WDTPRS – 15th Sunday after Pentecost: Is the Church is taking on water, sinking?

For the last few years I’ve had a terrible inkling that the Church hit an iceberg and is taking on water faster than it can be pumped.

It has ever been so, in cycles, since the Lord’s Ascension.

The Church will not sink, capsize or founder.

The Church, guaranteed by Christ to remain, will come to safe harbor even if in a single life boat.

Christ is our vessel, sails, oars, wind and navigator.

This Sunday’s Collect for Holy Mass in the Traditional Roman Rite survived the long knives of the Consilium to live on the in the Novus Ordo editions of the Missale Romanum on Monday of the 3rd Week of Lent.  Figure that one out. We find it in the 8th century Gelasian Sacramentary for a Sunday, with a minor spelling variation.  Hence, it is ancient.  There are reasons to think that the prayer is even more ancient.  Here is the text:

COLLECT (1962MR):

Ecclesiam tuam, Domine,
miseratio continuata mundet et muniat:
et quia sine te non potest salva consistere;
tuo semper munere gubernetur.

Interesting.  Usually in our Collects when we address God we add other adjectival phrases like “Omnipotens sempiterne”.  The spare “Domine” only occurs three other times (2nd Sunday of Advent, 2nd and 11th Sunday after Pentecost).

The word order is also noteworthy.  We begin with “Ecclesia tuam”, for indeed it is.  Also, in the last colon, that tuo semper munere gubernetur has a double, interlocking hyperbaton: tuo separated from munere and semper separated from gubernetur.   Moreover, in that second colon of the protasis, we have not two, but three petitions.  Easy to spot are mundet and muniat, but there is one buried in continuata miseratio.

We must not pass over the sound of this prayer.

The Roman, Latin prayers, particularly those which were handed down intact from earlier centuries, such as the time of St. Pope Leo the Great (+461), are elegantly sculpted both in their rhythm and their sounds.  Notice the wonderful alliteration throughout.  Tying the whole thing together from top to bottom are the glottal sounds (made in the back of the throat with the tongue), on the voiced or unvoiced glottal “k” sound of Ecclesiamcontinuata…quia…consistere…gubernetur.    Then we have an interlocking series of alliterations.  There are many humming “m” and “n” sounds: Ecclesiam tuam, Domine, miseratio continuata múndet et múniat…. Keep in mind that in ancient times, the final “m” was pronounced in a very nasal way, which survives in many instances in French and Portuguese.  So, this pray begins with a deep hum.  Then you shift to sibilants, the hissing “s”, with snappy “t”s along the way: et quia sine te non potest sálva consístere; tuo semper….  Then we go back to our humming “m” and “n”, but with a lovely rhythmical closure or clausulasemper múnere gúbernétúr.

Speak or sing this to get at the real beauty of this gem, with its glittering facets of phonemes.

And now vocabulary.

Gubnero was a favorite word of the great ancient Roman orator Cicero.  That feast of Latin lemmata, our thick and juicy Lewis & Short Dictionary,  says guberno is “to steer or pilot a ship”.  Logically, it also means “to direct, manage, conduct, govern, guide”. The Liddell, Scott, Jones Greek Lexicon, or LSJ, says that kubernao is “steer”, “drive” and metaphorically “guide, govern” and then “act as a pilot, i.e., perform certain rites in the Ship of Isis”.

I can’t quite imagine – don’t want to imagine – what those “rites of Isis” are.  I suspect they are used now by certain Jesuits.

The super-charged word munus is a little hard to get at in English is this Collect.  A munus can be “a service, office, post, employment, function, duty”.  Should we avoid reducing God to a functionary?   It is true that God is often said in our prayers to have pietas, which carries a strong sense of “duty”, but in Latin prayers pietas, when applied to God, is really more like “mercy”.  For man the term pietas  is “duty”.  In this instance of munere, we ought to lean toward another, less common meaning in the L&S, namely, “a service, favor”.  In fact the liturgical Latin dictionary we call Blaise/Dumas has, “don, faveur (de Dieu)”.   There is a connection between munus as “duty, service” and as “gift”, in that munus stood also for a public work given to the city by an individual. For example, a great Roman might put on public games and feasts for the people, or erect a temple or public building as a munus given from civic duty as well as to increase his and his family’s gloria, that is, his share in the honor of the state.

Concerning the debate about the meaning of munus in Benedict XVI’s odd resignation speech, we must note what Card. Erdö concluded in his paper on the uses of munus, ministerium and officium.  They are used in a virtually interchangeable way across different genres of documents.  Therefore, he said that clearer definitions were needed.  This was years before Benedict issued his notification about quitting (aka running from the wolves?).  I digress.

The verb consisto is “to stand still, stand, halt, stop, make a stop” but also many other sorts of “taking a stand”, such as what soldiers do when about to fight, or what you do in court to defend your position.  There is a “moral” stand one takes, as well as “stand with” someone.  However, both in the L&S and Blaise/Dumas we see that consisto can simply mean “to be, exist”.  In fact, this notion of “standing” (sisto) is also the root for existo.  It is as if, in the case of the later, that as things come into being, they “stand forth” (ex-sisto) from nothingness.

It seems to me that our author was also having a good time with the similar sounds of mundet, muniat, and munere, all very different but with phonic hooks that pull them conceptually together.

This week allow me also to play around with some alliteration in rendering our prayer, still sticking to a slavish version of the Latin lines.  I will also try to capture something of the nautical imagery.

LITERAL TRANSLATION:

Let Your continuous compassion, cleanse and defend Your Church, O Lord, and because without You she cannot stand to, safe, may she forever by Your favor be steered.

Nota bene: The subject is miseratio continuata, not Domine.  But the real subject is Domine, right?  Miseratio is a replacement or personification: the Lord is Mercy Itself.

In nautical parlance, to “stand to” means to “stay on a certain course”.  This is how I try to unpack the meaning of consisto, which aims at the concept of “consistency” and “staying” firm.  Because in this world the Church is on a journey, as a pilgrim, I didn’t want simply to say “stand firm”.  But gubernator, as the master of the ship’s course, who “governs” where the ship goes, helped me think of “stand to”.  Also, I could have said “safely”, but salva is an adjective, not an adverb, and I am feeling a bit more archaic than usual as I write today.

CURRENT ICEL VERSION (2011 – during Lent):

May your unfailing compassion, O Lord, cleanse and protect your Church, and, since without you she cannot stand secure, may she be always governed by your grace.

They didn’t go for the nautical image.  Too bad.  It is impoverished as a result.

One of the meanings of munio, which gives us the muniat in the prayer (“to build a wall around, to defend with a wall, to fortify, defend; to guard, secure, strengthen, support”, for munio stems from moenia “walls”) is also “to open a road”,  viam munire.

Maybe we can get our heads into this prayer by thinking of the Church, often portrayed as a ship, as in Peter’s Barque or the sailing ship in the vision of St. John Bosco, as that fortified way through the heaving waters of the world, with its distractions both sensual and diabolical, that threaten to blow us off our course.

As they sail in dangerous waters, ships need a well-prepared steersman to govern her through the shoals and currents, to avoid the reefs and rocks hidden beneath the waves.

There are times when we have a following wind, that favors smooth and direct sailing.  At other times, we must tack back and forth to make slow headway, or even run before the wind when the sea and the storms rise in frightful force against us.

In all these conditions, the captain and navigator and steersman seek the best course for the good of the whole ship and all who sail in her, according to the charts available, personal experience, the smell of the wind, the look of the sea, and the map of the sun, moon and stars.

In many ways these images of the ship at sea exemplify the experience of the Church.  Our Popes, bishops and pastors seek the best course as they know how, seeking to guide the barque in perilous waters and times.

In his meditation for the Way of the Cross in 2005 Card. Ratzinger said:

Lord, your Church often seems like a boat about to sink, a boat taking in water on every side.

In his homily for the Solemnity of Sts. Peter and Paul in 2006 Benedict XVI said:

The Church – and in her, Christ – still suffers today. In her, Christ is again and again taunted and slapped; again and again an effort is made to reject him from the world. Again and again the little barque of the Church is ripped apart by the winds of ideologies, whose waters seep into her and seem to condemn her to sink. Yet, precisely in the suffering Church, Christ is victorious.

In his final General Audience (before quitting) in 2013 Benedict said:

I have felt like Saint Peter with the Apostles in the boat on the Sea of Galilee: the Lord has given us so many days of sun and of light winds, days when the catch was abundant; there were also moments when the waters were rough and the winds against us, as throughout the Church’s history, and the Lord seemed to be sleeping. But I have always known that the Lord is in that boat, and I have always known that the barque of the Church is not mine but his. Nor does the Lord let it sink; it is he who guides it, surely also through those whom he has chosen, because he so wished. This has been, and is, a certainty which nothing can shake.

Well… most of them them try to steer well and make the right decisions about wind and wave.  Some do it well.  Others … not so much.

In human terms we do our best to steer our course and we can make mistakes.

In divine terms we know that no matter how terrifying are the winds and seas which buffet us and threaten to bear away our spars and sails, Christ’s sure hand rests on the wheel.

QUAERITUR: Right now, perhaps we have a Pope who is … what would you say?   Tacking?  Running before the wind?

We can take a couple things from this.

It might feel sometimes that the Church heading for this…

Instead of this…

Firstly, nothing contrary will prevent Holy Church from finding safe harbor in Him.  We will come home to a safe landfall.  Eventually, though storms and becalmings, we will make it.

Also, when we personally get off course, we can find our way back… in the confessional.

GO TO CONFESSION.

About Fr. John Zuhlsdorf

Fr. Z is the guy who runs this blog. o{]:¬)
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3 Comments

  1. PatS says:

    I do not think the man most the world thinks is Pope is tacking or Running before the wind. If anything the man is drilling holes in the ship. Would a Captain sabotage what is rightfully his?

    Some of Prevost’s statements undermine any coherence of the orthodox and unchanging deposit of faith. This in turn makes it impossible to defend what the Catholic Church is to outsiders who attack it with these statements (for example on public personality Jay Dyer). What about Charlie Kirk possibly delaying his conversion because of the obscurity of the man in charge a year ago?

    At some point we all must look honestly and gravely at the situation and realize what is the truth.

    The truth is that two true popes cannot exist together, but yet the world assumed they did from Benedict’s “resignation” to his final breath…. If there was only one Pope at that time, then we all know the truth….

    It is very simple from there to see today’s situation considering who has put in place most of the voting Cardinals in the recent “(illicit) conclave”.

    The Catholic Church indeed exists, but the question is do you see the Ape? Do you see the false facade clearly yet?

    When will our attitudes change? “We have to change attitudes before we even think about changing what the Church says about any given question.”

  2. WVC says:

    This was a helpful and much needed reflection. Thank you.

  3. L. says:

    Thank you for that discussion. I must confess (pun intended) that in the past when I’d see the entire church described by the phrase “Barque of Peter” I would think of our Diocese, being a smaller jurisdiction and therefor a smaller “vessel,” as “the ferry boat.”
    Yes, you know what I mean.

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