The “Days in Rome” Project – Easter 2026 and beyond – UPDATE – HERE

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Update: working on the Mass Intention Request Form

The migration of the blog disturbed a few things, including my contact forms which I have been trying to fix.

I think I have the Mass Intention Request Form working again.

Someone used it recently, and the necessary information was not included in the email I received.  I believe that is now fixed.

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Pope Leo’s admonition to French bishops about the TLM and Vatican II

the Cardinal Secretary of State Piero Parolin sent a note to the French bishops before their plenary meeting. It obviously conveys the desires of Leo XIV. One important remark sticks out, particularly in light of the upcoming June consistory:

“May the Holy Spirit suggest to you concrete solutions that would generously include those sincerely attached to the Vetus Ordo, while respecting the orientations set forth by the Second Vatican Council regarding the Liturgy.”

“HAH!”, quoth I when I read it, “Trads are much closer to what the the Council’s document on the liturgy says than 99% of those who celebrate the Novus Ordo, particularly because the Novus Ordo itself substantially violates important directives of the Council Fathers as published in black and white.”

Over at Rorate, Peter Kwasniewski addressed this in a post wherein he pulls out the relevant bits of Sacrosanctum Concilium.

Here’s a little bit of it, read the rest there.

“…if we were to take the clearest statements [of Sacrosanctum Concilium] and follow them according to the mind of the Council Fathers, here’s what your local liturgical scene would look like.””


[…]

1. The Eucharist would be perceived by all as a “divine sacrifice,” in which, as in the Church herself, action is subordinated to contemplation (cf. SC 2). The Mass would be understood to be, and would be called, a “holy sacrifice” (SC 7, 47, et passim) and the liturgy in general “a sacred action surpassing all others,” whose purpose is “the sanctification of man and the glorification of God” (SC 10; cf. 112). Indeed, the liturgy would seem like a foretaste on earth of the heavenly liturgy of the new Jerusalem (SC 8).

2. The faithful would be well catechized and well disposed to receive the sacraments fruitfully (SC 11), and would understand the nature of the liturgy and how to participate well in it (SC 14), led by the example and instruction of the clergy (SC 16-19): “through a good understanding of the rites and prayers they should take part in the sacred action conscious of what they are doing, with devotion and full collaboration” (SC 48). In this way, they would be unlike the majority of Catholics today, who, according to many surveys, are unaware that the Mass is the re-presentation of the Holy Sacrifice of Calvary or that the Eucharist is the true Body and Blood of Jesus Christ—and who also don’t sing very much, in spite of decades of cajoling.

3. The liturgy would look much as Catholic liturgy has looked for centuries, since “there must be no innovations unless the good of the Church genuinely and certainly requires them; and care must be taken that any new forms adopted should in some way grow organically from forms already existing” (SC 23).

4. The ordained ministers would be the only ones performing the actions they are supposed to do, while the laity would be involved in those ways that pertain to them: “in liturgical celebrations each person, minister or layman, who has an office to perform, should do all of, but only, those parts which pertain to his office by the nature of the rite and the principles of liturgy” (SC 28; cf. 118).

5. No one, “even if he be a priest,” would ever “add, remove, or change anything in the liturgy on his own authority” (SC 22.3).

6. The use of the venerable Latin language would be a frequent and appreciated occurrence, since “the use of the Latin language is to be preserved in the Latin rites” (SC 36.1). The vernacular, of course, will be utilized, but only for certain parts of the liturgy (SC 36.2), and the clergy would remember the Council’s request that “steps should be taken so that the faithful may also be able to say or to sing together in Latin those parts of the Ordinary of the Mass which pertain to them” (SC 54).

7. Liturgies would frequently be celebrated in their most noble form, namely, “solemnly in song” (SC 113). Most of the singing would be closely connected with the actual texts of the Mass (cf. SC 112, 113) and the music would be such as “adds delight to prayer, fosters unity of minds, or confers greater solemnity upon the sacred rites” (SC 112). There would be an important role for trained choirs or scholas, which preserve and foster the treasure of sacred music—a treasure of inestimable value (SC 112, 114-115). The people, for their part, would sing acclamations, responses, psalmody, antiphons, and songs—and everyone would observe reverent silence at the proper times (SC 30). None of the texts of the songs would be in any way objectionable from a doctrinal point of view, since they would be drawn directly from Scripture or the liturgy itself (SC 121).

8. Notably, Gregorian chant, being “specially suited to the Roman liturgy,” would be given “pride of place in liturgical services” (SC 116). Other forms of sacred music would not thereby be excluded—such as, preeminently, polyphony (ibid.). And of course, the pipe organ would be “held in high esteem” as “the traditional musical instrument which adds a wonderful splendor to the Church’s ceremonies and powerfully lifts up man’s mind to God and to higher things” (120). Other instruments would only be used if they “are suitable or can be made suitable for sacred use, accord with the dignity of the temple, and truly contribute to the edification of the faithful” (ibid.). Hence, such instruments as piano, guitar, and drums, which, in the Western world, originated in profane settings and are still associated with genres like jazz, folk, and rock, would never be used for sacred music. None of this is surprising, since the Council Fathers announced their purpose of “keeping to the norms and precepts of ecclesiastical tradition and discipline, and having regard to the purpose of sacred music, which is the glory of God and the sanctification of the faithful” (SC 112).

9. Communion under both kinds would be rare—e.g., to newly professed religious in the Mass of their religious dedication or to the newly baptized in the Mass that follows their baptism (SC 55). Similarly, concelebration would be relatively rare (SC 57).

10. Sunday Vespers would be a much-loved weekly occurrence, to which large numbers of faithful flock: “Pastors of souls should see to it that the chief hours, especially Vespers, are celebrated in common in church on Sundays and the more solemn feasts. And the laity, too, are encouraged to recite the divine office, either with the priests, or among themselves, or even individually” (SC 100).

11. The liturgical year would be of enormous importance in the life of the community, marked by the observance and promotion of each season’s traditions and customs (cf. SC 102-110). Images and relics of the saints would be publicly honored (SC 111). Sacramentals and popular devotions would abound, such as Eucharistic Processions, Adoration and Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, the Stations of the Cross, the Rosary, the Brown Scapular, and customs connected with saints’ days, because all of these things deepen the spiritual life of the faithful and help dispose them to participate more fully in the sacred liturgy (cf. SC 12-13).

12. The church architecture and furnishings would be “truly worthy, becoming, and beautiful, signs and symbols of the supernatural world” (SC 122), “turning men’s minds devoutly toward God” (ibid.). There would be nothing that could disturb or distract the faithful, since the bishop would have “carefully remove[d] from the house of God and from other sacred places those works of artists which are repugnant to faith, morals, and Christian piety, and which offend true religious sense either by depraved forms or by lack of artistic worth, mediocrity, and pretense” (124), since what are rightly sought are “works destined to be used in Catholic worship, to edify the faithful, and to foster their piety and their religious formation” (SC 127).

Is this what you experience, week in, week out?

[…]

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LENTCAzT 2026 – 38: Friday in Passiontide – Feast of Our Lady of Sorrows

A 5 minute daily podcast to help you in your Lenten discipline.

We hear about Santo Stefano Rotondo, the Roman Station. We spend time looking at the Feast of Our Lady of Sorrows, Mother of God and Coredemptrix.

Yesterday’s podcast – HERE

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ROME 26/3– Day 03: the color purple

You can see here the difference between the regular violet and the Roman shade.
Just for a change of pace, I put it here…

Sunrise was slate in Rome for 06:01

Sunset for 18:31

The Ave Maria Bell remains in the 18:45 cycle. I wonder if the brain trust that makes the calendar each year will adjust appropriately when Europ goes to the “ora legale” (daylight savings).

A Monaco license plate… not too rare in Rome and not too common either.

If Ming the Merciless went about in a little white Ford, when Leo goes to Monaco, will he go in this?

In my neighborhood, a new nasone that … isn’t.  Note: It’s Acqua Vergine.

Here’s a real nasone, which has the hole in the top so you can have a drink.

Jasmine (not the Jesuit) report.

Since I will be here for a while, I think I’ll get a jasmine for my tiny back outside area, along with some herbs.

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Star Wars bar scene…

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Pope Leo asks for generosity from bishops towards people who seek the TLM. I’ve seen this movie before.

Context: Far and wide we are getting reports of bishops celebrating Pontifical Masses, for example the latest in Holland by Card. Eyck. Also, on the horizon the SSPX will consecrate bishops with or without mandate of the Holy See. People have have been seriously abused by bishops who have a rigid view of forced uniformity of liturgical rites (which in the Novus Ordo is non-sensical and virtually impossible). Traditional groups have growing numbers of priests.

We read that, before the French bishops meet in a plenary session the Cardinal Secretary of State, Pietro Parolin, sent a message which clearly related the desire of Pope Leo. Parolin (Leo XIV) urged the bishops of France to seek “generous” pastoral solutions for Catholics attached to the Traditional Latin Mass.

I am minded of John Paul II in 1988 after the consecrations by the SSPX. In Ecclesia Dei adflicta he wrote:

“by virtue of my Apostolic Authority I decree the following:… c) … respect must everywhere be shown for the feelings of all those who are attached to the Latin liturgical tradition, by a wide and generous application of the directives already issued some time ago by the Apostolic See for the use of the Roman Missal according to the typical edition of 1962.”

Most bishops simply ignored him.

Will it be different this time?

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LENTCAzT 2026 – 37: Thursday in Passiontide – Babylon and Nard

A 5 minute daily podcast to help you in your Lenten discipline.

We hear about Sant’Apollinare, the Roman Station. Fr. Parsch addresses the theme of the Lesson for the Mass in the Vetus Ordo (Babylon) and the Gospel’s figure (the Penitent Woman).  Connected?

Yesterday’s podcast – HERE

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The Annunciation – The 1st Joyful Mystery (Patristic Rosary Project) Ave Gratiarum Mediatrix Omnium!

Years ago I put together the Patristic Rosary Project.

Although this is fundamentally a feast of Our Lord (His Incarnation) we also rightly say and do not err in so doing…

Θεοτόκε Παρθένε, χαῖρε!
Ave Gratiarum Mediatrix Omnium!

Here’s the 1st Mystery.


This is from my old Patristic Rosary Project

Once upon a time, I worked my way through the Mysteries of the Rosary offering some comments from the Fathers of the Church.

By Lanfranco at San Carlo ai Catinari, where I lived as a deacon. It has been closed from earthquake damage for some years, alas.

Commenting on Luke 1:26-38, the announcement of Jesus’ birth, St. Ambrose of Milan (+397) makes a connection between Mary and the Church.  :

And, therefore, the Evangelist, who had undertaken to prove the incorrupt mystery of the incarnation, thought it fruitless to pursue evidence of Mary’s virginity, lest he be seen as a defender of the Virgin rather than an advocate of the mystery.  Surely, when he taught that Joseph was righteous, he adequately declared that he could not violate the temple of the Holy Spirit, the mother of the Lord, the womb of the mystery.  We have learned the lineage of the Truth.  We have learned its counsel.  Let us learn its mystery.  Fittingly is she espoused, but virgin, because she prefigures the Church which is undefiled (cf. Eph 5:27) yet wed.  A virgin conceived us of the Spirit, a Virgin brings us forth without travail.  And thus perhaps Mary, wed to one, was filled by Another, because also the separate Churches are indeed filled by the Spirit and by grace and yet are joined to the appearance of a temporal Priest.  [Exposition of the Gospel of Luke 2.6-7]

The Marian thought of Ambrose has an ecclesiological dimension.  The Second Vatican Council cited this important passage in Lumen gentium, the dogmatic constitution on the Church:

63. By reason of the gift and role of divine maternity, by which she is united with her Son, the Redeemer, and with His singular graces and functions, the Blessed Virgin is also intimately united with the Church. As St. Ambrose taught, the Mother of God is a type of the Church in the order of faith, charity and perfect union with Christ.  For in the mystery of the Church, which is itself rightly called mother and virgin, the Blessed Virgin stands out in eminent and singular fashion as exemplar both of virgin and mother.  By her belief and obedience, not knowing man but overshadowed by the Holy Spirit, as the new Eve she brought forth on earth the very Son of the Father, showing an undefiled faith, not in the word of the ancient serpent, but in that of God’s messenger. The Son whom she brought forth is He whom God placed as the first-born among many brethren, namely the faithful, in whose birth and education she cooperates with a maternal love.

Because of Mary’s “Fiat mihi“, we can be members of the Church with Mary as our Mother.  Our baptism integrates us into this wondrous bond.  St. Leo the Great (+461) in one of his glorious sermons says:

Each one is a partaker of this spiritual origin in regeneration.  To every one, when he is reborn, the water of baptism is like the Virgin’s womb, for the same Holy Spirit fills the font, who filled the Virgin, that the sin, which that sacred conception overthrew, may be taken away by this mystical washing.  [s. 24.3]

This is not merely a Western insight.  While it is a little late for our Patristic interests, here is a snip from fascinating Kontakion of the Annunciation by the 9th century Theophanes Graphtos, the Branded:

The Theotokos said: Thou bringest me good tidings of divine joy: that Immaterial Light, in His abundant compassion, will be united to a material body.and now thou criest out to me: all-pure one, blessed is the fruit of thy womb!
The Archangel said: Rejoice, lady; rejoice, most pure virgin! Rejoice, God-containing vessel! Rejoice, candlestick of the light, the restoration of Adam, and the deliverance of Eve! Rejoice, holy mountain, shining sanctuary! Rejoice, bridal chamber of immortality!

The Theotokos said: The descent of the Holy Spirit has purified my soul; it has sanctified my body: it has made me a temple containing God, a divinely adorned tabernacle, a living sanctuary, and the pure Mother of Life.

The Archangel said: I see thee as a lamp with many lights; a bridal chamber made by God! Spotless maiden, as an ark of gold, receive now the Giver of the Law, who through thee has been pleased to deliver mankind’s corrupted nature!

Here the Blessed Virgin represents the Temple, the Tabernacle and the Ark of the Covenant, images of the Church.

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ROME 26/3– Day 02: Annunciation

Annuntio Vobis hodie Romae solem ortum esse hora sexta et tertia et occasum habiturum esse hora duodeviginti et dimidia.

Campana “Ave Maria” hora duodeviginti et quadraginta quinta sonare debet.

In addition to this being the Feast of the Annunciation, it is also the Feast of the Good Thief, St. Dismas.

There are 282 days left in the calendar year.   Today is also the anniversary of the founding of Venice.

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Welcome registrants:

Beatus Vir
SaintRitaprayforus

 

I went to The Parish™.  The scaffolding is coming down in the nave before Holy Week!  That means that the side chapels will be open and beautifully restored.

The images are covered.

The “Refectory” of the Archconfraternity is used for construction at the moment, but it is in the clutches of the Community of Sant’Egidio. If they had a sliver of decency, they would let go of it so that the parish can use it. It is a scandal.

White to move and mate in 4. HERE

Supper simple.

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Updating the different 3 different contact “forms”: Contact, Ask Father, Mass Intention Requests

I’ve changed the plugin for contact forms. Thus, I’ve been making and updating the

Contact Form (for general issues) HERE

ASK FATHER Question Box HERE

Mass Intention Requests HERE

I hope they work! After the migration of the blog, there were problems with how email worked. Now that we have that sorted it was time to use a different form plugin. The other one hadn’t been updated in about 8 years!

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Cardinal Eijk’s first Pontifical Mass in the Traditional Roman Rite: “impressive and unforgettable experience”. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

Messa in Latino has the interview.   Dutch Cardinal Willem Eijk celebrated his first Pontifical High Mass in the Traditional Roman Rite as an “impressive and unforgettable experience.”

Here is part of what the Cardinal said:

The Eucharistic celebration at the Grote Kerk in Oss was my first Pontifical Holy Mass in the extraordinary form. Fortunately, there is a team of priests there, along with a master of ceremonies and a group of acolytes and altar servers who are familiar with this rite, which made it a truly beautiful ceremony. I found it a very impressive and unforgettable experience. The church was filled with people praying devoutly. Most were young, and there were also many families. There was widespread recourse to the sacrament of penance and reconciliation (confession). The Tridentine Rite is very solemn and offers many moments of silence, thereby providing ample opportunity for personal prayer. The priest celebrates the Eucharist, not as is often claimed ‘with his back to the people’, but facing the altar and thus Christ. This helps those present to consciously turn towards Christ as well.

Other bishops and priests have recounted how moved they were to have said the TLM for the first time.  Some have wept.  It is for many like saying Mass for the first time.

The Cardinal mentions in the interview that he once declined doing an ordination because he had to learn the TLM first.

I would add that – IMO – the easiest liturgical role there is (provided he can pronounce Latin) for a bishop is to be celebrant of a Pontifical Mass.  There are all sorts of people around the bishop who can guide him here and there.  The bishop is free to pray.

This underscores a major difference in the ars celebrandi of the Novus Ordo and the Vetus Ordo.

In the Novus Ordo, a great deal of weight is put on the priest or bishop celebrant to carry forward the liturgical action.

In the Vetus Ordo, very little weight is put on the celebrant because he is controlled by the rubrics and the style of celebration and the layout of the sanctuary.  His eyes should be lowered, his chair faces to the “north”, not toward the people.  It is as if he is in a suit of armor that knows how to move on its own.

Thus, the priest is freer than at the Novus Ordo even though the priest at the Novus Ordo is ironically free to do much of what he wants according to myriad options.

This burden on the Novus Ordo celebrant personally have to “drive forward” the liturgical action is, I think, what scares bishops away from celebrating the old rite.  They imagine its complexities and mistakenly thing that it is going to depend on them to make it all happen, as it would in the Novus Ordo.  And let’s not even get into the issue of Latin (which canon law required them to learn before ordination – really – can. 249).   Hence they draw back with anxiety.  And because bishops don’t like to seem that they don’t know what to do, their anxiety can turn to hostility.

Yeah, I’m psychoanalyzing.  So what. Am I wrong?

I’ll just repeat that the easiest liturgical role there is for a bishop is to be celebrant of a Pontifical Mass.  There are all sorts of people around the bishop who can guide him here and there.

Your Excellencies… try it… you’ll like it.

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