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

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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. 255).   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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TESTING the POLL plugin to see if it works – your assistance requested

We might have to do this a few times.  Hopefully not!

Registered users can comment, but anyone can vote.

TEST POLL (because it was broken and we're fixing it))

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LENTCAzT 2026 – 36: Wednesday in Passiontide & Annunciation – Good Shepherd in the Mass

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

We hear about San Marcello, the Roman Station. Fr. Parsch addresses the Good Shepherd. Because it is the Feast of the Annunciation we have a musical tribute to Our Lady’s “Fiat” with a lovely polyphonic “Ave Maria” sung by the choir of St. John Cantius in Chicago.

Yesterday’s podcast – HERE

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Fr. McTeigue triggered my PTTSD

This is what I went through. We older guys have something to say to the young guys about this.

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ROME 26/3– Day 01: And so it begins

The Roman sunrise was at 06:05 and sunset is at 18:29. The Ave Maria is in the 18:45 cycle. It is the 83rd day of the year and my 1st day in Rome, though tomorrow will be the 1st full day.

Welcome Registrant:

Season After Pentecost

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On the way into town from the airport, a sight or two.  From the moving taxi….

The Temple of Portunus.

Santa Maria in Cosmodin

The side and apse of San Nicola in Carcere.  The part that sticks out laterally is the chapel where the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe is venerated, first in Rome, I think, and adorned with new gold from the New World.

No description needed.

Oh well.

Something chessy, but really more.

Anyone?

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LENTCAzT 2026 – 35: Tuesday in Passiontide – Christ’s suffering, popular piety

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

We hear about Santa Maria in Via Lata, the Roman Station. A continuation from yesterday with Fr. Parsch who was drilling into Passiontide, ancient and modern views.

Yesterday’s podcast – HERE

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Test of app and MY VIEW FOR AWHILE: Rome bound

This is a test knish.   Rather, test knish-es.

It worked.   Yay!   The app is functioning again.

Since I am here, I’m write this at JFK in the lounge waiting to board and to be bored (I hope).

I was apprehensive about the security lines today, since yesterday was a zoo with the shut down and the closure of LGA.  The online time estimators of the wait were helpful in making the move to the airport.   I also learned that you can reserve a time slot for the security check.  Interesting.

As it turned out, the waiting line wasn’t bad.  However, I got random flagged.  Then I think the agent arbitrarily picked on my shoes (I’m pre-check, etc.).  They had to go through the scanner separately.   Then the guy at the x-ray flagged by backpack for hand check and re-scan three times.  Even the agent at the end of the line was puzzled.   I was seriously irritating at the end.   Anyway, I made it through.

Lounge.  Behold the blazing internet!

Think of all that I can accomplish.

It isn’t often that you see upload as the faster of the two.

Meanwhile, I spotted this aircraft… the team plane wouldn’t be quite this obvious, would it?

The lounge food isn’t awful.

The airplane in the background won’t be mine, but that’s the gate.

So, I can do some chess puzzles and write a few emails, maybe make a call or two.

And, yes, I know, the polling plugin is still broken.

UPDATE

ONBOARD now to be bored. The last thing you want is an exciting flight.

UPDATE

UPDATE

A new feature

Must try to get some shut eye.

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Article at The Catholic Thing about the two forms of the Roman Rite

At the wonderful The Catholic Thing you will find an opinion piece by a priest writing under a penname (to avoid the Eye of Sauron as is only correct).  The piece is entitled “The ‘Polar Unity’ of the Two Forms of the Roman Rite”. The writer is “a North American priest who teaches in a seminary, does parish work, and celebrates both forms of the Roman rite”.

The article has strengths and weaknesses.

Here is the precis.

The writer argues that Benedict XVI’s distinction between the Ordinary Form and Extraordinary Form should be understood not merely juridically or pastorally, but theologically, as a “polar unity” within the one Roman Rite.  Its core claim is that the two forms are not rival rites, but complementary expressions of one lex orandi, consistent with Benedict’s broader “hermeneutic of reform in continuity.” To defend this claim, the writer uses Hans Urs von Balthasar’s distinction between the Marian and Petrine dimensions of the Church: Marian meaning contemplative, receptive, bridal and the Petrine meaning apostolic, juridical, governing.  He proposes that the Extraordinary Form tends to embody the Marian accent of the Church: silence, adoration, ritual density, transcendence, and the primacy of divine action.  He says the Ordinary Form tends to embody the Petrine accent: intelligibility, proclamation, pastoral accessibility, missionary outreach, and audible participation by the faithful.  Both forms contain both dimensions, but each gives one accent greater visibility.  On this reading, Benedict’s aim in allowing both forms was to preserve the Church from reductionism, that is, the Roman Rite should not be flattened into either pure sacral reserve or pure pastoral functionality. The writer says the two forms could “mutually enrich” one another in that the Ordinary Form could recover sacrality and silence while the Extraordinary Form could benefit from more scripture readings and pastoral attentiveness. He says that liturgical authority remains Petrine, but authority should serve liturgical memory and mystery rather than erase them. His conclusion is that the coexistence of the two forms symbolizes the Church’s refusal to eliminate fruitful tension. Contemplation and mission, silence and proclamation, gift and governance belong together in Catholic worship.

He ignores the miserable effects of Francis and his mandarins and doesn’t mention Traditionis custodes, a kind of damnatio memoriae. They don’t really exist in the article except in between the lines, that is, Francis made things so bad that something must be done.   That might be a weakness in the article… or a strength, depending on the level of disdain one has for and opinion of the validity of the 2021 legislation.

The article is thoughtful and plainly animated by a desire for peace. That is welcome. Its weakness is that it depends more on a speculative framework than on demonstrated liturgical reasoning.

Its central move is to interpret the two forms of the Roman Rite through, as mentioned above, a Balthasarian polarity, assigning one a Marian/contemplative accent and the other a Petrine/pastoral one. Such categories might spur some reflections, yet they can also be so broad that they explain almost anything.  I think the writer would have to establish from the texts, rubrics, history, and theological content of the orations of the two missals that one is predominately Marian and the other Petrine. He asserts it, but does not demonstrate it. I grant that he wasn’t offering a monograph: TCT has a word limit of about 1000, after all.  The writer also admits that both rites have both dimensions to some extent.

The article succeeds as a meditation and as an appeal for charity. It is less persuasive for understanding the two missals through this two-fold lens.

The piece tends to idealize both forms by describing them according to their best intentions rather than their actual historical performance. The Ordinary Form is presented as envisioned by Sacrosanctum Concilium and celebrated “according to the mind of the Church,” which is fair enough.  However, that shields the argument from the practical objections that usually emerge in post-Conciliar liturgical debates, such as the massive failure of the Novus Ordo to support all the sectors of the Church’s life as demographics and other indicators plainly show. The result is that the article risks being true at the level of aspiration while sidestepping the empirical questions.

From my point of view, when the Novus Ordo is celebrated more according to the Roman liturgical tradition, the better it is.  Of course that begs the question: Why not just use the Vetus Ordo, if that is the case.  The writer is trying to get at the “why” with his Balthasarian categories.  Moreover, I think the “mutual enrichment” of the people in the pews tends to go mostly in one direction.  Once people get the Novus Ordo in a more traditional celebration, they then will migrate over to the Vetus Ordo, just as the young graduate from lesser to more complicated and nourishing food.

This is a good contribution to those who are well-informed and able to discuss these matters thoughtfully.

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ROME 26/3– Day 00: Brooklyn and blog

I’ve been somewhat crippled in regard to posting. Since the migration of the blog, some things have either been very slow (the entire admin area) or not working at all, like the app on my phone that allows me to upload photos and to post while on the go. Yesterday I found that the poll plugin doesn’t work. So, we are trying to figure out what’s what.

Also, I had a couple of registrations which seemed a little dodgy, so I deleted them.  I take that “bio” section seriously.

Anyway, I’m in Brooklyn for the moment. I leave for Rome tonight, if we can get through TSA check lines.  We’ve had some good pub food and great chinese. (I have to email myself the photos and process them rather than just post from the phone.)

Brooklyn… Lent… knisch.

On Friday we explored the non-meat options starting with shrimp shumai.

There was a fishy stew with garlic and cabbage.

Crunchy cucumbers.

For the pub selection, the shot of my burger didn’t turn out well, but one of my companions had… but wait… first, there was this before we went in… A little Latin and an episcopal galero on an apartment building.

More Latin inside with the arrival of the Belgian…

Delirium Tremens… with elephants.  I dunno.

Back to the plot…

The onion rings were great, too.

Back to chinese on a meaty Sunday evening.  “Soup dumplings”.

Cumin Lamb

Eggplant, potatoes and pepper (we won’t get this on again… I’ve had better elsewhere)

Shrimp with mayonnaise.  There are crispy sweet walnuts and, underneath, chunks of pineapple.

Beef and vegetables.

Not too bad.

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Meanwhile… in Écône…

And…

Help monks… drink good stuff.

Chess puzzles will return.

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LENTCAzT 2026 – 34: Monday in Passiontide – Ancient v. Modern Views

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

We hear about San Crisogono, the Roman Station. Fr. Parsch drill into Passiontide, ancient and modern views.

Yesterday’s podcast – HERE

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