ADVENTCAzT 2025: 11 – Wednesday 2nd Week of Advent

A 5 minute daily podcast to help you in your Advent preparation.

Today I found a passage wherein Joseph Ratzinger investigates the world-mired mindset of those who resist the teaching of the Virgin Birth.  I wonder it pertains (via modernism) today and the reduction of titles of Mary.

Then we hear about how to attain peace of soul in this world.

Yesterday’s podcast HERE.

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Daily Rome Shot 1502

Quaeso, mei memento cum Natalicio tempore per interrete mercaris et nexibus meis affiliatis utere. USA HIC – CUR? Hoc adiuvat ad salutem, impensas publicas, cibaria, et cetera necessartia solvenda. Sine ullo pretio addito, auxilium praebes, pro quo gratiam habeo.  Oro libenter meis pro benefactoribus.

Interim, motus ad lusorem cum militibus albis pertinent. Scaccus mattus, scilicet mors regis, duobus in motis veniat.

NB: Detineam explicationes in crastinum, ne vestrae interrumpantur commentationes.

Interim…

Present ideas…

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An image drawn by a Cistercian nun provokes thoughts about the Immaculate Conception and the Tears of Eve. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

Today on Twitter I ran across an image HERE made by a Cistercian Trappist Sister of Our Lady of the Mississippi Abbey   They have an online store for the support of their community HERE which includes prints of the image and assortments of caramels and chocolates – great Christmas gift ideas – as well as fruit cake.  They wouldn’t be Trappists otherwise, I think, without fruitcake.

The site where I found the image has some theological reflection about the image, which is good.  However, I have a different idea founded on my Patristic background.

Initial thoughts before I get to the real point.

One thing I noticed right away is the shape of the leaves and the fruit.  These are not apples, they are figs.    The forbidden fruit of the Garden, was the fig, not the apple (even though that is what Eve is holding… and it has a bite mark).   I note, however, that the fruits in the image look rather like pears, which makes me think of Augustine’s youthful sin in Confessions 2:

We carried off a huge load of pears, not to eat ourselves, but to dump out to the hogs, after barely tasting some of them ourselves. Doing this pleased us all the more because it was forbidden. Such was my heart, O God, such was my heart–which thou didst pity even in that bottomless pit. Behold, now let my heart confess to thee what it was seeking there, when I was being gratuitously wanton, having no inducement to evil but the evil itself.

Eve’s choice and Adam’s failure echoing through the ages.

The way the figs leaves surround the two figures is reminiscent of the hortus conclusus theme of medieval paintings of the Blessed Virgin.

The hortus conclusus, the enclosed garden, is drawn from the Song of Songs 4:12, “hortus conclusus, soror mea, sponsa; hortus conclusus, fons signatus”.  The Fathers and medieval exegetes took this as a prophetic figure of the Virgin Mary: wholly belonging to God, inviolate, fruitful through divine grace. In paintings from the late Middle Ages through the Renaissance, the enclosed garden becomes the setting for the Annunciation or the Madonna and Child. Artists often fill the space with carefully chosen symbolic flora whose meanings echo Marian titles such as the lily for purity, the rose for charity, the columbine for sorrows.     Theologically the hortus conclusus signifies not only Mary’s perpetual virginity but also the interior sanctuary where God’s Word takes root. Mary is the “garden sealed” because the Incarnation is entirely God’s initiative. She is at once receptive and protected, a new Garden of Eden in whom the divine presence dwells without corruption. Ildefonso Schuster notes that Marian iconography often renders this garden as both earthly and paradisal, suggesting that in Mary humanity begins again. The hortus conclusus thus is visual catechesis, a proclamation of Mary as pure, fruitful, and uniquely prepared to receive and bear the Savior.

We must give due attention to the serpent.

Old Scratch entangles the feet of Eve, only to have its head crushed by the foot of Mary.

How heavy that foot upon the deceiver!

I am minded that the Latin word for pregnancy is graviditas from gravis, meaning “heavy”.  Graviditas was a rich theological metaphor.  Patristic authors use terms of physical generation to illuminate the mystery of the Incarnation, and graviditas is especially apt for describing the pleroma, the fullness of divine life, present in Mary and, by extension, in the Church.   The phrase graviditas Virginis appears in early Latin homiletic traditions to highlight the paradoxical union of virginity and fecundity. Mary’s graviditas signals her interior plenitude of grace. Augustine speaks of Mary conceiving Christ in her heart before conceiving Him in her womb… in mente prius quam in ventre (s. 215.4).  In this sense her graviditas is the fullness of faith, obedience, and charity that makes her not just hortus conclusus but also the living ark of the covenant.  The Church Fathers describe the Church as gravis or gravida with the faithful, using maternal imagery to articulate the Church’s role in bringing forth new life through baptism and catechesis. Thus graviditas Ecclesiae expresses the community’s fertile receptivity to the Word and its mission to “bear” Christ into the world.  In fact, the newly baptized were called “infantes“.  Medieval writers extend the metaphor to the soul. A believer “gravidus verbo… pregnant with the Word” is one who has allowed divine wisdom to take root and grow, producing virtuous action. Here graviditas indicates interior transformation, a heaviness not of burden but of divine presence.   Thus, graviditas is theological shorthand for fruitful receptivity to God, a symbol of how grace fills, shapes, and brings to birth the life of Christ within persons, Mary above all.

And now, after those tangents, to my point.

St. Cyril of Jerusalem in his Catechesis 12 wrote (I’ll give you some context):

Hear, O man, the mystery:
how the Creator of all is born of a Virgin,
how He who holds the world in His hands is wrapped in the swaddling-clothes of an infant.
Today there is joy for the heavenly ones and peace for those on earth;
today the tears of Eve have been dried through the Virgin;
today the curse has been undone and the blessing has sprung forth;
today death has vanished, and life has reigned.
Today Adam is called back to his inheritance, and Eve has found her liberty;
through the Virgin the bond of condemnation has been loosed;
through the Virgin immortality has entered among men;
through the Virgin salvation has poured forth like an unfailing fountain.

Cyril stands squarely in the patristic tradition that sees Mary as the New Eve, a title rooted deeply in second-century theology. His phrase “Eve’s tears are dried through the Virgin” is a precis of salvation history.

We can take Eve’s tears to represent, the sorrow of the fall (Gen 3:16), humanity’s exile and mortality, and the rupture between God and man. Tears symbolize the broken inheritance of the human race.

Cyril’s litany-like “Through the Virgin” produces what?  The tears cease, the curse dissolves, immortality returns, salvation is poured out.  Mary is the instrument chosen for the Incarnation, the hinge of the world’s re-creation.

Where Eve listened to the serpent, Mary listens to the angel.
Where Eve’s act led to exile, Mary’s fiat brings restoration.
Where Eve’s act introduced death, Mary’s obedience introduces Life Himself.

For Cyril, Mary’s divine maternity is the turning point of history: creation begins again in her womb.

BTW… Even apart from her perfectly united will at Calvary, does this all sound like Co-Redemptrix to you?

Lastly, do visit the store of the Trappist Sisters.  HERE

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9 December – Feast of St. Juan Diego. The AMAZING miracle for his canonization!

Remember…

If we do not believe in miracles, we do not ask for them. If we do not ask for them, they will not be granted.

We are not alone: the Church Militant and the Church Triumphant are closely knit, interwoven in charity. We on earth must intercede for each other and believe and ask for the intercession of the saints.

Today is the Feast of St. Juan Diego, of Our Lady of Guadalupe fame.  Mexican, native-American St. Juan Diego Cuauhtlatoatzin (+1548), was granted an apparition by Our Lady Virgin Mary four times on the hill of Tepeyac.   He had been declared Venerable in 1987.

St. John Paul II decided to beatify him without the approved miracle.  He was beatified on 6 May 1990.

Under normal circumstances, for a beatification there must be a miracle which has been rigorously studied and approved by the Congregation for Causes and Saints accepted by the Holy Father.   St. John Paul bypassed the process.  Pope Benedict did done the same occasionally.

There was a miracle for Juan Diego’s canonization, however. 

It is quite a story.

Here it is.

Juan Jose Barragan Silva, of Mexico City, was a drug addict from his adolescence.  He and his mother had been abandoned by his father.

On 3 May 1990 – note the date – Juan Jose, after getting drunk and high on marijuana with a friend, went home and started to cut himself on the head with a knife.  His mother, Esperanza, tried to get the knife away but failed.  She implored him to stop abusing himself and give up the alcohol and marijuana.   He shouted that he didn’t want to live any more so loudly that the neighbors came to see what was going on, but the door was locked.

Juan Jose threw himself off the balcony of their second floor apartment (in the USA this would be counted as the third floor).

In that moment, Esperanza had a “flash”.  Knowing that Pope John Paul was to be in Mexico for the beatification of Juan Diego, she called on Juan Diego to intercede for her son.

Juan Jose fell about 10 meters and landed close to a friend of his, Jesus Alfredo Velasquez Ramirez, who saw him land on his head on the concrete pavement.  Juan Jose was bleeding copiously from the mouth, nose and ears.  They covered him, thinking he was dead.  He suddenly sat up, rose and went to the stairs leading to his apartment.  On meeting his mother coming down the stairs he asked his mother’s forgiveness.  They embraced and remained that way for another ten minutes or so before the ambulance came.

During the ambulance ride Juan Jose said he had lost his vision.  He was able to say a Our Father.  He was registered at Sanatorio Durango at 1830.

The medical prognosis was very pessimistic.

The doctor, Juan Homero Hernandez Illescas, later explained that it was already incomprehensible that he was still alive.

They did tests immediately and found that Juan Jose had a fracture of the epistropheus, a large hematoma in the right temporal-parietal region extending to the lateral part of the neck and lacerations of the muscles about the parapharyngeal space,  fractures from the right orbital to the clivus, intracranial hemorrhages and air in the cranial cavity and in the cerebral ventricles.

Fr. Manuel Ponce gave him the last rites under the impression that Juan Jose would soon be dead.

He continued to live.

Fore the first few days Juan Jose was sedated. On the fifth, doctors found that his pupils were symmetrical and reactive and that he could move his arms and legs.  On the sixth day he was released from the ICU to a regular ward.  On the seventh day his feeding tube was removed.  He was released on the tenth day after the fall.   Subsequent tests by neurologists and other specialists showed a total recovery.  Juan Jose subsequently gave up his drug habit and started school.

It was determined that his change of condition came on 6 May at the very time John Paul II – in Mexico City – declared Juan Diego to be “Blessed”.

For a miracle of curing to be authenticated as such, the cure has to be sudden, complete and lasting.  It has to be inexplicable by science. It has to be demonstrated that the venerable or blessed was invoked in a particular way.  There are usually spiritual effects, such as conversion of life of the person cured and also witnesses.

The decree concerning this miracle was promulgated on 20 December 2001.  Holy Father Pope John Paul II canonized St. Juan Diego on 31 July 2002.

Friends, if we want miracles… we have to ASK for them!

Let’s ask St. Juan Diego and our Lady of Guadalupe to intercede for some miracle.

You might, in your prayers, mention my mother for healing.

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ADVENTCAzT 2025 – 10 – Tuesday 2nd Week of Advent

A 5 minute daily podcast to help you in your Advent 2025 preparation.

Today Fr. Troadec talks great sense about REALITY and spiritual progress.
Card. Bacci administers a dose of medicine.

Yesterday’s podcast HERE.

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Presidential Message on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception 2025

At the web site of the White House, Pres. Trump’s Message on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception.

Presidential Message on the Feast of the Immaculate Conception

Today, I recognize every American celebrating December 8 as a Holy Day honoring the faith, humility, and love of Mary, mother of Jesus and one of the greatest figures in the Bible.

On the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, Catholics celebrate what they believe to be Mary’s freedom from original sin as the mother of God.  She first entered recorded history as a young woman when, according to Holy Scripture, the Angel Gabriel greeted her in the village of Nazareth with news of a miracle: “Hail, favored one!  The Lord is with you,” announcing that “you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall name him Jesus.”

In one of the most profound and consequential acts of history, Mary heroically accepted God’s will with trust and humility:  “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord.  May it be done to me according to your word.”  Mary’s decision forever altered the course of humanity.  Nine months later, God became man when Mary gave birth to a son, Jesus, who would go on to offer his life on the Cross for the redemption of sins and the salvation of the world.

For nearly 250 years, Mary has played a distinct role in our great American story.  In 1792, less than a decade after the end of the Revolutionary War, Bishop John Carroll—the first Catholic bishop in the United States and cousin of signer of the Declaration of Independence Charles Carroll—consecrated our young Nation to the mother of Christ.  Less than a quarter-century later, Catholics attributed General Andrew Jackson’s stunning victory over the British in the climactic Battle of New Orleans to Mary.  Every year, Catholics celebrate a Mass of Thanksgiving in New Orleans on January 8 in memory of Mary’s assistance in saving the city.

Over the ages, American legends like Elizabeth Ann Seton, Frances Xavier Cabrini, and Fulton Sheen, who spent their lives glorifying God in service to others, have held a deep devotion to Mary.  The Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, located in the heart of our Nation’s Capital, honors Mary as the largest church in North America.  The timeless hymn “Ave Maria” remains beloved by countless citizens.  She has inspired the establishment of countless churches, hospitals, and schools.  Nearly 50 American colleges and universities bear Mary’s name.  And, just days from now, on December 12, Catholics in the United States and Mexico will celebrate the steadfast devotion to Mary that originated in the heart of Mexico—a place now home to the beautiful Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe—in 1531.  As we approach 250 years of glorious American Independence, we acknowledge and give thanks, with total gratitude, for Mary’s role in advancing peace, hope, and love in America and beyond our shores.

More than a century ago, in the midst of World War I, Pope Benedict XV, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, commissioned and dedicated a majestic statue of Mary, Queen of Peace, bearing the infant Christ with an olive branch so that the Christian faithful would be encouraged to look to her example of peace by praying for a stop to the horrific slaughter.  Just a few months later, World War I ended.  Today, we look to Mary once again for inspiration and encouragement as we pray for an end to war and for a new and lasting era of peace, prosperity, and harmony in Europe and throughout the world.

In her honor, and on a day so special to our Catholic citizens, we remember the sacred words that have brought aid, comfort, and support to generations of American believers in times of need:

Hail, Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee.  Blessed art thou among women and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.  Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death.  Amen.

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Daily Rome Shot 1501 – Tota pulchra

Photos from The Great Roman™ and don V.

Please remember me when CHRISTMAS shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance, utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

Meanwhile, Mr. Cricket has a spittle-flecked nutty attacking St. Carlo Acutis, who had a great devotion to the Most Holy Eucharist. Ponder: This guy was one of the inner circle responsible for Taurina cacata….er… Traditionis custodes.

In chessy news… the “Freestyle” scrum is going in on S. Africa.

White to move and mate in 4.

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

One last shot of this raving nut-job.

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8 December: Happy 20th Blogiversary! A retrospective

My first post on 8 December 2005. Today is the 20th anniversary of this blog.

HERE

In fact, there was a web page, wdtprs.com, several years before I moved to a WordPress platform in 2005.  Already in 2002 I was posting my column from The Wanderer, which looked like this.

By the time I started with WordPress the “archive” site looked like this in 2005.

Then it moved to this set up in December 2005.

There were quite a few awards back in the day.

By 2010 we looked like this…

The blog has remained with that basic theme ever since, with cosmetic changes here and there and rearranging.

Many ups and downs.  Many blessings.

You, dear readers, are my greatest blessings.

Thank you.

Thanks also especially to DY who once had the company which came to the blog’s rescue in the early days.  It grew so fast that it was crashing the server I had “rented” and the company kept killing my site.  David stepped in and hosted wdtprs.com.  If you have benefited from this site, you also have him to thank.  Perhaps you will recite a decade of the Rosary for him.  You can also check out his latest undertaking, which I use, Federated Computer which gets you out from under the tyranny of SaaS.

Non mihi, Domine, sed Nomini Tui da gloriam.

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Diocese of Charlotte: The community of the SSPX Chapel received a Papal Blessing

Rorate has more HERE but this is the short version.

Charlotte, where the local bishop cruelly suppressed celebrations of the TLM by diocesan priests, thus forcing families who desire their “legitimate aspiration” as Pope St. John Paul II called it, away from their parishes to drive long distances or to seek out the SSPX.

The SSPX… whose community received this papal blessing.

What does that mean? It doesn’t mean what some might be eager to claim, but it doesn’t mean nothing.

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ADVENTCAzT 2025 – 09 – Immaculate Conception

A 5 minute daily podcast to help you in your Advent 2025 preparation.

We hear from Pius Parsch today about the meaning of the Feast in the context of Advent and what it could indicate for our spiritual progress.

LINK (if player isn’t working)

Yesterday’s podcast: HERE

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