say, were I to rant, so let’s let it go at that.

However, there is something to say about the St. Patrick’s Day Parade.   As a matter of fact a very smart guy, Msgr. Charles Pope, who is pastor of a couple parishes in the Archdiocese of Washington DC, said it well on his blog.  He tackled the issue of the St. Patrick’s Day Parade in NYC.  Alas, his post has been “disappeared”.  So, you can’t read it at his blog.

However, someone preserved its text HERE, if you are interested in everything that he wrote.

This, however, is the section I want to underscore.  Thus, Msgr. Pope:

Now the St. Patrick’s Parade is becoming of parade of disorder, chaos, and fake unity. Let’s be honest: St. Patrick’s Day nationally has become a disgraceful display of drunkenness and foolishness in the middle of Lent that more often embarrasses the memory of Patrick than honors it.  [Do I hear an “Amen!”?]

In New York City in particular, the “parade” is devolving into a farcical and hateful ridicule of the faith that St. Patrick preached.  [Can anyone doubt that what occurs on the Feast of Patrick is entirely antithetical to what the feast stands for?]

It’s time to cancel the St. Patrick’s Day Parade and the Al Smith Dinner and all the other “Catholic” traditions that have been hijacked by the world. Better for Catholics to enter their churches and get down on their knees on St. Patrick’s Day to pray in reparation for the foolishness, and to pray for this confused world to return to its senses. Let’s do adoration and pray the rosary and the Divine Mercy Chaplet unceasingly for this poor old world.

[…]

And as for St Patrick’s Day, it’s time to stop wearin’ the green and instead take up the purple of Lent and mean it. Enough of the celebration of stupidity, frivolity, and drunkenness that St Paddy’s day has become. We need penance now, not foolishness. We don’t need parades and dinner with people who scoff at our teachings, insist we compromise, use us for publicity, and make money off of us. We’re being played for (and are?) fools.

End the St Patrick’s parade. End the Al Smith Dinner and all other such compromised events. Enough now, back to Church! Wear the purple of Lent and if there is going to be a procession, let it be Eucharistic and penitential for the sins of this age.

For the sake of His sorrowful passion, have mercy on us and on the whole world!

I think Msgr. Pope hit this one squarely on the head.

 

Posted in Fr. Z KUDOS, Our Catholic Identity, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged , ,
56 Comments

Dispute over the remains of Ven. Fulton Sheen

The cause for beatification of Ven. Archbp. Fulton Sheen has been put on hold.  Apparently, two dioceses have to settle their differences over the final disposition of the Venerable’s body.

The person or entity making the request that a cause be opened, the “Actor”, assume all responsibility for the expenses entailed in the cause, for the duration of the cause.  In this the Actor seems to be a Foundation in the Diocese of Peoria, where Ven. Fulton grew up.  However, in most cases when a cause is opened for a martyrdom, a person who lived a life of heroic virtue, or a miracle, the cause is located or handled in the place where the miracle took place or where the martyrdom occurred or, in the case also of non-martyrs, where the person died.  The Congregation for Causes of Saints can, for a good reason, transfer a cause from the place where the servant of God died, to another diocese.  For example, say that the profoundly holy servant of God Joe Bagofdonuts, born and raised and living and working for his whole life in the Diocese of Black Duck goes to visit his sister across the country in the Diocese of Mountweasel.  Mountweasel, initially would have the right to the cause, but for obvious reasons, the Congregation would have Black Duck handle it.   So, Peoria has great interest in Ven. Fulton, but he lived and worked and died in the Archd. of New York at Lennox Hill Hospital in Manhattan.  At some point the cause was transferred to Peoria.

And so the dispute begins, because… well New York has the body and Peoria wants it.

NB: There may be some more information out there about what is going on, but this is what I have seen so far.

From CNS:

WASHINGTON (CNS) — The canonization cause of Archbishop Fulton Sheen has been suspended indefinitely, according to a statement issued Sept. 3 by the Diocese of Peoria, Illinois, where the archbishop was born.

The suspension was announced “with immense sadness,” the diocese said. “The process to verify a possible miracle attributed to Sheen had been going extremely well, and only awaited a vote of the cardinals and the approval of the Holy Father. There was every indication that a possible date for beatification in Peoria would have been scheduled for as early as the coming year.”

[…]

The diocesan statement said the Archdiocese of New York denied a request from Bishop Daniel R. Jenky of Peoria, president of the Archbishop Sheen Foundation, to move the archbishop’s body to Peoria.

A Sept. 4 statement from Joseph Zwilling, communications director for the New York Archdiocese, said Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York “did express a hesitance in exhuming the body” absent a directive from the Vatican Congregation for Saints’ Causes and family approval. The statement added that Archbishop Sheen’s “closest surviving family members” asked that the archbishop’s wishes be respected and that he had “expressly stated his desire that his remains be buried in New York.”  [So, it is not only the Archdiocese that has reservations.]

Zwilling said Cardinal Dolan “does object to the dismemberment of the archbishop’s body,” but, were it to be exhumed, relics that might have been buried with Archbishop Sheen might be “reverently collected” and “shared generously” with the Peoria Diocese. [We can assume that this means the vestments and other episcopal gear the late Archbishop was clothed in.]

If the Peoria Diocese’s decision is final to suspend Archbishop Sheen’s cause and to assign it to the Vatican congregation’s historical archives, Zwilling said, “the Archdiocese of New York would welcome the opportunity to assume responsibility for the cause in an attempt to move it forward.” [Ah… the plot thickens.]

“After further discussion with Rome, it was decided that the Sheen Cause would now have to be relegated to the congregation’s historic archive,” the Peoria diocesan statement said.

[…]

“Countless supporters especially from the local church in Central Illinois have given their time, treasure and talent for this good work with the clear understanding that the body of Venerable Sheen would return to the diocese,” the Peoria statement said. “Bishop Jenky was personally assured on several occasions by the Archdiocese of New York that the transfer of the body would take place at the appropriate time. New York’s change of mind took place as the work on behalf of the cause had reached a significant stage.”

[…]

Clearly this “change of mind” does not play well in Peoria.

Nor should it, if there was such an agreement.  And, frankly, it is hard to image that there was not.

During the course of the cause there had to have been an official examination of the body of the servant of God, a recognitio, of his remains, their condition, their actual existence, he is in the grave and not someone or something else.  At some point they would have had to hammer out the important question of where the body would be should the cause come to a positive conclusion and the beatification should take place.  If Peoria had the cause, they would have wanted, also, the Blessed’s remains for veneration in their local church.  It is inconceivable that this wasn’t worked out ahead of time.

Habeas corpus.

The Church has a lot of experience in these matters and the process for a cause has been worked out over many centuries.  Just about every imaginable contingency has, at some point or other, been dealt with in the past.  In the case of Ven. Fulton, we have echoes of past experiences.

For example, we all remember from our history how, in late antiquity and especially in the medieval period it was important for a monastery or city cathedral to have the body or great relic of saint.  This could mean serious pilgrim traffic and, therefore, prestige and economic advance.  Everyone would want to travel to the monastery of St. Swithin-by-the-Slough on the Feast of St. Continentia.  A market fair would be held.  Goods would be traded, etc.  For a bit of the flavor of this, try reading the interesting novel by Ken Follet, The Pillars of the Earth.  Monasteries and cities fought over bodies of saints. St. Martin of Tours died halfway between Poitier and Tours. They were about to have a little war over the saints remains, but someone managed to steal the body. When St. Thomas Aquinas died, the Cistercian monks hide his remains so that they couldn’t be swiped. But, as it turns out, a French monk managed to nick the saint’s bones and take them back to Toulouse, where Thomas is today.

Thus, bickering over bodies is nothing new in this fascinating Church of ours. It is unsavory to see, but we have seen this movie before. And it ain’t the Bells of St. Mary.

Eventually this will be settled, when someone decides to give for the sake of the cause of Ven. Fulton. Until then, however, it is entirely proper and for the best that the cause be suspended.

UPDATE:

Fr. Landry has a piece at the National Catholic Register about this.  He adds more details.  It is worth a look.  HERE

Posted in Saints: Stories & Symbols, The Drill | Tagged , , , , , ,
42 Comments

HAM RADIO ACTION ITEM! Support HR 4969 NOW!

HR 4969 – the “Amateur Radio Parity Act of 2014” – was introduced into the 113th Congress.  This bipartisan effort would direct the FCC to extend the “reasonable accommodation” provisions for Amateur Radio antennas to include all types of land-use regulation, including deed restrictions and restrictive covenants.

Effectively, the bill will help to ensure that every ham in these USA, regardless of the community they live in, will have the opportunity to practice their avocation from their own homes without breaking any rules or fear of reprisal.  Well… less fear, I guess, given this administration.

Contact your representative.  HERE  Pick up the phone and CALL.  Go HERE for other ways to make your voice heard.

I am also going to tell my congressman that I want him to co-sponsor the bill and that I will be checking from time to time to watch for his name.  If he does, I will tell others that I am pleased.  If he doesn’t, I will tell people that I am very displeased.

Posted in ACTION ITEM!, Be The Maquis, Ham Radio, Semper Paratus, The Coming Storm | Tagged , ,
6 Comments

OBITUARY: Spirit of Vatican II – RIP – 52 years of age

The often amusing Eye of the Tiber had this.

CINCINNATI, OH- A Solemn High Requiem Mass was held Thursday at St. Martura Church in downtown Cincinnati for the Spirit of Vatican II, aged 52. After suffering a progressively debilitating illness for the last ten years of its life as a new generation of priests re-examined the Council in light of Sacred Tradition, the Spirit of Vatican II passed away quietly in its sleep last Tuesday.

“The Requiem Mass really brought closure to the community,” said 26-year old Father David Flannigan, FSSP, who celebrated the Mass with Deacon Brady Schwartz, 32, and Subdeacon Anthony LaViera, 23. “While the death of the Spirit of Vatican II was certainly expected, we were glad to offer Mass for its repose.”  [I would like to have been the celebrant for that one.  Perhaps I’ll schedule my own.]

“What a beautiful Mass!” commented long-time parishioner Gladys O’Neal. “I hadn’t seen black vestments since I was a little girl. And as much as I love the song On Eagle’s Wings, the Dies Irae sequence really got me thinking about the Four Last Things.”

The Spirit of Vatican II is survived by a dwindling number of aging hippies who dropped out of seminary in the ‘70’s, some faded felt banners, and tambourines presently gathering dust in storage.

Do I hear and “Amen!”?

Posted in Four Last Things, Lighter fare | Tagged
43 Comments

COLUMBUS, IN: Quran verses spray painted on Christian churches. Punks or…?

Sure… right… these words were taken out of context.  Right.

However, I like the fact that some Muslims offered to help clean it up.

Bottom line: Sure, maybe it was a bunch if idiot punks who did this. This may not be a huge deal right now, but this is a sign of the times.

We shall have to see what the investigation turns up.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJtr607RrDI&feature=player_embedded

Posted in The Coming Storm, The Drill, The Last Acceptable Prejudice, The Religion of Peace | Tagged ,
11 Comments