“…this missal is hereafter to be
followed absolutely, without any scruple of conscience or fear of incurring any
penalty, judgment or censure, and may freely and lawfully be used…Accordingly, no one whatsoever is permitted
to infringe or rashly contravene this notice of Our permission, statute,
ordinance, command, precept, grant, direction, will, decree and
prohibition. Should any person
venture to do so, let him understand he will incur the wrath of Almighty God
and of the Blessed Apostles Peter and Paul.”
Pope St. Pius V, Papal Bull, QUO PRIMUM,
Codifying the traditional Roman
Rite of the Mass.

Saint James the Greater,
Apostle
Ninth Sunday after Pentecost
St. Christopher, Martyr
July 25, 2010
St. James, brother of St. John, and son of Zebedee,
was a native of Bethsaida in Galilee.
He is surnamed the Greater, i.e. the elder.
One day his mother, approaching the
Savior, asked of Him “the favor for her two sons to be seated, one at His right
hand and the other on His left, in His kingdom” (Gospel). Christ then foretold their martyrdom. St. James “shall sit on a throne to judge
the twelve tribes of Israel” (Communion), but he will first have to mix his
blood with that of Jesus (Gospel) and undergo, like all the apostles, a life of
suffering and persecution, such as the Epistle describes. After the Ascension of Jesus Christ to
heaven, says the office of today, James preached His divinity in Judea and
Samaria. He soon betook himself to
Spain. When he returned to Jerusalem,
Herod Agrippa, desiring to please the Jews, condemned him to death and he was
beheaded towards the year 42, a short time before the feast of Easter.
It would seem, that for fear of the Arabs
who were masters of Jerusalem, the body of the Saint was later carried to
Compostella, in Spain, where he is heartily honored. July 25 recalls the date of this translation. His name is inscribed in the Canon of the
Mass with that of St. John, his brother.
St. Christopher was a native of
Chanaan. His name (who bears Christ)
expressed his love of Jesus. A generous
soul, he walked like a giant in the way of virtue. The piety of our fathers inspired by this grand allegory caused
them to place a colossal statue of St. Christopher at the entrance to
cathedrals. He was martyred towards the
year 250. He is one of the “fourteen
Auxiliary Saints.”
Today’s liturgy lays stress on the terrible
punishments which will one day be inflicted on those who have denied
Christ. They will all perish and not
one of them will enter the kingdom of heaven.
Those who have been faithful to Him through all the adversities of this
life, will also one day, be saved from the hands of their enemies and will
follow Him into heaven, wither He went at his Ascension. These thoughts about God’s justice are
suggested in the Breviary reading from the prophet Elias.
After Solomon’s death the twelve tribes
were divided into two kingdoms, Israel and Juda. The second of these consisted in the tribes of Juda and Benjamin,
with Jerusalem as the capital, while the first was composed of the remaining
ten tribes, having for its capital Sichem, then in Samaria.
To this latter kingdom belonged the
prophet Elias, who dwelt in the desert of Galaad in Samaria. A man of great virtue and austere life he
wore a tunic woven of camel’s hair and a leathern girdle. “With zeal. Zealous for the Lord God of
Hosts,” he left the desert three times to convey the divine warnings to Achab,
the seventh king of Israel and the queen, Jezebel, who seduced the people into
idolatry; to secure the death of the four hundred and fifty prophets of Baal
whom he had put to confusion on Mount Carmel; and to foretell to the king who
had taken Naboth’s vineyard for himself, that he would die bathed in his own
blood, and to the queen, who had been Achab’s evil genius, that her blood would
flow on the spot where Naboth’s flowed, while dogs should devour her flesh.
For these reasons Elias was persecuted by
the Israelites and by Achab and Jezebel, and was obliged to flee to Mount Horeb
to escape death. Later on, when
Ochozias Achab’s son had become king, Elias advised him not to consult
Beelzebub the god of Accaron as he intended but rather the God of Israel.
Upon this Ochozias sent him a captain of
fifty soldiers to summon him to come down from the mountain and to account for
his words, but Elias answered: “If I be a man of God, let fire come down from
heaven and consume thee, and thy fifty.”
And there came down fire from heaven, and consumed him and the fifty
that were with him (Breviary).
Still later, Elias set out towards the
Jordan with Eliseus, and when they had crossed the river, a fiery chariot and
horses separated them from each other, while Elias went up by a whirlwind into
heaven, then Eliseus took up Elias’s
mantle that had fallen from him, and received a double portion of his spirit,
while all Elias’ disciples exclaimed: “The spirit of Elias hath rested upon
Eliseus.”
On one occasion, when Elias was on his
way up to Bethel he was mocked by some small boys, crying: “Go up, thou bald
head. Go up, thou bald head.” And Elias cursed them in the name of God
whom they had offended, “and there came forth two bears out of the forest and
tore them two and forty boys.”
All his life, Elias, with his words of
fire, championed the rights of almighty God.
Much later John the Baptist “came forward in the spirit and power of
Elias,” clad like him, and like him dwelling in the desert; defending, with the
same impassioned voice, the same rights of God, and foretelling the separation
which Christ, who was at hand, would make between the chaff and the wheat. “He will gather the wheat into His barns,
but the chaff He will burn with unquenchable fire.” “Elias,” says St. Augustine, “was a type of our Redeemer and
Lord. Elias suffered persecution from
the Jews; our Lord, the true Elias, was despised, and rejected by this same people. Elias left his own country; Christ forsook
the synagogue and made welcome the Gentiles (2nd Nocturn).
Continuing the comparison, we may say the
God rescued Elias from his enemies by raising him into the sky; and in the same
way he took Christ from among His enemies, by making Him go up to heaven on
Ascension Day. “Deliver me from my
enemies, O my God, and defend me from them that rise up against me” (Alleluia).
Elias, carried away in a chariot of fire,
was in the language of the Fathers, the type of Jesus ascending to heaven. The Gradual uses the same verse of the eight
psalm which the liturgy employs on Ascension Day. “Lord, our Lord, how admirable is thy name in the whole
earth. Thy magnificence is elevated
above the heavens.” The Introit adds:
“Behold God is my helper and the Lord is the protector of my soul. Save me, O God, by Thy name and deliver me
by Thy strength.” This triumph of
Christ over those who hated Him, typified by that of Elias over his despisers,
will be ours also, if we do not “tempt Christ,” that is, if we avoid idolatry,
impurity, and murmuring (Epistle), remaining faithful to grace. For if our Lord continues to be offered up
on our altars to “make His work to avail on our behalf” (Secret), and if
“eating His Flesh and drinking His Blood, we abide in Him and He in us”
(Communion), it is in order that “united” to Him (Postcommunion) we may
faithfully keep His judgments which are “sweeter than honey” (Offertory).
St. Paul indeed, tells us: “God is
faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that which you are able;
but will make also with temptation issue, that you may be able to bear it”
(Epistle). Let us, therefore, beseech
the Lord that His merciful ears “may be open to the prayers” of His suppliants
and, in order that to those who seek He may surely give that for which they
ask, He may make us to ask only for those things which are well-pleasing to Him
(Collect).
But divine justice is not content with
protecting the just against their enemies and with rewarding them for their
fidelity; it punishes also those who do evil.
Elias threatened the faithless kingdom of Israel and made fire from
heaven to fall on his enemies (Breviary).
The Israelites who tempted Christ by their murmurings perished by firey
serpents (Epistle), and Jerusalem, over which our Lord wept and whose
punishment He foretold for its rejection of Himself, was destroyed by war and
fire (Gospel). Three and twenty
thousand of the children of Israel, we read, perished in one day through
fornication and many were destroyed because of their murmuring. “Now,” St Paul tells us, “all these things
happened to them in figure, and they are written for our correction’ (Epistle).
More than a million Jews perished at the
destruction of Jerusalem because they had rejected the Messias, and in the
Gospel our Lord always compared this tragic ending to the catastrophes which
will mark the end of all time when God will come to judge the world by fire.
At that moment, the divine judge will
accomplish the separation of the good from the evil, rewarding the first and
banishing from the kingdom of God all who have denied Him by their unbelief or
their sin, just as He drove from the Temple, the type of the Church on earth
and in heaven, the traffickers who had transformed that house of God into a den
of thieves (Gospel). “Turn back the
evils upon my enemies, and cut them off in Thy truth, O Lord my protector”
(Introit). For then the time of mercy
will have passed, and that of justice only will remain. “Wherefore,” says the apostle, “he that
thinketh himself to stand, let him take heed lest he fall” (Epistle).
INTROIT:
Ps.
138.
To me thy friends, O God, are made exceedingly honorable: their
principality is exceedingly strengthened.
Ps. Lord, thou
hast proved me, and known me; thou hast known my sitting down and my rising
up. Glory be, etc. To me thy friends, O God, are etc.
COLLECT:
Be thou, O Lord, the sanctifier
and protector of Thy people; that, strengthened by the aid of James, Thy
Apostle, they may please Thee in their lives and may serve Thee without
fear. Through our Lord, etc.
Let Thy merciful ears, O Lord, be
open to the prayers of Thy suppliant people: and that Thou mayest grant them
their desires, make them to ask such things as please Thee. Through our Lord, etc.
Grant, we beseech thee, almighty
God, that we who are keeping the festival of blessed Christopher, thy Martyr,
may at his intercession be strengthened in the love of thy name. Through our Lord, etc.
EPISTLE: 1 Cor.
4, 9-15.
Brethern: I think that God hath set forth us apostles, the last, as it were men appointed to death: we are made a spectacle to the world, and to angels, and to men. We are fools for Christ's sake, but you are wise in Christ; we are weak, but you are strong; you are honourable, but we without honour. Even unto this hour we both hunger and thirst, and are naked, and are buffeted, and have no fixed abode; And we labour, working with our own hands: we are reviled, and we bless; we are persecuted, and we suffer it. We are blasphemed, and we entreat; we are made as the refuse of this world, the offscouring of all even until now. I write not these things to confound you; but I admonish you as my dearest children. For if you have ten thousand instructors in Christ, yet not many fathers. For in Christ Jesus, by the gospel, I have begotten you.
GRADUAL:
Ps. 44. Thou shalt
make them princes over all the earth: they shall remember thy name, O Lord. In place of thy fathers, sons are born to
thee: therefore shall people praise thee.
Alleluia, alleluia.
John
15.
I have chosen you out of the world, that you should go, and should bring
forth fruit, and your fruit should remain.
Alleluia.
GOSPEL: Matt. 20, 20-23.
At. that time: The mother of the sons of Zebedee with her sons, adoring and asking something of him. Who said to her: What wilt thou? She saith to him: Say that these my two sons may sit, the one on thy right hand, and the other on thy left, in thy kingdom. And Jesus answering, said: You know not what you ask. Can you drink the chalice that I shall drink? They say to him: We can. He saith to them: My chalice indeed you shall drink; but to sit on my right or left hand, is not mine to give to you, but to them for whom it is prepared by my Father.
OFFERTORY:
Ps. 18. Their
sound hath gone forth into all the earth; and their words unto the ends of the
world.
SECRET:
May our
offerings, we pray, O Lord, find favor in Thy sight, through the holy sufferings
of blessed James the Apostle; and as they have no worth from any merits of
ours, may they be well-pleasing to Thee through his prayer. Through our Lord, etc.
Grant
us, we pray, O Lord, worthily to frequent these mysteries; because every time
this commemorative sacrifice is celebrated, the work of our redemption is
enacted. Through our Lord, etc.
As thou
hast received our gifts and prayers, O Lord, cleanse us, we pray, by thy
heavenly mysteries, and graciously hear us.
Through our Lord, etc.
PREFACE OF THE APOSTLES:
It is
truly meet and just, right and for our salvation, to entreat Thee humbly, O
Lord, that Thou wouldst not desert Thy flock, O everlasting Shepherd, but,
through Thy blessed Apostles, wouldst keep it under Thy constant protection;
that it may be governed by those same rulers, whom as vicars of Thy work, Thou
didst set over it to be its pastors. And therefore with Angels and Archangels,
with Thrones and Dominations, and with all the hosts of the heavenly army, we
sing the hymn of Thy glory, evermore saying: Holy, Holy, Holy, etc.
COMMUNION:
Matt.
19. You that have followed me shall sit upon seats, judging the
twelve tribes of Israel.
POSTCOMMUNION:
Help us, O Lord, we pray, through the intercession of
Thy blessed Apostle James, on whose festival we have joyfully received Thy holy
mysteries. Through our Lord, etc.
May the
communion of Thy sacrament, O Lord, we pray, afford us purification and grant
us unity. Through our Lord, etc.
Grant, we pray, O Lord our God, that we who in time
render joyful service in memory of thy saints, may be gladdened by their
company in eternity. Through our Lord,
etc.
LAST GOSPEL:
Luke 19, 41-47.
At that time, when Jesus drew near to Jerusalem, seeing the city, He wept over it, saying: If thou also hadst known, and that in this thy day, the things that are to thy peace: but now they are hidden from thy eyes. For the days shall come upon thee, and thine enemies shall cast a trench about thee, and compass thee round, and straiten thee on every side; and beat thee flat to the ground, and thy children who are in thee; and they shall not leave in thee a stone upon a stone, because thou hast not known the time of thy visitation. And entering into the temple, He began to cast out them that sold therein, and them that bought, saying to them: It is written, “My house is a house of prayer. but you have made it a den of thieves.” And He was teaching daily in the temple.
Why did our Saviour weep over
the city of Jerusalem?
Because of the ingratitude and obduracy of its inhabitants who would not receive Him as their Redeemer, and who through impenitence were hastening to destruction.
When was the time of
visitation?
The period in which God sent them one prophet after another who urged them to penance, and whom they persecuted, stoned, and killed. (Matt. 23, 34). It was especially the time of Christ's ministry, when He so often announced His salutary doctrine in the temple of Jerusalem, confirmed it by miracles, proving Himself to be the Messiah, the Saviour of the world, but was despised and rejected by this hardened and impenitent city.
Who are prefigured by this
hardened and impenitent city?
The hard-hearted, unrepenting sinners who will not recognize the time of God's visitation, in which He urges them by the mouth of His preachers, confessors, and superiors, and by inward inspiration to reform their lives and seek the salvation of their soul, but who give no ear to these admonitions, and defer conversion to the end of their lives. Their end will be like to that of this impious city; then the enemy, that is, the evil spirit, will surround their soul, tempt, terrify, and drag it into the abyss of ruin. Oh, how foolish it is to squander so lightly, the time of grace, the days of salvation! Oh, how would the damned do penance, could they but return to earth! Oh, how industriously would they employ the time to save their soul! Use, then, my dear Christian, the time of grace which God designs for you, and which, when it is run out or carelessly thrown away, will not be lengthened for a moment.
Will God conceal from the
wicked that which serves for their salvation?
No; but while they are running after the pleasures of this life, as St. Gregory says, they see not the misfortunes treading in their footsteps, and as consideration of the future makes them uncomfortable in the midst of their worldly pleasures, they remove the terrible thought far from them, and thus run with eyes blindfolded in the midst of their pleasure into eternal flames. Not God, but they themselves hide the knowledge of all that is for their peace, and thus they perish.
ASPIRATION. I beseech Thee, O Lord, who didst weep over the city of Jerusalem,
because it knew not the time of its visitation, to enlighten my heart, that I
may know and profit by the season of grace.

And
Jesus answering, said:
You
know not what you ask.
Can
you drink the chalice that I shall drink?
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Every Mass for Sunday and other Holy Days of Obligation
are offered for the welfare of the members of Ss. Peter & Paul Roman
Catholic Mission.
Daily Mass at the Chapel is again offered each weekday
at 6:00 PM and 9:00AM on Saturday and Sunday.
The statue of St. Ann with her child, the Blessed Virgin
Mary will be placed in the chapel tomorrow on the feast of St. Ann.
The Mission has purchased a new tabernacle,
monstrance, chalice and paten, and vestments in green and violet.
Acting upon a complaint made to the diocese of
Harrisburg, the diocese of Harrisburg contacted Bishop O’Brien of Baltimore who
has forbidden Fr. Peterson under obedience from helping Ss. Peter and Paul
Roman Catholic Mission in the future.
Bishop Joseph McFadden has been
appointed as the new bishop of Harrisburg Diocese. His welfare will be remembered at each Mass and Rosary of Reparation
offered in our chapel.
Appended below is the last letter sent to Brian Kisielnicki concerning the independent school
corporation. This letter has been
quoted repeatedly out of context and was used in the dramatic closure of Fr.
Tetherow’s sermon on Good Shepherd Sunday.
It is being offered now for clarification.
Acting under the advice of
expert legal counsel and that of a traditional priest who has provided
spiritual direction to this Mission for many years, Fr. Tetherow was removed as
chaplain of our religious society. He
no longer offers Mass at our Chapel.
This was done for cause.
Two previous requests were made
to Bill Fonticoba for the return of the Ss. Peter and Paul Roman Catholic
Mission financial records. He has not
complied with these requests consequently a letter was recently sent from the
Mission’s legal counsel again requesting the return of the records. He also has a laptop computer provided by
the Mission in his possession. Please
make sure that you maintain records of your personal contributions, which may
be necessary until the records are once again secured in the Mission’s
possession.
PROPER OF THE SAINTS FOR THE WEEK OF JULY 25th:
|
25 |
Sun |
St. James the
Greater, Apostle 9th Sunday after Pentecost St. Christopher, M |
d2cl |
R |
|
9:00 AM; Members Ss. Peter & Paul; Rosary of Reparation 8:30 AM;
Confessions 8:00 AM |
|
26 |
Mon |
St. Anne, Mother of the BVM, W |
d2cl |
W |
|
Mass 6:00 PM; Rosary of Reparation 5:30 PM |
|
27 |
Tue |
St. Pantaleon, M |
sp |
R |
|
Mass 6:00 PM; Rosary of Reparation 5:30 PM |
|
28 |
Wed |
St. Nazarius & Companions, Mm |
sd |
R |
|
Mass 6:00 PM; Rosary of Reparation 5:30 PM |
|
29 |
Thu |
St. Martha, V St. Feliz II & Companions, Mm |
sd |
W |
|
Mass 6:00 PM; Rosary of Reparation 5:30 PM |
|
30 |
Fri |
Ss. Abdon & Sennen, Mm |
sp |
R |
A |
Mass 6:00 PM; Rosary of Reparation 5:30 PM |
|
31 |
Sat |
St. Ignatius of Loyola, C |
dm |
W |
|
Mass 9:00 AM; Rosary of Reparation & Confession 8:30 AM |
|
1 |
Sun |
10th
Sunday after Pentecost St. Peter’s Chains St. Paul, Ap The Holy Machabees, Mm |
sd |
G |
|
9:00 AM; Members Ss. Peter & Paul; Rosary of Reparation 8:30 AM;
Confessions 8:00 AM |
St.
Ann Anne, Patroness of Christian Mothers
To St. Anne, God has given the power to aid in every necessity, because
Jesus, her Divine Grandchild according to the flesh, will refuse her no
petition, and Mary, her glorious daughter, supports her every request. Those
who venerate good St. Anne shall want for nothing, either in this life or the
next. Believe me, if you love and
venerate this Saint, you will experience how highly God esteems her. He grants
all she asks! It would be impossible to enumerate the many graces she obtains
daily for her servants.
Abbot John Trithemius
Anne is the glorious
tree from which bloomed a twig under Divine influence. She is the sublime
heaven from whose heights the Star of the Sea neared its rising. She is the
blessed barren woman, happy mother among mothers, from whose pure womb came
forth the shining temple of God, the sanctuary of the Holy Ghost, the Mother of
God.
St. Jerome
Blessed, thrice blessed
art thou, O Saint Anne, who didst receive from God and brought forth the
blessed child from whom proceeded Christ, the Flower of life! We congratulate
thee, O blessed Anne, on the dignity of being the mother of Mary, for thou hast
brought forth our common hope, the germ of Promise! All pious lips bless thee
in thy daughter, all languages glorify thy child! Worthy art thou above all
praise, worthy of the praise of all who are redeemed, for thou hast given life
to her who brought forth our Savior, Jesus Christ.
St. John Damascene
From her very
childhood, she possessed the fullness of every virtue. She was continually
engaged in devout meditation. Her unceasing prayer was that the Redeemer might
come soon.
St. Mary of Agreda
In desperate cases of
need, I always invoke the holy mother Anne.
Blessed Anna Catherine
Emmerich
We
do not doubt that the more love we show to the mother of Mary, the more we
merit the intercession and aid of the holy Virgin who brought forth the
only-begotten Son of God, Our Lord Jesus Christ.
Pope Gregory XV
We know and are
convinced that our good mother St. Anne helps in all needs, dangers and
tribulations, for Our Lord wishes to show us that He will do also in Heaven
what she asks of Him for us.
St. Teresa of Avila
“Into whatever city or town you shall enter,” said Jesus to His
disciples, “inquire who in it is worthy, and there abide.” Now St. Luke relates that as they went, our
Lord Himself “entered into a certain town, and a certain woman named Martha
received Him into her house.” How could
we give a greater praise to Magdalen’s sister than by bringing together these
two texts of the holy Gospel?
Dom Gueranger, The Liturgical Year, St. Martha
St. Ignatius received his first call three
weeks after Luther had completed his rebellion… Ten months of diabolilcal
manifestations prepared Satan’s lieutenant and on March 25th left
Wartburg. In the same month on the 25th,
on the glorious night of the Incarnation, the brilliant soldier in the armies
of the Catholic kingdom, the descendant of the families of Ognes and Loyola,
clad in sackcloth, the uniform of poverty, to indicate his new projects,
watched his arms in prayer at Montserrat; then hanging up his trusty sword at
Mary’s altar, he went forth to make trial of his future combats by a merciless
war against himself.
Dom Gueranger, The Liturgical Year,
Feast of St. Ignatius of Loyola
What strikes us at once in the history of the Society of Jesus is that
it was matured at its very first formation.
Whosoever knows the first founders of the Company knows the whole
Company, in its spirit, its aim, its enterprises, its proceedings, its
methods. What a generation was that
which gave it birth! What union of
science and activity, of interior life and military life! One may say they were universal men, men of
a giant race, compared with whom we are but insects.”
Cardinal Louis-Edouard Pie of Poitiers, who St. Pius X referred
as “my mentor” and a “second St. Hiliary,” on the Society of Jesus.
O most loving Word of
God, teach me to be generous, to serve You as You deserve: to give and not to
count the cost, to fight and not to heed the wounds, to toil and not to seek
for rest, to labor and not to ask for any other reward save that of knowing
that I do Your holy will.
St. Ignatius of Loyola
Again, in the Office
for the feasts of our Lady, the Church applies the words of Sirach to
the Blessed Virgin and thus gives us to understand that in her we find all
hope: In me is all hope of life and of virtue. In Mary is every
grace: In me is all grace of the way and of the truth. In Mary we
shall find life and eternal salvation: Those who serve me shall never
fail. Those who explain me shall have life everlasting (Sir. 24:25,
30, 31--- Vulgate). And in the Book of Proverbs: Those who find me find life
and win favor from the Lord (8:35). Surely such expressions are enough to
prove that we require the intercession of Mary.
St. Alphonsus de
Liguori, The Glories of Mary
But in order to take away all the excuses which are wont to be brought
forward by some for not hearing holy Mass, there shall be adduced, in the following
chapter, various examples adapted to every sort of person, to show that, if
they deprive themselves of so great a good, it is by their own fault, their
tepidity, their weariness in well-doing; and that great indeed shall be their
remorse on this account at the point of death.
St. Leonard of Port
Maurice, The
Hidden Treasure of the Holy Mass
Humility is like purity: however little it may be contaminated it
becomes impure. Purity is corrupted not only by an impure act, but also by an
immodest word or thought. And humility is also so fragile that it is easily
tainted by the love of praise, by a word or thought of self-esteem, by
vainglory or self-love.
Fr. Cajetan Mary da Bergamo, Humility of Heart
By the love of
concupiscence we love God, but we love Him chiefly as our good, as the source
of our happiness; we love Him for the help and assistance we expect from
Him. Charity, on the contrary, makes us
capable of loving God for Himself, because He is goodness, beauty, infinite
wisdom – in a word, because He is God.
Although the love of concupiscence which accompanies hope is very
precious, it is still imperfect, because by it we love God not for Himself
alone, but for the benefits which we hope to receive from Him. The love of charity, however, is perfect
because it is pure love of complacency, of benevolence, that is, love which
takes complacence in the infinite good of God, and desires this good, not for
any personal advantage, but for God Himself, for His felicity, His glory. …St.
Teresa of Avila prayed, “O Lord, be pleased to grant me this love before You
take me from this life. It will be a
great comfort at the hour of death to realize that I shall be judged by You
whom I have loved above all things. Then I shall be able to go to meet You with
confidence, even though burdened with my debts, for I shall not be going into a
foreign land but into my own country, into the kingdom of Him whom I have loved
so much and who likewise has so much loved me.”
Fr. Gabriel off St.
Mary Magdalen, Divine Intimacy, On Charity
Your divine Providence,
O god, takes care of all Your creatures as though they were but one, and it
takes care of each one as though all others were contained in it. Oh! If Your Providence were only understood,
everyone would forget the things of this world to be united to it.
St. Mary Magdalen dei
Pazzi
Remember in your charity the following pray
requests:
Please pray for our expectant mothers: Becky
Trott and Andrea Ebert,
Julio Vargas requests prayers for the welfare of his
aunt, Isabel Viquez, who is gravely ill,
Steve Trott asks our prayers for the welfare of his
brother, Chris Trott,
Fr. Peterson asks our prayers for Charles
Valenti, who is dying and his wife, Julia,
For the welfare of Fr. Paul DaDamio, Fr.
John Tokarick, and Fr. William T. Welsh,
Fr. Gerard Rusak asks our prayers for Michael
Frayn, who was severely injured in a car accident.
The welfare of Marie Mackin, the mother
of Joseph Mackin, who is ill,
Peter Schriver, the brother of Dan Scriver, who is seriously
ill,
Mrs. Tetherow requests our prayers for Bryan
Tetherow family,
Welfare of the Victor and Geraldine Caceres
family,
The Drew’s ask our prayers for the Joe &
Tracy Sentmanat family, welfare of Keith & Lisa Drew, and the
Timothy & Christy Koziol Family,
For Bob, a man who lives by the chapel,
has asked for our prayers in his behalf,
For the health and welfare of Don Emlett and
his family,
Pamela Noel petitions our prayers for her father, George
Glass, who is failing health,
Ryan Boyle grandmother, Jane Boyle, who
is failing health,
Mel Gibson and his family, please remember in our
prayers,
The Sbardello Family asks our prayers for their son, Rocco
Sbardello, who is gravely ill and in need of conversion,
Eileen Rzecinski asks our prayers for her health,
Crystal Keating asks our
prayers for the welfare of her grandmother, Mary Noel, her family, her
husband, Eugene, and Mary Altland,
Gail Lewis requests our
prayers for her friend, Betty Geiger, who has been diagnosed with
cancer,
The welfare of Conde
McGinley, a long time pillar within the traditional movement,
Rev. Timothy A. Hopkins, asks our prayers for
himself, his mother, the Mission of St. Philomena
in Miami, and the welfare of Fr Jean-Luc Lafitte,
The health and welfare of Augusta
Wildt,
For the welfare of Ed
Snell and Luanne Ferguson and their legal cases in the
defense of children in their mother’s womb,
For the conversion of the
daughter of Simon O’Leary, Margaret E. O'Neill, her husband Robert,
and their seven children,
For the welfare of Anthony
Maleski, a young Catholic father of three severely injured in a train
accident,
Barbara Taaffe asks prayers
for Etta Vanderwerken, and her brother, John Cox, Kenneth
Abare, Andres Heckenkamp, and Louis DeMeotto,
Ebert’s request our prayers
for the Andreas and Jenna Ortner Family,
Michelle Parthemore requests our prayers for the
welfare of her family,
David Romeo asks our prayers
for the health and welfare of his wife, Kim, and his aunt, Margaret
Romeo,
Cecilia Nico requests prayers
for the health and conversion for Sharon O’Connell, Kate Neason &
Barb Bucher,
Joyce Paglia has asked
prayers for George Richard Moore Sr., and her children,
Lease, Christopher, Perry, and Debbie,
The health and welfare of our
friend, Don Lewis,
The special intention and
welfare of Julio Vargas, and for the conversion of Karla and
Grace Vargas,
The Pitman’s request our
prayers for the health and welfare of Theresa Wagner, Jan Sigler, Lois
Curtis, Jennie Johansen, and for Caroline’s sister, Charlotte
Grossane, who has been diagnosed with cancer,
The health of Nancy
Bennett, the daughter of Peg and Bill Barry,
Helen Crane, the aunt of David Drew who
is in failing health,
Jason Kolinsky, asks our prayers for his
intention,
For the welfare of Anthony
and Joyce Paglia, who are responsible for the beautiful statuary in our
chapel,
The Drew’s ask your prayers
for the Gene Peters Family, the John Manidis Family, the
Sal Massinio Family, and John Cuono,
Please pray for Fr.
Michael Jurecki, an old and faithful traditional priest, who is in
failing health,
Philip Thees asks our prayers for his family, for McLaughlin Family, and the conversion of Helen Mackewicz and Bruce Heller, the welfare of Dan Polly Weand and, and the conversion of Sophia Herman, the special intention of John and Louis Fergale, the welfare of Deacon Michael Erdeck and his wife Nancy, the health of Grace Prestano, Connie DiMaggio, and his uncle, John Thees.
“The father of the
Preachers (St. Dominic) established his principle on the light, by making it
his aim and his armour; he took upon him the office of the Word My Son, sowing
My word, dispelling darkness, enlightening the earth; Mary, by whom I gave him
to the world, made him the extirpator of heresies.”
ternal Father to St.
Catherine of Siena, Dialogue of St. Catherine
Pray for the Repose of the Souls:
Elaine (Benjie) Crowley, the mother of a John
Crowley, a friend of David Drew,
Stanley
Bodalsky, the
father of Mary Ann Boyle who died June 25th,
Mary Isabel
Kilfoyle Humphreys, a former York resident and friend of the Drew’s, who
died June 6th,
Rev. John Campion, who offered the traditional
Mass for us every first Friday until forbidden to do so by Bishop Dattilo, died
May 1st,
Joseph Montagne, who died May 5th,
For Margaret Vagedes,
the aunt of Charles Zepeda, who died January 6th,
Fr. Enrique Rueda, who died December 14th,
Barbara Sahd, the grandmother of Stephanie
Fonticoba who died December 7th,
Anton Moore, the brother of Stan Moore
who died December 2nd,
Fr. Peterson asks our prayers
for his brother, Leonard Edward Peterson, and his cousin, Wanda,
who died this October,
Philip Thees petitions our
prayers for Beverly Romanick, who died November 9th,
Fr. Didier Bonneterre, the author of The
Liturgical Movement, who died September 15th, and Fr. John
Peek, who died September 7th,
Derrick Palengat, Andre Ebert’s godfather,
Brother Francis, MICM, the superior of the Slaves
of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in Richmond, NH, who died September 5th,
Elizabeth Vargas requests
prayers for her grandmother, Petrona Zeballos Zolva, and her
uncle, Nelson Torchino,
Walter Joseph Bialek, the father of Alice Mansell,
Rodolfo Zelaya Montealegre, the father of Claudia Drew,
who died May 24th,
Stephen Majchrzak, a Catholic from Baltimore,
Mary Cahill, a friend of the Drew’s who
died August 12th,
Crystal Keating requests our
prayers for Doug Emlet,
Barbara Taaffe asks our
prayers for Lorinda Bargallo, Helen Zibolshi, Rose Satalino, and her brother,
Joseph Cox,
Rev. Francis Clifford, a devout and humble
traditional priest, who died on March 7th,
The Pitman’s ask our prayers
for Howard Corl, who died February 10th,
Elizabeth Mirarchi, the sister of Conde McGinley,
Simon P. O’Leary who died November 4th,
David Romeo asks our prayers
for his aunt, Gloria Jean Romeo, and his uncles, Stanley
Calderia and John Calderia,
Cecilia Nico requests prayers
for the repose of her aunt, Ethel Fonner, who died Oct. 16th,
The grandfather of Tyler
Kauffman, Fredrick Anthony Iamurri,
Joyce Paglia has asked for
our prayers for her son, George Richard Moore, who died May 14th,
Fr. Peterson asks our prayers
for the repose of the souls of the six priests who were ordained
with him sixty years ago,
Joseph and Eleanor Lauctes, the brother-in-law and
sister of Regina Spahalski, and her brother, Bernard Adams,
Emilce Vargas, the grandmother of Julio
Vargas, and his grandfather, Carlos Gutierrez,
Benjamin Sorace, the uncle of Sonya
Kolinsky,
Kelly Donovan Jacquot, the sister-in-law of Gail
Lewis,
Jim Lewis, the brother of Don Lewis,
Sue Heindel, the sister of Pam Noel.
Has our divine Savior's
prophecy concerning, the city of Jerusalem been fulfilled?
Yes, and in the most terrible manner. The Jews, oppressed by the Romans their cruel masters, revolted, killed many of their enemies, and drove them out of Jerusalem. Knowing well that this would not be permitted to pass unavenged, the Jews armed themselves for a desperate resistance. The Emperor Nero sent a powerful army under the command of Vespasian against the city of Jerusalem, which first captured the smaller fortresses of Judea, and then laid siege to the city. The want and misery of the inhabitants had already reached the highest pitch; for within the city ambitious men had caused conflicts; factions had been formed, daily fighting each other, and reddening the streets with blood, while the angry Romans stormed outside. Then a short time of respite was granted to the unfortunate Jews. The Emperor Nero was murdered at Rome in the year of our Lord 68; his successor Galba soon died, and the soldiers placed their beloved commander Vespasian upon the imperial throne. He then left Jerusalem with his army, but in the year he sent his son Titus with a new army to Judea, with orders to capture the city at any price, and to punish its inhabitants.
It was the time of Easter, and a multitude of Jews had assembled from all provinces of the land, when Titus appeared with his army before the gates of Jerusalem, and surrounded the city. The supply of food was soon exhausted, famine and pestilence came upon the city and raged terribly. The leader of the savage revolutionists, John of Gischala, caused the houses to be searched, and the remaining food to be torn from the starving, or to be forced from them by terrible tortures: To save themselves from this outrageous tyrant, the Jews took the leader of a band of robbers, named Simon, with his whole gang into the city. John and Simon with their followers now sought to annihilate each other. John took possession of the temple. Simon besieged him; blood was streaming in the temple and in the streets. Only when the battle-din of the Romans was heard from without, did the hostile factions unite, go to meet the enemy, and resist his attack. As the famine increased, many Jews secretly left the city to seek for herbs. But Titus captured them with his cavalry, and crucified those who were armed. Nearly five hundred men, and sometimes more, were every day crucified in sight of the city, so that there could not be found enough of crosses and places of execution; but even this terrible sight did not move the Jews to submission. Incited by their leaders to frenzy, they obstinately resisted, and Titus finding it impossible to take the city by storm, concluded to surround it by walls in order to starve the inhabitants. In three days his soldiers built a wall of about ten miles in circumference, and thus the Saviour's prediction was fulfilled: Thy enemies shall cast a trench about thee, and compass thee round, and straiten thee on every side.
The famine in this unfortunate city now reached its most terrific height; the wretched inhabitants searched the very gutters for food, and ate the most disgusting things. A woman, ravenous from hunger, strangled her own child, roasted it, and ate half of it; the leaders smelling the horrible meal, forced a way into the house, and by terrible threats compelled the woman to show them what she had eaten; she handed them the remaining part of the roasted child, saying.: "Eat it, it is my child; I presume you are not more dainty than a woman, or more tender than a mother." Stricken with horror they rushed from the house. Death now carried away thousands daily, the streets and the houses were full of corpses: From the fourteenth of April when the siege commenced. to the first of July, there were counted one hundred and fifty-eight thousand dead bodies; six hundred thousand others were thrown over the walls into the trenches to save the city from infection. All who could flee, fled; some reached the camp of the Romans in safety; Titus spared the helpless, but all who fell into his hands armed, were crucified. Flight offered no better security. The Roman soldiers had learned that many Jews had swallowed, gold to secure it from the avarice of the robbers, and therefore the stomachs of many were cut open. Two thousand such corpses were found one morning in the camp of the Romans. The attempts of Titus to prevent this cruelty were unavailing. Finally, when misery had reached its height, Titus succeeded in carrying the fort, Antonia, and with his army forced a passage as far as the temple which had been held by John of Gischala with his infamous band. Desirous of saving the temple, Titus offered the revolutionists free passage from it, but his proposition was rejected, and the most violent contest then raged; the Romans trying to enter the temple, and being continually repulsed, at last, one of the soldiers seized a firebrand, and threw it into one of the rooms attached to the temple. The flames in an instant caught the whole of the inner temple, and totally consumed it, so that this prediction of our Lord was also fulfilled. The Romans butchered all the inhabitants whom they met, and Titus having razed the ruins of the temple and city, ploughed it over, to indicate that this city was never to be rebuilt. During the siege one million one hundred thousand Jews lost their lives; ninety-seven thousand were sold as slaves, and the rest of the people dispersed over the whole earth.
Thus God punished the impenitent city and nation, over whose wretchedness the Saviour wept so bitterly, and thus was fulfilled the prediction made by Him long before.
What do we learn from this?
That as this prediction so also all other threats and promises of the Saviour will be fulfilled. The destruction of the city and temple of Jerusalem, the dispersion of the Jews, are historical facts which cannot be denied, and testify through all centuries to the truth of our Lord's word: Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away (Matt. 24, 35).
By no means, for this would be a sin against the mercy of God which is much the same as the sin against the Holy Ghost. "God," says St. Augustine, "generally so punishes such negligent sinners, that in the end they forget themselves, as in health they forgot Him." He says: They have turned their back to me, and not their face: and in the time of their affliction they will say: Arise, and deliver us! Where are the gods whom thou hast made thee? Let them arise and deliver thee in the time of thy affliction. (Jer. 2, 27-28). And although we have a consoling example in the case of the penitent thief, yet this, as St. Augustine says, is only one, that the sinner may not despair: and it is only one, so that the sinner may have no excuse for his temerity in putting off his repentance unto the end.
Everything that is good if they be truly converted, but this is a very rare thing, as St. Augustine says: "It cannot be asserted with any security, that he who repents at the end has forgiveness;" and St. Jerome writes: "Scarcely one out of thousands whose life was impious, will truly repent at death and obtain forgiveness of sin;" and St. Vincent Ferrer says, "For a man who has lived an impious life to die a good death is a greater miracle than the raising of the dead to life." We need not be surprised at this, for repentance at the end of life is extorted by the fear of death and the coming judgment. St. Augustine says, that it is not he who abandons sin, but sin abandons him, for he would not cease to offend God, if life were granted him. What can we expect from such a conversion?
While we are in health, in possession of our senses
and strength, for according to the words of St. Augustine, the repentance of
the sick is a sickly repentance. As experience proves, man while ill is so
tormented and bewildered by the pains of sickness and the fear of death, by
remorse of conscience, and the temptations of the devil as well as by anxiety
for those whom he leaves, that he can scarcely collect his thoughts, much less
fit himself for true repentance. Since it is so hard for many to do penance
while they are in health, and have nothing to prevent them from elevating their
mind to God, how much more difficult will it be for them, when the body is
weakened and tortured by the pains of sickness. It has been made known by many
persons when convalescent, that they retained not the slightest recollection of
anything which occurred during their illness, and although they confessed and
received the last Sacraments, they did not remember it. If then you have
committed a grievous sin, do not delay to be reconciled as soon as possible by
contrition and a sacramental confession. Do not put off repentance from day to
day, for thereby conversion becomes more difficult, so much so that without
extraordinary grace from God, you cannot repent God does not give His grace to
the presumptuous scoffer.

Thy enemies…shall not leave in thee a stone upon a
stone,
because thou hast not known the time of thy
visitation.
PRESENCE
OF GOD ‑ O Lord,
grant that Your grace in me may not be void.
MEDITATION:
I. Today the liturgy invites us to consider the grave
problem of our correspondence with grace. It does this by showing us the sad
picture of the sufferings of Israel, the chosen people, upon whom God had
showered His benefits, whom He had surrounded with graces, protected with
jealous care, and who, in spite of all this, were lost through their own
infidelity. In the Epistle (I Cor 10, 6‑13), St. Paul, after mentioning
certain points about Israel's unfaithfulness, concludes : " Now all these
things happened to them in figure, and they are written for our correction ....
Wherefore, he that thinketh himself to stand, let him take heed lest he fall.
" This is a strong call to vigilance and humility. If God has gone before
us with His graces, if He has called us to a more intense interior life and to closer
intimacy with Himself, all this, far from making us presumptuous, should deepen
our humility of heart. God's gifts are preserved beneath the ashes of humble
mistrust of self. Woe to us if we consider ourselves henceforth free from the
weaknesses which we meet and, perhaps, condemn in others! Rather let us humbly
say : " Lord, help me, or I shall do worse."
At the same time that he exhorts us to be
humble, St. Paul also urges us to have confidence, because " God is
faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that which you are able :
but will make also with temptation issue, that you may be able to bear it.
" The Apostle is telling us that the knowledge of our weakness should not
discourage us, because God is always ready to sustain us with His grace. God
knows our weaknesses, the struggles we have to undergo, and the temptations
that assail us; and for each of them He gives us the measure of grace we need
in order to triumph over them. It is very true that when the storm is raging we
can feel only the impact of the struggle, and the grace that God is giving to
help us remains completely hidden; nevertheless, this grace is there and we
should be certain of it, because " God is faithful. " " God has
always helped me .... " St. Therese of the Child Jesus said, " I
count on His aid. My sufferings may reach even greater heights, but I am sure
He will not abandon me " (St).
2.
The Gospel (Lk. 19,41‑47) continues the same subject of the Epistle and
shows us Jesus weeping over Jerusalem. The Creator, the Lord, the Redeemer
weeps over the ruin of His creatures, the people whom He has loved with
predilection, even choosing them as the companions of His earthly life, and
whom He had desired to save at any price.
" Jerusalem, Jerusalem . . . how often
would I have gathered together thy children as the hen doth gather her chickens
under her wings, and thou wouldst not! " (Mt 23,37) This was the constant
attitude of Jesus toward the holy city, but it always remained blind to every
light, deaf to every invitation, and the Savior, shortly before going to His
Passion, broke forth into His last sorrowful admonition : " If thou also
hadst known and that in this thy day, the things that are to thy peace! "
But again the city resists, and Jesus, after having loved it so much, and after
having wept over it as a mother weeps over her son who has gone astray,
predicts its ruin : " Thy enemies . . . shall not leave in thee a stone
upon a stone, because thou hast not known the time of thy visitation. "
Do you know how to recognize the moments
in which Our Lord visits your soul? A word read or heard, perhaps even by
chance, an edifying example, an interior inspiration, a new light which makes
you see your faults more clearly and opens new horizons of virtue and of good‑all
are visits from Jesus. And you, how do you correspond? Is your soul sensitive
to these lights, to these admonitions? Do you not sometimes turn your gaze
away, fearing that the light you have glimpsed may ask you for sacrifices which
are too painful for your self‑love?
Oh! if you had always recognized the
moment in which the Lord visited you! If you had always been open to His
action! Try then to begin again today, resolve to commence anew each time that
you happen to give in to nature. " The things that are to your peace,
" your good, your sanctification are precisely here, in this continual
adherence to the impulses of grace.
COLLOQUY:
“As I have already confessed to You, O
glory of my life, O Lord God, strength of my salvation, I have sometimes placed
my hopes in my own virtue, which was no virtue, and when I attempted to run,
thinking I was very strong, I fell very quickly and went backward instead of
forward. What I expected to reach,
disappeared, and thus, O Lord, in various ways You have tested my powers. With
light from You, I now see that I could not accomplish by myself the things that
I wanted to do most. I said to myself:
‘
I shall do this, I shall finish that, ' and I did not do either the one or the other.
The will was there but not the power, and if the power was there, my will was
not; this because I had trusted in my own strength. Sustain me then, O Lord,
for alone I can do nothing. However, when You are my stability, then it is true
stability; but when I am my own stability, then it is weakness''
(St.
Augustine).
" O Lord, teach me to be always
docile to Your grace, to say ` yes ' to You always. To say ` yes ' to Your will
as expressed in the commandments, to say ` yes ' to the intimate inspirations
by which You invite me to a more intense union, to more generous self‑denial
and more complete detachment. Grant that I may always be ready to open the door
of my will to You, or rather, to keep it open always, so that You can enter
there, and thus I shall not miss a single one of Your visits, a single one of
Your delicate touches; not one of Your requests will escape me.
" Make me understand well that true
peace does not consist in being exempt from difficulties or in following my own
wishes, but in total adherence to Your will, and in docility to the
inspirations of the Holy Spirit " (cf. Sr. Carmela of the Holy Spirit,
O.C.D.).
My people have been a lost flock, their
shepherds have caused them to go astray, and have made them wander in the mountains;
they have gone from mountain to hill, they have forgotten their resting place.
Jer. 50:6
The
Essence of the New Theology is its Denial of the Immutability of Truth
(The New Theology) revisits modernism. Because it accepted the proposition which was intrinsic to modernism: that of substituting, as if it were illusory, the traditional definition of truth: aequatio rei et intellectus (the adequation of intellect and reality), for the subjective definition: adequatio realis mentis et vitae (the adequation of intellect and life). That was more explicitly stated in the already cited proposition, which emerged from the philosophy of action, and was condemned by the Holy Office, December 1, 1924: “Truth is not found in any particular act of the intellect wherein conformity with the object would be had, as the Scholastics say, but rather truth is always in a state of becoming, and consists in a progressive alignment of the understanding with life, indeed a certain perpetual process, by which the intellect strives to develop and explain that which experience presents or action requires: by which principle, moreover, as in all progression, nothing is ever determined or fixed.”
The truth is no longer the conformity of judgment to intuitive reality and its immutable laws, but the conformity of judgment to the exigencies of action, and of human life which continues to evolve. The philosophy of being or ontology is substituted by the philosophy of action which defines truth as no longer a function of being but of action.
Thus is modernism reprised: “Truth is no more immutable than man himself, inasmuch as it is evolved with him, in him and through him. As well, Pius X said of the modernists, “they pervert the eternal concept of truth.”
Fr. Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange, O.P., Where is the New
Theology Leading Us?
The Hermeneutics of Continuity/Discontinuity
On the Inerrancy of Sacred Scripture
Vatican preparatory
document for the October Synod of Bishops (2008) Teaches:
In summary, the following can be said with certainty … — with regards to what might be inspired in the many parts of Sacred Scripture, inerrancy applies only to ‘that truth which God wanted put into sacred writings for the sake of salvation’.
Instrumentum laboris, The
Word of God in the Life and the Mission of the Church, article 15, a “working
document” for the upcoming October Synod of Bishops; released from the Vatican
June 12th; emphasis added.
The Catholic Church
Teaches:
The Old and New Testaments,
“whole and with all their parts … [have] been written by the inspiration
of the Holy Ghost [and] have God as their author.”
Vatican I
For all the books which the Church receives as sacred and canonical, are written wholly and entirely, with all their parts, at the dictation of the Holy Ghost; and so far is it from being possible that any error can co-exist with inspiration, that inspiration not only is essentially incompatible with error, but excludes and rejects it as absolutely and necessarily as it is impossible that God Himself, the supreme Truth, can utter that which is not true. This is the ancient and unchanging faith of the Church, solemnly defined in the Councils of Florence and of Trent, and finally confirmed and more expressly formulated by the Council of the Vatican. These are the words of the last: ‘The Books of the Old and New Testament, whole and entire, with all their parts, as enumerated in the decree of the same Council (Trent) and in the ancient Latin Vulgate, are to be received as sacred and canonical. And the Church holds them as sacred and canonical, not because, having been composed by human industry, they were afterwards approved by her authority; nor only because they contain revelation without error; but because, having been written under the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, they have God for their author.’ Hence, because the Holy Ghost employed men as His instruments, we cannot therefore say that it was these inspired instruments who, perchance, have fallen into error…
Pope Leo XIII, Providentissimus
Deus
Divine inspiration does
not extend to all of Sacred Scripture so that it renders its parts,
each and every one free from every error.
Pope Saint Pius X’s Syllabus
of Errors against the Modernists, condemned proposition
It is absolutely forbidden
to pretend that the sacred writer himself has fallen into error, since Divine
inspiration not only excludes any and all possible error in itself, but even
loathes and excludes it, since God, Who is sovereign truth, cannot be the
author of any possible error…. This doctrine which was so forcefully explained
by our predecessor Leo XIII, We also propose with our pontifical authority, and
We insist that it be held rigorously by all. Pope Pius XII, Divini
Afflante Spiritu
Some boldly pervert the
meaning of the definition of the Vatican Council, with respect to God as the
author of Sacred Scripture and they revive the opinion, many times condemned,
according to which the immunity of the Sacred Writings from error extends only
to those matters which are handed down regarding God and moral and religious
subjects.
Pius XII, Humani
Generis
There
is a strongly felt need... for a reform of the United Nations Organisation, and
likewise of economic institutions and international finance, so that the concept
of the family of nations can acquire real teeth... there is urgent need of a
true world political authority.
Pope Benedict XVI, Caritas in Veritate
“All public power
must proceed from God. For God alone is the true and supreme Lord of the world.”
No society can hold together unless some one be over all, directing all to
strive earnestly for the common good, every body politic must have a ruling
authority, and this authority, no less than society itself, has its source in
nature, and has, consequently, God for its Author. Hence, it follows that all
public power must proceed from God. For God alone is the true and supreme Lord
of the world. Everything, without exception, must be subject to Him, and must
serve him, so that whosoever holds the right to govern holds it from one sole
and single source, namely, God, the sovereign Ruler of all. "There is no
power but from God" (Rom 12:1)
“Whole human race is most truly under the power of
Jesus Christ.”
This world-wide and solemn testimony of allegiance and piety is especially
appropriate to Jesus Christ, who is the Head and Supreme Lord of the race. His
empire extends not only over Catholic nations and those who, having been duly
washed in the waters of holy baptism, belong of right to the Church, although
erroneous opinions keep them astray, or dissent from her teaching cuts them off
from her care; it comprises also all those who are deprived of the Christian
faith, so that the whole human race is most truly under the power of Jesus
Christ.
"Christ has dominion over all creatures, a
dominion not seized by violence nor usurped, but His by essence and by
nature."
This same doctrine of the Kingship of Christ which we have
found in the Old Testament is even more clearly taught and confirmed in the
New. The Archangel, announcing to the Virgin that she should bear a Son, says
that "the Lord God shall give unto Him the throne of David his father, and
he shall reign in the house of Jacob for ever; and of His kingdom there shall
be no end."
Moreover,
Christ Himself speaks of His Own kingly authority: in His last discourse,
speaking of the rewards and punishments that will be the eternal lot of the
just and the damned; in His reply to the Roman magistrate, who asked Him
publicly whether He were a king or not; after His resurrection, when giving to
His Apostles the mission of teaching and Baptizing all nations, He took the
opportunity to call Himself king,
confirming the title publicly,
and solemnly proclaimed that all power was given Him in Heaven and on
earth. These words can only be taken to
indicate the greatness of his power, the infinite extent of His kingdom. What
wonder, then, that He Whom St. John calls the "prince of the kings of the
earth" appears in the Apostle's vision of the future as He Who "hath
on His garment and on His thigh written 'King of kings and Lord of lords!’” It
is Christ Whom the Father "hath appointed heir of all things"; "for
He must reign until at the end of the world He hath put all his enemies under
the feet of God and the Father." …………. The foundation of this power and
dignity of Our Lord is rightly indicated by Cyril of Alexandria. His kingship
is founded upon the ineffable hypostatic union. From this it follows not only
that Christ is to be adored by Angels and men, but that to Him as man Angels
and men are subject, and must recognize His empire; by reason of the hypostatic
union Christ has power over all creatures. But a thought that must give us even
greater joy and consolation is this that Christ is our King by acquired, as
well as by natural right, for He is our Redeemer. Would that they who forget
what they have cost their Savior might recall the words: "You were not
redeemed with corruptible things, but with the Precious Blood of Christ, as of
a lamb unspotted and undefiled." We are no longer our own property, for
Christ has purchased us "with a great price"; our very bodies are the
"members of Christ."
The “Omega Point” Is Just Over the Rainbow,
or Where is the Reform of the Reform Headed?
It's the great vision that later Teilhard de Chardin also had: At the end we will have a true cosmic liturgy, where the cosmos becomes a living host. Let's pray to the Lord that he help us be priests in this sense to help in the transformation of the world in adoration of God, beginning with ourselves.
Pope Benedict XVI, Cathedral of Aosta, July 24th, reflecting upon St. Paul’s letter to the Romans in which St. Paul writes that the world itself will one day become a form of living worship.
NOTE: Teilhard de Chardin, sometimes referred to as the "Catholic Darwin," who died in 1955 at the age of 73, was a French Jesuit who studied paleontology and participated in the 1920s-era discovery of "Peking Man" in China, a find now discredited that was once claimed to be a missing link in the evolutionary development of the human species. Teilhard has also been linked to the 1912 discovery of "Piltdown Man" in England, another “missing link” later exposed as a hoax.
Catholic Feasts in Thanksgiving for
Deliverance from our Enemies
On July 22, 1496, the Christian forces under the command of the great Hungarian John Hunyadi crushed the Turkish Moslem forces of Sultan Mehmet II at the Battle of Belgrade. The news of this great victory reached Rome on August 6th and in gratitude, Pope Callistus III elevated the ancient Feast of the Transfiguration of our Lord to the universal Church. The feast of the Holy Name of Mary on September 12th commemorates the victory of the Christian forces at the Battle of Vienna and the Feast of the Holy Rosary, October 7th, commemorates the victory at the battle of Lepanto.
Why
the Modern Clerics Lack “Counsel, Reason, and Inspiration”?
They have been “gathering from strange and
unwholesome streams”!
But the chief and special glory of St. Thomas, one which he has shared with none of the Catholic Doctors, is that the Fathers of Trent made it part of the order of conclave to lay upon the altar, together with sacred Scripture and the decrees of the supreme Pontiffs, the Summa of Thomas Aquinas, whence to seek counsel, reason, and inspiration. Our first and most cherished idea is that you should all furnish to studious youth a generous and copious supply of those purest streams of wisdom flowing inexhaustibly from the precious fountainhead of the Angelic Doctor…. be careful to guard the minds of youth from those which are said to flow thence (from St Thomas), but in reality are gathered from strange and unwholesome streams. Pope Leo XIII, Aeterni Patris (1879)
Again, if we are to avoid the errors which are the source and
fountain-head of all the miseries of our time, the teaching of Aquinas must be
adhered to more religiously than ever. For Thomas refutes the theories
propounded by Modernists in every sphere:
in philosophy, by protecting,
as We have reminded you, the force and power of the human mind and by
demonstrating the existence of God by the most cogent arguments;
in dogmatic theology, by
distinguishing the supernatural from the natural order and explaining the
reasons for belief and the dogmas themselves;
in theology, by showing that the
articles of faith are not based upon mere opinion but upon truth and therefore
cannot possibly change;
in exegesis, by transmitting
the true conception of divine inspiration;
in the science of morals, in
sociology and law, by laying down sound principles of legal and social,
commutative and distributive, justice and explaining the relations between
justice and charity;
in the theory of asceticism,
by his precepts concerning the perfection of the Christian life and his
confutation of the enemies of the religious orders in his own day.
Lastly, against the much
vaunted liberty of the human reason and its independence in regard to God he
asserts the rights of primary Truth and the authority over us of the Supreme
Master.
Pope Pius
X, Doctoris Angelici (1914)
Ecumenism of St. Francis of Assisi
Thomas of Celano
on St. Francis of Assisi. Thomas of Celano was a Franciscan contemporary
of St. Francis and his first biographer. He is also the author of the Dies
Irae.
Ecumenism of St. Paul, Apostle
Now I beseech
you, brethren, to mark them who cause dissensions and offenses contrary to the
doctrine which you have learned, and to avoid them; for they that are such
serve not Our Lord Christ, but their own belly, and by pleasing speeches and
good words seduce the hearts of the innocent (Rom. 16:17).
And this is
charity, that we walk according to his commandments. For this is the
commandment, that, as you have heard from the beginning, you should walk in the
same: For many seducers are gone out into the world, who confess not that Jesus
Christ is come in the flesh: this is a seducer and an antichrist. Look to
yourselves, that you lose not the things which you have wrought: but that you
may receive a full reward. Whosoever revolteth, and continueth not in the
doctrine of Christ, hath not God. He that continueth in the doctrine, the same
hath both the Father and the Son. If any man come to you, and bring not this
doctrine, receive him not into the house nor say to him, God speed you. For he
that saith unto him, God speed you, communicateth with his wicked
works. (2 John 1, 6-11)
Ecumenism of Pope Pius XI
Meanwhile they
(the heretics and schismatics) affirm that they would willingly treat with the
Church of Rome, but on equal terms, that is as equals with an equal: but even
if they could so act. it does not seem open to doubt that any pact into which
they might enter would not compel them to turn from those opinions which are
still the reason why they err and stray from the one fold of Christ. This being
so, it is clear that the Apostolic See cannot on any terms take part in their
assemblies, nor is it anyway lawful for Catholics either to support or to work
for such enterprises; for if they do so they will be giving countenance to a
false Christianity, quite alien to the one Church of Christ. Shall We suffer,
what would indeed be iniquitous, the truth, and a truth divinely revealed, to
be made a subject for compromise? For here there is question of defending
revealed truth. Mortalium Animos
...that it is necessary to obey a pope in all things as long
as he does not go against the universal custom of the Church, but should he go
against the universal customs of the Church, he need not be followed.
Pope Innocent III

St. Margaret Clitherow Ladies Guild
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