Sunday, July 29, 2007

I haven't posted to this blog in a bit. I've got two now! With Blogger it is much more difficult to link videos and other content than in some other formats. However, I intend to keep both and link them together in some way. This one is good for local news, some pictures and text.


For the other blog, which has video content, go to:
http://swmichigancatholic.stblogs.com/

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Attention! Traditional Mass Workshop For Priests!

Una Voce is offering a workshop for priests who want to learn to say the Traditional Latin Mass in union with the Church!

For more information, here is the link.

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Announced by the Holy See today---The long-awaited Apostolic Exhortation will be released next Tuesday, March 13th, about noon, Rome time. This means about 6AM our time.

From the Vatican website:

"PRESENTATION OF POST-SYNODAL DOCUMENT ON THE EUCHARIST VATICAN CITY, MAR 6, 2007 (VIS) - In the Holy See Press Office at 11.30 a.m. on Tuesday, March 13, the presentation will take place of the post-Synodal Apostolic Exhortation "Sacramentum Caritatis" on the Eucharist, source and summit of the life and mission of the Church. Participating in the press conference will be Cardinal Angelo Scola, patriarch of Venice, Italy, relator general of the 11th Ordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops, which was held in October 2005, and Archbishop Nikola Eterovic, secretary general of the Synod of Bishops.OP/APOSTOLIC EXHORTATION/...VIS 070306 (100)"

This document has been expected for some time but was delayed because of the death of Pope John Paul II, of blessed memory. It's expected to contain some instructions on the celebration of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.

It is not known at this time whether the much-mentioned Motu Proprio concerning freedom for the Missal of Paul V will be included in this document or will follow by some interval.

We are also waiting for the new translations of the Mass, but they are yet a bit down the road--1 to 2 years.

Incidentally, I have been informed that under the old calendar, March 13th was the feast day of St. Benedict. I don't think this is a coincidence.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

CD players in Church

Generally the first response to something like this is to invoke moral and social standards and then to yell "hate crime," a term which I detest. It's McLanguage, missing 90% of the content but capturing lots of attention--the intent of those who use it, I'm convinced.

What's really going on is much more complex. The culture in the US and most of Europe is post-Christian--has been for quite a while, but more openly now. Only the vestiges remain with many, maybe most, people. Enter the Christmas Catholic and the Ash Wednesday/Palm Sunday phenomenon; enter the political candidate who is nominally Christian but attempting to use it as a party platform while mis-quoting scripture and endorsing abortions.

Over and above all the grousing, the genuine response of Christians (and there are some remaining), the response thought about privately, is to wonder what, indeed if anything, delineates the boundaries of Christianity in this post-Christian world. We want to reach out, we have been told we must, but it's strange to be used, charicatured and abused. Where is the "line of intrusion?" Is there one? What is complicity and when does it exist?

The Churches, in their grand tradition which spans centuries, have been public buildings free for all to enter as long as anyone can remember. It's part of the Christian way, and has been for a great long time, to admit all comers. But then, all comers were steeped in the regard for the faith, and for social values such as peace and respect and they were willing to abide by (at least) cultural behaviors in the Church. This same dynamic was shown in the public forum--in matters of communication, social discourse, politics, family and so on. It's what everyone has been used to. It's what we expect as a people. But, as you can see in this news story and the lack of response socially, there is a period of erosion now. And it can be remarked, it's everywhere now, not just in this story. This is just a particularly blatant instance of something often seen. Many Christians believe that the situation is "broken" but often are not able to tell "broken" in exactly what way or how long this has been going on; many non-Christians are mildy interested or mildly disapprove the rudeness; some non-Christians approve intrusions like this, especially if they have impressions of being intruded upon themselves (or told what to do) and are seeking revenge, of a sort.

To really understand what has happened, it's necessary to look 2000 years to the birth of the Church. In the first centuries after the Resurrection, Christianity was illegal in many places, including Rome and its colonies, where one could be punished with death for being a Christian. This only made the Church grow, for the "blood of martyrs is the seed of the Church," as is often written. One must remember that pre-Christian Europe was a place of murder for sport, slavery, constant warfare and much hardship. Women, children, foreigners and others of low position were chattel. Pagan societies, then as now, tend to be run by the powerful at the expense of the less powerful, for obvious reasons. What compelling reason do they have to be otherwise? In such an atmosphere, a religion of rationality, peace and justice, with a strong emphasis on love as relationship to God and others, flourished. However, needless to say, our places of worship were not open to all comers without a good long look at who they were and what they were about. It was simply too dangerous. Old commentaries on the morality of "martyrdom" in various circumstances of volition exist to attest to these decisions, made on the part of the Christian community of Rome. And Christ himself who was martyred (although that is not the only significance of the cross) is our model, of course. Very old customs about house churches, burial practices and escorting catechumens out before the Eucharist date from this period.

Then came the legalization of Christianity and its miraculous spread throughout the world, but primarily in the fertile conversion fields of Europe. Christianity took hold in Europe and revolutionized the cultures and paradigms of Britian, Gaul and the Northern tribal lands, laying the foundations for social, political growth and material growth that has continued up to the present. The origins of Western government--the foundational pieces--were laid by the first Christian kings of Gaul, Britain, Spain and the Germanic lands and later elaborated under Christian rule. The foundations of science and art, which are now posited to be so inimical to faith, were laid in the most religious of ages, the 12th & 13th centuries! Even the limits of faith, invoked by many pragmatists and agnostics in this age, were formally written down by an errant Franciscan friar of the 12th century, William of Ockam, who found himself in a peck of trouble for using them rebelliously. (There truly is nothing new under the sun.) The phenomena brought about by these changes were so dynamic and wide-stretching that many people have forgotten their origin and have attributed these advances to themselves and perhaps to their own genetic stock or tribal culture--a horrendous mistake, one still being made by individuals and organizations (the UN, for one).

Parallel to all this, the Church grew and developed. Due to the legalization of Christianity, its widespread adoption by those seeking to initiate or restore order in Europe, and its essential character which held deep within it the seeds of truth which could drive development such as the world had never seen, it assumed a central position in culture. On top of the houses of martyrs, great public buildings--churches and basilicas--were taken over, decorated and built, first in Rome and the holy land, and then throughout the western world, and finally to the non-western world. The Church transformed from a sect in Rome and a few scattered colonies--tiny communities hiding their worship by necessity--into a public forum all were free to enter. Indeed, the oldest public churches are remodeled markets (ancient basilicas were a type of public building for shopping and public works) with doors open wide onto public squares. The essential questions around public and private worship, which had always been studied, were developed and probed. The face of the church in the public forum was developed. Out of this discipline has come the modern face of the Vatican in public affairs, and the notion of Christian citizenship and responsibility, as well as the public status of Churches in general community life of which we are all familiar, particularly in the west.

In the 16th century, the Protestant reformation attempted to strip away centuries of development (and some decadence) to return to the origins, but the question was how does one take the Church without taking the Church. Protestants still struggle with this dynamic, when they are serious about history. The extent to which the reformation, and the ensuing anti-reformation, damaged the Church we will never know. However, the trajectory of development did change in a noticeable way, for better or ill. Protestantism did tend to privatize theology while publicizing evangelization and has gone offline politically to some degree.

400 years later--now--in the west, we have undergone a breakdown in culture of which most people are aware. There are many ideas about how long it has lasted and what has caused it, but even though many people are complicit in it and some even revel in it, few will dispute that it has happened. There are a wide variety of attitudes toward it, from "ho-hum" to genuine alarm. However, most people have fallen prey to regarding the advances of culture as social phenomena without religious origin and so they are confused. In the most blatant situations, modern westerners simply can't understand why others "can't behave," not realizing what they have unconsciously "breathed" that others have not. Christians are confused as well, because even though some (but only some) are aware of the larger situation of the place of the Church in culture, they don't know how to handle the ancient issues surrounding the place of the Church in the world, and they don't know how to interact with those around them.

I am convinced that this situation of confusion stretches all the way to the top of the Church, in various degrees of depth and in various ways of exerting itself. We have never come to terms with some of these issues, it seems. Vatican II was implicitly about this struggle and added much smoke to the situation but not much light. Pope Paul VI's fears and posturings dealt most largely with these problems of the Church in the world but did little good. In fact, many believe they did much damage (ie Humanae Vitae). Perhaps, all this is part of the Christian struggle and we will never solve these problems. History says this is a real possibility seeing as how Christianity is as much about liberty of the individual soul as about peace and justice.

Confusion abounds, and what we currently have is a situation with the Church reaching out to the world, sometimes overreaching to the point of showing her knickers, while the world attributes her advances to some special "foo-foo dust" that they have concocted in a manner they know not how to duplicate, while staring in mixed consternation and amusement at Youtube and Ebay, simultaneously trying to avoid talk about impending clashes. We have division across the hierarchy and indeed, it's even as if we don't know how to start the discussion of what is wrong. Pope Benedict XVI is more certain of what is wrong, I believe, but he's not really being heard and he's not really saying so much.

Meanwhile, paganism in all its softer forms comes upon us. It is worthwhile to remember that paganism is a cruel mistress for all who are prey to her because of their lack of belief. She looks like a seductress but she has fangs which will appear soon enough. Every Christian with a sense of history knows that.

It's been a long time since I've posted. What's happened?
  • a blizzard, no kidding, and lots of informal wondering about the weather these days
  • lots of work (new position, same job), but only a little knitting & far too little personal reading
  • a sore tooth
  • a bit of news from Rome, but no Motu Proprio or Apostolic Exhortation
  • not much in the diocese of Kalamazoo

Speaking of the Motu Proprio, there is a Latin Mass at St. Mary's in Paw Paw on the third Sunday of each month at 1PM (Ecclesia Dei). I went last week. It's pretty, but also very sad. Sad because it's been polarized too, just like the new Mass but in an opposite direction (although thankfully, in a more subtle way). Oh, when are we going to stop this nonsense and get on with worshipping God?

Updates:

Motu Proprio news => fastest clearest updates: Fr. Zuhlsdorf in Rome and Rorate Coeli

Apostolic Exhortation news => CWN **Said to be "imminent"**

Department of Legislative Texts in Rome Overhauled => EWTN

Very Recent Interview with Archbishop Malcom Ranjith, Secretary for the Congregation for Divine Worship, on Liturgy => Inside the Vatican

Church Sign Funnies => Kansas City Catholic (Follow the links at the bottom. There's more!)

Helps to Keep Your Sense of Humor Dept => Conversi Ad Dominum

Beautiful Basilicas => WDTPRS (Fr. Zuhlsdorf), Rome of the West (St. Louis)

ACK! In my absence, Google ATE Blogger! I have to update. I have no choice. On the other hand, it does update faster......

But I don't want to go to New Blogger. Old Blogger is bad enough! :/

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Christmas Meme

1. Egg nog or hot chocolate? Both, but not together. Rum helps.
2. Does Santa wrap presents or just sit them under the tree? Wrap them, wait a minute, I’m Santa around here!
3. Colored lights on tree/house or white? Colored, blinking, not too many.
4. Do you hang mistletoe? Nope. I’m not sneakin’ up on anybody. Sorry.
5. When do you put your decorations up? About the 10th.
6. What is your favorite holiday dish (excluding dessert)? Turkey, stuffing, gravy…..yum.
7. Favorite Holiday memory as a child: Going to my grandma’s.
8. When and how did you learn the truth about Santa? At about 7, the sheer improbability of the whole thing just snowballed.
9. Do you open a gift on Christmas Eve? You mean a material gift, like a present? Nope.
10. How do you decorate your Christmas tree? Quickly.
11. Snow? Love it or Dread it? Dread it. Hate driving in it.
12. Can you ice skate? Yeah, but I can’t stop and I can’t turn, so it’s sort of a self-limiting deal. Don’t stand too close--you could get hurt.
13. Do you remember your favorite gift? Yes, Christ, the best Christmas gift ever.
14. What's the most exciting thing about the Holidays for you? Seeing my grandkids discover it.
15. What is your favorite Holiday Dessert? Chocolate. Of course. Any way, shape or form. Absolutely.
16. What is your favorite holiday tradition? Midnight Mass, no question. It’s the centerpiece of Christmas for me.
17. What tops your tree? An angel in white with sparkles.
18. Which do you prefer - giving or receiving? Both.
19. What is your favorite Christmas Song? Lo, How a Rose E’er Blooming, but only when it's sung by a choir who knows what they're doing. Ergo, not in church.
20. Candy canes? Not at all. Those are decorations, my dear. I don’t eat decorations.

If you read this, TAG YOU'RE IT!

Sunday, December 03, 2006

The Pope visits Washington and President Bush takes him for a ride down the Potomac on the presidential yacht. They're enjoying themselves when a gust of wind blows the Pope's hat (zucchetto) off and out onto the water. The Secret Service begins to launch a boat but Bush waves them off saying, "Wait. I'll take care of this."Bush steps off the yacht onto the surface of the water, walks out a ways and picks up the hat. Back on board, he hands the hat to the Pope amid stunned silence.The next morning the Washington Post carries the story complete with photos under the heading BUSH CAN'T SWIM.

Blogger credit to Happy Catholic.

Saturday, December 02, 2006

I've changed my "home page"--you know, that page first seen when entering the web? I've faithfully used Yahoo for 11 years. Yes, ELEVEN, ever since I first emerged online in 1995. But I've just had it.

First Yahoo starts putting all manner of jiggling, wiggling things on that page so it loads slowly. Then when I go online today, front and center, there's a photo of what can only be a "gender mistake." Like a guy in a dress with bad hair. Ack. I'm not all about it. So now I'm at Google and lovin' it.

Occasionally I use the back page of my blog as a mirror site for eyewitness reports and the like, sort of like a citizen news action. I think that the internet enables citizens to provide a powerful way to "get the news out" when the national media has one of their oh-too-PC-idiot attacks. Keeps the files from conveniently *disappearing* like they used to. So here goes, with a mirror of a file at Pajamas Media:

Alternate Site

Blogger will not let me upload the .pdf police report file. Please search for it on the net or go to Pajamas Media for the original if you can get in. Right now their server is overloaded and it can take a long time to get in.

On the same issue.