WDTPRS – 5th Sunday after Easter (V.O.): Liturgical goop. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

I am going to drag you – again – through my standard and sustained rant about liturgy, punctuated by Latin vocabulary and Neoplatonism.

Consider this a different sort of “food post”.

I will apply what I rant about to the Collect for this Sunday’s Mass.  Hang on for the ride.

First, to be grown up Catholics we need a Mass for grown ups.

Our Mass should give us thick red steak and Cabernet, not pureed carrots and milk for baby teeth.

I want meat for you, not goop.   That means I want some of you to grow up into something more than you have hitherto desired.

Goop is fine for babies.  Babies need goop.  But when you grow up, you need more than goop.  Adults can survive on goop, but they won’t thrive on goop.

I want you to thrive through our Mass not just survive.

FACT: In the revisions and recreation of new prayers for Novus Ordo we lost most of what could be characterized as “negative” concepts: sin, guilt, penance, propitiation, etc.  But these are vital nutrients for Catholics.  Grown up Catholics, that is, and growing up Catholics.

Catholics understand that we are sinners, and that one day we are going to die and meet our Maker, who is our Savior and our Judge.

When we deal with very young children we don’t drum on about the Four Last Things.  They shouldn’t be ignorant of them, but we shouldn’t stress them to much, either.  Let children be children.

But we must not infantilize adults by denying them the sustenance of TRUTH.

“Goo goo ga ga” from the pulpit and in our Mass prayers is not enough for adults. To preach “goo goo here comes the choo choo” to them is precisely the opposite of charity, which seeks to serve the good of others.

Alas, the Novus Ordo has a lot of “goo goo goop” built in it, because the experts who cobbled it together stripped the rites and prayers of many essential nutrients.  The deficiencies can be partly made up for by a good ars celebrandi and good preaching, just as in the TLM some of the optimistic eschatology stressed in the Novus Ordo can be brought in with good effect.

It is far easier to do that with the later than to evolve the former.   But I digress.

Bottom line…

Mass must be succulent, not insipid.

With the help of preachers and devotional reading and some silent contemplation – yes, I mean sitting down and thinking for a while without looking at a screen – we can crack the bones of our prayers and rites open with adult teeth, chew their marrow and gnaw their flesh with benefit.

I root this image in Christ’s own words in John 6 where He says that we must “eat” Him, and the Greek verbs move from regular “eat… phago” (v. 51, 53) to “gnaw… trogo” (v. 54).

Moving on to Sunday’s prayer, let’s start cracking those bones for the marrowy goodness within.

In the ancient Gelasian Sacramentary today’s Collect is found on the Fourth Sunday after the close of the Easter Octave (today). The Gelasian or Liber sacramentorum Romanae ecclesiae (Book of Sacraments of the Church of Rome) was assembled from older material in Paris around 750. It has elements of both the Roman and Gallican (French) liturgies of the Merovingian period (5th – 8th cc.). This Collect survived the cutters and snippers who pasted the Novus Ordo together on their desks. You hear it now on the 10th Sunday of Ordinary Time.

COLLECT – (1962MR):

Deus, a quo bona cuncta procedunt,
largire supplicibus tuis:
ut cogitemus, te inspirante, quae recta sunt;
et, te gubernante, eadem faciamus.

The Novus Ordo version slightly rearranges the word order, saying “tuis largire supplicibus”, which I actually prefer since it flows better, but the more ancient version in the Gelasian omits the “tuis” altogether.

Our never distant Lewis & Short Dictionary says procedo means “to go forth or before, to go forwards, advance, proceed” and more importantly “to go or come forth or out, to advance, issue” and even “to issue from the mouth, to be uttered”. Largire looks like an infinitive but is really an imperative form of the deponent largior, “to give bountifully, to lavish, bestow, dispense, distribute, impart… to confer, bestow, grant, yield”. The neuter substantive rectum, i (from rego), is “that which is right, good, virtuous; uprightness, rectitude, virtue”. Rego involves “to keep straight or from going wrong, to lead straight; to guide, conduct, direct”. The core concepts are “straight” and “upwards”. In its adjectival form, rectus, a, um, there is a moral content, “right, correct, proper, appropriate, befitting” again having reference to that which is “above”. Cogito is more than simply “to think”. As in Descartes’ often quoted “Cogito ergo sum… I think, therefore I am”, it is really, “to pursue something in the mind” and “to consider thoroughly, to ponder, to weigh, reflect upon”. The English derivative is “cogitate”.

Also, from the point of view of rhetoric, that cogitemus precedes the object and faciamus follows eadem.  Putting cogitemus at the beginning of the colon and faciamus at the of the other underscores antithesis between “thinking” and “doing”.  In fact, the Epistle from James 1 today begins: “be doers of the word, not hearers only”.

LITERAL VERSION:

O God, from whom all good things issue forth, bountifully grant to Your supplicants, that, You inspiring, we may think things which are right, and, You guiding, we may accomplish the same.

NB: largire supplicibus … grant to those who pray.  We are about to enter into the Rogation Days. (Yeah.. gone from the N.O.)

CURRENT ICEL (2011 from the Ordinary Form):

O God, from whom all good things come,
grant that we, who call on you in our need,
may at your prompting discern what is right,
and by your guidance do it
.

Well… okay.

Time to CRACK SOME BONES!

In today’s classically sculpted Collect there is a concept important for theological reflection by the ancient Church through the medieval period.

A theological key helps us to open up what the Church is really saying to God, on our behalf, locked up in words.

Ancient theologians, both pagan and Christian struggled alike for answers to the same questions.

  • If all things come from God, did God create evil?
  • If all things come from God, then are all things, in fact, also God?
  • If in the cosmos there are only God and everything else which is not-God, and if God is the only Good, then are all created not-God things evil?
  • Is matter evil by nature?
  • Are we evil, destined to doom or nothingness?

Pagans and Christians, using the same starting points and categories of thought, came up with differing solutions.

Rejecting the idea of both a good god principle and an evil god principle, pagan theologians of the Platonic stream of thought posited a kind of creation through an endless series of intermediaries to avoid the conclusion that God, the highest good, created evil. For them, the perfectly transcendent One overflowed with being through descending triads of intermediaries down to the corrupt material world from which we must be freed. This solved nothing, of course, because no matter how many hierarchies of intermediaries you propose, those hierarchies always must be further divided into more hierarchies. Christian theologians, who were also Platonists, using the same categories of thought found another solution: creatio ex nihilo… immediate (that is “unmediated”) creation of the universe from nothing. Evil was explained as a deprivation of being, essentially a “nothingness”, not created by God.

All things which have being come forth from God, are good, and will go back to God. This is the key for unlocking our prayer.

Let us now look at the lame-duck version people had to hear in church for over thirty years on the 10th Sunday of Ordinary, brought to you by…

OBSOLETE ICEL (1973 10th Ord. Sunday):
God of wisdom and love,
source of all good,
send your Spirit to teach us your truth
and guide our actions
in your way of peace.

BLECH! Did I mention “goo goo ga ga goop?”

Folks, translation is hard but it ain’t that hard.   They had to want to make it kind of stupid… to eventually keep you or make you kind of stupid regarding your faith.  Remember: we are our rites.  Liturgy is doctrine.

Our Latin prayer today is like a nice plate of ossobucco, so it’s time to dig out that good rich marrow.

When our Sunday Collect was composed, Western theologians (still really Platonists in many respects) were mightily struggling to solve thorny problems about, for example, predestination. This required them to gaze deeply at man’s nature and the problem of evil.

In this titanic theological battle we find on all sides the ancient Platonic view of creation.

All creation proceeds (procedo) forth from God in indeterminate form. In a reflection of the eternal procession of uncreated divine Persons of the Trinity, the rational component of creation (man) turned around when proceeding forth in order to regard his Source and, in that turning, that conversio, took determinate form and began to return to God. This going forth and returning, this descent and rising (in theology exitus and reditus or Greek exodos and proodos) is everywhere present in ancient and medieval thought… and in liturgical prayer today when the ancient form was too messed up by the redactors.

For Christians of the Neoplatonic Augustinian tradition, man, the pinnacle of creation, “drags”, as it were, all of created nature with him in a contemplative “conversion” back to God.

Man’s rational nature was not destroyed by sin in the Fall.

However, were it not for the Incarnate Logos, the Word made flesh, the union of uncreated with created, the descent of creation would have simply continued “exiting” away from God for eternity.

If not for the Incarnation man and all creation with him would never turn back, doomed to become ever more indeterminate!

Instead, rational man, the image of the rational Word, and all creation with him can turn back to God.

The Son entered our created realm and made possible man’s conversio after the Fall.

As John Scotus Eriugena (+877) put it, man is “nature’s priest”.

Through rational acts man plays a part in God’s saving plan for creation.

This pattern of exitus and reditus is exemplified in the writings of theologians in a line from pagan Neoplatonic writers like Plotinus (+270), to Christian Platonists like St. Augustine (+430), Boethius (+525), Eriugena, St. Bonaventure (+1274) and St. Thomas Aquinas (+1274). This is the theology behind many ancient prayers.

Our Collect echoes the Neoplationic theology of late antiquity and early Middle Ages together with the Scriptural James 1:17, a text used frequently by these same Merovingian and Carolingian thinkers.  NB: In these last two Sundays the Epistle is also from James.

We need what our prayers really say.  They are the bones of our daily lives. We need a Mass for grown ups.

Demand Grown-up Mass.

Lastly, perhaps that Augustinian, Neoplatonic stuff I rattled on about could be the starting point for a serious “theology of ecology”, somewhat more substantial than the pseudo-scientific tripe that’s being peddled today.  You theology students out there: this could provide some starting points for papers and theses.  Go back and read that last part and see what you can think up.

Just don’t attempt this at Villanova or at any Jesuit school unless there is solid faculty member about.  Better… find a different school.

 

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ASK FATHER: A point about papal pronouncements and the truth

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I have a question about papal infallibility. I started to think about this when learning more about the council of Florence.

The Filioque is true. It didn’t need either the pope or a council to proclaim it as true. It already was true.

There is an old Twilight Zone episode with Burgess Meredith where he played the devil working for a newspaper. He wrote lies but they became true.

I know this might seem silly but it seems to me that this idea of either a council or the pope saying something and that being what makes the information true is the way people think of infallibility. But for me that can’t be right. Either the information was already true or it wasn’t.

It can not be the case that untrue information becomes true after the pope says so.

In know infallibility is described as the pope being protected from error but how that filters down to people is saying that somehow the pope can make up whatever he wants. Would it not be better to say the information was infallible because it was always true?

Please let me know how I am going wrong on this.

Thanks for the question.  That point about the “Twilight Zone” episode is interesting.   I have felt like we’ve been living in a “Twilight Episode” for that last 14 years or so.

Your instinct is basically correct. Infallibility does not mean that the Pope can make something true by saying it. Truth is grounded in God, who is Truth itself. A doctrine is true because it corresponds to divine reality, divine revelation, or what follows necessarily from revelation. The Church’s infallibility does not create truth. It protects the Church from error when she definitively teaches what God has revealed or what must be held in connection with revelation.

For example, some Pope could change a paragraph or two in the, say, Catechism of the Catholic Church about some question and ground that change essentially upon recent things he himself had said.   Things don’t become true by the fact that they are published in the CCC.  They are based on the truth, and the grounding of that truth is, in the CCC, demonstrated in the footnotes which reference Councils, writings of the Fathers and Doctors, etc., and not just one questionable source.

So, in your example, the Filioque did not become true because the Council of Florence taught it. If it is true, it was eternally true, because it concerns the eternal procession of the Holy Spirit in the inner life of the Trinity  (pace Easterners). That Council did not cause the doctrine to become true. It authoritatively identified, demonstrated, and proposed the truth to be held by the faithful. (Yes, we can have discussions about Filioque and find ways to harmonize Western and Eastern positions… but not in this post!)

This is exactly why the “Twilight Zone” comparison is useful. We reject the notion that ecclesiastical authority can make falsehood become truth. Vatican I teaches that there can be no real contradiction between faith and reason, because God cannot deny Himself, nor can truth contradict truth.  If something is false, no pope can make it true. If something is outside the deposit of faith, no pope can turn it into revelation. The Pope is the servant of revelation, not its author.

Papal infallibility means something more precise. Vatican I teaches that the Roman Pontiff is preserved from error when, speaking ex cathedra, he defines a doctrine concerning faith or morals to be held by the whole Church. Such definitions are “irreformable of themselves, and not by the consent of the Church,” because the protection comes from Christ’s promise to His Church, not from later approval by the faithful.  The Catechism says the same: the Pope enjoys this infallibility when, as supreme pastor and teacher of all the faithful, he proclaims by a definitive act a doctrine pertaining to faith or morals.

This also helps avoid a common misunderstanding. Catholics are not required to believe that every papal statement is infallible, or that the Pope receives new revelations, or that he may define whatever he wishes. Vatican I places limits around the charism: it concerns faith and morals, it must be taught as supreme pastor and teacher of all Christians, and it must be proposed definitively to the whole Church. Outside those conditions, papal statements can have varying degrees of authority, but they are not automatically infallible.

So I would slightly refine your proposed wording. Instead of saying, “the information was infallible because it was always true,” I would say: “The doctrine was true before it was defined; the Church’s definitive judgment is infallible because Christ protects His Church from error when she solemnly defines a doctrine of faith or morals.” That preserves both sides: truth does not depend on papal will, and the Church really does have a divinely protected teaching office.

In short, you are not going wrong by resisting the idea that the Pope can make up doctrine. That resistance is Catholic.

BTW… the TZ episode was called “The Printer’s Devil”, which is an old term for apprentices in print shops who got covered with ink, etc.  Even older is the medieval “printer’s devil” Titivillus, a demon blamed for scribal, liturgical, and verbal faults: dropped syllables, misspelled words, mumbled prayers, inattentive chanting, and mistakes in copying manuscripts. He was imagined as gathering these errors in a sack to present against negligent monks, clerks, and worshippers at their judgment.   Titivillus moved from the scriptorium and choir stall into the compositor’s case.  An infamous printing error blamed on Titivillus was the omission of the word not in the 1631 Authorised Version of the Bible, which resulted in Exodus 20:14 appearing as “Thou shalt commit adultery.

NB: Just because that appeared in an edition of the Bible doesn’t make it true.  Although we don’t yet know what effect “walking together” will make of Amoris laetitiae and Fiducia supplicans.  But I digress.

 

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WHEREIN FR. Z offers a new project: rescue, restore a spectacular set of vestments – UPDATED

UPDATE 10 May 2026 06:50 CET

There may be some of you who see this late and would have liked to participated.   I have good news and bad news.

The bad news is that, when I was given the estimate, it did not include the 22% Value Added Tax in Italy (IVA).  That pushes it to €14640 which is, today, roughly $17500.

I should have asked about the VAT in the first place.  DUH!

The good news is that, I am sure that a few people saw this a little late and wanted to contribute.  Therefore, I will reopen the fundraiser so we can close the gap.

NEW PLEDGES:   We need TWO more of $500 or else ONE of $1000.  

PG, KS, SB

Original pledges from:

MR, AK, JV, JK, NW, T&LI, ME, MM,  ARG, CD, SH, EB, KB for the initial run.

THANK YOU.  The Pastor at The Parish™ is over the moon.

The next step… I’ll write an email to you about how to proceed.


 

ORIGINAL POST

I hereby present a project.

We build the corporal and spiritual health of the communities which enjoy the Vetus Ordo brick by brick.   By helping them, we raise all boats like a rising tide.  Those who attend the Novus Ordo are also genuinely aided by attraction and osmosis.

At The Parish™, buried in a bottom drawer, is a spectacular white set worked with real gold from the time of Bl. Pius IX… he was a member of the mighty Archconfraternity.  It is difficult adequately to underscore the importance of this group in Rome over the centuries.

The white set has also an altar frontal and tabernacle canopy.

Here is a photo of the frontal with the canopy.  NB: The canopy has been cleaned, but it needs more.  Look at the difference the years have wrought.

The vestments are in bad shape.   Here are a few of many photos I took.  First, look at this.

What must be done?  All of the decoration must be removed and transferred to new fabric.  This takes expert knowledge.  We have someone!

Some close ups of some of the pieces.
    

Makes you want to cry.  BUT… they are ready for rebirth.  As they are… using them would do terrible damage.

 

Gosh.
    

Here’s the point.

I’ll start with a bid for funds for the Tridentine Mass Society of the Diocese of Madison.  In this weird time of ecclesial demolition it is hard to know where your monetary support should go for constructive purposes.  Always remember the TMSM – 501(c)(3).

The estimate for the work is €12,000 which is about $14000.

We are going to restore this set.  It will take months.  It will only get more expensive and iffy the longer we wait.

I ask for donors willing to pledge at least $500 but ideally $1000 to the TMSM, which will pay for the restoration.

You names will be recorded and a document placed with the vestments so that you will be remembered by name when they are used.

When I get the right number of pledges, we can pull the trigger.

We have a good track record.  We did their baptismal font when they became the Traditional Parish in Rome, black vestments, red vestments.

Please drop me a note HERE and put this in the subject: PLEDGE 

If you want to pledge more, great!

DO NOT SENT MONEY YET.  When we have pledges, I will ask you – individually – for checks to go to the TMSM.  Non-$US donations can come maybe another way which I will figure out.

Friends, this is an important set of vestments… let’s save them and bring them back to the altar.

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ROME 26/5– Day 46: Details and a Bell

On this Roman day the sun rose at 5:54.

It just set at 20:20 according to the Curia, or in terms of just plain Rome 20:18.

The Ave Maria… will it begin to ring again? … in the 20:30 cycle.   If we are sticking to solar time it will ring at 20:48.   I’ll try to catch the chime of the Ave Maria from the new and super cool app.  More on that below.

It is the Feast of St. Isaiah, Old Testament Prophet.

CLICK

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Here is a detail of the sacristy at The Parish™.

Vidimus aquam.

In church, however, on the Marian altar, you can see the final products of what I showed you yesterday, when Mighty Pippo was constructing them at his place in the Campo de’ Fiori.

In Warsaw, alas my guy Wesley has fallen behind a bit in the Blitz phase, while Fabiano Caruana and two others charged forward.

White mates in 4.  Easy.

’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

More about the super cool Ave Maria Clock App.  I’ve been in contact with its maker.   He did some research to pinpoint the place which is used in official reports for sunrise and sunset (which vary from what are on the curial calendar by a couple minutes).  He found this:

What you are looking at is the Piazza della Repubblica, and the locator marker is in front of the facade of the Basilica Santa Maria degli Angeli.   What I right away remarked is that church is where the official sun clock was by which Rome knew solar noon. The analemma on the floor is on that side of the church as you enter.

Back in the day when the sunbeam struck the analemma, a flag would be raised and, spied from atop the Janiculum Hill on the other side of the Tiber, a cannon was fired. To this day, every day at civil (not solar) noon, a cannon is fired from the hill.

Coincidence?

John L. Heilbron has a book on churches and cathedrals as solar observatories.  It is called The Sun In The Church.   Very cool.

The app’s creator is adding more features, including the Roman day and the lunar computus.

As promised…  here’s the app ringing the “Ave Maria” at 20:48:

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ROME 26/5– Day 45: Fr. Z gives you the bird

5:55 20:19
20:30

Today one recites the Supplica to Our Lady of Pompeii

It is the 1st Anniversary of the election of Leo XIV.

Two 7th century Popes have their Feast today, Boniface IV (+615) and Benedict II (+685)

A couple of amusing things and something not so amusing.

I have to scratch my head at this and look around to see if Malachi Martin is standing behind me.  See anything strange?

You all know that in January we celebrate the Feast of the Ass.  Today, apparently, is World Donkey Day.  Really.  So many celebrations at once!

Oh yes… a friend sent this screenshot.  It seems someone thinks that Mary is “Mediatrix”.

Well, maybe news hasn’t reached them yet.  Donkeys are kinda slow.

Today on my way to church I ran into the lady with the cockatoo. When I had my place across from the English College and above the infamous Bar Peru, each day I could hear when they came by for a constitutional. Today, we met in front of S.M. Monserrato.

She was not gesturing because she didn’t want photos.  She was quite engaged and friendly.

So, there. Now you have the bird.

Black to move. What to do?

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

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8 May – Happy Feast of Mary… under which title?

Today I had options for Mass….

Apparition of St. Michael

Mary, Queen of All Saints and Mother of Beautiful Love

Mary, Our Lady of the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Mary, Mediatrix of All Graces.

Guess which one I choose.

Let me help.

Posted in Our Solitary Boast, SESSIUNCULA |
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8 May – Indulgence for the Supplication to Our Lady of Pompeii (twice a year)

Today is the 8 May and we recite the Supplica to Our Lady of Pompeii

It is often recited at 1200 Noon.

Once upon a time one could obtain this day a plenary indulgence by reciting the Supplication to the Madonna of Pompei.  The other day for this is the first Sunday of October.

Bl. Bartolo Longo, who fostered this devotion was dedicated also to St. Michael the Archangel.  For this reason he wanted the Supplica to be said on the Feast of the Apparition of St. Michael which occurred in 490.   The place, Mt. Gargano, is one of the points that can be drawn through Michael shrines from Ireland to the Holy Land, St. Michael’s Sword, firmly fixed also with Mary’s Supplica.

With the changes to the concessions for indulgences, according to the Enchiridion Indulgentiarum, there is no longer any plenary indulgence for this prayer, notwithstanding anything you might see in some old book or on a website.  For example, if you see something about Pope Leo XIII granting an indulgence, etc., that is null and void now.

However, the new Enchiridion says with concession #17, §3 that Marian prayers obtain a partial indulgence under the condition that the prayer is approved by competent authority and that it is recited with fervor in the state of grace (you don’t need confession and Communion within 20 days, nor must you recite the prayers for the Roman Pontiffs intentions for a partial indulgence). You can receive a partial indulgence, by maintaining this beautiful custom of the Supplication today. 

For more about this, including the prayers, click HERE.  

I included background on Bl. Bartolo Longo, a converted Satanic priest! John Paul II beatified Bartolo Longo in 1980.  Some of his writings form the basis of the Luminous Mysteries of the Rosary.

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ROME 26/5– Day 44: I didn’t expect roses.

Aloft, into the Roman sky did the sun battle with the clouds for dominance. It was 05:58.

The battle, warmly waged was by the sun achieved until the airy field was surrendered at 2017.

The Ave Maria Bell… still in the 20:30 cycle.

It is the feast St. Flavia Domitila.

Welcome Registrants:

Garrett Hughes
michele.agnoletti

I received a note from the makers of the Six Hour Clock app, who have added features. He is now including certain aspects of the calculations of the Moon.

THAT drove me with terror renewed to review the calculations of ecclesiastical lunar things, involving epachts, golden numbers, special letters… the Church maintains these archaic and arcane “computus” even in the modern, post-Conciliar liturgical books though I doubt that 1 in 1 million pay attention to them. I did some scary reading to review. OOOmmmphff. Maybe I will write something about them.

Today I went to get more alstroemeria today from Pippo, but he decided that what he had wasn’t good enough so he wouldn’t sell it. But he was involved with making new floral arrangements for the Marian altar at The Parish™.

This guy is amazing.  Note the use the quercia.  I didn’t expect roses.

I made a hamburger tonight.  Wow, right?

I’m listening to the last audible book of the series about Quintus Sertorius by Vincent B. Davis.

I did my Hungarian lesson and reviewed exercises in the Queen’s Gambit Accepted – an unusual e5 line.   Alas, I didn’t get any work done on the novel, but I am determined to kill a Franciscan in the Via dei Pettinari (but I haven’t figured that out yet).

I renewed my apartment contract.   Sure, you can send donations!

May I please wrap this up?

My guy Wesley is .5 out of first in Warsaw.  Magnus won in Malmo.

Black mates in 4.

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

Help monks.

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REVIEW: New biography of the late and truly great Michael Davies

I am reading Michael Davies: The Great Defender of Catholic Tradition by Leo Darroch.

US HERE – UK HERE

I’m annoyed because I have a lot of chores to do … laundry, some mending, make lunch, clean the kitchen … but I don’t want to stop reading.

Michael Davies was and still is someone to whom anyone who desires to celebrate or assist at the Traditional Roman Rite owes a deep debt of gratitude, at least, and prayers for the repose of his soul. He died in 2004.

I knew his writings fairly well but only met him in person a few times, when he would come to Rome while I was in the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei”. He was a even on those brief terms a real gentleman of deep conviction. Once over lunch I had a little argument with him about something he had written that needed correction. He fiercely defended his choice. I had to make the point iron clad and, after a while, he accepted it. I don’t even remember what the point was after all these years, but I remember his razor mind, his determination, and, in the end, his willingness to be convinced if the argument was good enough. That’s rare.

This book – I’m several chapters in – flows, it is easy to read. It is jammed with interesting history. If Michael was from or in or at a place, the author includes some history about it relevant to Davies’ involvement.

Michael Davies deserves to be remembered. Moreover, the account of his life also is informative about the long efforts and tears of many who labored to preserve the Traditional Roman Rite.

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ROME 26/5– Day 43: Res clamat Domino

The sun rose in Rome at 5:58.

Sunset was at 20:16:

The Ave Maria Bells hasn’t budged… in more ways than one… from 20:30.

Today, along with being the day of the Swearing of the new Swiss Guards, was a special Feast for the Diocese of Rome, St. John at the Latin Gate.  It was, in some places, the Feast of St. Dominic Savio.

The Romans call the Feast of St. John at the Latin Gate San Giovanni “sott’olio… St. John in oil”, which sounds like how you pack anchovies in a jar.

The Church of St John at the Latin Gate is at site of the attempted murder of St. John the Apostle and Evangelist.

John was in Rome in 92 AD at the time of the Emperor Domitian. According to the very early Latin writer Tertullian who died around 220, in his work The Prescription of Heretics the Romans tried to killed John by boiling him in oil but John emerged unscathed thousands of spectators were converted to Christianity when they saw John miraculous protection of harm.

There is also a story that they tried to poison john with a cup of venom filled wine. As John blessed it, the poisons emerged in the form of a snake. That is why we often see John depicted with a chalice with a little snake or dragon critter crawling out. Another good reason to bless our food and drink.  This is also why there is a special blessing for wine on the Feast of St. John just after Christmas.

After his miraculous protection from harm, John was banished from Rome to Patmos, where he wrote Revelation. A church was built on the place where John’s martyrdom took place near the southern part of the Rome’s wall. The aforementioned church is one of the Roman Stations during Lent. The building of the church goes back to the time of Pope Gelasius who died in 496, there are still roof tiles which have the stamp of Theodoric who ruled from 493- 526. The beautiful campanile or bell tower was added in the 8th century. the baroque decorations added in the 16 and 17th centuries were removed in the 1940’s.

There are different forms of martyrdom and not all of them are bloody. But authentic martyrdom is always a witness to the Faith of the person who is suffering and that witness bears fruit for the Faith of others.

Different forms of martyrdom can include dying to the world in different modes of living in the world, active and contemplative. Our reading today in Holy Mass today was a springboard for St. Augustine to look at this paring of figures, types of the active and contemplative lives, Peter and John, Leah and Rachel, Martha and Mary.

The cleaning of the travertine along the flank of The Parish™ on the Via dei Pettinari was completed. I hope they will do more.

Partly done from the other day.

All the way.  And… someone left a carrot on the wall.  Why?  It is a perfectly good carrot.  I  didn’t disturb it in case its rightful owner returned looking for it.   Res clamat Domino!  Maybe it’s one of those situations when you find a hub cap? or a glove?  You leave it there, but set it in a more visible place for the happy owner’s subsequent retrieval.

The Pastor of The Parish™ with the guys who did the work.

I noticed something when I looked up.  Directly across the street from the church’s wall is an old palazzo of a Rome family who were the patrons of the chapel to St. Philip Neri inside the church directly across from the palazzo door.  Up in the arch over the chapel is the coat of arms of the family which would have been framed in the window of (probably) the piano nobile.

I had never noticed it before.

And, in the travertine… who know what pilgrim carved this or when…

CLICK

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.

And there’s this.  Hard to argue with the sentiment.  A delivery truck.

Meanwhile in the Rapid tournament in Warsaw, my guy Wesley So is doing well.  He was in the lead coming into Round 6, after which he is tied with the unlikable Hans Neimann, who may be growing up.   I had the pleasure of seeing one game play out in which Wesley defeated “Puer” (for whom I have had a long dislike because of his shenanigans with the Candidates a few years back.

Black can 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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