Sunday, January 13, 2008
Anselm's Pictures of Roma
Does the devil hate latin?
Many Trads are familiar with the following phrase: "Don't worry, the devil hates Latin, too." It is a humorous little jab at those who in the past four decades have effectively pushed for the de facto outlawing of Latin in the Latin Rite and have treated those who adhere to the Church's perennial and universal language as reactionary inquisitors from a bygone age. But, beyond the obvious implication in the statement (that those who want to do away with Latin are in league with the devil), we must ask ourselves, does the devil really hate Latin?Friday, January 11, 2008
Protestant Soteriology
In all the ecumenical dialogue that has occured in the past 40 years, there is endless emphasis on what Protestants and Catholics share in common and in being able to unite and gather around the dogmas that we do hold in common. One of these doctrines that Catholics and Protestants supposedly agree on is the atoning death of Christ on the cross for the sins of mankind. This is all well and good, until we stop and ask what each side means when it refers to Christ's atoning death. This is of paramount importance. For example, if you ask Mormon missionaries, they will say that they believe in the Holy Trinity. However, according to LDS, the Trinity refers to a triumvirate of three separate gods, one called the Father, one called the Son and one called the Holy Ghost. Mormons are quite adept at using orthodox words but attaching different definitions to them.Wednesday, January 09, 2008
Religious relativism & syncretism in America

Indeed, 44% agree with the statement "Christians get on my nerves" [What kind of objective polling is this? Can you think of a more ambiguous question?]
LifeWay Research, the research arm of the Southern Baptist Convention, based in Nashville, conducted the survey of 1,402 "unchurched" adults last spring and summer. The margin of error is plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.
Many of the unchurched are shaky on Christian basics, says LifeWay Research director Ed Stetzer [Duh].
Just 52% agree on the essential Christian belief that "Jesus died and came back to life" [Kudos to this author for at least realizing that the essential Christian belief is in the death and Resurrection of Jesus and not in being tolerant or non-judgmental].
And 61% say the God of the Bible is "no different from the gods or spiritual beings depicted by world religions such as Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, etc.," although Buddhist philosophy has no god and Hindus worship many [I love the way this last sentence tacitly points out the absurd contradiction in such syncretist beliefs].
"We no longer have a home-field advantage as Christians in this culture" [Catholics never had the home-field advantage in this country].
Most of the unchurched (86%) say they believe they can have a "good relationship with God without belonging to a church" [That's great that they "believe" that, but what doe sit have to do with what the truth is? It's like saying I can have a good relationship with my family without ever going to visit them], And 79% say "Christianity today is less about organized religion than loving God and loving people" [Okay, so the people who just a few sentences ago admitted they were "shaky on Christian basics" are now telling us what Christianity is about?] .
"These outsiders are making a clear comment that churches are not getting through on the two greatest commandments," to love God and love your neighbor, says Scott McConnell, associate director of LifeWay Research. "When they look at churches … they don't see people living out the faith" [And so they're going to live it out better by not going at all? Chesterton famously said that if something was worth doing, it was worth doing badly].
But despite respondents' critical views of organized religion, Stetzer is optimistic. He cites the finding that 78% would "be willing to listen" to someone tell "what he or she believed about Christianity."
They already know believers — 89% of the unchurched have at least one close friend who is Christian, Stetzer noted.
And 71% agreed that "believing in Jesus makes a positive difference in a person's life."
"What surprised me is the openness of the hard-core unchurched to the message of God and Christianity — just not as expressed in church," Stetzer says [The knee-jerk reactions against "Church" and "organized religion" seem to be manifestations of rebellion against authority, a fruit of the Protestant Reformation. Everybody is open to hear about what someone else believes, just so long as you don't try to insist that they have to give up their sin. That's when it gets ugly!].
"It's a personal thing, not an institutional thing. It's a matter of starting conversations" [Sounds like Cardinal Dulles' vision of Catholic evangelization!] .
New forms of community, such as Internet Bible study and prayer circles, also mean some people don't believe they need a church, Goff says [Seems that most persons falsely think the Church exists solely to serve them; if they don't "feel" they need it, it is therefore dispensible].
"Is there a workshop for churches in being less annoying, less hypocritical?" asks Arthur Farnsley, administrator for the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion and a fellow at Goff's center [Why was this comment included? Would they include a comment that said, "Is there a way to make Muslims less murderous, less fanatical?" Again, anti-Christian bigotry is accepted while any criticism of other faiths is intolerant].
"So much of American religion today is therapeutic in approach, focused on things you want to fix in your life," he says [That should be a warning sign to anybody seeking objective truth. Do people even believe in objective truth anymore?].
"The one-to-one approach is more attractive [Me n' Jesus] . People don't go to institutions to fix their problems [They don't seem to comprehend the possibility of going to God through and in an institution].
"Most people have already heard the basic Christian message [Or they think they have. Clearly they need to hear it again]. The question for evangelism now is: Do you have a take that is authentic and engaging in a way that works for the unchurched?" [It's not about what "take" I have on religion; it is about the Way, the Truth and the Life Who is a Person and Who has revealed the truth through His Church]
Excellence is not "showing off"
How often have you heard the accusation that Trads want to "show off" by insisting that liturgy be done well? I have heard it several times: if a priest wears beautiful and costly vestments, he is accused of being showy; if liturgical utensils are made of precious metals, the accusation is that the priest/parish is wasting money on something non-essential when it could have been better spent elsewhere ( echoing Judas' complaint in John 12:5); if homilies are preached that communicate the pure doctrine of Christ, they are too exclusive, academic, divisive, etc. If liturgical music is executed beautifully and according to the tradition of the Church, the music director is accused of wanting to "show off." In short, anybody who thinks that liturgy ought to be done well is looked down upon as having a "holier than thou" attitude.Monday, January 07, 2008
Question on Custom
Boniface, sorry, but this question is a bit long and complicated: for at least twenty years in our parish, we have had a summer festival every year out in a parish-owned piece of property near the Church. As part of the festivities, the parish priest has always said an open-air Mass outdoors on the big day of the festival, with no major abuses except the ones common to the Novus Ordo. I always questioned whether or not we ought to be doing this (since the Church was close by and there was no pressing need to have a Mass outdoors except for novelty).
First, you will notice that the canon calls for thirty continuous years, not twenty. In your situation, this means that the priest, by canceling the custom and removing the Mass back to the parish Church, has already nullified the possibility of using the argument from thirty-continuous years, since even one contrary act nullifies the succession of years. Thus, if it takes thirty-years to establish custom with the force of law, and the priest alters the custom in the twenty-ninth year, in the following year you must start over from one, so that "not even one particle of time should be wanting."
But, I would say you do not even have to have recourse to this argument, because there is a more fundamental one that is against this gentleman's opinion. Canon 25 (26 in the 17 Code) reads: "No custom aquires the force of law unless it has been observed, with the intention of introducing a law, by a community capable of at least receiving a law." There are two elements here (1) intention of introducing a law, and (2) the only community who can introduce legally binding custom are those who are capable of receiving an ecclesiastical law.
Regarding the first point, the commentary footnotes of the 1983 Code says, "Custom must be observed with the intention of introducing a norm." Cicognani says of this same canon, "Moreover, the members of the community are to perform these acts with the intention of obligating themselves" (pg. 648). In otherwords, the custom of the outdoor Mass could only acquire the force of law if, from the beginning, it was being performed with the intention of establishing a binding custom, which it seems you'd be hard pressed to be able to prove.
Regarding the second point, that only those who are capable of receiving a law can establish a binding custom, it is clear that only a community who can receive a law is able to likewise bind themselves to a customary law. The commentary on the 83 Code is silent on who can receive a law, but Cicognani says of the same canon in the 17 Code: "The following communities are capable of receiving laws: an ecclesiastical province, a diocese, a body of clerics, the province of a religious Order, monasteries that are sui juris and convents of nuns also" (pg. 648). We must point out that parish churches, festival planning committees or parish councils are not listed. In fact, all of the above bodies are either religious orders or ordained clerics. Thus, this man is misapplying canon law in attributing the power to establish customary law to parish churches or festival planning committees.
There is one final reason why this gentleman is errant in his assertion that the parish is obligated to hold the festival Mass outdoors. Canon 24 of the 83 Code states that "No custom which is contrary to divine law can acquire the force of law." The corresponding canon in the 1917 Code (Canon 27:1) is much more explicit: "No custom can in any way derogate from the Divine Law, either natural or positive; nor does a custom prejudice an ecclesiastical law, unless it is a reasonable custom and lawfully prescribed..." Both Canon 27 of the old Code and 24 of the new Code speak about the reasonableness of the custom, and though the 1983 Code speaks only of custom being unable to contravene Divine Law, it points out in the footnote that this includes "ecclesiastical discipline" as well. So, is it against divine law (either natural or positive) or ecclesiastical discipline to hold an outdoor Mass in a field within walking distance from a parish Church?
The answer is yes. Canon 932 of the 1983 Code states: "The eucharistic celebration is to be carried out in a sacred place, unless in a particular case neccesity requires otherwise; in which case, the celebration must be in a fitting place." In case anyone has any qualms about what constitutes a "sacred place," Canons 1205 and 1210 clearly define them as "those which are assigned to divine worship" and where "only those things are permitted which serve to exercise or promote worship, piety and religion." Clearly a field adjacent to the parish does not qualify as a sacred space, and the 1983 Code seems to envision nothing other than a church, oratory or private chapel by the phrase "sacred space."
So, unless there is "particular necessity," a Mass must be said in a consecrated Church (a consecrated cemetary is also permitted, provided there is a suitable place for the Sacrifice). Now, we must ask ourselves, is there necessity in having the Mass outdoors against the order of Canon 932? The answer must be no, for three reasons: (1) There is no emergency; it appeared to be done just for "novelty," as the anonymous questioner pointed out (2) The parish Church was very close-by, making it pointless to needlessly have a Mass in a field when it could easily be done in the Church (3) The fact that the new priest did in fact move the Mass to the Church proves that it is reasonable and feasible to have the Mass in the Church building and that doing an outdoor Mass is uneccesary in this case. Therefore, Canon 932 remains in force. Cicognani says that the introduction of custom "cannot arise from error or ignorance" (pg. 648); in this case, it seems that both error and ignorance were the source of this dubious custom of celebrating Mass out in the field.
It is a long-winded answer, but I can summarize it in a few short points:
1) Mass cannot be celebrated in the field with good reason because it violates Canon 932, which requires Mass to be said in a consecrated Church unless there is particular necessity, which it has been proven that there is not.
2) Even so, a parish-body is not a competent legal entity to establish legally binding custom because it is not capable of receiving a law (Canon 25); furthermore, there was no demonstrable intent of the parish to bind itself to this custom.
3) Even so, thirty-continuous years have not been observed, the parish priest having interrupted the succession the past year (Canon 26).
I hope this helps. As is the case with many other things, Canon Law becomes very tricky when people attempt to take individual canons out of context and without reference to canonical tradition.
Sunday, January 06, 2008
Epiphany
The word "Epiphany" means "manifestation." The church in the Mass commemorates a triple manifestation of Christ: to the Magi, that is, to the Gentiles; in His Baptism, when the Voice from heaven declared: "This is My Beloved Son"; and in the miracle of changing water into wine at Cana.Ecce, advenit Dominator Dominus: et regnum in manu ejus, et potestas, et imperium. (Psalm) Deus, judicium tuum regi da: et justitiam tuam Filio regis.
(Behold the Lord the Ruler is come: and the Kingdom is in His hand, and power, and dominion. (Psalm) Give to the king Thy judgment, O God: and to the king's Son Thy justice.
Friday, January 04, 2008
Latest statement on Medjugorje
There are at least 6 or 7 religious or quasi-religious communities, just initiating or already established, some of diocesan right, some not, which have arbitrarily been installed in Medjugorje without the permission of the local Diocesan authorities. These communities are more a sign of disobedience than a real charisma of obedience in this Church!
There exists a problem in this diocese of Mostar-Duvno which in recent years has practically precipitated into a schism. At least eight Franciscan priests, who have rebelled against the decision of the Holy See to transfer a certain number of parishes administered by the Franciscans to the diocesan priests, have been expelled from the Franciscan Order and suspended 'a divinis'. In spite of this, they have occupied at least five parishes through force, and continue to exercise sacred functions. They invalidly assist at marriages, hear confessions without canonical faculties and invalidly confer the sacrament of confirmation. Three years ago they even invited a deacon of the Old-Catholic Church who falsely presented himself as a bishop, to preside at a confirmation and he "confirmed" about 800 young people in three parishes.
Two of these expelled priests sought after episcopal consecration from Swiss bishop of the Old-Catholic Church, Hans Gerny, yet without any result. So many invalid sacraments, so much disobedience, violence, sacrilege, disorder,irregularities, and not a single "message" from tens of thousands of "apparitions" has been directed towards eliminating these scandals. A very strange thing indeed! The Church, from the local to supreme level, from the beginning to this very day, has clearly and constantly repeated: Non constat de supernaturalitate! [No evidence of supernatural activity] No to pilgrimages that would ascribe a supernatural nature to the apparitions, no shrine of the Madonna, no authentic messages nor revelations, no true visions! This is the state of things today. How will things be tomorrow? We'll leave them in God's hands and under Our Lady's protection!
I recommend you all read over this document in full. It summarizes the position of the Chuch (both the local bishops and the Vatican) on the phenomenon at Medjugorje and exposes many of the falsehoods surrounding the alleged apparitions and the seers. Here's one final excerpt from Bishop Peric on the real danger of Medjurgorje:
Regarding Medjugorje, there's a real danger that the Madonna and the Church could be privatized. People could start contriving a Madonna and a Church according to their own taste, perception and deception: by not submitting their reason as believers to the official Magisterium of the Church, but rather forcing the Church to follow and recognize their fantasy.
Thursday, January 03, 2008
69 year old gets bones broke counseling against abortions
World Net Daily: January 1, 2008
Pro-life activists are calling for an investigation into – and possibly prosecution of – police officers who responded to a severely injured abortion clinic sidewalk counselor, but then allowed his suspected attacker to leave the scene.
"It is unbelievable that an officer would allow an attacker to go free after inflicting life-threatening injuries on an elderly gentleman, then threaten to arrest the witness to the crime," said Troy Newman, president of Operation Rescue.
"That was not only unprofessional conduct, but it showed a fundamental lack of respect for Mr. Snell's life and beliefs. She should face serious discipline."
The attack happened just before Christmas, as Ed Snell, 69, was trying to counsel women entering the Hillcrest Abortion Center in Harrisburg, Pa., according to witnesses at the scene.
According to a report by the American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property, the work of counselors such as Snell had been so effective at Hillcrest that the abortion business had built a 7-foot-tall privacy fence to prevent counselors from speaking to women entering the business.
So counselors started bringing ladders to see over the fence. Snell, however, built a platform on top of his vehicle in order to have a more stable location to stand.
John McTernan, a witness to the incident, said Snell tried to counsel a woman who got out of a vehicle and was going towards the abortion business with a man.
However, the man suddenly jumped the fence, "leaped on the vehicle with Ed and catapulted him off of the vehicle and onto the ground," he said. Snell landed on his back and head and was knocked unconscious, he said.
Pro-Life Activist Ed Snell (right)
He was hospitalized with multiple trauma, bleeding in his head, compression fractures of four vertebrae, two broken ribs and a broken shoulder, the report said.
The problem escalated when three police officers who arrived on the scene to investigate allowed the attacker to leave, the report said. Even though the assailant still was in the business when officers arrived, and they were able to talk with him, they allowed the assailant and his companion to drive away, the report said.
McTernan to police: "What are you doing? That's him! That's the assailant!"
Officer: "It is none of your business."
McTernan: "I am making it my business. Ed Snell is my good friend."
The officer then threatened to arrest McTernan, and he responded. "I want to know why the assailant walked away from this scene where an elderly man was left unconscious."
That was followed by another threat to arrest McTernan by the officer, who then drove away.
It wasn't until after the extent of Snell's injuries were documented by the hospital that the assailant was arrested, the report said. A WND call to the Harrisburg police department was referred to the mayor's office, and officials there did not return messages seeking a comment.
"I cannot imagine me [as a pro-lifer], striking someone connected with Hillcrest [Abortion Center], knocking them unconscious, the police coming, the injured person being taken away in an ambulance and the police letting me go," McTernan said. "There is something wrong with that."
The report also said pro-lifers asked the abortion business receptionist about the incident, and were told, "He got what he deserved."
Operation Rescue said the incident was another in a "growing list" of attacks on pro-life advocates in recent months.
Where'd it go?
No alliance with Muslims
Because of his trust in God, Gideon is able to defeat a vastly superior number of Midianites with only 300 warriors (Judges 6-8) Related: Mundabor: The First, Second and Third Enemy is Islam
Wednesday, January 02, 2008
Pope John's Council (part 2)
In an earlier post (here) I began to write about Volume 2 of Michael Davies' Liturgical Revolution series entitled Pope John's Council, in which the author provides a history of the event that was Vatican Council II by which (intentionally or not) the windows of the Church were thrown open to the smoke of Satan.Blitzkrieg
Tuesday, January 01, 2008
Octave-Day of the Nativity

I highly recommend the wonderful source of traditional Catholic information that is Fish Eaters for their page on the Feast of the Circumcision, and on the practice of (or avoidance of) circumcision.
And after eight days were accomplished, that the child should be circumcised, his name was called Jesus, which was called by the angel, before he was conceived in the womb (Luke 2:21).
Monday, December 31, 2007
Favorite Posts of 2007
Best Humorous Posts
Bishops use "Cinderlla" method on the Motu Proprio
Hey, Constantine!
Is reincarnation real?
Post That Got the Most Comments
Medjugorje Messages (56 comments, mostly from two people arguing)
Most Widely-Read Posts
I'm back from Columbus (part 1)
I'm back from Columbus (part 2)
These two articles on NCYC, because they were picked up by Fr. Z, got us about 12,000 hits in one week and a bunch of attention for this blogpostolate.
Post(s) For Which I Received the Most Compliments
Where is the Ark of the Covenant? (whole series of 4 posts available on sidebar)
Biggest Dufus Profiled on this Blog
Professor Never Heard of Unam Sanctam
Best Post on Music
Protestant and Catholic Lyrics
Best Historical Posts
The Battle of Belgrade
Historicity of the Flood
Stupidest Story Covered in 2007
The Pope-Fire of Poland
Most Important Liturgical Posts
Well, was it abrogated or not?
Well, is there one rite or two?
Conversion to Traditionalism
Is Liturgy Really that Big a Deal?
Nature & Social Implications of the Liturgical Act
The Term "Extraordinary"
Some of My Personal Favorites
Saint Louis IX on Interreligious Dialogue
Is Sin Inevitable?
Hindus Terrorized and Killed by Their False Monkey-Gods
Blame it on the Ignorant Laity (an excellent post that goes through the Efficient, Formal, Final and Material Causes for the church crisis and debunks the myth of the pre-Vatican II "ignorant laity" and places the blame on the hierarchy instead)
Update: Anselm's Personal Favorite
Why Do So Many Catholics Believe in Penal Substitution? (also a series of related posts on soteriology available on the sidebar)
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Pope John's Council, or, What I've Been Reading Lately (part 1)
Well, this is long enough for one post, but I've only highlighted the first two chapters out of seventeen. Look for further installments soon; this is an important series of books, and this one in particular is mandatory reading for any traditional Catholic who wants to know what really happened at Vatican II to open the windows to the smoke of Satan.
Saturday, December 29, 2007
Updates from Coalition Ecclesia Dei
Before July 7, 2007, the Coalition shipped 1,000 Latin-English Missals each month. Since July 7 we have shipped 1,000 booklets every week. In May, we had reprinted 20,000 booklet missals, and ordered another 20,000 in October. Latin-Spanish books have been reprinted, as have the books for Requiem Mass. The Nuptial booklets are next, their report said.
By the way, in case anybody is buying in to the notion that you have to be an arch-conservative academic egghead with a mastery of Latin in order to get anything out of the old Mass, the Coalition also reports a call from a father who ordered booklet missals for his family because his 12-year old son prefers the Old Latin Mass to the new English Mass. This is so simple, even kids get it! What was that Jesus said about "out of the mouths of babes and suckings..."?
The Coalition also reports that orders for the Know Your Mass book for the training of altar boys are also up, and that 800 training DVD's ("The Most Beautiful Thing This Side of Heaven") have been ordered by priests wanting to learn the TLM.
These are most encouraging facts! If anybody else out there has any stories about the spread of the TLM, please keep us updated!
Friday, December 28, 2007
6 Month Anniversary
In the meantime, if you want to give Anselm and I a good Christmas present, how about letting somebody else know about this blog or forwarding a link to one of your favorite articles to somebody who has not yet visited here. We like to think that the work we do at this blog is at least somewhat important to the life of the Church, and the more people we can get connected the better we can work and pray to restore the Traditions of the Church. Therefore, please take a moment and let a friend know about this humble little corner of Cyberspace.
Now, as a Christmas present to all of you loyal bloggers, I'm going to put up pics of Anselm and myself so you can see who we are:

Here's a nice pic of Anselm. When I first met him, his flesh colored eyes were difficult to get used to, but I finally accepted him for who he is.
English & Latin
But, whereas with Latin we have lost the usage of the language in its entirety, in English we have a stranger phenomenon. While English is obviously used liturgically, since it is the vernacular and that's what everybody uses now, we have experienced a great dumming down of the way in which English is used, both in the prayers we pray liturgically and in the hymns that are sung. I've said it before, that if we are bound and determined to use vernacular in our worship, let's at least use good vernacular.
I don't think this was originally a Catholic song, but check out the words to this old English hymn "Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing" by Robert Robertson and John Wyeth (c. 1759). Notice the mastery of the language and compare it to the banal English songs we use today [you can listen to the tune here]:
Come, Thou Fount of every blessing,Tune my heart to sing Thy grace; Streams of mercy, never ceasing,Call for songs of loudest praise.Teach me some melodious sonnet, Sung by flaming tongues above. Praise the mount! I’m fixed upon it, Mount of Thy redeeming love.
Sorrowing I shall be in spirit, Till released from flesh and sin, Yet from what I do inherit, Here Thy praises I’ll begin; Here I raise my Ebenezer [meaning a sign of victory, a reference to 1 Sam. 7:12]; Here by Thy great help I’ve come; And I hope, by Thy good pleasure, Safely to arrive at home.
Jesus sought me when a stranger,Wandering from the fold of God; He, to rescue me from danger, Interposed His precious blood; How His kindness yet pursues me, Mortal tongue can never tell, Clothed in flesh, till death shall loose meI cannot proclaim it well.
O to grace how great a debtor, Daily I’m constrained to be! Let Thy goodness, like a fetter, Bind my wandering heart to Thee. Prone to wander, Lord, I feel it, Prone to leave the God I love; Here’s my heart, O take and seal it, Seal it for Thy courts above.
O that day when freed from sinning, I shall see Thy lovely face; Clothed then in blood washed linen How I’ll sing Thy sovereign grace; Come, my Lord, no longer tarry,Take my ransomed soul away; Send thine angels now to carry Me to realms of endless day.
Now, look at some of these beautiful lines: "Teach me some melodious sonnet, Sung by flaming tongues above. Praise the mount! I’m fixed upon it, Mount of Thy redeeming love" (v.1). What song-writer for GIA would use the phrase "melodious sonnet" in their composition? That would seem to high-falutin' for their liking.
In verse 3 it says, "Jesus sought me when a stranger,Wandering from the fold of God; He, to rescue me from danger, Interposed His precious blood." What a beautiful image! When was the last time you heard somebody use the word "interposed"?
Verse 4 has my favorite line, where is says, "O to grace how great a debtor, Daily I’m constrained to be! Let Thy goodness, like a fetter, Bind my wandering heart to Thee." How wonderful to conceive of God's love as a fetter that binds the heart to the Divine Goodness!
What is my point here? My point is this: not only have we lost the use of the Church's traditional language of Latin, which in itself is a big enough battle to fight, but even the use of our own language has been dummed down, simplified and idiotized (is that a real word?) until it is incapable of expressing adequately the divine realities that we are trying to write, sing or pray about. Besides the obvious danger in discarding our liturgical language, there is a subtle danger in dumming down our own laguage, because the less intricate it becomes, the less precise, and the less able we are to say what we mean, and all sorts of ambiguities and problems become manifest. Compare these two prayers. The first is from the Gradual for today (Feast of the Holy Innocents) from the 1962 Missal:
Our soul hath been delivered as a sparrow out of the snare of the fowler. The snare is broken, and we are delivered. Our help is in the name of the Lord, Who made heaven and earth.
Very nice. Now, look at the Psalm-prayer for today's daytime prayer, from the modern Liturgy of the Hours:
Lord, we are citizens of this earth and ask to be made citizens of heaven by your free gift. Help us to run in the way of your commandments and to set our hearts on you alone.
Maybe it is just me; maybe I am being a bit too picky, but do you see a difference in the way things are worded, in what is emphasized in each example? And what's the idea calling us "citizens of this earth"? Sounds like European Union propaganda to me. Last I checked, Hebrews 13:14 said, "Here we have no lasting city, but we seek the city which is to come."
One more example. In the 1962 Missal, for today we have this English translation of the hymn Salvete, flores Martyrum (All hail, Flowers of Martyrdom!):
Flowers of martyrdom, all hail! Smitten by the tyrant foe on life's threshold, as the gale strews the roses ere they blow. First to bleed for Christ, sweet lambs! What a simple death ye died! Sporting with your wreaths and palms at the very altar side. Honor, glory, virtue, merit be to Thee, O Virgin's Son! With the Father, and the Spirit while eternal ages run. Amen.
Now, compare it to the hymn that would be sung for today's morning prayer in the Liturgy of the Hours, a text by James Quinn, SJ:
Father, Lord of earth and heaven, King to whom all gifts belong, give Your greatest Gift, your Spirit, God the holy, God the strong. Stay among us, God the Father, stay among us, God the Son, stay among us, Holy Spirit: dwell within us, make us one.
Whatever the intention is, can you perceive the loss of vibrancy and expressiveness in the English language in these two examples? It is all intentional (though I'm sure much has to do with simple lack of talent). Let's make sure that while we are defending Latin from the front door, we don't let them sneak in and ruin English from the back door. There are liturgists and theologians out there who would have us all praying and talking like this if they could: "We Church. God good. Tolerance double-plus good. Intolerance double-plus ungood." Linsguistic sophistication is the tangible measure of which we are able to express ideas verbally, and thus what we are able to say about our ideas. It must be preserved at all costs.
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Rome was no accident (part 2)
In part one of this post last week, we looked at the common fallacy that sees the establishment of the headship of the Church at the city of Rome as a mere accident of history that was due primarily to political factors. This position is in fact condemned by Pope St. Pius X in Lamentabili Sane, number 56, where the following statement, The Roman Church became the head of all the churches, not through the ordinance of Divine Providence, but merely through political conditions, is anathematized. Last time we looked at some false, modernist notions of how the Church of Rome came to preeminence. We also looked at the historical argument for Rome's primacy (it's double-Apostolic origin). Today we shall look at the Scriptural or theological reasons for the headship of the Church of Rome over all of the other churches.
The next day [Alexander] called [the priests] to him and bade them ask what favors they pleased of him: whereupon the high priest desired that they might enjoy the laws of their forefathers, and might pay no tribute on the seventh year. He granted all they desired ...
I know it is a long quote, but this wonderful story verifies what I have been saying. Here, Alexander wants to destroy Jerusalem and punish the high priest, but through God's intervention, he ends up acknowledging the true God and supporting His people by his royal decrees.
We have seen this scenario played out with three of the four kingdoms witnessed by Daniel. But it is to the fourth, which was "different" from the other three kingdoms, that God promised to smash with a rock and replace with a mountain that would fill the whole earth.
Rome: With this story, we are all familiar. How in the reign of this fourth beast the Son of God was born, how the Romans persecuted the Church worse than any of the other three beasts, for this beast persecuted not the followers of the Old Covenant but the faithful of the New, which was even worse, inasmuch as the glory they were spurning was greater. But through the perseverance of the martyrs and the miracles wrought by God, this beast slowly became converted, as the Rock of Peter smashed its toes and began to grow. Soon, the old kingdom was displaced, and the same imperial authority that once issued edicts against the Christians now declared:
It is our desire that all the various nations which are subject to our Clemency and Moderation, should continue in the profession of that religion which was once delivered to the Romans by the divine Apostle Peter, as it hath been preserved by faithful tradition...but as for others, since, in our judgment, they are foolish madmen, we decree that they shall be branded with the ignominious name of heretics, and shall not presume to give to their conventicles the name of churches. They will suffer in the first place the chastisement of the divine condemnation, and in the second the punishment which our authority, in accordance with the will of heaven, shall decide to inflict (Decree of Theodosius I, 380).
This is a repeat of what happened to Nebuchadnezzar, Darius, Ahasuerus, Cyrus and Alexander, only now it was different, because now the converted kingdom was promulgating not just the shadows of the Old Testament but the glorious light of the New, which will never pass away. Babylon, Persia, Greece and Old Rome passed away, but the Church of Rome, founded by God on the Apostle Peter, has become that stone that became a great mountain that filled the whole earth which was spoken of by Isaiah the prophet: "In the latter days the mountain of the Lord's house shall be established on the top of the mountains, and all nations shall flow to it. Many peoples shall come and say: "Come, let us climb the LORD'S mountain, to the house of the God of Jacob, That he may instruct us in his ways, and we may walk in his paths. For out of Zion shall go forth the word of the Lord" (Isaiah 2:1-3). It is this kingdom which shall never pass away.
In case you are wondering, I did not make this explanantion up. In my research on kingship in the Middle Ages, I found this view of the Roman Church as the inheritor of the fourth kingdom in the writings of many of the medieval political theorists and theologians, although many saw this kingdom to be not the Roman Church, but the Holy Roman Empire. But by it we can see that it was not by any accident that the head of the Church wound up in Rome. It was part of a long and divinely ordained pattern that went back to Nebuchadnezzar and Daniel. It was all part of God's great plan for making use of the nations of the earth to spread His message and proclaim His glory.

