A priest writes about his 40 years of priesthood

17_05_05_ordination_card_01Over at Catholic World Report there is a piece by Fr. Peter Stravinskas, who reflects on 40 years of priesthood… his own.  His 40th anniversary of ordination comes up on 27 May.

This bit got my attention and sympathy.

The college seminary experience was not too bad; indeed, the academic formation was stellar, while the overall environment in the Church was harrowing, especially as defections from the priesthood reached epidemic proportions; I often say it is surprising that the suction didn’t take the rest of us with them.  The theology years were a nightmare at every level: outright heresy taught as Gospel truth; rife liturgical abuses on a daily basis; persecution of “retrograde” seminarians – with Yours Truly being told that he was “unsuited for ministry in the post-conciliar Church” and forced to find a benevolent bishop three months before diaconate.  My seven years of supposed priestly formation were, bar none, the most unhappy years of my life, characterized by intense polarization and draconian imposition of aberrant viewpoints by those in authority.  It must be noted that there were, to be sure, some good and faithful priests on the seminary faculty, but they were a distinct minority and largely reduced to window dressing.  In short, my generation of priests had been robbed of our Catholic and priestly patrimony by a generation of angry rebels.

At any rate, by nothing short of a miracle of God’s grace, I was ordained a priest on May 27, 1977.

A lot has happened since 1977, including the passing of Paul VI and the election of John Paul II… etc.

With a few variations, what Father wrote, above, can be echoed by so many priests of a certain era and age, including the undersigned.  For my part, I can say that my seminary years were sincerely dreadful.  In fact, it was a nasty diabolical war for part of it.  “Living hell” over states it, but not by much.

For those of you who are considering priesthood: Do NOT let the experiences of those who went through those bad years slow you down for a moment.  Conditions have improved enormously, so much so that my not-in-the-least “almamater is unrecognizable today.

He goes on to offer his view of the present state of things along with his aspirations for the time to come.  Go have a look.

Congratulations in advance to Fr. Stravinskas for 40 years.  Stop and say a prayer for him today and on 27 May.

Posted in Mail from priests, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged , ,
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Rome – Day 1: Jet Lag Edition

We hit the ground running, as one must do in Rome… first: stay awake… eat… get sun… stay awake.

This is a good way to do it.

Later, I said Mass at Ss. Trinita.

They are having a novena to Our Lady and will consecrated the parish!

Well done.

This is how they have displayed Our Lady of Fatima.

A trip to Gammarelli began with a glimpse of this beautiful hand embroidered vestment.  Someone: feel free to send $10K.

Wow.  Right?

The vestments we ordered will have the coats of arms embroidered directly on the fabric.  However, we have a few others.  Here is one for the Extraordinary Ordinary.

The scene of Act I of Tosca.

Because today, in the traditional calendar (and that of the Augustinians) is St. Monica, we went to venerate her bone in the church names after her son.

I enjoy the street shrines.  After all these years they are like old friends.

Orata at a tiny, family owned place I’ve known and trusted for years.

 

Artichokes.

Zucchini flowers.

Scallopine.

One of the most beautiful squares in the world.

 

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Your Good News

Do you have a bit of good news to share with the readership?

Let us know.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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My View For Awhile: Quick Trip Edition

I’m off.


A quick trip to Rome came up quite swiftly.  I was invited along on a business trip, and I, happy, was free to accept.

I’ll be able personally to check on the progress of our new white vestments for Pontifical Mass.  This morning I had a note from Gammarelli with photos.

As you will recall they will have the coat of arms of the diocese and of the Extraordinary Ordinary.   

Also on the schedule, we will go to the swearing in of the Swiss Guard.

Meanwhile, look whom I found during the boarding process: Fr Longenecker.


He’s heading to Rome with a parish pilgrimage.

Hey! Fr Heilman!  Perhaps … a parish pilgrimage is in order.   

More later.

Prayers, please for the safety of all and the people I’m to meet in Rome.

UPDATE:

Wow. Smooth boarding.  The irony is that in today’s Japanese lesson I got a dialogue about the flight being delayed. I guess the power of Irony overawed the propensities of Delta.

But we’re not off the ground yet.   Hmmm.  

UPDATE:

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
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The Embarrassed College of the Holy Cross

crusaderMy friend Fr. Martin Fox, at his blog Bonfire Of The Vanities, writes today about a Catholic college for the Holy Cross, hence, College of the Holy Cross.  He picked it up from NRO.

They are wringing their hands over maybe changing their college team’s name: The Crusaders.

Goodness gracious!  Imagine a Catholic college named for the Holy Cross with the team name The Crusaders.  By the way, “crusader” comes ultimately from Latin crux, “cross” and maybe cruciatus, in Medieval Latin, “marked with a cross”.

Fr. Fox says:

[T]here is one reason to be embarrassed by the name “Crusader”….

I’ll bet they are spending pointless hours trying to come up with something PC neutral, like the idiotic Minnesota “Wild”.  Perhaps they should chose: “Yellow”.

Holy Cross should drop the “Holy” right away, while they’re working on not offending anyone.  Let’s not clue anyone in about what we think of the Lord’s Sacrifice on Calvary.

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Bad priesthood vocations numbers? Not by accident. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

I posted this last year, to the day.

Any additional thoughts?

___ Originally Published on: May 3, 2016 ___

Ordination_First_Mass_cardAnd yet, do other parishes and dioceses and religious groups change what they are doing?

Not much.  It is if they really aren’t committed.

In life I have found that when I am going in the wrong direction, I have to, first, stop going in the wrong direction, turn around, go back, and then go in the right direction.

Right? Does that make sense?  Is that your experience too?  It’s not hard, right?

At California Catholic I read…

Why aren’t other dioceses looking to Lincoln?

[…]

According to the Official Catholic Directory and the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate, Lincoln, NE is the only diocese in the United States to place in the Top 20 for the ratio of ordinands to population in every survey conducted from 1993-2012.
Despite having a Catholic population of only 97,000, the Lincoln diocese ordained 22 men from 2010-2012. Only seven dioceses in the entire country ordained more. One of those, the Archdiocese of Los Angeles (with a Catholic population over 4.2 million) ordained 34 men during those same three years. In other words, L.A. only ordained four more men per year on average despite having a population 44X greater than Lincoln.

The Lincoln blueprint can be narrowed down to a few foundational elements:

Orthodox Bishops[Yep.  This is a big one.]

Against all odds and the prevailing winds of the post-conciliar Church, Lincoln has avoided the craziness and irreverence that has afflicted so many other dioceses. This has largely been achieved through the stability and orthodoxy provided over the last fifty years by three men: Bishop Glennon Flavin (1967-1992), Bishop Fabian Bruskewitz (1992-2012), and Bishop James Conley (2012-present). They succeeded despite the occasional scorn of their brother bishops, and by making the Church’s perennial priorities their own.
The National Catholic Reporter (known as the Fishwrap to Fr. Z readers) [And not only to Fr Z readers…. pretty much everyone now calls it that.] once bemoaned that it was as if the “reforms” so prevalent in the aftermath of Vatican II had missed Lincoln altogether. Exactly.

The Male Only Sanctuary

To a large extent, Lincoln has preserved a male only sanctuary. In this area the diocese has simply given more weight to tradition and common sense instead of “modern sensibilities” that are more secular minded.
The diocese remains the only one in the country to maintain an altar serving policy of boys only.
Lincoln also utilizes installed acolytes and lectors for the Holy Mass. Since it is an instituted ministry, the role of an acolyte is only open to men. Both of these instituted ministries commenced during Bishop Flavin’s time during the 1970’s.

Tradition Friendly

Those in Lincoln will speak of the lack of Catholic tribalism and the absence of the liturgical wars so prevalent in other dioceses. In large part this is due to the environment established by Lincoln’s bishops. Reverent Novus Ordo liturgies have served the faithful well, preventing the frustration that so many encounter in other dioceses.
[… good stuff… but I want to keep this short… Suffice to say that during my last visit to NYC, I had a church full of young people from a High School in Lincoln.  They were reverent, received Communion on the tongue, kneeling, without batting an eye… impressive…]

Liturgical Continuity

As stated previously, the Lincoln diocese has intentionally avoided the modern tendency to clericalize the laity by delegating liturgical roles to the faithful. Thanks to its use of acolytes and lectors, instead of the more common excessive use of readers and extraordinary ministers, the diocese has not blurred the lines between ministers and laity, or between sanctuary and nave. It’s obvious to see how this would reinforce the ministerial priesthood in Lincoln, as well as the continuity between both forms of the Roman Rite.
Proper liturgical orientation has been further reinforced through the manner in which many masses are offered in Lincoln: with the priest facing toward the liturgical east, or Ad Orientem.

A Catholic Education

While I have saved this for last, in many ways education is the primary ingredient to Lincoln’s recipe for success. Bishop Glennon Flavin’s vision for a diocese that allowed its children to go to Catholic school at an affordable cost and to be taught authentic Catholicism by religious sisters and priests is integral to the diocesan mission.  [One of the parent/chaperons of the aforementioned group from Lincoln told me that tuition was in the neighborhood of $1200 per year. ]
[…]

Read the whole thing there.  It’s pretty interesting.

Here is the bottom line.

The percentages of men to be ordained, and who are now active, against those who are retiring or dying are getting grim.  I was recently in a diocese in Louisiana where some half of the priests are set to retire in the next five years.  Disaster, right?

Well, friends….

That percentage didn’t just happen.

It was engineered.

And the numbers in Lincoln, and in certain parishes, dioceses and religious groups known for good numbers of vocations didn’t just happen either!

You have probably seen the polls I have had here.  I’ll post them again.  Anyone can vote, but only registered and approved users here can comment.

Does an all-male sanctuary foster vocations to the priesthood? (Revisited)

View Results

Does female service at the altar harm or suppress vocations to the priesthood?

View Results

And… yes… there are only male and female on both my planet and on your planet.

And…no… I don’t want to just pray for all “Vocations”, lumping them together in one amorphous prayer salad.   Sure, pray that young people get married.  But pray explicitly for PRIESTS.

 

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, POLLS, Priests and Priesthood, Seminarians and Seminaries, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , , ,
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For your Brick by Brick file.

And example of what young priests can do when they have a chance.

A chapel at a school: before and after.

17_05_03_Chapel

Our “worship spaces” don’t have to be ugly.

Our churches and chapels reflect what we believe (or at least what the designers believed, if anything).  But they also shape our belief.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged ,
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YOUNG ADULTS! ALERT! Of the TLM, WYD and You.

Juventutem_SquareI received a note from Juventutem.

Report of President Bertalan Kiss on WYD Conference in Rome

At the invitation of the Holy See, Bertalan Kiss – the President of the Fœderatio Internationalis Juventutem – spent much of the first week of passiontide in Rome, as a member of a conference which reviewed the lessons learned at the WYD festival in Krakow, began to plan the WYD festival in Panama, and advised ecclesiastics in preparation for 2018’s Synod of Bishops on youth and vocation.

Bertalan’s full report regarding the conference can be read in this pdf:
„From Krakow to Panama – the synod journeying with young people” – International Conference, Rome – 4 April to 9 April 2017

In order for the young adults of Juventutem to do their little part to continue to advocate around the world for the Roman Tradition of the Church, it is necessary to have the prayer and other support of young adults and not-young adults.  Please consider donating to support this year’s efforts!

Introduction:
Just before the most sacred of feasts, the death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ began this year, the new dicastery of the Vatican for the Laity, Family, and Life organised a conference in Rome for the national delegates of episcopal conferences’ youth ministries and other various international youth associations. The Foederatio Internationalis Juventutem has also received an invitation to this event, and I took it upon myself to represent our federation. Accompanying me was the newest member of Juventutem Magyarország, and a fervent organiser of youth events in the Hungarian diocese of Vác, my friend Ervin Dér.

¡Hagan lío!

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A college campus chapel goes ‘ad orientem’

Ad-Orientem-Cartoon-Meme-640x578Our leaders and pastors must open their eyes to the obvious.

For your Brick By Brick file from a reader…

I wanted to email you and let you know some good developments at the Newman Center at Wichita State University. The pastor has decided that during some renovation in the sanctuary, he is going to celebrate Mass ad orientem. The response has been very positive, and I think this is particularly important because this is at a college campus which, obviously, caters to younger people (who are looking for tradition).

The pastor released an explanatory insert in the bulletin, which has some great quotes by current students as well. You can see it HERE.

Some other local parishes have been adding ad orientem Masses, and this is just the most recent of those. Good news for the Diocese of Wichita!

Card. Sarah was right to call on more priests to celebrate Holy Mass ad orientem.  HERE

This is an important step in the revitalization of our sacred worship and the recovery of our identity.

Quotes from students in the aforementioned letter:

“My whole perception of the mass changed when all of our focus and direction, including the priest, was directed towards the Eucharist, It wasn’t me, the priest, and Jesus. It was just me and our Lord.”

“Celebrating Mass in this way has brought about a more rich understanding for me. I have been able to enter more deeply into the Mass…”

“Having Mass celebrated Ad Orientem gives me a greater sense of the reality of the Priest offering the sacrifice to God.”

¡Hagan lío!

Make it a movement.

Fr. Z kudos.

CLICK

Posted in ¡Hagan lío!, "How To..." - Practical Notes, Fr. Z KUDOS, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The future and our choices, Turn Towards The Lord | Tagged , ,
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New book about influences of Communism and Socialism on Pope Francis

I arose today to a loud PING on my phone as a friend in Rome sent me a link to a piece in the American Spectator by the hardly-ever-subtle George Neumayr about the influence of Communism and Socialism on Pope Francis.

The Spectator provides an excerpt from Neumayr’s new book on the topic released today 2 May:

The Political Pope: How Pope Francis Is Delighting the Liberal Left and Abandoning Conservatives

US HERE – UK HERE

I’m not going to excerpt much from the excerpt.  However, this is of interest:

These biographical details throw light on the pope’s ideological instincts. Yet many commentators have ignored them, breezily casting his leftism as a bit confused but basically harmless.

I haven’t read this one yet, but I put it on my Kindle Wishlist.

It is good to know about our leaders, both secular and spiritual.  Each person is a puzzle.  No single work, or even several works, can give a perfect picture.  Pieces of their puzzle will inevitably be hard to sort out.  This is especially true when the person is still alive.

I’ve read several books about His Holiness, all offering some insights into this enigmatic figure.  I suspect that this new book will be – how to say this delicately – less than enthusiastic about Pope Francis.  However, I suspect it will also fill in gaps left by biographers and others, as Neumayr suggests.  For that reason alone, it could be helpful.  It might provide some more puzzle pieces.

Also, one of the most useful things I’ve read of late about Pope Francis is a chapter on Liberation Theology in Tracey Rowland’s terrific new book, Catholic Theology – which I warmly recommend.  Her explanation of Pope Francis’ theological starting points seem to me to be dead on target.  Every seminarian and student of theology needs this book.

US HERE – UK HERE

Posted in Francis, REVIEWS, The Campus Telephone Pole, The Drill | Tagged , ,
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