Adoration in Austin… in the Capitol in the Capital

A reader sent me this.

For Corpus Christi, in Austin, the state capital of Texas, there was a Eucharistic Procession from the Cathedral to the Capitol.  (You who have English as a second language, or who were born after about 1970 and went to public schools, note well that “o” and “a”.)

Can you imaging Adoration and Benediction in the rotunda of your state capitol?

HERE

It is pretty hard to imagine this in my native place, Minnesota.  And here, in Madison, WI?  HAH!

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool | Tagged ,
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Pope Francis and the Pallia

Did you notice that Pope Francis, for Sts. Peter and Paul, went back to the ordinary modern pallium which all the metropolitan archbishops wear?

So, in the space of about 10 years we have seen the longish, archeologizing pallium first used by Pope Benedict (probably a creation of Piero Marini).

Not my favorite. Benedict left that one, portentously, on the tomb of Pope Celestine V.

And then Benedict went to a transitional historic pallium.

Francis used that until now.

So, we are back where we started.

 

I, for one, am glad to see it back.  For how long?  Who knows.  He might get rid of it all together before he resigns at 80.

Posted in Benedict XVI, Francis, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 |
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Catholic church, sold, now to be a mosque

Some of you may have seen what recently transpired in my native place. A Catholic Church, where a friend of mine had been pastor, was closed and then sold to Muslims. It will soon be a mosque. HERE and HERE

This is seriously galling.

Former St. John's Church - Cross removed

St. John’s church finds new owner

Will be an Islamic faith center

The altars are gone, and the cross has been pulled off the top of the building.

It’s official — St. John’s Catholic Church has been decommissioned by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, and sold off by St. Pascal Baylon Catholic Church, which owned the buildings.

The sale to the new owners, the Darul-Uloom Islamic Center, closed on Friday, June 20. The sale included the church building, the empty school, and the attached rectory, which was used as rental housing. [What a grand place that rectory was.]

The St. Pascal Baylon parish took over care of St. John’s as part of a directive from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis — with the merger, St. John’s was effectively closed.

The Roman Catholic church held its last Mass on Sunday, June 30, 2013 and was vacant for a year until it was purchased.

The sale will help relieve St. Pascal Baylon of its outstanding $900,000 debt to the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, according to the Rev. Mike Byron, the St. Pascal Baylon priest.

Though the church, rectory and school were listed for $927,000, the Archdiocese did not reveal the amount they sold for.

[…]

Decommissioning process [I think the word is “desecration”.]

A few weeks ago, former St. John’s Catholic Church parishioner Greg Cosimini passed by the old vacant church, and noticed a large lift in the parking lot.

Cosimini looked over and saw that the giant cross from the top of the building had been placed in a large dumpster. Cosimini said workers had tried to save the cross, but it was broken while being removed.

[…]

Byron said that though St. Pascal Baylon didn’t have any specific hopes of what the new use of the building might be, the outcome “an opportunity to welcome a new faith community into the East Side.”

He said that the St. Pascal’s parish would look to ways to cooperate on “some ventures of mutual interest.”

“It’s good that it’s going to continue to be used as a sacred space,” he added.

“We’re happy with the transaction, and I hope the buyers will be happy with it, too,” Byron said.

PHOTOS

I want to remind you all of something important.

Our Lord promised that Hell would not prevail against the Church.  He did not promise that Hell wouldn’t prevail in these USA, or where you live.

Don’t assume that any of the structures of the Church are safe and will just automatically always be there for you without you having to lift your pinky finger to do your part.

Posted in Pò sì jiù, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, The Religion of Peace, You must be joking! | Tagged
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Wherein Fr. Z looks for a cobbler, or tailor, or someone….

Are there any cobblers, leather workers out there?

Years ago I inherited a small “wallet” for a pocket stole. I almost always have a stole and oil stock about my person.  One use for my spare mag pocket on my 5.11’s, right?  It seems to me that that’s a pretty good trade.

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Time has taken its toll and I need a replacement.

 

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It’s not complicated.

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It is hard to find these compact stoles now.  The one’s you find these days are far bulkier.

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I think you get the drift.  The idea is to keep it slim and moderately flexible.

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Anyone?

Who can make Father another stole wallet?

UPDATE 17 June:

I have had a few emails on this.  I am always impressed with the way people respond to requests for help.  It looks as if a couple of the readers are going to take a shot at making one!   I look forward to the results.  And the results will be so much nicer to have than something simply purchased somewhere.

UPDATE 30 JUNE:

I am delighted to have received from a reader his offering of a new stole wallet.  That’s what I am calling it now, for lack of a better term.

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With the stole

 

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I am grateful for the thought and the effort!

Posted in The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged , ,
11 Comments

Francis latest interview. Feminists won’t be pleased.

The Holy Father had an interview with the Italian daily Il Messaggero.  It isn’t all that revelatory and I suspect that not too many people will be excited about it.

There is little more statism in it. One thing to note, however, is that our feminists are not going to be happy with this interview.  Not one little bit.

Here is the section about women in the  Church (my trans.):

M: If you will permit a criticism…

Francis: Of course…

M: You speak, perhaps, little about women, and when you speak about them you take on on issue only from the point of view of motherhood, woman as spouse, woman as mother, etc.  But women by now are heads of state, multinationals, armies.  What posts can women hold in the Church, according to you?

Francis: Women are the most beautiful things that God created.  The Church is woman.  Church is a feminine word [in Italian].  One cannot do theology without this femininity.  You are right that we don’t talk about this enough.  I agree that there must be more work on the theology of women.  I have said that we are working in this sense.

M: Isn’t there a certain misogyny at the base of this?

Francis: The fact is that woman was taken from a rib … (he laughs strongly).  I’m kidding, that’s a joke.  I agree that the question of women must be explored more deeply, otherwise one cannot understand the Church herself.

M: Can we expect some historic decisions from you, along the lines of a woman head of a dicastery [Vatican department], if not of Clergy

Francis: (laughs), Beh, many times priests wind up under the thumb of their housekeepers… [le perpetue… are “housekeepers because in Manzioni’s I promessi sposi, don Abondio’s housekeeper was named “Perpetua”]

So, feminists and the promoters of women’s ordination get nothing and then, again, nothing.

Posted in Francis, The Drill | Tagged , , , , ,
68 Comments

D. Madison, WI: Pontifical Mass at the Throne

For those of you in striking distance of Madison, WI….

On Sunday, the Feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, there will be a Pontifical Mass at the Throne celebrated by His Excellency Most Rev. Robert C. Morlino, Bishop of Madison.

Mass will begin at 1 pm at the Bishop O’Connor Center.

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged ,
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Fr. Z’s Kitchen: Sauces and some rescue tips

CLICK ME

I haven’t been doing much interesting cooking, I’m afraid.  I have, however, done a couple things that might be of interest.

Not too long ago, I made supper for myself and a priest friend, pan-fried steaks, sautéed mushrooms, and sauce Béarnaise from scratch was to be the highlight with a sturdy Côte-du-Rhone.

He stood me up, as it turns out, but I made the Bearnaise sauce anyway.

If you are interested in these things, try Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking. If you don’t have her two volume set in your kitchen… well… what on earth’s wrong with you, anyway?

It was a little hard to snap pics of the process, since a lot of it requires both hands, especially the beating stage.

First, you should know that sauce Béarnaise is the cousin, perhaps the more Catholic cousin, of sauce Hollandaise. Use high quality ingredients, a top notch unsalted butter (you want to do your own seasoning, after all) and fresh eggs.

I used the microwave for to melt some of the butter.  After chopping, really mincing, the shallot – you don’t need much, so for, say, four people you can get just a single, small one – you add it to white wine or wine vinegar or white, dry vermouth. You can use a red vinegar too, for a darker color.  I like to do half and half, dry vermouth and vinegar for a more confident flavor.  You can also get away with using green onion if you can’t find a shallot.  And don’t use white sweet vermouth, for the love of all that’s holy!  Use sweet white vermouth, such as Martini Bianco, for your pre-prandial, all by itself on ice with a twist of lemon.  Excellent on a hot summer day.  You could also use tarragon infused white vinegar, but check your flavor balance before the very last stage.  Anyway, reduce your vinegar with the shallots and some chopped tarragon – how do people live without tarragon, I wonder – and a little pepper and a pinch of salt, until you have about 2 tablespoons left.  Strain out the stuff and let the reduced liquid cool in the sauce pan you are going to use for the sauce itself.

Separate your egg yolks well and add them to your (cooled) reduction and then start beating them until smooth and they start to thicken.  You can also add your reduction to the eggs after they are beaten.  Just before they really change consistency, which will happen rather suddenly, you will get a little curl of steam from the mixture.  Then you thicken them more over either a pan of boiling water (called bain-marie or double-boiler) or directly over the heat source.  I like doing it directly over flame.  I bring the pan over the flame briefly and move it away, again and again, as I beat the sauce together, making sure you don’t make scrambled eggs out of it.  This saves time, though I had plenty of time, having been stood up by that priest.  Right now, since I cook on a hot plate here in the Steam Pipe Trunk Distribution Venue, I have used the boiling water technique, but the next time I make a sauce like this, I’ll try direct heat.  My hot plate is one of these induction units (sent from my wishlist by a reader – KA!) that requires direct contact with a pan of high iron content.  I could do Add some of the cold butter and keep beating.  As the mixture gets smooth and starts to thicken, you could add just a wee bit of cool water.  As it thickens more, and started to stick a little to the whisk, you begin to add – bit by bit, mind you – your melted butter as you beat the sauce, watching your texture closely.  Make sure that all of the butter is well blended in before adding more.

Tip: Don’t have a wire whisk? Use some chop sticks.

Tip: Clarified butter will make a thicker sauce.  Also, I have also done the butter stage by keeping a mass of butter nearby and then picking up a little at a time with the whisk itself.  You can use your fingers, too… don’t be ascared to touch food.  After all, as Julia would say, “Who’s to know?”

NB: You really do need to add the butter a little at a time.  Too much at a time and it won’t thicken and then you have to go into rescue mode.  And whisk whisk whisk!  When you are satisfied with the wonderful yellow ribbons, add rest of your chopped tarragon and then check the seasoning level, with salt and pepper.

Violà, Bearnaise sauce for the price of a few eggs and a little tarragon, some vinegar and a persistent whisk.  It is not hard, really, but you have to pay attention for a few minutes.  I was not distracted by my guest, the priest who didn’t show up, so this was a snap.

“But Father! But Father!”, some of you could be saying, “We are bored with freshly made Béarnaise sauce.  Ho hum.  And you hate Vatican II!”

Never fear.  There are variations.  If you were going to make steaks in a pan, as I was before I was stood up by that priest, you could deglaze your pan and then beat the liquid into the Bearnaise for to make sauce Colbert, which isn’t funny at all.  If you would beat in a little tomato paste or, even better, a fresh purée your result is sauce Choron.

RESCUE TIPS: If you blow it with the sauce, and it gets lumpy because you screwed up the heat and beat part, you should be able to rescue a lot of it by pressing it through a fine mesh strainer into a bowl and beating it up with a bit more vinegar until it is smooth again.  And if that doesn’t resolve it, because it’s far too scrambled and lumpy, then lumpify it more.  I don’t remember where I picked this up, but I know it was from Julia Child. It isn’t in the Art of French Cooking but I have it on a sheet of notes tucked into the cover. She suggests to add chopped hard boiled eggs and more herbs and maybe capers and present on the side of the plate as a garnish it as if that were exactly the way you wanted it to be.  Don’t lose your cool.  Bearnaise and Hollandaise can also curdle instead of thicken.  This could happen if you add too much butter at at time during the whisking and beating stage.  Resolve that by beating, little by little, some of the curds into more vinegar, until smooth and then, again, adjust the flavor.

Also, if your sauce cools too much before serving, warm it by beating in hot butter or hot water (which I prefer).

Since I was stood up by the priest for supper, I made a few little packs of the sauce to stick into the freezer for other times.  I used that great wrap that sticks to just about anything, except to an appointment for supper with a priest, as it turns out.  It doesn’t revive perfectly after being frozen, but in a pinch it’ll do for a spread in a sandwich or with many other things.  I must try a smear of this in a BLT when the tomatoes come in.  Hmmmm.

Speaking of butter, since I had sliced some mushrooms before the priest stood me up for supper, I did them too.   Never put to many in a pan at once, if you want them to be a nice golden brown.  Mushroom have a lot of water in them.  If you pack the pan, they will steam each other.  Space them out and be patient.  You can make them well ahead of the supper you will have made in vain because you were stood up, by the priest, as I was.

Don’t be ascared to try making sauce Béarnaise.  It is easy to use inexpensive ingredients to make additions which raise your meals to a new level, even when you are stood up by a priest.  As Julia once said, “You don’t have to cook fancy or complicated masterpieces – just good food from fresh ingredients.”

UPDATE:

Today, no sooner did I finish making three-bean salad, for myself and not for the supper spurning priest, but I found this article about multiple uses of vinegar, another material proof that God loves us.  HERE

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Fr. Z's Kitchen, Mail from priests, Slubberdegullions | Tagged , ,
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More about Holy Innocents in Manhattan (videos)

Many media outlets (e.g. NYT, NRO, Rod Dreher), are noticing the plight of the people of Holy Innocents Church in midtown Manhattan’s reviving Garment District.

There is now a good article at the National Catholic Register about Holy Innocents, though I strongly disagree with the first line:

NEW YORK — Every weekday, several [?] traditional Catholics in New York City gather for a 6pm Traditional Latin Mass at the Church of the Holy Innocents, a Gothic Revival structure in Manhattan’s Garment District.

“Several”?  Several dozens!  And they are of every color and shape and economic level.

Masses are celebrated every day at the ideally situated Holy Innocents Church in both the Ordinary Form and, more importantly, in the Extraordinary Form.

The attendance at the Extraordinary Form evening Mass, well-timed for people getting off work, has been steadily growing.  For Low Masses on Monday and Thursdays there is an average of 55 people.  For Sung Masses – every Wednesday – about 75.  On Fridays the number climbs to over 100.  On Saturday morning, it varies between 80-100.  On Sundays the average has been 170 and that number is climbing to around 200 these days. There are about 40 men who are in the server corps and about 20 in the choir rotation.  Lay people gather and at least one cleric on Sunday afternoons to sing Vespers (as the Second Vatican Council asked) and have Benediction.  There aren’t Sung Vespers at St. Patrick’s Cathedral, but there are at Holy Innocents.  More people are at Sunday Vespers than at the Novus Ordo Mass at 12:30.

I don’t usually go for the “empower” buzz word stuff, but it is the lay people who are seriously empowered here.  A liberal’s dream, right?  Lay people have, with the benign nod of the pastor, turned this place around in 5 years.

Since the now infamous sermon given by Fr. Wylie and the way Holy Innocents has been in the news, I am told that there are many new faces in the congregation.  I was told, “there are so many new faces for the coffee hour that we are running out of food extremely quickly.”  They have coffee and doughnuts after the Sunday Extraordinary Form Mass and quite a few people hang out, as is typical of the traditional Mass goers whom I have seen around these USA and abroad.

Traditional Catholics tend to form a close and warm community.  That’s also what is at stake.  These are people, not numbers.

But speaking of numbers, last year the parish exceeded the quota for the “Cardinal’s Annual Appeal”.

Holy Innocents is on 37th between Broadway and 7th, near Herald Square, not far from Penn Station, so it is ideally situated near many public transportation options.  The Garment District is experiencing a revival.  The New York Post wrote that it is becoming another Silicon Valley.  Even now, there is a steady stream of people all day long in an out of the church. People come to light candles, to pray briefly, and then go on their way. There is a thrift clothing store in the basement which is a help to low income people.  I wrote about watching people during the day HERE.

If you are in New York sometime, and go to nearby Times Square or Macy’s, stop in at Holy Innocents even if you can’t be there for Mass. Say a prayer, and then watch the people come and go.  It is amazing.

Animi caussa… just for kicks… just to give you a taste of what happens there… here are filmettes of the choir practicing one of the ethnic Christmas pieces for the concert before Midnight Mass and then the Gloria at the Holy Thursday Mass, which was done rather simplex this year, for various reasons.   And, yes, the boy was playing the organ.  Talented kid!  He also composed the Gloria!  And, yes, the music is generally that good.

Play

I say again:

  • Do not give up.
  • Make your desires known in charity but clearly.
  • Put aside minor differences and band together.
  • Excel in works of mercy.
  • Be willing to work and sacrifice and give of time and talent and treasure.

Step up.  Don’t whine.  Think it through.  Set goals.  Make it happen.  You can do it.

Posted in ACTION ITEM!, New Evangelization, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Drill | Tagged , , ,
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ASK FATHER: Prayers for putting on cassock, surplice

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

While vesting for Mass, a member of the clergy (at least in the EF; the priests I know do it for OF too) will say a set of prayers as he is putting the different vestments on. As un-ordained servers wear some of the same vestments (exs: the cassock, sometimes an alb), would it be appropriate for a server to say the prayers for those vestments?
(ex: [look… if you are going to abbreviate “for example”, how about using a standard form?  For example, “e.g.”] if a layman were to don an alb, would it be appropriate to pray the Dealba me, Domine prayer while putting it on?)

I don’t see any problem with any male reciting the prayers used when putting on these items.

However, to do it right, males should wash their hands before putting on any vestment, reciting the proper prayer:

Da, Domine, virtutem manibus meis ad abstergendam omnem maculam ut sine pollutione mentis et corporis valeam tibi servire.

Give virtue to my hands, O Lord, that being cleansed from all stain I might serve you with purity of mind and body.

When putting on the cassock, a male should say:

Dominus, pars hereditatis meae et calicis mei, tu es qui restitues hereditatem meam.

O Lord, the portion of my inheritance and my chalice, You are He who will restore my inheritance.

When putting on the surplice, a male should say:

Indue me, Domine, novum hominem, qui secundum Deum creatus est in iustitia et sanctitate veritatis. Amen.

Invest me, O Lord, as a new man, who was created by God in justice and the holiness of truth. Amen.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , ,
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Citizen Wesolowski, laicized for violating minors

By now you will have heard that Jozef Wesolowski, an Archbishop and the former Nuncio to the Dominican Republic, has been laicized. It is not known exactly where he is at the moment, I believe.

When the Holy See heard of the charges against Wesolowski, he was pulled out of the Dominican Republic back to Rome.  Of course that started up the cliché mill that the Vatican was protecting a pedophile, blah blah.  Not so.  They were doing what any sovereign state’s government  would do to a errant diplomat with immunity from prosecution: they recalled him and then they prosecuted him.

First, the CDF got hold of Wesolowski.  They examined the charged and found them credible.  Since what Wesolowski did was a horrible sin and crime by the Church’s law, he was laicized.  Harming minors is a grave delict.  He got what was coming to him as a cleric.

Now that the CDF has moved against Wesolowski, and laicized him, the only recourse that he has would be back to the CDF itself.  The members of the Congregation, meeting on one of their Wednesday dates called a Feria Quarta, would consider an eventual appeal.  I doubt Wesolowski will make one, since they nailed him dead on.  After that, only the Pope himself could hear an appeal, but you can bet that with something like this, involving a Nuncio and diplomatic immunity, etc., the CDF didn’t sneeze without the Holy Father’s being brought up to speed.

So, now that Wesolowski has been laicized he is fired from his position, he no longer would have diplomatic immunity from prosecution in the Dominican Republic, and he will surely lose any pension that he might have had.

Now he will get what is coming to him simply considered as a man, rather than also as a cleric.

Wesolowski is now, since he was a diplomat, a citizen of the Vatican City State.  He is now subject to criminal prosecution under the Vatican’s own judicial system.  This is not the same as the Code of Canon Law for the Latin Church.  This is not the same as the special law that the CDF would lay down.  This is the Vatican City State’s own penal law and criminal justice system.  Wesolowski could be incarcerated, as Benedict XVI’s traitorous butler was, tried in a trial, and then sentenced to jail time.  Long term sentences are taken care of, for the Vatican, by Italian authorities.

Could Wesolowski be extradited by the Dominican Republic?  I suppose so, but I don’t know what sort of agreement the two states have.

And former Father Greg Reynolds is still excommunicated.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Brick by Brick, Clerical Sexual Abuse, Sin That Cries To Heaven, The Drill | Tagged , , ,
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