ORDINATION TO THE PRIESTHOOD AND THE BLESSING OF OILS His Eminence has designated Friday, June 26 at 9:00 AM as the day for the ordination of the class of 2020. Those to be ordained are Reverend Mr. Luis Silva for the archdiocese and Reverend Brother Roland Pereira, M.Id for the Idente Missionaries. Pray for these ordinandi.
There will be no Chrism Mass which was postponed from Holy Week. So, at 8:30am, on June 26 the Cardinal will bless the oils and consecrate the chrism. All of this will be live streamed.
READ MOREBy Fr Konrad Loewenstein, FSSP Dowry, FSSP Periodical N. 41, Spring 2019
Each of us has a particular temperament which encompasses our whole manner of feeling, judging, sympathizing, willing, and acting. This temperament is to be perfected in each one of us by the practice of the Christian virtues. What can impede this work of perfection, and even bring each of us to our eternal ruin, is what is known as "the Predominant Fault".
READ MOREPope Benedict XV canonized St. Joan of Arc on May 16, 1920. Her feast day is on May 30. Joan, also known as the Maid of Orleans and la Pucelle captivated the hearts of many including the American writer Mark Twain. His book on St. Joan is a classic and well worth reading. It is available from Ignatius Press. Twain considered it his finest book and Joan one of the finest human beings who ever lived. George Bernard Shaw also an unlikely author for this saint wrote the famous play Saint Joan. For The transcript of her trial is also available. One of the most moving moments in her trial was the moment she was asked whether she was in a state of grace, that is, without mortal sin. Joan was unlettered and unschooled in theology but gave a perfect answer consistent with Catholic teaching. Only God knows the absolute state of anyone’s soul. Joan responded: If I am may God keep me in it and if I am not may He bring me to it.
READ MORECardinal Sarah, Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship of the Holy see, in an op-ed for Figaro Vox reminds us of the Church’s mission. The title of the op-ed jas the quote: The Covid-19 epidemic draws the Church back to her first responsibility: the Faith.” Underneath there is the headline: Too often, the Church has wanted to prove that she was “of this world: in devoting herself to common causes rather than the apostolate, deplores the Cardinal from Guinea. You can read the basic content of Cardinal Sarah’s remarks at Life Site News HERE. There you will find this potent reminder: …the Church must change. She must stop being afraid of causing shock and of going against the tide. She must give up thinking of herself as a worldly institution. She must return to her only “raison d'être”: faith. The Church is there to announce that Jesus conquered death through His resurrection.
from lanuovabq.it/it/enrico-medi-lo-scienziato-che-amava-leucaristia
His is not a household name but the Servant of God, Enrico Medi (1911-1974) was once a well-known physicist with a degree in theology as well. At one time he was vice president of Euratom and counseled the peaceful use of nuclear energy. He did scientific commentary on TV. A husband and father of six daughters, Medi loved the Eucharist, the priesthood, and was a spiritual son of Padre Pio. He is on the road to beatification. . His heroism and charity was exemplified in 1943 during World War II when he offered his own life to save two men condemned to be shot. They were spared and his life was not taken. Some items and thoughts from this scientist and faithful Catholic:
READ MOREAs Aquinas teaches, Christ did not die to save the fallen angels, because they cannot be saved. They cannot be saved because their wills are locked on to evil. It is impossible for them to repent. It is impossible for them to repent because they are incorporeal, and thus lack the bodily preconditions for the changeability of the will's basic orientation toward either good or evil. An angel makes this basic choice once and for all upon its creation. It is because we are corporeal that Christ can save us. But he can do so only while we are still in the flesh. Upon death, the soul is divorced from the body and thus, like an angel, becomes locked on to a basic orientation toward either good or evil. If it is not saved before death, it cannot be saved. It's game over. I explained the reasons for all this in a post on the metaphysics of damnation.
READ MORECatholics are forbidden to become Freemasons under pain of mortal sin. This is something many Catholics are surprised to hear. They view the Masons as a harmless fraternal group like the Elks, Lions, Knights of Columbus, and if you are a fan of the Jackie Gleason comedy show, the Honeymooners, the Raccoons. The Knights of Columbus was intended to provide an alternative for Catholics to membership in a Masonic lodge a membership forbidden by the Church. The classic teaching on why Catholics can’t be Freemasons is Pope Leo XIII’s encyclical, Humanum Genus, which can be accessed here.
READ MOREMany people have had to face the loss of loved-ones, in some cases multiple loved-ones, during the pandemic. Even outside of the pandemic situation Catholics face end-of-life situations and are pressed by medical/hospital personnel to indicate choices like "do not resuscitate" or "pulling the plug" Here is a guide to form a correct conscience in accord with Catholic teaching. It goes without saying that euthanasia and assisted suicide are serious violations of God's law and ought not be chosen.
READ MOREWhile focus has been on the corona virus and its devastating effects, there is also devastation from the shut-down of the Country: the loss of jobs, businesses, livelihoods. In the wake of this, there has been the expansion and promotion of highly-addictive and damaging pornography by the smut-merchants. The Bishops of the United States have weighed in on this in a letter to the Attorney General of the U.S. concerning pornography and the non-enforcement obscenity laws.
READ MOREMan and woman are created to praise, reverence, and serve God our Lord, and by this means to save their souls; the other things on the face of the earth are created to help them in attaining the end for which they are created.
—Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius Loyola Foundational Teaching
Canon 1752 of the Code of Canon Law: …the salvation of souls, which must always be the supreme law in the Church, is to be kept before one's eyes.
READ MOREAn Italian author and essayist began a recent blog entry with the question How to Keep Beauty from Vanishing Away, a question from a poem of the great Victorian poet Gerard Manley Hopkins S. J. He notes how poets often mirror our fears, hopes, sufferings and suggests Hopkins for this pandemic. He offers several: The Leaden Echo which is a poem of feeling loss, desperation, sadness and then The Golden Echo, which is a poem of rebounding and hope.
Hopkins an Anglican Protestant became a Catholic and a Jesuit under the influence of St. John Henry Newman. His parents were stunned that he would throw away a pure life and rare mind into the cold limbo which Rome destines English converts. Not only did he become a Catholic but he joined the hated and most persecuted order from Elizabethan times the Jesuits the era when Jesuits were giants.
Hopkins draws on ancient Catholic tradition and notices hidden beauty if people have the eyes to see. Every speck of beauty in creation reflects the Word, Who became Flesh, Whose Name is Jesus Christ, Beauty Himself. The third poem is very appropriate for the month of May: The Blessed Virgin compared to the air we breathe.
READ MOREPope-Emeritus Benedict XVI recently caused a stir on the occasion of the appearance in Germany of a book by Peter Seewald called, Benedict XVI: A Life (Benedikt XVI: Ein Leben). It’s due to come out in English in November 2020. Referenced in the book was a remark Pope Benedict made when he was elected Pope: Pray for me that I do not flee in the face of the wolves. Benedict XVI resigned in 2013. Who are the wolves?
The question addressed to the Pope by Peter Seewald was: Did you forsee what would be waiting for you? Maike Hickson in Life Site News summarized the Pope’s response in this new book this way:
READ MOREDuring medieval times, particularly during the Black Plague, devotion arose for the Fourteen Holy Helpers or Auxiliary Saints. This lists the saints and their patronage.
The Fourteen "Auxiliary Saints" or "Holy Helpers" are a group of saints invoked because they have been efficacious in assisting in trials and sufferings. Each saint has a separate feast or memorial day, and the group was collectively venerated on August 8. These saints were often represented together. Popular devotion to these saints often began in some monastery that held their relics. All of the saints except Giles were martyrs. Devotion to some of the saints, such as St. George, St. Margaret, St. Christopher, St. Barbara and St. Catherine became so widespread that customs and festivals still are popular today.
READ MOREYour Excellency,
For nearly two months now the Catholic faithful have been deprived of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, of Holy Communion, and for many, even of Confession, many priests refusing this ministry. This time has been one of great suffering for all. The unexpectedness of the situation found us all wondering what to do, and those in positions of leadership had to make some very tough and very quick decisions.
Even if, we hope, things may once again be relatively normal in the near future, I am mindful that the situation we found ourselves in is likely to repeat itself. It is for this reason that I would like to share with you a few reflections about the way things have been handled during the COVID-19 crisis.
This letter is not intended to incriminate anyone, nor even to lodge a complaint. It takes its source in my reflections as a theologian, and seeks only to cast upon events the light of truth and justice with the hope that, having learned from the experience, we may in the future not leave the Catholic faithful in a situation where many of them felt effectively abandoned.
READ MOREUpon hearing the puerile remarks of Governor Andrew Cuomo last week, Chesterton came to mind. The lapsed Catholic governor is usually prone to inanity and offense, but this reached new heights: "We have turned the corner on the Coronavirus plague. It was not faith or prayers that did it. Only hard work and science." To such blather, Chesterton says: "The madman is the one who has one idea completely right, but one does not know where it fits into the whole of things." Indeed, as with so many men of modernity, the governor is a madman. Yet he does have one idea right: essential to man's flourishing is hard work and the pursuit of knowledge.
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