CATASTROPHIC: Pray for vocations to the priesthood

910526FrzOrdinationI’ve been writing with friends about vocation numbers.

From one of my interlocutors today:

Catastrophic (HERE):

“The past few weeks have again seen a number of ordinations of new deacons and priests in the dioceses of northwestern Europe. 24 of them, in 13 (arch)dioceses, to be exact. In total, the area in question (the countries of Germany, the Netherlands, the Flemish part of Belgium, Luxembourg, Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Iceland) is covered by 46 dioceses or similar circumscriptions, which means that 33 of them had no deacons (permanent or transitional) or priests to ordain on or around Vocations Sunday. Of the newly ordained, 6 are permanent deacons, 14 are transitional deacons and 4 are priests.”

And in the Eternal City:

The Holy Father ordained as priests four men from Rome’s Major Seminary: three born in Rome, and one from Bologna, ages 26 to 29. Two from the Neo-Catechumenal Way: a 28-year old Italian and a 38-year-old from Mexico. The other four were: a member of the Congregation of Our Lady of Mercy (Italian, age 38); a member of the Family of Disciples (Peruvian, age 34); a man for the apostolic prefecture of Azerbaijan (apparently a native of that country, age 35); and a 28-year-old Italian for the diocese of Nocera.

 

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged ,
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Ladrillo por ladrillo: Roman Breviary in Latin and SPANISH

For your Brick by Brick File.

There is now available an edition of the older, traditional Breviarium Romanum in Latin and SPANISH.

So far it looks like VOLUME I.

HERE

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Latin, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Mail from priests, New Evangelization | Tagged ,
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CHICAGO: Sat 13 May – O.L. Fatima 100th Anniv. Procession

My friends at St. John Cantius sent this:

This Saturday, May 13th, in the streets of Chicago, thousands will peacefully walk one mile praying for an end to violence—following Mary’s request to pray for peace, forgiveness, and conversion.

Beginning at St. John Cantius at 7 pm, this Saturday, May 13th, there will be a presentation followed by a candlelight procession to St. Stanislaus Kostka Church.

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Brick by Brick: Priests learning the TLM

I had an interesting email today.

I got an e-mail today from Fr. Joshua, at St. John Cantius Church, who was good enough to share a group photo of several priests at their TLM workshop.
Facebook tells me that this is embedded code.
As you may recall, you helped make this happen.
I asked Fr. Joshua, and my editor, Beverly Stevens to pass along this information. I think I’ll send it to Fr. Heilman as well.
Thank you so much Father. I hope you post it for justified bragging rights.

Frankly, I was a little confused about this (I get lots of half-explained email and hard to use or absent links), so I asked what it was all about.  I got the response:

This, refers to a post you wrote. Specifically, this one HERE.

That post has turned into this.

The photo is helpfully included as well.

Thank you so much, Fr. Z. I just thought you might want to pass along these results.

Anyway, brick by brick.

Friends, it can be done.  But YOU need to step up and make it happen!

UPDATE:

More coherent information…

This week 12 priests from across the USA and Canada are with the Canons Regular learning the ceremonies of the Latin Mass.

The priests participated in Solemn High Mass for the feast of Mary, Queen of Poland (May 3rd) at Saint John Cantius Church.

Since being asked by Cardinal Francis George in 2007 the Canons Regular have hosted 65 workshops in the Latin Mass in Chicago and locations around the world, helping over 1,000 priests to learn the Extraordinary Form of the Mass.

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, Brick by Brick | Tagged ,
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Rome: Mass for Benefactors

I am going to celebrate Mass for the intention of my kind benefactors while I am here in Rome where I also do not forget to pray for them at the altars and tombs of many great saints.   So, Tuesday afternoon, shortly after 5 PM Rome time, I will say Mass for you.

It is my duty and honor to pray for benefactors.

Always on my mind, GS, KA, DY.

UPDATE:

One kind reader helped today and I was able to order a new cassock. Thanks.

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Important research with implications for feminist geography

squirrelAllow me to preface this with the reminder that I hate squirrels.

That said, I promise you I am not making this up.

I was alerted to this from the – no… really… Journal of Feminist Geography.

No… really.

Here is an abstract of a contribution to the – I just marvel at this – Journal of Feminist Geography.

If you are more comfortable by… no, wait… less triggered by reading it in either Spanish or Chinese, the abstracts are available in those languages. Not that I’m judging you.

Abstract

Eastern fox squirrels (Sciurus niger), reddish-brown tree squirrels native to the eastern and southeastern United States, were introduced to and now thrive in suburban/urban California. As a result, many residents in the greater Los Angeles region are grappling with living amongst tree squirrels, particularly because the state’s native western gray squirrel (Sciurus griseus) is less tolerant of human beings and, as a result, has historically been absent from most sections of the greater Los Angeles area. ‘Easties,’ as they are colloquially referred to in the popular press, are willing to feed on trash and have an ‘appetite for everything.’ Given that the shift in tree squirrel demographics is a relatively recent phenomenon, this case presents a unique opportunity to question and re-theorize the ontological given of ‘otherness’ that manifests, in part, through a politics whereby animal food choices ‘[come] to stand in for both compliance and resistance to the dominant forces in [human] culture’. I, therefore, juxtapose feminist posthumanist theories and feminist food studies scholarship to demonstrate how eastern fox squirrels are subjected to gendered, racialized, and speciesist thinking in the popular news media as a result of their feeding/eating practices, their unique and unfixed spatial arrangements in the greater Los Angeles region, and the western, modernist human frame through which humans interpret these actions. I conclude by drawing out the implications of this research for the fields of animal geography and feminist geography.

I think a blind squirrel wouldn’t have to look too hard, if you get my drift.

Posted in Lighter fare, You must be joking! | Tagged , ,
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Rome – Day 4: Caprese, Carbonara and Consecration

It has been a quiet Sunday in the Eternal City, with perfect weather. This is exactly what you expect of Rome right now.

ikeunchtime… which glass is mine?

This entire Caprese is mine.

Each strand of this is mine, also.

The motto is on the bottle (I helped to keep it there… long story).

If the stuff before was all mine, this is for everyone.

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As a matter of fact, I will celebrate Holy Mass for my benefactors on Tuesday in the afternoon at Ss. Trinità.

UPDATE:

Mass offered, errands accomplished and meetings prepared and held, now it’s time to meet friends, including The Great Roman™ and his wife, for supper.

On the way, a stop at Chiesa Nuova to visit Pippo Bono.

At the restaurant.

Vignarola.  Yumm.

Artichokes, a material proof that God loves us.

The flat thing is like a croquette made from broad beans, or fave, with pecorino and fried. This is a variation on what we had the other day.  And that’s a zucchini flower stuffed with cheese and acciughe off the grill.

Spaghetti with beloved telline!  I have a story about telline going back to when I blessed a fresh fish shop.  But I digress.

“Finger-burners.”

On the way home, the alarmingly graceful facade of the once Oratory.

A good Sunday in Rome, with perfect days with great friends.   It doesn’t get better than that.

Posted in On the road, SESSIUNCULA, What Fr. Z is up to |
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Rome – Day 3: Beheadings and Swearings

It was a full day yesterday.  After Mass yesterday we broke the fast and then headed off the the Palazzo Braschi for the Artemesia exhibit.

Artemesia Gentileschi was the daughter of Orazio Gentileschi and a fine painter in her own right, a rare female painter in the 17th century.   It was the time of Caravaggio and Galileo, whom she knew.  Marino writing poems about new art works as they appeared in salons.  Painters were swaggering, sword toting rockstars.  Artemesia had a tough time of things, as a woman in that business, including being raped by a painting tutor whom her father had hired. There was a humiliating prosecution of her attacker afterward.

Perhaps it is just a coincidence, but some of Artemesia’s best work involved the theme of women killing men.  I say “coincidence” because other painters of the period were often depicted the popular themes of, for example, Judith beheading Holofernes.  She also has great versions of Jael serenely hammering a spike through Sisera’s head as he slept.

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She has such a calm expression, focused and unhurried with her hammer raised for the blow.

Her Judiths are similarly calm, but focused.   Holofernes is focused too, but not in a calm way.

A couple versions side by side, which was a treat.

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Another moment in the process, Judith and faithful Abra are on their way out when they hear something.   Alas, not a great shot from this angle.  You can find better online.    This is closer to the version in Detroit.

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David with the head of Goliath was popular in the period, as were penitent Magdalen, dying Lucretia, and Cleopatra.

Later in the day, we had the great pleasure of attending the annual swearing in ceremony for the new recruits of the Pontifical Swiss Guard.

Some of you will recall that we of this blog had a wonderful project of having custom armor made for one the Corporals.  Engraved on his breastplate are St. Joseph and St. Joan of Arc.  It does get cooler than that.

Here is a close up of our guy and his armor.

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I have a few videos to give you a taste:

How they swear…

And… see how windy it was.  They can barely hold the flag and swords.

After the Giuramento, we headed off to supper with a stop at the famous Castroni for some coffee.

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Fending off death by starvation…

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Lamb… perfect.

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And life without puntarelle… is… well… is it really life?

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Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged , , , ,
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First, Pete and now Re-Pete?

John_Paul_IAt The Catholic Herald, the UK’s best Catholic weekly, there is a thought provoking piece by Damien Thompson.  Read the whole thing over there, but here are a few snips:

It’s 1978 all over again

I’ve been thinking about that surreal period because my cousin has kindly given me three copies of Time magazine from 1978. The cover stories are: “In Search of a Pope” (August 21); “The New Pope, John Paul I” (September 4); and “John Paul II” (October 30). Reading them has been quite a culture shock, especially for a magazine journalist. So many lucrative full-page ads – eight of them for cigarettes in one issue alone. Dozens of exquisitely written colour pieces, published without bylines: Time’s hacks were so spectacularly well paid that they didn’t care if their names were missing.

[…]

When Paul VI died, the Church was still going through the identity crisis provoked by the Second Vatican Council. Paul was the pope who initiated drastic and increasingly ugly liturgical changes; he was also the author of Humanae Vitae, which dismayed Catholic liberals. By the time St John Paul died, the factionalism had subsided. It was a slow process – in his first few years, he was careful not to upset liberal dioceses – and of course there were still conservatives and progressives. But they had to operate within parameters set by John Paul. So, too, did his successor, whose supposedly hardline traditionalism evaporated once he became Benedict XVI.

Now, in contrast, the factions are again flexing their muscles. The Church, disturbed by Amoris Laetitia and several other small wars initiated by the Vatican, is dividing along geographical lines. The articles from 1978 talked about the Dutch, Latin American and Polish churches as if they were rival denominations. That way of thinking is creeping back.

The direction of the Church is once again negotiable, even if John Paul II managed to cross women priests off the agenda (and can we even be certain of that?). Like Paul VI, Francis is out of step with committed lay Catholics, the difference being that he is theologically to the left of his critics.

But an even bigger difference is that secular society takes no more than a polite interest in the Church. It’s fair to say, as it was 39 years ago, that everything hangs on the choice of the next pope. When the moment comes, Catholics will be able to draw on unimaginable amounts of information compared to 1978. But they will look in vain for the meticulous, expensive and even-handed coverage squeezed between the ads for bourbon and Buicks in my vintage magazines. Time, like the rest of the world, has moved on.

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Rome – Day 2: Baccala and brocade

Yesterday I mentioned the set of vestments we are having made for the Pontifical Masses. I received the following few photos before the fabric was cut and sent for sewing. The photos are not great, but they give a sense of the project.

You can see that the arms are embroidered directly into the fabric, rather than onto a patch.  More on the patch, below.

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With some of the trim.  Apparently, the trim held back the project.  They thought they had enough, but when they opened a package of it, it was mismarked.  So, they had to look high and low to get enough while more is being made.  We are getting lots of vestments, as it turns out, including several copes and an antependium.

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Okay… I’ll get back to the vestments.   Meanwhile, some morning shopping revealed baccala ready to be cut and taken home for Friday preparation.  If it’s Friday, it’s baccala.

At lunch I was presented with a new cardinalatial wrist band.

An old building, just because.

Back to vestments.  These are finished pieces from the pontifical set.

The humeral veil.

The gremial.

With a new pair of gloves.

Patches.  Originally they had the arms embroidered onto these which was UNACCEPTABLE.  Hence, another delay in the production of the project.

In any event, now we have these too.

You would be surprised at how many people think that I should wear shoes with buckles when I say Mass.  Available here.

Lunch having been consumed, and business errands concluded, it was off to Ss. Trinità for Mass.   The vestments were laid out in this manner.

I was recognized by someone as I was reading Mass, a long-time reader here and a former Swiss Guard in town for the Giuramento.  We had an aperativo afterward and a good chat.

So far so good.

UPDATE:

Not much of an appetite to go out.  Hence…

Fave and peccorino and cold Frascati.  Classic.

Pizza bianca, olives, anchovies, tomini.

Tomorrow will bring prosciutto, with cantaloupe melon, nearly oozing with juicy flavor.

 

Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to | Tagged
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