Nope. People know how doctors dress.

Nope. People know how doctors dress.

Nope.

Nope!

I hope that this is an occasion for some more seriously dialogue with the Holy See … not sure about American bishops … especially after what Leo said about prayer (cf. Augustine ep. 189) and POTUS remarks about Leo.

Knucklehead stuff can lead to something smarter and more productive.

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ROME 26/3– Day 21: More on the Six Hour Clock app

6:31 was when the chariot of Helios began to grace the Roman skies.

19:51 is when Pyrois, Eous, Aethon, and Phlegon will seeks their nightly stable.

20:00 is when the Ave Maria Bell should ring according to the cycle on the curial calendar.

However, if we are being picky about solar time, the Ave Maria could also follow the sun, and ring precisely one half hour after sunset.   So, following the sun strictly, the solar Ave Maria this evening would ring at 20:21

On the new Six Hour Clock App I wrote about yesterday, I have a slightly different time for sunset, that is, 19:48 – 3 minutes sooner than the curial calendar shows.  I suppose this could be a matter of the location where the calendar’s time was calculated.    I am going to guess that it is calculated not in Rome, but at Castel Gandolfo, the summer papal palace but also the site of the Vatican Observatory.  And….

… nope, lookie here.

Why the 3 minute discrepancy? You would not expect there to be a 3 minute difference between Rome and Vatican City.  Possible explanations are a different computational convention, rounding method, or a simple calendar-table issue.  It might be a horizon angle difference, depending on where the observations were made (and who knows when and by what means).  Another possibility, and this is likely explanation, laziness.

This will only drive me slightly crazy.

Too bad the app doesn’t have a “coordinate with the Curia calendar” option.

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Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HERE – UK HERE  WHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

Last night I did some more cooking. I roasted a spatchcocked chicken.

But first, a shot from Exposition yesterday after Vespers.

Getting the veg ready. I tossed it in batches in a frying pan.

And put a little color on the chicken. After I warmed up some broth.

I wanted to thicken the liquid, but I don’t have any flour. However, I remembered once using a few psyllium capsules. Not quite the same, but in a pinch, improvise, adapt, overcome!

This was as good as I have ever made. The veg were celery, onion, carrot, fennel, garlic and lemon. The liquid, chix broth and white wine.

The lemon chunks with the peel were incredible, like candy, and served as my dessert.

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Priestly chess players, drop me a line. HERE

White to move and mate in 4. Good luck.

What is the tactic called that you have to use?

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ROME 26/3– Day 20: WOW! JUST TOO COOL!

As the Roman days lengthen, the Roman sun rises earlier and sets later. Today the sun rose at 06:33. Sunset is at 19:50.

The cycle of the “Ave Maria” Bell…. is… NO! WAIT!

I received from a reader something very cool.

Welcome registrant:

DWFollower

From a reader…

Fr Z.

On a recent Camino pilgrimage I learned about the Ave Maria Bell and the Six Hour Italian clock.

At first I planned to build a physical clock, but that is impractical for me right now, but with my IT background I was inspired to build a phone app instead. Your blog was extremely helpful for me as I was building the app. It was one of the few places I could find helpful information on the Ave Maria Bell. My good friend Fr [M] also helped a great deal too.

I installed the app.  Chronological joy has arrived.   It just chimed solar Terce.  I hope that when the “Ave Maria” is to ring, that it rings the classic pattern, and not a one and done.

Here are some screenshots.   SIX HOUR CLOCK!  How cool is that?

There’s also a 24 hour clock, but… hey!

Where’s the sun, you ask?  And the moon?

This is in the Apple App Store.    What a spiffy development.

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Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HERE – UK HERE  WHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

More shopping options.

Black to move.  Mate in 4.

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Priestly chess players, drop me a line. HERE

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes – Quasimodo Sunday (and “Low” and “Thomas” and “Divine Mercy”)

Too many people today are without good, strong preaching, to the detriment of all. Share the good stuff.

Was there a GOOD point made in the sermon you heard at your Mass of obligation for this Easter Octave Sunday?

Tell us about attendance especially for the Traditional Latin Mass.

Any local changes or (hopefully good) news?

A taste of what I offered at 1 Peter 5 this week:

[…]

Then comes the moment of immense ecclesial and sacramental consequence. “As the Father has sent me, even so I send you” (v. 21). The Son is the One sent by the Father. The Apostles now become sent ones in and through Him. He breathes on them and says, “Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained.” This is the institution of the Sacrament of Penance. The power promised in the discourse about the keys and in the authority to bind and loose now takes concrete form in the breath, Hebrew ruach, of the Risen Christ.

When a priest absolves sins, it is not a mere declaration that sins are somehow ignored, covered, or externally imputed away. It is a true remission, a true cleansing, a real loosing. The Council of Trent affirmed de fide that the Church received from Christ the authority to remit post-baptismal sins. The text itself makes plain that such remission requires judgment, and judgment requires knowledge. If sins are to be forgiven or retained, they must therefore be known to the minister to whom Christ entrusted this authority. Hence, verbal confession of sins belongs to the sacrament’s very logic.

[…]

GO TO CONFESSION!

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ASK FATHER: We can eat meat on Easter Friday, but do we have to do some other penance?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Please excuse my ignorance. When a solemnity falls on a Friday, (e.g. in Octave of Easter) the abstinence from meat is lifted. However, if I decide to eat meat do I still have to substitute it for some other form of penance.

No. Under the universal law of the Latin Church, when a solemnity falls on a Friday, the Church does not require abstinence that day, and the Code does not impose some substitute penitential act in its place.

Canon 1251 states: “Abstinence from meat, or from some other food as determined by the Episcopal Conference, is to be observed on all Fridays, unless a solemnity should fall on a Friday.”

The key is the earlier can. 1249. Can. 1249 says all the faithful are bound by divine law to do penance, and that the Church prescribes certain common observances on penitential days, “according to the norm of the following canons.” Those following canons (including can. 1251) define what is juridically required. Can. 1251 expressly removes Friday abstinence when the day is a solemnity. The Code nowhere adds, “and then some other penance must be done instead.”

So, speaking strictly according to the Code of Canon Law for the Latin Church, a Friday solemnity is an exception to the Friday abstinence law, and no alternate penance is required by the Code itself.

That said, an episcopal conference can legislate more specifically about penitential practice under can. 1253, so particular law could matter in a given country. But under the Code alone, the answer is no.

Naturally, you have free will and you can do some sort of penance on a Friday which is a solemnity (i.e., a major feast day).  At the same time, doing penance on a solemnity seems to be in tension with the nature of a solemnity, doesn’t it?

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ROME 26/3– Day 19: Claming up

At 06:34, four minutes after my alarm rang, the Sun rose in Rome.

The Sun will set, if all goes well, at 19:49.

The “Ave Maria” Bell? At 20:00

This 101st day of the calendar year is the Feast of St. Gemma Galgani.

On this day in 1970, Apollo 13 was launched.

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Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HERE – UK HERE  WHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

Yesterday, I treated myself to some new flowers from Pippo. The others, the first I bought, had lasted over two weeks! But they were starting to drop petals. What I didn’t mention is that I was at the fishmonger before I went to get the flowers.

Why the fishmonger, you ask? I wanted to treat myself to something I’ve been eagerly awaiting: vongole… clams.

Last night I did the first cooking thing I’ve yet done that didn’t involve putting something between two slices of bread or the equivalent.

I purged the clams for hours in salty water.  They say in the shop that they are already purged. Yeah… I purge them more.

None of your weak-ass US garlic here.

A little oil, parsley stalks, white wine.

I cooked the spaghetti – mostly – ahead and put it aside while I prepared the clams.

Time to rock and roll.

You can see them starting to open.

Finish cooking the spaghetti in the juice!

Assemble and add some parsley.

I was very pleased.  That scratched an itch.

Meanwhile, on the way to church today, not much going on in the morning chill.

Black to mate in 4.

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

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Nuns of Gower Abbey have a NEW music disc/download!

I am delighted to share with you that the wonderful nuns of Gower Abbey, the Benedictines of Mary, Queen of Apostles, have released a new music collection, on CD and digital download.

I have the album (Thanks Mother Cecilia!) and have enjoyed it. They get better and better. And there are some instrumental touches as well. Nuns got talent.

Here is a brief sampler…

Get yours now and give it as gifts.

Apostles at Ephesus

US HERE – UK HERE (nope)

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St. Augustine on military service and prayer in time of war

I was recently prompted by some new accounts to review what St. Augustine thought about military service, the Christian vocation, and prayer.  Hence, ep. 189.

Context is helpful and here is a broad view of the letter as a whole.

In a nutshell, Letter 189 belongs to Augustine’s later years, around 417–418. He wrote to Boniface, a senior military officer in Africa battling against the Vandals, later the comes Africae. Augustine says he had already written once, but then a messenger named Faustus arrived and reported that Boniface especially wanted something spiritually useful for his salvation. Augustine therefore sent a second, more direct exhortation.

Bluntly, Boniface is fighting the Vandals in Roman Africa. He wants to quit fighting and join a monastery. Augustine is not amused, as his brevity suggests.

The dense letter is pastoral in purpose. Boniface was a Christian officer, a man of rank, arms, and public responsibility, asking a bishop how to live faithfully in that condition.  Augustine writes to Boniface as a pastor.  The Bishop of Hippo reduces the Christian life to the twofold commandment of charity, love of God and love of neighbor, and then applies it to military service, discipline, humility, and the right use of force.

The opening shows that the letter is meant as a practical spiritual rule for a busy commander rather than a full theological treatise.

There is also a larger African ecclesiastical and political context. Boniface had already been in contact with Augustine during the Donatist controversy. In Augustine’s earlier Letter 185, Boniface appears as the official charged with enforcing imperial penalties against Donatists. Augustine there explains and defends coercive legislation against schism. That earlier connection helps explain why Boniface would turn to Augustine again. He was operating in a province where religion, public order, coercion, and imperial law were tightly bound together.

A central move in Letter 189 is Augustine’s reordering of Boniface’s horizon. Boniface was a man of command, always in danger of letting urgent worldly business eclipse the final end. Augustine therefore lifts the question above office, reputation, and imperial service to the vision of God and the hope of the heavenly kingdom. A commander who forgets his final end will also misuse his temporal means. Charity is thus given as the governing interior principle broad enough to guide command decisions, violence, prayer, and daily conduct.

Augustine also addresses Boniface’s anxiety about whether a soldier can please God. He answers yes.

Augustine points to David, the centurion praised by Christ, Cornelius, and the soldiers who asked John the Baptist what to do and were told not to extort, not to accuse falsely, and to be content with their wages. He does not tell Boniface to leave military service. He legitimizes Christian service in arms while giving it a moral compass. In Boniface’s case this was immediately relevant, since he already held coercive and defensive responsibilities in Africa.

Augustine then places Boniface’s office within a wider ecclesial division of labor. Some Christians fight invisible enemies by prayer, while Boniface fights visible enemies, the barbarians. In this way he serves the peace of the Church and the Christian people. Yet Augustine sharply defines the ethos of such service: “Peace should be the object of your desire; war should be waged only as a necessity.” Even promises to enemies must be kept, and the defeated or captive are to receive mercy when peace can be secured. Force may be used, but never with hatred or delight in violence.

The letter closes by turning from public duty to private discipline: chastity, sobriety, moderation, detachment from riches, thanksgiving, humility, prayer, and readiness to forgive. Augustine says the letter is more a mirror than a manual, since he had already heard a good report of Boniface. At this stage, before Boniface’s later crises, Augustine was trying to strengthen what seemed a promising Christian military vocation.

With this background in mind, here is an interesting passage from ep. 189.5 about the men in his monastery, that is, those who have abandoned secular employments.  Augustine founded a convent for women, one for men, and his own house, a monastery that wound up as seminary for bishops.  Here is a key passage, also touching on indifference or even positive support concerning false religions whom he associates with the Devil and fallen angels :

5. They occupy indeed a higher place before God who, abandoning all these secular employments, serve Him with the strictest chastity; but every one, as the apostle says, has his proper gift of God, one after this manner, and another after that (1 Corinthians 7:7). Some, then, in praying for you, fight against your invisible enemies; you, in fighting for them, contend against the barbarians, their visible enemies. Would that one faith existed in all, for then there would be less weary struggling, and the devil with his angels would be more easily conquered; but since it is necessary in this life that the citizens of the kingdom of heaven should be subjected to temptations among erring and impious men, that they may be exercised, and tried as gold in the furnace (Wisdom 3:6) we ought not before the appointed time to desire to live with those alone who are holy and righteous, so that, by patience, we may deserve to receive this blessedness in its proper time.

Did you notice that Augustine tells Boniface that the monks are PRAYING for his success in battle?

It is good idea to delve into Augustine in the midst of current events.

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ROME 26/3– Day 18: Flowers!

The first sunlight of the day reached Rome at 06:36.

That sunlight will recede until tomorrow, I hope, at 19:48.

The “Ave Maria” ought to be chimed at 20:00.

The Roman Station for this Easter Friday, upon which you can eat meat, is Santa Maria “ad martyres” (aka the Pantheon).

Speaking about what’s wrong in the Vatican…

Here are your ivy (yes, I know) and jasmine (no, not the Jesuit) reports.

Taken in the same spot as before.  HERE

The jasmine has a way to go yet. I am contemplating getting a potted jasmine for my little cortile. I am not sure it would survive my absences.

Black to move and mate in 4.

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

Interested in learning?  Try THIS.

Chess is undergoing a huge renaissance. Do yourselves and your kids a favor. LEARN TO PLAY. It is something that lasts a lifetime.

I was at the Campo de’ Fiori today to get some veggies and some flowers from, of course, Pippo.

Beautiful tulips and peonies now.

Not peonies.

 

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ASK FATHER: Can we eat meat on Friday in the Octave of Easter? (Hint: YES!)

First, allow me to say that I am making a steak for myself tonight, Thursday.

I could also enjoy it tomrrow, Friday in the Octave of Easter.  That said, I think I might pick up a whole mess of clams and make spaghetti alle vongole… not because its Friday, but because I really want that.

From a reader, classic question…

QUAERITUR:

My wife and I recently returned to the traditional Friday abstinence from meat year round.

Traditionally, would the Friday abstinence from meat also apply during Fridays of the whole Easter season?

What about just the octave?

Congratulations for wanting to adhere to the traditional practices.  Kudos.

You’ve asked a good question.

Here is canon 1251:

Can. 1251 Abstinence from meat, or from some other food as determined by the Episcopal Conference, is to be observed on all Fridays, unless a solemnity should fall on a Friday. Abstinence and fasting are to be observed on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.

From the General Norms for Liturgical Year and Calendar, 24

24. The first eight days of Easter Time constitute the Octave of Easter and are celebrated as Solemnities of the Lord.

The days of the Octave of Easter are celebrated as Solemnities (in the Novus Ordo calendar, which is the Church’s “general” calendar).

Therefore, there is no obligation for Catholics – even if they follow only the Vetus Ordo for Mass – for the Friday abstinence on this coming Friday.

Note well that the other Fridays of Eastertide are not Solemnities.  The relief from abstinence applies only to the Friday in the Octave of Easter.

BTW… this does not apply to the Octave of Christmas, for those days of that Octave are not counted as “Solemnities” as are those of the Easter Octave.

This is how the 1983 Code of Canon Law handles Friday in the Octave of Easter, and this applies also to those who prefer the Extraordinary Form (which did not have “Solemnities”).

As far as other Fridays are concerned, outside the Octave of Easter or some other Solemnity, you can ask your parish priest to dispense you or commute your act of penance.

Can. 1245 Without prejudice to the right of diocesan bishops mentioned in can. 87, for a just cause and according to the prescripts of the diocesan bishop, a pastor [parish priest] can grant in individual cases a dispensation from the obligation of observing a feast day or a day of penance or can grant a commutation of the obligation into other pious works. A superior of a religious institute or society of apostolic life, if they are clerical and of pontifical right, can also do this in regard to his own subjects and others living in the house day and night.

Abstinence from meat has good reasoning behind it. For some, however, abstinence from other things can be of great spiritual effect.

And… order some super good beer.

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