THE GRAPES OF… TRANFIGURATION!

The Roman calendar has many little treasures which remind us of how our Faith and the Church’s calendar, the rhythm of temporal and spiritual life, are integrated in our seasons.

Today, for example, the Feast of the Transfiguration of the Lord, there is a special blessing of grapes in the traditional Rituale Romanum.   The powers that be, some of them at least, want to take this away from people.  It is not found in the “BOB” or “Book of Blessings… De Benedictionibus”.  In its index, “Grapes” are relegated to “new fruits” on the feast of the Presentation.    Don’t let them take away our heritage.

You might consider that title, “THE GRAPES OF… TRANSFIGURATION!” a little dramatic.  However, consider that the vast majority of grapes grown went to wine, their individual leap to collective glory.

In the Transfiguration, Our Lord let something of His glory shine forth through His human body.  In wine, in advance we detect something of the joy of the heavenly banquet, remembering that, just as grapes are crushed to make wine, our Lord had His Passion.  As the Golden Legend say, “the blood of Christ is renewed of new wine if it may be founden of a ripe grape”.

We also have to have our Passion, collectively as a Church, and individually.   There is no escaping the Passion.  Do not listen to those who posit anything Christian that avoids the Passion.

If truth be told, the blessing of grapes at this time seems to be attached more to the Feast of St. Sixtus II, martyred in 258 with his famous companions.  The Feast of the Transfiguration came to be observed centuries later in the Roman calendar.

But who cares?  The more the merrier!  We are Catholics.  That means we are both/and rather than either/or when it comes to these happy events.

Back to Sixtus.  At the beginning of August we Romans remember the martyrs Pope Saint Sixtus and his four deacon companions.  St. Lawrence would famously follow, burned on an iron grate.  For that see St. Ambrose.   HERE  This is the time of year with the first grapes of the harvest are blessed.  Together with the Transfiguration of our Lord, the blessing of grapes – an eschatological symbol – shows that Holy Church is already in the end time, though we wait for its completion.   And it sure feels like the end times.

Here is the translation for the blessing of grapes, for those who don’t have Latin:

V. Our help is in the name of the Lord.
R. Who hath made heaven and earth.
V. The Lord be with you.
R. And with thy spirit.

Let us pray.

Bless, we beseech Thee, O Lord, this fresh fruit of the vine,
which Thou hast graciously brought to full ripeness
with the dew of heaven, abundant rain, and calm and fair weather.
Thou hast given them for our use;
grant that we may receive them with thanksgiving
in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, the True Vine,
who liveth and reigneth with Thee in the unity of the Holy Ghost,
God for ever and ever.
R. Amen.

(And they are sprinkled with holy water.)

I was delighted by the reference to “dew of heaven… rore caeli“.  You might recall the controversy over the reference to “dew” when the new, corrected English translation of the Novus Ordo was being prepared.

The cultivation of certain types of grapes requires special conditions.  In a contrast to the benefits of dew lauded in the prayer of the blessing, however, dew isn’t always good for grapes.  Dew helps fungus to get hold, through in the case of some grapes, certain fungi are welcome, as in the case of the “noble rot” in a very late harvest which produces wines of a spectacular sweetness and depth.  Also, it is important to harvest grapes after dissipation of dew.  But certainly the evocation of dew in the prayer refers to the necessary moisture grapes need for their proper development.  And of course, dew is a Scriptural image for the descent of God with graces.

The coming of and effects of the Holy Spirit, in Scripture and in the Fathers of the Church, are often described not by fire imagery, but rather by water images and, indeed, dew.

First, ros can come from above like rain.  Second, ros is dew which forms nearly imperceptibly.  In one case, rain flows across a thing and washes it.  Dew slowly dampens.  In both cases there results a penetrating soaking.  Arid ground yields to planting.  Seeds germinate and sprout.   The ros Spiritus in the (artificially cobbled up and inaccurately called ancient) 2nd Eucharistic Prayer can be both the cleansing and the moistening.

Our Catholic doctrine of sanctification teaches us that at baptism a person is both justified and sanctified by the washing/indwelling of the Holy Spirit.  That sanctification can be deepened through the course of one’s life.  It comes suddenly.  It comes gradually.

In Scripture the psalmist sings about the “King of Justice”. “May he be like rain (Vulgate ros) that falls on the mown grass, like showers that water the earth!” (Ps 72:6 RSV).

In the Song of Songs, we hear, “Open to me, my sister, my love, my dove, my perfect one; for my head is wet with dew (ros), my locks with the drops of the night. By night I have put off my coat, how shall I put it on? I have washed my feet, how shall I defile them” (Cant 5:2-3).  St. Augustine (+430) saw in the lover and beloved an image of Christ calling His ministerial Church to service.

From Isaiah we have an image which has come into the Latin Church’s liturgy, namely, “Rorate caeli desuper … Shower (rorate), O heavens, from above, and let the skies rain down righteousness; let the earth open, that salvation may sprout forth, and let it cause righteousness to spring up also; I the LORD have created it” (Is 45:8 Vulgate and RSV – Introit 4th Sunday of Advent).

The Fathers made much of ros through an allegorical technique of interpretation.  Origen (+254), via Rufinus’ translation of the Homilies on the Book of Judges (8.5) says: “But we also, if only we might offer our feet, the Lord Jesus is ready to wash the feet of our soul and cleanse them with a heavenly washing (rore caelesti), by the grace of the Holy Spirit, by the word of sacred doctrine.”

Saint Ambrose of Milan (+397), who drew much upon Origen’s writings as a starting point, in his work on the Holy Spirit wrote: “The Holy Scriptures were promising to us this rainfall (pluvia) of the whole world, which watered the orb under the coming of the Lord, in the falling dew of the divine Spirit (Spiritus rore divini)” (De spiritu sancto 1.8).

The imagery of grapes is also Scriptural.  The immediate association for Catholics is the Eucharist.  But grapes symbolize the end times.  They have an eschatological import.   In Revelation 14:19-20 we have an image of the end times and judgment when the grapes of wrath are pressed in the winepress. The title of the post might call to mind the book by Steinbeck, but that in turn points to Rev 14.

17 And another angel came out of the temple in heaven, and he too had a sharp sickle. 18 Then another angel came out from the altar, the angel who has power over fire, and he called with a loud voice to him who had the sharp sickle, “Put in your sickle, and gather the clusters of the vine of the earth, for its grapes are ripe.” 19 So the angel swung his sickle on the earth and gathered the vintage of the earth, and threw it into the great wine press of the wrath of God; 20 and the wine press was trodden outside the city, and blood flowed from the wine press, as high as a horse’s bridle, for one thousand six hundred stadia.

Of course the image of grapes is a happy one as well… obviously.  From the ancient Roman Church grapes are found in carvings in the catacombs and on sarcophagus reliefs.  Bunches of ripe grapes are symbols of completion, that the season has finally brought things to fruition.  Grapes remind us that Christ is the Vine, whence all our life and hope flows out to us, His branches and tendrils.

In those ancient depictions we sometimes see the harvest of grapes, which is the happy completion of life.  For example there is the relief of the famous 4th c. sarcophagus with the Good Shepherd from the Catacombs of Praetextatus which shows a harvest.  In the Catacomb of Priscilla there is a 4th century carving of a dove eating grapes, the dove being a symbol of the Christian soul and grapes the happy attainment of the goal of fullness in due time, heaven.  Remember that reference, above, to the dove from the Song of Songs?  It all fits together.  You can right-click on that image of the Good Shepherd for a larger view.

Grapes remind us that we shall be known from the fruits we both bear and we generate for the benefit of others.

Grapes remind us that we should not be sour grapes for others.

Grapes remind us that, if we do not live our vocations as the Lord’s branches well, then the grapes may be those of wrath, though mercy and forgiveness is what the Lord offers those who fall.

So, get your grapes and get them blessed, today, if you can.

When you eat them consider:

  • how good God has been to you, even if some of the grapes are bitter;
  • whether or not, through the dew of God’s graces and the light He shines on you, you are developing well for your own eternal salvation;
  • whether or not you are producing fruits for the benefit of others, hopefully sweet fruits and not sour.
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Does this seem right to you? – UPDATED and really UPDATED!

UPDATED: 5 August 2025 at 1014:

I received this important note.

Hi there, dear and Reverend Father! I know Chris Hall pretty well. He often visits our abbey, and I am happy to report that he converted to Our Holy Catholic Faith a number of years ago. So yes, while he was Protestant in the past, he is now safely within the embrace of Holy Mother Church, and he is a good and orthodox believer. Yes, a clerical speaker would be a much better choice for a convocation of this kind, but I can attest that the priests will be in good and orthodox hands with Chris Hall as their speaker. God bless you and all your great work! Oremus pro invicem.

I am glad always to be corrected. Thank you. I am very happy to hear that Dr. Hall has entered the Church.

At the same time, it speaks to the times we are in and that particular place and the goings on there that it would be entirely plausible that a non-Catholic layman would be chosen to address the presbyterate. Please, Lord, help us through these confusing times to an era of clarity and confidence, unmarred by our scars.


Originally posted 4 August 2025 at 19:25

Most of you in these USA are probably aware that every few years a diocese will call all of the priests together for a convocation. It will last a couple days and there will be a main speaker.

This October, the Archdiocese of Detroit is having their convocation. Their main speaker will be…

… an Episcopalian layman.  [SEE UPDATE ABOVE.  The link that follows – HERE – takes us to his wikipedia entry which at the time of this writing indicates that Dr. Hall is/was Episcopalian.  ]

HERE

Christopher A. Hall.

What message is being sent by this decision?

Hall is, I believe, a good scholar.  He participated, for example, as an editor of the Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture series and has done some work in Patristics.

But the priest convocation is not about Patristics, even though lots of “Fathers” will be there.

I wonder if there will be an Q&A opportunities. One might be tempted to ask:

Since you are Episcopalian, you may not be familiar with the Church’s document called Dominus Iesus, which clearly states that ecclesial communities which do not have a valid episcopate and genuine Eucharist cannot properly be called churches. How is it that you, a theologian, want to be a member of something that isn’t properly a church, given that, despite its name, you don’t have valid orders and what happen in your liturgies never confects the Eucharist?  Is that a problem?

I’m sure the priests of the Archdiocese will be deeply edified in their sacred vocations by this well-planned convocation.

UPDATE:

HEY!   Wait a minute.  If the Archbishop wants a layman for the priests convocation, I think

RALPH MARTIN is available!

 

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Anniversary of sad hilarity.

Since I am in Chicago, I post today a link to a story from this date in 2023, 4 August 2022, about the Archdiocese and the Institute of Christ the King.

HERE

You might remember that the local Archbishop said to the Institute, whose raison d’être is the use the traditional form of the Roman Rite, that they had to accept the patently and false and manifestly stupid claim that the Novus Ordo “is the only expression of the Roman Rite” or they couldn’t celebrate any Masses in their church. In other words, they offered the Institute an unjust choice: Accept the lie we are forcing on you, or you can’t functioning as priests… and it’s YOUR fault.

This sort of thing is a manifestation of what so often results for priests as moral injury.

Remember: It’s not just the rite, the Vetus Ordo, that they fear and hate, its the people who want those rites.  It’s the people.

Adding to the sadness, even though a new pontificate in underway with Leo XIV, even though 99% of local bishop don’t know what his thinking is about the matter is, some bishop are moving against the people who want the traditional Mass (cf. Detroit, Charlotte, Valence, etc.).

 

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Daily Rome Shot 1407

Not Roma, but Bologna on the Feast of St. Dominic.

Welcome registrant:

Quodscripsi61

Kinda like … well… I won’t say.

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  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.

You can see where this is going, right?

Black to move.

And today marks 13 years of activity for the Mars Rover Curiosity! HERE

They’ve upgraded the software so that it is more energy efficient and can multitask. Also, it’s tread is a good shape and it can keep going for a long time yet. It’s an interesting article.

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ACTION ITEM: IMPORTANT – On the use and, especially, abuse of Newman’s “development of doctrine”

At the substack of Catholic Unscripted (three great brits) there is a piece by Rev. Stephen Morgan, whom I have known for years.  Brilliant and “good value” (a phrase I learned from him), a convert, who is now heading up a Catholic University in Macao (after working in finance and obtain multiple serious degrees).

He wrote “the book” on John Henry Newman’s key concept, which many cite and few grasp.

John Henry Newman and the Development of Doctrine: Encountering Change, Looking for Continuity

US HERE

At Catholic Unscripted, his piece – NOT behind a paywall because it is that important –  is called… I’ll give you a taste…

Hijacked Development
Rescuing Newman from Misuse in the Church’s Moral Crisis
By Stephen Morgan

In February 2023, the Anglican Archbishop of York, Stephen Cottrell, addressed the Church of England Synod with a bold theological claim. Seeking to justify the blessing of same-sex unions, he invoked St. John Henry Newman’s theory of doctrinal development to argue that revealed truth can change into its opposite. What was once considered sin could now, under the banner of “development,” be embraced as sacramentally significant.

The invocation was more than theologically strained—it was ironic. Newman had left Anglicanism precisely because his theory of development, written in the dying days of his life as an Anglican, but in fact worked out over the previous twelve years, demonstrated that the Church of England lacked doctrinal coherence, lacked the authority to validate the changes it had made to the Catholic and Apostolic faith. Yet today, even within the Catholic Church, Newman’s name is misused in precisely the same way: to provide theological cover for innovations that appear, under scrutiny, to contradict apostolic teaching.

Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, Prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, has repeatedly cited Newman’s Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine (1845) to defend controversial interpretations of documents such as Amoris Laetitia and Fiducia Supplicans. In both cases, Newman’s theory has been used to claim that the Church is not reversing her teachings but developing them—suggesting that it was possible to adapt pastoral practice while preserving doctrinal principle, as if the one does not act upon the other in the order of reality.

[…]

I think you can see where this is going.

I urge you to take a few minutes and read Morgan’s piece at Catholic Unscripted.

Some popping quotes from the piece:

“Despite the clarity of Newman’s method, recent years have seen it misappropriated by those seeking to justify changes that clearly fail his tests.”

“The misuse is particularly offensive because it both seeks to endorse grave moral evil and leverages Newman’s authority to undermine the very tradition to which the end point that the logic of the Essay on Development…”.

“A true development builds on what came before without undermining it. This is not what Amoris Laetitia does.

The 2023 declaration Fiducia Supplicans intensified this misuse.”

“The original purpose of Newman’s Essay was to demonstrate Catholicism’s consistency with apostolic faith. Today, that same essay is cited to justify inconsistencies. The difference could not be starker. Newman offered a grammar of development—what is now being practiced is a rhetoric of change.”

“In declaring him a Doctor of the Church, Pope Leo XIV has rightly recognized Newman’s genius. But that genius must be honoured with fidelity, not reinterpreted beyond recognition. If the Church is to remain credible in the eyes of the faithful and the world, it must cease weaponising Newman’s name and begin applying his method.”

See?

This is an important essay.  Please give it attention and perhaps drop a note of thanks to Catholic Unscripted for getting it out there!

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Daily Rome Shot 1406

Pope Leo at Mass for the swarms of young people in Rome for the Jubilee.

Anything missing from the altar?

I suspect there will be a conversation with someone about that.

At the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe for a conference. The Feast of their Dedication was celebrated with Card. Eijk, Archbishop of Utrecht, as the homilist.  HERE

Card. Eijk was a contributor to the important book on “sense of the faithful” which I describe more at length HERE  So was Dr. Echeveria who was brutally fired from Sacred Heart Seminary.

Why is this move brilliant?  Explain.

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My View For Awhile: 2nd City Edition – ARRIVED!

I’m heading north to Chicago and the the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe for a conference.

Meanwhile, what is going on there?   The Feast of their Dedication was celebrated with Card. Eijk, Archbishop of Utrecht, as the homilist.  HERE

My first leg is delayed but that won’t affect me on the other end provided it isn’t delayed for hours. Long layover. I don’t book close flights anymore.

UPDATE

Another prehistoric Boeing. Pray for me.

It’s great to get that text that your bag has been put into the same plane you are on.

UPDATE:

In Atlanta an exterior view of the C Concourse lounge where there will be room for me.

Instead there is room at the T lounge.

They manage to keep their carpet attached to the floor.

Unlike at the Panera in the same spot for years now.  We’ve mentioned it and a couple of our players have tripped and fallen when getting up!   But fix it?

There are experts about everything out there.  What sort of glue would work?   The manager said he tried.  It is hard to believe.   Discuss.

Meanwhile, I am in the lounge and reading the superb essay I just posted about HERE.

This is the laptop that died and rose again to new life.

Later.

UPDATE

Really?

UPDATE

The gate guy got us all going bam bam bam. But it was cooler in the bridge than the airport.

Back in the 21st century.

UPDATE

Coming in to the Windy City.  Little did I know that…

… the War of the Worlds had started.

We taxied for 25 MINUTES once on the ground.

Awaiting me were a two different types of pizza.  Guess which one this is.

Which hot pepper flakes are mine?

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WDTPRS – 8th Sunday after Pentecost (1962MR): True freedom

Today’s Collect – for Mass and the Office on this 8th Sunday after Pentecost – is found in the ancient Veronese Sacramentary and the Gelasian and the so-called Gregorian. It survived the liturgical tailors with their scissors and thread to live on in the post-Conciliar Missale Romanum on Thursday of the 1st week of Lent. However, there is a minor adjustment in the Novus Ordo version.

Let’s drill into what our prayer really says.

COLLECT (1962MR)

Largire nobis, quaesumus, Domine, semper spiritum cogitandi quae recta sunt, propitius et agendi: ut, qui sine te esse non possumus, secundum te vivere valeamus.

In the Novus Ordo version that oddly placed propitius (“propitiously”) is replaced by promptius (“more readily/openly”). In the critical edition of the ancient Veronese Sacramentary, you find promptius. The reformers preferred the version that pre-dated the “Tridentine” editio princeps of 1570. What happened? Probably some ancient copyist made a mistake in reading an old manuscript’s ink squiggles in – mpt – and – pit -. Easy to do.  Why the reversion was thought necessary, after having prayed the perfectly good collect for so many centuries, beats me.   I’m not sure that, as the Council Fathers commanded, the good of the Church “genuinely and certainly” required it (Sacrosanctum Concilium 23).

One meaning of secundum in the prestigious Lewis & Short Dictionary is “agreeably to, in accordance with, according to”. Remember that largire is an imperative of a deponent verb, not an infinitive. The famous verb cogito is more than simply “to think”. It reflects deeper reflection, true pursuit in the mind: “to consider thoroughly, to ponder, to weigh, reflect upon, think”.

LITERAL ATTEMPT

We beg you, O Lord, bestow upon us propitiously the spirit of thinking always things which are correct, and of carrying them out, so that we who are not able to exist without You may be able to live according to Your will.

In my peregrinations though the writings of St. Augustine of Hippo (+430) I found a text which harks to at least part of the content of this prayer (In io. eu. tr. 51,3):

“For Christ, who humbled Himself, made obedient unto death, even the death of the Cross, is the teacher of humility. When He teaches us humility He doesn’t thus let go of His divinity: for in it (His divinity) He is the equal of the Father, while in this (His humility) He is like unto us; and in that He is the Father’s equal He created us in order that we might exist; and in that He is like to us, He redeemed us so that we would not perish.”

In Acts 17:28, we read about our God, “in whom we live and move and have our being”, a concept perhaps influenced by the legendary Epimenides of Knossos (6th c?).   He was a Cretan, of course, and is famous for the paradoxical “All Cretans are liars.”  Today, we might update that by having, say, a famous Jesuit say… wellll…. never mind.  St. Paul seems to have known the Epimenides Paradox.  In Titus, he writes:

For there are many insubordinate men, empty talkers and deceivers, especially the circumcision party; 11 they must be silenced, since they are upsetting whole families by teaching for base gain what they have no right to teach. 12 One of themselves, a prophet of their own, said, “Cretans are always liars, evil beasts, lazy gluttons.” 13 This testimony is true. Therefore rebuke them sharply, that they may be sound in the faith, 14 instead of giving heed to Jewish myths or to commands of men who reject the truth. 15 To the pure all things are pure, but to the corrupt and unbelieving nothing is pure; their very minds and consciences are corrupted. 16 They profess to know God, but they deny him by their deeds; they are detestable, disobedient, unfit for any good deed.

Moving on from the Jesuits, and back to our prayer….

We are made to act as God acts: to know, will and love.

When we cleave to God, seeking what is good and true and beautiful through the tangle of our wounded intellect, we are really seeking God.

Once we know what is good, true and beautiful, either because we reasoned to it or perhaps an authority helped us, then we must act in accordance with the good, truth and beauty we found.

Today we pray to God in our Collect to give us the actual graces we need in order to live properly according to His image within us.

We are even more ourselves, even freer when, eschewing our own errant wills, we embrace the One who is Goodness, Truth and Beauty.

Yet there are times when we purposely (and thereafter habitually) choose against what reason and authority point to as the Good, True and Beautiful. We make the choice to stray and sin. In doing so we diminish ourselves. After all, we have our very existence from the One whom we choose to defy. We must return to the correct path, as Dante did in his Divine Comedy. His fictional self strayed into the dark woods after leaving the path of the right reason.

We could so often avoid sin if we would just act readily on those impulses of our minds and consciences toward what is good and true and beautiful. In a way, the phrase of the Nike commercial (níke means “victory” in ancient Greek) sums it up: Just Do It. And we have many helps in discerning the good, especially in the authoritative teachings of the Church. Over time we build up good habits of acting at the right time and measure, so that we have the habits that are virtues.

A problem rises when circumstances and our passions confuse us and we must ponder to discern the correct path. Most of the time we get ourselves into trouble by hesitating about doing what we know is right. We mull, dawdle, pick and get ourselves into a hornet nest of problems.

Strive, in accord with a conscience formed by the Church’s teachings and according to common sense, after the good, true and beautiful, which are ultimately reflects of God.

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes: 8th Sunday after Pentecost (N.O. 18th Sunday)

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 the this 8th Sunday after Pentecost?  18th Sunday of Ordinary Time in the Novus Ordo.

Tell about attendance especially for the Traditional Latin Mass.

Any local changes or (hopefully good) news?  I know there is a lot of BAD news.  How about some good news?

A taste of my thoughts from the other place: HERE

[…]

The challenge of the parable lies in the commendation of the steward’s cleverness. The Fathers grappled with this. St. Jerome even wrote to St. Augustine to ask what it meant. Augustine saw here an argumentum a minori ad maius: if the unjust steward is praised for prudence in temporal affairs, how much more should the children of light be shrewd in the things that secure eternal life. The Lord praises not the fraud but the foresight.

[…]

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17 July ’25: Dutch Card. Eijk of Utrecht warmly commended Card. Burke for how endured criticism from inside the Church (including some in particular) – VIDEO

https://guadalupeshrine.org/mass-live-stream/

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