Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Somewhere in Switzerland: Theologian complains about Benedict's success.


Somewhere in Switzerland, an elderly, EX-theologian ponders a cup of coffee laced with liberal amounts of Jägermeister and looks out of his window, reflectively like you'd expect an ex-theologian would, to those legendary Swiss Alps. Suddenly, the phone rings. He lays aside the copy of America Magazine and answers the phone.



"Hey, Hans. This is Mori, from your publisher Burns and Oats."

"Yes, hello."

"I need you to do something for me. I want you to write something about this Anglican Reunimaccallit."

"Ok. Have you sent my royalty check?"

There's a long pause.

"Don't worry, it should be there any day."

After about five minutes of effort, he hits the "send" key on his brand-new MacBook, as easyKüng99@yahoo.com and you can read it here:

Link

Beginning of end of English Reformation - Commentary

Beginning of end of English Reformation - Commentary

The Pope's Anglican Proposal will draw at least 20-30 Bishops

The current initiative to invite Anglicans into the Catholic Church en masse was prompted by numerous requests. It is now clear that not just a few will be joining the Catholic Church throughout the world in response to these conservative Anglicans' increasing alienation in the Anglican Communion due to women's ordination and homosexuality; but quite a bit more outside of the Traditional Anglican Communion, numbering from 20-30 Bishops wishing direct communion to include individual groups constituting large numbers of prospective Catholics. What father would give his child a stone when he asked for bread?

However, there are conditions attached. Anglicans entering the fold must recognise the pope as the head of the church. The parishes would be led by former Anglican clergy who would be ordained as Catholic priests. “The ordinary,” who heads an ordinariate, can be either a celibate priest or an unmarried bishop, and “will usually be appointed from among former Anglican clergy,” the cardinal stated. While married Anglican priests may be ordained as Catholic priests, this does not apply to married Anglican bishops. As Africa's Newswatch Magazine reports:

Cardinal William Levada, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, CDF, announced this decision at a special international press briefing in the Vatican, October 20. Cardinal Levada said the Pope decided to establish this special structure in response to “the many requests” that were submitted to the Holy See over the past three years or more “from groups of Anglican clergy and faithful in different parts of the world who wish to enter into visible communion.” He announced that about “20 to 30 bishops” had submitted requests, while “hundreds of requests” had been received from large groups of people,” and not from just the Traditional Anglican Community which has 500,000 members worldwide. He said it was expected that the Pope would issue an apostolic constitution, a document to enact or promulgate laws, on this issue in a few weeks.


Read entire article...

Top Catholic bishops demand apology from Rep. Kennedy

By Michael O'Brien - 10/28/09 12:45 PM ET

Two top Catholic bishops have called on Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.) to apologize for remarks blasting the church's opposition to health reform legislation.

Archbishop Timothy Dolan, of the archdiocese of New York, and Bishop Thomas Tobin, who is Kennedy's bishop, called on the Catholic lawmaker's criticism of the church's opposition to healthcare reform, citing concerns over whether the bill would allow funding for abortions.

"I can’t understand for the life of me how the Catholic Church could be against the biggest social justice issue of our time, where the very dignity of the human person is being respected by the fact that we’re caring and giving health care to the human person," Kennedy said in an interview with the Catholic News Service.


Read further...

Muslims kill Christian over Nude Photos of Girlfriend in Egypt

By Michael Carl
© 2009 WorldNetDaily

Egypt

Tensions and the threat of confrontation remain high in the central Egyptian village of Dairut after Muslims killed a Christian man whose son had taken photos of a Muslim girl he was dating, fomenting Muslim rioting against Christian targets.

Police say they have arrested four men in connection with the shooting death of Henry Atallah, who was attacked allegedly because his son took "illicit" photos of a Muslim girl he was dating and distributed them with his cell phone.

Read further...


Related stories:

30 Arrested in Clash at Church Tower in Egypt.

Egypt is increasingly unsafe for Christians.

Monarchy threatened in Nepal by India and China

The following article appeared in the India Times and points to India's growing interest in the government of Nepal which it apparently seeks to destabilize by overthrowing the monarchy. Mr Prasai, quoted in the article, quite rightly identifies the historical consequences that invariably follow from the overthrow of monarchy, an anarchy from which the Indian government hopes it will benefit.

Here...

The writer Mr. Prasai with the former president of India-1987

It is true that there are many countries which do not have monarchy still they could remain independent and prosperous. But in a diverse country like Nepal, monarchy is the only basis of national unity and Nepal cannot be compared with other countries. Indian conspirators are taking some deviant leaders of the political parties on their shoulders with the sole aim that it will be easy for them to control Nepal if monarchy can be displaced. But such a situation will be a happy one for India also. Some communist parties take monarchy as the root cause of Nepal’s all woes. This is not correct. No Nepalese king has ever acted or walked on the path which is against Nepal’s national interest.

Many countries where monarchy was displaced have now ceased to exist and several other have fallen into anarchy and civil war. It will be totally inappropriate without knowing fully the ground realities. It was not for whether to keep monarchy or not. The Nepalese constituent assembly is just a representative organization to formulate a new constitution and it does not have any right to displace monarchy. Can the future of the country be decided just because so called big political parties ganged up together? Those powerful nations, who in the past shed blood in Vietnam, North and South Korea, East and West Germany, Cambodia, Afghanistan and Yugoslavia, are now trying to drag Nepal into a civil war. So, if the political leaders, including the Maoists, tried to trample on this truth, one should know that the existence of Nepal [is threatened?].


And as if to confirm it, the article appears here at Revolution in Asia blog.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

The State Departement is Displeased with Bulgaria





Intolerance by Bulgarian local authorities of non-Orthodox Christian religious groups and anti-Semitic messages by Volen Siderov’s Ataka party are among issues raised in the US state department’s annual International Religious Freedom Report, released on October 26 2009.

The report said that Bulgaria’s constitution provides for freedom of religion and prohibits religious discrimination but designates Eastern Orthodox Christianity as the "traditional" religion.


Read more...

Pius V University Hosts Conference Refuting Darwinism

There are many things afoot lately which are challenging the characteristic and frankly slavish way we look at the world, whether it is in Rome, or closer to home with the usual blandishments that modern life deals out, but unexpectedly, the theory of evolution will be challenged in a conference at Pius V University in Rome.

Read More...

A Boost for Catholic-Anglican Dialogue

A response to So Long and Thanks for All the Priests in Monday's Guardian.

Cardinal Heenan, Archbishop of Westminster until 1975, used to get annoyed when Anglicans were offered communion in French Catholic churches and given a hearty Gallic welcome. French Catholics, understandably, couldn't see a lot of difference between Catholic Anglicans and English Roman Catholics. But Heenan was horrified. Once the two started being welcome in each others' churches, he warned, it was obvious what would happen: the Romans would all start to drift to the smart Anglican churches, with their robed choirs and Oxbridge clergy and their glimpse of a pre-Reformation English world.

And that's the reason why the pope's firecracker announcement last week of a legal space within the Catholic church for a corporate Anglican existence will have the effect of advancing Catholic-Anglican relations, not undermining them.

Read further...

Liberal Obfuscation at the Pope's Offer?

We're already aware that this offer of Benedict may be met with a lukewarm reception even among the disaffected Anglicans who don't see how they can possibly reconcile the new positions elucidated in the Covenant and biblical and doctrinal Christianity.

Father Z has warned of a Liberal meltdown in the wake of this announcement. There are already some reports that two disaffected Anglican Bishops are not necessarily coming over.

The following report in the Telegraph takes Bishop of Chichester to task for his unequal statements that he wanted to have in the agreement that his orders were always in effect. Well, in a sense they were, at least as regards Baptism. I'm sure that the Bishop baptised many new Christians, but that's not strictly speaking, always the role of the priest. This should be interesting to watch.

Disaffected Anglican bishops don't know if they're coming or going

Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali was at least clear on Saturday. He said: “I have to admit that Arcic and its work has been shot to pieces.” He went on to say that his hopes for unity with Rome had been destroyed
.

In fact, it seems that he is not becoming a Catholic because, despite his continual condemnation of homosexuality, he is at heart, an Anglican.

It's hard to understand what he's holding out for, because if Arcic has been shot to pieces, so has any semblance of continuity, save the most superficial, between historical Christianity and the Anglican Communion.

The Coronation Oath and The Crisis of the Church of England

The enclosed article by Tom Johnstone traces the history of the Coronation Oath taken by English Monarchs since the time of Archbishop Egbert of York to the modern time. What we see is a gradual transformation of the Oath to reflect the changing political and religious factors that were brought to England especially during the Penal times which saw the Oath linked with the established protestant Church, aligned eventually with the Test Act, which meant to exclude the possibility of Catholics from taking an active part in the Parliament.

"I ... do solemnly and sincerely, in the presence of God, profess, testify and declare that I do believe that in the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper there is not any transubstantiation of the elements of bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ at or after the consecration thereof by any person whatsoever: and that the invocation or adoration of the Virgin Mary or any other Saint and the sacrifice of the Mass, as they are now used in the Church of Rome, are superstitious and idolatrous."


What is certain from this excellent article by Mr. Johnstone is that the English State Church, linked as it is to the Crown and these oaths have been altered in response to growing concerns for religious toleration, and another historical concern for disestablishment.

Since many members of the Royal Family have renounced claims to the throne since marrying Catholics, the future looks bright for an alteration in the Coronation Oath to reflect the failure of the Church of England to respond effectively to liberalizing elements essentially making the English Church indistinguishable from the surrounding modern society and undercutting continuity with the perennial moral teachings common to all Christians before the modern age.

Queen Elizabeth has been quoted by "informants" recently in The Telegraph that she is appalled at the established church: yet it is clear, given her own points of concern in the past with the course of things in society, her sympathy to the Catholic Church and fondness for the Pope who is to stay at Buckingham Palace when he visits England next year, the precedent for changes in the Coronation Oath and the abrogation of the aforementioned Test Act, it is possible that her successor, if not herself, could become the first Catholic monarch of England since James II.

Swedish Lutheran Synod Allows Gay Weddings

Despite warnings by the Archbishop of Helsinki last week, the Swedish Synod of the Lutheran Church have ignored centuries of continuity and in a majority vote, decided to declare in favor of the spirit of the age.

Religious Intelligence quotes a discouraged and disheartening Pastor Kalin in what must be for him the end of a world,

In the Church of Sweden, “theology has been transformed into an ideology and the church’s own institutions happily provide theological post-constructions to the latest opinions and whims of the world,” he said.

Pastor Kalin said that “for the church, this is devastating” as the “faith, confession and teaching of the Church of Sweden” rested “on political majorities or on the currently fancy views of the world.”

The proposed changes will likely take the form of the modification of the marriage liturgy, replacing “man and wife” with “lawfully wedded spouses” for same-sex couples and follows upon the 2005 vote to amend the title of Chapter 23 of its prayer book, from “Marriage” to “Marriage and Blessings” to permit blessing of same-sex civil unions. Pastors will be permitted the option of refusing to perform same-sex marriages; however, traditionalists worry that this conscious clause will be abrogated in future sessions of the synod as past guarantees respecting the conscious of those opposed to women clergy were rescinded.



Read more...

The New Benedictines of Norcia

The New Benedictines of Norcia are restablishing a Monastic presence which has been absent for some time now. Founded in Rome in 1998, they reestablished themselves in the home of St. Benedict in Norcia in 2000. They have about ten men presently under the leadership of Massachusets born, Father Cassian. Most are Americans but they are hoping and praying for their first Italian vocation.

They only celebrate the Old Rite and live a very austere life. For more information and interest in vocations, contact:


By Mail Monastero di San Benedetto Via Reguardati, 22 06046 Norcia (PG) Italy
Tel: 39 0743 817125
Fax: 39 0743 828425
Email: monastero@osbnorcia.org

Please send all personal coorespondence directly to the monastery.
United States Foundation Address: SEDES SAPIENTIAE FOUNDATION 511 Kearsarge Mountain Road Warner, New Hampshire 03278 Telephone: (845) 633-2819

Link

Monday, October 26, 2009

Venezuelan Bishops' Council Appeals to Freedom of Religion

It's not wise to make concessions to these people, and appealing to freedom of religion is an unfortunate thing which basically concedes the point and will spell out the eventual destruction of Catholic education in Venezuela as it has been imperiled so many times before in other countries dominated by Marxist regimes. In contrast to earlier martyrs for Catholic education in Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Croatia, the Venezuelan bishop's committee on education seeks to make concessions the increasingly hostile government there. This will only temporarily forestall inevitable restrictions and attacks on the Catholic Church in Venezuela as reported by CNA today.

Cardinals Mindzenty of Hungary, Stepanic of Croatia and Frantisek of Bohemia were all charged with trumped up charges and in each of the nations in question, the issue was centered on education. The Communists were eager to get the Catholic Church out of education and none of these men were willing to relinquish that trust. While these Cardinals did invoke religious freedom, they were unwilling to compromise the point that the Communists or anyone else has the right to teach error. Venezuela's Bishops have unfortunately made this point.

The president of the Venezuelan bishops' committee on education,Bishop Jose Angel Divasson, said last week that the Catholic Church does not seek to impose Catholic education on schools but only asks that the religious dimension of each person be respected.


His preoccupation with religious freedom may be a necessary ploy in this game of survival, but it provides no lasting solution, or shield, to the continuing menace of Venezuela's government against Catholic Education. As the Bishop continues, the contrast between his compromise and the stolid resistance of his episcopal forebears is disappointing.

“We hope the government realizes this and seeks out alternatives that benefit all of Venezuela and not just a single group,” the bishop concluded.

"Ratzinger Blitzkriegs Protestants." Are you Sure?

It's so great that others are fully perceiving the greatness and decisiveness of this bold master stroke as Der Panzerpapst has effectively drawn attention to the teetering structure of Anglican Catholicism while opening a door to disaffected Traditional Anglicans who can no longer find a home in the toxic atmosphere of the CoE. This article by an writer at the Trumpet, however, is willing to view Cardinal Kasper's sidelining as an accidental oversight. It takes away the contrast between two respective and irreconcilable approaches to Ecumenism, one faltering and indecisive and the other reminiscent of the Great Commission.

Did Benedict’s seeming undue haste [He can't be bold and in undue haste at the same time] to make this announcement perhaps have bearing on the reason why the German Cardinal Kasper was in Cyprus? Was it timed to send a signal to the Eastern Orthodox hierarchy that the pope is ready to make similar concessions to the Orthodox community if they capitulate to Rome? After all, Kasper was Johnny on the spot to assess their reaction to this dramatic announcement to then be in a position to report that reaction firsthand to Benedict upon his return to Rome from Nicosia.


Everything else is idle speculation and definitely an indication that there was far more hope of re-union with the Traditional Anglicans than there is with the Orthodox who, while being positive to these overtures and willing to discuss, are far less sanguine to the ecumenicism of engagement and more hesitant to reunite.

The Trumpet, for those of you who might not know is a publication produced in Philadelphia by The Church of God.

Article Here...

Bishop Tobin Calls Congressman Kennedy a Disappointment

By David Waters

Confusion over whether and how government health-care reform will or should deal with abortion has resulted in an equally confusing war of words between Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy (D-R.I.) and Rhode Island Catholic Bishop Thomas J. Tobin.
In an interview last Friday, Kennedy -- a Roman Catholic and son of the late Sen. Edward Kennedy, who spent much of his career pushing for health-care reform -- called U.S. Catholic bishops' concerns about the abortion issue a "red herring" that fans "the flames of dissent and discord." Kennedy added: "If the church is pro-life, then they ought to be for health-care reform, because it's going to provide health care that are going to keep people alive."

In a sharply-worded response, Tobin called Kennedy's position on the matter "irresponsible and ignorant of the facts . . . Congressman Kennedy continues to be a disappointment to the Catholic Church and to
the citizens of the State of Rhode Island. I believe the Congressman owes us an apology for his irresponsible comments. It is my fervent hope and prayer that he will find a way to provide more effective and morally responsible leadership for our state."

Read More...

SSPX Bishop Williamson Fined €12,000 by German Court

A British bishop has been fined €12,000 after a German court found him guilty of denying the Holocaust.

Richard Williamson received a letter today from the court in the Bavarian city of Regensburg informing him that he was being fined for incitement over his claim on Swedish television that fewer than 300,000 Jews died in Nazi death camps.

Read More...

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Cardinal George lauds appointment of N.Y. archbishop to Jewish Affairs post

Cardinal George lauds appointment of N.Y. archbishop to Jewish Affairs post

Just as a reminder, here is an article on Cardinal George's previous non-binding statement on Jewish-Catholic interaction and his aqcuiescence to their insistence that all references to "conversion" be removed.

- Curious Cardinal.

Third World Anglicans Demur from Pope's Offer

PARIS (Reuters) - Conservative bishops who say they represent almost half the world's Anglicans urged fellow believers on Sunday to reform the Anglican Communion rather than take up Pope Benedict's invitation to join the Roman Catholic Church.

The "Global South" group, which last year seemed close to quitting the Communion, said those opposed to gay clergy and other liberal reforms should "stand firm with us in cherishing the Anglican heritage (and) pursuing a common vocation."

Read More

Anglican bishops may become Catholic

Anglican bishops may become Catholic

Benedict's Ecumenical Blitzkrieg

People might be willing to make comparisons to the Blitzkrieg, and others, especially partisans of the Holy Father might be offended, but how can you not compare this to a successful military operation involving complete secrecy beforehand, leaving the stunned defenders completely oblivious as they are surrounded and cut off in a daring pincer movement.

Gerard Warner at the Scotsman, borrowing unatributively from Ruth Gledhill at The Times described Williams waking up with tanks on his lawn. It's a nice image.

For face-saving reasons, Williams tried desperately to pretend that this Vatican initiative was the outcome of mutual consultation, when the reality was that he had wakened up that morning to find Ratzinger's tanks on his lawn.


He also makes mention of the fact that, as in a perfect offensive maneuver, even enemy spies were oblivious of the move as Cardinal Kasper was nowhere to be seen. [He was in Cyprus] This promises to proceed apace as a smooth and well-timed and executed military-like operation after years and years of ineffectual discussions while the Anglican Church drifted further and further away from sanity and orthodoxy on the seas of modernity.

The entire thing promises to work like a Catholic reconquista with Catholics finally regaining possession of church campuses and monasteries stolen from them by Henry VIII and now occasionally in the possession of rock stars and Anglicans.

School Janitor Charged with Murder of NJ Priest.

The School Janitor had been with the parish for 17 years and was the one who found the body. His daughter even graduated from the local school. This article from the NZ Herald.

Saturday, October 24, 2009

Former Archbishop of Canterbury Angry with Lack of Forewarning

The former Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord Carey, finds the current proposal from Rome "inexcusable" in that more warning wasn't given, but still welcomes the proposal. He insists that he isn't usurping the Archbishop William's role.

Here


According to BBC about 600 Priests are planning to meet to discuss whether they should become part of the Catholic Church owing to Benedict's much requested lifeline in the wake of the Anglican Communion's decision to ordain women and active homosexuals. Some of the priests have already planned to become Catholic regardless.

Here

In this article, Peter Stafford, curiously and erroneously suggests that the current move will appeal to those Anglicans who do not regard women as equals.

Here

In an effort rally the troops in defense of dying protestantism, Bishop Harvey of Anglican Network in Canada (ANiC), insists on his protestant interpretation of the word Catholic, citing various problems he forsees in the proposed union.

Here

Some word on the Anglican Church of North America which has grown by nearly 40 Congregations recently.

Here

Also threatening to leave the sinking ship of liberal Anglicanism, SC Episcopalians have announced just 4 days following Benedict's announcement that they are distancing themselves away from the Anglican Communion while insisting that they do not want complete seperation. It is unclear at this time whether they will regard the Vatican proposal favorably.

Here

A Fourth Iranian Monarchist Militant Sentenced to Death

Davood Fardbacheh Mir-Ardabili, born in 1973, is charged with being a member of the Iran Monarchy Association. He was arrested on May 4th that is to say before the demonstrations following the elections in June, which didn’t prevent a judgment by the Revolutionary Court of Tehran in charge of the repression of the events.

Davood Fardbachech Mir-Ardabil has not been allowed to be defended by a lawyer nor insure his defense by himself.

The International Monarchist Conference (IMC) is protesting once more against these arbitrary lawsuits. The Iranian Regime has just marked a new stage in abject behavior. It is no longer only a matter of iniquitous cases but actual judiciary assassination.

The name of Davood Fardbacheh Mir-Ardabili has just been added to the name of three other monarchist activists sentenced to death by hanging, journalist Mohammad-Reza Ali-Zamani (37 years old), Hamed Rouhinejad (24 years old) and the young Arash Rahmanpour (only 20 years old).

Together, let’s demand the release of Iranian political prisoners!

Sign the petition : http://www.freezamani.org

Join the demonstration of November 3d 2009 at 07.00 pm, place d’Iéna in Paris, near the Iranian Embassy (Metro Iéna).

Sylvain ROUSSILLON
General Secretary of the International Monarchist Conference
Spokesperson of the Free Zamani Action Group
http://internationale.monarchiste.com

Mosaic at the Convent of St. John, Earliest Monastery in Syria



The Syriac Church of al-Nabghi Landmark. This Syriac piece is what remains of a mosaic of beautiful grounds with trees from the early fifth century. The earliest date ever recorded of a Syriac Christian monument was unearthed in February 2007 in the village of al-Nabghi near Aleppo in northern Syria. The inscription commemorates the creation of a mosaic floor laid in the chapel of the martyrs of a convent dedicated to St. John (probably the Baptist). The text began with the date, unfortunately damaged, but it is possible, according to Francoise Briquel Chantonnet and Alain Desmreumaux (CNRS), reading 718, in use at the time of the Seleucid era, ie., around 406-407 AD. It was then the oldest archaeological evidence of the existence of a monastery in northern Syria. It is also and example of archaic Syriac, the Aramaic of the Edessa region (south of present-day Turkey), which was and is still today the liturgical language of Syriac, still living in the Middle East.

Link here

Friday, October 23, 2009

Opus Dei Member and Ex-FBI Director Louis Freeh Italian Citizen

From the Drudge Report:

Clinton appointed former FBI director, Louis Freeh has just received Italian Citizenship thanks to his efforts in fighting organized crime in Italy. Both he and the infamous Robert Hanssen were members of Opus Dei and working for the FBI. Freeh described the Hanssen breech as disastrous, while he himself worked closely with Russian Police against organized crime in Russia according to Accuracy in Media.

Just before 9-11, Freeh left his job as Director of the CIA. He went to work defending a Saudi Prince Bandar, embroiled in a corruption case. He was also working with Fanny Mae according to Politics Daily.

There does seem to be a bit of a question about Louis Freeh's membership in Opus and the evidence is available in this article at Harvard Crimson which fairly discloses his close association with that organization.

The Theological Dunkirk of the CoE

According to Howlingly Absurd at Angelqueen, "this is the Anglican Communion's Theological Dunkirk as they await the Liturgical Overlord and the Moral D-Day Invasion."

Phil Lawler has another perspective altogether and perhaps a more sobering and realistic one as he takes into account that many Anglicans will be concerned about leaving their lifelong and inter-generational parsonages, their subsequent financial support as there will be no severance packages for them, and the precariousness of entering an ecclesial reality apparently as precarious as the one they left in the first place.



Realistic expectations about Anglicans
By Phil Lawler | October 21, 2009 3:24 PM

From catholicculture.org

There's a natural, healthy excitement in Church this week, caused by the Pope's bold move to welcome Anglicans into the Catholic fold. But after that first flush of excitement, let's step back just a bit and assess the likely outcome.

Will there be millions of Anglicans battering down the doors of Catholic churches next week? Not likely. Hundreds of thousands, then? Probably not.

The Anglican Church is sinking, and the Pope has thrown a lifeline. But there are several reasons why Anglicans-- even tradition-minded Anglicans-- might not grasp it.

First there are practical matters. Anglican clergymen have salaries and pension funds, and in many cases they have families to feed. There will be financial questions to settle, as well as legal questions about the ownership of parish properties and the administration of church programs.

Second there are the purely human considerations. Many Anglicans will find it difficult to walk away from the parish with which their families have been involved for generations, where their parents and grandparents were baptized and married, where their ancestors helped to build the church and now lie in the parish graveyard. Leaving the Anglican communion, for them, might mean leaving behind some bitterly disappointed relatives and friends, as well as some cherished memories. It will be wrenching; it might not happen right away.

Next there are the suspicions and fears that will doubtless remain, even after the Pope issues his apostolic constitution. Conservative Anglicans might glance nervously at the Catholic parishes in their neighborhood, notice the theological novelties and the liturgical abuses, and wonder whether they might be leaving one untenable situation only to enter into another. Working from the opposite direction, liberal Catholics-- including some in the hierarchy-- might discourage Anglicans from entering the Church, recognizing that an influx of conservative believers could tilt the entire Church toward a more traditional outlook.

For some conservative Anglicans-- notably in Africa-- there is no special incentive to enter the Catholic Church, because the Anglican communities in their regions remain firmly in the hands of their fellow conservatives. The worldwide Anglican communion may be falling apart, but in Africa the faith is buoyant, and the faithful are far less likely to see any need for dramatic changes.

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, there are many conservative Anglicans who have no desire to enter the Catholic Church under any circumstances.

The Anglican communion, one must remember, is divided in two different ways. There is a clear liberal/conservative split, which is evident in the highly publicized battles over issues such as homosexuality and the ordination of women. Catholics readily recognize that division; we have the same problem in our Church. But in the Anglican communion there is another division, between the "high church" and "low church" traditions. Those two ways of classifying the Anglican faithful produce very different divisions. Within the Roman Catholic Church, "liberals" tend to disagree with "conservatives" consistently, across a whole range of issues: doctrinal, moral, and liturgical. Not so in the Anglican communion, where one can find high-church liberals and low-church conservatives.

The distinction between the "high" and "low" Anglican traditions can be traced back to the 17th century, when some parishes within the Church of England clung to the sacramental rituals they had preserved from their days as Catholic communities, while others-- more heavily influenced by the Reformation-- jettisoned those ceremonies to adopt a self-consciously simpler style of worship. The battle between "high" and "low" approaches has continued on different fronts over the centuries. At the risk of oversimplification, one might say that today the heirs of the "high church" tradition in the Anglican communion emphasize the patrimony they have received from the universal (Catholic) Church, while those of the "low church" tradition think of themselves as children of the Reformation.

In the 19th century, the Oxford Movement spoke explicitly of the "Anglo-Catholic" tradition, and today the heirs of the Oxford Movement-- including the members of the Traditional Anglican Communion-- still think of themselves as Anglo-Catholics. For them, the Pope's invitation may prove irresistible.

But Anglicans from the other, "low-church" tradition, who think of themselves as Protestants, will not succumb so quickly to the magnetic attraction of Rome. Many of them may be conservative, in the same way that Evangelical Christians are conservative, on questions of theological doctrine and moral principle. They may be estranged from their more liberal co-religionists. But they do not see the Catholic Church as a potential refuge. Thus Bishop Martyn Minns, a leader of the Anglican Church in North America-- a group formed to counteract liberalism in the Episcopal Church-- told the New York Times: "I don't want to be a Roman Catholic." He explained simply: "There was a Reformation, you remember."


Still, there is much speculation about the numbers. This article Lawler posts is almost as grim, expecting not more than 1,000 priests and identifying some of the pitfalls, like expected defections later on. It has additional links to other sources and articles dealing with women's ordination and Forward in Faith (FiFo) who specualate that at least a dozzen Bishops will convert.

Here.

Bulgarian Patriarch Eager For Union With Rome.


VATICAN CITY (Zenit.org) Bulgarian Orthodox prelate told Benedict XVI of his desire for unity, and his commitment to accelerate communion with the Catholic Church.

At the end of Wednesday's general audience, Bishop Tichon, head of the diocese for Central and Western Europe of the Patriarchate of Bulgaria, stated to the Pope, "We must find unity as soon as possible and finally celebrate together," L'Osservatore Romano reported.

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Archbishop Fellay Says SSPX Could Become A Personal Prelature

The talks between the Vatican and the Society of Saint Pius X perhaps anticipated to go better than expected, although this structural suggestion is only part of the agenda of the upcoming talks this October. An optomistic prognosis is being given by Bishop Fellay. So we may be witnessing yet another triumph from the Holy Father as he moves powerfully to enact dramatic changes in key positions and restore unity and order to the Church.

Santiago, Chile, Oct 22, 2009 / 01:03 pm (CNA).- In an interview with the Chilean daily, “El Mercurio,” the Superior General of the Society of St. Pius X, Bernard Fellay, acknowledged that the Vatican is considering the possibility of converting the Lefebvrist group into a personal prelature as part of the discussions aimed at bringing about reconciliation. Fellay, who visited members of the SSPX movement in Chile, is one of four bishops whose excommunication was lifted by Pope Benedict XVI last January. Asked about the speculation that the Society of Pius X could be made into a personal prelature similar to Opus Dei, Fellay responded, “There is a lot of truth to that. I think the Vatican is moving towards that kind of canonical solution.”

He also noted that the controversy unleashed by Bishop Richard Williamson’s statements on the Nazi holocaust “was a well-planned attack, not against the Society, but directly against the person of Pope Benedict XVI, in order to tarnish his gesture.”

Postive Conservative Commentary on Anglican-Catholic Reunion

The Tablet

Will Rowan Williams be the next high profile Anglican to come to Rome?

Here.


National Times: Australia

Here.

Prime Minister Rudd of Australia considers becoming a Catholic-Anglican.

Saint Benedict Center:

"Don't call them Anglicans, call them Catholics".

Here.

Holy Smoke!

We get confirmation that the Magic Circle is indeed not pleased by this sudden influx of unwanted spiritual immigrants.

Here.

Cardinal Kasper is Set to Retire: Possible Successor, Bishop Gerhard Ludwig

The controversial Cardinal Kasper is 76 years old and is ready for retirement.

Kath.net reports a rumour broadcast by Bavarian Radio Broadcast 1 about the appointment on "well informed Church circles". They've reported Thursday that Regensburg Bishop Gerhard Ludwig Müller should, supposedly,succeed Curial Cardinal Walter Kasper, head of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity. The report should be made public around the end of November. Clmens Neck, Communications Director for the Diocese, denies the rumours, and has received no information on it. His own words were, "according to our own information, this is only a rumour". Neither do any of kath.net's own well-informed Church circles know anything about this appointment. What is clear is that Cardinal Kasper is already 76 and therefore is expected in the forseeable future to step down.

You might recall Biship Gerhard Ludwig's earlier condemnation of the SSPX Bishops in February earlier this year on Christopher Gillibrand's Catholic Church Conservation.

More Liberals Attempting to Downplay Anglican-Catholic Union and Salvage Their Failing Auto-destructive Policies.

Liberals in the world press, or perhaps, the liberal world press is attempting to downplay the significance of the reunion between the Catholic Church and the Anglican Communion. They rightly fear that their policies, diminishing numbers and progressive views are becoming irrelevant in the face of successful ecumenical efforts on the part of a reformer Pope.

Jesuit priest and former editor of the controversial America Magazine, Father Reese SJ, makes some curious remarks in the wake at The Washington Post, wanting to downplay, in agreement with many parts of the secular press today, the momentous reunion of conservative Anglicans and Episcopalians with the Catholic Church. While he does talk about the reasons these conservatives are coming to the Catholic Church, he downplays these motivations and focuses on the desire of dissidents to see married clergy. Really, what he and many liberals fear is a further dilution of their diminishing numbers and impetus to change the Church's teaching through democratic reform.

Catholic liberals, especially Catholic feminists, fear that an influx of conservative Anglicans will further discourage reform in the Catholic Church. In any case, someone should warn these Anglicans that two out of three U.S. Catholics support the ordination of women. They will not find in Catholicism a controversy-free zone.


He proceeds then, to indicate that Traditional Anglicans will find some of the same problems they left behind. Unfortunately for him, it remains to be seen whether 2/3rds of the Catholic laity anywhere favor women's ordination. Where he gets those numbers from is anyone's guess, but we suspect it is merely wishful thinking.

More importantly, could married Roman Catholic men from the traditional dioceses join the Anglican ordinariate and become seminarians and priests? If so, we have just solved the priest shortage problem and within a generation there will be more priests in the Anglican ordinariates than in the traditional dioceses. The rest of the people will soon follow and the Anglican ordinariate will hold a majority of Roman Catholics.


In contrast to this unscientific citation, another poll brought to our attention by Father Z at his blog leads to Cincinnati Women's, and indicates overwhelming opposition to women's ordination.

National Public Radio has a long history of hostillity to the Catholic Church in its editorial policies which might have been dictated by the Devil himself.

This New Republic writer is glibly critical about the entire thing and finds a contradiction between allowing married Anglican priests and the current discipline existing for RC clergy in the Latin Rite. She doesn't seem to understand, or ignores, the fact that there already are married priests who are of the Anglican Tradition within the Catholic Church just as there are married priests in the Eastern Rites of the Church and have been since the Church was founded at the Pentecost in 33 A.D..

Baltimore Sun wants to keep the focus on the fact that there are many defections both ways and that there was, after all, one Church founded by Christ not to be confused with Anglican, Catholic or Protestant. Unfortunately, he's incorrect since the only one of those churches founded by Christ was the Catholic.

More from the Tablet. "Converts may choke on the raw meat of Catholicism"

These Liberals need to be informed of a fact so succinctly summed up by Diogenes at From the Mail that:

As your Uncle Di has pointed out before: the dissatisfied Anglican leaves because his Church ain't what she used to be. The dissatisfied Catholic leaves his Church because she is.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

The Pope's Current Move will Harm Dialogue. Well, good!

There are already complaints and concerns being aired on the Pope's new move, not least of which is being voiced by the faint hearted Timothy Bradshaw at The Times.

He identifies the docuement, "Gift of Authority" which urged the Anglican Community to accept the Primacy of the Papacy. It's a surprising document and many Anglicans are now making good on it, so, could it be that Archbishop Rowan is merely overseeing the disintigration of the Church of England? Queen Elizabeth has already voiced her displeasure for the 80 Million large Church of which she is the head, and many Anglicans are quite rightly disgusted with the handful of liberals hijacking of their Church over matters of homosexuality and women's ordination. It's time to take a stand.

John Allen at National Catholic Reporter, simply reported the facts and identified the potential damage some were concerned about. He gave what is probably a more accurate portrayal of Cardinal Casper's characterization of the event as not "poaching" but a respect for one's personal conscience. He rightly says, "if someone is knocking on the Church's door, we have every responsibillity to let them in." For once, we find ourselves agreeing with the good Cardinal in that sense. It's difficult to get out of a vicious habit of predicting liberalism and bad faith in someone we've come to distrust.

Father Richard McBrien, the enfant terrible of Notre Dame, on the other hand, has a more nuanced view, while describing Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Catnerbury's own opposition to same-sex unions, he goes on to describe William's attempt to create a two-tiered system to accomodate, unsatisfactorily as far as the TAC is concerned, both sides of the issue.

Rather than focusing on the source of the tension in the first place, McBrien insists on pointing out the difficulties of authority that are a problem for both churches, suggesting subtly, that there is a similiar, perhaps much larger divide within the Catholic Church on these issues concerning central authority and who defines correct practice and doctrine.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Could Cardinal Kasper be The Enemy?

A famous general of the War of Northern Aggression was Burnside. You couldn't really tell whose side he was really on as Lincoln remarked, “Only Burnside could manage such a coup to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory”.

The Catholic Church seems to have leader of similar, although far more malevolent if more slightly less comical, character. Cardinal Kasper is trying to upstage the jubilant arrival of the prodigal with insidious messages encouraging dissent. Cardinal Kasper is eager to redirect suggestions that this is after all, a victory for conservative forces, dragging out the overtried phraseology of false ecumenism, he said, “But if there are people who obeying their consciences want to become Catholic, we cannot shut the door” [But we really tried to shut the door, believe me].

In order to reassure the Archbishop of Canterbury, CNS reports, as if it might be a possibility that Dominican Inquisitors are ready to deploy to newly catholicized Anglican parsonages, he solemnly intoned another familiar cliche, “I think there is an agreement between us and the (Anglican) Archbishop of Canterbury that we have to respect their freedom of conscience and freedom of religion.”

Already, the ecumenicist of engagement arrives in England to help fight a rearguard action for the Magic Circle English Bishops who can only look on at something they attempted to prevent and frustrate all along.

Canon Law dealing with Homosexuality

Unfortunately, a lot of people think that their personal tastes and desires have supreme legistlative power, and in so much as they are ruled by their emotions, they confer this false and naive charity upon others whose crimes they benevolently wish excuse.

Despite the canonical fact that homosexuals are excluded from priestly formation and religious life, even in the New Canon Code of 1983, but also according to a 2005 clarification with the long title, Instruction Concerning the Criteria for the Discernment of Vocations with regard to Persons with Homosexual Tendencies in view of their Admission to the Seminary and to Holy Orders., homosexuls are still admitted to the religious life against the lessons of history and the Canon Law itself.

The document contains the following passage:

In the light of such teaching, this Dicastery, in accord with the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, believes it necessary to state clearly that the Church, while profoundly respecting the persons in question[9], cannot admit to the seminary or to holy orders those who practise homosexuality, present deep-seated homosexual tendencies or support the so-called "gay culture"[10].


It's not our intention to usurp the office of canon lawyers or bishops, but when this document was released in 2005, there was quite a bit of encouragement and hope that orthodoxy would be the rule of the day and that bishops would restrict the entrance into the seminary, those who lack the affective maturity to relate to men and women in the life of the Church.

Obviously, these rules haven't been implemented with the same force throughout the Church. Some superiors and bishops no doubt exhibit a great deal of clemency in this regard, but there has to be a point at which credulity is stretched beyond its breaking point.

And So It Begins

Ruth Gledhill in the Times is reporting on the bankruptcy proceedings of the Delaware Diocese. What we see at work here is the familiar pattern of the confiscation of Church property, selling off cemetery plots with the bones of departed priests and bishops, to meet the terms.

Of course, interwoven in this tragedy are the lives of victims who come with legitimate complaints against churchmen, who've failed in their office, promoting strange liturgical practices and demeaning the traditional moral teachings of the Church, may be lost in the reorganization shuffle. Is it any surprise then that the Church's enemies have been assisted by the episcopal Judases who've orchestrated this travesty?

No doubt this will leave behind an increasingly hobbled Church and speed the defections from Her ranks, multiplying the indifferentism which infects the land like a terrible cancer.

Despite this, the Catholic Church is still at work in the world. Good can come out of evil, but there are also victories as in the case of the Anglican Communion in England which has joined the Catholic Church today. It might be ironic to some, but they are fleeing the same liberalism and moral turpitude that many of us are trying to escape in the Catholic Church with regard to our own bishops and religious orders.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Rethink Redux: Cormac Brissett

After much consideration, hand wringing, self-doubt and pious meditation, we've decided to consider the condition of our soul, upon taking in the many concerns that have been iterated here and elsewhere that what we're doing here isn't righteous but amounts to calumny and detraction.

Upon reflection, we've had to consider the times in history when the Church's societies have come under attack from outside forces, forces within the Church and even within their own societies; unjust attacks, as was the case with the suppression of the Knights Templar which resulted in the forced confessions of many brother Knights all based on the suggestion that the Knights were involved in worshippng the devil and comitting unnatural acts with one another. Of course, when one looks between the lines, all it amounted to was a desire by Phillip IV to focus his power and have access to the fabulous wealth of the Templars.

Ironically, the date of our blog post is October 14th, the day after the Templar Grand Master, Jaques de Molay, along with some of his brothers, were arrested and accused of Satanism and homosexuality. French troops had already threatened Rome in 1303 when they arrived at Agnani to arrest Boniface VIII and accuse him of heresy, and French troops again threatened his successor, the French Pope Clement, if demands for a speedy condemnation were not met. Reluctantly and perhaps tragically he aquiesced. It seems that Phillip was not content with bringing the Pope to heel, but some of the Pope's guardians as well.

We've also taken into account Henry VIII's own unjust confiscation of Church lands with the usual condemnations directed at the Church then too, and the unfortunate suppression of the Jesuits in 1773 which conincided, incidentally, with the mass infiltration of Masonic societies throughout Europe by Adam Weisshaupt's illluminist conspirators.

It's a terrible story of betrayal and injustice and it is a historical lesson which should give anyone pause when he considers the Holy Societies and Religious Orders of the Church.

Unlike Henry VIII or Phillip IV, we're not looking to consolidate our power, although there are undoubtedly those who do today; therefore, it's important that we are mindful that an attack on the American Church might amount to a benefit for the Church's enemies.

Unfortunately, the Church's enemies have successfully infiltrated the Church. Unlike some of the aforementioned historical lessons, including the Soviet Union's own use of similiar tactics to attack Catholic and Orthdox churchmen, these are valid claims. Undoubtedly, however, and to our shame, there was some truth to the claims levelled against the Church and Her Religious Orders: but what of the motivation?

What we've experienced in the past forty years and more has been a wholesale defection of many of the Church's societies to the point where they are almost unrecognizeable from pre-conciliar times. The infiltration of the Church by men with Revolutionary agendas is well documented, and this is in no wise to be exaggerated in the case of the Society of Jesus. Moreover, there are a considerable number of homosexuals in their ranks, some of whom engage in pederasty. It is the motivation of the airing of this news to give some consolation to past victims, possible redress to present victims and to prevent any future crimes of this nature occuring with the frequency they have in the past occured, with benign neglect on the part of many parts of all too often fallible churchmen.

So, after much consideration of the Church's history in this regard and the threats without and the threats within, we must regretfully maintain our initial posture of revealing this information to the public in hopes that it will serve to reform the parts of the Church we cherish and encourage those who are guilty of not being who they claim to exit their offices. We'd hope, moreover, that those responsible for protecting men like the aforementioned Cormac, would be removed.

One wonders at the fervor of the defenders of these vices. Would they be as fervant in the defense of a man who was loyal to the orthodox Patrimony of the Catholic Faith? They would not.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

New Ways to Break with the Past



Not content with traditional models of sexual behavior, Fr. William Skudlarek is able to trivialize them by redefining ordinary celibacy as "myth" and exploring Eastern venues to experiment with new forms of sexual expression by redefining sexuality altogether.

From the Review
"Skudlarek proposes a demythologized view of celibacy, presenting it as an alternate and equally valid spiritual practice for those who choose not to accept the demands of a committed sexual relationship. "

Friday, October 16, 2009



Marie Antoinette, the most beautiful flower of the Hapsburg family was cruelly abused by her Republican jailers before she surmounted the platform to the jeering of a multitude with wavering steps, slightly trembling, as Hillaire Belloc describes her for posterity. Her once beautiful auburn hair disheveled and matted, yet she walked with the pitable dignity of a woman who'd been cruelly beaten but was not defeated. The Republican organs of propaganda had whipped the crowd into a frenzy of hate for this woman and she was condemned to die without proof, stripped of her children who'd later be murdered and preceeded in death by her beloved husband, the King.

The youthful courage of this gentle and sweet woman will be remembered in eternity and her noble death will be remembered long after the lies told about her have receeded like a bad dream.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Losing's a Habit and the Jesuits are Losing

The financially and spiritually troubled Oregon Catholic Province of the Society of Jesus is continuing the irresponsible pattern it has historically maintained in recent decades with regard to the men it chooses to fill its ranks. Despite institutional countermeasures to address the problem, the Jesuit Province still still finds novices who exhibit strong indications that they will be prolems in the future. This Jesuit province in the already troubled Catholic Northwest has settled 25 Million Dollars in claims since 2001 and the morally struggling order is now filing Chapter 11 Bankruptcy, according to Catholic News Service.

Meet Cormac Brissett who's a novice in that province.

He signed a protest in defense of public lewdness in a circular letter posted on-line by an apologist for pederasty, William A. Percy, in No to Sexophobia (May 3, 1995) with one of the founding members of NAMBLA.

It's hard to believe that Mr. Brissett's opinions are a passing fancy, he's penned articles for Lavender Magazine, and intereviewed another pederastic intellectual,Edmund White, without the slightest criticism.

It would be more surprising that Mr. Brissett would give up his unnatural tastes and intellectual defense of them than that the Jesuit order will perform due dilligence on its candidates for priesthood.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Sympathy for the Devil




















Arturo Vazquez eloquently discusses the treatment of Bishop Weakland by the local traditionalists for Inside Catholic. He has also written an after-article, wherein he accuses the traditionalistas of casting stones and residing in glass houses, citing some abuses by a few clerics of traditional or conservative bent.

Despite making some awfully good points, he denies the significance of the salient issue of the relationship between homosexuality and the liberal agenda which Bishops like Weakland propose by undertones and overtones so obvious and monstrous, it's difficult to do them justice to a clerical set and laity so morally anesthetized and stunned, they don't know if what they see is real - don't believe it can be true.

Considering the work of Randy Engel's Rite of Sodomy, Michael Rose's, Good-bye, Good men, Father Cozzens' Freeing Celibacy and the last forty or so years of periodicals like The Wanderer, not to mention some of our own personal experiences of clerical failure in this line, it's hard to believe that there isn't a dreadful correlation between the sin of Sodom and that all-too-familiar self-indulgent behavior from the clerical homosexual with regard to notoriously bad taste in everything from liturgy to music and theology. From my perspective it's hard not to be sympathetic to the traditionalistas crying for some retribution, and it's still harder to bypass the tribulations of those people who've left the Church for this reason. Frankly, it's an injustice that this man still walks the street and has any freedom at all to attempt to justify himself, as guilty and close-minded as even he makes himself to be, in the national spotlight. No doubt, he's still got supporters, viscious men in soft garments, no doubt, and a small hoard of loyal pew warmers who still can't believe the truth.

I wrote on Arturo's blog a brief rejoinder: you do highlight his impoverished, malfeasant and highly bureaucratized life, but remain critical of him none the less, while asking those of us, and I am one, who are critical enough of him to want him punished by the civil arm and not at liberty, if we don't live in glass houses.

We're not Bishops, actually, we've just been sold a bill of goods and bear the responsibillity of what our ancestors handed down to us when they taught us to say our prayers, and asked us if we knew our Catechism.

The only thing I wanted on my First Communion, aside from the vague sense that I was communicating with Jesus who loves me, having memorized the Apostle's Creed which I remember to this day, not to be too impious, was the cake and presents I was going to get when I'd made my first communion. I was filled with this idea of my importance and that I had just come upon a milestone in my life. I was given something of inestimable importance, yet I very dimly understood it, and I bear the burden of that moment, my self-importance, vanity and fascination with that tasty, frosted cake.

But I'm not a Bishop, nor am I a priest, nor am I [Fr] Timothy Svea. It's not fair to compare them, for their burdens are unequal to the ones that we bear. Those of us who are laymen, married or not.

Perhaps you rightly point out that we put our foot in mouth, for we all sin, but most of us aren't Bishops entrusted with the souls of a large North American Diocese, and I'd also like to point out that the unpunished pathological histrionicism of this Bishop, [Fr.] Timothy Svea or Fr. Vander Putten (if what you say is true) is not a burden that most traditionalists share, however self-important, overreaching and vain we are.

Finnland's Bishop speaks against Homosexuality


Father Tim Finnigan reports the courageous Finnish Bishop at The Heremeutic of Continuity He is speaking out against the unfortunate Swedish Lutheran proposal to recognize same-sex unions in Sweden.

It reminds me of another famous Bishop of the North. When a Bishop is consecrated, he is given a Mitre so that he might be fearsome to the Church's enemies.

The full story is here.

Monarchists in Iran, sentenced to be hanged.

You might wonder what a Catholic Monarchist's sympathies might be for men of Islamic Faith who favor the restoration of the progressive regime of the late Shah. The Shah was the legitimate ruler of Iran, and therefore, a target of Marxist Revolutionaries as well as the Theocratic Republicans who eventually did oust him. It's in recognition of these facts that he might be regarded as a brother to Catholic legitimists. Mutual cooperation between us is a hopeful sign of the conversion of this land of poets to the true Faith. Indeed, the Shah's Persia was friendlier to the small Catholic Church there than the regime now in power and cooperation with the Iranian monarchists is reminscent of the friendship which existed of old between the Jewish Nation and the Persian Empire in the times of the Babylonian Captivity.


Official statement of the International Monarchist Conference (IMC)

From Iranian sources, we learn that two other Iranian monarchist militants, members of Association Monarchy of Iran have just been condemned to hanging by the revolutionary Tribunal of Teheran following the demonstrations of last June.

It is act of Hamed Rouhinejad and Arash Rahmanpour, this 20 years old last only.

With the journalist Mohammad-Reza Ali-Zamani, are thus three monarchist militants who, if the international community does not mobilize itself, will be carried out in the days which come, victims of Iranian Islamic revolutionary terror.

The International Monarchist Conference invites to be mobilized within the “Comitee for the release of Mohammad-Reza Ali-Zamani” to obtain the grace and the release of these three men.

Mobilization! Help us! Help them…

freezamani@monarchiste.com
http://internationale.monarchiste.com/
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=151478437097

S.ROUSSILLON
Secrétaire général de la CMI
General secretary of the IMC

Leo XIII speaks on Christopher Columbus



Many forget the exquisitely medieval character of the expedition, the kinds of men who embarked on this adventure and the reasons they came. This voyage was undertaken with great hope fulfilled in the discovery of a strange land which received the Catholic Faith and built a new hybrid civilization. It was at once Catholic, Indian, European, Mediterranean and glorious.

Now that four centuries have sped since a Ligurian first, under God's guidance, touched shores unknown beyond the Atlantic, the whole world is eager to celebrate the memory of the event, and glorify its author. Nor could a worthier reason be found where through zeal should be kindled. For the exploit is in itself the highest and grandest which any age has ever seen accomplished by man; and he who achieved it, for the greatness of his mind and heart, can be compared to but few in the history of humanity.


By his toil another world emerged from the unsearched bosom of the ocean: hundreds of thousands of mortals have, from a state of blindness, been raised to the common level of the human race, reclaimed from savagery to gentleness and humanity; and, greatest of all, by the acquisition of those blessings of which Jesus Christ is the author, they have been recalled from destruction to eternal life.


Europe, indeed, overpowered at the time by the novelty and strangeness of the discovery, presently came to recognize what was due to Columbus, when, through the numerous colonies shipped to America, through the constant intercourse and interchange of business and the ocean-trade, an incredible addition was made to our knowledge of nature, and to the commonwealth; whilst at the same time the prestige of the European name was marvellously increased.


Therefore, amidst so lavish a display of honour, so unanimous a tribute of congratulations, it is fitting that the Church should not be altogether silent; since she, by custom and precedent, willingly approves and endeavours to forward whatsoever she see, and wherever she see it, that is honourable and praiseworthy. It is true she reserves her special and greatest honours for virtues that most signally proclaim a high morality, for these are directly associated with the salvation of souls; but she does not, therefore, despise or lightly estimate virtues of other kinds. On the contrary, she has ever highly favoured and held in honour those who have deserved well of men in civil society, and have thus attained a lasting name among posterity.


For God, indeed, is especially wonderful in his Saints - mirabilis in Sanctis suis; but the impress of His Divine virtue also appears in those who shine with excellent power of mind and spirit, since high intellect and greatness of spirit can be the property of men only through their parent and creator, God.


But there is, besides, another reason, a unique one, why We consider that this immortal achievement should be recalled by Us with memorial words. For Columbus is ours; since if a little consideration be given to the particular reason of his design in exploring the mare tenebrosum, and also the manner in which he endeavoured to execute the design, it is indubitable that the Catholic faith was the strongest motive for the inception and prosecution of the design; so that for this reason also the whole human race owes not a little to the Church.


We say not that he was unmoved by perfectly honourable aspirations after knowledge, and deserving well of human society; nor did he despise glory, which is a most engrossing ideal to great souls; nor did he altogether scorn a hope of advantages to himself; but to him far before all these human considerations was the consideration of his ancient faith, which questionless dowered him with strength of mind and will, and often strengthened and consoled him in the midst of the greatest difficulties. This view and aim is known to have possessed his mind above all; namely, to open a way for the Gospel over new lands and seas.


[I]n his mind, he sought first of all to extend the Christian name and the benefits of Christian charity to the West, as is abundantly proved by the history of the whole undertaking. For when he first petitioned Ferdinand and Isabella, the Sovereigns of Spain, for fear lest they should be reluctant to encourage the undertaking, he clearly explained its object: "That their glory would grow to immortality, if they resolved to carry the name and doctrine of Jesus Christ into regions so distant." And in no long time having obtained his desires, he bears witness: "That he implores of God that, through His Divine aid and grace, the Sovereigns may continue steadfast in their desire to fill these new missionary shores with the truths of the Gospel."


He hastens to seek missionaries from Pope Alexander VI, through a letter in which this sentence occurs: "I trust that, by God's help, I may spread the Holy Name and Gospel of Jesus Christ as widely as may be." He was carried away, as we think, with joy, when on his first return from the Indies he wrote to Raphael Sanchez: "That to God should be rendered immortal thanks, Who had brought his labours such prosperous issues; that Jesus Christ rejoices and triumphs on earth no less than in Heaven, at the approaching salvation of nations innumerable, who were before hastening to destruction." And if he moved Ferdinand and Isabella to decree that only Catholic Christians should be suffered to approach the New World and trade with the natives, he brought forward as reason, "that he sought nothing from his enterprise and endeavour but the increase and glory of the Christian religion." And this was well known to Isabella, ... [f]or she had declared of Columbus that he would boldly thrust himself upon the vast ocean, "to achieve a most signal thing, for the sake of the Divine glory." And to Columbus himself, on his second return, she writes: "That the expenses she had incurred, and was about to incur, for the Indian expeditions, had been well bestowed; for thence would ensure a spreading of Catholicism."
Leo XIII
Quarto abeunte

Thursday, October 8, 2009

The Curious Cardinal



As providence would have it, there was an recently published interview in NCR about the aforementioned Cardinal George whose statement on interreligious dialogue with the Jews leaves us in little doubt that he has a very circumscribed notion of the Church's mission to the world, including the Jews.

John Allen's soft-ball interview leaves some questions unanswered, but does admit a blithe admonition to an indeterminate and perhaps fabled duality in the American Church, those elusive Liberals and Conservatives. Incredibly, the Cardinal accuses the mythical polarity of focusing too much on Bishops, assuming that they have more power than they have and an obligation to correct and on the other hand wishing they didn't have too much power. He admonishes both of these legendary antognists to focus more on Christ, but doesn't fail to relinquish responsibillity for the problems he identifies, feebly, like Catechesis, the sorry state of Catholic Charitable institutes, and Liturgy.

Considering the Cardinal's more recent "clarifications" on Interreligious Dialogue with the Jews, he's talking about himself when he describes Liberals. Wishing he had less authority than he does, perhaps, or still worse, wishing that since, "the conservatives wish to descend into sectarianism" that all of these distinctions between the beliefs of various religions are meant to be ignored. Somehow, our focus on Christ and work among with poor with a leftist missionary organisation like St'Egidio will cause us to forget those petty doctrinal problems and the poor showing so many priests make when it comes to the Liturgy. In all of this, he strikes me as a less potent, understated, and therefore perhaps more dangerous version of his sulferous predecessor, Cardinal Berardin.

What this all amounts to, more than a fawning softball interview by a bootlicking journalist, is the Bishop telling the laity that things will continue basically as they have and that they need to keep giving and obeying.

Moreover, by the end of this interview, I was still in the dark about what His Lordship meant by improving Evangelization. I think he's implying that we need to be less Catholic and more Universalist, that we can leave behind this implausible sectarianism as the dusty relic of a bygone age and other such cliché. Perhaps his "plant" is that there is no plan, or at least not one he's going to tell anyone else.


Tuesday, October 6, 2009

The American Bishops "Revise" Statement on the Jews


The Catholic Bishops of America are circulating a letter on official Jewish-Catholic dialogue. It makes statements which suppose to invoke interreligious dialogue to create greater understanding between Catholics and Jews. More importantly, there is a concern for the "hurt feelings" of Jews who dislike the idea of being targeted for conversion by Catholics. Despite many scriptural and doctrinal teachings to the contrary, five courageous Bishops have made the following statement, to wit, “Jewish covenantal life endures till the present day as a vital witness to God’s saving will for his people Israel and for all of humanity.”

The implication is that Catholics and Jews don't have a good relationship historically, and that poor relationship has been caused by the active assertion that the Catholic Church maintains the inferiority and ineffectiveness of their religion toward salvation. The Bishops attempt to address that problem in the following six point statement which suggests that Jews will not have to consider this a deliberate or even implicit attempt to Baptize them.[1]

At the end of the day, whatever the actual intentions of these Bishops, whether it is a tit for tat arrangement of some kind, an act of cowardice or possibly an act of complete ignorance, the clarity of these documents and their actual force remain in question, although a good case can be made that these statements either say too little or say too much in obvious contradiction of the Catholic Church's mission in Matthew 28:16-20.

Mr. Robert Sungenis and an interlocutor handle this discussion pretty handily. [2]

There is also a blissfully hopeful article written in NCR. If you look long and hard enough at the article you can see the feeble hand that wrote it is not long for this world. Here

The Bishops who signed this document are:

Cardinal George of Chicago, Cardinal William H. Keeler, retired archbishop of Baltimore, USCCB episcopal moderator of Catholic-Jewish relations; Archbishop Wilton D. Gregory of Atlanta, chairman of the USCCB Committee on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs; Bishop William E. Lori of Bridgeport, Conn., chairman of the USCCB Committee on Doctrine, and Bishop William Murphy of Rockville Centre, N.Y.


At least three of them have enourmous problems controlling the sexual improprieties of their priests and are also guilty of turning a blind eye to dissenters in their Universities.


The National

A Kurdistan politician, dreaming of an independent region for Christians, offered free homes as they fled the violence in Baghdad after the US invasion. His secrecy about the plan, however, has raised the suspicion of his opponents, Phil Sands, foreign correspondent, reports.
Vatican City, Oct 6, 2009 / 03:16 am (CNA).- The Italian daily Il Foglio published today an article entitled "L'ascia del vescovo pellerossa - Charles j. Chaput contro Notre Dame e l'illustre cardinale sedotto dall'abortista Obama" ("The ax of the Red Skin Bishop - Charles J. Chaput against Notre Dame and the illustrious cardinal seduced by the pro abortion Obama") in which the Archbishop of Denver contests some of the strongly pro-Obama assertions made by Cardinal Georges Cottier last July in the International Catholic Magazine “30 Days”.

Il Foglio is one of the most influential intellectual dailies in Italy, dedicated more at analyzing than covering the news. Its director is one of the most famous Italian contemporary thinkers, Giuliano Ferrara.

Despite being an agnostic, Ferrara is a long time admirer of the though of Joseph Ratzinger.

On its Tuesday edition, Il Foglio publishes a front page interview to Cardinal Francis George, and devotes the full third page to Archbishop Chaput’s comments to the original Cottier’s essay.

The Archbishop’ article, originally submitted under the more modest title of “Politics, Morality and a President: an American View,” focuses on what it meant to the Church in the US President’s Obama speech at the University of Notre Dame, which Cardinal Cottier, Theologian Emeritus of the Pontifical Household, described in 30 Days in a very positive light.

Here is the full text in English of Archbishop Chaput’s article published today in “Il Foglio”, exclusive from Catholic News Agency.

Politics, Morality and a President: an American View

One of the strengths of the Church is her global perspective. In that light, Cardinal Georges Cottier’s recent essay on President Barack Obama (“Politics, morality and original sin,” 30 Days, No. 5), made a valuable contribution to Catholic discussion of the new American president. Our faith connects us across borders. What happens in one nation may have an impact on many others. World opinion about America’s leaders is not only appropriate; it should be welcomed.

And yet, the world does not live and vote in the United States. Americans do. The pastoral realities of any country are best known by the local bishops who shepherd their people. Thus, on the subject of America’s leaders, the thoughts of an American bishop may have some value. They may augment the Cardinal’s good views by offering a different perspective.

Note that I speak here only for myself. I do not speak for the bishops of the United States as a body, nor for any other individual bishop. Nor will I address President Obama’s speech to the Islamic world, which Cardinal Cottier mentions in his own essay. That would require a separate discussion.

I will focus instead on the President’s graduation appearance at the University of Notre Dame, and Cardinal Cottier’s comments on the President’s thinking. I have two motives in doing so.

First, men and women from my own diocese belong to the national Notre Dame community as students, graduates and parents. Every bishop has a stake in the faith of the people in his care, and Notre Dame has never merely been a local Catholic university. It is an icon of the American Catholic experience. Second, when Notre Dame’s local bishop vigorously disagrees with the appearance of any speaker, and some 80 other bishops and 300,000 laypeople around the country publicly support the local bishop, then reasonable people must infer that a real problem exists with the speaker – or at least with his appearance at the disputed event. Reasonable people might further choose to defer to the judgment of those Catholic pastors closest to the controversy.

Regrettably and unintentionally, Cardinal Cottier’s articulate essay undervalues the gravity of what happened at Notre Dame. It also overvalues the consonance of President Obama’s thinking with Catholic teaching.

There are several key points to remember here.

First, resistance to President Obama’s appearance at Notre Dame had nothing to do with whether he is a good or bad man. He is obviously a gifted man. He has many good moral and political instincts, and an admirable devotion to his family. These things matter. But unfortunately, so does this: The President’s views on vital bioethical issues, including but not limited to abortion, differ sharply from Catholic teaching. This is why he has enjoyed the strong support of major “abortion rights” groups for many years. Much is made, in some religious circles, of the President’s sympathy for Catholic social teaching. But defense of the unborn child is a demand of social justice. There is no “social justice” if the youngest and weakest among us can be legally killed. Good programs for the poor are vital, but they can never excuse this fundamental violation of human rights.

Second, at a different moment and under different circumstances, the conflict at Notre Dame might have faded away if the university had simply asked the President to give a lecture or public address. But at a time when the American bishops as a body had already voiced strong concern about the new administration’s abortion policies, Notre Dame not only made the President the centerpiece of its graduation events, but also granted him an honorary doctorate of laws – this, despite his deeply troubling views on abortion law and related social issues.

The real source of Catholic frustration with President Obama’s appearance at Notre Dame was his overt, negative public voting and speaking record on abortion and other problematic issues. By its actions, Notre Dame ignored and violated the guidance of America’s bishops in their 2004 document, “Catholics in Political Life.” In that text, the bishops urged Catholic institutions to refrain from honoring public officials who disagreed with Church teaching on grave matters.

Thus, the fierce debate in American Catholic circles this spring over the Notre Dame honor for Mr. Obama was not finally about partisan politics. It was about serious issues of Catholic belief, identity and witness – triggered by Mr. Obama’s views -- which Cardinal Cottier, writing from outside the American context, may have misunderstood.

Third, the Cardinal wisely notes points of contact between President Obama’s frequently stated search for political “common ground” and the Catholic emphasis on pursing the “common good.” These goals – seeking common ground and pursuing the common good – can often coincide. But they are not the same thing. They can sharply diverge in practice. So-called “common ground” abortion policies may actually attack the common good because they imply a false unity; they create a ledge of shared public agreement too narrow and too weak to sustain the weight of a real moral consensus. The common good is never served by tolerance for killing the weak – beginning with the unborn.

Fourth, Cardinal Cottier rightly reminds his readers of the mutual respect and cooperative spirit required by citizenship in a pluralist democracy. But pluralism is never an end in itself. It is never an excuse for inaction. As President Obama himself acknowledged at Notre Dame, democracy depends for its health on people of conviction fighting hard in the public square for what they believe – peacefully, legally but vigorously and without apologies.

Unfortunately, the President also added the curious remark that “. . . the ultimate irony of faith is that it necessarily admits doubt . . . This doubt should not push us away from our faith. But it should humble us.” In a sense, of course, this is true: On this side of eternity, doubt is part of the human predicament. But doubt is the absence of something; it is not a positive value. Insofar as it inoculates believers from acting on the demands of faith, doubt is a fatal weakness.

The habit of doubt fits much too comfortably with a kind of “baptized unbelief;” a Christianity that is little more than a vague tribal loyalty and a convenient spiritual vocabulary. Too often in recent American experience, pluralism and doubt have become alibis for Catholic moral and political lethargy. Perhaps Europe is different. But I would suggest that our current historical moment -- which both European and American Catholics share -- is very far from the social circumstances facing the early Christian legislators mentioned by the Cardinal. They had faith, and they also had the zeal – tempered by patience and intelligence – to incarnate the moral content of their faith explicitly in culture. In other words, they were building a civilization shaped by Christian belief. Something very different is happening now.

Cardinal Cottier’s essay gives witness to his own generous spirit. I was struck in particular by his praise for President Obama’s “humble realism.” I hope he’s right. American Catholics want him to be right. Humility and realism are the soil where a commonsense, modest, human-scaled and moral politics can grow. Whether President Obama can provide this kind of leadership remains to be seen. We have a duty to pray for him -- so that he can, and does.

http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/new.php?n=15876

Lefebvrist Priest praises Opus Dei

The website of the German District of the SSPX has accused the Tagespost of censorship and provides evidence. [Kreuznet.de] http://www.kreuz.net/article.9951.html

Finally, an opponent who can think logically - but "Die Tagespost" has censured him.The website of the German District of the SSPX recently reported this in a recently published article.

The question is Rev. Martin Rhonheimer, a Swiss Opus Dei priest and professor at the roman Opus Dei Univerrsity Santa Croce. On the 27th of September, Rev. Rhonheimer published an opinion piece in the German paper, "Tagespost", which later was posted by the neo-conservative Linz based 'kath.net'.

According to the testimony of the Pius website, Rev. Rhonheimer demonstrated, "unsual clarity", that the Church has changed its doctrine on religious freedom in the Second Vatican Council:

"Himself a partisan of the new teaching, is still honorable enough, to repudiate the quest for harmony beteween the traditional teaching and the documents on Religious Freedom of the Second Vatican Council" - maintains the website.

Rev. Rhonheimer concedes that SSPX Fr. Mathias Gaudron is correct in a letter to the editor, likewise, against the falsity of this concord:

"That was for the Tagespost too much honor for an SSPX priest, for the corresponding section can only be read on 'kath.net'" commented the website and cited the "publicly censured" portion:"

Father Mattias Gaudron has in fact, dialogue participant of the german Society of Pius X in a letter to the editor (compare, "Die Tagespost" from June, 6 2009) brought the subject matter to the point. While, for instance, according to H. Klueting ('Tagespost' from May 5, 2009 page 18) the teaching of the Second Vatican Council on 'Freedom from coercion" is reduced and falsely accorded an unbroken continuity, Father Gaudron put his finger on the decisive point:

The disagreement does not come from the question of repudiation of coercion - here is complete agreement -, rather, 'if and how far one may limit the exercise of false beliefs and their publication', said Father Gaudron. It constintutes then in fact a break in continuity, or in the word of Benedict XVI.: Discontinuity.

"The website maintains, that this opinion "felicitously" distinguished from the editorial letter by Professor Nikolaus Lobkowicz, "Peter Gaudron and the whole Society of Pius X on the 9th of June proposes, not between the right to error and the limits of the rights of the State, to hold error, could not distinguish and with that only demonstrate their own ignorance of the subject."

Father Peter's answer on 'Tagespost' was not published:"The 'Tagespost' appears to be intent on following the course of the German Bishop's Conference, that there can be no dialogue with the Society of Pius X and that they should be refused where possibile from expressing their opinions."Rev Rhonheimer cites the Website: "any way you twist and turn, one can't get round therefore: It is precisely this teaching of the Second Vatican Council which has been condemned in the Encyclical 'Quanta Cura'."

The Website acknowledges, that Rev. Rhonheimer is also against the eminent Munich philosopher Robert Spaeman who in April in the 'Tagespost' had addressed attempts to reconcile the two, in the question of Religious Freedom to assert an unbroken continuity between the conciliar and post-conciliar teaching.

Really, Rev. Rhonheimer allows that he is not completely convinced of this position: "It is however contestable"

He turns himself on the earlier proposed attempts at reconciliation of the french Old Rite Benedictine, Father Basil Valuet, or the Jesuit, Fr. Bertrand de Margerie.Finally, he holds them for "hopless and factually amiss": "They employ confusion, while such pleasconceal the originality of the teaching of the Second Vatican Council. "

Fr. Rhonheimer also maintains, that Pope Benedict, who is informed of the Council's condemned alteration of the teaching and cites from his Christmas Speech to the Roman Curia of 22nd December 2005:

"The Second Vatican Council through the redefinition of the relationship between the Faith of the Church and certain fundamental elements of modern thought have newly considered or even corrected or even some of the past pronouncements."

Thus says the Pope himself, that the Church acccording the Second Vatican Council is different than before.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Curious New Beginnings

Capturing the last few late summer hours, I suffered an intense desire to write something tonight, to be curious and capture the thought before it fades into nothing and I forget once waking a fantastic dream and lands to which I can never return.