D. Charlotte, NC: Another bishop about to crush people who desire traditional worship in the name of “concord and unity”. – UPDATE

UPDATE 30 May 2025:

At The Pillar we read that then-Cardinal Prevost, Prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops, told the new Bishop of Charlotte to put the brakes on a controversial relocation of a diocesan cathedral.

Bull in a china shop?

UPDATE

The Bishop of Charlotte has published responses to some of the points made in social media about his treatment of the people who desire the traditional forms of worship and sacraments.

This is a zip file with the images I was sent. HERE  In fairness, it should be looked at.

In essence the bishop says, a) he listened to people b) his predecessor started this in 2013 c) he repeated the canard (which no one really believes) about the Congregation making a decision based on a survey of bishops) d) this is about unity in the Church e) yeah, people will have to drive farther, f) sure there’s a new Pope, but why wait g) no, I won’t ask for an extension h) “Any young man who is only or primarily interested in the celebration of the TLM is not nor ever has been a viable candidate for ordination…”, i) if people give less, they are to blame, j) get used to the Novus Ordo, k) avoid social media, l) again, avoid social media, m) do penance and give up your own needs.

 

UPDATE

A petition to the local bishop has been launched. It would be best if the signers are a) real people and b) LOCAL, at least near enough to the diocese that they were able to attend the TLM. Think about this practically and charitably and, for the sake of the petitioners, do NOT be angry, rude or verbose in the comment box. You’ll just hurt people.   Sometimes less is more.

https://commoninja.site/latinmasspetition

UPDATE below.


 

Originally Published on: May 23, 2025

The Bishop of Charlotte, NC. is about to suppress all Traditional Latin Masses in parishes and sequester the people who want it in a remote, rural former presbyterian church that doesn’t even have a name yet, as he admitted in his public letter.

It would be a REALLY GOOD IDEA for bishops to leave things be now that there is a NEW POPE with different ideas.    We will see who the ideologues are and who the truly pastoral bishops are.

There was twist of the knife at the end of his letter where he wrote… I’m not making this up:

It is my heartfelt desire and prayer that this implementation of Traditionis Custodes will further “promote the concord and unity of the Church” among the People of God in the Diocese of Charlotte so that, as Jesus prayed to His Father, we “may all be one” (John 17:21).

Nice, huh?

I wonder if he would use that “may all be one” line on Ukrainian Catholics?  Don’t they pray differently?

Here is the letter.

A priest wrote to me (adjusted a little here and there):

I am certain that you have been emailed 100 times by now.

Speaking from the perspective of a priest of our good diocese. The past year since his appointment has been rocky, to say the least. His immediate focus was on Latin and altar rails in the Novus Ordo … modernizing the liturgy through a liturgical norms document what will attempt to ban the Benedictine altar arrangement, fiddleback vestments, and the amount of lace on an alb.

Today’s sequestering of the Traditional Mass to an inaccessible part of the diocese, namely an old Presbyterian Church outside of the Charlotte metro area, is only the first shoe to drop. ….

Speaking of knife twist’s people now get to drive to an former presbyterian church that – as a Catholic chapel – doesn’t even have a name?  Now that’s what you call pastoral solicitude!

BTW… I looked up the Mooresville address given in the letter and found this.   I wonder if “Freedom Christian Center of Mooresville” is the place intended in the letter.  If so, I wonder if they know that!

There might be a back story to this place.  Off the top of my head I could guess that perhaps some well-meaning member or members of the TLM crowd bought it against the day that they might need to go to the catacombs.  Of course it could be something entirely different.  But these days, it isn’t a stretch of the imagination.

UPDATE:

I received this:

Father, in a desire for truth, I have to send you the article from the Catholic News and Herald which provides much more detail regarding the proposed chapel (former Protestant church) which the Diocese bought because it was adjacent to a Diocese senior living center and is going to spend $700,000 to upfit for appropriate use. This is important information on the story and (in my mind) shows a continued commitment by the Diocese to spend funds for the pastoral needs of those who have a love for the TLM. I thought you should have this additional information given the way you addressed the chapel in your blog. https://catholicnewsherald.com/90-news/local/11679-latin-mass?fbclid=IwY2xjawKe0x1leHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHipjAfZF237_N1r0EEUPR5nucf7awYkW0VO9on0q3I0pIbKWzFHeRH-kmBsD_aem_S0UJaLGQui5GmNgw9DHy1Q

Posted in Pò sì jiù, The Coming Storm, The Drill, The future and our choices, Traditionis custodes | Tagged ,
49 Comments

A posthumous surprise post from the late Fr. Hunwicke (+2024): “Obituary of a very failed Pontificate”

Those of us who have been reading Catholics things on the interwebs will with fondness, respect and sorrow remember the wonderful, erudite, amusing posts of the late Fr. John Hunwicke.  Fr. Hunwicke died 13 months ago.

He had had a few posts scheduled to publish which trickled out quickly.

What we didn’t know is that he had a draft of something for the death of FRANCIS tucked away.

It was published today.

Fr. Hunwicke was a terrific wordsmith which gave force to his prodigious mind.

I’ll make it easy to go to his posthumous post.  HERE

Hang on to your caps.

One last offering from the great Fr. Hunwicke.

May he rest in peace.

UPDATE:

At the top of Fr. Hunwicke’s posthumous post, there is a quote from ancient Greek transliterated into English letters.   Your ancient Greek might be a little rusty.

The quote is from Alcaeus.  We have fragments of his poems, from the 6th c. BC.  This fragment is a expression of celebration at the death of the tyrant of Mytilene whom Alcaeus clearly did not like.   The Greek literally says,

νῦν χρῆ μεθύσθην καί τινα πὲρ βίαν
πώνην. ἐπεὶ δὴ κάτθανε Μύρσιλος…

“We have to get drunk now and celebrate because Mursilos is dead.”  

It was a “thing” in the ancient world to have celebratory banquets some days after the death of a person or after some public prodigy that foretold bad tidings.   The Romans called this novemdialis, the nine day period, which is the term still used today for the period of nine days after the death of a Pope when Masses are celebrated for the repose of his soul just before a conclave would begin.  We’ve heard this word recently, haven’t we.

Posted in Francis, Mail from priests |
12 Comments

ACTION ITEM! Pentecost Novena Prayers for Traditional Latin Mass

I received this good idea from a priest friend.  Please consider doing this and sharing it widely.  RIGHT AWAY… today is ASCENSION THURSDAY which begins the original novena.

Friends,

Tomorrow begins the Pentecost Novena to the Holy Spirit. It would be an excellent time for us to pray humbly and intensely for our holy father Pope Leo to grant the Church the great gift of restoring unlimited access to the celebration of the traditional Latin Mass and sacraments.

Although our Lord grants us innumerable good things without our asking, yet there are some things He is pleased to give only upon persistent (and reverent) prayer. Such may be the case in this matter.

The successor of Saint Peter is the shepherd whose duty is to feed the Lord’s lambs and sheep who hunger for the orthodoxy and rich graces of the traditional Latin Mass. Let us then invited holy Mary to join us in this petition to the Almighty that this special grace of the Holy Spirit be conferred upon the Church.

Will you also join in? No uniform prayer is required, though the traditional prayer, “Come, Holy Spirit,” would be fitting with seven repetitions of the “Glory be to the Father” added to it.

And please invite others to participate in this nine day prayer.


Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of Thy faithful and enkindle in them the fire of Thy love, Alleluia.
Send forth Thy Spirit and they shall be created, Alleluia, and Thou shalt renew the face of the earth.
Let us pray. O God, who didst instruct the hearts of the faithful by the light of the Holy Spirit, grant us by that same Spirit to be truly wise and ever to rejoice in His consolation. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Glory be to the Father… (said seven times)

Veni Sancte Spiritus, reple tuórum corda fidélium et tui amóris in eis ignem accénde, Alleluia
Emítte Spíritum tuum, et creabúntur, Alleluia.
Et renovábis fáciem terræ.
Orémus.
Deus, qui corda fidélium Sancti Spíritus illustratióne docuísti, da nobis in eódem Spíritu recta sápere, et de eius semper consolatióne gaudére. Per Christum, Dóminum nostrum. Amen.
Gloria Patri et Filii et Spiritui Sancto… (septies)
Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ACTION ITEM!, Hard-Identity Catholicism, The future and our choices | Tagged
6 Comments

Irritating Trouble

I’m in NYC and I am in trouble.

My laptop is completely dead.

It worked perfectly last evening. I got up this morning, noticed that the little charge indicator light at the power button was illuminated. I pushed the button to turn the laptop on. The light stopped and… nothing. Now, no light. No start. It is a brick.

This obviously is going to affect my connectivity until a) I figure out what’s wrong and can fix it, b) I get a temporary laptop etc., for my time here c) I get home in a few days.

This is very pesky. I bought this laptop a week before I went to Rome. It has functioned well and I have been quite happy with it.

As I type, I am using a Bluetooth keyboard connected to my phone with its WordPress app. But this is not a solution.

I am irritated and baffled.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
Comments Off on Irritating Trouble

From “The Private Diary of Bishop F. Atticus McButterpants” – 25-05-05 – Sink’o dee Mayo!

May 5th 2025,

Dear Diary,

Well, today’s drive back from Black Duck for our state bishops conflab took a flavorful detour. Fr. Gilbert might have perfect hair, but his driving sometimes leaves me anxious, if I’m not asleep in back pretending to do paperwork.  When we got some gas, G managed to back into a food truck. Not just any food truck, mind you!  It was a rolling cathedral of Cuban culinary glory named – I wrote it down – El Sabor de Maria. No one was hurt, unless you count Gilbert’s pride and the truck’s side panel.

The truck cook, a cheerful man named Ernesto in one of those spiffy Yogi Berra shirts, recognized me as the bishop and waved it off like he’d seen far worse and told a story about how once he got hit by a runaway cawinsiniera float.  After exchanging insurance details and holy cards – Fr. Gilbert hands them out like his mother hands out lumpia – we were invited to stay for lunch.   It would have been rude not to accept, right?

And what a lunch! Moho pork that could convert vegans, black beans that made me question my vocation, and fried plantains that tasted like the mercy of God. Fr. Gilbert, still a little shaken, asked if “el pastor dispensation” covered second helpings. I said yes.  Several times.

As we sat on awful plastic stools beside truck, I wondered about divine providence putting that truck in our way on the exact right day, the “sinko de mayo” which they celebrate down there.  At one point, just to lighten things up I asked for some “mayo for the moho” but I don’t think they got it.  Gilbert had a brief coughing thing for a moho. HAH! Anyway, minor collisions and major flavors.

Funny how even when G screws up it turns out okay.

Posted in Diary of Bp. McButterpants, Lighter fare | Tagged
7 Comments

ROME – NYC 25/5– Day 48.25: My view for awhile – UPDATED

Roman sunrise not long time ago at 0537.

Roman sunset will be long after I am gone at 2038.

The Ave Maria Bell: still 2100.

On the way to my last Mass here. Yesterday and today for my Roman Donors.

Vigil of The Ascension.   And in the older calendar the Feast of Augustine of Canterbury.

On the way to the airport, I spotted one of those now rare 6 hour clocks.  I wrote about these when I explained the “Ave Maria Bell”.

UPDATE:

At the airport, lots of people. I think many were finishing cruises.

Also they changed lounges for us. I hate this lounge.  I think next time I won’t bother.

I am so looking forward to a cheeseburger or Chinese. But that will be after a long flight and then that interminable slog to customs etc.

UPDATE:

The back quarter of the plane (A330) was mostly empty.

UPDATE:

Arriving in NYC, our gate was next to the big slope down into the customs and baggage area, so we didn’t have to walk all the way from Montauk.  No lines, bag came fast.  I was from gate to curb … maybe 20 minutes.

Which cheeseburger is mine?

Wow, did this hit the spot.

If I can’t be in Rome, I can at least start out some time in exile with one of these.

 

Posted in On the road, SESSIUNCULA |
5 Comments

Vigil of Ascension – old and new

fullsize_vanni_ascensionHere is something I wrote a loooong time ago – 2006 – for an WDTPRS article in the print version of The Wanderer.  I had a column there for 11 years.

The Wanderer… they have been faithful warriors for a long time.  You could give them some encouragement. With a subscription.  Help them out.

…(I)n some places the Feast of the Ascension, which falls always on a Thursday, has been transferred to this Sunday.  That would make it “Ascension Thursday Sunday”, I suppose. (Eye roll)

The third edition of the Missale Romanum issued in 2002 now provides a Mass for the Vigil of Ascension, which wasn’t in previous editions of the Novus Ordo.  Moreover, the prayers for the new Vigil of Ascension are not the same as those found in the pre-Conciliar Missale for the Vigil.

Also, there are now proper Masses for the days after Ascension, most having alternative collects depending on whether or not in that region Ascension is transferred to Sunday.

What a mess.

And some people wonder why it isn’t perfectly okay to just to celebrate the Novus Ordo in Latin with some lace and stuff.  These ignoramuses do not have an even partial clue.

Since many people do not have access to the prayers for the Vigil of Ascension, let’s look at them this week.

First, here are the antiphons. Ant. ad introitum:  Regna terrae cantata Deo, psallite Domino, qui ascendit super caelum caeli; magnificentia et virtus eius in nubibus, alleluia. (Ps 67:33,35)  Ant. ad communionem: Christus, unam pro peccatis offerens hostiam, in sempiterum sedet in dextera Dei, alleluia.  (Cf. Heb 10:12)

COLLECT:
Deus, cuius Filus hodie in caelos,
Apostolis astantibus, ascendit,
concede nobis, quaesumus,
ut secundum eius promissionem
et ille nobiscum semper in terris
et nos cum eo in caelo vivere mereamur.

This was modified from a prayer in ancient sacramentaries such as the Liber Sacramentorum when it was used on Ascension Thursday having its Station Mass at St. Peter’s Basilica.  Here is some liturgical education for you.  The eucological formulas (the prayers), for the Ascension found in what is sometimes called the Leonine Sacramentary surviving in one 7th century manuscript in Verona (the Veronese Sacramentary) are the oldest prayers we have in the Roman liturgy!  The Missale Romanum and those ancient collections consist principally in prayers for Masses which in fancy liturgist talk are called “eucological formulas”.

You might not immediately recognize astantibus as being from asto or adsto, which that ascendant lexicon of Latin lemmata, the Lewis & Short Dictionary, says means, “to stand at or near a person or thing, to stand by”  The L&S will also inform you that asto has the synonym adsisto.

If you have ever heard the phrase “to assist (adsisto) at Holy Mass” this is the concept: you are present and actively participating.   Of course what many say “active participation” is is dead WRONG… but I digress.

During the Roman Canon, the priest describes the people as circumstantes, “standing around”.  This doesn’t mean they there around the altar with their hands in the their pockets (though I have seen that happen, not rarely). Rather, they are there morally and spiritually “around” the altar, participating each according to their vocation and capacity.

So, circumstantes is used to identify the baptized who are present.

SUPER LITERAL VERSION:
O God, whose Son today ascended
into the heavens as the Apostles were standing close by,
grant us, we beseech You,
that, according to His promise,
we may be worthy both that He lives with us on earth,
and that we live with Him in heaven.

The Apostles, who were adstantes, actively participating in the Lord’s Ascension before, during and after the actual moment if the Ascension, both listened to the Lord and watched the Lord.  Similarly, at Holy Mass we actively participate before, during and after the consecration, both by listening to the Lord speak through the texts and watching what the Lord does in the liturgical action.

LATER ADDITION in 2011:

NEW CORRECTED ICEL (2011):
O God, whose Son today ascended to the heavens
as the Apostles looked on,
grant, we pray, that, in accordance with his promise,
we may be worthy for him to live with us always on earth,
and we with him in heaven
.

When the Second Person took up our human nature into an indestructible bond with His divinity, indestructible, we were thereby destined to sit at God’s right hand, first in Christ and then on our own.  Christ makes us worthy, no one else.

Christ alone.  It’s all His.  And because it’s His, it’s ours.

Posted in EASTER, WDTPRS | Tagged
4 Comments

ROME 25/5– Day 47: Last full day… sniff…

When, you ask, was sunrise in Rome? It was at 5:38. And you will likely ask when the sunset was, too. It was at 20:37.

The Ave Maria for the Curia is in the 21:00 cycle.

In the Venerable calendar, today is the Feast of Venerable Bede. In the New Fangled calendar, it is the Feast of St. Augustine of Canterbury.

Welcome new registrant:

R2D

Tomorrow, is the Vigil of Ascension and the Feast of St. Augustine of Hippo.

After Mass, breakfast was had with The World’s Best Sacristan™.

I defied common sense today for lunch and had risotto with saffron and ossobuco.    So, good, but so heavy.  I couldn’t eat it all.  However, it was the first time since I’ve been here that I had risotto… since before last time, too, I believe.

Last errands today.  Some prayer time also.

It’s quite hard to leave, in fact.

I arranged for a driver to the airport, prepped the fridge and freezer for shut down in the next couple days when the cleaner (bless her) will come in.  There are people who can check on the place and I will maintain my internet for my security cam.   I am almost completely packed except for things that must be done in the morning after Mass and before the car comes.

Please remember me when 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.

If you are into chess, check out the summary of the Norway Chess classical format game between Magnus and, official world champ, Gukesh. It’s engaging and instructive. It’s the first time they’ve clashed in classical since Gukesh defeated Ding. HERE David Howell declared it the “game of the year so far!”

One of the features these tournaments are building in is what they call the “confessional booth”. That is, they go alone into a silenced room and, live on camera, say what they are thinking about the game.

I would be happy to be the chaplain for a large chess event and provide Mass and confessions for the players. Hey FIDE!

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
3 Comments

Oldie ASK FATHER: Blessings that are not in Latin? Wherein Fr. Z rants at length.

NOTE: Today a question arrived in my email box which cited this post.  I took at look and thought that it would be good to share gain.

___ Originally Published on: Feb 2, 2022

I received a somewhat convoluted note about blessings, which contained several implicit questions. I will tease out the essence.

He can’t find a priest to bless things in Latin and it would be very far to drive to find one.

QUAERUNTUR: Why not just use the English translation provided in “Weller” (a three volume set that translated the traditional Rituale Romanum).  Or should the Book of Blessings be used?

I don’t think the Book of Blessings should be used for anything other than a tire block when parking on a slope.  There is only one prayer in the book that blesses the object.  Otherwise, it expresses happy thoughts about someone who might see it or use it someday.  In the Praenotanda there is an explicit repudiation of the Church’s teaching about invocative and constitutive blessings.  It is appalling.

That said, the Church has always been concerned lest people fall into the trap of seeing blessings and sacramentals and sacraments as a kind of theurgy or magic.

We are confident that, when the priest blesses, God blesses in the person of the priest.  We are confident that, when the priest exorcises, God exorcises.  We are confident that when the priest consecrates items or places or persons, God acts in the priest to constitute them as blessed or consecrated, to tear from from the grip of the Prince of this world and set them apart for the King and the advance His Kingdom.

The efficacy of the blessings depends ultimately on God, who desires what is good for us.

However, we do our best to bless and consecrate through outward signs, the gestures and words of, especially, the priest who is alter Christus.

If our blessings are not magic, neither are they nothing.  Gestures and words count.  Latin makes a difference, as exorcists will confirm.  Moreover, the Rituale Romanum, in the edition that was in force at the time of Vatican II and after explicitly states that if Latin is not used the blessing is void.  I am not making that up.

The Rituale Romanum, Title 8, Chapter 1 gives the general rules for blessings. These are also presented in Weller, vol. 3, pp. 2-5.

Note that n. 2 states:

“Benedictiones sive constitutivae sive invocativae invalidae sunt, si adhibita non fuerit formula ab Ecclesia praescripta.   

Both constitutive and invocative blessings are invalid if the form prescribed by the Church is not used.”

Weller’s English translations were never approved for use, even in that interim time after the Council when more English could be used.  The translations are for reference, not use.  The LATIN is approved for use.

The apparent meaning of that, read as it is, is that if priests are using the Weller translation to bless things, Holy Water, etc., they aren’t blessing.    At the end, you have salty water.

HIS SCRIPTIS

  • We cannot limit God.
  • We don’t make the perfect the enemy of the good.
  • People are not bound to do the impossible.

That said…

  • God gives us strong guidance in how to worship Him in a way that pleases Him and we see the fruits.
  • If there is a way to do things better, we should strive to perfect them.
  • People can improve themselves and, for example, learn Latin.

If a priest doesn’t use Latin and instead uses the English translation is something blessed or not?

All I know is that I will always use Latin when I bless holy water.  I will always use Latin to bless objects.  I will always use Latin for the important bits, such as forms of sacraments and exorcisms.

I am never going to leave anyone with the slightest whisp of a doubt about what just happened.  When you come to me for blessings or sacramentals or sacraments, I owe that to you.  It is my duty to make sure that you have no doubt as to what happened.  Latin always resolves that and the vernacular can resolve that.

Latin, for me, is now second nature.  It isn’t for a lot of priests.

These are troubling times.

When the People of Israel broke covenant after covenant with God, God eventually imposed Law on them which reflected not just their state of being chosen by Him, but reflected also their wickedness.  This is why, for example, God allowed for divorce, which, as Christ says, was not so before.

It seems to me that the Church is so messed up right now, and our Catholic identity is so violated and wounded and scrambled, that latitude has to be provided, because Deus providebit.

How do I mean this?

Take analogy of our sacred liturgical worship as, now, having been forced onto a continuum of Catholic identity, ranging from clueless to well-informed and dedicated.

Using Paul’s image of the newly converted being like children who can only take milk, not ready for solid food, in these our times we have to work within reality, not fantasy.

The hic et nunc has to be considered.  We have priests of the Latin Church, the Roman Rite, who have no idea about how to celebrate in their Church’s Rites and don’t know Latin.  This was purposeful on the part of those who both wrote and then warped what was written for the reform of the liturgy.  This was systematically done by those in charge of priestly formation.  They destroyed Catholic identity guttatim.  Drop by drop.  They undermined priesthood, brick from brick.   The result, hic et nunc, is what it is, and it is not what it isn’t.  That sounds tautological, I know, but we have to sober ourselves with this smelling salt and get the cobwebs out of our heads.

So, today, if a well-meaning priest, who through no fault of his own, blesses something using the English translation in Well, does he bless or not?

Here are the factors I put into the scales of my mind.

  • God loves us and wants us to have blessed things.
  • The Church without doubt said that the approved text, meaning Latin, has to be used.
  • God knows that 99% of priests don’t know Latin because the Church has, manifestly contrary to the law, cheated them out of that critical aspect of their formation and identity.
  • God is not limited by the Church’s positive law concerning blessings.
  • Priests of the Roman Catholic Church ought to pray like Roman Catholic priests.
  • The Rituale Romanum itself states that it is a starting point, a reference point for the development of local rituals.
  • It is extremely important to maintain the categories of constitutive and invocative blessings against modernist encroachment and the campaign against them.
  • We are our rites!
  • The wider world is affected by what we do regarding sacred objects, places and persons.  Getting it right is more important than our comfort zone.

Putting all of that into the mental hopper and letting it macerate, when a priest blesses (constitutive) using some other form than what is in the book, I am not sure what happens.  I am inclined to think that, God being merciful, something happens.   If, for example, someone were to walk up to me and ask me to bless the Rosary she was holding out, and if I were to make the sign of the Cross over it while saying something like, Benedictus benedicat (which I got from my old mentor the holy and late, great Card. Mayer), I am inclined to think that the Rosary was blessed.

You will object, why shouldn’t I have just memorized the Latin prayer for the blessing of a Rosary?

We have to fight to recover these things and use them properly.  In the meantime, we have to be smart and flexible.

Allow me to go back to my food analogy for liturgy. This might seem a little insulting but it is just intended to make a point about the continuum we are on.

In 99% of a man’s day and activities, it is  beneath his dignity to scrunch up his face and make airplane noises while moving a spoon around with his hand.  People would think he was nuts.   OR… if he is sitting in front of the high-chair of his little son, who can only eat goop and must sometimes be convinced to eat it, then that man is not doing anything beneath his dignity.  On the contrary, he is performing a sacrificial act of love for his child.  He sacrifices his dignity – becoming more dignified yet – for the sake of his boy’s eating something that will help him to grow out of the need to eat that sort of thing in that sort of way.  He helps his boy move up the food and eating continuum to more complicated foods eaten in a more human way.  Infants eat in the way that infants eat, not in the way that adults eat.  To force an infant to eat steak and cabernet is abuse, not love.

This is our situation with a large number of those who miraculously still self-identify as Catholic.  Some can take the solid food of the Vetus Ordo, with its greater challenge and deeper apophatic approach to an encounter with mystery.  Some are still pretty much bound up in the emphasis on the immanent in the Novus Ordo.  Some are ready to make a move quickly and others need more time.  Some are ready for steak and cabernet and others still need goop, or perhaps SpaghettiOs if they are into the Novus Ordo with some traditional elements.  Eventually, they can handle a slice of bologna and maybe stab at it with a fork that they have to hold in various ways while they learn and their dexterity improves.  You get the idea.  Eventually, it is china, linens, crystal, sharp knives and bistecca alla fiorentina with a bottle Tignanello.

Do not make the mistake of thinking that the toddler with Spaghetti O’s is bad because he can’t handle spaghetti all’arrabbiata.  Do not make the mistake of thinking that mom and dad who give their toddler SpaggettiOs are bad.    They would be bad if, once junior is grown and able to take more and better, they keep him eating pureed carrots in a special chair.   They would be infantalizing him, which would be abuse of their child and beneath their own dignity as parents.   Of course if the parents had been kept in an infantile state themselves, they wouldn’t know any better.

Keeping people down liturgically is just plain wrong.   However, if priests and bishops don’t have a clue themselves… what to do?  Priests and bishops are included in this.   Some priests are at the level of the boy in the high chair when in comes to liturgical identity.  Remember: we are our rites! Alas, they listen to the “experts” who did the infantalization in the first place and the closed circles just grinds on and on.

To move this into the plain of the Church’s teaching on morals, while we acknowledge that some people are in sinful situations, we don’t leave them in sinful situations.  Understanding that movement and improvement takes time, we don’t just excuse what they are doing because, after all, the ideals we have been presented are just too hard for some people.   No.  We are our rites and our rites are doctrine.   With the help of authority and of grace, we must be working toward the ideal, even if it is painful.  This is true for our moral lives and also our sacred liturgical worship, by which we individually and collectively fulfill the virtue of Religion.

Our Catholic identity is a mess.  There are correctives and remedies.   But the therapy will have its painful moments.  But they MUST be undertaken.

I’ve had injuries that required painful therapeutic exercises.   Oh, how I didn’t want to do them.  But I wanted recovery enough so that I was willing to deal with the discomfort.   In the long run, it paid off.  I never want to have that pain again, but it worked.

I am reminded of the Lord’s words in John 16, using the image of painful child-birth:

21 When a woman is in travail she has sorrow, because her hour has come; but when she is delivered of the child, she no longer remembers the anguish, for joy that a child[b] is born into the world. 22 So you have sorrow now, but I will see you again and your hearts will rejoice, and no one will take your joy from you. 23 In that day you will ask nothing of me. Truly, truly, I say to you, if you ask anything of the Father, he will give it to you in my name. 24 Hitherto you have asked nothing in my name; ask, and you will receive, that your joy may be full.

We have to get through this dark time together, in solidarity, with joy, hopeful determination and elbow grease.

Are you asking for restoration of our Catholic identity and sacred worship in the Holy Name of Jesus?

Posted in Latin, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Our Catholic Identity, Save The Liturgy - Save The World | Tagged ,
3 Comments

ROME 25/5– Days 46: anniversary day

This warm sunny day, the sun rose to make it so at 5:38. Cooling will commence in earnest at 20:37.

The Ave Maria bell is in the 21:00 cycle.

It is the feast of St. Philip Neri, my great friend and patron. His body is not far from where I type this, less than five minutes if I hit the green light to get across the Corso. I stopped into the Chiesa Nuova this morning after my own Mass.

Today I celebrated Mass for my parents.

Yesterday I celebrated Mass for all my benefactors.

Tomorrow I will say for all my ROMAN donors.

It is such an awesome grace to be able to offer Mass for intention which God’s understands better than I, little priest.

One of The Parish’s many reliquaries of St. Philp.

St. Philip is Co-Patron of Rome with St. Peter.

This is how The World’s Best Sacristan™ put out my vestments today.

Off to visit St. Philip’s tomb in the Chiesa Nuova.

Today they took of the grate in front of the tomb.

How I love the light in Rome at this time of year.  It is so hard to leave.

Supper tonight with The Great Roman™ a friend now of “the years of Jesus”, one of the most honorable men I have every known.

We split a first.   Frankly, we ordered one thing and they brough another, but it worked out.

Which rombo is mine?

Elle Effe… they do a good job.  I have a feeling that they are slightly better organized during the day than the evening.  However when “cook” is on, he’s on.  He was on tonight.

Please remember me when 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.

Don’t forget the monks of Norcia!

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
1 Comment