Pentecost Wednesday: Peter’s shadow

Pentecost Wednesday: Ember Day

Another Octave ramble which might have a couple of surprises.

Back in the day, 5th c or so, Pentecost was enriched with an Octave, thus extending the festal character of the great feast. For a while they were bumped.

In the 11th c. St. Pope Gregory VII, Hildebrand, reinstated them while keeping the festive tone of the Octave.

If the Octave of Pentecost can be abolished for the Novus Ordo calendar, it can be reinstated, just as John Paul II reinstated “Prayers over the people” during Lent.

If the Ember Days can be de facto suppressed through lack of interest and ignorance, they can be reinstated through education and pursuit.

Consider what Gregory VII’s approach to “Eucharistic consistency” (or is it “Eucharistic coherence”…)  might be.

Consider what Gregory VII would do about prelates who waffle on morals, who do nothing about schlock worship, etc.

Today’s Roman Station is St. Mary Major, the place traditionally for scrutinies of candidates for ordination.  Ember Saturdays were traditionally days for ordinations.

If I had my way, we would call some back for scrutinies!  In my day in Rome, before ordination to the diaconate and to the priesthood we had pretty thorough “scrutinies”.  We went around a big room from table to where there was a priest/bishop scrutineer who would interrogate us about the material of which he was an expert.  These guys were usually professors from the Pontifical Universities.

Because this is an Ember Day, we have, first, two readings from Acts 2 and Acts 5, with a “Flectamus genua” for good measure, and then a Gospel pericope from the Bread of Life discourse in John 6.

Acts 2 relates the descent of the Holy Spirit and then Peter’s preaching with the conversion of many. Peter talks about the wonders people will see.

Acts 5 opens with the sad case of Ananias and Sapphira. Later the Apostles are imprisoned, but angels let them out. When the big shots started to freak out, Gamaliel counseled patience to see if what the Apostles were doing was from God. In this reading, the Apostles work many signs, many cures. Even Peter’s shadow cured. Many believed.

A few points spring to mind, in no special order.

First, Gamaliel counseled patience.  If what the Apostles were doing was from God, it would endure and produce good things.  If it was not, that would become clear.

Would that today our Whatevers High Atop The Thing would have even a hair’s breadth of such wise patience when it comes to something that really doesn’t need to prove itself because it already had a track record of centuries.

The Vetus Ordo has a track record and the Novus Ordo does not.  Rather, the Novus Ordo’s incipient track record isn’t that impressive.

Ratzinger said, way back in the day, and I’ve been saying this for decades, that the two rites (that’s what they are, let’s not kid ourselves) should be freely offered in the best way, most faithful way possible, side by side.  People will show us the way forward.

But … progressivists, you see, the catholic Left, liberals (from the Latin “free”, meaning for a liberal you are only “free” to agree with liberals), are afraid of freedom when it comes to that which stands as a bulwark against erosion of doctrine and – wait for it – morals.  There is nothing to fear from the Vetus Ordo and the people who want it, unless, that is, you fear large, happy, devout families with many children who participate in the life of the Church, which they love.

Second, Peter’s shadow healed.   This struck me as I said Mass in the presence of relics.

The association with holiness, and with the mediated power of Christ, is so mighty that it can effect miracles of healing.  A part of a saint’s body or a possession that was a often used and decorous (such as clothing, a writing pen, a holy image or book, a rosary or chalice), and appropriate object which come into contact with them, are considered relics.  Miracles can be effected through them.  Peter’s shadow healed!

The power of mediation should ever be in our minds.  John was the voice and Christ the Word.  “He who hears you hears me”.  “Whose sins you forgive, they are forgiven…”.  The priest says, in persons Christi, “This is my Body…”.

Next, Peter’s shadow healed because of his association with and commissioning by the Lord, Light from Light.  It is vitally – in the literal sense of that word – important to stay close to the Light source.   Holy Church is a Light house for us, as well as the Barque it directs.  The farther we get from the light source, the weaker it gets and and fuzzier the shadow or beam.  TRADITION keeps us close to the light source.   Hence, Tradidi quod et accepi. 

To attack Tradition is to attack Christ and His Church.  It is suicidal to attack within the Church those who are attracted to Church’s Tradition.

In addition, the Mass texts today shift to different themes. Pentecost and Monday and Tuesday (before Ember Days) all contained protection from harm by the enemy.

Something about the Descent of the Spirit has always twitched at my mind. Acts 2:1 says “they were all together in one place”. But there were quite a few believers at the time, at least 120. All in one place? The upper room wasn’t big enough. BUT… this is the Feast of Weeks, Shavuot!

They were not in the Upper Room.  They were in the TEMPLE.

Males were to go to the Temple for the Shavuot – Pentecost – spring harvest festival celebration involving the wave offerings in the Temple of the harvest fruits, loaves baked from the first sheaves.  The Temple was certainly “big enough” for all the disciples.  And that is where they were!   Acts 2:2 says a wind came (the Holy Spirit) and “filled the house”, Greek oikos. Oikos can be house, of course, but it can also mean any building, including the Temple, the house of God (Matthew 21:13; Mark 11:17; Luke 19:46; John 2:16f, (Isaiah 56:5, 7); cf. Luke 11:51; Acts 7:47, 49).

Remember what we read at the end of Luke 24:50-53 and the account of the Ascension of the Lord?

Then [Jesus] led them out as far as Bethany, and lifting up his hands he blessed them. While he blessed them, he parted from them, and was carried up into heaven. And they returned to Jerusalem with great joy, and were continually in the temple blessing God.

They were continually in the Temple. Why? Among other reasons, Shavuot. When Acts says they were in the “house”, they were in the Temple.  Jewish festivals looked back to historical events and they looked forward to something yet to be fulfilled.  Shavuot looked back to the descent of God on the mountain in the fiery presence cloud, shekinah, when God gave the Decalogue, the Ten Commandments.  Shavuot looked forward to the return of the fiery “presence cloud” to the Temple which had departed with the destruction of the first Temple.  That’s Pentecost: Shavuot fulfilled.  The first fruits this time being the 3000 baptized.

What happens after the mighty wind and tongues of fire? A huge crowd hears Peter’s sermon. Where was that? In the Temple. When did it take place? At 9:00 in the morning. Remember the line about drunkenness?

This was the 3rd hour of the morning and the time of the tamid, the sacrifice of the first of the two daily lambs.

To baptize all those people they would have needed a place with a lot of water. There was such a place nearby, pools for ritual cleansing before going to the Temple.

I am reminded of Ezekiel 6:26:

“A new heart I will give you, and a new spirit I will put within you; and I will take out of your flesh the heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh.”

A new SPIRIT I will put within you. I will take away this TEMPLE of STONE and give you a TEMPLE of FLESH.

This took place in the Temple which lost the glory cloud of fire of the presence of God. The presence of God as fire returns and settles not in the Holy Holies where the Ark was, but rather on the New Ark, Mary and on the Apostles and, through baptism in the hearts of the new believers, new Temples of the Holy Spirit.

In the Introit of today’s Mass we pray: “O God, when You went forth at the head of Your people, making a passage for them, dwelling in their midst…” A reference to the fire cloud that led the people.

In the Collect we pray something that echoes that image of the guiding freedom-bringing fire: “May the Paraclete Who proceeds from You, enlighten our minds, we beseech You, O Lord, and guide us to all truth, as Your Son has promised.”

In the Second Collect, remember it is an Ember Day with two first readings, we get this. See if it doesn’t bind together my thoughts, above:

Grant, we beseech You, almighty and most merciful God, that the Holy Spirit may come to dwell in us, graciously making us a temple of His glory.

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OLDIE PODCAzT 58: Ember Days; Chrysostom on St. Matthias; Prayer to the Holy Spirit

ORIGINAL NOTES from 14 May 2008:

Today is Wednesday in the Octave of Pentecost, or at least it ought to be in in the Novus Ordo as it is in the older, Traditional Roman Calendar.

This is the third PODCAzT for the Pentecost Octave.

Today we learn about what Ember Day’s are, these beautiful days which helped Catholics for may centuries regulate the rhythm of their lives in the consecration of the seasons of the year, and learn to use God’s creation with moderation.

Then we hear from St. John Chrysostom (+407) on the choice of St. Matthias to replace Judas who had fallen away.  I have comments about bishops.

Finally, we hear a marvelous old prayer invoking the help of the Holy Spirit, appropriate in this Octave of Pentecost.

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VIDEO – Unboxing the newly reprinted Pre-55 Missal from the Benedictines of Norcia

I unbox – open the package – of the newly reprinted Pre-55 Missal from the Benedictines of Norcia which just arrived. The monks forewarned that they don’t have many at the time I made this video. They will eventually have more. NB: Therefore, they are not at the time I post this – 10 June 2025, Pentecost Tuesday – able to take orders.

However, I wanted you to see what this treasure is like and how it was shipped to me. I am grateful to a reader and patron of this blog, as well as the wonderful monks of Norcia, for this new old Missal, the 20th edition “iuxta typicam” of 1937.

Buy their beer! It is excellent. Three kinds!

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OLDIE PODCAzT 57: John Paul II on the unforgivable sin; Our Lady of Fatima and the vision of Hell

ORIGINAL NOTES Posted on 13 May 2008

Today is Tuesday in the Octave of Pentecost, or at least it ought to be in in the Novus Ordo as it is in the older, Traditional Roman Calendar.

This is the second PODCAzT for the Pentecost Octave.

Thanks to your feedback after yesterday’s I decided to do another.

Today we dig into John Paul II’s encyclical on the Holy Spirit Dominum et vivificantem and what he teaches about the unforgivable sin, “blasphemy” against the Holy Spirit.

I add a few digressions, of course, including one where I connect the sinner’s closing off to the redemptive power of the Holy Spirit and the self-enclosed circle created in versus populum worship rather than the opening out to the coming of the Lord in ad orientem worship. I might be on a limb with that, but… hey! Food for thought.

Then we hear Our Lady of Fatima, on this her feast day. We hear Lucia’s description of the vision of Hell, which Our Lady showed the children.

Just in case you were wondering what closing yourself off to the Holy Spirit comes to….

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Daily Rome Shot 1372 – Confirmation

Saturday Vigil of Pentecost, at The Parish™, Card. Müller administered the Sacrament of Confirmation. Here are some moments.

Please remember me when shopping online and use my affiliate links.  US HEREWHY?  This helps to pay for health insurance (massively hiked for this new year of surprises), utilities, groceries, etc..  At no extra cost, you provide help for which I am grateful.

 

Our time in “East Germany” is over.

White to move and mate in 4.    HERE

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WDTPRS – Pentecost Monday: Feast of the Lacrimation of Paul VI. 


Let’s have a look at the Collect for today’s Mass of Pentecost Monday.

COLLECT (1962MR):
Deus, qui Apostolis tuis
Sanctum dedisti Spiritum:
concede plebi tuae piae petitionis effectum;
ut, quibus dedisti fidem, largiaris et pacem
.

I found this prayer in the 8th c. Liber sacramentorum Gellonensis.

I like that elegant splitting of Spiritum Sanctum with dedisti.

Our trusty Lewis & Short reminds us that effectus, us, (efficio) means basically “a doing, effecting; execution, accomplishment, performance; with reference to the result of an action, an operation, effect, tendency, purpose”.  Blaise & Dumas offers that effectus has to do with the “realization of a prayer”.

LITERAL VERSION:
O God, who gave the Holy Spirit to Your Apostles,
grant to Your people the realization of their dutiful petition,
that you may bestow also peace
upon those whom you have given faith
.

What immediately jumps into my mind are the references to peace in the ordinary of the Mass and also in the moderm form for sacramental absolution.

Allow me to stretch to a connection, in view of the Roman Station.

Christ is our Lord and Liberator.  After His Ascension he sent our Counselor and Comforter.

Together, under the eternal aegis of the Father, the Son and the Spirit bring us from bondage to freedom, anxiety to peace.  We need not fear our judgment.

This is accomplished through the ministry and mediation of the Church.

As a People who are members of Christ’s Body the Church we approach God’s mercy with a sense of filial duty, petitioning both the immediate effect of Christ’s merits and also the long-term effect of heavenly peace.

In the words of the Church’s worship, Christ Himself strikes from our limbs the heavy chains of our oppression.

This is true “liberation theology”.  This is a cause of tears of joy.

Meanwhile, for another kind of tears, in the Novus Ordo today it is back to green.  No Octave of Pentecost. 

You know the now infamous story of Paul VI, which a friend of mine dubbed the

Feast of the Lacrimation of Paul VI.   

I wrote about it many times.  One example: HERE

That story has made the rounds, with embellishments.  I’m the source of that anecdote, recounted to me in Rome many years ago by a former papal MC, whose word I have no reason to doubt.

For more on those dark years…

For more on that era check these PODCAzTs:

093 09-11-16 40 years ago… Paul VI on the eve of the Novus Ordo
094 09-11-20 40 years ago… Paul VI on the eve of the Novus Ordo (Part II)
095 09-11-24 40 years ago… Paul VI on the eve of the Novus Ordo (Part III)

 

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OLDIE PODCAzT 56: Octaves – Fr. Z rants & Augustine on Pentecost

ORIGINAL NOTES:

Today is Monday in the Octave of Pentecost, or at least it ought to be in in the Novus Ordo as it is in the older, Traditional Roman Calendar.

I dig in to what a liturgical Octave, is adding my own comments.

The we hear from the great St. Augustine (+430) on the feast of Pentecost, preaching on 12 June 412. He has interesting wine imagery and talks about what it means to be a living member of the Body of Christ.

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News of the Church 14 – 8 June 2025

It’s 8 June 2025 and it is Pentecost Sunday, that beautiful feast traditionally decorated with liturgical treasures surpassing all others. Some time ago, I saw a movie called News of the World in which years after the Civil War a former confederate officer scratches out a living as a gazetteer. He travels from town to and town and reads aloud stories from different newspapers. People pay a dime .10c a head to listen, which is about $2.50 today. HERE The idea caught my imagination and here I am, a gazetteer.

An audio “gazette” of Catholic things.

00:14 – Init
01:08 – Pope Leo XIV’s Pectoral Cross
07:00 – Pope Leo XIV’s June Intention
11:57 – The true “Holy Grail”?
15:19 – Letter of the District Superior of the SSPX
24:30 – Boris Spassky retrospect
30:10 – Concealed Carry: Sacrilege?
34:00 – On he Descent the Holy Spirit by Fulton Sheen
36:45 – Exit

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Daily Rome Shot 1372 – Happy Pentecost!

Getting ready for confirmations at The Parish™.  Photos from The World’s Best Sacristan™.

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Welcome Registrants

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YCSarris

Proper concelebration on the Chartres Pilgrimage

White to move and mate in 7!  There are two techniques in here you should be able to name.  Also, note what a deadly combo a queen and a knight can be.

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes: Pentecost Sunday 2025

Too many people today are without good, strong preaching, to the detriment of all. Share the good stuff.

Was there a GOOD point made in the sermon you heard at your Mass of obligation for the Pentecost Sunday?

Tell about attendance especially for the Traditional Latin Mass.

Any local changes or (hopefully good) news?  I know there is a lot of BAD news.  How about some good news?

A taste of my thoughts from the other place: HERE

[…]

The Greek says in Acts 2:2 that the mighty rush filled the “house” (Greek oikos), which on the surface suggests the “upper room” where they had been for Passover.  However, in Acts 7:47 we read about how Solomon built a “house” (oikos) for God, which means the Temple.  In Greek, the usual world for “temple” is hierón or naós for inner sanctuary.  As for the time of day, it was the “third hour” or 9 AM (Acts 2:15), the time of the first of two daily tamid sacrifices of a spotless lamb in the Temple.  However, in Acts 3:1 we find Peter and John “going up to the temple at the hour of prayer, the ninth hour”, which was 3 PM.  This is the hour of the second of the tamid took place.  It seems that Peter and John were observing the hours of the tamid sacrifices and they were in the Temple, but not just them.  Acts 2:1 says they were “all together in one place”.  Furthermore, at the sound of the rushing of the Spirit, “the multitude came together”, which is when people from across the ancient world heard their own tongues being spoken, and “about three thousand souls” were baptized (Acts 2:41).  It would be hard to have a multitude come together and to baptize 3000 people in the upper room of the Passover.  In fact, they were probably in the Temple at the hour of the morning tamid when the Holy Spirit came, which would be the clear fulfillment of the return of God’s presence and the resolution of what was foreshadowed when God descended in fire on Mount Sinai to write the Decalogue of the Old Law on tablets of stone.  This time, the New Law was written by tongues of fire on hearts.  The 3000 souls added were indeed “first fruits” of the Spirit’s harvest festival following up the Risen Christ’s own first fruit wave bikkurim offering from the Resurrection to the Ascension.

[…]

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