ASK FATHER: In confession, the priest insisted on his Act of Contrition rather than the one I know.

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I went to confession this afternoon. It was my first time going at this particular church. When the priest asked me to say an Act of Contrition, I started, “O my God, I am heartily sorry…” and he cut me off. He told me that I had to use the Act of Contrition printed on a card on the kneeler. Respectfully (I really do mean it), I asked him what difference it made. He told me “as your confessor I am asking you to say the form of the prayer the Church includes in the rite of penance.” I did what he asked because it seemed wrong to get into an argument in the confessional but it was bizarre because I’ve always used that form and never had a problem.

The version he required me to say was:

“My God, I am sorry for my sins with all my heart. In choosing to do wrong and failing to do good, I have sinned against you whom I should love above all things.
I firmly intend, with your help, to do penance, to sin no more, and to avoid whatever leads me to sin. Our Savior Jesus Christ suffered and died for us. In his name, my God, have mercy.”

From what I can see both are approved forms of the Act of Contrition. Can a priest require a particular one? It didn’t go there but I was left wondering if he would have withheld absolution if I insisted on the traditional form.

Thankfully, he used the proper form of absolution and didn’t bother me about not going face to face. That has not always been my experience.

Okay.

Okay.

Interesting.

Firstly, you had a chance to go  confession.  Good.  He didn’t insist on face to face.  Good.  He imparted absolution using the proper form (I suppose).  Good.  He wanted you to make an Act of Contrition.  Good.

Now the problem: Can the confessor insist on the use of a particular act of contrition on the grounds that it is in the Ordo, the Rite for penance and reconciliation?

On the face of it, I think not, given that the Ordo itself provides options for the Act of Contrition.   I don’t have the actual book in front of me right now, but online I found this:

45. The priest then asks the penitent to express his sorrow, which the penitent may do in these or similar words:

My God, I am sorry for my sins with all my heart. In choosing to do wrong and failing to do good, I have sinned against you whom I should love above all things. I firmly intend, with your help, to do penance, to sin no more, and to avoid whatever leads me to sin. Our Savior Jesus Christ suffered and died for us. In his name, my God, have mercy.

Other prayers of the penitent may be chosen from nos. 85-92.

Or:

Lord Jesus, Son of God have mercy on me, a sinner.

Note that even in this truncated form, there is an option for an extremely brief expression of sorrow.  There are also seven pages of option to choose from.   I have a recollection of them as being rather sloppy, but… hey.  And note what I emphasized: “in these or similar words”.   The rite itself provides for variations.

In my opinion it was wrong for that priest to be so insistent on one particular Act that he favored when the rite seems to leave it to the penitent.

What I suspect was going on in the head of Fr. Rigid in that confessional moment was guided by the idea that you were engaged in a liturgical moment, and that the liturgy you were actively participating in had its proper texts and, by God, you were going to stick to the script, as it were, without deviations.

There is a strange kind of rigidity in certain clerical hierophants of the Novus Ordo, a rigidity shot through with irony as they insist on this option over that option.

Some people are less aware that making a confession and being absolved is also a liturgical rite.  We tend to be a little free flowing with how people start and finish, perhaps.  It’s a sensitive moment and it is of supreme importance that people feel comfortable enough to confess all their mortal sins in both kind and number.  Thus, maybe we fudge a bit in the flow of the rite.   This particular confessor, in the question, was sticking to the red and the black.

I am amused with myself at this moment.  I’m the guy always saying, “Say The Black – Do The Red” and here I am hinting that, perhaps in this particular liturgical moment – the rite of penance – that’s sort’a kind’a optional (except in the absolutely necessary elements for validity).   I’m the guy who warns against liturgical minimalism (“As long as it’s valid, what difference do the details make?”)! There’s clearly a difference of approach between “traditional” precision and “Novus Ordo” precision.

But I digress.

Circling back, it is good that he wanted an Act of Contrition.

The Act of Contrition is good for the penitent.  It is also useful for the priest.

It is useful for the priest because, before he can impart absolution he has to be reasonably sure that the penitent is sorry and has a firm purpose of amendment.  The Act of Contrition states the things that the priest needs to hear so he can give absolution.

Some Acts of Contrition – and there are quit a few! – are better than others in this regard.

For example, I think that the Act which you, the questioner here, started and which the priest halted (wrongly) is superior to the Act he insisted on, the first option in the Novus Ordo version book.

For example, the classic Act:

Deus meus, ex toto corde pænitet me omnium meorum peccatorum, eaque detestor, quia peccando, non solum pœnas a te iuste statutas promeritus sum, sed præsertim quia offendi te, summum bonum, ac dignum qui super omnia diligaris. Ideo firmiter propono, adiuvante gratia tua, de cetero me non peccaturum peccandique occasiones proximas fugiturum. Amen.

O my God, I am heartily sorry for having offended Thee, and I detest all my sins because I dread the loss of Heaven and the pains of hell, but most of all because they have offended Thee, my God, Who art all good and deserving of all my love. I firmly resolve, with the help of Thy grace, to confess my sins, to do penance, and to amend my life. Amen.

Both in this and in the Act insisted upon by the confessor – which if memory serves is only an American option – there is an expression of “contrition”.  One might expect an expression of contrition in an Act of Contrition.

Contrition, or sorrow for sins, is more perfect when it comes from love of God (“because they have offended Thee, my God, Who art all good and deserving of all my love”) .  It is less perfect when it comes from fear of punishment (“because I dread the loss of Heaven and the pains of hell”).  The latter is also called “attrition”.  Sorrow for sin because of fear is less perfect BUT… it is sufficient an expression of sorrow so that the priest can give absolution.   That’s why it comes first in the classic Act of Contrition.  As a matter of fact, some old confessors would start giving absolution as soon as they heard that part, the attrition part.  Why?  Because confessors were taught that when they were sufficiently convinced of the penitents sincerity and sorrow they were not to delay absolution unreasonably.  So, taking that pretty literally, they would start the form quietly while the penitent was finishing his Act of Contrition.  Sometimes all a penitent would hear is the business part of the form… “et ego te absolvo…” etc.  Some priests still do this.

In any event, the older, traditional Act of Contrition is rather more complete than that American version in the new-fangled book as one of the options.

Bottom line: Father was too rigid in insisting that you do his preferred Act of Contrition when you clearly knew the traditional one and were launched into it.

I might have a different view if, before hand, he had said something like, “Sometimes we can get a little complacent in using a memorized form which perhaps we have said for so long that it has lost some of its meaning.  How about this time using a different one?  There is a card there with some options.  However, chose as you please.”

Of course he wouldn’t have known ahead of time which you preferred, but… hey… I’m spitballing here.

Fathers… do insist on some Act of Contrition.  Exhort, urge, persuade that people should memorize an Act of Contrition and that they should say it often, not just when they go to confession.   Break it down and teach about it from the pulpit.  People are far more ready to do things when they know why they are doing them.   But, Fathers, don’t be rigid jackasses and impose your preferred version.  You might, outside of the confessional, make an argument for one or the other as I am doing now, but not inside the confessional.

And, everyone….

GO TO CONFESSION!

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News From The Chaplain: “Bomb go boom”

You long-time readers will remember my good friend Fr. Charles Johnson, presently chaplain on USS Ford, which is undergoing various tests and trails as they shake her down.   We had travel vestments made for Father, when his airplane went into the river at NAS Jacksonville after I had blessed the same aircraft (long story) on my way down to Gitmo.  Since I felt responsible for the total loss of his gear, it was the right thing to do.

In any event, USS Ford was in the news.

Father wrote about it:

Happy Father’s Day (both in the primary and secondary analogate sense)! Yes, we survived the first shock trial. It was definitely a “bomb go boom” moment–much louder than we were led to expect. Some “high dust” came down–making cleaning easier–and a few drawers popped out, but otherwise the chapel spaces were fine. … We have two more of these to go, each one closer and lower than the last. It’s an invigorating way to spend one’s summer….

It’s always good to hear from him.  That’s one fortunate crew.

Meanwhile, “Eternal Father, strong to save…”.

Let’s pray for our chaplains and let’s pray for many more.

 

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WDTPRS – 4th Sunday after Pentecost: “O Captain, my Captain!”

I may have quoted Whitman, but, no, I’m not talking about Abraham Lincoln.  After all, I’m not a racist.

Are you sick of the madness?  Let’s put that aside.

Sunday’s prayer is found in ancient sacramentaries, such as the Veronese and the “Hadrian” version of the Gregorian, and the so-called Gelasian.  It is unchanged in the “Tridentine” form of the Missale Romanum as my trusty copy of the 1570MR shows.  It survived the Consilium’s slicers and gluers who pasted together the Novus Ordo as the Collect for the 8th Sunday of Ordinary Time.

COLLECT: (1962 Missale Romanum): 

Da nobis, quaesumus, Domine, ut et mundi cursus pacifico nobis tuo ordine dirigatur: et Ecclesia tua tranquilla devotione laetetur.

Some vocabulary from the mighty Lewis & Short Dictionary.  Cursus can mean anything from “course, way, journey” to “course of a ship”, the “flow of conversation” and “postal route”.  Dirigo is “to give a particular direction” or “to lay or draw a straight line”.  It was used, among other things, to indicate ordering an army to march to a certain point or to direct or steer a ship on its course.    Ordo means too many things to get into in depth.  Suffice to say that it can refer to the “methodical arrangement, class or condition.” By extension it is applied to everything from the “orders” of the clergy, the way trees are planted, the lines of an army, or the banks of rowers in a ship.  Pacificus is a composite of pax and facio meaning “peacemaker” or “peaceable”.  The problem with that laetetur is that it could be from the deponent laetor or passive from laeto.  Because of those ablatives in that clause, I am opting here for the passive, like dirigatur.   Among the things that devotio means are “fealty, allegiance, piety, devotion, zeal.”

LITERAL ATTEMPT

Grant us, we beg, O Lord, both that the course of the world be set by Your methodical peace-producing plan for us and that Your Church may be made joyful by means of tranquil devotion.

Despite the wordy literal translation I have given this time, I will later lend to this a more poetic aspect.

Notice that in our collect’s vocabulary there are hints of military and nautical imagery.

Try reading this prayer with the mental image of a ship.

Its great Captain sets its course upon the sea. So great is the Captain that He can command calm waters and a favorable wind as well.  The ship can be seen as the world.  In this case I see the ship as the Church in the world, the Church Militant, which is not an unfamiliar image to those familiar with the Barque of Peter.  The sea it sails upon is the deep and turbulent world we live in.  The Captain is our Lord Jesus Christ, who calmed the stormy waters and commanded Peter to walk to Him upon them.  He entrusted His ship to Peter, to steer it in His stead.  Once all has been put into proper order, made “ship-shape and Bristol fashion”, our own sense of loyal zeal, our devotion, is the wind that the Captain uses to steer the ship upon the course He sets, carrying us its crew to the port and safe haven.

The word pacificus brought to mind an antiphon of First Vespers of Christmas: “Rex pacificus magnificatus est, cuius vultum desiderat universa terra… The peacemaker King, whose glance the whole world longs for, has been exalted.”  Is not the sight of God, “in whose will is our peace”, our true desire?  Is that not the port and safe haven we journey towards in the turbulence of this world?

We must look more intently at devotio… devotion.

According to St. Thomas Aquinas (+1274) writing in his monumental Summa Theologiae, devotio is an “active” virtue.  The Angelic Doctor wrote:

“The intrinsic or human cause of devotion is contemplation or meditation. Devotion is an act of the will by which a man promptly gives himself to the service of God. Every act of the will proceeds from some consideration of the intellect, since the object of the will is a known good; or as Augustine says, willing proceeds from understanding. Consequently, meditation is the cause of devotion since through meditation man conceives the idea of giving himself to the service of God” (STh II-II 82, 3).

The famously eloquent Jesuit preacher Louis Bourdaloue (1632-1704) translates this into “a devotion to duty”. What we do, including our “devotions”, must help us keep the commandments of God and stick to the duties of one’s state in life before all else.

(See? We don’t have to avoid everything Jesuit!)

In other words, there is an interplay between our devotions and our devotion.

Each of us has a state in life, a God-given vocation we are duty bound to follow. We must be devoted to that state in life, and the duties that come with it, as they are in the here and now.

That “here and now”, hic et nunc, is important.

We must not focus on the state we had once upon a time, or wish we had, or should have had, or might have someday: those are unreal and misleading fantasies that distract us from reality and God’s will.

If we are truly devoted and devout (in the sense of the active virtue) to fulfilling the duties of our state as it truly is here and now, then God will give us every actual grace we need to fulfill our vocation. Why can we boldly depend on God to help us? If we are fulfilling the duties of our state of life, then we are also fulfilling our proper roles in His great plan, His design from before the creation of the universe. God is therefore sure to help us. And if we are devoted to our state as it truly is, then God can also guide us to a new vocation when and if that is His will for us.

The greater the challenges for our time, the greater the honor for those who live in them, the greater the graces and merit.

Faithful in what we must do here and now, we will be open to something God wants us to do later.

This attachment to reality and sense of dutiful obedience through the active virtue devotio is a necessary part of religion in keeping with the biblical principle in 1 John 2:3-5:

And by this we may be sure that we know Him, if we keep His commandments. He who says ‘I know Him’ but disobeys His commandments is a liar, and the truth is not in him; but whoever keeps his word, in him truly love for God is perfected. By this we may be sure that we are in Him: he who says he bides in Him ought to walk in the same way in which He walked.

Before the creation of the universe God knew each one of us and desired us and loved us.

He called us into existence as a precise point in His great plan, His economy of salvation.  He gives us a part to play in that plan and gives each of us the tools and talents we need to fulfill it.  If we devote ourselves with real devotio to our state-in-life and strive to carry out His will, God will give us every actual grace we need since we are furthering His great plan.

This is why I suggest above that our devotion can be like the wind that the Captain uses to direct our great ship.  More than just being the “hands on deck”, we play a vital part in the actual forward motion of the ship. We are not merely being hauled along upon the “alien merits” of Christ, as some Protestants call God’s saving intervention.  While we truly depend on Him and Him alone, while we truly do not merit what He provides, mysteriously it is part of His plan. He brings it to pass that His work becomes ours and ours His.  He “makes it so”.

A Somewhat Smoother Version:

Grant, we beseech you, O Lord, that the course of the world be steered by your plan for peace and that your Church be filled with joy from tranquil devotion to that plan.

Or a bit more poetic:

O Lord, we beg Thee to grant that the peaceful steerage of the world’s course be set according to Thy plan and that Thy Church be made full with joy from our tranquil devotion.

OBSOLETE ICEL (1973):

Lord, guide the course of world events and give your Church the joy and peace of serving you in freedom.

It is hard to strike a balance between the literal, which can be awkward and wordy, and the simple, which can be banal and miss the real impact of the prayer.

CURRENT ICEL (2011):

Grant us, O Lord, we pray, that the course of our world may be directed by your peaceful rule and that your Church may rejoice, untroubled in her devotion.

You decide.

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Daily Rome Shot 193

 

 

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CQ CQ CQ: Ham Radio – #ZedNet reminder – 20 June ’21

Fellow hams, here’s a reminder about ZedNet for Sunday 20 June ’21 – evening at 2000h EDT. (0100h ZULU Monday).

We now have the site running:  http://zednet.xyz

Zednet exists on the…

  • Yaesu System Fusion (Wires-X) “room” 28598, which is cross-linked to
  • Brandmeister (BM) DMR worldwide talkgroup 31429,
  • Echolink  WB0YLE-R
  • I had to use Echolink a couple weeks ago and it worked pretty well.

Fellow hams who have access locally to a Yaesu System Fusion repeater, a repeater on the BM network, or a multi-mode hotspot registered with BM can get on and have a rag chew…. 24/7/365

Brandmeister requires a personal password now: HERE  In effect, they applied security to their “masters”.

WB0YLE gave me a clear list, a BOM, with links, of everything you need to get involved. HERE  THIS WAS UPDATED on 22 March 2021

I created a page for the List of YOUR callsigns.  HERE  Chime in or drop me a note if your call doesn’t appear in the list.

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VIDEO: Test your LIZARD’s DNA!

Lighter fare for this Friday.

This appeals to my reptilian brain stem!

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Cause for canonization advances for World War II hero, Army Air Corps chaplain Fr LT Joseph Verbis Lafleur

In better news about the US Bishops, I see this splendid statement from Archbp. Timothy Broglio of the Archdiocese for Military Services.

WASHINGTON, D.C. – His Excellency, the Most Reverend Timothy P. Broglio, J.C.D., Archbishop for the Military Services, USA, issued the following statement today on Thursday’s decision by the U.S. Catholic bishops giving the Diocese of Lafayette, LA, the go-ahead to pursue the Cause for Canonization of World War II hero and Army Air Corps chaplain Father Lieutenant Joseph Verbis Lafleur.

Archbishop Broglio said:

“I am delighted that the Diocese of Lafayette in Louisiana has begun the Cause for the Canonization of Father J. Verbis Lafleur. In addition to being a chaplain who led and cared for his fellow prisoners of war, he was a priest who exemplified priestly virtue from the moment of his ordination. Being ordained in the depression, he willingly pawned his watch to buy baseball equipment for the youth to play.

“He is a model of a shepherd with ‘the smell of his sheep’. Even though he died more than 75 years ago, he is an excellent example for priests today. I hope that the process will go quickly and we will see him raised to the dignity of the altars soon.”

I remind the readership that the remains of Servant of God Fr. Emil Kapaun were at last identified. HERE

Moreover, I am told that there is a plan to create a memorial for Fr. Capodanno at the HQ of the Archdiocese for Military in Washington DC.

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In a time when 75% of US Catholics don’t believe in the Real Presence… NEWSFLASH!!!! … 75% of bishops vote to teach about the Eucharist!

CLICK ME

Today the USCCB overwhelmingly voted yes to the drafting of a document about the Eucharist.  Only 66% was needed to move that document forward and the approval garnered 75% of the bishops’ votes.

Given that the Pew survey a couple years back revealed that some 75% of self-identifying Catholics don’t believe what the Church teaches about the Eucharist, the real story is not that 75% of the bishops thought a document on the Eucharist was needed, but that 25% thought it was not needed.   In fact, some of the dissenting bishops think the document will be harmful.   Talking about the problem could do damage!   That’s the line of thought.

I saw a tweet from one of the papalotrous New catholic Red Guard which said that when bishops in the Amazonian Pachamama Synod (“walking together”) talked about ordaining married me, the divisions deepened.    So… shhhhhh!   Don’t talk about our problems.

Hey!  Wait!   I just remembered.  Bishops don’t need the USCCB to tell them whether or not they can teach about the Eucharist.  The USCCB can’t tell them anything, as a matter of fact.   So, perhaps the US bishops should – all on their own! – start teaching about the Eucharist.    Outside the box?

Meanwhile, Biden was asked about the possibility that he could be denied Communion.  He said that that was a private matter.    NO, it really isn’t a private matter, not if he goes to a church for a public Mass, it isn’t.  He is a highly visible public figure, highly recognizable (swarms of Secret Service is a give away).   In an age when everyone has a camera phone, it is decidedly not “private’.  That is precisely the point of one dimension of the discussion about the Eucharist and “Eucharistic coherence”… is that the term they are using now?   If you are obviously  and obstinately and perennially in defiance of certain important teachings of the Church, and if you are a highly visible public figure, then can. 915 applies: those who administer the Eucharist are barred from giving that figure Communion.  Communion is not to be given to those people.  That doesn’t apply just to politicians.

Again meanwhile, the bishops approved (voting 182 in favor, 6 opposed, 2 abstaining) the ICEL Gray Book of the Order of Penance for use in the dioceses of the United States.  So there will be a new translation of the various penance services, etc.  I haven’t seen that Gray Book to check if the formula of absolution will be tinkered with.

Remember, Fathers.  You can always use Latin.

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Update on Fr. Dana Christensen, warrior priest

Some of you have written to me to ask how Fr. Dana Christensen is doing.

There are two ways to answer that.

He is doing great and he is doing really awful.

He is awful in that his horrible disease, ALS, it really whittling him away and he is suffering.

He is doing great in that he is offering his sufferings to God in a truly priestly way.

Fr. Christensen has a new entry on his page.

Giving Up The Ghost, Going to Confession, and You

And a way to donate:

HERE

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Daily Rome Shot 192

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Thinking about Father’s Day? (Pssst – It’s 20 June.)

Father’s Day Gift Shop

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Sober thoughts about a rumored restricting of Summorum Pontificum. Wherein Fr. Z rants.

Dom Alcuin Reid, has a good opinion piece at Catholic World Report about the rumored restrictions or retooling of Summorum Pontificum, Benedict XVI’s “emancipation proclamation” for priests and lay people regarding traditional sacred liturgical worship.

My emphases and comments.

Opinion: On liturgical wars and rumors of wars

It is to be hoped that the anxieties and fears that have been aroused about a restriction of the older rites can be calmed and that no authority issues peremptory precepts which may simply undermine their own authority.

Disquiet abounds at present in the milieu which celebrates the usus antiquior – the more ancient use – of the Roman rite of the Sacred Liturgy. Seemingly the Holy See is considering issuing new norms limiting its celebration, at least in parishes. Some bishops appear to be acting in this vein already, taking measures against good clergy and healthy apostolates which do not present any reason for concern – except that (1) they exist; (2) they are growing; and (3) they are fruitful in leading to good Catholic marriages and new families as well as significant numbers of vocations to the priesthood, monastic and religious life – all indications that this phenomenon is not going away any time soon.  [Exactly.  Why target a rapidly growing, healthy demographic in the Church?   Why target the priests?   It is possible that, in large part, the bishops fear these groups because they don’t grasp or understand the liturgical worship that drives them.  They’ve been brainwashed into thinking that Tradition is out of continuity with their tradition, which began in the 1960’s.   Think of the profound influence of Rahner in their formation, etc.]

We are in a peculiar age when these are seen as concerns. But for some, who are ideologically committed to “the changes,” the rites and ecclesiastical reforms put in place following the most recent ecumenical Council of the Church as means to bring about a new Springtime in the life of the Church have become ends in themselves. For such persons, these means must be adhered to even if it has long since become clear that their ends – the profound renewal they were meant to usher in some decades ago – have simply not been achieved. They can become idols, occluding anything but their own worship.  [True liturgical worship, the essence of fulfillment of the virtue of Religion, is hard.  What is easy about bringing us into contact with Mystery, transcendence tremendum et fascinans?  In Spirit of the Liturgy Ratzinger talks about how people today are imbued with immanentism.  He describes how the Jews made the Golden Calf, not because they really thought it was a god, but because it was easier.  Liturgy which seeks to make everything easier is no authentic liturgy at all.   It’s self-contradictory.  Many bishops and priests, therefore the laity they serve, have made a golden calf out of their use of the Novus Ordo.   The TLM is an antidote to this ironic idolatry.  But who likes taking strong medicine?]

Charity, prayer and patience are the weapons with which to confront such myopia. Please, God, people thus afflicted can become open to the signs of the times in which we actually live, which include the richness, beauty and fruitfulness of the usus antiquior in the life of the Church. And indeed to the fact that their celebration today often evinces far more of that full, conscious, actual (active) and fruitful participation in the liturgical rites for which the Second Vatican Council called than one can readily find elsewhere (to be sure, there are notable exceptions in both directions). Many bishops who have celebrated the older rites for communities in their dioceses have come to appreciate this reality. Acrimony in the face of its incomprehension will simply reinforce prejudices. [You will hear some claim that the traditional forms of worship are antithetical to “full, conscious and active participation”.  They don’t know or forget that those ideals developed long before Vatican II.  I’m with Reid on this: the older, traditional form provides more occasion, not less, for “active participation”.]

So, too, we usus antiquior communities need to examine our consciences. To sustain a sectarian attitude or create a ghetto, whilst perhaps understandable in the heady years following the Council, is untenable today. [Do I hear an “Amen!”?  How many times on this blog have I written that those who desire traditional sacred worship have to be the first group to step up in the parish when there are events and projects?  How many times have I written about the need to be inviting to people, which is, when you think about it, a critical aspect of evangelization?] The liturgical and pastoral riches our communities treasure are for the good of all the Church, not the privilege of few gnostic ‘elect’. The Christian lives of those who draw from them must be all the more credible, particularly in respect of the social teaching of the Church. The light of our communities must – each according to its proper charism – “so shine before men, that they may see [our] good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven.” (Mt. 5:16)

Clericalism has no place anywhere, and the seminaries of institutes which celebrate the usus antiquior must ensure that they form men whose apostolic zeal is concomitant with the love they have for the Sacred Liturgy. They must be men who live and work for the conversion of the world to Christ in the twenty-first century, not ones content to live in a gilt cage decorated according to the tastes of their preferred century in history. Ecclesiastical authorities are right to be concerned when they detect a self-serving narcissism in clergy – a reality that is by no means exclusively found in devotees of the older liturgical rites, or solely in junior clergy.  [BTW… if there is a clerical activity that is most likely to breed clericalism in the negative sense, it is celebration of Holy Mass versus populum.  Add to that incessant options and the practice of turning over priestly roles to lay people – how condescending – and you have an effective petri dish for the narcissism that undergirds negative clericalism.]

One of the first tests of a young man seeking to enter the monastic life is to see whether he is capable of hard manual work without complaint. Most aspirants have little difficulty in attending the liturgical Hours (with the possible exception of matins) but almost all of us need to learn that whilst faithfully observing the norms of the liturgical books is integral to giving due glory to Almighty God, so too bathrooms and chicken sheds need cleaning. The candidate who is able to do both, or who at least becomes conscious that he must grow in his ability so to do, each at their appropriate time, will become a good monk. [Could we apply this to my remarks, above, about how those who desire traditional liturgical worship also have to roll up their sleeves and get involved in the parish?  They can’t just pop in and pop out on Sunday.  Some will respond that they have to drive an hour each way to get to a TLM on a Sunday or Holy Day, with kids, and that would be a huge burden to have to do it more often, for parish events and such.   I get that.  That underscores the need to have even more places where the TLM is offered, so that people can realize their legitimate aspirations without an excessive burden.  It is clericalistic stinginess on the part of priests and bishops not to provide for these people, who clearly represent a fast growing demographic of faithful and zealous believers in a time when large numbers of Catholic don’t believe what the Church teaches and are falling away.]

Our usus antiquior communities and houses of formation need this same balance and moderation. Young people need space and time and patience, and they need love and understanding, in which to grow and mature. [PLEASE!  For the love of GOD, you bishops and priests out there, give these people some TLC!   This is the single most marginalized group in the Church today and YOU are responsible for that.] Older people, above all those in authority or with responsibility for formation, need to give them all of this and more, even if they themselves bear the scars of having been denied the same. [I really like Scott Hahn’s designation of “sad trads”, “mad trads” and “glad trads”.   There are “trads” who have been pretty badly beaten up, mistreated for decades by those who ought to have shown them pastoral care.  They are hurt and angry and it is understandable that, over time, they should develop something of a siege mentality, and “us against them” stance.  I believe that during the pontificate of Benedict XVI and with Summorum, they began to unclench. But in recent years those old wounds have been poked and bruised again.  And to what end?] So too, usus antiquior communities need to form candidates to be men of the Church rather than indulgent self-defined ‘rad-trads’ or à la carte laptop-liturgists who, in their fear, isolation or pride, inhabit a virtual world – or Church – of their own construction.

It is to be hoped that the anxieties and fears that have been aroused about a restriction of the older rites can be calmed and that no authority issues peremptory precepts which will, in all likelihood, simply undermine their own authority – blind obedience is no longer the daily bread of Catholic clergy or laity and cannot be relied upon as it was a half-century ago. The positive proscription of something true, good and beautiful is likely to intensify, not heal, enmity, clericalism and alienation within the Church.  [You see what he is saying here, I think.  I believe he is right.   A harsh, top-down retooling of Summorum‘ provisions, essentially a raw exercise of power, opens the way to defiance and resistance and also  for future raw exercises of power to undo the previous deed.   In a short period of time – after only 14 years – a pope stomps out one of the most important acts of the previous pontificate… and perhaps expects his own actions to be respected by the next guy? How can the powers that be, who themselves back in the day, over time, deliberately and systematically violated the law so as to attain approval of abuses such as Communion in the hand and altar girls, etc., realistically expect that, if some sort of “slave act of 2021” is issued against Benedict’s “emancipation proclamation” that people – including priests – won’t rise up?  And, as Reid pointed to above, is there a foreshadowing to be found in the rise of “cancelation” of priests – usually traditional – by bishops?]

In addition, to ban the usus antiquior because of its increasing popularity [“BECAUSE of its increasing popularity”] some fifty years after it was supposedly replaced by a liturgical reform that, according to St Paul VI, involved the necessary sacrifice of the venerable liturgy for the pastoral good of the Church would, ironically, risk being nothing less than an ‘own goal’; [I detect in that phrase some soccer (football) terminology.  An “own goal” is when a defensive player winds up scoring for the other team by knocking the ball into his own net.] an historic, eloquent and ultimately embarrassing admission of the colossal failure of that reform by those committed to its ideological perpetuation no matter what the cost.

Reid retained until the end a strong reason why I don’t think we are going to see a retooling or restricting of Summorum Pontificum.   There is no upside to doing it, no genuine gain to be made.  Such a move would provoke large numbers of people to deep resentment and confusion and possibly even open defiance.  After all, the horse is now out of the barn. It would undermine the authority of those who would implement such a restriction.

Apart from those serious reasons why there should be no retooling, no “slave act of 2021”, as Reid points out it would be admission that the idealistically hoped for magnificent fruits of the post-Conciliar liturgical reform were, in the end, mere pipedreams.  If the powers that be have to stomp out the resurgence of traditional liturgy by sheer power, that will merely underscore that the post-Conciliar reform was a “colossal failure”.

Instead, why not try something else?

Why not foster and expand the use of the traditional forms so that they are far more available, side by side with the Novus Ordo, and then see what happens?

If there is a mutual enrichment in the line of the resparking of the organic development of liturgical worship which was a goal of Benedict’s Motu Proprio, isn’t that alright? If people who discover the TLM decide that that’s what they prefer… isn’t that a good thing?   If people who discover the TLM decide that they prefer the Novus Ordo… isn’t that okay?

What are they so afraid of?

If the powers that be are so convinced in the superiority of the post-Conciliar forms, that they truly provide for and respond to the needs of Catholics in the 21st century, then … let’s find out!

Foster the TLM in many more places and then see what happens.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, Save The Liturgy - Save The World, Wherein Fr. Z Rants | Tagged ,
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A CANCELLED PRIEST SPEAKS: #00

Today I saw a video posted by Church Militant of a panel discussion with 9 priests who have been “cancelled”.    Some of it was pretty rough… at least for me to watch.

One of the things that I heard is the claim that there are “hundreds” of priests who have been sidelined, cancelled.

I believe it.   I know quite a few as it is and I am sure that’s a drop in the bucket.

One of the things that popped into my head as I listened, would be to post – on this blog – a comment or letter from cancelled priests, completely anonymized.   They could send, for example, a note of 400 words.

A CANCELLED PRIEST SPEAKS: #01

Something like that,  A kind of Catholic priestly samizdat.

Just thinking aloud.   It could give a cancelled priest a chance to be heard on something, for example, what he would have preached on Sunday had his bishop allowed, or something about his situation or the state of the Church, etc.   Without giving himself up, that is.

Friends, this is a problem.  It is a symptom of something systemic.

Posted in Mail from priests, Priests and Priesthood | Tagged
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ASK FATHER: Are those who must read the Liturgy of the Hours, obliged to read it aloud? Vocal recitation?

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I was recently reading Quigley’s “The Divine Office: A Study of the Roman Breviary.” In it he mentions that vocal recitation was necessary to validly fulfill the obligation of reciting the office. Does this still hold for the Liturgy of the Hours? For example, is one who is bound to say the office bound to vocally recite, for example, the lessons at the office of readings?

I did a lengthy look on this question here on the blog.  The “search box” is useful, btw.  That’s how I found what I wrote a couple years back.

Here it is:

Published on: Aug 28, 2017 


12_04_11_breviaryFrom a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I have seen a tendency for people who have a duty to say the Office attempt to satisfy their obligation without mouthing the words with air passing through the lips. Has the liturgical law changed? I’m pressure sure [I’m pretty sure that that’s “pretty sure”] the older manuals like Prummer [insert reverent head bow here] said each syllable must be uttered for the perfect satisfaction of the obligation.

So the question is must the Office be performed as vocal prayer rather than interior mental prayer?

For the perfect satisfaction of the obligation?

We are Unreconstructed Ossified Manualists.  Let’s look it up.

Let me just say that most diocesan priests and bishops – 99.99% I would guess – might be a little horrified to read the whole section De attentione et devotione in recitandis Horis in

Sabbetti-Barrett (see my note at the very end of the post):

Pronuntiatio debet esse vocalis, integra et continuata.  Et 1°. quidem debet esse vocalis, nam Officum recitari debet voce, et quidem distincta; non autem sufficit, ut sola mente legatur, aut tantum oculis percurratur; nec satis est, se recitetur gutture vel intra dentes, aut syncopando, linguave titubante abbreviando; nam id quod praecipitur est oratio propriae vocalis; oratio autem non censetur proprie vocalis, nisi voce distincta fiat;2°. debet esse integra, ad integritatem autem pertinent Pater, Ave Credo in principio et fine Horarum, prout in Rubricis adnotatur, non autem orationes Aperi Domine et Sacrosanctae, quae solum ex consilio recitantur; 3°. debet esse continuata; se proinde quaecumque notabilis interruptio intra unam Horam, si absque ulla causa fiat, culpa non caret; sed peccatum veniale non excidit. Cf. S. Alphons. n. 166.

So, yes, the Office must be recited, pronounced, since it is vocal prayer (cf. CCC 2700 ff.).

Also,

580 QUAER. 1°. An recitans Officium debeat se audire, ut possit dici vocaliter orare?

Resp. Neg., quia oratio vocalis dicitur per oppositionem ad mentalem, et vere habetur quoties verba vere pronuntiantur, utut a nemine audiantur; ac proinde sufficit, si recitans conscius sibi sit se verba pronuntiare. – Cf. S. Alphons. n. 163.

Deeply drilling Prümmer (1953) says (vol. 2, #370): “Ad plene satisfaciendum praecepto ecclesiastico Officium divinum recitari debet: 1. debito ordine, loco, situ, tempore; 2. integre; 3. continue; 4. vocaliter; 5. cum attentione et intentione.”

Notice that “plene“!

In the explanation in #375 he says:

“Immo est consuetudo haud laudabilis ita proferendi aut potius sibilandi verba Officii in recitatione privata, ut circumstantes inde molestiam patiantur.  Clericus mentaliter tantum Officium legens aut solis oculis percurrens non satisfacit suae obligationi; saltem si non habet speciale privilegium.”  

If you don’t say your Office vocally, and just do it mentally, according to Prümmer you don’t fulfill your obligation.  HOWEVER, he goes on to say that Leo X (of happy memory) gave the Friars Minor this privilege.  And also in #376,

“Propter auctoritatem S. Alphonsi, cuius sententias quilibet confessarius in praxi sequi potest, nisi Curia Romana expresse aliud statuerit, non auderem quidem peccati mortalis reum declarare clericum regularem, qui totum Officium mentaliter tantum dixerit, sed haud pauci auctores docent, privilegium istud a Leone X concessum hodie iam non existere.”

Something in the back of my mind tells me that that privilege was rescinded by Gregory V.

HENCE: Recitation of the Office should be aloud, since it is official and mainly vocal prayer. This is why of yore and even now priests move their lips when saying their Office.

I guess it could be possible to fulfill your obligation mentally, but only with permission from proper authority.  I imagine that that could be the diocesan bishop for diocesan priests.  After all, Sacrosanctum Concilium 101 says that the “ordinary” can give clerics permission to use the vernacular for the office.  More HERE.  One might argue that while Latin may not be of the essence of the Office, vocal prayer is.

However, even when you don’t read aloud, there is a measure of subvocalization going on when reading.

That said, I am of the opinion that a priest imperfectly fulfills his obligation even when not moving his lips, only reading silently.  I don’t know if that is a venial sin or not.  I suppose a great deal depends on the training the priest had about the nature of the Office.  I suspect that none of this is explained in seminaries, even from the point of view of historical interest.

In the instruction for the Liturgy of the Hours there is an explanation that biographical notes about saints are not for reading aloud.  That implies that the rest is read aloud.  Also, there is a paragraph at 103 says that “even when a psalm is recited and not sung or is said silently in private, its musical character should govern its use”.  But that seems to be about Psalms in general rather in about their specific recitation in the Office.

It seems to be that even in the lax days of the Liturgy of the Hours, the obligation of true vocal recitation remains as it did before.

If that is the case, we are in serious trouble as a Church and so is the whole world: the official prayer of the Church which clerics and religious should be offering for the sake of the whole People of God … isn’t being offered in a satisfactory way.

See my SAVE THE LITURGY – SAVE THE WORLD Manifesto.

And then there’s this!

17_02_07_Jesuit_breviary

When I read these manuals, especially the sections that pertain to clerical life, liturgy, etc., I am always left simultaneously edified and humiliated.

I am edified at the amazing ideals which are proposed according to law and reason.

I am humiliated in that in many respects I don’t come up to scratch.

I must rededicate myself – confess those faults which I think may be mortal – and then amend and improve.

So… I am now going to back away from this question and quietly, indeed silently and not even moving my lips, go back to my To Do List.

The moderation queue is ON (especially for those who want to provide translations of the Latin – which would be a great service to non-Latin reading bishops and priests out there).  If sound, I’ll integrate them into the post.

UPDATE:  Not satisfied… I found also this.

Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship Note Liturgiae Horarum Interpretationes (Not 9 (1973) 150)

Query: When a person recites the liturgy of the hours do the readings have to be pronounced or simply read?

Reply: It is enough to simply read them. The conciliar Constitution on the Liturgy says nothing about an obligation to oral recitation when a person says the office alone, although there was a difference of opinion on this among the conciliar Fathers. They decreed a reform of the breviary not for the purpose of shortening the time of prayer but of giving all who celebrate the liturgy of the hours a better time for prayer…Sometimes a surer guarantee for this objective of the liturgy of the hours in individual recitation may be to omit the oral recitation of each word, especially in the case of the readings.
Found on page 1098 of Documents on the Liturgy 1963-1979. Conciliar, Papal and Curial Texts. The Liturgical Press, 1982

With this explanation:

recitation office silent

I find in this a contradiction, especially in light of the expression of Paul VI about Christ’s voice echoing in us.

This is such a different approach.  It seems simply to sweep aside the characteristic liturgical prayer as vocal prayer.  NB: A priest cannot simply think the words of consecration or the forms of the other sacraments.

Posted in "How To..." - Practical Notes, ASK FATHER Question Box, Linking Back, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000 | Tagged , ,
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PRAYER REQUEST: Cancelled priests

I lately have had notes from lay people and from priests about priests who are being cancelled… by their bishops.

I grant that in every case there can be circumstances, details that are not public.

That said, this seems to be happening more frequently now.

Word about these situations gets around and it is incredibly demoralizing.   I recently had a chat with a young man who has a strong sense of his priestly call.  But he has seen what is happening to priests.  He made a determination that he would be crazy to seek ordination for his diocese and is, instead, going to join one of the traditional religious groups.   I said, “Amen.”

As one of the brethren, I ask that you say often, daily at least, the prayer for priests which I link on the sidebar of this blog.  Perhaps you could bookmark it or print it out and keep it with you.  Maybe keep a copy in your car so that you could say it at a long light, or when waiting to pick someone up.   Perhaps put a copy in your hand missal.

Priests are among the most vulnerable members of the church, as a matter of fact.   Bishops seem to be applying “tall poppy syndrome” rather than trying to work something out with them.

Daily Prayer for Priests

O Almighty Eternal God, look upon the face of Thy Christ, and for the love of Him who is the Eternal High Priest, have pity on Thy priests. Remember, O most compassionate God, that they are but weak and frail human beings. Stir up in them the grace of their vocation which is in them by the imposition of the bishop’s hands. Keep them close to Thee, lest the Enemy prevail against them, so that they may never do anything in the slightest degree unworthy of their sublime vocation.

O Jesus, I pray Thee for Thy faithful and fervent priests; for Thy unfaithful and tepid priests; for Thy priests laboring at home or abroad in distant mission fields; for Thy tempted priests; for Thy lonely and desolate priests; for Thy young priests; for Thy aged priests; for Thy sick priests, [for thy cancelled priests] for Thy dying priests; for the souls of Thy priests in Purgatory.

But above all I commend to Thee the priests dearest to me; the priest who baptized me; the priests who absolved me from my sins; the priests at whose Masses I assisted, and who gave me Thy Body and Blood in Holy Communion; the priests who taught and instructed me, or helped and encouraged me; all the priests to whom I am indebted in any other way, particularly N. O Jesus, keep them all close to Thy Heart, and bless them abundantly in time and in eternity. Amen.

IMPRIMATUR
+Robert C. Morlino, Bishop of Madison, 6 September 2018

 

Posted in Priests and Priesthood | Tagged
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Daily Rome Shot 191

Photo by Bree Dail.

UPDATE your BOOKMARK!

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
1 Comment

Daily Rome Shot 190

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
3 Comments

Happy Birthday @Card_R_Sarah

Posted in Lighter fare | Tagged
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That’s not what I expected to see.

This is such an interesting photo that I had to post it for your thoughts. I originally saw the top part first and then I opened it. Wow.

Posted in I'm just askin'... |
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URGENT: Prayers for Fr. Tim Finigan

May I ask your prayers for my dear friend Fr. Tim Finigan? He has the excellent blog The Hermeneutic of Continuity which for many years has provided a splendid witness to the Faith. Fr. Finigan is the best of men and a fine priest.

I saw this distressing news today….

“Of interest” to the doctors.   Yeah… that’s what we need to hear: “interesting” from a doctor.

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