Daily Rome Shot 1262 – no pun intended

More in Sant’Ignazio. In memory of Jesuit Fr. Felix Cappello, an amazing canonist and famed confessor.

Seems right for ASH WEDNESDAY.

GO TO CONFESSION!

Thanks to PS CP, GF, for reliquaries from my wishlist! I look forward to installing relics in them. OF course, I am STILL waiting for those relics to arrive. I’m trying to be patient.

Can you spell JURASSIC? Well… I guess I let that one out… no pun intended. Well, yes, it was intended. The consequences of this may not be intended, however.

Chessy news… HERE

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | 2 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 1261 – starching

Welcome Registrant:

FJH3

Sant’Ignazio…

I haven’t figured out what is going on with my amazon tags.  I can see that people have ordered things, by the traffic graphs.  So, I will continue to ask for your assistance this way.

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.

I have started to renew my corporals.  It has been quite a while.  I found a couple languishing which had gone sort of yellow.  Therefore, I gave them a good soak in Oxyclean and then set about the starching.  I had in the past used a combination of rice starch and white olive oil soap to obtain a beautiful shiny gloss.   However, I remembered that one priest in the combox said he used just liquid starch and it worked.  I tried that.

Smoothed out wet on a pane of glass.

Dry this morning.  You can see through the linen that underneath the glass I put a rubbery sheet to make sure the glass wouldn’t move it bumped.

Peeling it off.  It came off with difficulty, not at all like when I used also the oil soap.

I used magnets to hold the edge tight.

Peeled.  It has no glossy surface at all on the side that was against the glass.  It feels quite rough.

Folded.

It is rather hard, which is good, but it is rough to the touch.  The point of having the glossy, glassy finish is that you can both see and catch up particles of a Host easily using the paten.

I will not use this corporal.  Instead, I will try an experiment.  I’ll liquify some oil soap and blend it into the liquid starch.  Maybe that will work.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | 1 Comment

5 March 2025 – Ash Wednesday – Fasting, Abstinence, and You (with remarks on coffee and on brushing your teeth)

According to the 1983 Code of Canon Law for the Latin Church, Latin Church Catholics are bound to observe fasting and abstinence on Ash Wednesday.

Here are some details. I am sure you know them already, but they are good to review.

FASTING: Catholics who are 18 year old and up, until their 59th birthday (when you begin your 60th year), are bound to fast (1 full meal and perhaps some food at a couple points during the day, call it 2 “snacks”, according to local custom or law – call it, two snacks that don’t add up to a full meal) on Ash Wednesday and on Good Friday.

Some choose not to eat at all.  Some choose, in the monastic style, to have something only in the evening.

There is no scientific formula for this.  Figure it out.

ABSTINENCE: Catholics who are 14 years old and older are abound to abstain from meat on Ash Wednesday and on all Fridays of Lent.

In general, when you have a medical condition of some kind, or you are pregnant, etc., these requirements can be relaxed.

For Eastern Catholics there are differences concerning dates and practices. Our Eastern friends can fill us Latins in.

You should by now have a plan for your spiritual life and your physical/material mortifications and penitential practices during Lent.

You would do well to include some works of mercy, both spiritual and corporal.

I also recommend making a good confession close to the beginning of Lent.  Let me put that another way:

GO TO CONFESSION!

“But Father! But Father!”, some of you are saying anxiously, “What about my coffee?  I can drink my coffee, can’t I?  Can’t I?”

You can, of course, have coffee.  No question there.  You can also choose not to.

How about coffee in between meals on Ash Wednesday?

The old axiom, for the Lenten fast, is “Liquidum non frangit ieiuniumliquid does not break the fast”, provided – NB – you are drinking for the sake of thirst, rather than for eating.

Common sense suggests that chocolate banana shakes or “smoothies”, etc., are not permissible, even though they are pretty much liquid in form.  They are not what you would drink because you are thirsty, as you might more commonly do with water, coffee, tea, wine in some cases, lemonade, even some of these sports drinks such as “Gatorade”, etc.

Again, common sense applies, so figure it out.

Drinks such as coffee and tea do not break the Lenten fast even if they have a little milk added, or a bit of sugar, or fruit juice, which in the case of tea might be lemon.

Coffee would break the Eucharistic fast (one hour before Communion), since – pace fallentes  – coffee is no longer water, but it does not break the Lenten fast on Ash Wednesday.

You will be happy to know that chewing tobacco does not break the fast (unless you eat the quid, I guess), nor does using mouthwash (gargarisatio in one manual I checked) or brushing your teeth (pulverisatio – because once people used tooth powder – and you still can!  GETCHYER TOOTH POWDER HERE! There is even one with charcoal.  The ancient Romans at least the ancient Iberians under the Romans, as we know from a poem by Catullus, used chalk and urine. Yes.  They did (cf. Catullus 39 about Egnatius, who apparently grinned to excess).

EVERYONE NB: Never forget the Latin proverb, risus abundant in ore stultorum… laughter/grinning abounds in the mouths of the stupid.  And, in the aforementioned Cat 39, “nam risu inepto res ineptior nulla est… there is nothing more tasteless than a silly laugh”.  If you have a risus ineptus you would do well to change your ways.

Concerning the consumption of alligator and crocodile – HERE

I included notes also on the eating of endothermic moonfish, peptonized beef, and muskrat… just in case.

If you want to drink your coffee and tea with true merit I suggest drinking it from one of my coffee mugs.  I’d like to offer an indulgence for doing so, but that’s above my pay grade.

I just happen to have available a “Liquidum non frangit ieiunium” mug!  HERE

And there’s also this new choice…

3:16 isn’t just in John.

CLICK to see MORE

Posted in Canon Law, Our Catholic Identity, SESSIUNCULA | 1 Comment

During this “watch”, each evening at St Peter’s Gregorian chant is sung… but hardly anyone sings. Why is that?

From a priest reader…

As I’m sure you’ve noticed, each night in St. Peter’s Square, a small schola has sung the Oremus pro Pontifice for the Holy Father. It’s a gesture that is simultaneously reverent and traditional, yet incredibly simple. For those of us in the know, however, the videos of the nightly chanting of this antiphon give a glimpse into the effects of the liturgical reform on the Church at large:

  1. The Liturgical Movement was supposed to restore chant to its pride of place. Every night, the faithful, religious, and priests in attendance stare blankly at the schola, not really understanding the significance of the chant. On this point, if the Liturgical Movement had succeeded, then this would be a staple of the Catholic repertoire; a common chant sung regularly at parishes.
  2. The majority of the cardinals, themselves, despite traditionally being models of Romanitas do not know how to sing this chant. They, too, stare blankly at the schola as they chant the antiphon. When they enter the conclave, will these men even know how to sing the Veni Creator, or the meaning of its poetry?
  3. The only cardinals who do know how to chant the antiphon are the ones that you would expect, namely Burke and Arinze.

I just thought that you would appreciate these observations. Thank you for all you do in the webspace for Holy Mother Church.

In 1962, John XXIII issued Veterum sapientia.

The Second Vatican Council said that Latin was to be retained and that Gregorian chant had pride of place.  It required that pastors of souls made sure that people could sing and speak the Latin that pertained to them.

The Latin Church’s Code of Canon Law commands that candidates for the priesthood be very capable (bene calleant) in Latin.

One thing after another has been disobeyed.  The result?   We don’t know who we are now.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Mail from priests, Our Catholic Identity, Pò sì jiù, The future and our choices | Tagged | 11 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 1260 – news

More from Sant’ Ignazio

Welcome registrants:

Briddygirl
Datter av Gud
Mr N Murphy

NEWS…

Yesterday I celebrated Holy Mass for my benefactors.  I remember in prayer daily all my benefactors, those regular and those occasional.  I am also grateful for you who use my amazon links.

ABOUT AMAZON… yesterday I had a bit of a scare.   I checked the balance of the accumulated percent of the sales from the use of my links and… everything was GONE.  No records… no access.  I found my UK link, but my USA link is…. I don’t know.  I have no idea what is happening.   I think that if you use links with that USA tag (whatdoesthepr-20) I still get the credit.  But I don’t know.  I have an other tag that is – in theory – to unify the different international shops (onamzwhatdoes-20).   I am scratching my head at this point wondering if I’ve been cancelled or partially so.   This is troubling, because a good portion of my income comes from this.  Time will tell.

Speaking of News… I did a New of the Church podcast yesterday.  I’m asking myself …why.  No comments.

More news.

In chessy news… HERE

White to move and win. Not mate just yet because black can delay. One slip and it is mate in 5.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | 6 Comments

News of the Church 12 – 2 March 2025

Sometimes the PLAY arrow doesn’t display, but it’s there. And you can use this HERE.

It’s 2nd of March 2025 and it is Quinquagesima Sunday.

Some time ago, I saw a movie called News of the World in which years after the Civil War a former confederate officer ekes out a living travelling from town to town and reading aloud news and stories in newspapers from different parts of the country to people who paid a dime a ahead to listen (that’s about $2.50 today). People in those days were news and novelty starved and often illiterate, so there was interest in what he read. This was a real boon for them if they wanted news. The idea of a wandering gazetteer caught my imagination and here I am.

BTW a “gazette” – a news report once often the name of newspapers – came from the name of the 16th c. venetian coin that bought early paper news sheets.

An audio “gazette” of Catholic things.

00:13 – Init
01:26 – Beginning of St. Joseph’s Month.
05:18 – News of the Moon, Jesuits and insects
11:47 – Another “red shift” Jesuit scientist (but not a Communist for a change).
18:06 – The Wanderer: “We Must Renew Our Trust In God”
26:29 – Wherein Fr. Z rants
30:29 – Litany of St. Joseph
36:00 – Exit

Posted in News of the Church, News of the Church, PODCAzT | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 1259 – Moon

More from Sant’Ignazio.  The tomb of St. John Berchmans.

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.

Speaking of Jesuits…

Today the Firefly lunar lander Blue Ghost successfully (softly and in a stable, well-behaved way) touched down on the moon, the last stage beings entirely autonomous to avoid iffy terrain. The landing site is in Mare Crisium, which is visible from the Northern Hemisphere in the upper right of the full Moon. It is sometimes called the “Sea of Crises”. Some of you might know it from a story by Arthur C. Clarke. It is NE of Mare Tranquillitatis. A Soviet lander went there in 1976. Blue Ghost 1 launched on 15 January and is part of the CLIPS program, which pairs NASA up with companies making their own landers and payloads.

There is a fascinating connection between the name of the company and the place where Blue Ghost landed, but I’ll save that for News of the Church, which I want to do today, before Lent.

Here is a dramatic photo, one of the first to come back…

In chessy news… HERE

Here’s a good one. White to move and win material. There’s a mini windmill.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | 3 Comments

Is papal authority over liturgy absolute?

The more vigorously the primacy was displayed, the more the question came up about the extent and and limits of [papal] authority, which of course, as such, had never been considered. After the Second Vatican Council, the impression arose that the pope really could do anything in liturgical matters, especially if he were acting on the mandate of an ecumenical council. Eventually, the idea of the givenness of the liturgy, the fact that one cannot do with it what one will, faded from the public consciousness of the West. In fact, the First Vatican Council had in no way defined the pope as an absolute monarch. On the contrary, it presented him as the guarantor of obedience to the revealed Word. The pope’s authority is bound to the Tradition of faith. … The authority of the pope is not unlimited; it is at the service of Sacred Tradition.

Joseph Ratzinger
in The Spirit of the Liturgy

US HERE – UK HERE

I am also reminded of what one of young Ratzinger’s mentors wrote on this topic.

Jesuit Fr. Karl Rahner was an immensely influential theological guru of a couple of generations of clerics and theologians.   He is the darling, venerated oracle of the catholic left and modernists.

Here is a quote from Karl Rahner.  This quote should be picked up and circulated widely.  Particularly in view of a potential upcoming special gathering.

From Karl Rahner’s Studies in Modern Theology (Herder, 1965, pp. 394-395) under the subtitle:

A Distinction: Legal and Moral Norms

[…]

Imagine that the Pope, as supreme pastor of the Church, issued a decree today requiring all the uniate churches of the Near East to give up their Oriental liturgy and adopt the Latin rite….The Pope would not exceed the competence of his jurisdictional primacy by such a decree, but the decree would be legally valid.

But we can also pose an entirely different question. Would it be morally licit for the Pope to issue such a decree? Any reasonable man and any true Christian would have to answer “no.” Any confessor of the Pope would have to tell him that in the concrete situation of the Church today such a decree, despite its legal validity, would be subjectively and objectively an extremely grave moral offense against charity, against the unity of the Church rightly understood (which does not demand uniformity), against possible reunion of the Orthodox with the Roman Catholic Church, etc., a mortal sin from which the Pope could be absolved only if he revoked the decree.

From this example one can readily gather the heart of the matter. It can, of course, be worked out more fundamentally and abstractly in a theological demonstration:

1. The exercise of papal jurisdictional primacy remains even when it is legal, subject to moral norms, which are not necessarily satisfied merely because a given act of jurisdiction is legal. Even an act of jurisdiction which legally binds its subjects can offend against moral principles.

2. To point out and protest against the possible infringement against moral norms of an act which must respect these norms is not to deny or question the legal competence of the man possessing the jurisdiction.

[…]

I recall that the late Michael Davies used this argument in one of his books in the wake of the Novus Ordo.

By this approach a Pope could have the raw power, the juridical authority, to suppress the TLM (pace fans of Quo primum), but he clearly would not have the moral authority to do such a thing.  It would be a…

“grave moral offense against charity”.

 

Posted in Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World | Tagged , | 9 Comments

I was told that the Left is telling people to boycott Amazon today. Therefore it is a great day to buy something from Amazon.  

I was told that the Left is telling people to boycott Amazon today.

Therefore it is a great day to buy something from Amazon.

Please use my affiliate links.  US HERE – UK HERE  WHY?  I get a small percentage of sales.  I can’t see who buys what.  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.

Here are a few suggestions:

Jesuit at Large: Essays and Reviews by Paul Mankowski, S.J.

US HERE – UK HERE

In the Beginning Was the Word: An Annotated Reading of the Prologue of John

US HERE – UK

 Ignatius Catholic Study Bible: Old and New Testaments  – WOW!

US HERE – UK HERE

The Exorcist Files: True Stories About the Reality of Evil and How to Defeat It

US HERE – UK

Martyrs of the Eucharist: Stories to Inspire Eucharistic Amazement.

US HERE – UK HERE

On The Demonic by Archbp. Fulton J. Sheen.

US HERE – UK HERE

No Apologies: Why Civilization Depends on the Strength of Men by Anthony Esolen

US HERE – UK HERE

 John Fisher and Thomas More: Keeping Their Souls While Losing Their Heads by Robert J. Conrad, Jr 

US HERE – UK HERE

Posted in ¡Hagan lío! | 4 Comments

Daily Rome Shot 1258 – relics

HEY! a****n.w***h@erickson.com! My thank you note was kicked back as undeliverable. New email?

The Roman Martyrology says that today is the anniversary of the translation of the relics of St. Augustine of Hippo from Sardinia to Pavia in northern Italy about 20 miles south of Milan by King Luitprand king of the Lombards. His tomb is in the church San Pietro in Ciel d’Oro. Also in that church are the remains of St. Boethius, who wrote The Consolation of Philosophy.  Liutprand is also buried here.

Speaking of relics, I recently acquired 8 beautiful reliquaries for the Tridentine Mass Society of Madison (of which I am still President – in exile).  They arrived in Madison, have been assembled and are waiting for consecration and the placement of a reliquary theca in each one.  Here’s a shot.

I am grateful to everyone who has continued to contribute donations to the TMSM even in this time of persecution.   We are still involved in beautifying worthy sacred liturgical worship and waiting for happier days without the hypocritical oppression being carried on by Rome and some bishops.

Speaking more of relics, I am about to receive some new saints for my chapel.  I have in the past depended on the kindness of you readers to provide reliquaries.  I put the names of donors on a tag on the base to remember them when they are moved, which I usually do on their feasts.    I have put a few more reliquaries on my wishlistHERE

Here’s a puzzle for today:

NB: I’ll hold comments with solutions ’till the next day so there won’t be “spoilers” for others.

White to move and win a piece.  This is a little tricky.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | 5 Comments