More love from the Religion of Peace

16_05_13_OLFatima_200From Jihad Watch:

Mexico: Muslim stabs priest at the altar of Mexico City’s Metropolitan Cathedral

[…]

“A French Muslim stabs a priest in the cathedral of Mexico,” translated from “Un musulmán francés apuñala a un sacerdote en la catedral de México,” by Ana Fuentes, Actuall, May 16, 2017 (thanks to C.):

A priest who officiated at the Metropolitan Cathedral in Mexico City was stabbed last Monday at 6:00 pm by a middle-aged man who went up to the altar and stabbed a blade into his neck.

According to the archdiocese, the attacker, named John Rene Rockschiil, of Muslim faith according to the Mexican media, was arrested after carrying out the attack with a knife.

After calling the police, a Condor unit from the capital’s public security secretariat arrived in the vicinity of the cathedral, located in the historic city center, to transfer the clergyman to San Miguel Chapultepec hospital.

Some of the testimonies of the parishioners who were in the cathedral emphasize that some of those present detained the 35-year-old man, in addition to providing medical care to the parish priest Miguel Angel Machorro, until the aid services arrived.

This year is the 100th anniversary of the apparitions of Our Lady at Fatima.

Ven. Fulton Sheen once wrote:

“This brings us to our second point, namely, why the Blessed Mother, in this twentieth century, should have revealed herself in the insignificant little village of Fatima, so that to all future generations she would be known as ‘Our Lady of Fatima’. Since nothing ever happens out of heaven except with a finesse of all details, I believe that the Blessed Virgin chose to be known as ‘Our Lady of Fatima’ as a pledge and a sign of hope to the Moslem people, and as an assurance that they, who show her so much respect, will one day accept her Divine Son, too.

Evidence to support these views is found in the historical fact that the Moslems occupied Portugal for centuries. At the time when they were finally driven out, the last Moslem chief had a beautiful daughter by the name of Fatima. A Catholic boy fell in love with her, and for him she not only stayed behind when the Moslems left, but even embraced the faith. The young husband was so much in love with her that he changed the name of the town where he lived to Fatima. Thus, the very place where Our Lady appeared in 1917 bears a historical connection to Fatima, the daughter of Mohammed.”

Food for thought.

Sts. Nunilo and Alodia, pray for us.
St. Lawrence of Brindisi, pray for us.
St. Pius V, pray for us.
Martyrs of Otranto, pray for us.
St. Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle.
Our Lady of Fatima, pray for us.

Posted in The Coming Storm, The future and our choices, The Religion of Peace | Tagged , ,
10 Comments

Your Good News

Do you have some great news to share with the readership?

Let us in on it.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
8 Comments

A visit to a great parish

I was recently in Grand Rapids, MI at Sacred Heart parish. I observed there some impressive things which confirm other experiences I’ve had.

First, what they have done with the school – rather, Academy – there could be a model for pastors with struggling schools to think about. They developed a classical curriculum and a relationship with homeschoolers which has produced amazing results. I walked through the school yesterday with the pastor, Fr. Sirico, and we visited classrooms, including two rooms where Latin studies were underway. The kids seemed really to be into it, which was encouraging. They have daily Mass, often in Latin and ad orientem.  The growth of attendance over the last couple years is astonishing.  They have been adding a grade each year.  Next year they start an 11th grade.

The parish Masses are great. They have the TLM and a Novus Ordo with good music, chant, Latin. Confessions are heard during the 10 and 12:30 TLM. I heard confessions pretty much as quickly as I could during the 10AM Novus Ordo: they were well-prepared, which is a sign of consistently solid preaching and use of the confessional.

All, I have noticed a great growth in attendance at Masses. I’ve been visiting the place for several years now.

One thing that very much caught me attention, is the deepening of reverence at the time of Holy Communion. After hearing confessions, I helped with Communion at the Novus Ordo Mass. Even though they don’t yet have a Communion rail (I think there are plans to reinstall one) people knelt along the step to the sanctuary where the rail once was. Virtually everyone received on the tongue. This is a big change from the last time I was there. The pastor told me that they haven’t pushed this very hard. They made some adjustments to their liturgical worship and … it just happened.

This confirms what I have seem at the parish where I usually am on Sundays. All Masses are ad orientem. There is a “dialogue” between the NO and TLM. A Communion rail was installed. People just started using it. Now, virtually no one receives in the hand. The time of Communion at the NO has a sharply different atmosphere than it did a few years ago. Some of the change is due to music at the time Communion.

In any event, what I am driving at is that careful reintroduction of traditional practices can make a huge difference.

I have little doubt that the pastor, Fr. Sirico, would welcome a call and friendly chat about what he has been doing there.

¡Hagan lío!

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, "How To..." - Practical Notes, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 |
10 Comments

Lightning … from above!

No, you are above the lightning for a change.

I found this at APOD.  Very cool.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Explanation: Watch a huge lightning storm move across the eastern USA. The huge storm caused much damage and unfortunately some loss of life for people in its path. Seen from space, the lightning is seen as momentary flashes in the featured time-lapse video recorded last month by the Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM) aboard the GOES-16 satellite. The outline of North America is most evident during the day, while the bright lightning strikes are most evident at night. Inspection of the video shows that much of the lightning occurred at the leading edge of the huge tail of the swirling storm. Because lightning frequently precedes a storm’s most violent impact, lightning data from GLM holds promise to help reduce the harm to humans from future storms.

Posted in Just Too Cool, Look! Up in the sky! | Tagged , ,
2 Comments

My View For Awhile: Homeward With Chant And Shakuhachi

I’ve had a great couple of days in Grand Rapids MI. It’s time to go home.


The talk I gave to kick off the Fatima series at Sacred Heart parish – an amazing place, more later – was well received by a full church.

On Sunday I heard confessions during an NO Mass – well prepared – and had the Sung TLM after.  In the evening there was a wonderful evening with some parishioners and the pastor Fr Sirico.

Visits here are always edifying.

But I’m heading home and I’ll be glad for some days without jet lag and a suitcase.

For the first leg…

Marvelous…  US HERE – UK HERE

UPDATE

UPDATE

Next leg.

I’m reading a book on Michelangelo and the Sistine Chapel so this seems appropriate…

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
3 Comments

An “imperialism of novelty”

Peter Kwasniewski at NLM has a thoughtful piece, with which I agree, about trend over time in the celebration of the Novus Ordo.  When there are options provided, there seems to be an expectation that the least traditional option will be chosen, with the result that tradition is opted out of sight and mind.  He called this this an “imperialism of novelty”.

It’s a manifestation of the hermeneutic of disrupture.  “Optionitis”… “Tinkeritis”….

Think about it…

  • The Roman Canon (Eucharistic Prayer I)
  • Black vestments
  • Gregorian chant
  • Latin
  • Pipe Organ
  • ad orientem worship

Summorum Pontificum is so important.

A sample:

I was once talking with a priest about the strange phenomenon of options in the new rite of Mass and the other sacraments. He made the observation that whenever there are multiple options, one of which is traditional and the others more recent inventions, there seems to be a subtle pressure to choose the more recent inventions, with the consequence that, as he put it, the traditional practice is “optioned out of existence.”

Now we know that this happens a great deal when it comes to anything that’s longer or more complex, or requires a special effort. For example, if the lectionary provides optional readings for a particular saint or category of saint, chances are they’ll be skipped, just because it’s so much easier to march through the daily cycle page by page rather than being bothered to look up the optional reading. An example of length would be the Confiteor: it takes a little longer to pray the Confiteor and the Kyrie than to use the pseudo-troped Kyrie. And so the Confiteor often falls by the wayside.

A dangerous tendency is at work here. Although theoretically many options are put at the celebrant’s disposal, in reality there is a certain pressure against choosing the traditional option precisely because it is traditional and a certain pressure in favor of choosing the modern option because it’s modern, because it can be done, because perhaps it’s more politically correct, or it’s more feminist, or whatever it might be. One is reminded here of the arrogant vanity of modern applied science, which seems to function by the technobarbaric principle of “If we can do, we should do it.” No matter the larger questions of right or wrong, the nuclear bombs must be built, the organs must be harvested, the test tube babies produced, the embryos frozen, the animals cloned, or whatever it might be.

An excellent example would be how the missal says that the priest can say “Pray, brethren.” Nobody ever says “Pray, brethren”; they always say “Pray, brothers and sisters” (or sometimes “Pray, sisters and brothers,” although that’s not an option given in the missal).

[…]
What we see in the world of the reformed liturgy, in short, is a continual drift towards a more and more meaningless, vestigial, paper-thin permission for traditional practices — as if the traditional practices were a rare and dangerous species of delicate flower that’s being pressured out of its ecosystem by an aggressive, invasive species of noxious weeds or foreign frogs.

As a name for the phenomenon, I suggest “the imperialism of novelty,” [a manifestation of the hermeneutic of disrupture] a kind of unseeing, undiscerning, indiscriminate favoritism or advancement of all that is new and recent and shiny, the latest model rolling off the production line. Tradition has no voice with which to defend itself; it has no armies, no force. [It has Summorum Pontificum.] It compels solely by its inner rationale, its beauty, its value as something passed down to us. But because modern people don’t care about what has been passed down to us, tradition’s voice is muted; the moral force that it should have is tempered, if not suppressed altogether. Modernity is fundamentally anti-traditional: recall Thomas Jefferson talking about how the enlightened governments of his day will at last throw off medieval priestcraft and monkery and superstition as we embark on a new Age of Reason, Novus Ordo Seclorum. The only positions that have any clout are those that are espoused by people today — not surprisingly, because the people today who espouse them are alive, with muscles and vocal chords, and they will do what they want to do because they are in charge and they’re alive right now.

[…]

Read the rest there.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The future and our choices, Turn Towards The Lord |
26 Comments

IN THE WILD: on a muscle car

I enjoy getting “In The Wild” pics with Z-Swag.

Here’s a great one… from a reader… via Twitter…

Screen Shot 2017-05-15 at 15.26.56

I have car magnets to support our priests and bishops.

>>HERE<<

Check them out!

Example:

Posted in In The Wild | Tagged , ,
3 Comments

Glaswegians! ACTION ITEM!

Some time ago I asked the readership if anyone had ever seen a stained glass window of Moses at the cleft in the rock from Exodus 33.

Someone came through and I am deeply grateful!

From a reader…

I remember a while back you asked if anyone had seen a stained glass of Moses in the cleft of the rock. We’re visiting in Scotland and I saw this at the Cathedral of St. Mungo in Glasgow. Not the greatest quality, but the best I could do.

window Moses cleft Exodus

May I ask any Glaswegians out there to get a really good image?

Posted in ACTION ITEM!, Just Too Cool | Tagged , ,
3 Comments

OUR LORD CAPTURED BY ALIEN ROBOT!

I can’t resist.   This is from my friend Greg DiPippo:

A scene from the soon-to-be-released film “Alien: New Covenant.” (An early press release from the studio accidentally omitted the word “new” from the title.) The xenomorphs have mated with the T-1000 from the 2nd Terminator movie, and their offspring has captured the Lord.

17_05_13_Fatima_monstrance

This is, of course, the monster-ance used at Fatima for the anniversary.

My first thought was, “propeller”?

Really?

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged , ,
75 Comments

Your Sunday Sermon Notes

Was there a good point made during the sermon you heard for your Mass of Sunday obligation?  Let us know what it was!

For my part, though I haven’t given it yet, I intend to connect the Epistle (James 1) with the core message of the Fatima apparitions.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
21 Comments