Old Holy Trinity German National Parish

Thursday, January 31, 2008

St. Giovanni Melchior Bosco

St. John BoscoBeing a product of one of the Salesian Society's schools I always look forward to the Feast of St. John Bosco every year. In Los Ángeles County, where I grew up, we are privileged to have not one, but three Salesian schools for young men. While I never felt a connection with the modern Salesian spirituality, I did enjoy learning about Don Bosco and his trials in trying to educate the Catholic youth of the Piedmont in the Kingdom of Sardinia. Of particular interest are the prophetic dreams of St. John Bosco, which he wrote down and can still be found in print by TAN Books. These were frequently read to us by the Salesian brothers during our religion classes.

From The Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913:
St. Giovanni Melchior Bosco

(Or St. John Bosco; Don Bosco.)

Founder of the Salesian Society. Born of poor parents in a little cabin at Becchi, a hill-side hamlet near Castelnuovo, Piedmont, Italy, 16 August, 1815; died 31 January 1888; declared Venerable by Pius X, 21 July, 1907. [Note: Pope Pius XI beatified him in 1929 and canonized him in 1934.]

When he was little more than two years old his father died, leaving the support of three boys to the mother, Margaret Bosco. John's early years were spent as a shepherd and he received his first instruction at the hands of the parish priest. He possessed a ready wit, a retentive memory, and as years passed his appetite for study grew stronger. Owing to the poverty of the home, however, he was often obliged to turn from his books to the field, but the desire of what he had to give up never left him. In 1835 he entered the seminary at Chieri and after six years of study was ordained priest on the eve of Trinity Sunday by Archbishop Franzoni of Turin.

Leaving the seminary, Don Bosco went to Turin where he entered zealously upon his priestly labours. It was here that an incident occurred which opened up to him the real field of effort of his afterlife. One of his duties was to accompany Don Cafasso upon his visits to the prisons of the city, and the condition of the children confined in these places, abandoned to the most evil influences, and with little before them but the gallows, made such a indelible impression upon his mind that he resolved to devote his life to the rescue of these unfortunate outcasts. On the eighth of December, 1841, the feast of the Immaculate Conception, while Don Bosco was vesting for Mass, the sacristan drove from the Church a ragged urchin because he refused to serve Mass. Don Bosco heard his cries and recalled him, and in the friendship which sprang up between the priest and Bartolomeo Garelli was sown the first seed of the "Oratory", so called, no doubt, after the example of St. Philip Neri and because prayer was its prominent feature. Don Bosco entered eagerly upon the task of instructing this first pupil of the streets; companions soon joined Bartolomeo, all drawn by a kindness they had never known, and in February, 1842, the Oratory numbered twenty boys, in March of the same year, thirty, and in March, 1846, four hundred.

As the number of boys increased, the question of a suitable meeting-place presented itself. In good weather walks were taken on Sundays and holidays to spots in the country about Turin where lunch was eaten, and realizing the charm which music held for the untamed spirits of his disciples Don Bosco organized a band for which some old brass instruments were procured. In the autumn of 1844 he was appointed assistant chaplain to the Rifugio, where Don Borel entered enthusiastically into his work. With the approval of Archbishop Franzoni, two rooms were secured adjoining the Rifugio and converted into a chapel, which was dedicated to St. Francis de Sales. The members of the Oratory now gathered at the Rifugio, and numbers of boys from the surrounding district applied for admission. It was about this time (1845) that Don Bosco began his night schools and with the closing of the factories the boys flocked to his rooms where he and Don Borel instructed them in rudimentary branches.

The success of the Oratory at the Rifugio was not of long duration. To his great distress Don Bosco was obliged to give up his rooms and from this on he was subjected to petty annoyances and obstacles which, at times, seemed to spell the ruin of his undertaking. His perseverance in the face of all difficulties led many to the conclusion that he was insane, and an attempt was even made to confine him in an asylum. Complaints were lodged against him, declaring his community to be a nuisance, owing to the character of the boys he befriended. From the Rifugio the Oratory was moved to St. Martin's, to St. Peter's Churchyard, to three rooms in Via Cottolengo, where the night schools were resumed, to an open field, and finally to a rough shed upon the site of which grew up an Oratory that counted seven hundred members. Don Bosco took lodgings nearby, where he was joined by his mother. "Mama Margaret", as Don Bosco's mother came to be known, gave the last ten years of her life in devoted service to the little inmates of this first Salesian home. When she joined her son at the Oratory the outlook was not bright. But sacrificing what small means she had, even to parting with her home, its furnishings, and her jewelry, she brought all the solicitude and love of a mother to these children of the streets. The evening classes increased and gradually dormitories were provided for many who desired to live at the Oratory. Thus was founded the first Salesian Home which now houses about one thousand boys.

The municipal authorities by this time had come to recognize the importance of the work which Don Bosco was doing, and he began with much success a fund for the erection of technical schools and workshops. These were all completed without serious difficulty. In 1868 to meet the needs of the Valdocco quarter of Turin, Don Bosco resolved to build a church. Accordingly a plan was drawn in the form of a cross covering an area of 1,500 sq. yards. He experienced considerable difficulty in raising the necessary money, but the charity of some friends finally enabled him to complete it at a cost of more than a million francs (about 200,000). The church was consecrated 9 June, 1868, and placed under the patronage of Our Lady, Help of Christians. In the same year in which Don Bosco began the erection of the church fifty priests and teachers who had been assisting him formed a society under a common rule which Pius IX, provisionally in 1869, and finally in 1874, approved.


Character and Growth of the Oratory

Any attempt to explain the popularity of the Oratory among the classes to which Don Bosco devoted his life would fail without an appreciation of his spirit which was its life. For his earliest intercourse with poor boys he had never failed to see under the dirt, the rags, and the uncouthness the spark which a little kindness and encouragement would fan into a flame. In his vision or dream which he is said to have had in his early boyhood, wherein it was disclosed to him what his life work would be, a voice said to him: "Not with blows, but with charity and gentleness must you draw these friends to the path of virtue." And whether this be accounted as nothing more than a dream, that was in reality the spirit with which he animated his Oratory. In the earlier days when the number of his little disciples was slender he drew them about him by means of small presents and attractions, and by pleasant walks to favorite spots in the environs of Turin. These excursions occurring on Sunday, Don Bosco would say Mass in the village church and give a short instruction on the Gospel; breakfast would then be eaten, followed by games; and in the afternoon Vespers would be chanted, a lesson in Catechism given, and the Rosary recited. It was a familiar sight to see him in the field surrounded by kneeling boys preparing for confession.

Don Bosco's method of study knew nothing of punishment. Observance of rules was obtained by instilling a true sense of duty, by removing assiduously all occasions for disobedience, and by allowing no effort towards virtue, how trivial soever it might be, to pass unappreciated. He held that the teacher should be father, adviser, and friend, and he was the first to adopt the preventive method. Of punishment he said: "As far as possible avoid punishing . . . . try to gain love before inspiring fear." And in 1887 he wrote: "I do not remember to have used formal punishment; and with God's grace I have always obtained, and from apparently hopeless children, not alone what duty exacted, but what my wish simply expressed." In one of his books he has discussed the causes of weakness of character, and derives them largely from a misdirected kindness in the rearing of children. Parents make a parade of precocious talents: the child understands quickly, and his sensitiveness enraptures all who meet him, but the parents have only succeeded in producing an affectionate, perfected, intelligent animal. The chief object should be to form the will and to temper the character. In all his pupils Don Bosco tried to cultivate a taste for music, believing it to be a powerful and refining influence. "Instruction", he said, "is but an accessory, like a game; knowledge never makes a man because it does not directly touch the heart. It gives more power in the exercise of good or evil; but alone it is an indifferent weapon, wanting guidance." He always studied, too, the aptitudes and vocations of his pupils, and to an almost supernatural quickness and clearness of insight into the hearts of children must be ascribed to no small part of his success. In his rules he wrote: "Frequent Confession, frequent Communion, daily Mass: these are the pillars which should sustain the whole edifice of education." Don Bosco was an indefatigable confessor, devoting days to the work among his children. He recognized that gentleness and persuasion alone were not enough to bring to the task of education. He thoroughly believed in play as a means of arousing childish curiosity -- more than this, he places it among his first recommendations, and for the rest he adopted St. Philip Neri's words: "Do as you wish, I do not care so long as you do not sin."


Statistics

At the time of Don Bosco's death in 1888 there were 250 houses of the Salesian Society in all parts of the world, containing 130,000 children, and from which there annually went out 18,000 finished apprentices. In the motherhouse Don Bosco had selected the brightest of his pupils, taught them Italian, Latin, French, and mathematics, and this band formed a teaching corps for the new homes which quickly grew up in other places. Up to 1888 over six thousand priests had gone forth from Don Bosco's institutions, 1,200 of whom had remained in the society. The schools begin with the child in his first instruction and lead, for those who choose it, to seminaries for the priesthood. The society also conducts Sunday schools, evening schools for adult workmen, schools for those who enter the priesthood late in life, technical schools, and printing establishments for the diffusion of good reading in different languages. Its members also have charge of hospitals and asylums, nurse the sick, and do prison work, especially in rural districts. The society has houses in the following countries: Italy, Spain, Portugal, France, England, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, Palestine, and Algiers; in Central America, Mexico, in South America, Patagonia, Terra del Fuego, Ecuador, Brazil, Paraguay, The Argentine Republic, Bolivia, Uruguay, Chile, Peru, Venezuela, and Colombia. In the United States the Salesians have four churches: Sts. Peter and Paul and Corpus Christi in San Francisco, California; St. Josephs in Oakland, California; and the Transfiguration in New York City. Very Rev. Michael Borghino, Provincial for America, resides in San Francisco.

St. John Bosco, pray for vocations.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Free Palestine!!! ¡¡¡Viva Palestina Libre!!!

Palestinian BorderSomeone posted this letter on ByzCath. It is from a priest in the Holy Land:

Restrictions by Israel on Christians Threatening the Future of the Church

The Israeli Ministry of Interior decided to limit the entry of holders of valid visas to “one entry” or “no entry”. Initially, this measure was meant to prohibit entry to those coming from “enemy countries”. Now however, it includes Jordanians and Egyptians as well, the only two Arab countries who signed a peace agreement with Israel; among those holders of visas being restricted are priests, religious men and women, seminarians and other church personnel.

What may seem a normal restriction imposes grave consequences:

The Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, which includes Palestine, Israel and Jordan, will be divided, as Jordanian priests and church personnel will not be allowed to move between Jordan and Israel/Palestine. The same applies to the Custody of the Holy Land, the Melkite Church and the religious congregations.

Seminarians at the Latin Patriachal Seminary in Beit Jala, most of whom are Jordanians, will not be allowed to visit their families for Christmas, Easter or any other occasion including family emergencies. If they do visit them, they will loose their residence visa. Applying for a new visa while they are outside the country, according to the new Israeli regulations, will take 3-4 months. Jordanians can leave the country, but re-entry is not guaranteed.

Jordanians, and other Arab priests, have to stay in the country without leaving it, and when their residence visa expires, they have to leave the country, apply for a new visa before they can go back to their parishes and ministries. The waiting period can be 3-4 months, with no guarantee they will obtain it. The whole work and life of the Church is in jeopardy by this policy.

If Israel continue with the new regulations, the consequences will be dire:

1. by June 2008, the Catholic Church will loose many of its clergy, many of whom are Jordanians;

2. the Seminary, founded in 1852 and which formed all the clergy and bishops of the Latin Patriarchate (256 since 1852), will be closed;

3. and many parishes will be left priestless.


These new restrictions are added to the already existing ones:

We witness long delays and complicated bureaucratic procedures to obtain visas for the personnel the Church needs for its work; the refusal to give or renew visas without any explanation. The freedom of the Church in the matter is stated in the Fundamental Agreement between the Holy See and the State of Israel in 1993, and never ratified by the Israeli Parliament (the Kenesset).

Palestinian priests are not allowed to enter Israel or Jerusalem; they may be given “permits” by the Israeli military authorities, restricting the entry points, the duration of their stay, restricted hours, no use of a car, being subject to humiliating search on checkpoints, and canceling the permits any time or with the frequent closures “of the Territories”. This restriction does not allow any normal pastoral work or any participation at the religious ceremonies in the Holy Places or the monthly meetings/spiritual retreats at the Latin Patriarchate.

Palestinian Christians, as it is the case of all Palestinians, are not allowed to go to Jerusalem and/or visit the Holy Places. When new restrictions are imposed on the pastors, seminarians and the Church personnel, the life of the Church will be gravely affected.

What is needed now is for Israel to:

1. respect religious freedom;

2. respect the status of the Holy Land as the center of the life of the Church;

3. respect the freedom of the Church to exercise her pastoral work;

4. respect the engagement taken in the “Fundamental Agreement” with the Holy See;

5. allow the Church personnel to move freely, by simply giving them “Multi-entries” on their residence visas.


If the restrictions continue, the future of the Church in the Holy Land is gravely threatened.

God bless you

Yours in Christ,

Fr. F. (Name removed for privacy)

If you feel very strongly about this issue write to the Israeli Ambassador:

Ambassador Sallai Meridor
Israeli Embassy
3514 International Drive, N.W.
Washington, DC 20008

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Godless Communism v. Holy Church

St. Joseph's Cathedral, HanoiFrom Catholic World News:
Viet Catholics clash with police in Hanoi

Hanoi, Jan. 25, 2008 (CWNews.com) - Angered by the Vietnamese government's refusal to restore Church possession of the office once occupied by the apostolic nuncio in Hanoi, more than 2,000 Catholics demonstrated at the site on January 25. Some were beaten and taken into custody by local police.

Traffic came to a halt in Hanoi on Friday when Catholic priests, religious, and laity marched in procession from St. Joseph cathedral to the building that once housed the apostolic delegation and is currently being used by the government for commercial enterprises (the garden of what was the nunciature is now a parking lot for government officials). The morning protest was followed by another demonstration after the Mass celebrated for the 89th birthday of Cardinal Paul Joseph Pham Dinh Tung, the retired Archbishop of Hanoi.

During the second protest, some Catholic women climbed over a gate to place flowers at a statue of the Virgin Mary inside the building. There they were confronted by security officials. Disregarding the women's explanations for venturing into the building, the guards attacked them with batons, kicking and cuffing them. When several other protestors broke through the gate to rescue the women, they too were embroiled in the scuffle with police.

The protestors took control the building for a while-- long enough to put up a large cross in the garden-- before the security force was reinforced by local police units.

As they regained control of the building, police made several arrests. A local source reported that officials are still looking for others who were actively involved in the protest.

The January 25 clash was the most serious conflict yet in a confrontation that began in December. Hanoi's Catholics have demonstrated daily at the old nuncio's office. Today's demonstrations were the largest to date, coming in the face of warnings that the government might take action against the protests.
Saint Joseph, priez pour eux!

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Chaldeans & Assyrians Face Extinction

From Thursday's issue of the California Catholic Daily:
Mass in the Chaldean Rite
When there’s persecution, what can you do?

One of the world’s oldest Christian peoples, the Assyrians of Iraq and Iran, find refuge in California but face ethnic extinction

“Operation Iraqi Freedom,” the moniker for the United States’ war in Iraq, has spelled, not so much freedom, but exile and dispersion for one of the oldest Christian peoples in the world – the Assyrians.

The Central Valley town of Turlock has an ethnic club that, for over 60 years, has served as a cultural center for the small but ancient Assyrian nation. Beginning with Turkish massacres during World War I, the Christian Assyrians, centered in Mesopotamia (modern day Iraq), have been coming to California. These were joined by other Assyrians who fled Iran after the revolution that overthrew the Shah in 1979. But the flight of refugees after the Gulf War and the current Iraq war threaten to end the existence of the Assyrians as a distinct ethnic group, said a Jan. 5 Associated Press story.

The Assyrian Church, which dates back to the earliest days of the Christian faith, eventually came to embrace the teachings of the fifth century archbishop of Constantinople, Nestorius, condemned by the Council of Ephesus in 431. Since then, the Assyrian Church has been separated from the Catholic and Orthodox churches – though a large number of Nestorian Assyrians came into union with Rome, beginning in the 16th century, forming the Chaldean Catholic Church – which today is larger than the Assyrian Church.

The Oct. 23, 2006 Intelligencer reported United Nations survey, saying that over 200,000 Assyrian Christians fled Iraq after the U.S. invasion of 2003. The number of refugees increased in 2004 on account of terrorist bombings of Christian churches, as well as kidnappings and assassinations, in Iraq. By 2006, only 20,000 Assyrians remained in Iraq, according to the U.S. State Department. Though many refugees came to the U.S., others have gone to Canada and Europe.

Isaac Samow, an Assyrian Christian who lives in Modesto, told Associated Press, "My children speak my language, but what about my grandchildren? If there are no Assyrians left in Mesopotamia, how will our culture live?" Samow, with his wife and seven children, fled Iran after the ’79 revolution.

The Assyrian American Civic Club of Turlock, with similar clubs in California and elsewhere, works to keep Assyrian culture alive with festivals as well as a radio station that carries Assyrian music and news. The club raises money to help Assyrians in Iraq. An Iranian-Assyrian, Fred Betmaleck, however, told Associated Press that the club encourages Assyrians not to leave Iraq. “But, he said, “when there’s persecution, what can you do?”

One reason Assyrians are persecuted by Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds is that they are perceived as being pro-American. Many speak English along with their Assyrian language and so work as translators.

According to the web site, christiansofiraq.com, Assyrians suffered during Saddam Hussein’s wars with the Kurds with the destruction of Assyrian churches, villages, and the driving of Assyrians from their homeland. They were forced to give their children Arabic names.

“The fall of Saddam which was hoped to bring peace to Iraq has unleashed religious violence against the Christian community in Iraq,” says the web site. “Unless special attention is given to their plight by the US and the Iraqi government this ancient people will continue to suffer grievously as they have in the past.”

Friday, January 25, 2008

The Mozarabs Go 'Ad Orientem'

I just came across this video that was posted earlier this month on You Tube. It is a celebration of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass according to the Novus Ordo of the Mozarabic Rite. After the liturgical changes to the Roman Rite in the 1960s, the other Western Rites (Mozarabic, Ambrosian, Dominican, &c.) followed suit and adopted their own changes. However, a notable difference in the video below is that this Mass, celebrated on New Year's Day, was celebrated ad orientem. Very encouraging!



For those of you who are not familiar with the Mozarabic Rite it is one of the ancient rites of the Catholic Church. The liturgy as we know it to-day developed in Spain during the Muslim occupation. It was once widely used on the Iberian Peninsula (the Rituale Mozarabum was also used in some parts of South America for weddings, funerals, &c. up until the 1960s), but the Roman Rite mostly replaced it after the Reconquista. To-day this rite is mostly confined to the Primatial See of Spain--Toledo--where there is a special chapel in the cathedral for this rite. As well, there are also a few Mozarabic parishes in the city and a few more scattered throughout Southern Spain.

Here is a little bit more information from The Catholic Encyclopedia:
The name "Mozarabic Rite" is given to the rite used generally in Spain and in what afterwards became Portugal from the earliest times of which we have any information down to the latter part of the eleventh century, and still surviving in the Capilla Muzárabe inToledo cathedral and in the chapel of San Salvador or Talavera, in the old cathedral of Salamanca. The name is not a good one. It originated in the fact that, after its abolition in Christian Spain, the rite continued to be used by the Christians in the Moorish dominions who were known as Mazárabes or Muzárabes. The form Mostárabes is also found. The derivation of the word is not quite certain, but the best theory seems to be that it is musta’rab, the participle of the tenth form of the verb ’araba, and that it means a naturalized Arab or one who has adopted Arab customs or nationality, an Arabized person. Some, with less probability, have made it a Latin or Spanish Compound, Mixto-Arabic. The meanings, which are not far apart, applied entirely to the persons who used the rite in its later period, and not to the rite itself, which has no sign of any Arab influence. The names Gothic, Toledan, Isidorian, have also been applied to the rite–the first referring to its development during the time of the Visigothic kingdom of Spain, the second to the metropolitan city which was its headquarters, and the third to the idea that it owed, if not its existence, at any rate a considerable revision to St. Isidore of Seville. Dom Férotin (Liber Ordinum) prefers Rite Wisigothique.

Its origin is still discussed, and the various theories have been already set forth under AMBROSIAN RITE, CELTIC RITE, and GALLICAN RITE. Suffice it to say that whatever theory applies to the Gallican Rite applies equally to the Mozarabic, which is so nearly identical with it in construction as to leave no doubt of a common origin. The theory of Pinius (op. cit. in bibliography) to the effect that the Goths brought with them from Constantinople and Asia Minor a Greek Liturgy, which, combined with the already existing Romano-Spanish Rite, formed the new rite of Spain, is not founded on more than conjecture. There is no definite information concerning the Spanish variety of the Hispano-Gallican Rite until the end of the sixth and beginning of the seventh century (that is to say, until the period of transition from Arianism to Catholicism in the Visigothic kingdom), and, since the whole of Spain, including the Suevic kingdom in Galicia which had been annexed by the Visigothic king Leovigild, was then under the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of Toledo, it may be presumed that the Toledo Rite was used throughout the whole peninsula. This had not been the case somewhat earlier. In 538 Profuturus, Bishop of Braga and Metropolitan of the Suevic kingdom, had consulted Pope Vigilius on liturgical matters. Vigilius sent him rather full information concerning the Roman usages in the Mass and in baptism. The Council of Braga (561), held at the time of the conversion of the Arian Suevi to Catholicism, decided (cc, iv, v) that the orders of Mass and baptism obtained from Rome by Profuturus should be exclusively used in the kingdom. This probably continued as long as the Suevi remained independent, and perhaps until the conversion of the Visigothic king Recared to Catholicism in 589. Though until this date the kings and the Teutonic ruling class were Arians, the native Spanish population was largely Catholic, and the rite–which was possibly revised and added to by St. Leander of Seville and the first Council of Toledo in 589, described and perhaps arranged by his brother and successor, St. Isidore (d. 636), and regulated by the Fourth Council ofToledo in 633–was no doubt that previously in use among the Spanish Catholics. This is confirmed by the scanty liturgical decrees of the various Spanish councils of the sixth century. What the Arians used we have no means of knowing, and there is no reason to suppose that, whatever it was, its influence continued after the conversion of Recared and the submission of the Arian bishops. But the rite described by St. Isidore, allowing of course for the modifications and variations of many centuries, is substantially that now know as the Mozarabic.

Dom Marius Férotin, O.S.B. (to whom the present writer is indebted for much help), in his edition of the Mozarabic "Liber Ordinum", dismisses the idea of any Oriental origin, and describes it as a purely Western rite, "the general framework and numerous ceremonies of which were imported from Italy (probably from Rome)", while the remainder (lessons, prayers, hymns, etc.) is the work of Spanish bishops and doctors, with additions from Africa and Gaul. Without accepting the Italian or Roman origin as more than a very reasonable conjecture, we may take this as an excellent generalization. There was a period of development during the seventh century under St. Isidore, who was the movingspirit of the Council of Toledo (657-67), to whom certain masses are attributed, and St. Julian (680-90), who, according to his biographer and successor, Felix, wrote a Mass-book "de toto circulo anni", and a book of collects, as a revision of the old books with additions of his own. But after the Moorish invasion, which began in 710, the Spanish Christians had little leisure for improving their liturgies, and, except for some prayers, hymns, and masses attributed to Abbot Salvus of Albelda (tenth century), nothing seems to have been added to the rite from the eighth to the eleventh century. In 870 Charles the Bald, King of the Franks, and afterwards emperor, wishing to see what the ancient Gallican Rite had been like, had priests sent from Spain to say the Toledan Mass before him. In the latter part of the eighth century, the Spanish Rite had fallen under some suspicion owing to quotations cited by Elipandus of Toledo in support of his Adoptionist theories, and the Council of Frankfort (794) spoke somewhat disparagingly of possible Moslem influence on it. Some of the passages still remain, in spite of Alcuin's suggestion that the original and proper readings must have been assumptio and assumptus, not adoptio and adoptatus (or adopticus); but they all can bear an orthodox explanation. It was in consequence of this suspicion that in 924 John X sent a legate (Zanedo, Zannello, or Jannello) to Santiago to examine the Spanish Rite. He reported favourably upon it, and the pope gave it a new approbation, changing only, as Sr. Moraleda y Estaban says (El Rito Mozárabe), the Words of Consecration to the Roman Use. This condition is still observed, but whether that has always been the case since 924 or not, there is no evidence to show. The old Spanish formula is given in the modern books–"ne antiquitas ignoretur", as Leslie says in his notes to the Mozarabic Missal–but the Roman is used in actual practice.
The full article can be read here: Mozarabic Rite.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Philadelphia Archdiocese Ignores Pope

Like many other archdioceses in the United States, Philadelphia has finally issued its own guidelines that contradict the text of Summorum Pontificum. While St. Charles Seminary will begin teaching courses on the Extraordinary Use of the Roman Rite, the Archdiocese of Philadelphia has issued some restrictions on the Traditional Latin Mass.

One of the guidelines is that priests must "demonstrate competence" in saying the Traditional Latin Mass to the regional auxiliary bishop or his delegate. This, of course, begs the question: is the same standard used for the priests to celebrate the Novus Ordo? Or do I smell a double standard?

From The Catholic Standard & Times:

Father Daniel J. Kehoe celebrates Mass at Our Lady of Consolation. Altar servers are laymen Chris Cridge and Steve Cooper. (CS&T file photo)


Mass in ‘Extraordinary Form’
Priests receive guidelines for traditional Latin Mass


By Lou Baldwin
Special to The CS&T

Cardinal Justin Rigali has sent a letter to all priests of the Archdiocese announcing he has promulgated guidelines for the implementation of new norms set by Pope Benedict XVI for the Mass familiar worldwide through the 1960s, which was celebrated mainly in Latin.

The Holy Father issued the new norms last July in his apostolic letter, Summorum Pontificum.

In Cardinal Rigali’s Jan. 8 letter, he encouraged all priests who wish to celebrate the 1962 Roman Missal Mass — now officially called the Extraordinary Form of the Mass of the Roman Rite — to avail themselves of a six-week program that will be offered by the Theological Institute for Priests at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary.

The program, which begins Jan. 24, “will offer priests the opportunity to study the theology and rubrics of the Extraordinary Form so that Mass may be celebrated with the proper dignity and understanding,” the Cardinal wrote.

The 1962 Mass contained the final amendments, promulgated by Blessed John XXIII, to the Tridentine Mass, which was originally issued by St. Paul V in 1570 after the Council of Trent.

The amended 1962 Mass was in general use through the Second Vatican Council.

In 1970, Pope Paul VI promulgated the missal that is now officially the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite.

Two archdiocesan parishes, Holy Saviour in Norristown and Our Lady of Consolation in Philadelphia, were already celebrating, with the necessary indult, a weekly Mass according to the 1962 missal prior to the issuance of Summorum Pontificum.

“I am grateful to these parishes for their generous response to the needs of the faithful as they continue to celebrate the Mass according to the Extraordinary Form,” Cardinal Rigali wrote.

The guidelines, the Cardinal said, were issued “after consultation with the Council of Priests as well as with other priests of the Archdiocese. I pray that these guidelines will assist all clergy to respond appropriately and generously to the pastoral needs of the faithful in their care.”

Father Brian P. Hennessy, assistant to the vicar for the clergy, said the six-week series will be presented by Msgr. Charles L. Sangermano and Msgr. Michael K. Magee, both of whom have been celebrating Extraordinary Form Masses at the parishes where they are offered.

Father G. Dennis Gill, a former director of sacred liturgy at the North American College in Rome, commented: “This was not an easy decision on the part of the Holy Father. One of his chief aims is the authentic celebration of the sacred liturgy, whether in the ordinary or the extraordinary form.

“Aside from any reconciliation with disaffected Catholics because of liturgical reform,” Father Gill said, “Pope Benedict’s desire is to promote the celebration of the sacred liturgy in either form, with the sacrality of the older form mentoring the current form.”

Lou Baldwin is a member of St. Leo parish and a freelance writer.


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Highlights of Cardinal Rigali’s coordinating guidelines for the implementation of Summorum Pontificum (emphases mine):


• A priest is qualified to celebrate the Extraordinary Form when he possesses the requisite knowledge of the rubrics of the Mass and he is competent in the Latin language. If he wishes to celebrate the Extraordinary Form publicly, he must demonstrate this required competence to the regional auxiliary bishop or his delegate. The same requirement holds for deacons who are asked to participate in a Mass or sacred liturgy in the Extraordinary Form.

• For Masses without a congregation, the Extraordinary Form may be celebrated any day except during the Easter Triduum. The faithful may attend such a Mass if they ask to be admitted of their own free will. An additional Mass is never to be celebrated at the same time a public Mass is being celebrated in the same church or oratory.

• A public Mass in the Extraordinary Form with a congregation may be celebrated when a stable group of the faithful makes a request of the pastor. The pastor must first consult with the regional auxiliary bishop before acceding to such a request. The Mass may be celebrated by a priest who has demonstrated his competence to celebrate in the Extraordinary Form.

• The Extraordinary Form may be permitted by the pastor for the celebration of other sacraments, funerals or occasional celebrations when requested by the lay faithful. The pastor is to consult with the regional auxiliary bishop before acceding to such a request and also, if he cannot accede to the request, he must consult the regional auxiliary bishop.

• Religious orders and congregations who wish to celebrate Mass in the Extraordinary Form may do so. However, if they wish to celebrate in this manner often, habitually or permanently, the decision must be taken to major superiors. If such celebrations are to take place in a parish church entrusted to the care of the religious, the archdiocesan coordinating guidelines must be followed.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Israeli Sanctions on Gaza affects Christians

Funeral in Gaza's Melkite Catholic church, not related to the present sanctionsFrom the Catholic News Service:
Lack of fuel in Gaza forces teachers to adjust to help hungry pupils

By Judith Sudilovsky
Catholic News Service

JERUSALEM (CNS) -- Shatha Halu, a first grader at Holy Family School in Gaza City, put on his backpack and climbed down the 10 flights of stairs in his building on the way to school.

At the bottom of the stairs he turned to his mother, who had made the long trek down with him and, looking up the steps, asked her how he would be able to climb all the way back up after school with his heavy bag.

"It is a very bad situation," said Msgr. Manuel Musallam, pastor of Holy Family Church, who recounted the story in a telephone interview with Catholic News Service Jan. 21. "This lack of electricity is stopping civilization, stopping life in Gaza."

Israel closed the border to the Gaza Strip and temporarily banned imports, including the fuel necessary to run Gaza's power plant, following a sharp increase in the number of rockets Palestinian militants fired into Israeli border towns. Gaza is controlled by the militant Islamic group Hamas.

Following an international outcry, on Jan. 22 Israel allowed enough fuel for electricity for two days to be pumped into the Gaza Strip. It also delivered cooking gas, medicine and food. Israel promised enough total fuel delivery over three days to allow the Gazan power plant to run for a week, but said a ban on gasoline would continue.

Msgr. Musallam said Jan. 21 that while Holy Family School has a generator for its electrical needs, it would soon run out of the gasoline needed to run it. The school and the church can function without electricity, he said, but the hospitals were in dire need of fuel to run their generators.

He said he donated his last fuel to Shifa Hospital, which was requesting donations so it could treat patients. At least five people died in Gaza hospitals due to the lack of electricity.

"We can manage with not using our computers, but in the hospitals the sick people need the electricity to survive," said Msgr. Musallam.

He said many people had been unable to bathe for nearly a week, since electricity is needed to pump the water. Some teachers asked to bathe at the convent, since the church has its own generator.

Parents asked that the school be closed because they were embarrassed to send their unbathed children to school. However, the priest said he would keep the school open because "we must challenge the situation." He added that when the children are together at school they can talk to their friends, play and be distracted from the difficult situation for a few hours.

Israel said it provides about 60 percent of Gaza's electricity, and another 5 percent is provided by Egypt. The power outage mainly affected Gaza City.

Msgr. Musallam said children arrived at school without having eaten breakfast because there was very little food to buy in the shops, and bakeries stopped baking bread because they had no electricity. Teachers, who had nothing to offer their students to eat, readjusted their teaching schedules because the children were tired, complained of headaches and were unable to sit through two hours of lessons, he said.

The previous weekend two of the school's students were injured by shrapnel following an Israeli missile attack, the priest said, and after receiving initial first aid treatment at the hospital, they were sent home because there was no possibility of giving them further treatment.

"We must stop shooting, but also the (Israelis) must stop. That is it," he said.

Israel said that in January 400 Qassam rockets had been fired into Israeli border towns -- more than half from Jan. 15 to Jan. 18. Since the blockade, the number of missiles was reduced to a trickle, said Israeli officials, who added that when the Hamas government wants to stop the rockets it can.

The heads of Christian churches in Jerusalem and the Holy Land called on the international community, U.S. President George W. Bush and Israel to end the blockade "in the name of God." In a Jan. 22 statement, they said the blockade was "illegal collective punishment, an immoral act in violation of the basic human and natural laws as well as international law."

The church leaders also urged the Palestinian leadership to unite "for the sake of their people in Gaza" and called for the gunmen to stop firing missiles into Israeli territory.

"We would say to all concerned parties while ... you persist in firing rockets into Israel you encourage public opinion outside this land to feel there is a justification for this siege," they said.

"We pray for the day when the people of Gaza will be free from occupation, from political differences, from violence and from despair. We pray for the Israelis and Palestinians to respect human life and God's love for every human life," they said in the statement released by the Jerusalem Inter-Church Center.

Gisha, the Israeli Legal Center for Freedom of Movement, said in a Jan.20 statement, "We condemn the illegal rocket attacks on civilians in southern Israel, but punishing Gaza's 1.5 million does not stop the rocket fire; it only creates an impossible balance of human suffering on both sides of the border."

Caritas Jerusalem called for "an immediate end to the blockade facing Gaza, an urgent appeal to help address the humanitarian situation there and for an end to all military actions by the Israeli army and by militants in Gaza."

Sahar Shaat, a project officer at the U.S. bishops' Catholic Relief Services Gaza office, said she had been studying for her master's exams by candlelight.

"There are continuing electricity shortages about eight hours every day according to schedules and according to areas," she said. "We are in winter and it is very cold, and we are without heaters. All the people in Gaza use electric heaters."

She said there was still gas for cooking, and meat and chicken were available, but people were worried about what would happen if that food runs out. Food cannot be kept in refrigerators because it will spoil without electricity, she noted.

"There is a shortage of everything. If we find something it costs double" the normal price, she said, noting that employees of nongovernmental and humanitarian organizations felt helpless in the face of the growing shortages."

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Pre-Lent (Traditional Calendar)

Septuagesima 2007 in Switzerland
Septuagesima Sunday

From Fisheaters.com:

With Saturday's Vigil begins the season of Septuagesima, and our attention turns to the themes of exile and banishment -- our expulsion from Eden, the captivity in Babylon, the fate of death -- rooted in sin. The Divine Office today begins with the first chapter of Genesis and recounts man's Fall, and the fourth and fifth lessons -- written by St. Augustine -- explain things:
Lesson Four:
The Lord had foretold that if man should sin, he would bring upon himself the penalty of death. Thus it was that, albeit God endowed man with free-will, he asserted his dominion over him by urging on him the danger of self-destruction through sin. And so God placed him in that happy Garden (as it were, in a sheltered nook of life), whence he might have attained unto an even better life, if he had remained righteous.

But this first man sinned, and was therefore driven out of his paradise. And by his sin, he infected all his offspring with the disease of sin, since he himself (their source), was poisoned therewith; whereby he brought upon all mankind the very sentence of death and damnation which he had earned for himself. So it is that all who descend by fleshly generation from Adam and his wife Eve (which latter had urged him to sin, and therefore shared in the sentence passed upon him), inherit original sin; whereby we are drawn on, through divers errors and sorrows, toward the final ruin that fallen man doth share with the fallen angels, which same are our corrupters, masters, and partakers in this doom.

Lesson Five:
By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin, and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned. In this sentence, by the word world the Apostle signifieth all mankind. Thus then did the matter stand? All of doomed humanity lay in misery, (or rather was blundering on, and plunging from bad to worse), together with that part of the Angels which had sinned, until both together should suffer the condign punishment of their vile treason.

This Season, then, is a prelude to the penitential mortifications of Lent -- a time that ends with the Passion of Christ and leads to the glorious Resurrection and Ascension that end our exile. It's as if during Septuagesima, we recognize our exile and the reasons for it; during Lent we repent of those reasons; during Passiontide, Our Lord assuages the Father's wrath at those reasons; and then, during Easter, we rejoice that, through the Cross, we can avoid the eternal price of sin.

For now, though, exile it is, and to indicate this, we eliminate the alleluia -- which means "All hail to Him Who is" -- from the Mass. Just as at Requiem Masses (and also the Mass for the Holy Innocents), the alleluia isn't heard and will be heard no more until the Easter Vigil on Holy Saturday. This tenth century hymn tells of the alleluia's absence:
Alleluia, song of sweetness,
voice of joy that cannot die;
alleluia is the anthem
ever raised by choirs on high;
in the house of God abiding
thus they sing eternally.

Alleluia dulce carmen,
Vox perennis gaudii,
Alleluia laus suavis
Est choris coelestibus,
Quam canunt Dei manentes
In domo per saecula.

Alleluia thou resoundest,
true Jerusalem and free;
alleluia, joyful mother,
all thy children sing with thee;
but by Babylon's sad waters
mourning exiles now are we.

Alleluia laeta mater
Concivis Jerusalem:
Alleluia vox tuorum
Civium gaudentium:
Exsules nos flere cogunt
Babylonis flumina.

Alleluia cannot always
be our song while here below;
alleluia our transgressions
make us for awhile forgo;
for the solemn time is coming
when our tears for sin must flow.

Alleluia non meremur
In perenne psallere;
Alleluia vo reatus
Cogit intermittere;
Tempus instat quo peracta
Lugeamus crimina.

Therefore in our hymns we pray Thee,
grant us, blessed Trinity,
at the last to keep Thine Easter,
in our home beyond the sky,
there to Thee for ever singing
alleluia joyfully.

Unde laudando precamur
Te beata Trinitas,
Ut tuum nobis videre
Pascha des in aethere,
Quo tibi laeti canamus
Alleluia perpetim.

In many places, there arose the custom of literally "burying the alleluia," just as, in some places, "Carnival" is buried on Ash Wednesday, and "Lent" is buried on Holy Saturday. Francis Weiser's "Easter Book" (1954) cites a fifteenth-century statute book of the Church of Toul, which reads:
On Saturday before Septuagesima Sunday all choir boys gather in the sacristy during the prayer of the None, to prepare for the burial of the Alleluia. After the last Benedicamus [i.e., at the end of the service] they march in procession, with crosses, tapers, holy water and censers; and they carry a coffin, as in a funeral. Thus they proceed through the aisle, moaning and mourning, until they reach the cloister. There they bury the coffin; they sprinkle it with holy water and incense it; whereupon they return to the sacristy by the same way.
This book also tells us that in "Paris, a straw figure bearing in golden letters the inscription 'Alleluia' was carried out of the choir at the end of the service and burned in the church yard." Such a custom could be easily adapted by families for the evening before Septuagesima Sunday: the word alleluia can be written on paper, carved onto a wooden plaque, embroidered with golden thread onto fabric, etc., and then be laid to rest in a wooden box and covered with a semblance of a pall -- or literally buried -- until the Vigil on Holy Saturday, when it can be "resurrected" and used to adorn the Easter table with the Paschal candle.

Even during this somber season there is great hope, as always with God. The Gospel reading on Septuagesima Sunday recounts the parable of the laborers in the vineyard:
Matthew 20:1-16
The kingdom of heaven is like to an householder, who went out early in the morning to hire labourers into his vineyard. And having agreed with the labourers for a penny a day, he sent them into his vineyard. And going about the third hour, he saw others standing in the market place idle. And he said to them: Go you also into my vineyard, and I will give you what shall be just. And they went their way.

And again he went out about the sixth and the ninth hour, and did in like manner.

But about the eleventh hour he went out and found others standing, and he saith to them: Why stand you here all the day idle?

They say to him: Because no man hath hired us.

He saith to them: Go you also into my vineyard. And when evening was come, the lord of the vineyard saith to his steward: Call the labourers and pay them their hire, beginning from the last even to the first.

When therefore they were come, that came about the eleventh hour, they received every man a penny. But when the first also came, they thought that they should receive more: and they also received every man a penny. And receiving it they murmured against the master of the house, Saying: These last have worked but one hour, and thou hast made them equal to us, that have borne the burden of the day and the heats.

But he answering said to one of them: Friend, I do thee no wrong: didst thou not agree with me for a penny? Take what is thine, and go thy way: I will also give to this last even as to thee. Or, is it not lawful for me to do what I will? is thy eye evil, because I am good? So shall the last be first, and the first last. For many are called, but few chosen.
St. John Chrysostom (born c. A.D. 347), Doctor of the Church, explains this parable to us...

Reading
On Matthew 20:1-16
By St. John Chrysostom


What is to us the intent of this parable? For the beginning doth not harmonize with what is said at the end, but intimates altogether the contrary. For in the first part He shows all enjoying the same, and not some cast out, and some brought in; yet He Himself both before the parable and after the parable said the opposite thing. "That the first shall be last, and the last first," that is, before the very first, those not continuing first, but having become last. For in proof that this is His meaning, He added, "Many are called, but few chosen," so as doubly both to sting the one, and to soothe and urge on the other.

But the parable saith not this, but that they shall be equal to them that are approved, and have labored much. "For thou hast made them equal unto us," it is said, "that have borne the burden and heat of the day."

What then is the meaning of the parable? For it is necessary to make this first clear, and then we shall clear up that other point. By a vineyard He meaneth the injunctions of God and His commandments: by the time of laboring, the present life: by laborers, them that in different ways are called to the fulfillment of the injunctions: by early in the morning, and about the third and ninth and eleventh hours, them who at different ages have drawn near to God, and approved themselves.

But the question is this, whether the first having gloriously approved themselves, and having pleased God, and having throughout the whole day shone by their labors, are possessed by the basest feeling of vice, jealousy and envy. For when they had seen them enjoying the same rewards, they say, "These last have wrought but one hour, and thou hast made them equal unto us, that have borne the burden and heat of the day." And in these words, when they are to receive no hurt, neither to suffer diminution as to their own hire, they were indignant, and much displeased at the good of others, which was proof of envy and jealousy. And what is yet more, the good man of the house in justifying himself with respect to them, and in making his defense to him that had said these things, convicts him of wickedness and the basest jealousy, saying, "Didst thou not agree with me for a penny? Take that thine is, and go thy way; I will give unto the last even as unto thee. Is thine eye evil, because I am good?"

What then is it which is to be established by these things? For in other parables also this self-same thing may be seen. For the son who was approved is brought in, as having felt this self-same thing, when he saw his prodigal brother enjoying much honor, even more than himself. For like as these enjoyed more by receiving first, so he in a greater degree was honored by the abundance of the things given him; and to these things he that was approved bears witness.

What then may we say? There is no one who is thus justifying himself, or blaming others in the kingdom of Heaven; away with the thought! for that place is pure from envy and jealousy. For if when they are here the saints give their very lives for sinners, much more when they see them there in the enjoyment of these things, do they rejoice and account these to be blessings of their own. Wherefore then did He so frame His discourse? The saying is a parable, wherefore neither is it right to inquire curiously into all things in parables word by word,but when we have learnt the object for which it was composed, to reap this, and not to busy one's self about anything further.

Wherefore then was this parable thus composed? what is its object to effect? To render more earnest them that are converted and become better men in extreme old age, and not to allow them to suppose they have a less portion. So it is for this cause He introduces also others displeased at their blessings, not to represent those men as pining or vexed, away with the thought! but to teach us that these have enjoyed such honor, as could even have begotten envy in others. Which we also often do, saying, "Such a one blamed me, because I counted thee worthy of much honor," neither having been blamed, nor wishing to slander that other, but hereby to show the greatness of the gift which this one enjoyed.

But wherefore can it have been that He did not hire all at once? As far as concerned Him, He did hire all; but if all did not hearken at once, the difference was made by the disposition of them that were called. For this cause, some are called early in the morning, some at the third hour, some at the sixth, some at the ninth, some at the eleventh, when they would obey.

This Paul also declared when he said, "When it pleased Him, who separated me from my mother's womb." When did it please Him? When he was ready to obey. For He willed it even from the beginning, but because he would not have yielded, then it pleased Him, when Paul also was ready to obey. Thus also did He call the thief, although He was able to have called him even before, but he would not have obeyed. For if Paul at the beginning would not have obeyed, much more the thief.

And if they say, "No man hath hired us," in the first place as I said we must not be curious about all the points in the parables; but here neither is the good man of the house represented to say this, but they; but he could not convict them, that he might drive them to perplexity, but might win them over. For that He called all, as far as lay in Him, from the first even the parable shows, saying, that "He went out early in the morning to hire."

From everything then it is manifest to us, that the parable is spoken with reference to them who from earliest youth, and those who in old age and more tardily, lay hold on virtue; to the former, that they may not be proud, neither reproach those called at the eleventh hour; to the latter, that they may learn that it is possible even in a short time to recover all.

For since He had been speaking about earnestness, and the casting away of riches, and contempt of all one's possessions, but this needed much vigor of mind and youthful ardor; in order to kindle in them a fire of love, and to give vigor to their will, He shows that it is possible even for men coming later to receive the hire of the whole day.

But He doth not say it thus, lest again He should make them proud, but he shows that the whole is of His love to man, and because of this they shall not fail, but shall themselves enjoy the unspeakable blessings.

And this chiefly is what it is His will to establish by this parable. And if He adds, that, "So the last shall be first and the first last; for many are called, but few chosen," marvel not. For not as inferring it from the parable doth He say this, but His meaning is this, that like as this came to pass, so shall that come to pass. For here indeed the first did not become last, but all received the same contrary to hope and expectation. But as this result took place contrary to hope and contrary to expectation, and they that came before were equalled by them that followed, so shall that also come to pass which is more than this, and more strange, I mean, that the last should come to be even before the first, and that the first should be after these. So that that is one thing, and this another.

But He seems to me to say these, things, darkly hinting at the Jews, and amongst the believers at those who at first shone forth, but afterwards neglected virtue, and fell back; and those others again that have risen from vice, and have shot beyond many. For we see such changes taking place both with respect to faith and practice.

Wherefore I entreat you let us use much diligence both to stand in the right faith, and to show forth an excellent life. For unless we add also a life suitable to our faith, we shall suffer the extremest punishment.

And this the blessed Paul showed even from times of old, when he said, that "They did all eat the same spiritual meat, and did all drink the same spiritual drink: "and added, that they were not saved; "for they were overthrown in the Wilderness." And Christ declared it even in the evangelists, when He brought in some that had cast out devils and prophesied, and are led away to punishment. And all His parables also, as that of the virgins, that of the net, that of the thorns, that of the tree not bringing forth fruit, demand virtue in our works. For concerning doctrines He discourses seldom, for neither doth the subject need labor, but of life often or rather everywhere, for the war about this is continual, wherefore also so is the labor.

And why do I speak of the whole code. For even a part of it overlooked brings upon one great evils; as, for instance, almsgiving overlooked casts into hell them that have come short in it; and yet this is not the whole of virtue, but a part thereof. But nevertheless both the virgins were punished for not having this, and the rich man was for this cause tormented, and they that have not fed the hungry, are for this condemned with the devil. Again, not to revile is a very small part of it, nevertheless this too casts out them that have not attained to it. "For he that saith to his brother, Thou fool, shall be in danger of hell fire."Again, even continence itself is a part, but nevertheless, without this no one shall see the Lord. For, "Follow peace," it is said. "and holinesswithout which no man shall see the Lord."And humility too in like manner is a part of virtue; but nevertheless though any one should fulfill other good works, but have not attained to this, he is unclean with God. And this is manifest from the Pharisee, who though abounding with numberless good works, by this lost all.

But I have also something more than these things to say again. I mean, that not only one of them overlooked shuts Heaven against us, but though it be done, yet not in due perfection and abundance, it produces the selfsame effect again. "For except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the Scribes and Pharisees, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of Heaven."So that though thou give alms, but not more than they, thou shalt not enter in.

And how much did they bestow in alms? one may ask. For this very thing, I am minded to say now, that they who do not give may be roused to give, and they that give may not pride themselves, but may make increase of their gifts. What then did they give? A tenth of all their possessions, and again another tenth, and after this a third, so that they almost gave away the third part, for three-tenths put together make up this. And together with these, first fruits, and first born, and other things besides, as, for instance, the offerings for sins, those for purification, those at feasts, those in the jubilee,those by the cancelling of debts, and the dismissals of servants. and the lendings that were clear of usury. But if he who gave the third part of his goods, or rather the half (for those being put together with these are the half), if then he who is giving the half, achieves no great thing, he who doth not bestow so much as the tenth, of what shall he be worthy? With reason He said, "There are few that be saved."

Let us not, then, despise the care of our life. For if one portion of it despised brings so great a destruction, when on every hand we are subject to the sentence of condemnation, how shall we escape the punishment? and what manner of penalty shall we not suffer? and what manner of hope of salvation have we, one may ask, if each of the things we have numbered threatens us with hell? I too say this; nevertheless, if we give heed we may be saved, preparing the medicines of almsgiving, and attending to our wounds.

For oil does not so strengthen a body, as benevolence at once strengthens a soul, and makes it invincible to all and impregnable to the devil. For wheresoever he may seize us, his hold then slips, this oil not suffering his grasp to fix on our back.

With this oil therefore let us anoint ourselves continually. For it is the cause of health, and a supply of light, and a source of cheerfulness. "But such a one," thou wilt say, "hath talents of gold so many and so many, and gives away nothing." And whal is that to thee? For thus shalt thou appear more worthy of admiration, when in poverty thou an more munificent than he. It was on this ground Paul marvelled at the Macedonians, not because they gave, but because even though they were in poverty they gave.

Look not then at these, but at the common Teacher of all, who "had not where to lay His head."And why, you say, doth not this and that person do so? Do not judge another, but deliver thyself from the charge against thee. Since the punishment is greater when thou at the same time blamest others, and thyself doest not, when judging other men, thou art again thyself also subject to the same judgment. For if even them who do right He permits not to judge others, much more will He not permit offenders. Let us not therefore judge others, neither let us look to others who are taking their ease, but unto Jesus, and from thence let us draw our examples.

Why! have I been thy benefactor? Why! did I redeem thee, that thou lookest to me? It is another who hath bestowed these things on thee. Why dost thou let go thy Master, and look unto thy fellow-servant? Heardest thou not Him saying, "Learn of me, for I am meek and lowly in heart?" And again, "He that would be first amongst you, let him be servant of all:" and again, "Even as the Son of Man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister."And after these things again, lest taking offense at them who are remiss amongst thy fellow-servants, thou continue in contemptuousness; to draw thee off from that, He saith, "I have made myself an example to you, that as I have done, ye should do also." But hast thou no teacher of virtue amongst those persons that are with thee, neither such a one as to lead thee on to these things? More abundant then will be the praise, the commendation greater, when not even being supplied with teachers thou hast become one to be marvelled at.

For this is possible, nay very easy, if we be willing: and this they show, who first duly performed these things, as for instance, Noah, Abraham, Melchizedeck, Job, and all the men like them. To them it is needful to look every day, and not unto these, whom ye never cease emulating, and passing about their names in your assemblies. For nothing else do I hear you saying everywhere, but such words as these; "Such a one has bought so many acres of land; such a one is rich, he is building." Why dost thou stare, O man, at what is without? Why dost thou look to others? If thou art minded to look to others, look to them that do their duty, to them that approve themselves, to them that carefully fulfill the law, not to those that have become offenders, and are in dishonor. For if thou look to these, thou wilt gather hence many evil things, falling into remissness, into pride, into condemnation of others; but if thou reckon over them that do right, thou wilt lead thyself on unto humility, unto diligence, unto compunction, unto the blessings that are beyond number.

Hear what the Pharisee suffered, because he let pass them that do right, and looked to him that had offended; hear and fear.

See how David became one to be marvelled at, because he looked to his ancestors that were noted for virtue. "For I am a stranger," saith he, "and a sojourner, as all my fathers were." For this man, and all that are like him, let pass them that had sinned, and thought of those who had approved themselves.

This do thou also. For thou art not set to judge of the negligences of which others have been guilty, nor to inquire into the sins which others are committing; thou art required to do judgment on thyself, not on others. "For if we judged ourselves," it is said, "we should not be judged, but when we are judged, we are chastened of the Lord."But thou hast reversed the order, of thyself requiring no account of offenses great or small, but being strict and curious about the offenses of others.

Let us no more do this, but leaving off this disorderly way, let us set up a tribunal in ourselves for the sins committed by ourselves, becoming ourselves accusers, and judges, and executioners for our offenses.

But if it be thy will to be busy about the things of other men also, busy thyself about their good works, not their sins, that both by the memory of our negligences and by our emulation for the good works they have done, and by setting before ourselves the judgment-seat from which no prayers can deliver, wounded each day by our conscience as by a kind of goad,we may lead ourselves on to humility, and a greater diligence, and attain unto the good things to come, by the grace and love towards man of our Lord Jesus Christ; with whom be to the Father, together with the Holy Ghost, glory, might, honor, now and always, and world without end. Amen.

Friday, January 18, 2008

St. Peter's Chair at Rome

Bernini's 'Triumph of the Chair of St. Peter' in St. Peter's Basilica, Rome
Until the revisions to the Universal Calendar in the early 1960s, January 18 was the Feast of St. Peter's Chair at Rome. (This feast has since been merged with the Feast of St. Peter's Chair at Antioch on February 22.) Thus it was considered appropriate for the beginning of a novena for the union of all of God's children into the awaiting arms of Holy Mother Church. During the next eight days of this Church Unity Octave we pray that "all may be one". This devotion ends on January 25, the Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul.

Now it would probably surprise a few of you (those who don't already know) that this novena was begun by an American Episcopal priest! The Rev. Lewis Thomas Wattson (who later took as his religious name 'Paul James Francis') had founded a community of Franciscan Friars within the Protestant Episcopal Church in 1899 at Graymoor, New York. Officially the Friars of the Atonement, they are commonly called the Graymoor Friars because of their location. This order of Anglican mendicants was so successful that soon a second order of sisters was established. It must be remembered that at this time the Anglo-Catholic Revival was just beginning to gain momentum within Anglicanism. Father Paul was an Anglican of the more extreme Anglo-Papalist variety and began to preach the corporate reunion of the Protestant Episcopal Church with the Roman Catholic Church. His sermons caused quite a stir, not only within the Protestant Episcopal Church, where he was banned from the pulpit, but within his community of friars as well. In 1908, he inaugurated the Church Unity Octave as a devotion, and it was only one year later that his entire order of Franciscans entered the Roman Catholic Church as a body. Pope St. Pius X was so impressed by this that he gave them his special blessing to continue as an order with the charism of working to bring more Christians into union with Rome. In 1916, Pope Benedict XV approved the Church Unity Octave as a Roman Catholic devotion and shortly thereafter it was adopted by all of the dioceses of the United States.


THAT ALL MAY BE ONE--CHURCH UNITY OCTAVE

A PLENARY INDULGENCE has been granted by the Holy Father to everyone of the Faithful who on the first or last day of the Octave shall receive Holy Communion under the usual conditions.

Form of the prayer decreed by Pope Benedict XV to be recited daily during Octave
(200 Days Indulgence each Octave Day)

Antiphon: That they all may be one, as Thou, Father, in Me and I in Thee; that they also may be one in Us; that the world may believe that Thou hast sent Me. --St. John xvii: 21.

V. I say unto thee, that thou art Peter;
R. And upon this Rock I will build My Church.

Let us pray.

O Lord Jesus Christ, who said unto Thine Apostles: Peace I leave with you, My Peace I give unto you; regard not our sins, but the faith of Thy Church, and grant unto her that Peace and Unity which are agreeable to Thy Will Who livest and reignest God forever and ever. Amen.

It is also recommended that one decade of the Rosary (at least) be said for the particular intention of each day; also that Holy Communion be received as often as possible during the Octave, daily if possible, certainly on the First or Last Day of the Octave, in order to obtain the Plenary Indulgence.

THE DAILY INTENTIONS

Jan. 18. Feast of St. Peter's Chair at Rome. The return of all the "Other Sheep" to the Fold of Peter, the One Shepherd.

Jan. 19. The return of all Oriental Separatists to Communion with the Apostolic See.

Jan. 20. The Repairing of the 16th Century Breach between England and Rome.

Jan. 21. That the Lutherans and all other Protestants of Continental Europe may find their way "Back to Holy Chuch".

Jan. 22. That all Christians in America may become one in communion with the Chair of Peter.

Jan. 23. The return to the Sacraments of all lapsed Catholics.

Jan. 24. The conversion of the Jews.

Jan. 25. Feast of the Conversion of St. Paul. The Missionary conquest of the entire world for Christ.


Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Wiener Waltz

Physicians' Ball 2003It's that time of year again! Break out your white tie & tails or evening dress (and let's not forget those dancing shoes). It's ball season in Vienna!

The residents of Orleans Parish, Louisiana have the drunken revelries of Mardi-Gras; and the people of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil have the excesses of Carnival. But it is the German-speaking people of Vienna, Austria who celebrate the days between Christmas and Lent in style with their Fasching. Every guild and society holds (and every ex-royal and factory worker attends) a ball in this former capital of Christendom. The best thing is that for many of them, one not need be a member to attend. Just buy a ticket.

For more information click here: The Ball Season in Vienna: Positive Romanticism.

Monday, January 14, 2008

More computer trouble

Arg!!!Sadly, I'm not out of the woods yet and am having some serious computer trouble at home. I'm not sure when I'll have things back up, but I hope I'll have my work laptop set up to do stuff by week's end.

Friday, January 11, 2008

O Tannenbaum

Now that it's nearing the end of the Epiphany Octave it's time to start thinking about taking down the Christmas decorations. Thus, I thought I'd post some photos before they come down. Enjoy.

Christmas Tree

Christmas Crib

Monday, January 7, 2008

Happy Eastern Christmas!

Christos rodivsya!Happy Eastern Christmas! for those who follow the Julian Calendar. (I had the privilege of attending the Pontifical Mass for Eastern Christmas at the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Cathedral to-day.)

However, sadly I have been having computer trouble for the last several days and my computer is not working now. I am trying to get it fixed, but will be taking a hiatus for the next week or so. With luck, and prayers, it'll be up and running soon. Best wishes during the first few weeks of this new year.

Sunday, January 6, 2008

Happy Epiphany!

Epiphany mural from Beuron Abbey¡Feliz día de los Reyes Magos!

Saturday, January 5, 2008

Feast of St. John Nepomucene Neumann

St. John NeumannOn this day we celebrate the feast of one of two local Philadelphia saints--St. John Nepomucene Neumann. Neumann was the last Bishop of Philadelphia (which was, after his death, made a metropolitan see, i.e. an archdiocese with archbishops). He is well known for his institution of the first Catholic school system in America, as well as his ministry to the Germans in the United States. Sadly, he was not canonized till after the liturgical reforms of 1968, and his feast was placed on what is the Vigil of the Epiphany on the Calendar of the Extraordinary Use of the Roman Rite. Thus, his feast is listed as 'optional' on many American local calendars.

From Catholic OnLine:

This American saint was born in Bohemia in 1811. He was looking forward to being ordained in 1835 when the bishop decided there would be no more ordinations. It is difficult for us to imagine now, but Bohemia was overstocked with priests. John wrote to bishops all over Europe but the story was the same everywhere no one wanted any more bishops. John was sure he was called to be a priest but all the doors to follow that vocation seemed to close in his face.

But John didn't give up. He had learned English by working in a factory with English-speaking workers so he wrote to the bishops in America. Finally, the bishop in New York agreed to ordain him. In order to follow God's call to the priesthood John would have to leave his home forever and travel across the ocean to a new and rugged land.

In New York, John was one of 36 priests for 200,000 Catholics. John's parish in western New York stretched from Lake Ontario to Pennsylvania. His church had no steeple or floor but that didn't matter because John spent most of his time traveling from village to village, climbing mountains to visit the sick, staying in garrets and taverns to teach, and celebrating the Mass at kitchen tables.

Because of the work and the isolation of his parish, John longed for community and so joined the Redemptorists, a congregation of priests and brothers dedicated to helping the poor and most abandoned.

John was appointed bishop of Philadelphia in 1852. As bishop, he was the first to organize a diocesan Catholic school system. A founder of Catholic education in this country, he increased the number of Catholic schools in his diocese from two to 100.

John never lost his love and concern for the people -- something that may have bothered the elite of Philadelphia. On one visit to a rural parish, the parish priest picked him up in a manure wagon. Seated on a plank stretched over the wagon's contents, John joked, "Have you ever seen such an entourage for a bishop!"

The ability to learn languages that had brought him to America led him to learn Spanish, French, Italian, and Dutch so he could hear confessions in at least six languages. When Irish immigration started, he learned Gaelic so well that one Irish woman remarked, "Isn't it grand that we have an Irish bishop!"

Once on a visit to Germany, he came back to the house he was staying in soaked by rain. When his host suggested he change his shoes, John remarked, "The only way I could change my shoes is by putting the left one on the right foot and the right one on the left foot. This is the only pair I own."

John died on January 5, 1860 at the age of 48.

The National Shrine of St. John Neumann can be visited at the Church of St. Peter the Apostle at 5th & Girard Streets here in Philadelphia.

To read more about his life, I recommend: St. John Neumann: The Little Bishop

As well, please see my post below: Neumann's New Vestments.

Friday, January 4, 2008

Ron Paul for President!!!

Totally out of character with this blog, but I think that I should post this.





Though not a Catholic, he holds some Catholic ideas:
In addition he is a strict constitutionalist who opposes encroachments upon our civil liberties such as:
To find out more about Ron Paul see his campaign website: Ron Paul: Hope for America. He has raised over $19 million dollars and placed fifth in the Iowa Caucus this week. With an support for him increasing daily he has a good shot at getting the Republican nomination despite the media "blackout" of coverage of him (e.g. last night on Nightline, when George Stephanopoulos began mentioning Ron Paul he was rudely interrupted by Charles Gibson who changed the subject.)

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Neumann's New Vestments

St. John Neumann's old vestments (modern Gothic-cut polyester):

A photo of Neumann's old vestments from my photo collection

St. John Neumann's new vestments (traditional Roman-cut silk):

New vestments on the feast of St. John Neumann

From The Catholic Standard & Times: Great Model of Holiness: Saint John Neumann clad in new episcopal vestments before feast day

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Feast of the Circumcision (Traditional Calendar)

The Circumcision of ChristTo-day we celebrate the first time that Christ shed blood for mankind. It is also a Holy Day of Obligation. Please remember to hear Mass to-day.

From the Breviarium Romanum:

So the Child is circumcised. This is the Child of whom it is said : Unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given : or again : Made under the Law to redeem them that were under the Law : or again : To present him to the Lord. In my commentary on Isaiah I have already explained what is meant by being presented to the Lord in Jerusalem, and therefore I will not enter into the subject again. He that is circumcised in heart gaineth the protection of God, as it is written : The eyes of the Lord are over the righteous. Ye will see that as all the ceremonies of the Old Law were types of realities in the New Law, so the circumcision of the body signified the cleansing of the heart from the guilt of sin.

But since the body and mind of man remain yet infected with a proneness to sin, the circumcision of the eighth day is meant to put us in mind of that complete cleansing from sin which we shall have at the resurrection. This is doubtless to be inferred from the words : Every male that openeth the womb shall be called holy unto the Lord. That is, these words are literally true only of the delivery of the Blessed Virgin. Verily, he that opened her womb was holy, for he was altogether without spot. And we may gather that the Law hath this meaning because the Angel said almost the same words : That Holy Thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God.

Among all them that are born of women the Lord Jesus Christ stood alone in holiness. He alone, because of this immáculate birth, felt no contagion from human corruption ; it came not near him because of his heavenly majesty. Otherwise (that is, if we are to apply this passage of the Law literally) we are obliged to say that without exception every male that openeth the womb is holy ; and how then shall we explain that so many were unrighteous? Was Ahab holy? Were the false prophets holy? Were they holy on whom Elijah justly called down fire from heaven? But he to whom the sacred commandment of the Law of God is mystically directed is the Holy One of Israel. And he alone hath opened the secret womb of his holy virgin-bride the Church, filling her with a sinless fruitfulness whereby to bring forth the People of God.
 
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