Follow this link, print it, and pray every day:
http://www.mprp-roc.org/mprp07-11September.html
Archive for August, 2011
Print Your September Monthly Priest Calendar
August 31st, 2011, Promulgated by Ben AndersonVouchers prompt Indiana school exodus
August 30th, 2011, Promulgated by BernieFrom Boston.com
OUTH BEND, Ind. – Weeks after Indiana began the nation’s broadest school voucher program, thousands of students have transferred from public to private schools, causing a spike in enrollment at some Catholic institutions that were recently on the brink of closing.
It is a scenario public school advocates have long feared: Students fleeing local districts in large numbers, taking with them vital tax dollars that often end up at parochial schools. Opponents say the practice violates the separation of church and state.
In at least one district, public school principals have been pleading with parents not …
Coming Soon: Cristiada
August 27th, 2011, Promulgated by GenThe trailer below is for a movie about the struggles Mexican Catholics faced in the 1920′s, when the government attempted to suppress the Faith. It looks like an absolutely stellar film. Any film where Peter O’Toole is a Catholic priest (or pope) has to be excellent!
Spiritual Bouquet for Bishop Clark
August 23rd, 2011, Promulgated by Ben AndersonLast November (’10) the Catholic Courier did a series of articles on Polarization (read CF responsed here and here). In one of those articles Bishop Clark commented thus:
“I don’t read the blogs in general, to be honest with you. From what I’ve heard, they’re inflammatory and one-sided,” he said.
The classic argument against us is that we don’t respect the person of Bishop Clark and from the above quote I fear that perhaps the bishop himself feels this way. I would like to shatter that perception and show him that we truly love him in a very personal way. I’m sure most of you already pray for the Bishop Clark daily. Over the next 25 days, I ask you to let us know about the prayers you are offering for the person of Bishop Clark using the form below. 25 days from now (September 18th), I will mail Bishop Clark a spiritual bouquet from the Cleansing Fire Community so that he will receive it by his namesake’s feast day (St. Matthew). Our prayers will be offered for the person of Bishop Matthew Clark (not his agenda, or our agenda, but only Jesus Christ’s agenda for his eternal soul). I believe this is a good thing for us to do for 2 reasons:
1) God wants us to love and desire the best for others for their own sake. One great way to love someone is to pray for them.
2) I believe it spiritually helps those who of us who oppose his agenda to pray for the person of Bishop Clark. I wonder if any of us battle with an unhealthy anger against the Bishop and this diocese. Yes, there is healthy anger, but Satan seizes the opportunity to turn it into sin. Keeping others in our prayers and desiring the best for them helps us avoid this temptation.
As our Lord said (Matthew 5):
46 For if you love those who love you, what reward have you? Do not even the tax collectors do the same? 47 And if you salute only your brethren, what more are you doing than others? Do not even the Gentiles do the same? 48 You, therefore, must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.
Don’t take this analogy too far – I’m not saying the Bishop isn’t our brethren or that he doesn’t offer us reciprocal love. I’m just making a point that we should pray for and love everyone – especially our bishop. I found the below quote from Peter Kreeft’s book “Prayer for Beginners” (p121) fitting:
Patience and perseverance are two aspects of the same virtue, which is fidelity, or faithfulness. We sometimes mistakenly think of patience and perseverance as opposites because we think of patience as resignation and perseverance as stubbornness – as if patience were almost despair and perseverance were almost pride. In the same way, we mistakenly think of holy humility and holy ambition as opposites, when in fact they are two complementary aspects of the Godlike soul. God is both humble and ambitious, “easy to please but hard to satisfy”. He is simultaneously patient and persevering, gentle and persistent, like water wearing away rock. The strongest forces in the universe , both physical and spiritual, always have that Godlike Character. It is only because our minds are fallen and broken in two that we break this character in two and use two contrasting words for it.
For those of you who actively participate in our “Rosaries for Rochester” campaign (found in the right side panel), you are certainly free to continue in that endeavor. If you’re up for additional prayers for the person of Bishop Clark – that’d be great. Or if you wish to momentarily substitute your prayers for the diocese with prayers for the person of Bishop Clark – that’d be great as well. Whatever you wish to do is fine.
Below is the initial form I created (if you don’t see it yet, I’m still working on it). This is my first attempt to use this type of technology, so I’m hoping it works. If you have a particular prayer you’d like to add just let me know in the comments and I’ll add it. You can bookmark this page and register 1-10 prayers at a time or keep your own tally and submit them all by September 18th. I’ll be sending reminders as we go. Here is a link to the form to enter your prayers.
Alternative Liturgy for the Establishment of a Parish Minister Person
August 23rd, 2011, Promulgated by GenThe following comes from Fr. Longenecker’s “Standing on My Head.” Oddly enough, I think this liturgy may be found in Sr. MaryAnn Binsack’s little white binder. 
Alternative Liturgy for the Establishment of a Parish Minister Person
Remember: Say the Black Do the Red
The people who are church gather in the shared worship space while singing a suitable hymn, protest song or praise anthem. Suggested music choices are We are Gathering in this Place, We Would Rather Gather, Gather them In, Bill Gaither’s Trio, Let Us Blather as We Gather, Somewhere Over the Rainbow, I Dreamed a Dream, and other suitable songs by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Oscar Hammerstein.
The Bishop Shall process into the shared worship space with the Parish Minister Person. The Parish Minister Person shall be suitably attired in a soutane of light blue, a surplice and not-a-stole. A saturno of matching hue may be worn by the Parish Minister Person. The Presiding Person (previously known as ‘the Bishop’ shall wear a cope and miter (unless he feels that these garments may be offensive and seem hierarchical to the Parish Minister Person) Other vestments may be worn by appropriate ministers. A procession by as many lay persons as possible is to be desired. These persons shall represent every group and ministry within the parish. When all are in their place in the shared worship space the Presiding Person stands before them.Presiding Person: The Lord be with you. How are you all doing today? Have you heard the one about the priest who went into a bar riding a camel? Another opening crowd pleasing joke may be used according to the discretion of the presiding person and the liturgical season of the year.
Parish Minister Person: That is a good one Presiding Person, and may the Lord be with you too.
Presiding Person: Brothers and Sisters we have gathered here to welcome N. as your new Parish Minister Person.
All: It is meet and right so to do.
Presiding Person: I am sure N. has met all the requirements of my divine office to be appointed as the Parish Minister Person. N. has completed the training that is set before him/her and he/she subscribes to the same view of church as I do, so I now ask you as the people of God who are church: Do you think that N. is a very nice person and would you like him/her to by your new Parish Minister Person?
All: We do like N. very much.
Presiding Person: N. are you willing to take on the duties of being this Parish Minister Person?
Parish Minister Person: I am willing.
Presiding Person: Do you accept that you are not a priest or a deacon, and that you shall only pretend to be one all the days of your life?
Parish Minister Person: It is meet and right so to do.
Presiding Person: Do you promise to faithfully complete your duties by dressing as a priest, behaving as a priest and doing everything a priest can do in order to deceive the faithful and usher in as soon as possible the new Vatican 3 church that all of us long for?
Parish Minister Person: With the help of God I will.
The Parish Minister Person then stands before the Presiding Person who kneels and kisses his/her ring thus symbolizing the submission of the Presiding Person and all hierarchical, patriarchal type people to the will of the people of God who are church.
Parish Minister Person: (for he/she is now in charge) Let us all share together the sign of Peace.
The people who are church exchange the sign of peace among themselves while a suitable hymn or protest song is chanted. A liturgical procession/dance may now take place if the local custom and room in the shared worship space allows. The procession/dance should involve carrying the newly anointed Parish Minister Person at shoulder height in the seda gestatoria accompanied by bearers of the peacock fans, but if the parish have not such accouterments they may use a kitchen chair and rainbow banners. This shall be done unless the Parish Minister Person be of overlarge girth in which case he/she may be conveyed in a wheelchair suitably decorated in liturgical colors. During the procession/dance the Presiding Person should lie prostrate. On return to the sanctuary the Parish Minister Person says with arms extended:
Parish Minister Person: The Lord be with You
All: And also with you!
Parish Minister Person: I may not bless you so instead let us all say:
All: May the road rise up to meet us, May the sun always be at our back, and may the Irish eyes be smiling until we meet again, and now may God the Creator, Redeemer and Sustainer be with us forever more. AMEN.
The Parish Minister Person then removes the miter of the Presiding Person and imposes a large amount of ashes on the head of the Presiding Person as a sign of rejection of hierarchy and patriarchy. The Presiding Person then rends his garments (care should be taken that the Presiding Person is suitably attired in discreet undergarments so that the people who are church may not descend into levity)
The Presiding Person now divested leads the procession to show penitence for being a hierarchical patriarchal sort of person. The Parish Minister Person shall be carried on the seda gestatoria surrounded by the bearers of the peacock fans, or rainbow banners as appropriate to the members there present. At the door of the shared worship space the Parish Minister Person, with arms extended shall say:
Parish Minister Person: All We Are Saying is…
All: …Give Peace a Chance.
Sunday School FINAL EXAM!
August 23rd, 2011, Promulgated by BernieI have no idea how sunday schools (or CCD or whatever we are calling religious ed today) are run here in our diocese but in Malaysia it appears you actually have to know something when the course is done. I hope that is true with us. Maybe some of our religious ed teachers could give us a little run down on what is suppose to happen in classes and what is suppose to happen at the end. Is there a required curriculum? How is learning evaluated?
In my opinion, children -young people- will only take those things seriously that adults present as serious.
Getting Our Priorities Straight
August 22nd, 2011, Promulgated by Gen“The Eucharist is ‘the source and summit of the Christian life.’ ‘The other sacraments, and indeed all ecclesiastical ministries and works of the apostolate, are bound up with the Eucharist and are oriented toward it. For in the blessed Eucharist is contained the whole spiritual good of the Church, namely Christ himself, our Pasch.’” - Catechism of the Catholic Church
We are blessed to have such a dynamic population of practicing Catholics in the Diocese of Rochester, and for as much as there is which is wrong or disordered, there is a great deal that is good and godly. And, at the end of the day, Our Lord is present in our tabernacles, regardless as to whether or not the Sacrifice of the Mass was properly celebrated. In addition to this, we have a vibrant population of lay faithful, intent on spreading the Gospel through their charitable and spiritual works. And I think that where all of us can agree, even our liberal friends, is that the Mass is, as the Church tells us, “the source and summit of the Christian life.”
Why, then, is good liturgy dismissed as too “over the top” by some Catholics who otherwise defend the Church with zeal and integrity? Why is the prerogative of the Church, which is the absolute pinnacle of human achievement, deemed secondary, or considered a disordered priority by those who, ultimately, are called upon to defend and uphold it? It seems that we have a rupture between those who profess “ora et labora,” and just plain “ora.” St. Benedict famously directed his followers to pray and labor, together and in all things. He did not direct his monks (some may think unfortunately so) simply to pray, and let God take care of the rest. Throughout the history of the Church, we see this theme of prayer and labor, of faith in action. Jesus fasted in the wilderness, but then he presided at the Passover seder, the First Mass. Monks in the Dark Ages lived often within the confines of some sort of cloister, but they preserved classical antiquity and tended to the spiritual and temporal needs of the locals. Even now, our Carmelite sisters live within their monastery, but recognize the need to order their day around prayer and labor.
Now, of course, labor can be many things. It could be running a parish. It could be running a choir. It could be running a youth group. But when the labor is not directed where it ought to be, namely, the Eucharist, the “source and summit,” the labor is in vain. As the psalmist wrote, “Unless the Lord build the house, they labour in vain that build it. Unless the Lord keep the city, he watches in vain that keeps it” (Psalm 127). For us who are Roman Catholics, this “city” is the Church, and if we labor in ways that are not productive, or even counterproductive, we are not standing in solidarity with Christ. We are called to be vigilant, and to do Our Lord’s bidding, especially at the Mass. He commanded, “Do this in memory of me.” That is one of the most explicit things said by Our Lord in the Gospels. We look to the cryptic, metaphorical tone of the parables, and find the same Truth, but the way in which it is given is entirely different. God Himself commanded that we take this most sublime gift, a gift formed by God Himself, and partake of it with frequency.
Indeed, the Catechism of the Catholic Church says of the Mass, “in brief, the Eucharist is the sum and summary of our faith: ‘Our way of thinking is attuned to the Eucharist, and the Eucharist in turn confirms our way of thinking’” (CCC 1327). If our thoughts, our prayers, our labors, are not directed towards the dignity of the Holy Sacrifice of the Altar, we must rethink our priorities. It is lamentable that our Protestant brethren devote such time in studying and preaching the Scriptures without their complete and total application. It is certainly commendable to know the history of the Jewish people as outlined in the Old Testament, to know the connotations of the original Greek in St. Paul’s epistles, and to see in the Gospels the hand of the Divine Author, but that is not enough. All of this is aimed, not at the breadth and depth of Scripture or service or fraternity, but at the Holy Mass. Without the Mass, we are nothing, for it is that most sublime gift which links us physically and directly to God and the Heavenly Jerusalem.
To have a love and knowledge of Scripture is to understand that our lives are ordered in such a way as that the Mass is should be our highest priority, for in the Mass we are presented with Jesus Christ, Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity. The Mass is that instrument used by God to give us Himself on a daily basis, an instrument which uses the Word as an integral part to that Mystery. But what happens when we strip the Word of its liturgical focus? We strip our Faith of its liturgical focus, and in so doing, lose sight of what our priorities really, truly are. The Mass is like a ciborium, in that it is the vessel of God’s Sacramental Presence here on Earth. Sacred Scripture is the gold lining that cradles the host, but we must realize that it is not the host itself, but a support to it. For what is more precious, the Word or He or spoke it? This is not to say that the Word is somehow not precious – it is. But God is perfection itself, and needs nothing to adorn that which is already the most beautiful thing imaginable. The Holy Scripture gives life to Our Faith, and is coupled with Tradition to present us with Christ’s Mystical Spouse, the Church, but the Word is not God. The Blessed Sacrament is.
So what should our priority be – the manifestation of God on our altars, or our own “ecclesiastical ministries” and “works of the apostolate” (which, we can all agree, are most beneficial to us as Christians)? The Church is very clear that the Mass is central to salvation, for through it we encounter Christ Himself.
And so it follows that, should we have the ability, we must strive to do our best to make the Mass beautiful. If one is a priest, it is up to him to say Mass with dignity and fidelity, not to fall into some sort of worship of the rubrics of the liturgy, but to offer high praise to God. If one is a layman, it is up to him not to profane the Mass with any of his God-given faculties. Our Lord deserves the best, and it is the sin of sacrilege to purposefully and willingly deprive God of the honor due to His Name. We see in the Gospels that we must love and serve the poor, but that we must be even more aware of the importance of He who is our God and King, He who gave us our Eucharistic Meal wherein our souls find themselves spiritually sated and our minds given to holy thoughts. St. Augustine presents us with excellent insight into this notion:
6. But
Mary,the other sister of Lazarus,took a pound of ointment of pure nard, very precious, and anointed the feet of Jesus, and wiped His feet with her hair; and the house was filled with the odor of the ointment.Such was the incident, let us look into the mystery it imported. Whatever soul of you wishes to be truly faithful, anoint like Mary the feet of the Lord with precious ointment. That ointment was righteousness, and therefore it was [exactly] a pound weight: but it was ointment of pure nard [nardi pistici], very precious. From his calling itpistici,we ought to infer that there was some locality from which it derived its preciousness: but this does not exhaust its meaning, and it harmonizes well with a sacramental symbol. The root of the word [pure] in the Greek is by us calledfaith.You were seeking to work righteousness: the just shall live by faith. Romans 1:17 Anoint the feet of Jesus: follow by a good life the Lord’s footsteps. Wipe them with your hair: what you have of superfluity, give to the poor, and you have wiped the feet of the Lord; for the hair seems to be the superfluous part of the body. You have something to spare of your abundance: it is superfluous to you, but necessary for the feet of the Lord. Perhaps on this earth the Lord’s feet are still in need. For of whom but of His members is He yet to say in the end,Inasmuch as you did it to one of the least of mine, you did it unto me? Matthew 25:40 You spent what was superfluous for yourselves, but you have done what was grateful to my feet.7.
And the house was filled with the odor.The world is filled with the fame of a good character: for a good character is as a pleasant odor. Those who live wickedly and bear the name of Christians, do injury to Christ: of such it is said, that through themthe name of the Lord is blasphemed.Romans 2:24 If through such God’s name is blasphemed, through the good the name of the Lord is honored. Listen to the apostle, when he says,We are a sweet savor of Christ in every place.As it is said also in the Song of Songs,Your name is as ointment poured forth.Song of Songs 1:3 Attend again to the apostle:We are a sweet savor,he says,of Christ in every place, both in them that are saved, and in them that perish. To the one we are the savor of life unto life, to the other the savor of death unto death: and who is sufficient for these things?2 Corinthians 2:14-16 The lesson of the holy Gospel before us affords us the opportunity of so speaking of that savor, that we on our part may give worthy utterance, and you diligent heed, to what is thus expressed by the apostle himself,And who is sufficient for these things?But have we any reason to infer from these words that we are qualified to attempt speaking on such a subject, or you to hear? We, indeed, are not so; but He is sufficient, who is pleased to speak by us what it may be for your profit to hear. The apostle, you see, is, as he calls himself,a sweet savor:but that sweet savor isto some the savor of life unto life, and to others the savor of death unto death;and yet all the whilea sweet savorin itself. For he does not say, does he, To some we are a sweet savor unto life, to others an evil savor unto death? He called himself a sweet savor, not an evil; and represented himself as the same sweet savor, to some unto life, to others unto death. Happy they who find life in this sweet savor! But what misery can be greater than theirs, to whom the sweet savor is the messenger of death?8. And who is it, says some one, that is thus slain by the sweet savor? It is to this the apostle alludes in the words,
And who is sufficient for these things?In what wonderful ways God brings it about that the good savor is fraught both with life to the good, and with death to the wicked; how it is so, so far as the Lord is pleased to inspire my thoughts (for it may still conceal a deeper meaning beyond my power to penetrate)—yet so far, I say, as my power of penetration has reached, you ought not to have the information withheld. The integrity of the Apostle Paul’s life and conduct, his preaching of righteousness in word and exhibition of it in works, his wondrous power as a teacher and his fidelity as a steward, were everywhere noised abroad: he was loved by some, and envied by others. For he himself tells us in a certain place of some, that they preached Christ not sincerely, but of envy;thinking,he says,to add affliction to my bonds.But what does he add?Whether in pretence or in truth, let Christ be preached.They preach who love me, they preach who hate me; in that good savor the former live, in it the others die: and yet by the preaching of both let the name of Christ be proclaimed, with this excellent savor let the world be filled. Have you been loving one whose conduct evidenced his goodness then in this good savor you have lived. Have you been envying such a one? Then in this same savor you have died. But have you, pray, in thus choosing to die, converted this savor into an evil one? Turn from your envious feelings, and the good savor will cease to slay you.
9. And now, lastly, listen to what we have here, how this ointment was to some a sweet savor unto life, and to others a sweet savor unto death. When the pious Mary had rendered this grateful service to the Lord, straightway one of His disciples, Judas Iscariot, who was yet to betray Him, said,
Why was not this ointment sold for three hundred pence, and given to the poor?Alas for you, wretched man! The sweet savor has slain you. For the cause that led him so to speak is disclosed by the holy evangelist. But we, too, might have supposed, had not the real state of his mind been revealed in the Gospel, that the care of the poor might have induced him so to speak. Not so. What then? Hearken to a true witness:This he said, not that he cared for the poor; but because he was a thief, and had the money bag, and bare what was put therein.Did he bear it about, or bear it away? For the common service he bore it, as a thief he bore it away.10. Look now, and learn that this Judas did not become perverted only at the time when he yielded to the bribery of the Jews and betrayed his Lord. For not a few, inattentive to the Gospel, suppose that Judas only perished when he accepted money from the Jews to betray the Lord. It was not then that he perished, but he was already a thief, and a reprobate, when following the Lord; for it was with his body and not with his heart that he followed. He made up the apostolic number of twelve, but had no part in the apostolic blessedness: he had been made the twelfth in semblance, and on his departure, and the succession of another, the apostolic reality was completed, and the entireness of the number conserved. Acts 1:26 What lesson then, my brethren, did our Lord Jesus Christ wish to impress on His Church, when it pleased Him to have one castaway among the twelve, but this, that we should bear with the wicked, and refrain from dividing the body of Christ? Here you have Judas among the saints—that Judas, mark you! Who was a thief, yea— do not overlook it— not a thief of any ordinary type, but a thief and a sacrilegist: a robber of money bags, but of such as were the Lord’s; of money bags, but of such as were sacred. If there is a distinction made in the public courts between such crimes as ordinary theft and peculation—for by peculation we mean the theft of public property; and private theft is not visited with the same sentence as public—how much more severe ought to be the sentence on the sacrilegious thief, who has dared to steal, not from places of any ordinary kind, but to steal from the Church? He who thieves from the Church, stands side by side with the castaway Judas. Such was this man Judas, and yet he went in and out with the eleven holy disciples. With them he came even to the table of the Lord: he was permitted to have intercourse with them, but he could not contaminate them. Of one bread did both Peter and Judas partake, and yet what communion had the believer with the infidel? Peter’s partaking was unto life, but that of Judas unto death. For that good bread was just like the sweet savor. For as the sweet savor, so also does the good bread give life to the good, and bring death to the wicked.
For he that eats unworthily, eats and drinks judgment to himself:1 Corinthians 11:29judgment to himself,not to you. If, then, it is judgment to himself, not to you, bear as one that is good with him that is evil, that you may attain unto the rewards of the good, and be not hurled into the punishment of the wicked.
11. Lay to heart our Lord’s example while living with man upon earth. Why had He a money bag, who was ministered unto by angels, save to intimate that His Church was destined thereafter to have her repository for money? Why gave He admission to a thief, save to teach His Church patiently to bear with thieves? But he who had formed the habit of abstracting money from the bag, did not hesitate for money received to sell the Lord Himself. But let us see what answer our Lord gave to such words. See, brethren: He does not say to him, You speak so on account of your thievishness. He knew him to be a thief, yet did not betray him, but rather endured him, and showed us an example of patience in tolerating the wicked in the Church.
Then said Jesus to him: Let her keep it against the day of my burial.He announced that His own death was at hand.12. But what follows?
For the poor you have always with you, but me ye will not have always.We can certainly understand,the poor you have always;what He has thus said is true. When were the poor wanting in the Church?But me ye will not have always;what does He mean by this? How are we to understand,Me ye will not have always? Don’t be alarmed: it was addressed to Judas. Why, then, did He not say, you will have, but, ye will have? Because Judas is not here a unit. One wicked man represents the whole body of the wicked; in the same way as Peter, the whole body of the good, yea, the body of the Church, but in respect to the good. For if in Peter’s case there were no sacramental symbol of the Church, the Lord would not have said to him,I will give unto you the keys of the kingdom of heaven: whatsoever you shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven; and whatsoever you shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven.Matthew 16:19 If this was said only to Peter, it gives no ground of action to the Church. But if such is the case also in the Church, that what is bound on earth is bound in heaven, and what is loosed on earth is loosed in heaven,— for when the Church excommunicates, the excommunicated person is bound in heaven; when one is reconciled by the Church, the person so reconciled is loosed in heaven:— if such, then, is the case in the Church, Peter, in receiving the keys, represented the holy Church. If, then, in the person of Peter were represented the good in the Church, and in Judas’ person were represented the bad in the Church, then to these latter was it said,But me ye will not have always.But what means thenot always;and what, thealways? If you are good, if you belong to the body represented by Peter, you have Christ both now and hereafter: now by faith, by sign, by the sacrament of baptism, by the bread and wine of the altar. You have Christ now, but you will have Him always; for when you have gone hence, you will come to Him who said to the robber,Today shall you be with me in paradise.Luke 23:43 But if you live wickedly, you may seem to have Christ now, because you enter the Church, signest yourself with the sign of Christ, art baptized with the baptism of Christ, minglest yourself with the members of Christ, and approachest His altar: now you have Christ, but by living wickedly you will not have Him always.13. It may be also understood in this way:
The poor ye will have always with you, but me ye will not have always.The good may take it also as addressed to themselves, but not so as to be any source of anxiety; for He was speaking of His bodily presence. For in respect of His majesty, His providence, His ineffable and invisible grace, His own words are fulfilled,Lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the world.Matthew 28:20 But in respect of the flesh He assumed as the Word, in respect of that which He was as the son of the Virgin, of that wherein He was seized by the Jews, nailed to the tree, let down from the cross, enveloped in a shroud, laid in the sepulchre, and manifested in His resurrection,ye will not have Him always.And why? Because in respect of His bodily presence He associated for forty days with His disciples, and then, having brought them forth for the purpose of beholding and not of following Him, He ascended into heaven, and is no longer here. He is there, indeed, sitting at the right hand of the Father; and He is here also, having never withdrawn the presence of His glory. In other words, in respect of His divine presence we always have Christ; in respect of His presence in the flesh it was rightly said to the disciples,Me ye will not have always.In this respect the Church enjoyed His presence only for a few days: now it possesses Him by faith, without seeing Him with the eyes. In whichever way, then, it was said,But me ye will not have always,it can no longer, I suppose, after this twofold solution, remain as a subject of doubt.
By focusing on things to the exclusion of the Holy Mass, to profess a love for the Mystical Banquet but then label its most zealous defenders, to make sanctimonious pronouncements – all of this robs the Mass of its dignity. For 2,000 years, we have had the Mass, and for 2,000 years, certain Christians have diminished its apparent worth by whoring it out to this agenda or that, by sitting back and permitting sacrilege, by removing the “labora” from the “ora et labora.” The Church, however, has never ceased to teach the absolute importance of the Mass, the “source and summit.” So, yes, serve the Church through whatever apostolate you feel called to, but remember, your first priority is always to the Mass, not its parts. Love the Gospel, preach it, defend it, but recognize it as a part of the Mass, not something which stands alone, but something which totally depends on the Mass (and on which the Mass is totally dependent).
It pains me to think of how some people over the years have mistaken a zeal for good liturgy for that as its own end. Good liturgy is never an end in itself, but a means to a more perfect end, namely, the presence of God in our tabernacles. People have criticized me and my friends for “worshiping the liturgy” – what sense does it make to worship worship or to praise praise? To love the Mass is to love praying the Mass, and to love Him who is made present through it.
St. Bernard’s School of Theology and Ministry: “one of the best in the country”?
August 20th, 2011, Promulgated by Ben AndersonThis morning I posted an article (on an unrelated topic) on LinkedIn, which posted to my twitter account, which posted to my facebook account. That’s just the way of the Internet these days. Layer upon layer upon layer. Hang on tight as I’m about to weave together various articles that caught my fancy this week. I think they all relate, but perhaps you’ll find yourself in disagreement. I’ll start with a Fr. Z post, which links to an article by John Allen Jr in which he interviewed Capuchin Fr. Thomas Weinandy, executive director of the Secretariat for Doctrine at the U.S. bishops’ conference. Here’s some snippets of what Fr. Weinandy had to say:
Theologians can be a “curse and affliction upon the church,” according to the U.S. bishops’ top official on doctrine, if their work is not grounded in church teaching and an active faith life, and ends up promoting “doctrinal and moral error.” He warned of a “crisis” in Catholic theology, caused by theologians who “often appear to possess little reverence for the mysteries of the faith as traditionally understood and presently professed within the church.”
“Much of what passes for contemporary Catholic theology,” he said, “often is not founded upon an assent of faith in the divine deposit of revelation as proclaimed in the sacred scriptures and developed within the living doctrinal and moral tradition of the church.”
Instead, he said, much Catholic theology has become “an attempt by reason to pass judgment on the content of the faith as if it were of human origin,” with theologians as “judges who stand above the faith and arbitrate what is to be believed and what is not.”
That approach, Weinandy said, “sometimes undermines genuine faith within the body of Christ” and ends up leading people “into the darkness of error.” It also, he said, “inevitably produces fragmentation within the church.”
Weinandy acknowledged that over the centuries, the Catholic church has recognized different “schools” of theology.
Yet today, he said, “the church is experiencing not a debate among legitimate schools of theological thought, but a radical divide over the central tenets of the Catholic faith and the church’s fundamental moral tradition.”
“This is not simply an expression of a plurality of Catholic theologies,” Weinandy said, “but the very disintegration of the Catholic faith itself.”
Who exactly might he be referring to? It sounds like he’s talking about real people in real institutions, rather than just some imaginary ones. Could the Diocese of Rochester’s own School of Theology and Ministry, [side note: I find it interesting that one of the words in the flash montage on the home page is "Empowerment"] which educates most of our lay leaders and deacons, be guilty of this assessment? I’m going to continue beating the same drum and bring up the Theology on Tap session I attended a year ago until I hear someone make a credible claim that this session was an anomaly and that St. Bernard’s staff usually stays within the bounds of Catholic doctrine. I think it’s safe to say, though, that Sr. Pat’s comments were consistent with the type of ”education” that happens at St. Bernard’s as I’ve continually heard from people that it is typical of St. Bernard’s to challenge fundamentals of the faith and falsely present them as merely one “expression of a plurality of Catholic theologies”.
Given this context, I’d like to congratulate Deacon John Brasley as he begins a new leadership role as the diocesan director of deacon personnel and formation. What really stuck out at me in the article was that Deacon Brasley directs the four-year deacon formation program through St. Bernard’s School of Theology and Ministry, which he calls “one of the best in the country.” I’ll admit ignorance on this program, although I’ve heard rumors that it is as radically progressive as the rest of St. Bernard’s. I do pray that Deacon Brasley’s program is something other than the typical St. Bernard’s education, but I fear it is not and that the 100+ deacons at work in our diocese have been educated in a way that is less than ideal. I hope that Deacon Brasley adheres to the orthodox faith, but I fear our new “diocesan director of deacon personnel and formation” does not. Perhaps he can clear this up for us since he and his wife blog for the Catholic Courier. The deacon’s praise reminded me of the time Fr. Holland called Bishop Clark the “best bishop in America” (no joke – he really did).
There is much that is troubling in Rochester and I really can’t fathom why, on the one hand, the official Church clearly teaches something other than what is taught here in Rochester, while on the other hand, she lets everything just continue on as is. This makes it really difficult for a blog like ours to have any credibility. They say, “If it’s such a big deal, then why doesn’t Rome do anything?”. I honestly can’t answer that question. Rome has clearly spoken, but it’s true that she has taken almost zero action (at least publicly – we don’t know what goes on behind the scenes). Which also leads to the question, “You’re just some blogger [said with disgust] while these other people are accredited academics and actual members of the clergy. Who are you to think you can even fathom the heights of their intellectual prowess and ecclesial authority?” My answer leads me to what I truly love about the Internet. I am a nobody. I am a hack. I wasn’t raised in the Catholic Church and I still have a lot to learn (having only converted 4 years ago). But I fell in love with something beautiful, something intellectual, something mystical, something REAL. This is why I sit at my computer and stay up late at night pounding on my keyboard. Through the power of the Internet, I can read, link to, and directly quote what our Church teaches. I don’t have to make arguments on my own authority. I can stand on the shoulders of giants. I can lay out arguments which stand or fall on their own merit. If I have connected the dots incorrectly, then it should be easy for the progressives to deliver a knock-out blow and send our readers fleeing from such illogical posts as this one. There are some who wish to disband the Catholic blogosphere rather than engage it. They wish the Church would come out and tell everyone to knock if off and go back to their role of “pray, pay, and obey”. To their chagrin, the Church has not done this. Hopefull has already posted about the Church’s openness towards, and praise of, the Catholic blogosphere. And here today we have this from Archbishop Chaput at WYD (hat tip Papist):
So whom can you trust? Where can you go for reliable news and intelligent discussion about your Catholic faith?
Well, you can come to World Youth Day—but you’ve already done that. Luckily, you live in an age of radically new kinds of information media. You have more media choices, and more ways to access those choices, than I ever could have imagined at your age.
Many of those choices include outstanding Catholic media like Catholic News Agency, EWTN, the National Catholic Register, and Our Sunday Visitor; Salt and Light and Catholic News Service; plus Catholic blogs, websites, and Catholic satellite radio stations. Support these media and encourage their great work for the Church. Visit their websites. “Like” them on Facebook. Follow their Twitter feeds. These excellent media sources will nourish and deepen your faith in ways that the mainstream public media can never provide.
He must have forgotten the part about trusting your local heterodox School of Theology and Ministry. Such a comment from such a prominent member of the hierarchy would have been unthinkable 10 or 15 years ago. Obviously it would have been unthinkable since the Internet was still in it’s infancy (and probably still is), but also because EWTN was still somewhat taboo (just read Raymond Arroyo’s book on Mama Ang). It was generally frowned upon at that time to present doctrines of the Catholic faith as facts that must be believed.
The dialogue that the progressives have been talking up for decades is manifest in a way that no one could have anticipated. They should be basking in their glory right now if they were truly concerned about dialogue and authentic debate. What’s really fascinating, though, is that the Catholic blogosphere is almost exclusively orthodox. Where are the progressive bloggers? They don’t exist. They are sitting on the sidelines during the Super Bowl of all Super Bowls of true dialogue. So why aren’t they playing the game? It’s because their arguments don’t hold water and they know it. I don’t mean to imply that they don’t believe in their mission. But what they are coming to know more firmly (and don’t want everyone else to find out) is that their core beliefs are outside the boundaries of the Catholic faith. They are free to believe what they wish to believe, but they are not free to label any old belief-system as Catholic. When you clearly and articulately express what they believe, it is clear that it is truly a different religion (as Gretchen over at SavingOurParish so ably pointed out). They have taken their hearts and their minds and left Catholicism, but their bodies remain in the Church. Why? This, as Fr. Z recently pointed out, could be summed up by the words of Saul Alinksy:
There’s another reason for working inside the system. Dostoevski said that taking a new step is what people fear most. Any revolutionary change must be preceded by a passive, affirmative, non-challenging attitude toward change among the mass of our people. They must feel so frustrated, so defeated, so lost, so futureless in the prevailing system that they are willing to let go of the past and change the future. This acceptance is the reformation essential to any revolution. To bring on this reformation requires that the organizer work inside the system
They* don’t want you to know what they really think. They will push the boundaries only when they see an opportunity. The last 30+ years in the Diocese of Rochester, they’ve had this opportunity. Bit by bit, they’ve torn down the faith to the point where it is merely a remnant of what it once was. I’m not only talking about physical buildings, although I do believe they are symbolic. I’m mainly talking about the spirituality of the faithful. What percentage of Catholics go to mass? receive the Eucharist worthily? believe all the truths which the holy catholic Church teaches? can articulate these truths to a non-Catholic or non-Christian? cares enough about their neighbor to reach out to those outside the flock? The smart ones, though, are seeing their heyday come to an end. It seems there are “some” in the diocese that are moving towards orthodoxy (if only in perception). I truly pray that these are true conversions and that we continue to see more of them. I hope and pray that they are not subversive attempts to re-position themselves within the system (which will be shaken up when our next bishop takes the reigns).
* – The “they” I refer to are the spiritual forces of darkness. While many people allow these spiritual forces to work using their own hands, we must always remember that people are not our true enemies. Demons are our enemies. People are either lost or found. Either way we must love them. If they are lost, then we must love them back into the fold. The Gospel is relevant to all peoples at all times (including progressives).
The only way they can hold on to the little they have left is by confusion and distortion. This is why they don’t blog about their beliefs and instead spend their time talking about subjective experiences. The other thing the Internet has done is to bring vast geographic locations together for common dialogue. It can no longer be denied that the norm in the Diocese of Rochester would be considered radically progressive elsewhere. It can no longer be denied that what is considered the far-right, conservative fringe here is actually just “simply Catholic” elsewhere. Looking at the Church outside of Rochester, it really seems like things are headed in the right direction. Will Rochester get there someday? Let us hope and pray that we will. Will a new bishop turn things around from day one? Let us hope and pray that he will. Let us not forget, though, that while some challenges may be removed others will present themselves. This is to be expected for the Christian. God asks us to give Him our best and to go to battle for Him while at the same time remain in His peace and never give up the hope and joy that is within us.
pax et bonum
More Misuse of the Sacntuary
August 19th, 2011, Promulgated by BernieI just returned from attending a closing event for a week long Bible Camp that my granddaughter attended, at Guardian Angels Church in Henrietta , and I’m sick at heart.
I’m not depressed over the presentation, the kids’ enthusiastic performances or anything, really, having to do with the Bible Camp per say. It’s about where the performances were held and the disrespect shown the Blessed Sacrament.
A pep rally type event was held in the chancel with the stage in front of the altar, which was veiled by some kind of backdrop. That was bad enough with kids yelling and running all over the chancel and sanctuary before, during and after the presentations. Most shocking, however, was that the Blessed Sacrament had not been removed from Tabernacle.
Just after I arrived I mentioned my concern to the director of the camp who informed me that the issue of the presence of the Blessed Sacrament had been discussed but that the pastoral administrator -Barbara Swiecki- ruled that it was appropriate for the Blessed Sacrament to remain in the Tabernacle.
Honestly folks, the event was as I remember school pep rallies in our school gym. There was cheering, shout outs, running around, panda bear logos on the drop down screen over the altar, a somewhat large stuffed panda bear sitting on the pulpit, the director jumping around leading cheers while wearing panda ears, and the pastoral administrator firing little pandas down the nave of the church out of a large air gun that looked to be a leaf blower in disguise. Loud secular sounding melodies with “Christian” catch phrases blarred from speakers. My 4 year granddaughter covered her ears and left the stage to sit in the pews with us because the music was so loud.
How on God’s green earth the “pastoral” administrator could justify reserving the Blessed Sacrament in the Tabernacle while all this was going to be going on is beyond me. It’s not as if she forgot about the Sacrament or didn’t know what the event would entail; she was a participant and had actually ruled, when quizzed by her staff, that the Sacrament would remain in the Tabernacle.
No one -NO ONE!- reverenced the Blessed Sacrament at any time before, during, or after the performance. No one even looked in the direction of the Tabernacle.
There were no opening or closing prayers; no attempt to create at least some respectful silence here and there during the evening. Outside of shout outs of “God listens to me!” and “God loves me!” and such, it was indistinguishable from a secular event.
What could possibly have been envisioned as being gained by leaving the Sacrament in the Tabernacle? Think upon what has been lost by doing so.
What is wrong with these people?
2011 Cannonball Awards
August 19th, 2011, Promulgated by GenFolks, your kindness last year propelled us to win the Cannonball Award in multiple categories. I’m still humbled and honored!
But alas, it’s time to do it once again! You may submit nominations as comments to this post on the Crescat (which is one of the blogs I read every day, and I hope you do too). Please take a moment to give Cleansing Fire your e-imprimatur.
Apostatizing in Place: A Book Review
August 19th, 2011, Promulgated by BernieCatholic and Feminist: The Surprising History of the American Catholic Feminist Movement. By Mary J. Henold. University of North Carolina Press. 291 pages. $32.
The following is from a book review by Anne Barbeau Gardiner, a Contributing Editor of the New Oxford Review, is Professor Emerita of English at John Jay College of the City University of New York. She has published on Dryden, Milton, and Swift, as well as on Catholics of the seventeenth century.
… When Catholic feminists speak of their commitment to the Church, they equivocate; it turns out they mean the “people,” not the “institution.” Indeed, Catholic feminists constantly reduce the Magisterium to an “institution.” They have their own understanding of Catholicism and see themselves as free to choose what to “believe” and what to “abandon.” This is not cafeteria Catholicism, but something different, for they are guided in their choices by a primary loyalty to feminism. Donna Quinn, one of the leading feminist nuns in the 1970s, represents many of them when she declares, “This is my church, this is my tradition. I love this church. I want to change it.” Then she adds, “I have never rejected anything in the feminist movement…. I love the word ‘feminism,’ I have put that first.” Yes, first. This is the idol to which Catholic feminists have been willing to sacrifice the Church.
At the 1975 Detroit Women’s Ordination Conference (WOC), the “pivotal event” of the Catholic feminist movement in the 1970s, theologian Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza spoke of our Church needing “a radical conversion.” Feminists like her choose to remain Catholic as a means to an end. Their strategy is called defecting in place, but it may more fittingly be called apostatizing in place.
Throughout Catholic and Feminist: The Surprising History of the American Catholic Feminist Movement, Henold reveals how Catholic feminists have taken a utilitarian approach to religion, using the Church’s sacred language, symbols, and traditions as a “means of understanding and structuring their feminism.” Yes, a means to an end. To begin with, they wanted women priests, Henold says, because they needed …
To read more: This is from an article in the current issue of the New Oxford Review. You will probably need to subscribe in order to read the rest of the column. Do subscribe. The NOR has excellent articles every month. In addition you will get terrific news feeds every morning with excellent links to featured articles from its past issues.
AUDIO: How to Extinguish the Fire of Anger
August 17th, 2011, Promulgated by Ben AndersonAnother stellar homily from Audio Sancto that is very pertinent to all of us.
And Two Shall Become One
August 16th, 2011, Promulgated by NerinaNo, I’m not talking about marriage, here, but about the practice of “selective reduction” especially in regards to twin pregnancies. I found an incredibly disturbing article at the New York Times discussing this morally problematic practice which has seen an increase in use. It is a lengthy article, but it raises many of the moral and ethical points that the Church, in Her wisdom, cautions the faithful about regarding reproductive technologies.
The article begins by sharing the story of “Jenny,” (all of the subjects requested anonymity in the article) a 45 year old woman 14 weeks pregnant with twins who chose pregnancy reduction. She spent 6 years pursuing various fertility options and says:
Things would have been different if we were 15 years younger or if we hadn’t had children already or if we were more financially secure, (keep in mind that Jenny pursued fertility treatment for years which I’m sure stressed the family finances mightily, she already has two children and she is 45 years old. What motivated her to pursue this pregnancy given these conditions?)
She goes on to add:
If I had conceived these twins naturally, I wouldn’t have reduced this pregnancy, because you feel like if there’s a natural order, then you don’t want to disturb it. But we created this child in such an artificial manner — in a test tube, choosing an egg donor, having the embryo placed in me — and somehow, making a decision about how many to carry seemed to be just another choice. The pregnancy was all so consumerish to begin with(emphasis mine), and this became yet another thing we could control. (At least with this comment she is being honest about how children are now viewed as a commodity – to be obtained on a person’s schedule, at his or her convenience and according to his or her plan. Also note that she is, in essence, killing another person’s baby, not her own, since an egg donor was used).
In 2004, the Pontifical Academy for Life published a final communique summarizing the symposium “The Dignity of Human Procreation and Reproductive Technologies. Anthropological and Ethical Aspects.” In it, the Academy noted the following points:
- over 1 million children are believed to have been conceived through IVF technology since the birth of the first IVF baby in 1978;
- despite the economic and medical resources committed to increasing the effectiveness rates of ART (assisted reproductive technology), little progress has been made. The Academy further suggests that if the same rates of success were applied to other medical technologies, they would be deemed “technical failures.”
- many couples, placing their hope in such technologies, despite the low success rates, often suffer greatly when ART fails (not to mention the moral dilemmas faced and the financial impact of pursuing ART)
- many human lives are lost to ART because of the excessive numbers of embryos created and ultimately lost in pursuit of a successful implantation
- ART does nothing to address the underlying issue of sterility among western couples but rather touts itself as a the answer to infertility
- a new mentality has developed leading some to believe that ” ART constitutes a preferential route – compared to the “natural” route – to bring a child into this world, because it is possible through these techniques to exercise a more effective “control” over the quality of the conceived child in line with the wishes of those who ask for such a child.“ The Academy further noted: ” All this works in favour of seeing the child obtained through the use of ART as being on the same level as a “product” whose value in reality depends in large measure on its “good quality”, which for its part is subjected to severe controls and careful selection.” (which brings us back to the NYT article)
Returning to Jenny’s story:
Jenny’s decision to reduce twins to a single fetus was never really in doubt. The idea of managing two infants at this point in her life terrified her. (Got that? Terrified her. Was she really so naive to have thought twins was not a possible outcome given the increased incidence of multiples with ART and IVF? Or did she anticipate pursuing reduction as part of the pregnancy plan? Did the fact that she was carrying another woman’s children make it an easier decision? Now, as a 44 year old woman myself with 5 children, I can definitely appreciate how daunting raising twins at this time in my life would be but I also know that I am not in control of this situation. God is. Children are a gift. We have to view them this way or we end up casting off the inconvenient or imperfect ones.)
Jenny basically goes on to justify killing one of the babies because she wants to make sure she has enough energy, attention and material things for her existing children and the remaining child in the pregnancy. The author of the article writes:
Even the twins would be robbed, because, at best, she could give each one only half of her attention and, she feared, only half of her love. Jenny desperately wanted another child, but not at the risk of becoming a second-rate parent. (Since Jenny is already a parent I don’t know how she deceived herself with this reasoning. As any parent I’ve ever talked to will say, love doesn’t divide, it multiplies. I know I was amazed each time a new child was welcomed into our home by how much love I had not only for the new baby, but for my other children as well.)
Shockingly, Jenny says “This is bad (referring to the reduction), but it’s not anywhere as bad as neglecting your child or not giving everything you can to the children you have,” (Again, the human brain can do amazing things to justify any behavior. As my 14 year old daughter concluded: “so she’s saying that being dead is better than having to wear hand-me downs?)
Interestingly, Jenny and her husband told no one about their decision and plan to keep it that way and this approach is quite common in those couples that pursue pregnancy reduction. One couple in this article were very divided about the procedure but ended up compromising when the husband said he didn’t want to see ultrasounds of the twins and he didn’t want to be in the room during the reduction procedure. As long as he didn’t have to “see it” he felt he could handle the intentional death of one of his children. His wife was happy with his absence because she didn’t “want to have to deal with this feelings.” (Yikes. How is that marriage going to weather?)
Several doctors who perform the procedure note that there is a certain stigma attached to it. Though society seems to be more willing to accept a straightforward abortion, it views couples who pursue reduction as more “selfish.” Further, women often suffer greatly after reduction with “what if” questions and wondering if they chose the right baby (often times doctors are the ones to choose which baby to kill since couples don’t want the responsibility. It will be interesting to see if recovery groups like “Silent No More” develop in a few years to help couples deal with the guilt and regret that is likely to come.)
There is a detailed discussion of why some physicians recommend reduction with twin pregnancies and several other anecdotes involving the procedure. The author also explores some of the ethical quandaries (e.g. sex selection, birth defects, Downs Syndrome) faced by a society that now views pregnancy and parenthood as just another consumer choice. I’ll finish this post with this final example of A. and her partner, a lesbian couple, looking to have children. The author shares their story:
Because both women were 45, they tried to double their already slim chances by both being inseminated. They each tried it three times; nothing took. At their doctor’s suggestion, they chose an egg donor in her mid-20s. Both women went through I.V.F., each with two embryos transferred. Both women got pregnant, but A. quickly miscarried. Her partner (who did not want to be identified, even by an initial) gave birth to a healthy boy, whom they adore. A. did another round of I.V.F. with frozen embryos, hoping to provide their son with a sibling. It didn’t work. So when their boy was nearly a year old, both women underwent I.V.F. again. Given A.’s fertility history, the doctor predicted she had just a 5 percent chance of getting pregnant.
Eventually, both women ended up pregnant with twins. They debated about pregnancy reduction and concluded that A. would reduce so as to increase the likeliness she would carry the remaining baby to term. After her reduction procedure, A’s partner miscarried. Now A. is expecting her baby in December. When asked about fearing a miscarriage, she reflects on the whole situation in this ironic way:
I’ve come to realize there’s only so much we can control. There’s a point where you just have to let nature take its course.
Melius Illi Erat . . .
August 16th, 2011, Promulgated by Gen
So many times when I have an argument with a “progressive” Catholic, I’m struck how he or she always falls back on the same old crutch. “But Jesus wouldn’t be so judgmental.” Or maybe, “Jesus wouldn’t say/act like that.” Or even, “Jesus wouldn’t have a problem with that.”
Two minor objections, which are ultimately matters of personal sentiment on my part, are that (1.) the “progressive” seems to throw about the Holy Name a bit too casually. The spirit in which we say the Name of Our Lord, Jesus, ought to be one of reverence, not justification. (2.) It’s just a trite way to avoid a more mature discussion. It’s called, in technical terms, “a fallacious appeal to authority.” Basically, “We can’t eat the cookies because daddy said ‘no’” becomes the mentality of the progressive’s argument.
However, the biggest objection I have to this sort of thing is that Jesus was not some passive, all-embracing social activist. You say Jesus wouldn’t condemn “X” or punish Fr./Sr./Msgr./Bishop “Y”? Well, then you seem to be forgetting the dialogue Jesus had with His Apostles on Holy Thursday:
And whilst they were eating, he said: Amen I say to you that one of you is about to betray me. And they being very much troubled began every one to say: Is it I, Lord? But he answering said: He that dips his hand with me in the dish, he shall betray me. The Son of man indeed goes, as it is written of him. But woe to that man by whom the Son of man shall be betrayed. It were better for him, if that man had not been born.
“Melius illi erat, si natus non fuiset.” “It were better for him, if that man had not been born.”
We are exceedingly and unworthily blessed with God’s mercy. However, that is not some Divine “get out of jail free” card. We must strive always to serve Our Lord and to be obedient to His Church, and pray most earnestly that we never take the place of Judas. Remember, Judas was at the Last Supper, the First Mass. He was called by Our Lord personally. This should remind us that if we feel “called,” we may well indeed be so. However, it isn’t an easy way out of falling into sin. If I felt called to be a father, I would pursue it in a valid, licit, and holy way, through the Sacrament of Marriage. I wouldn’t say, “I feel called to be a father . . . so I’ll just snatch a kid and call him Gen Jr.” No. I may have discerned the right calling, but most certainly not the right path to answering it.
Remember, ultimately, that we ought to act with all love, all humility when serving Our Lord. He is always first, and when we manipulate His Church to achieve our own ends, be they political, social, or personal, we assume the role of Judas. And in that moment of demonic transformation, we should do well to remember that Christ Himself denounced the traitor, and Christ Himself has the same ability to denounce us if, through our selfishness, we have denounced Him.
Sacred Heart of Jesus, have mercy on us!
A Beautiful Processional Banner
August 16th, 2011, Promulgated by Bernie(Click on pictures to see larger images)
I saw this banner in use at Father Scott Caton’s first Mass which was celebrated in the glorious setting of St. Michael’s Church, Rochester. It is such a gorgeous image of The All Holy Mother of God that I had to take a picture of it. I thought it would be nice to post it around the time of the Feast of the Annunciation, or even the Feast of the Assumption for it communicates to me the glorified -deified- Holy Mother.
The rich patterns, colors, and gold thread communicate a heavenly environment and a heavenly being. It seems to be one of the basic ways in which humans from all around the world, from the most “primitive” to the most sophisticated, picture the transcendent or state of heavenly bliss. To describe that which cannot be described sensually, humans usually turn to the most sensual or precious.
The floral motif, of course, calls to mind a garden: Eden, Paradise. That is the garden that was lost through the first Eve but reclaimed through the second Eve, Mary, at the Annunciation.
I believe the banner is owned by one of the priest’s who celebrated with Father Caton at the altar.
Theology of the Body Special Event in Perinton
August 15th, 2011, Promulgated by Ben AndersonTHEOLOGY OF THE BODY
Special Event: Peter Colosi, Ph.D. will be at Saint John of Rochester speaking about the application of Blessed Pope John Paul II’s Theology of the Body to Catholic teachings on sexuality. Dr. Colosi is currently a professor of philosophy and moral theology at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in Pennsylvania. He is an international expert on Theology of the Body and his interests also include Bioethics, HealthCare Ethics and Catholic Social Doctrine. This talk will be at 7:00 PM, Sunday, August 21st in the Gathering Room and is open to all teens and adults. If you have ever wanted to know what Theology of the Body is or want to dig deeper into Catholic moral issues, please come
40 Days for Life
August 14th, 2011, Promulgated by Ben AndersonThe 40 Days for Life planning committee is meeting Tuesday nights in August and September from 7-8 p.m. at the Focus Pregnancy Help Center, 86 University Ave., Rochester. All those who are interested in helping to plan or to obtain more information about the September 28-November 6 campaign are invited to attend. For more info on 40 Days for Life, see the website - http://www.40daysforlife.com/rochester/.

The beheading of St. John the Baptist, whom Herod ordered beheaded about the time of the Feast of the Pasch; but his memory is solemnly kept on this day, August 29, on which his venerated head was found for a second time. It was afterwards translated to Rome and is preserved in the church of St. Silvester in Capite and honoured by the people with great devotion. (from The Roman Martyrology)







9. And now, lastly, listen to what we have here, how this ointment was to some a sweet savor unto life, and to others a sweet savor unto death. When the pious Mary had rendered this grateful service to the Lord, straightway one of His disciples, Judas Iscariot, who was yet to betray Him, said,
11. Lay to heart our Lord’s example while living with man upon earth. Why had He a money bag, who was ministered unto by angels, save to intimate that His Church was destined thereafter to have her repository for money? Why gave He admission to a thief, save to teach His Church patiently to bear with thieves? But he who had formed the habit of abstracting money from the bag, did not hesitate for money received to sell the Lord Himself. But let us see what answer our Lord gave to such words. See, brethren: He does not say to him, You speak so on account of your thievishness. He knew him to be a thief, yet did not betray him, but rather endured him, and showed us an example of patience in tolerating the wicked in the Church. 



