A matter of fact, brutally clear, “handbook” on exorcism, demons, demonic influence and what can be done about it.

I write to alert you to a book to be released on 19 November – now available for pre-order at 25% off – by my friend Fr. Carlos Martins, whose apostolate with relics Treasures of the Church is well-known to you.   Right now he is taking the arm of the Apostle St. Jude around the country.

Here is the new book, forward by Card. Burke.   It’s comprehensive and instructive about angels, demons, all manner and level of demonic attacks, exorcism, etc.

The Exorcist Files: True Stories About the Reality of Evil and How to Defeat It

US HERE – UK (not quite yet)

If you trust me, just stop here and order it.

It is intended as an aid in the spiritual life.

I want to look at this list from the book.  Look at it carefully.

Did you read that? Really?  Perhaps integrate it soon as an element of an examination of conscience for confession (which you should be doing on a DAILY basis).

Let’s go on.

I wrote a longer review of the book, but I won’t trouble you.  GET IT.

Get a copy for your priests.

It is worthwhile even from the account of Alessandro Serenelli, St Maria Goretti’s murderer. Believe me.

A personal note.

Over the years I have had problems with my left leg. Always my left. Multiple fractures, etc., chronic pain. Also, for a couple years, I could not keep my left shoe or boot tied. Double-knots, tucked in military style.  Several times a day I had to retie.   I mentioned this to a long-time reader and daily Mass stream viewer visiting Rome from Ireland and she said she would pray for my boot problem. It went away.

Fast forward to present day. Some time ago, Fr. Martins sent the PDF of his book.  Of course he wanted me to help promote it, which I am delighted to do because it is a great. The next day my left leg, knee especially, was killing me and I had to tie my darn shoe. Coincidence? Remember my problem during Mass with the demon next to The Parish™ on those two recent Sundays? (Recounted elsewhere… you really should be paying attention.)

Also, you will perhaps have seen the video interview with Fr. Martins about the demonic vexation that Tucker Carlson experienced and related elsewhere. HERE

Real stuff, friends.

Posted in REVIEWS, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged , ,
16 Comments

Martin Scorsese – new streaming series on four saints – 17 November

It is often the case that, no matter how far people may stray, faith is the last thing to flicker out.

Martin Scorsese has coming out a streaming series on four saints: John the Baptist, St. Sebastian, St. Joan of Arc, St. Maximilian Kolbe.

The trailer is intriguing, but I am apprehensive.

 

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

I refused to see his movie version of the ghastly novel by Shusaku Endo’s book Silence. I wrote about that HERE.

There is a hollywood tendency.  If something or someone is holy, they have to do knock it down.  It’s as if they can’t stand that something simply be good.  They have to besmirch in some way, as Peter Jackson did in his LotR with Aragorn and Faramir.   So, I am apprehensive about what Scorsese has down to these saints.

John the Baptist
Sebastian
Joan of Arc
Maximilian Kolbe

All four are martyrs.  Is there another common thread?

 

Posted in Saints: Stories & Symbols | Tagged
8 Comments

Rome 24/10 – Day 37: Wherein Fr. Z rants

Morning sun movement became visible at 06:47. It will disappear from view at 17:00.

Thank you for this day, Lord.

The Ave Maria rings at – according to the errant curial calendar – 17:30. But that’s wrong.  It should now be in the 17:15 cycle.

On this dies non I said a Daily Requiem for Poor Souls. As a matter of fact, I just got that intention yesterday, so I brought it to the head of the line.

The Requiem Mass is so beautiful with the Dies Irae.

Quaerens me, sedisti lassus:
Redemisti Crucem passus:
Tantus labor non sit cassus.

Welcome registrants:

TomasDelRio
marcolajolla62

The tail end of some “premium content” sent out to Roman Donors. I am so grateful to them.

In churchy news…

In Florida the abortion amendment was defeated! HERE I know that a great many churches – and there are a lot (of different kinds, splinters) – had NO! signs out.

The late, former Exorcist of Rome, Fr. Gabriel Amorth, said that demons try to possess politicians. HERE Well… duh! Shall we talk about leaders in the CHURCH?

At National Catholic Register, there is a piece about the mainly American (I think) phenomenon of moving priests so often, allowing a man to be pastor for maybe 12 years and then shoving him out. HERE In the Latin Church’s Code of Canon Law, can. 522 says,

Can. 522 – Parochus stabilitate gaudeat oportet ideoque ad tempus indefinitum nominetur; ad certum tempus tantum ab Episcopo dioecesano nominari potest, si id ab Episcoporum conferentia per decretum admissum fuerit.

So…“A pastor must enjoy/have stability and therefore is fitting that he be appointed for an indefinite period of time”. However, in the next part: “He can be appointed by the diocesan bishop only for a specific period if the conference of bishops will have permitted through a decree.”

The clear intent of the law is that pastors, “the parish priest”, in normal circumstances have a long time in his parish.

Most of the priests I talk to think this appointment for 6 years, with another 6 possible years is terrible. They are just getting into the place and they get moved. When they get to baptize the children of the children they baptized… then they’ve gotten settled. Will some have other opinions? Sure. Are parishes different from each other? Sure. Are there bad fits that have to be adjusted? Sure. But you get the idea.

Most priests I know think that this term limiting of pastors is also a dodge that bishops use so they don’t have to work things through with pastors who are perhaps “troublesome” for them. They just wait them out and move them.

Most priests I know think that moving priests so often over time gives people the idea that the priest isn’t really in charge. They come and go. The lay staff is the stable element.

Therefore, there is no “father” in the parish. This is also part of a war on men and boys, which manifests also in the sanctuary.

Take a look at that piece.

At a substack called WM Review, there is a provocative piece about whether or not, because of the change to the rites of ordination after the Council, we will have validly consecrated bishops in the future.

This question comes up once in a while because it is an important issue and there were significant changes to the rites of ordination of priests and of bishops under Paul VI.  The changes to the ordination for priests were concerning enough that John Paul II in 1990 put things back into the rite that Paul VI took out.  Rites should make explicit exactly what they are supposed to do.   For example, the post-Conciliar Book of Blessings has “blessings” that don’t explicitly bless things with a constitutive blessing (as opposed to an invocative blessing).  The forward to the Book of Blessings states that it is trying to eliminate the distinction.   Change the rite, you just might change the effect.   And WE ARE OUR RITES.  How we pray impacts what we believe and, hence, how we live, and vice versa in a complete intertwined loop of influence.

The rites of ordination were significantly changed after Vatican II, so it is entirely normal that one might wonder about them.

HOWEVER… in view of the ordination of priests the late great Michael Davies wrote a book called Order of Melchisedech: A Defence of the Catholic Priesthood – US HERE  Davies tackles the changes to the rites after the Council, pointing out the problems.  However, he argues that the rites DO ordain validly despite the changes.   That said, he also brings up the issue of the intent of the ordaining bishop.   Folks… I am working from my memory about Davies’ book, which I read a long time ago.   If I put my foot wrong there, please correct me.  Davies argues (I think) that so long as the bishop has the correct theology of priesthood, ordination, etc., then the rite is just within the bounds of valid.  However, if over time the theology of priesthood and ordination is eroded through modernist machinations – and believe you me that is EXACTLY what they tried to do to us in seminary in the 1980’s! – then all bets are off.   In any event, the WM Review pieces comes down on the side of invalidity.  I don’t agree.

However, this is a question that will not go away easily.   Why?  I mentioned my seminary in the USA.  I did two years of hard time at the hell-hole that was the Saint Paul Seminary in the late 80’s.  I finished in Rome.  However, we were not to use the word “priest” (which we called “the P word”), because we are all “ministers”, some ordained and some non-ordained.  In our class which was supposed to be on Priesthood and Eucharist, but which was called something like Ministry and Symbol, we were told, that – I am not making this up –

“when the ordained minister says the words of institution [not consecration] over bread and wine no real change takes place – they become a symbol of the unity of the community gathered there in that moment.”

Yup.  Really.

How many things are wrong with that?

I objected.  I asked how that jived with transubstantiation.  The heretic priest – who left the priesthood to shack up with a female seminary faculty member after celebrating the invalid marriage ceremony of disgraced musician David Haas – replied that the Church no longer teaches transubstantiation.   I asked when that happened.  Vatican II.   I asked why Paul VI, after Vatican II, wrote in his 1965 encyclical Mysterium fidei said the opposite and that we have to use “transubstantiation”.  He became furious.  He said I was locked up in irrelevant Aristotelean categories, blah blah blah.  I responded: “I grew up Lutheran.  Even Lutherans believe more than you.”   Soon after, the rector had a heart attack.  This heretic became rector.  He threw me out the next day.  It was after that, on the advice of a priest friend, that I pray to the Little Flower St. Thérèse for help.  The next day I received signs of roses all day long.  That night, the Auxiliary Bishop (now a retired Archbishop) called me with the news that I was not being thrown out.  (This is why I have a wreath of roses on my chalice.)

But did you get what that heretic said?  For him, the Eucharist symbolized, but not in a real way, the unity of the community (not the Body Blood Soul Divinity of Christ), gathered there (just localized) in that moment (not in an enduring way such that you would reserve it in a tabernacle).   That’s worse than Rahner’s bizarre ideas about sacraments celebrating pre-existing realities!

But that’s not all!   What danger could these heretic jerks have had for the knowledge and faithful of future priests and future bishops?

Channeling his inner Schillebeeckx, there are no priests in the sense of sacramentally ordained.  The community calls forth presiders for their “eucharist” (see above for what he believed about eucharist!) who embody who the community is.  As the community changes, or the one called forth changes, that person returns to the assembly and another is called forth to preside.

THAT’s what we got in seminary in the 1980’s.

So … is there any reason ever to wonder about the intention of some men who were formed for priesthood in those years?

Yes.  However, those notions I wrote above are so weird, so far out, that very few men indeed would buy them and remain a priest for any length of time after ordination.  Very few.  And it would be unlikely that men believing that complete crap would be made a bishop.

It certainly has happened that there were some – maybe now are – some bishops with such  screwy ideas.  I have in mind one in the Amazon…. and I don’t mean my wish list.  But are there bishops who have zero connection to authentic Catholic theology of priesthood and ordination. It would have to be demonstrated to me with solid proofs and not just claims because the bishop is … sub-optimal in some ways.

Jesus founded our Church.  Jesus will take care of our Church.  That doesn’t mean that the Church will survive “woke” in the USA or in the Amazon or in Rome!   It means that Jesus will maintain the Church in some form with valid sacraments – valid Holy Orders – no matter what is inflicted on her from without or from within. Christus vincit!  Christus regnat! Christus imperat!

In chessy news… HERE

From Paul VI’s  Mysterium fideiMy emphases:

REASONS FOR PASTORAL CONCERN AND ANXIETY

9. There are, however, Venerable Brothers, a number of reasons for serious pastoral concern and anxiety in this very matter that we are now discussing, and because of Our consciousness of Our Apostolic office, We cannot remain silent about them.

False and Disturbing Opinions

10. For We can see that some of those who are dealing with this Most Holy Mystery in speech and writing are disseminating opinions on Masses celebrated in private or on the dogma of transubstantiation that are disturbing the minds of the faithful and causing them no small measure of confusion about matters of faith, just as if it were all right for someone to take doctrine that has already been defined by the Church and consign it to oblivion or else interpret it in such a way as to weaken the genuine meaning of the words or the recognized force of the concepts involved.

11. To give an example of what We are talking about, it is not permissible to extol the so-called “community” Mass in such a way as to detract from Masses that are celebrated privately; or to concentrate on the notion of sacramental sign as if the symbolism—which no one will deny is certainly present in the Most Blessed Eucharist—fully expressed and exhausted the manner of Christ’s presence in this Sacrament; or to discuss the mystery of transubstantiation without mentioning what the Council of Trent had to say about the marvelous conversion of the whole substance of the bread into the Body and the whole substance of the wine into the Blood of Christ, as if they involve nothing more than “transignification,” or “transfinalization” as they call it; or, finally, to propose and act upon the opinion that Christ Our Lord is no longer present in the consecrated Hosts that remain after the celebration of the sacrifice of the Mass has been completed.

12. Everyone can see that the spread of these and similar opinions does great harm to belief in and devotion to the Eucharist.

Play
Posted in SESSIUNCULA, Wherein Fr. Z Rants |
10 Comments

Have you prayed for a good outcome for the election? Now, would be a good time.

Have you PRAYED for a good outcome? The best possible outcome that will benefit the nation spiritually and materially (if that is what God wills)?

Have you also prayed to ask the Holy Angels to prevent interference from the fallen angels when it comes to anything electronic used in the election results? Demons are really good with electronic things.

So,… have you PRAYED?

Now’s the time.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
10 Comments

Rome 24/10 – Day 36: Screw ups, a family album, and getting dead

I didn’t see it take place, but assuredly the sun rose on Rome at 6:46.  It will set at 17:01.

The Vatican calendar is again screwed up.  My records show that the Ave Maria was to change from its 17:30 cycle – 22 Oct – 4 Nov) yesterday to its 17:15 cycle (4-20 Nov).   What to do?  What to do about a bell that ought to ring, but never does… except at Ss Trinità – aka The Parish™?

Thank you for this day, O Lord.

If you are paying attention also to the auxiliary calendar in the back of the Traditional Missal, in the section for propers “in some places… aliquibus locis” there is a Mass today for the Feast of All Relics.   It is certainly relic seasons, given the proximity to All Saints and All Souls and the theme of November being the Four Last Things.

Relics be the instruments of miracles, physical and spiritual.  They are sacred.   Poor care of a reliquary with a relic in it is sacrilege.   Relics must not be sold.  That’s a serious sin.

I am mindful today and grateful for the apostolate of my good friend Fr. Carlos Martins, whose Treasures of the Church has brought countless thousands of people into contact with holy relics, resulting in conversions and healings.   At present he is taking a major relic of St. Jude the Apostle to different parishes in the United States, a real labor of love.

At The Parish™ we had a solemn displaying of the relics preserved there. I made a video. It’s a lovely event. In a way it is like looking at our Family Album together, for they are already in the family of Heaven and they are waiting for us.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

All the parishes used to do in Rome once upon a time.  No one does it anymore.  I thought it was unique in Rome other than in Lent when in St. Peter’s many relics are exposed and the Veil of Veronica is displayed.  However, I found some music written for Ostentatio Reliquiarum by one Cardinal Albrect Brandenburg.   So, it was done elsewhere.  Makes sense.

Speaking of family, yesterday at The Parish™ we had a Solemn Requiem for the 30th day from the burial of our friend and confrere in the Archconfraternity, Gian Carlo Ciccia.  After the Mass we sand Vespers… and Matins… and Lauds…. it was really long.   The music for the Mass was splendid, the Requiem for 6 voices by Tomás Luis de Victoria (+1611).  There were also instruments.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Nice people! Great service!

Friends, taking this is was like being transported back to the early 17th century to see precisely what they would have done.  The Guardiani of the Archconfraternity were in their habits and in the sanctuary, where they received Communion.  The music was period and appropriate for the ritual and architecture. Victoria also spent time as a musician in Rome, so it was a Roman venture.   Would you like to participate in a bit of it?  Perhaps the Requiem?

The repetition of the ritual, so long used, so finely tuned and thought through by our forebears is a sacred action, an act of Religion, which brings great solace.  The traditional Requiem Mass might be ornamented with more or less magnificent vestments, in a more or less magnificent setting, for a more or less famous person, rich or poor, powerful or small.  We come into the world the same way and we go forth as well.  All alike, we go before our Creator, the Just Judge, the King of Fearful Majesty.   The older form of the Requiem doesn’t have lots of options, as the Novus Ordo does.  The Novus Ordo, full of options, aims at being adapted, tailored, to make it express what we want to express.   The Vetus Ordo reflects what Holy Church – the greatest expert on humanity there has ever been or will be – know what we really need, what it best for us, in particular for the person who is deceased: prayers for the person’s soul, relief from Purgatory, swift access to Heaven.   That is the point of a Requiem: the deceased.  The deceased is the point, but we are not excluded.  We know that, with the older Rite, in our own time we will be prayed for in this most power and efficacious way.  We know that we will receive what the Church knows what is best for us in that state: prayers, penances, indulgences.

It’s a matter of priorities.

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.

In churchy news….

Eccles posted the WINNERS of the 2024 World Cup of Synod Jargon. HERE

There were a great many “worthy” options for votes. Hard work. BUT… the voters walked together to a conclusion of this World Cup.

Meanwhile, …

I wonder what the Holy See gets from the China deal that hasn’t been disclosed.

Also, because the Indonesian bishop declined to be made a Cardinal, Archbishop Battaglia of Naples has been chosen. Why he wasn’t chosen in the first place is a little baffling… it’s NAPLES after all, and not the one in Florida. The new Cardinal-elect has a reputation of being quite anti-mafia. Meanwhile, the Archbishop of Los Angeles is not a Cardinal. And I am not a Monsignor. Heck, I’m 65 now! There should be a world-wide movement.

The monks of Le Barroux in S. France make excellent wine. Help them and you help yourselves!

In chessy news…. HERE

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
6 Comments

YOUR URGENT PRAYER REQUESTS

PLEASE use the sharing buttons! Thanks!

In your charity would you please take a moment look at the requests and to pray for the people about whom you read?

Continued from THESE.

Let’s remember all who are ill, who will die soon, who have died recently, who have lost their jobs, who are afraid.

I get many requests by email asking for prayers. Some are heart-achingly grave and urgent.

As long as my blog reaches so many readers in so many places, let’s give each other a hand. We should support each other in works of mercy.

If you have some prayer requests, feel free to post them below.

You have to be registered here to be able to post.

In your kindness continue prayers for my mother, who has been diagnosed with something grave and incurable.

Pray for me, for my circumstances and wisdom in my decisions.

Also, I received this note:

I also humbly ask for your prayers for [our 8 year old son] Patrick. He has a lesion on his brain and is at the Children’s Hospital.
Patrick loves all things military and firefighters. For All Hallow’s Eve he wanted to be God’s GI Joe: Chaplain Emil Kapaun. This was his second time to learn about and dress up as Fr. Kapaun.

We are asking you to join us in asking Servant of God Chaplain Emil Kapaun to walk this journey of unknowns with Patrick and if it be in God’s Holy Will to heal Patrick, we ask this through the intercession of Fr. Kapaun. I cannot link the website with the novena to Fr. Kapaun, but there is one on his website.
Thank you.
We appreciate all prayers for Patrick and our family.
All for Jesus, Amen!

The website of Fr. Emil Kapuan – HERE

Please stop and pray here and now for this little boy.

For Your glory and praise, Almighty and merciful God, and to increase faith in You and Your Church, through the intercession of Servant of God Emil Kapaun, I beseech You, that You grant a sudden, complete and lasting miraculous healing for little Patrick, suffering from a lesion on his brain and for whatever other ailment by which he may be affected. I ask this in the Most Holy Name of Jesus Christ, Your Son, who lives and reigns with You and the Holy Spirit, ever one God, world without end. Amen.

Posted in PRAYER REQUEST, SESSIUNCULA | Tagged ,
12 Comments

Rome 24/10 – Day 34: ADORATION

When the sun rose at 6:43 , I was already up. I will still be up at 17:04 when it sets.

Today the Ave Maria would ring at 17:30.  IT RANG AT THE PARISH PRECISELY AT 17:30!

It is the 4th Sunday remaining after Epiphany resumed to fill the gap of Sundays at the end of the liturgical year.

Lord, thank you for this Sunday.

Welcome registrants:

MAK4LIFE
Faberian

Jack MJ… I don’t have an email for you.

For centuries the Archconfraternity of Ss.ma Trinità dei Pellegrini e Convalescenti, founded by St. Philip Neri, on the first Sunday of the month conducted full Forty Hours Devotion. As the Archconfraternity is being renewed, the members on 1st Sundays have begun spending an hour of Adoration before the Blessed Sacrament exposed, using prayers from Forty Hours.  Brick by brick.  Today was also a day when food and money was collected to feed the poor.

You can see some of them in red habits. It is also a treat to hear the extremely rare little 17th century portative organ which was discovered in a cubbyhole and lovingly restored.

Also, this occurred in first 8 days of November, and so the church is arranged for prayers for the Poor Souls, which includes absolution of the catafalque and Masses for the Dead.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

From lunch on All Saints with The Great Roman™.  (He had to finish it).  Rigatoni and sauce of coda alla vaccinara.

Like these photos?  Thank DM for the new phone and better camera.

An Italian Army band was getting ready for something this morning.  Piazza Farnese on my way to The Parish’s™ Solemn Mass.

Before Mass.

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.  This is important to me.  Takes you a few seconds more.

After Mass in the evening, following Vespers.

In chessy news… HERE

(White to move and mate in 4)

Churchy….

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
7 Comments

WDTPRS – 31st Ordinary Sunday: Running and stumbling! Wherein Fr. Z rants.

At the end, I rant.

The Collect for the 31st Ordinary Sunday, which was in the ancient Veronese Sacramentary, is also found in the Extraordinary Form on the 12th Sunday after Pentecost.

Omnipotens et misericors Deus, de cuius munere venit, ut tibi a fidelibus tuis digne et laudabiliter serviatur, tribue, quaesumus, nobis, ut ad promissiones tuas sine offensione curramus.

Servio, “to serve”, is very rarely found in the passive.  We must break “that it be served in reference to You” down into “that You be served”.

Offensio (related to offendo) concerns “a striking against, a stumbling”. It is also “an offense” and “that which causes one to offend or sin” as in a lapis offensionis (a “stumbling-block” cf 1 Pet. 2:8).  Offendo, by the way, can also mean “to meet by chance”.

Munus means, first, “a service, office, post”. Synonyms are officium and ministerium.

These are the key words in dispute in the matter of Benedict XVI’s resignation.   

Some say that Benedict wanted only to resign the active administration of the Diocese of Rome and of the universal Church, the ministerium, without resigning the munus, the office of Vicar of Christ.  However, the terms ministerium and munus, what they mean in relation to each other, is really murky.

For a more clarity about munus we can go to our dictionaries.  On the other hand, we must in any event go by how they are used in Church documents.

I was at one time pretty sure that munus and ministerium were specific and meant obviously different things.  Then I read a paper written by a serious canonist about the problematic meanings of munus, ministerium and officium written back in 1989, long before 2013 and this controversy.  It was written by (future) Cardinal Peter Erdõ, considered papabile now.  Divine providence?  (Cf. ERDÖ, “Ministerium, munus et officium in Codice iuris canonici”, in Periodica, 1989, pp. 411-436.)  It’s in Latin.

Bottom line, between the uses of the three terms in the 1917 Code, Vatican II, and the 1983 Code, according to Erdõ, there is confusion.  It is hard to fix definitions that don’t overlap to the point that they are sometimes interchangeable.  More work is needed on the problem.

However, in this post we are dealing with a liturgical text, not a canonical text. 

When we drill into munus, our thoughts turn right away to a Greek equivalent leitourgia, a needed civic work or service one performs because he ought to for the sake of society; whence our word “liturgy”.

In the New Testament munus/leitourgia points to concepts such as taking up collections for the poor (i.e., what man does for man) and religious services (what man does for God).

Munus also means “a present, gift”.

Moreover, munus is a theologically loaded word, indicating among other things the three offices (tria munera) which Christ passed to His Church, the Apostles and their successors: to teach, to govern, to sanctify.   Prophet – King – Priest.

When the Lord gives us commands (and He does, e.g., love one another as I have loved you; pick up your Cross and follow me; be perfect as your Father in heaven is perfect; do this in memory of me, etc.), we can sum them up in the two-fold commandment of love of God and of neighbor.

All followers of Jesus have been given a two-fold munus to fulfill which reflects the three munera Christ gave to the Church’s ordained priesthood.

I invite you to try an experiment.  See what happens to your perception of the Collect if you make munus mean “office” rather than “gift.”

While reading it, hearing it, can you keep both concepts simultaneously in mind?

LITERAL TRANSLATION:

Almighty and merciful God, from whose gift it comes that You be served by the faithful worthily and laudably, grant us, we beseech You, that we may run toward Your promises without stumbling.

This Collect gives me the image of a person hurrying to fulfill a duty or command given by his master or superior.  He is rushing, running.   He might even be carrying a heavy burden.   While dashing forward, he strives to be careful under his burden lest he stumble, fall, lose or ruin what he carries.

Isn’t this how we live our Christian vocations?

God has given us something to do while in this vale of tears.

When we discern God’s will and do our best to live well according to our state in life, we will experience heavy burdens.  Our human nature is wounded and there is an Enemy who hates and tempts us.  When we are faithful to our vocations, we receive many opportunities to participate in carrying the Cross of Jesus.   We also are offered all the actual graces we need to do so.

The Lord Himself told us, through the Gospels, that if we want to be with Him, we must participate in His Cross, even daily (Luke 9:23).  During His Passion, our Lord literally carried His (and our) Cross.  As He was driven by the soldiers over the uneven road, as careful as He must have been, He stumbled and fell.

We stumble and fall, though not like our sinless Lord.  We stumble mostly by choice.

In this Collect do we hear an echo of the petition in the Lord’s Prayer? “Lead us not into temptation.”

There is a diabolical Enemy Tempter who desires us to fall and to give offense to the Lord.  The Enemy places obstacles before our feet.

That one – the Enemy – we do not want to meet with, even by chance.  Or by intention!  Avoid avoid AVOID all things having to do with the occult or idols of false religions.  They are gateways for the Enemy to get at you.  In addition, regularly make use of sacramentals and go to confession often.  Along with those, make good holy Communions and the Devil will have little to say to you.

It is inconceivable that God would give us something to do and then not give us the means to achieve it.

As we draw closer to the end of this liturgical year,  during this Sunday’s Mass Father prays that we run, rather than drag along, toward the reward of heaven.  We beg God that we do so without mishap.   We beg not to give offense by what we do. We ask that the road be made free of stumbling blocks for our running feet.

Run!  Watch for those stumbling blocks but run!

Don’t drag along, moping, resentful of your lot.  Our reward is not here in this vale of tears.  Heaven is our goal.

Help your struggling neighbor.

Our Lord understands the craggy road we travel.  He never abandons us, even when we stumble in sin.

CURRENT ICEL (2011):

Almighty and merciful God, by whose gift your faithful offer you right and praiseworthy service, grant, we pray, that we may hasten without stumbling to receive the things you have promised.

As a final note. I have studied and written about the prayers for the Novus Ordo and Vetus Ordo Sunday formularies for many years, beginning in the 1990’s.  Over time I’ve noted how the Novus Ordo prayers tend to stress the eschatological joy of Heaven.   If the orations were taken from the Vetus Ordo or old sources, they were often edited to eliminate references to guilt, sin, propitiation, etc.; “negative” things.

Some will claim that the Vetus Ordo prayers dwell on those “negative” elements too much without pointing towards the joy of Heaven.  I disagree.

There is nothing wrong in itself with stressing the “positive”, the attainment of Heavenly joy in our prayers for Mass.

However, in the Traditional Latin Mass our prayers also stress how to attain Heaven. That’s something that the Novus Ordo version do not do all that well.   We have to deal with sin, with guilt.  We have to consider Christ’s propitiation.  We must highlight the Sacrifice even while we recognize and long for the Banquet.

Above, I wrote that God would not give us something to do (i.e., live in such a way that we can have the joy of Heaven) without giving us also the means to attain it (i.e., graces, a Savior who made a propitiatory Sacrifice).  Similarly, Holy Church holds out for us the goal of Heaven in our prayers.  Similarly, Holy Church should also tell us how to get there.    We absolutely must deal with our fallen nature, our personal sins.  We need penance.

Hence I repeat my phrase, “We are our rites!”

How we pray, affects what we believe, which affects in turn how we pray and how we live, which again affects what we believe and therefore how we live and pray… it’s all constantly intertwined.  Lex orandi et lex credendi et lex vivendi.   Change the prayers and, over time, you change what we as Catholics believe and, as a consequence, how we live, privately and in the public square.

So, how is that going after the last 50 some years?

Posted in Linking Back, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, WDTPRS, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged , ,
1 Comment

Your Sunday Sermon Notes – 4th Sunday remaining after Epiphany (N.O.: 31st) 2024

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 traditional 4th Sunday remaining after Epiphany, or, in the Novus Ordo, the 31st Sunday of Ordinary Time?

Tell us about attendance especially for the Traditional Latin Mass.

Any local changes or (hopefully good) news?

A couple thoughts of my own: HERE  A taste…

[…]

Their situation in the storm was like to the end of the world.  However, it was also like to the beginning of the world, when there were waters of chaos.

In Genesis God spoke a Word over the chaotic waters and order was the result.  In Matthew’s account amidst the chaotic, boat-swamping waters of Galilee, the Word Incarnate Jesus speaks to the wind, rebuking it, to the sea, calming it.  In this calming of winds and waters, Jesus revealed Himself to be God.

This episode also ties Christ to the figure in Ps 107, in which frightened people in a storm on the waters, probably also fisherman, cry to God for help. The Lord delivers them.

There’s more peril in this Sunday, but hidden behind the Collect, the first oration of the Mass which goes back to the time of Pope St. Gregory the Great (+604).

[…]

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged
2 Comments

Rome 24/10 – Day 33: All Souls

UPDATE:

Here’s a clip from a “premium content” video for some Roman Sojourn Donors. It’s nothing special, just part of my morning walk through the area to get some food stuffs for the day and to say hello to a few people as the day gets underway. And a splendid day it was in Rome.


Thank you, Lord, for this day, when the sun rose at 6:42 and when the sun will set at 17:05.

The Ave Maria has a couple more days in the 17:30 cycle.

Today is All Souls. It is not a feast. It is not a day of precept (obligation). However, you can gain indulgences for praying for the dead in this 8 day period.

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.

Welcome registrant:

Goldfield

HEY!  sm****41@nc.rr.com!
HEY! and*****00@charter.net!

My notes to you were bounced back.  New email?

In church last night…

I’ll make a video of the formal displaying of the relics and post the link when it is ready.

In church this morning…

How to make lunch in Rome.

Buy pizza bianca.

Buy mortadella with black truffle.

Assemble like this.

In churchy news…

Too beautiful not to share…

This is interesting from the great canonist Ed Peters

One of the presidential candidates is pretty openly anti-Catholic.

To accurate not to share…

In chessy news… HERE

(White to move and mate in 3)

Interested in learning?  Try THIS.

Play
Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
8 Comments