When Card. Tagle sang “Imagine”

I don’t think this is AI:

Lyrics

Imagine there’s no heaven
It’s easy if you try
No hell below us
Above us, only sky
Imagine all the people
Livin’ for today
Ah
Imagine there’s no countries
It isn’t hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion, too
Imagine all the people
Livin’ life in peace
You
You may say I’m a dreamer
But I’m not the only one
I hope someday you’ll join us
And the world will be as one
Imagine no possessions
I wonder if you can
No need for greed or hunger
A brotherhood of man
Imagine all the people
Sharing all the world
You
You may say I’m a dreamer
But I’m not the only one
I hope someday you’ll join us
And the world will live as one

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Is this really shabby or is it my imagination?

Devious.  Underhanded.  Treacherous.

Just a few adjectives that spring to mind.

Right?  Wrong?

Posted in Pò sì jiù, Sin That Cries To Heaven, You must be joking! | Tagged
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Internet jury rigged… for awhile… but food photos and a rant

As I write, I have returned home from supper with a priest who just arrived in Rome for the canonization of Carlo Acutis… which has been cancelled. Other things are going on.

Returning home I find no internet. I’m using cellular data but I could not, for some reason, tether my laptop, which I tested and tried before I left for Rome.

I happened to buy a thin portable Bluetooth keyboard which I am using now to type into my iPhone WP app for the blog. That helps.

I’m not sure what the sitrep is with internet. Checking online (with the phone) shows no outages for Vodafone Italia. Maybe they show it outside of Italy, I don’t know. Maybe this is another example of the gummint screwing with internet in advance of all sorts of big shots descending on Rome in the next few days.

All I know is that, if this doesn’t clear up, I may be working from the sacristy or a bar if it doesn’t clear up by morning.

So, I am not quite cut off, but I am a bit crippled until I can find out what the deal is with internet here. I did pay my bill, of course.

In the meantime, for you dear readers who like food photos. I’ll try to upload a couple from supper now and then hit the hay.

Roman style artichoke. Perfect. Fork sank through it.

Pizza Bianca … hmmm Pizzaballa… Fumo Bianco…

Seconds after (it was cold) I cut it, it was oozing milk. Mozzarella as God intended.

Alla norcina. Could have been in a better bowl. The fancier the bowl the harder to eat in an integrated way. Goodies go to the bottom so you must incessantly lift and sift. Keep it simple.

Salitimbocca which I had not had since I’ve arrived. It was just right tonight.

I spoke at length with the waiter, long-serving, old-school, seen it all. He said the Jubilee is a flop. They had a huge lunch crowd but almost all the tables tonight were empty! And this is a well-known place in the heart of things, in a Jubilee when clerics are flooding in. Cardinals eat here (not ones I like) so it is known and established. We had a leisurely meal over a couple of hours. In their main room with over a dozen tables, there were two other tables with people and one turned over. The Jubilee… meh.

However, now I am hearing that rooms are booking FAST and some clerics were possibly going to be booted from their reservations (for Carlos Acutis) to make room for the guys with colorful sashes and bigger accounts.

What did Jesus say about the “aquilae”?

UPDATE: 5 minutes after I posted this, the internet came back up.

Of course it did. Anything to keep me from sleep.

UPDATE: It will be interesting to watch things like bandwidth and GPS over the next few days as preparations are made here for the arrival of many heads of state.  In years past when some big shot came in, you could look at your phone for a map and watch it drift around trying to find where you were.  Big shots leave, everything back to normal.  Maybe they’ve gotten better at things.  We shall see.

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ROME 25/4– Day 15: Easter Wednesday


Over Rome at 06:15 the sun emerged and it will remerge (?) submerge at 20:02.

The Ave Maria Bell ought to ring for the Curia at 2-:15 (but it won’t).

It’s the feast of St. George and St. Adalbert.

It would have been Francis’ birthday.

The Roman Station is St. Lawrence outside-the-walls. I have a nice memory of being deacon when my bishop celebrated the Station Mass there and climbing the great ambo to sing the Gospel.

Welcome registrants:

ShemNehm
Sir Kronos MC
Breakspear

Tedeum

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Just a nice view from my evening stroll.

Remember the teaming hordes of pilgrims there were supposed to be during the Jubilee?

This morning walking up to the Campo de’ Fiori after Mass and a chat and a coffee…

Pretty much everyone here is saying that the Jubilee has been a flop.  Not many came for Easter…. in a Jubilee.

I bought some flowers today from Pippo.  We talked about Francis.  (He wasn’t particularly a fan… as most Romans I’ve spoken who had any thought about him at all.)

Heading home with some slices from Ruggieri (finocchiona) and taleggio (a favorite) and bread from the Forno at the Campo and flowers from Pippo and some passata di pomodoro (tomato … purée, I think is best).

Meanwhile…

Yeah… we knew that.

Cardinal Sarah is truly amazing. I think that even the progressivists know that he is a man of deep prayer and faith.

And this… yeah… we knew that too.

Between us, I’ve slowly been picking up Hungarian… which looks a bit like this. It’s hard.

Nice people! Great service!

In chessy news…

Magnus Carlsen won the 2025 Grenke Chess Freestyle Open (Fischer Random) with a perfect 9/9 score. A force of nature. It was quite the event, with some 3000 participants. Big! Freestyle is a thing. Look at this venue…

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

My guy Wesley So finished 6.5, with a comeback after losing in round three his only loss of the tournament.

I’m tellin’ya friends… get with it! Chess.

Interested in learning?  Try THIS.

Meanwhile, why is this knight sac amazing?   Quick!  60 seconds…. GO!

[NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.]

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PASCHALCAzT 2025 – 50: Easter Wednesday – Wherein (also) Fr. Z rants

The Roman Station today is St. Lawrence outside-the-walls.  We started Septuagesima here!

Scott Hahn drives home how liturgy, our worship, our participation in the Church’s liturgy affects the course of history.

Sound familiar?  I have a few thoughts about that.

 

Posted in LENTCAzT, PASCHALCAzT, PODCAzT, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , , ,
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“Quo nomine vis vocari?” What name will the next Pope take? – POLL

The Sede Vacante period isn’t just a time of dour mourning and anxious worry about what sort of Pope we are going to get next.  There is a lighter aspect.

What regnal name with the next Pope take?

When a man has been elected, at the moment he accepts, he gains universal jurisdiction over the Church.   Then he is asked “Quo nomine vis vocari?… By which name do you want to be called?”  I’m pretty sure that every Cardinal has given that some thought whether they are realistically in the running or not.   I think just about every cleric on earth has too.  It’s just a little fun.

It’s entirely possible that a man might stick to his baptismal name, if it is also a name with a papal pedigree.   I suspect that Card. Peter Erdö might freak out a lot of people if he did that.

There is an outside chance that some brand new name will be introduced to the long list.  Hey, that happened last time, right?  Results have varied.

Still, odds are that a more usual papal regnal name will be chosen.

I would be tempted to take the name Clement XIV the Second, just to make a point.

Let’s have a poll.

In what follows I left out Sixtus because “Sixtus VI” (in Italian even worse, “Sisto Sesto”.  I also left out Hormisdas … (watch.. now it’ll be Hormisdas), Callixtus, Boniface, Alexander and a few more that have been repeats.  I can’t list them all.   I’ve left an option for some of the less well-known names and you can comment on that in the combox.

Anyone can vote.  You can comment if you are registered and approved.

What regnal name with the newly elected Pope take?

View Results

 

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Francis and the post-mortem smear job

Back in the day of earlier cinema, to create a special glowing effect, for example to pretty-up an actress, vaseline or some other substance was smeared on the lens or on a piece of glass in front of the lens.

Something like that is going on after the death of Francis.

It is hardly unexpected that certain left-leaning and progressivist outlets will vigorously apply the vaseline when summing up the man and his pontificate.

For example, at Jesuit-run Amerika Magazine you’ll nearly drown in it. For obvious reasons. Similarly, Fishwrap lays it on thick. At the time of this writing, in league with Amerika, front and center Fishwrap moons over Francis and all things queer.

Other views, however, are also focusing on Francis with a less interfered with lens.

For example, at Crisis Eric Sammons lists oddities from the last few years that did nothing to help the Church and, frankly, quite a bit to cause division and weakness in the public square.   Once you start piling things up, some of which have faded a bit from memory although not from cumulative effect, it’s pretty daunting.  However, this paragraph stood out:

They say “personnel is policy,” and the radical policies of Pope Francis were reflected in his close advisors. He consistently surrounded himself with questionable and even downright evil men, including Theodore McCarrick, Cardinal Angelo Becciu, Cardinal Victor Manuel Fernandez, Fr. Marko Rupnik, and Fr. James Martin. Any pope can be prone to mistakes when appointing men to high positions, but Francis seemed to delight in having some of the worst people as his closest confidants.

At First Things there are a couple of pieces with no smear.  First, the Archbishop Emeritus of Philadelphia, Charles Chaput remarks HERE:

What the Church needs going forward is a leader who can marry personal simplicity with a passion for converting the world to Jesus Christ, a leader who has a heart of courage and a keen intellect to match it. Anything less won’t work.

“Personal simplicity”.   On the other hand, that “personal simplicity” wound up with a double-effect of diminishing the papal office and personal grandstanding.  I think I am not alone in being less than favorably impressed with the choice of a car (which is a kind of stunt) or not showing up with clothing proper to a Pope for truly important moments (like his first appearance) or not genuflecting to the Blessed Sacrament (but doing so for foreign officials) or living at Casa Santa Marta in humility (which cost the Vatican City State a huge pile cash to purchase and secure the Roman street out outside the nearby wall), etc.

Also at First Things, Protestant (Orthodox Presbyterian Church) Carl Trueman HERE opined candidly:

As a confessional Protestant, there is perhaps one decision Francis made that I should approve: restricting the Latin Mass. The need for vernacular liturgy was a standard part of Reformation Protestant policy. But even here there was a problem. The Protestant Reformers’ liturgical changes were driven by a specific theology of the word and its connection to salvation and sacraments. Catholicism’s theology of the sacraments is different and does not require liturgy in the vernacular. The pope’s move therefore lacked any obvious doctrinal motivation. One can only speculate as to his motives, but it appeared to be a liberal assault on traditional Catholicism. Francis was thus my own worst Protestant nightmare: an authoritarian Roman pope driving a liberal Protestant agenda, a leader who embodied the worst of all possible Christian worlds.

That’s was a good insight, about how the Protestant approach requires vernacular (because of sola Scriptura, each person being his own “pope” and authority to interpret, and the emphasis on preaching in worship, etc.) and that the Catholic Church’s theology does not depend on the vernacular.  We can absorb it and use it but we don’t depend on it.

One thing upon which most clear-eyed commentators will stress, is that we need now a Pope who unify and not seemingly delight in dividing, will care for the dignity of the office and proffer clarity of doctrine in teaching and even in more casual remarks.

Perhaps in your goodness you might take on some extra time in prayer, perhaps in church before the tabernacle, asking God to guide and protect the Electors of the College of Cardinals in their important task.

Posted in The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged
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ROME 25/4– Day 14: Easter Tuesday

Up came the sun at 06:17. Down goeth the sun at 20:01.

The Ave Maria is in the 20:15 cycle for the Curia, which is in the state of Sede Vacante, so business has slowed down. Or it should have. Some are being busy little bees, I see, in a hurry.

It is the feast of three saintly Popes of yore: Soter, Caius and Agapitus.

The Roman Station is at St. Paul’s outside-the-walls.

Jasmine Report (not the Jesuit!).

It’s getting there!   This growth, near where I live, is in full sunlight, so it is coming along quickly.

Beautiful morning in Rome!   It’s going to be splendid today.  After lunch and a brief (I hope) nap, I’ll take a good walk.

 

 

Richt-Click for a larger view of the altar at The Parish™ for Easter.

I’ve had no interesting food.  I will try to do better.

You can have excellent wine made by the monks of Le Barroux.

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Yesterday was Rome’s Birthday. Here is something I did NOT know!

Very Cool.

BTW… the done of the Pantheon is not only vastly older than St. Peter’s dome, it is about one foot larger in diameter.

Less edifying….

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The Whatever High Atop The Thing has rushed to the General Congregations BEFORE Cardinals can arrive. What’s the hurry?

What’s the massive hurry? This rush feels to me like an attempt to organize a voting block before the far flung cardinals arrive. We can ask: To whose advantage/disadvantage is it to hurry the process and thereby deny some of the farther cardinals from early participation?

Cui bono?

Oh… by the way…

Compare and contrast…

Posted in The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged
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PASCHALCAzT 2025 – 49: Easter Tuesday – Worshiping with our whole being

Roman Station: St. Paul’s outside-the-walls

Scott Hahn reflects on the Heavenly liturgy as related in the Book of Revelation and how it teaches us to worship.

We also hear what my home parish sounded like on Easter Sunday and why I am, in many respects, who and what I am today.

Posted in LENTCAzT, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, PASCHALCAzT, PODCAzT, Save The Liturgy - Save The World | Tagged , , , ,
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