Pope Francis on our having lost the “sense of worship”. Fr. Z rants and suggests.

From Vatican Insider:

“A Temple is a place where we gather to worship God, not celebrate a rite”

At this morning’s mass in St. Martha’s House the Pope said Christians have lost sight of the meaning of worship: “We go to the Temple and come together as brothers and that’s wonderful! But God is at the centre” [And when the tabernacle is in the center, that’s more obvious.]
DOMENICO AGASSO JR
ROME

A stone house which houses the soul of a people who worship God, but also a human body through which the Lord speaks and the heart listens. In this morning’s mass at St. Martha’s House Pope Francis spoke about the concept of a “sacred Temple”, based on these two parallel dimensions of Christian life.

The Pope said the Temple is a sacred place where what matters the most are not rituals but “worshipping the Lord”. [Just watch.  Liberals will now trumpet that Pope Francis is against ritual, that the Pope says that the rubrics aren’t important, that we should be constrained by man-made rites.  But that is not what the Pope said.  Moreover… we don’t get everything that the Pope says in these daily fervorini, do we? We get little bit and pieces, chopped up, mixed around.] Francis emphasised that as a Temple of the Holy Spirit, human beings are called to listen to the voice of God within them, ask him for forgiveness and follow him.

Today Francis commented on the passage in the Old Testament, where Judas Maccabeus re-consecrates the Temple destroyed by the war. He presented the Temple “as a place of reference for the community, a place of reference for the people of God “, where we go for many reasons one of which surpasses all others.”The Temple is the place where the community comes to pray, to praise the Lord, to give thanks, but above all to worship: we worship the Lord in the Temple. And this is the most important point.”  [And how do we do that? Sacred liturgy.]

This is also valid for liturgical ceremonies: what is most important in this liturgical ceremony? Chants, rituals – they are all beautiful… but the most important thing is worship.[Who can object to that?  Of course true worship is more important than just going through the motions.  Our inward participation is what the outward signs must promote.]

“But I think – I say this humbly – that we Christians may have somewhat lost the ‘sense of worship , [Who will not agree?] and we think:  lets go to the Temple, lets come together as brothers and sisters – that’s good , it’s great ! – but the centre is where God is. And we worship God.” [Okay… I am not sure what that meant. Maybe he will explain.]

The Pope then asked a couple of questions: “are our Temples places of worship, do they favour adoration? Do our celebrations foster adoration?” Jesus chases out those who try to do “business” in the Temple, who had taken the place of the Temple to do trade rather than worship. [This is a good question.  However, note the language used.  Do our “celebrations” foster adoration? Do celebrations foster adoration? I’m not sure about that.  Of course everyone uses “celebration” today for every liturgical rite.  It might be good to consider fostering adoration, true worship, also through stillness and silence, self-humbling acts of kneeling more, through physical reception of the Eucharist we adore without a gesture that looks like “gimme one”.  Perhaps we can foster adoration by the fostering decorum and dignity and a sense that what we are up to in church is special, different, removed from the mundane.]

“But there is another “Temple” and another to be considered sacred in the life of faith.”St. Paul tells us that we are Temples of the Holy Spirit. I am a Temple. The Spirit of God is in me. He also tells us: ‘ Grieve not the Spirit of God is within you!’ [By committing mortal sins.] And even here, perhaps we can not speak of worship as before, but a kind of worship that is the heart that seeks God’s Spirit within and knows that God is within, that the Holy Spirit is inside. That listens to him and follows him.”

“Following God presupposes a continuous purification,” Francis highlighted, “because we are sinners”: “we purify ourselves by prayer, penance, the sacrament of reconciliation and the Eucharist.[The last two in that list are liturgical rites.]

“These two Temples – the material Temple, the place of worship, [Which is a sacred space that received a special consecration.] and the spiritual Temple inside me, where the Holy Spirit dwells – in these two Temples, our attitude should be that of piety, of loving and listening , praying and asking for forgiveness, praising the Lord,” Francis continued.  [Nothing in this say that we shouldn’t Say The Black and Do the Red.]

“And when you speak of the joy of the Temple, we talk about this: the entire congregation in worship, in prayer, in thanksgiving, in praise. [We can do that together because we follow the rites as they are in the books!] Me in prayer with the Lord, that is within me because I’m a ‘Temple’.  Listening, being open. May the Lord grant us this true sense of the Temple, to be able to move forward in our life of worship and listening to the Word of God.”

What Pope Francis is saying here is a great argument for implementing far and wide the provisions of Summorum Pontificum.

Pope Francis is asking good questions.  We are losing a sense of adoration in our worship?  I think so.  We need to learn again from widespread “celebrations” of Holy Mass according to the 1962 Missale Romanum.

One of the thing that I found is that when priests learn the older form of Holy Mass, it changes the way they say the Novus Ordo.  This in turn is noticed by people.  The way a priest says Mass has a knock-on effect for the congregation.  They see how the priest says Mass.

I have also heard from many lay people is that when they start participating at Masses in the older form, their perception of Mass changes.  The way they pray during Mass, according to them, starts to come around to the kind of prayer and adoration and worship that Pope Francis is talking about in his little sermon.

So, if we want to take Pope Francis’ words to heart, and I think that, as Catholics, we do, then we must press forward with Summorum Pontificum with greater urgency.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Francis, GO TO CONFESSION, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Drill | Tagged , , , , , ,
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The “knockout game” and YOU!

Did you hear about the case in Lansing, MI?

A teen, who admitted he had done the “knockout game” think several other times, wound up getting shot twice by a man who defended himself with his legally concealed carry weapon.  HERE for a video of the story.

In this case, the 17 year old attack tried to victimize the innocent bystander with a faulty taser.  (It might have been stun gun.)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uM7IGvVcJuQ&feature=player_embedded

Fr. Z says, be careful out there.

Ladies… consider that CCW.

Parents… do you know what your kids are doing? With whom they are running?

This “game” is a symptom.  I’ll bet you can name some of the causes.

 

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, The Drill | Tagged ,
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POLLS: The “AFFORDABLE” Care Act and You!

Here are a couple of POLLS for you readers in these USA.

And as you choose your answer, I want you all to remember the Nuns on the Bus, the CHA and Sr. Keehan, and the USCCB, all of whom lobbied for the “AFFORDABLE” Care Act.

Have you had your health insurance cancelled by your insurance company or employers since the "AFFORDABLE" Care Act kicked in?

View Results

And then…

When will your health insurance be cancelled?

View Results

The combox is open for registered readers.

Let’s us know about your experience with the “AFFORDABLE” Care Act.

Posted in Liberals, Pò sì jiù, POLLS, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , , , , , ,
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NYC mayor-elect v. Catholics

From the Catholic League:

De Blasio Shuts Out Priests

November 21, 2013

Bill Donohue comments on New York City Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio’s transition committee:

Yesterday, Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio announced the appointment of 60 New York leaders to his transition committee. He instructed them to “identify women and men from every part of our city and walk of life” that wants a better New York. He lied. Also lying was Transition Co-Chair Jennifer Jones Austin, who said that committee members “come from every slice of civic life—business and labor, science and the arts, clergy….” (My italic.)

In fact, there are two ministers, two rabbis and one imam on the transition committee. There are no Catholic priests. Catholics make up 52.5 percent of New York, yet they have no clergy representation. This is not an oversight: every attempt was made to include persons from virtually every sector of New York. This was clearly done by design. Looks like de Blasio’s politics of inclusion has its limits.

To make matters worse, de Blasio showed his contempt for Catholics by naming to his transition committee the man who insulted them in 1999 with the “Sensation” exhibit, Arnold L. Lehman, director of the Brooklyn Museum of Art. That exhibit featured a portrait of Our Blessed Mother with elephant dung and pornographic cut outs on it. I led a demonstration against it.

If de Blasio ever gets around to appointing a Catholic priest to his transition team, we hope he doesn’t take the advice of Darren Walker, a member of the committee. Walker is president of the Ford Foundation, the most generous donor to the most anti-Catholic and pro-abortion organization in the nation, Catholics for Choice.

We are contacting every Catholic parish in all five boroughs about de Blasio’s decision to shut out priests. De Blasio hasn’t even begun, yet he has managed to insult a majority of New Yorkers.

Contact de Blasio’s Press Secretary, Wiley Norvell: wnorvell@pubadvocate.nyc.gov

Posted in Liberals, The Last Acceptable Prejudice | Tagged , , ,
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Of catacomb paintings, wymynprysts, and rocks on Mars

My email box is under siege by people who want me to comment on the recently restored ancient Roman fresco that feminists and members of COW… no… the Women’s Ordination Conference… that’s WOC… claim as evidence for the ordination of women.

Sigh.

Look, friends… here is the deal.

In a chapel of the 2nd century Roman catacombs of Priscilla on the Via Salaria, there are 3rd century frescoes. They are in poor condition even though they have been recently restored.

In the “Greek chapel”, so-called because of some inscriptions in Greek, you find, above, a Good Shepherd, a peacock (symbol of eternal life, because the ancients thought peacock flesh didn’t decay). Nearby is the most ancient known depiction of Mary and the infant Jesus. There is also a fine depiction of the biblical scene of the three youths, their arms raised in the “orans” or praying position, in the fiery furnace, an symbolic illustration of our trust in God and His salvific care for us. In another section, there is a phoenix, a symbol of resurrection.

The “orans” position, arms raised in an attitude of prayer, was a pagan gesture adopted quite naturally by Christians. In ancient art, a figure standing in this attitude is usually a symbolic depiction of the soul. In a Christian burial site, it would connote the soul’s longing for and attainment of eternal life.

On one side of the Greek chapel there are several figures seated on the far side (from our view) of a table. On the ground on either side are several containers of some kind. On the other side, are the three youths in the fiery furnace.

In the center section you face, there is an “orans” figure standing in a robe falling to mid calf, head covered with a shawl much like a Jewish man’s tallit, without a beard and with disproportionately large hands. On the right there is a figure, probably female, seated on a low-backed chair holding a fairly active infant. On the left there is an older man and two smaller figures, probably young men, who are hard to distinguish. The older man is seated.  He could be wearing a palla, a cloak over a white tunic. One of the young, standing figures is holding up something round, on a cloth or platter, hard to tell.  It may be a loaf of bread.  The older figure’s hand is extended toward the round object.  It looks like what could be a Eucharistic scene.

Some people, in their fevered imaginations, make this out to be a kind of concelebration of the Eucharist, priests behind the table, assisted by deacons in the presence of a bishop.  I don’t see the connection.  Moreover, how do the youths in the furnace fit, if the left and central frescoes are connected?

If the right side of the central fresco, wherein the large “orans” dominates, is a Eucharistic celebration (why the smaller figure would hold the bread in that moment is hard to say), what is with the figure on the right, the woman seated with a baby?  She is seated in such a way not to be facing toward the supposed Eucharistic celebration, but away, which suggests that the left and the right are not related.  The seated woman is gazing pointedly back to the left, but at the “orans” figure, not the Eucharistic scene.

It could be that the family had painted an image of a woman who died in child birth, that the “orans” figure in the center is an expression of her prayer and ours for ourselves and for the dead, and that the Eucharistic scene connects our eschatological and salvific aspirations to the “bread of life”.

The problem is, when you look objectively at the fresco for a while, you can’t make out anything about the seated figures in the frescoes to the left of the central fresco. You can’t tell what sex they are.  Some claim one is a woman.  Fine.  On the other hand, there is no indication that they are clergy of any kind. The fact that they are seated at a table does not mean that this is the Eucharist. There is no evidence that they are doing anything other than eating a meal. That it is in a catacomb suggests that the meal was special, and that it concerns eternal refreshment (refrigerium) and life. It also calls to mind that early Christians not rarely had meals in cemetery’s and catacombs, a practice that persisted from some centuries.

People are conditioned, it seems to me, when they see figures seated as if for a meal on the far side of a table, to think, “Hah! Last Supper!” and therefore “Eucharistic meal” and therefore “Women were priests!” On the other hand, off the top of my head, the fresco could alternately depict the Wedding at Cana, Christ turning the water in the vague containers to wine. Why that would be in a catacomb, I am not sure, but it looks rather like.  Perhaps the donor of the paintings wanted to recall the happy day of his marriage and the wife he lost to child birth.  Perhaps the “orans” figure is him praying and mourning.  Perhaps the youths in the furnace show how he feels now.  Perhaps the Good Shepherd, above it all, shows Christ holding him on His shoulders, a lost sheep, lost without Christ.

Whatever it is the frescoes depict, I don’t think anyone can reasonably conclude that they depict a Eucharistic meal with a female presider.

It is far more likely that we see symbolic representations of the family’s hopes for those interred therein, along with a depiction of the Christian soul in an attitude of petitioning and glorifying prayer, thus prompting the viewer to do the same for those buried within.

Just as most of the nasty things written about Pius XII had their origin in a single vicious play, The Deputy, the claims made about the Priscilla fresco find their origin with a feminist named Joan Morris (who also promoted the loony fable about “Pope Joan”).  Writers have been running with both fables ever since, footnoting them as if they were true.

I also want here to bring the readers’ attention to some rocks on the plant Mars that were discovered and photographed by the rover Curiosity.

These rocks definitely prove that someone was there and left her Barbi doll (or perhaps Fulla doll) behind.

In fact, this photo proves that the Women’s Ordination Conference (WOC!) is really from Mars, not Venus, thus overturning decades of serious research about the differences of women and men!

“But Father! But Father!”, you are asking with good reason, “Why is that Barbi alone?  Where is the wymynpryst who was playing with it?  Your theory is ridiculous and you hate Vatican II.  Vatican II wanted women priests!”

This is easily explained.

The wymynpryst ran off at the approach of Curiosity!

She left the doll there and ran off because she was embarrassed to have been caught by male technology (you know, rovers… get it? “rovers“?…. have that long thing that sticks out).  Furthermore, she was about to be caught playing with a ghastly icon of the oppression of women!  It was more than she could bear, so she dropped her doll and skeedaddled.

We, however, have the definitive proof in that photo.  It is incontrovertible.

I only ask that you footnote this blog when you write your scholarly papers about this electrifying discovery, which is sure to be prompted by Google to the very top of all your search pages…. just like the fact that the fresco in the Catacombs of Priscilla prove that women were ordained.

We also know that there are iguanas on Mars.  But that is the stuff of another post.

Posted in "But Father! But Father!", Lighter fare, Magisterium of Nuns, Our Catholic Identity, The Drill, You must be joking! | Tagged , , , ,
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SCOTUS won’t block Texas law on abortion

Form Reuters:

U.S. Supreme Court declines to block Texas abortion law

(Reuters) – A split U.S. Supreme Court declined on Tuesday to block implementation of a new abortion law in Texas that already has prompted a dozen clinics in the state to stop performing the procedure.

The provision requires doctors who perform abortions to have admitting privileges at a hospital within 30 miles of the facility in case women have complications.

The court was split 5-4, with the conservative wing of the court in the majority. The four liberal justices said they would have overturned the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals October 31 ruling that allowed the law to take effect.

Justice Antonin Scalia, joined by two of his conservative colleagues, wrote an opinion explaining the rationale in favor of leaving the appeals court decision intact.

Scalia criticized the four dissenters, saying that their suggested outcome would “flout core principles of federalism by mandating postponement of a state law without asserting that the law is even probably unconstitutional.”

Writing for the four dissenters, Justice Stephen Breyer said he would have favored blocking the law to “maintain the status quo” while the lower courts handled “this difficult, sensitive and controversial legal matter.” [HUH?]

[…]

Posted in Emanations from Penumbras, The Drill, The future and our choices | Tagged , ,
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REVIEW: 2014 Ordo for the TLM from the Canons of St. John Cantius

The Canons of St. John Cantius in Chicago sent me a copy of their 2014 Ordo for use with the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite.

Every sacristy needs to have an Ordo for both forms of the Roman Rite!

An Ordo is a booklet which tells you, day by day, what Mass and what office to say and some of the particulars of how to say it.

I reviewed the FSSP Ordo HERE.

First, the Cantian Ordo is far more attractive than the FSSP Ordo (which is quite plain). The color will also help you locate it more quickly.

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Rather than describe the content, here are the table content pages. Click to see them in a larger format:

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There is just a little artwork… just a little.  There is none in the FSSP version.

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Here is a shot of the actual calendar section, as it begins with Advent.  It is not much different from what the FSSP does.

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Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, REVIEWS, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM | Tagged , ,
6 Comments

Whaddya gonna call ’em… Whoies?

Many of you are Trekkies.  I suspect many of you are… whaddya gonna call ’em… Whoies?

I was over at BBC 4 today to listen to reading of CS Lewis’ Screwtape Letters.  Cleese is better.  It is the anniversary of his death this week and the author is going to receive a memorial stone in Westminster Abbey.  Thus, they are reading some of his work.  It amazed me that BBC would permit such a reading.  The Screwtape Letters?  Talk about pulling the smiley mask of everything BBC is!  Perhaps they think they are – by now -impervious.  Perhaps they are right.  “How quaint!”, listeners will say, “And how very well he reads.”  I digress.

Go over to the BBC to see a remarkable page dedicated to the journeys of all the Doctors.  HERE  It is a galactic waste of time but … impressive.

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged ,
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The Philippines: Priests or Phoenixes? YES!

A friend and reader sent me a note:

Peter Ayaso and his class will still be ordained next Friday, the 25th of Nov. IN THE CATHEDRAL!!! He writes:

You’re all invited still to my ordination to the priesthood on Nov. 25, 9am at the Palo Metropolitan Cathedral. on this day the heavens will be upon us (literally! since the cathedral has no roof). i’ll be going back to palo this coming friday.

What’s up with this, you might be asking?

Palo is near Tacloban!

Priests are inseparable from the life of the Church. No priests, no Sacrifice. No Sacrifice, no Eucharist, no Church. I can’t think of a more appropriate way to begin rebuilding the cathedral than an ordination.

Posted in Brick by Brick, Just Too Cool | Tagged , ,
7 Comments

150 years ago: The Gettysburg Address – Fr Z opines

Four and a half months after the Battle of Gettysburg, on the afternoon of Thursday 19 November 1863, President Abraham Lincoln delivered a “few appropriate remarks” at the dedication of the cemetery for fallen soldiers.

After a 13,607 word speech by Edward Everett, the President’s address consisted of 10 sentences in 272 words.

Today is the 150th anniversary of the greatest pieces of public oratory in history.

However…

Today of all days Pres. Obama, to mark this occasion, recorded the famous, pivotal speech and left out Lincoln’s reference to God.  HERE

As I watch what is happening domestically and abroad, I think we may be seeing in this presidency…

…the worst thing to happen to these USA since the American Civil War.

Posted in Liberals | Tagged , ,
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