Category: Religion (page 2 of 2)

The Signs of Our Times

I like watching these old Bishop Sheen black-and-whites because they really give an idea of the imminent moral and political challenges our country faced back then. We can see some of the crossroads that the nation faced and, 65 years later, we can judge whether the country made the right choices or not. Prominent themes were communism, Russia, and the fear of nuclear war. Perhaps today we have to admit that communism eventually did win in America (and the West). And even now we have fools in Washington constantly poking the Bear, risking a war that would be the end of us.  It is too soon to say that we have cleared the threat of nuclear war.

It is hard to believe that back then this program was a top prime-time show. I don’t think we could see something like that now, which alone says something.

I wonder: what are the signs of our times today?  How would God judge us?

 

Why Still Be Catholic?

A question I see out there a lot on the Internet forums is why would anybody still be Catholic considering the absolutely horrible and embarrassing state of the Church these days.  It must be said, that without a doubt it is a heavy cross to be a good Catholic today: one can’t help but to have a sorrowful heart.  The mess is so bad — and most people have only seen the tip of the iceberg, believe me — that sometimes you wonder if maybe we’re in the End Times.  There is no doubt that the enemy is embedded deep within and high up.

But let’s consider first, what is the cause of this great humiliation we now suffer?

The root of the issue is the pride that is within the members of the Church, which, while latent for a couple of centuries, finally exploded out into the open in the post-War period.  This pride is manifest in a few ways.  Popes, bishops and theologians began to entertain their own speculations rather than submitting themselves to the traditions of the Church.  More and more, the lay Catholics didn’t want to submit to God’s law.  And worse, we threw out the way that God provided for us to worship Him through the Mass handed down to us.  Instead, a handful of bishops went into a room and came up with a “New Mass”:  a greatly desacralized and banal version said in the vernacular.  “We’ll come up with a Mass that WE like.  We’re not going to accept what God has given to us down through the centuries.”  It is just plain simple PRIDE.

Now we all have to know and accept our place.  If we’re not going to humble ourselves and receive what is given to us, rather than trying to make up our own way, then it’s just natural that God is going to have to humiliate us to purify us of our pride.  And the humiliation is going to get worse and deeper until we finally humble ourselves and remember that God is God and we are not.

And the same exact thing is happening to our nations.  Look at how the hordes of third-worlders are coming into our countries, going on welfare and showing no appreciation, taking our women for their own, committing crimes with impunity — and we seem powerless to stop it.  It is a great humiliation.  And it’s for the same reason:  we got prideful.  We forgot God.  We thought we could do it all alone.  And now He’s going to humiliate us until we come to our senses and return to reality and re-learn our place.

So to the question of why I am still a Catholic despite the circumstances, I can provide a short answer:

If Our Lord was willing to suffer the greatest humiliation — of the scourging, being spat on, being mocked and crucified — all for me, and He didn’t walk away… then how can I?  For surely the servant isn’t greater than the Master?

We’re on Our Own Out Here

“The floor of hell is paved with the skulls of bishops.”  So said St. Athanasius in the fourth century.

If he could only see us now.

Consider the following statement released by the US Conference of Catholic Bishops in response to the execution of Domineque Ray:

The execution of Domineque Ray deeply troubles us. The death penalty itself is an affront to human dignity, and the Church has long called for its abolition in the United States and around the world. Mr. Ray bore the further indignity of being refused spiritual care in his last moments of life, in violation of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and Alabama law. This unjust treatment is disturbing to people of all faiths, whether Muslim, Christian, Jewish, or otherwise. People deserve to be accompanied in death by someone who shares their faith. It is especially important that we respect this right for religious minorities. As Pope Francis said during his recent trip to the United Arab Emirates, ‘What we are called to do as believers is to commit ourselves to the equal dignity of all.’ Let us make this commitment today.

How is it possible to fit so much effeminacy and heresy into such a short passage?  Try as we might, only a US bishop can excel at such an achievement.

Before we correct this obnoxious drivel, it must be said that one of the co-authors of this statement is Archbishop Joseph Kurtz of Louisville, KY, who was quick to put out a statement criticizing the Covington Catholic high school kids for smirking in the direction of a “native elder”, calling it a “shameful act of disrespect”.

The first problem with the statement is that it brings undue sympathy to the executed.  Nowhere is there a consideration for the actual victims of his crimes:  Tiffany Harville was raped and murdered by having a knife jabbed into her brain and her throat slit.  Two other boys, Reinhard and Ernest Mabins, were also killed by Ray a year earlier.  To talk about the “indignity” that Ray supposedly suffered by not having an iman at his side while not even mentioning the victims is just pathetic.

Second, can you imagine a Catholic bishop talking about some “right” to have a minister of a false religion at one’s death bed?  Only a priest can bring a penitent soul back to God at death.  There used to be bishops who would lose their heads for steadfastly upholding the one, true faith.

And finally, we have to address this completely false argument — now so often repeated — that the Catholic Church is “against” the death penalty.  There may be some people in the Catholic episcopacy today who don’t accept the death penalty, but that’s not God’s law, as espoused by the tradition of the Church.

I copy the following quotes that were put together by Ann Barnhardt for your consideration, and judge for yourselves who to believe.

St. Augustine
The same divine authority that forbids the killing of a human being establishes certain exceptions, as when God authorizes killing by a general law or when He gives an explicit commission to an individual for a limited time.

The agent who executes the killing does not commit homicide; he is an instrument as is the sword with which he cuts. Therefore, it is in no way contrary to the commandment, ‘Thou shalt not kill’ to wage war at God’s bidding, or for the representatives of public authority to put criminals to death, according to the law, that is, the will of the most just reason.

St. Thomas Aquinas
Every part is directed to the whole, as imperfect to perfect, wherefore every part exists naturally for the sake of the whole. For this reason we see that if the health of the whole human body demands the excision of a member, because it became putrid or infectious to the other members, it would be both praiseworthy and healthful to have it cut away. Now every individual person is related to the entire society as a part to the whole. Therefore if a man be dangerous and infectious to the community, on account of some sin, it is praiseworthy and healthful that he be killed in order to safeguard the common good, since “a little leaven corrupteth the whole lump” (1 Cor. 5:6).

The fact that the evil ones, as long as they live, can be corrected from their errors does not prohibit that they may be justly executed, for the danger which threatens from their way of life is greater and more certain than the good which may be expected from their improvement.

They also have at that critical point of death the opportunity to be converted to God through repentance. And if they are so obstinate that even at the point of death their heart does not draw back from malice, it is possible to make a quite probable judgment that they would never come away from evil.

…a secondary measure of the love of God may be said to appear, for capital punishment provides the murderer with incentive to repentance which the ordinary man does not have, that is a definite date on which he is to meet his God. …the law grants to the condemned an opportunity which he did not grant to his victim, the opportunity to prepare to meet his God. Even divine justice here may be said to be tempered with mercy.

St. Alphonsus Liguori
It is lawful to put a man to death by public authority: it is even a duty of princes and of judges to condemn to death criminals who deserve it; and it is the duty of the officers of justice to execute the sentence; God Himself wishes malefactors to be punished.

Thomas Aquinas laid the groundwork for our modern Western ethics and theology.  He is one of the true greats of Christendom.  Do these bishops and popes really put themselves above St. Thomas and St. Alphonsus?  Who do they think they are?

Folks, no bishop or pope is going to save us, that seems for sure.  We are on our own out here to restore our traditions and take back our religion.  God will send us good shepherds in due time.

 

Happy Candlemas!

Forty days have passed since Christmas Day, and that means it is the last day of Christmastide.  Which means that there’s no better way to celebrate than listening to Christmas carols for one last time until next year.

In modern times it has become common to criticize “triumphalism”.  (Wikipedia definition:  Triumphalism is the attitude or belief that a particular doctrine, religion, culture, or social system is superior to and should triumph over all others.)  Yeah, well… heck with that. Call me a triumphalist.  I think we should scream from the rooftops the superiority of Christian culture, and frequently exhibit its past greatness, and make it present again today.  What is there to be ashamed of?

It’s been said — correctly — that the pipe organ is the second-greatest musical instrument, second only to the human voice.  The pipe organ is another one of Europe’s great artistic achievements, and when employed with vigor, lifts our souls with a sense of joy and victory that is truly proper for the Christian.  When your feet feel the vibrations in the floor, you know you’re dealing with serious business.

So enjoy some nice pipe organ to close out the season:

Westminster Abbey’s stunning Gothic architecture reminds us of the importance of aesthetics in worship and culture. The first church was built here in the 7th century, and this particular building dates back to the 13th century. This was back when our ancestors believed that building grand, beautiful churches took precedence over building multi-million dollar sports stadiums. The church was originally a Catholic church — as all were back in that time — and became an Anglican church after King Henry VIII completely lost his mind and stole it. Perhaps some day it will be restored for its proper use.

We’ve Been Warned

It’s not that there are no good bishops.  It’s just that the few that remain have been pushed off to the sidelines of the periphery, hardly to be heard from.  The fact that this is the case shows just how deeply Satan has infiltrated the modern world and laid down roots:  in our governments, our corporations, our churches and, sadly, even in the hearts of so many men.

But let no man later say “we didn’t see it coming”, when it is now so out in the open: we are truly facing an existential threat.

What we can now say with confidence is that “freedom of religion” — even for false religions — is nothing more than a freemasonic Trojan horse, designed to under-cut the very moral and cultural foundations of the Western world, to weaken our nations from within so that they can’t withstand the onslaught. This is a centuries-long attack from the emissaries of the devil himself.

To confront this attack, we may have to leave behind some of our more modern ideologies. We can’t bring a knife to a gunfight and have any hope of winning. And, in this case, winning is a matter of life and death for our nations.

Stille Nacht

Two-hundred years ago today — December 24, 1818 — was written this now ubiquitous Christmas carol by an Austrian priest named Josef Mohr, with Franz Xaver Gruber composing the music.  Today it is often sung at Midnight Mass as a lullaby of sorts to Our Lord.

Continuing the idea of listening to carols in their native tongue, below is the 1977 performance by the Vienna Boys’ Choir.  The Vienna Boys’ Choir is one of the oldest still remaining, dating back to about the 15th century or perhaps before.  Boys’ choirs developed in the Middle Ages when treble voices were needed due to the acoustic designs of churches, and mixed choirs (i.e., with women) were still forbidden.  These days, with the prohibition of mixed choirs having been relaxed, they are less common.

A few loops of that and it is easy to find a meditation.  At this Christmas time, as people go about their business of celebrating without even giving Our Lord His due, I am reminded of something revealed to St. Margaret Mary Alacoque, a French nun and mystic of the 17th century, when Our Lord established the Sacred Heart Devotion, beginning just two days after Christmas 1673.

He told this humble nun:

Behold the Heart that has so loved men that it has spared nothing, even to exhausting and consuming Itself, in order to testify to Its love; and in return, I receive from the greater part only ingratitude, by their irreverence and sacrilege, and by the coldness and contempt they have for Me in this Sacrament of Love. But what I feel most keenly is that it is hearts which are consecrated to Me that treat Me thus.

And:

I feel this more than all that I suffered during My Passion. If only they would make Me some return for My Love, I should think but little of all I have done for them and would wish, were it possible, to suffer still more. But the sole return they make for all My eagerness to do them good is to reject Me and treat Me with coldness.

Truly… it is hard to read.  But upon taking some moments to reflect on these words, I think we must resign ourselves to acknowledge… it’s true.  And we’re moved to ask, “What else more could He have done for us, so that we would love Him?”

At no other time of the year must this indifference be so painful to Our Lord than during the frenzy and fuss of the Christmas season.  We, as a people, have lost sight of the fact that He came — not to be a great king here on earth, and even less so that we can have an annual month of celebration — but rather, that He was born with the sole purpose of dying, so that He can be king of our hearts, and that we may live in His kingdom forever.

Meditating on these thoughts while listening to the carol above — even for just fifteen minutes — can truly nourish the soul.

So let’s take this great feast of Christmas for what it truly is, and re-double our efforts in the coming year to grow closer to our entire reason for being.

Merry Christmas!

 

A Marian Hymn for Advent

During the Christmas season it is common for us to become so busy with preparations and such that we lose focus on the reason for it all.  So, we should make time for meditation to keep us grounded in the true meaning of Christmas, and what we are celebrating.  It’s not going to happen automatically; we must set aside the time and make the effort.

To that end, I’ve found this Marian hymn to be helpful, and is probably my favorite Advent hymn.  It was written in 16th century Germany and is still frequently sung at Mass today.  When I was a child I never thought much of it; it seemed a little boring to be frank.  But I guess age has a way of changing our tastes, and now when I hear the hymn it brings back memories of those years hearing the handful of choir members singing it at Sunday night Mass.

I enjoy listening to hymns in their native tongue, and so here is the Vienna Boys Choir (1977) singing it in the church of Maria am Gestade  in Vienna.  Maria am Gestade is an old church — completed in the early 15th century — and although it survived the wars it does show itself to look a bit tired, dusty and with the shine worn off; yet, still perfectly serviceable… if only people would come and bring their joys and sorrows to the altar, where Our Lord so desires to pour out His inexhaustible consolation.

A few loops of that and you have yourself a nice meditation there.

Or, if you prefer the English translation… there is a nice performance by Frederica von Stade, or even a solo a capella version.

Aren’t you glad somebody wrote that song for you so many centuries ago?

 

Advent: A Time for Penance

Sometime after the 1950s things began to go off the rails in regards to Christmas in America.  But since we’re all about restoring our traditions around here, let’s get things back on track.

First, a primer of where we are.  From what I see, the merchants of the country have managed to commercialize the holiday and have pushed the season of Christmas — which they refer to as “the holidays” — from just after Thanksgiving to December 25.  For all intents and purposes, they have established this month-long period as an extended shopping spree under the guise of a festive “season”.  Therefore, the Christmas decorations and “holiday music” on the radios, etc. go up immediately after Thanksgiving.  And they all come down on December 26.

I recall a particular radio station in the area that began 24-hour “holiday” music very early in December or late November.  And I remember when I was driving home after midnight on Christmas night, they had switched back to their ordinary pop music format.  I was furious because I couldn’t help but feel that they “used” the people’s holiday and then, like a switch, moved on.  You see this also in the malls and stores, where immediately after Christmas the decorations come down.

Why, it’s almost like the merchants of the country aren’t even Christian… but love to abuse the Christian’s holy day to extract money from their bank accounts.

This is all completely backwards; and let us explore why that is.

The Church’s liturgical calendar year begins with Advent, which typically starts about 3-4 weeks before Christmas.  (Or, more precisely, Advent begins on the Sunday closest to November 30.)  What is Advent?  To understand that we have to remember what we are celebrating at Christmas:  the coming of our Lord into this world.  As such, Advent is the period of preparation before the coming of our Lord.  It mimics the darkness that the world was in before our Lord came.  In that sense, it is a solemn and penitential season, commonly called a “mini-Lent”.  During this time, Christmas lights and trees and carols and parties and festivities are quite inappropriate.*

This is also reflected in the readings at the Mass.  On the First Sunday of Advent we hear about the end of the world and the Second Coming.  Why?  Because as we prepare to commemorate the First Coming of our Lord at Christmas, it is an appropriate time to prepare ourselves for the judgment at the Second Coming (or, more likely, to prepare for our personal judgment at our death).  The readings at the Second and Third Sundays of Advent recall the penitential life of St. John the Baptist who lived as “a voice crying out in the wilderness, ‘Prepare the way for the Lord.'”  And finally, the Fourth Sunday of Advent brings us right up to the Incarnation nine months before Christmas and gives us that sense of anticipation.

So what’s the point?

The world says that you celebrate Christmas beginning at Thanksgiving, and you do it for a month.  On the other hand, the tradition is that we spend this month reflecting on the darkness of the world before the coming of Christ.  The short, dark days of the season accentuate that reflection.  So there must be a time of penance before the celebration of Christmas.  Can one feast without first fasting?  Can one harvest without first planting?  Can you have Easter Sunday before Good Friday?  See how backwards and materialistic the world is?

Don’t let them take Advent from you!  It is a spiritually powerful time of the year.

Now that we know what Advent is, what can we say about Christmas?  Does it end at the stroke of midnight on December 26, as our new culture-setting overlords tell us?  Nope, they’re wrong again.  Christmas is not just a day but a season, the length of which depends on how you see it.

For most major feasts, the Church establishes an octave for celebration.  An octave is simply eight days.  So the Octave of Christmas runs from December 25 through January 1, and the Church book-ends this octave with two holy days of obligation.  This eight-day period is the Christmas feast proper.  For many, Christmas will run for twelve days, to the Feast of the Epiphany (January 6).  For others, the season extends to the Feast of the Baptism of Our Lord (January 13), and this is pretty much a hard limit for when Christmas decorations are expected to come down and Christmas hymns are no longer sung.  In the older tradition (before the changes in the 1960s), the season of Christmastide lasts for 40 days, which takes us to the Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Presentation of the Lord on February 2, which is more simply known as Candlemas.

So, that’s the skinny on that.

Perhaps at another time we can contemplate how they’ve managed to also wreck Christmas by secularizing its carols and symbols to the point that our Lord is practically an afterthought.

(* Since we have to live in the world, a common compromise is to begin putting up decorations sometime in the first and second weeks of Christmas, and keep Christmas carols for just before December 25.  I put my lights up on the Feast of St. Nicholas, December 6, and leave them up until Epiphany.)

 

A Little Fact About Alcohol

One interesting thing about alcohol is that it is soluble in water.  So, for example, if one part methanol (fuel) is mixed with two parts water, the methanol is dissolved enough to the point that it can’t ignite.  To extinguish a methanol fire, you can dilute it with about nine parts water for one part methanol.

The Catholic Faith is like alcohol in this regard.  If you water it down… and water down the teaching… and water down the rituals and liturgies, eventually it loses its flammability and become inert in the culture.

And that’s where we are today.  People don’t know and understand their faith anymore.  It has become “watered-down” with sappy, humanistic ideas, and because of that, Christianity today no longer moves the nations to pursue a higher plane of existence for its people.  This milquetoast version is, in the aggregate, incapable of inflaming souls and driving them to higher virtue.

Don’t believe me?  Just look at art today.  Compare it to 500 years ago.  Or look at the new church buildings with their banal, open, community-focused ugly architecture and compare it to churches made even as little as a century ago, where art, beauty, regalness, strength and acoustics were all prominent factors in design.

This is why today, perhaps more than ever, we have to make the time to learn our Faith and put it in to practice.  It’s no longer good enough to simply live in the culture and absorb it passively.  No, we have to transform the culture.

 

November: Month for the Faithful Departed

The Church sets aside the entire month of November for the special cause of making prayers and sacrifices for the Holy Souls in Purgatory who, while being perfected, suffer a great longing to be with God.

The Fourth Commandment (to honor one’s father and mother) enjoins on us the obligation to pray for those in our family who have gone before us, including our ancestors who passed down the Holy Faith.

To that end, the Church has established the following indulgences for the month of November:

  1. A plenary indulgence, applicable only to the Holy Souls in Purgatory, is available on each of the first eight days of November and is granted to the faithful who visit a cemetery and pray for the faithful departed, under the normal conditions of a plenary indulgence.  On the other days of the month the indulgence is a partial one.
  2. A plenary indulgence is granted to the faithful who visit a church on November 2 and pray the Pater Noster and Credo.
  3. A partial indulgence is available on every other day of the month for those who recite the Requiem prayer:  “Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them.  May they rest in peace.  Amen.”

“The good God will render us back the good we do for the poor souls a hundred fold.” — St. John Vianney

“It is therefore a holy and wholesome thought to pray for the dead, that they may be loosed from sin.” — 2 Machabees 12:46

 

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