Sunday, November 20, 2011

Some More "Some More"

“Some more, some more, Summorum Pontificum!”
Heck, around here, we’d be happy at this point just to get back what we had before a certain Apostolic Administrator came into power, let alone “some more”! But yes, we would like “some more”, too – all over the diocese.
Our heroic Fr. Christopher is still away in Nigeria (due to the death of his brother), and so we still are without a Mass in the forma extraordinaria.
Tonight, my husband and I went to Mass at a nearby “mission” church, and witnessed reason #7392 for why we need Summorum Pontificum. We were prepared for the worst: a friend had told me she was in charge of the music, and that she simply played CD’s – alternating English and Spanish songs. She had also warned me that the priest gave his homily in both English and Spanish, and that some of the prayers were done the same way. Now there’s unity, eh? Didn’t Vatican II say something about everyone knowing the Latin ordinary so that even in multicultural congregations, those prayers could be prayed and sung together? Why, yes, in fact, it did (Sacrosanctum Concilium, paragraph 36).
Back to our adventure: tonight, at this particular Mass, there was no music at all, thanks be to God. The whole thing was fairly painless, until the end. Instead of simply proceeding to the final blessing, Father asked everyone to sit, and then he began an impromptu dialogue with some people who were visiting. “I want to welcome our visitors! Thank you for coming! Where are you from? How were your travels? I wish you would stay here!” Finally, that all ended, and he gave the final blessing.
Now, you may be asking yourself, “What was so horrible about that?” Well, nothing, if you’re at the Pentecostal church down the road. You might say, “But I like it when I’m a visitor and people are friendly like that, and acknowledge that I’m there!” Okay, fine. But I don’t like it – never have, at any church, even when I was a Pentecostal myself.
But it’s not a matter of opinion. The Mass is about worshiping God, not acknowledging visitors. There is no place in the rubrics for such a meet-and-greet act. It is not the mind of the Church that the visitors should be greeted in that way. That’s not Mass. That’s not the liturgy. If only all priests would take Fr. Z’s advice and simply

In the extraordinary form of the Mass, the meet-and-greet would not happen. For one thing, the priests who learn to say the EF Mass seem to “get” that it is important to follow the rubrics, and in fact, they are held accountable by that liturgy to follow the rubrics faithfully. For another thing, the EF Mass, in my opinion, engenders awe and reverence, and everything about it makes clear that we are there to worship God. The meet-and-greet act would be so out of place, so ludicrous, that no one – least of all the priest! – would even consider it.
Are there liturgical abuses in the EF Mass? I’m sure there are, have been, and always will be, because we are all human. But I maintain that there is less opportunity for abuse in the EF. Most priests can’t adlib in Latin! And since the EF Mass is said ad orientem – with the priest and the people all turned toward the Lord – the priest is not likely to take on the role of talk-show host; in fact, it is almost impossible. I’ve noted before my impression that the EF Mass allows the priest to actually be a priest. I know personally only a couple of priests who have learned the EF Mass, but they say that it changes them, and I think that is the experience of many others.
I believe it changes the laity, too. I know it has changed me.
And yet, there is such resistance! Our Apostolic Administrator gives lip service to supporting the EF Mass in our diocese, but his actions have undermined it. A chancery priest has openly (and rather ignorantly) denounced Latin in general. In Idaho, a sizable group of faithful has repeatedly asked for the EF Mass, and their bishop has repeatedly denied their request. There are many cases like this, apparently, all over the world. As “Ihidaya” notes in the comments on the other “Some More” post,
"That Mass is back...to liberal dismay..." Indeed. And so long as Liberal is in control, God forbid that the Faithful should have access to it - even in death!
Here he references a post on Rorate Caeli, where we learn of “Another Tradition Funeral Mass Denied by a Diocese”. The authors of that post examine why the funeral wishes of the deceased would be denied when it comes to the EF Mass. They write:
…[B]y allowing one individual case, the practice would spread…and parishes and dioceses, out of respect for the faithful departed and to pay homage to the present Pontiff, would be forced to allow the celebration. At this point the contagion would be uncontrollable: other faithful participating at funerals both beautiful and dignified would be struck favourably and would say “I want this too”.  Other faithful, curious about the original liturgical style, would discover the Mass of Pius V and some, perhaps, would begin to attend it. It would be the fulfillment on a planetary scale, of that “democracy of the dead” which G.K. Chesterton referred to, on the grounds that, they, the dead, have also the right to vote when something extremely important must be decided. In other words: a real disaster. A disaster, we mean, from the point of view of those who want to bury the Old Rite forever.
So the EF Mass continues to be squelched, and the talk-show host mentality of the Novus Ordo Mass continues to run rampant.
And Mass attendance continues to decline, belief in the Real Presence wanes, the vocations crisis continues. When will we see a reform of the reform?!
In the meantime, “some more, some more, Summorum Pontificum”, please.

"Some More, Some More, Summorum Pontificum"

Check this out - it's about the only time I've been able to listen to guitar music in a long time! I am stealing this to post here!

It's from That the Bones You Have Crushed May Thrill blog; go there for the video and to hear it sung.

Here are the lyrics:


The Ballad of Summorum Pontificum

It was the 7th July 2007
“The most beautiful day
This side of Heaven”

A treasure was released
The Mass of all Ages
The Missal was closed
Now a Priest turns the pages

So we kneel down and pray the Confiteor
Now he’s facing the right way, towards the Lord
Ad Deum quit laetificat juvemtutem meum
He turns around and the people say give us some more!

For over 50 years
A Mass that lay hidden
Came out of the closet
No moth there had bitten

No dust was upon it
For this Mass is timeless
You can tell when you walk through the door!

You can hear the bells ring out thrice at the Sanctus
He turns around and he says "Oratre Fratres"
Priest and people pray Domine non sum dignus
And the people say give us some more

Some more
Summorum Pontificum!
Gimme some more, some more
Gimme some more
Some more
Summorum Pontificum!
Gimme some more, some more, give us some more!

Ecce Agnus Dei qui tollis peccata mundi
Now we can hear the words ring out
Every Sunday
The Latin Mass is back
Put your guitars on the floor
We have Communion kneeling and on the tongue

All ages they pass
All ages they vary
The Mass of Ages belongs
In our seminaries

Our Bishops they don’t want it
Oh if only they could
Say “God bless our Pope
The great and the good!”

Some more
Summorum Pontificum!
Gimme some more, some more
Gimme some more
Some more
Summorum Pontificum!
Gimme some more, some more
Gimme some more!

The Mass that brings sinners
To the Fountain of grace
The Mass that made martyrs
Embrace their pains
The Mass that brought hope
To the poor and abandoned
Finding in Jesus (bow head)
The perfect Companion
But that Mass is back (back)
To liberal dismay
That Mass is back (back)
To liberal dismay
That Mass is back (back)
To liberal dismay
That Mass is back (back)
You might find one today!

Some more
Summorum Pontificum!
Gimme some more, some more
Gimme some more
Some more
Summorum Pontificum!
Gimme some more, some more
Gimme some more!
(Repeat x 2)

It was the 7th July 2007
“The most beautiful day
This side of Heaven”

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Why Yes, We HAVE Been Robbed!

Michael Voris has said it a couple of times in his recent "Vortex" episodes: "We've were robbed!" (See a sample at the end of the post.) Every time he says it, I think of the article I wrote which appeared in the May 2008 issue of Homiletic and Pastoral Review. I had come to the same conclusion Mr. Voris did, though I had not grown up Catholic, and probably couldn't even have told you the name of the Pope prior to my RCIA year.
At any rate, I thought I'd present the first few paragraphs of that paper (other excerpts from it have appeared on this blog, as well). If you are interested in reading the article in its entirety, email me for a copy.

From "We've Been Robbed!" (Homiletic and Pastoral Review, May 2008)


It was Easter Vigil, 2002. I was being received into the Catholic Church. I had been robbed, and I didn’t even know it.

Perhaps “robbed” isn’t the correct word, but in hindsight, I can see clearly that some of the most wonderful treasures of the Roman Catholic Church had at least been hidden from my view. At the time, however, I didn’t even know they existed.

The real sense that I had been robbed has come only recently for me, and the catalyst has been the Holy Father’s motu proprio, Summorum Pontificum.

Having not been Catholic prior to Vatican II, nor even for much of the post-Vatican II era, I had no knowledge of the traditional Latin Mass, the forma extraordinaria. I’d had no exposure to Latin until a year or so after I’d been received into the Church, but when I had received that exposure to the official language of the Church, I was “sold” – another treasure had been “discovered”! I started teaching myself Latin, and began memorizing some of the traditional prayers in Latin. When the Compendium of the Catechism of the Catholic Church was published, I was delighted to discover a whole section of prayers in English and Latin.

Finally, I have now experienced the extraordinary form of the Mass: a treasure, it seems to me, of inestimable value. And now I find myself crying out, “We were robbed!”

What, exactly, was taken? Let me backtrack a bit, and give my impressions as a convert to the faith who has no formal training in these matters.

I’d educated myself prior to attending RCIA classes by reading through parts of the Catechism of the Catholic Church. I’d originally purchased my own volume in order to read it and find ways to prove to my cradle-Catholic husband that the Catholic Church was wrong with regard to a variety of issues. In fact, I found what appeared to me to be beautiful, sound doctrine, and I could not find anything “wrong” with it. Here was a treasure which had not been hidden! I did wonder, however, why the wonderful teaching in that book did not seem to be very adequately implemented in every-day practice. Apparently, the treasure had been hidden from many Catholics – or else they had chosen to ignore it.

My journey into Catholicism included teaching religion classes at a Catholic high school during my RCIA year, including serving as the “Campus Ministry” instructor; I was responsible for leading a class in “creating” the liturgy for a monthly “first Friday Mass” for the school. I was not even Catholic at the time, and really had no inkling as to how to proceed with the liturgy; I asked if there were a manual of some sort. “Oh no,” I was told. “Just ask the kids. They know how to do it. They’ll teach you.” Again, hindsight reveals that one important treasure had been hidden from me even when I asked for it: the General Instruction of the Roman Missal.

Just before my first anniversary as a Catholic, we moved to a new state and a new parish. In no time at all, I found myself employed as the parish secretary. This provided me with new insights into the “inner workings” of the Church at the parish level, revealing more division than I cared to know about: a deacon, Director of Religious Education, and extraordinary ministers who all questioned Church teaching on such important issues as artificial contraception, homosexuality, and even abortion! We were led by a pastor who was fond of saying (rather ungrammatically) that we needed to “meet people where they’re at”. He made no mention of moving them along the road to sanctification. In fact, much debate was stirred by our bishop’s publication of a pastoral letter prescribing greater fidelity to the GIRM, with a vocal minority of parishioners accusing him of being “pre-Vatican II”. This prompted me to read the Vatican II documents in order to find out for myself what Vatican II was all about. In the process, I discovered that more treasures had been obscured.

Soon I was introduced to other documents of the Church, and, being a student at heart, I began reading them. Yes, here were even more treasures – a vast storehouse of them!

My “discovery” of the GIRM and other documents of the Church, and the realization that these were treasures, did not immediately lead me to the impression that I had been “robbed”. To me it seemed that I simply had been unaware of them, though I wondered why they seemed to be the best kept secret of the Catholic Church next to the Real Presence of Jesus in the Eucharist! I saw that they were treasures because they did not “restrict” our liturgical worship, but rather enhanced it by guiding us to greater reverence and appreciation of the mysteries of our faith; they did not “restrict” our morality, but rather provided knowledge that could liberate us from our sin.
...


Friday, November 18, 2011

The Gates of Hell Will Not Prevail...

...and so, despite Planned Parenthood, the Obama administration, Benetton's shenanigans, and the various other forces coming against our Church, I hereby take a deep, cleansing breath, and post a phew of this Philothea's phavorite photos:

1. Our Lady of the Snows? My little statue covered in last night's snow.



2. Last year's picture, but it's comin' this year, too!



3. Some cute kids I know... Aren't they adorable?!




4. I just like this one:



5. Me 'n' Liz, last summer.



6. Springtime in Baker County. It's comin', too...but not yet!



7. Rainbows are always a good thing!



8. My husband and daughter:


9. Me and my son Sky (a couple years ago):


Thursday, November 17, 2011

It's Still November: Pray for the Dead!

It’s still November, and it’s still an especially good time to pray for the dead!
It’s a good time to get in the habit of praying for the dead on a daily basis, and not just in November.
Here are some interesting excerpts from a couple of other blogs – be sure to go and read the whole post at the link provided.
“Can the Poor Souls Pray for Us?” posted by Fr. Ryan Erlenbush, New Theological Movement
In the month of November, it is fitting that we think on the poor souls in purgatory. While it is a matter of faith that the saints can pray for us, and likewise that we can pray for the poor souls, there is no little question as to whether the souls in purgatory can pray for us. While there is much popular devotion today – which seems also to be supported by the experiences of certain more recent saints (for example, St. Pio) – by which the faithful invoke the intercessory power of the holy souls, it is good to recognize that the majority of the tradition is decidedly against this possibility.
Granting that nearly every Church Doctor has either implicitly or even explicitly held that the poor souls cannot pray for us, is there any ground for imploring their intercession?
“A Month for Real Charity” posted at La Nueva Primavera (The New Springtime)
Every day, people do heroic acts to help others. Firemen rescue people from burning buildings. Police rescue victims from their persecutors. Missionaries deliver food, clothing and education to the poor. Yet, one of the greatest areas of need remains ignored: The fate of the poor souls.

Purgatory is a fact. Catholics are REQUIRED to accept Purgatory as a dogma of their faith.

You never hear it preached? It's still there.

You don't like to think about it? It's still there.

How can a merciful and loving God permit such a thing?

HOW COULD HE NOT?

Here’s the De Profundis – the traditional psalm/prayer said for the dead (from Fish Eaters)
Out of the Depths / De Profundis
 

English version:
   
Latin version:
Out of the depths have I cried unto Thee, O Lord: Lord hear my voice.
De profúndis clamávi ad te, Dómine: Dómine, exáudi vocem meam.
Let Thine ears be attentive to the voice of my supplication.
Fiant aures tuae intendéntes: in vocem deprecationes meae.
If Thou, Lord, shouldst mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand?
Si iniquitátes observaveris, Dómine: Dómine, quis sustinébit.
But there is forgiveness with Thee: because of Thy law I wait for Thee, O Lord.
Quia apud te propitiátio est: et propter legem tuam sustinui te, Dómine.
My soul waiteth on His word: my soul hopeth in the Lord.
Sustinuit ánima mea in verbo ejus: sperávit ánima mea in Dómino.
From the morning watch even until night let Israel hope in the Lord:
A custodia matutina usque ad noctem: specret Israel in Dómino.
For with the Lord there is mercy, and with Him is plentiful redemption.
Quia apud Dóminum misericordia: et copiósa apud eum redémptio.
And He shall redeem Israel, from all their iniquities.
Et ipse redimet Israel, ex ómnibus iniquitátibus ejus.

Note:
This partially indulgenced prayer is Psalm 129, one of the 7 Penitential Psalms, the others being Psalms 6, 31, 37, 50, 101, and 142.

Also, there are some nice traditional prayers to pray for the dead each day of the week. Go here to access them.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

The Way the World Thinks…and How to Change It

Generally, I believe, we all fail to think logically, at least in some ways. (Spock of Star Trek fame doesn’t count; he’s only half-human.) That’s because we don’t have a good, integrated view of life and society and religion and politics all knit together with the same thread. Of course, such a thread is available…we just tend not to use it. (Hint: It’s called “the liturgy”.)
Here’s a quote a friend sent me about the Penn State fiasco:
…thinks everything going on in Pennsylvania could have been averted if only they allowed Penn State coaches to marry, or for women to become Penn State co... wait a minute...
The sexual abuse woes of the Catholic Church are blamed on clerical celibacy and the fact that women cannot be ordained priests. Yeah, that makes perfect sense! But wait…when we apply the same thinking elsewhere, we see that sexual abuse happens even where there is marriage, and where women have their “rights”.  In fact, in my small town in Eastern Oregon, there has been only one highly-publicized case of “clergy” sexual abuse, and it did NOT involve the Catholic Church. The perpetrator was the youth pastor at a local Protestant church…a married youth pastor, with teen-age children. All righty, then.
Jill Stanek has also pointed to the hypocrisy and illogic of…well, everyone, basically…regarding the failure to report sexual abuse. Penn State and the Catholic Church are raked over the coals for it, and they pay the price. In the meantime, Planned Parenthood – in some cases fully admitting that they fail to report sexual abuse – is given a pass. No indictments, no criticisms, no accountability. No one seems to be concerned that PP allows abusers to bring in their victims for abortions, no questions asked; they provide the abortion and let the abuse continue. After all, it might bring in more business…
Then there’s the homosexual political (and societal!) agenda: more hypocrisy and illogical thinking. For one thing, any second-grader who hasn’t been through homosexual indoctrination awareness education can tell you that homosexuality doesn’t make much sense when it comes to making babies. (Come to think of it, the only reason the phrase “second-grader” came to mind is that our society is over-sexed and we are teaching our children about the sex act at earlier and earlier ages – in part thanks to the homosexual agenda, and in part thanks to Planned Parenthood). And if you carry the logic through…well, it seems that the homosexuals want everyone to be homosexual. Eventually, the human race would die out completely. Ya gotta have heterosexuals to produce babies! (Okay, yes, we can do all that in vitro stuff, and artificial insemination…sure…but don’t make me go there.)
Speaking of homosexual glorification, people are asking this question:  Why did the New Yorker reject this cartoon?

There’s plenty of commentary out there on this little issue. Start here, with the National Organization for Marriage.
The ultimate illogic of moral relativism is that we must be tolerant of everyone, of every group, of every color and stripe of philosophical orientation…unless, of course, it’s those Christians – and especially those Catholics. Why? It’s because Christians, and Catholics in particular, reject moral relativism and stand for moral absolutes. Moral relativists can’t stand that. And it's the "unless" factor that makes their position ultimately untenable.
All this boils down to one thought, hammered into my head by Fr. Z:
Save the liturgy, save the world.
Now, how does that work?
The Eucharist is the source and summit of our life as Catholic. We attend Mass and are supposed to be changed by our contact with the Real Presence of Jesus. Dr. Denis Crouan, in his book The Liturgy after Vatican II, suggests that the liturgy can and should have a profound effect on how we live our lives as Christians:
     Rather than explaining the liturgical rites at the very moment they are being performed, people need to learn to live them, so as to understand them in slow stages from within the celebration, in other words, with the eyes of faith and in relation to that which comprises the very heart of every liturgical celebration: the presence of the Lord on the altar.
     …This is the way that liturgical rites can also become means of promoting sound social behavior and attitudes that are in keeping with the demands of the Christian life. (p. 21; emphasis added)

Dr. Rouan echoes then-Cardinal Ratzinger in The Spirit of the Liturgy:
Worship, that is, the right kind of cult, of relationship with God, is essential for the right kind of human existence in the world. It is so precisely because it reaches beyond everyday life. Worship gives us a share in heaven’s mode of existence, in the world of God, and allows light to fall from that divine world into ours…It lays hold in advance of a more perfect life and, in so doing, gives our present life its proper measure. A life without such anticipation, a life no longer opened up to heaven, would be empty, a leaden life. (p. 21; emphases added)

Save the Liturgy. Save the world.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Parish Bull(etin): Leading Catholics Astray

The pastor of the local parish often puts “news” excerpts in the parish bulletin. Unfortunately, his sources are usually liberal progressive modernist ones like the National “Catholic” Reporter or America magazine. This little article appeared in last week’s issue:
What Catholics think - Catholics favor a variety of responses to the priest shortage but give less credence to official church teachings than they formerly did, according to the results of a survey commissioned by the National Catholic Reporter newspaper. At least two-thirds of the respondents supported each of a number of alternatives -- priest-sharing, parish mergers, bringing in priests from another country, cutting the number of weekend Masses, having a deacon or layperson run the parish, and occasionally substituting Mass with a communion service. And at least three-quarters of the respondents agreed that laypeople had the right to decide how parish money should be spent, select their new pastor and decide on parish closings. It was the fifth such survey commissioned by the newspaper since 1987 and the first since 2005, when Pope Benedict XVI succeeded Blessed John Paul II as pope. A majority of respondents for the first time said individuals had the final say in what is right or wrong in the areas of abortion, homosexuality and sex outside of marriage. A growing majority said the same about contraception, and 47 percent agreed on the subject of divorce and remarriage, up from 42 percent. A minority held that both individuals and church leaders had the final say in these five matters, while a smaller minority said church leaders alone should have the final say.
Why the pastor would put such nonsense in the bulletin is beyond me; I really don’t believe that he himself thinks in this heretical fashion!
My husband wrote the pastor a letter after he read the article. I think he nails it:
Father:
In the parish bulletin this week I read “What Catholics Think”, based upon a survey conducted by the National Catholic Reporter. While I have little use for that publication, since it frequently takes editorial positions in opposition to true Catholic teaching, the survey which was summarized in the bulletin does reinforce the point made in my earlier letter [see “Looking for a Few Good Shepherds”, which was the gist of a letter my husband sent to all the priests of the diocese].
With such a high percentage of Catholics thinking that they, not the Church, can determine what position to take on subjects ranging from Church finances to abortion, sex outside of marriage, and homosexual relationships, one must wonder how so many Catholics have become so misguided.  I think it is precisely because of the point I made in my previous letter – it is because many bishops and priests have failed to address such matters and therefore most Catholics have no idea what the Church’s teaching is; hence, they have incorrectly assumed that they, not the Church, can decide such issues for themselves.
I believe that many Catholics, including those in your parish, who read the survey summary in the bulletin will use the survey to justify their own misguided views on these issues. “If so many other Catholics believe as I do then it must be okay.”  Of course nothing could be further from the truth.  However, unless you address these issues, individually and often, there is no hope that distortions of Church teaching will ever be reversed.
I think that by choosing to print this particular survey you are now obligated to make clear, from the pulpit, what the Church actually does teach on these matters.
I pray that you will choose to meet that obligation.
Sincerely,
Jerry Boyd

Yep. He nailed it.