Sunday, 10 January

23:55

How Do You Know? [That The Bones You Have Crushed May Thrill]



Understandably, there has been much discussion of the first in the papal fireside chat video series that we are promised frequently during the Year of Mercy. Much like the spiritual hand-grenade thrown into the Catholic world on the Feast of the Holy Family (Our Lord Jesus Christ begging forgiveness for his 'escapade'), the inter-faith dialogue I-believe-in-love-so-let's-torch-2000-years-of-Catholic-teaching video is jaw-droppingly astonishing and really quite painful. Generally, with the video released in such close proximity to the Epiphany, at which we commemorate the showing forth of the Lord Jesus Christ to the Gentiles, we can surely sum it up as being another 'teaching opportunity' sadly missed, because if we really needed someone to tell us 'all you need is love', we could have just listened to the Beatles.

One could mention the clear indifferentism shown in the video, on the Feast of the Epiphany, as others have, the lack of the Crucifix as a clear Icon of Christianity and much else. However, what really concerns me - among so much that I find quite eerie in this video - is this statement...


It's not followed by: '...Jesus Christ is the Way, the Truth and the Life'.

It's followed by:  '...we are all children of God'.

I just have one question:

How do you know?

How does His Holiness, as a religious leader, lay claim to the certainty that 'we are all children of God'? How does he, as the Successor of St Peter, know with certainty, that God exists at all? Because, you know, if we are saying that God definitely exists, that is dealing in an Absolute.

What makes his claim to knowledge of God's fatherhood of humanity more important than that of an atheist? Basically, why should anyone believe him? Is it because the Lord Jesus said, 'Thou art Peter...' ? Because if His Holiness believes that's where his Authority comes from, we can be sure that there is much more than his statement above of which he can be 'certain'.

For instance, if the Church and the World should listen to the Pope because he is the Vicar of Christ on Earth, the Successor of St Peter, with all the authority invested him by the only Begotten Son of God, then that first principle of certainty ('I am certainly, for example, the Pope') means he can say, unapologetically, that many other certainties also exist.

These include 'certainties' like...

  • Jesus is the Son of God.
  • Jesus is the Way, the Truth and the Life and nobody comes to the Father except through Him.
  • Many people believe in love, but Jesus is Love Incarnate.
  • The road to Heaven is narrow and few people find it.
  • Hell exists, just as Jesus taught, and it is eternal.
  • Those who divorce and remarry commit adultery.
  • Baptism is necessary for Salvation.
  • Unless you eat the Flesh of the Son of God and drink His Blood, you have no life in you.
  • And much, much more...

Either Pope Francis is who and what he is by virtue of that Authority which Jesus Christ, the only Begotten Son of God has given to him, or he is of no more importance or no more worth listening to than Richard Dawkins. His teaching credibility relies on the fact that he comes to us claiming authority given to him by the Lord Jesus Christ to 'teach all nations, baptising them in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit'. The incredibly limited framework within which the Holy Father says we can have 'certainty' has clear implications for him and his hearers. If he is certain that his unique authority to speak on matters of faith and morals comes from Jesus Christ, then other certainties flow from that - including the certainty that all that Jesus taught about Salvation is true. If he is uncertain about that, how can he (or we) even be certain of his message that 'we are all children of God'.

There is room for doubt, after all, because Christ taught the Pharisees who would not accept Him...


23:28

Tridentine Community News - 1st TLM/new high altar at Our Lady Queen of Martyrs; Local Tridentine contact info; Latin Liturgy Assoc.; Florida church tour; TLM Mass times [Musings of a Pertinacious Papist]


"I will go in unto the Altar of God
To God, Who giveth joy to my youth"

Tridentine Community News by Alex Begin (January 10, 2016):
January 10, 2016 – The Holy Family

First Tridentine Mass Celebrated on New High Altar at Our Lady Queen of Martyrs A welcome and uncommon sight has debuted at Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Church in Beverly Hills, Michigan: a newly constructed High Altar. Taking the place of the former simple tabernacle stand, the new High Altar is part of a remodeling of the church’s sanctuary. This past Wednesday, January 6, the new altar was inaugurated with its first Holy Mass in the Extraordinary Form, celebrated by Fr. Clint McDonell. Members of the Oakland County Latin Mass Association and the St. Benedict Tridentine Community provided key support as ushers, singers, and altar servers.


Next up: Pastor Fr. Scott Thibodeau hopes to install a new Communion Rail, provided that funds can be raised. Each of the three sections of the rail will cost at least $7,000.

Back in Business #1: St. Benedict Phone Number

Among the many things that the late Sharon Moody did for the St. Benedict Tridentine Community was providing her home phone line as the published phone number of the group. Her children have kindly permitted the phone number to be transferred to a cell phone which is now in the possession of Charlotte Parent, the new Secretary/Treasurer. During the transition, the phone number was temporarily out of service, but you may once again call (519) 734-1335 with any questions or issues pertaining to the Windsor Latin Mass. Since the number is now on a cell phone, you may also text message the number. You may also contact St. Benedict via e-mail: Back in Business #2: Latin Liturgy Association

After several years of dormancy, the Latin Liturgy Association is coming back to life under new President Regina Morris of St. Louis, Missouri. Newsletters are once again being published, and the web site listing of Latin Masses in the Ordinary Form has been updated. The most recent newsletter makes mention of Regina’s recent visit to the Oakland County Latin Mass Association and the St. Benedict Tridentine Community to substitute for Wassim Sarweh.

For membership information and the directory, please visit www.latinliturgy.com. Let’s hope that another National Convention like the one we hosted here in Detroit and Windsor in 2010 is included in their plans for the future.

Florida Church Tour

Prayer Pilgrimages is venturing further afield than usual with a tour of churches in Florida, Tuesday – Saturday, January 26-30. Tridentine Masses will be offered during the tour; specific sites have not yet been announced. Cities and churches to be visited include:

St. Augustine: Cathedral Basilica; Jacksonville: Immaculate Conception Basilica; Daytona Beach: St. Paul Basilica; Key West: St. Mary Star of the Sea Basilica; Miami: St. Mary’s Cathedral, Gesu Church [pictured], Epiphany Church, Museum Chapel of Our Lady; Orlando: Mary Queen of the Universe Basilica; Naples: Ave Maria University


Viewers of Extraordinary Faith may recognize the sites in Miami from the episodes filmed there.

Side trips to Epcot and to the Everglades are included. Pilgrims will fly to Florida, then be transported by van. For information or to register, visit www.prayerpilgrimages.com or call Michael Semaan at (248) 250-6005.

Tridentine Masses This Coming Week
  • Mon. 01/11 7:00 PM: Low Mass at St. Josaphat (St. Hyginus, Pope & Martyr)
  • Tue. 01/12 7:00 PM: Low Mass at Holy Name of Mary (Feria [Mass of the First Sunday After Epiphany])
[Comments? Please e-mail tridnews@detroitlatinmass.org. Previous columns are available at http://www.detroitlatinmass.org. This edition of Tridentine Community News, with minor editions, is from the St. Albertus (Detroit), Academy of the Sacred Heart (Bloomfield Hills), and St. Alphonsus and Holy Name of Mary Churches (Windsor) bulletin inserts for January 10, 2016. Hat tip to Alex Begin, author of the column.]

20:33

Tridentine Masses coming this week to metro Detroit and east Michigan [Musings of a Pertinacious Papist]



Tridentine Masses This Coming Week

20:17

Sunday Meditation: Is the Mass "Very Long and Tiresome" for You? [LES FEMMES - THE TRUTH]

I found this quote from Chesterton today on a link from a blog I often visit. It set me to thinking about my own Mass experiences.

My husband and I go almost every day. I doubt if we miss Mass more than a dozen weekdays every year. I don't say that to boast; it is more a necessity to preserve me from being one more casualty of Satan's wiles. Daily Communion is as necessary to me as eating. I once read that perhaps those born into the Catholic church are given that grace because they are the ones most likely to be lost without the graces that come through Holy Mother Church. Knowing the potential for evil in myself, I believe it.


I am truly blessed because I can't say I ever find Mass "very long and tiresome" either on Sunday or during the week. I hope that shows that I love God. And I know do...but very badly I'm afraid. When I pray the Act of Love in the morning I can't bring myself to say, "I love you with my whole heart, mind, soul, and strength" because I feel like I'm lying. And so instead, I pray, "Please help me to love you with my whole heart, mind, soul, and strength." And I trust He will.

I repent that I love my Lord and God so little. I can't count the number of Masses where I'm thinking about what I'm going to make for breakfast or whether we'll go out to a local cafe after Mass or what's on the daily agenda or why so and so over in the second pew stands through most of the Eucharistic prayer instead of kneeling, etc. ad nauseum. I say "ad nauseum" but I hope I don't nauseate my Savior who is there on the altar inviting me to join in the unbloody sacrifice of Calvary making reparation for the sins, including my own, that nailed Him to the cross. My body is here, Lord. Please make my intellect and will present to you as well.

And yet, there I am after Communion with Christ within me closer than any friend or even my "one flesh" spouse can ever be, and what am I doing? Watching people going to Communion: reflecting on the reverence of the men who kneel to receive, noting the immodest clothing, lamenting all the people who receive in the hand. I'm especially distracted by the children: the little boy with no shoes who makes me smile, the babes in arms sleeping on a parent's shoulder, the little girl in her Sunday finery playing with the lace on her dress.

How can I pay attention to all this while the Lord of universe resides within me waiting patiently for me to be attentive to Him, like Mary Magdalene who chose the better part. And yet I often choose the worldly part and let the King sit by Himself. My consolation is to know how much God loves me and how patient He is with my shortcomings like I am with my two-year-old grandchildren. Some distractions are no doubt invitations to pray for those who come to mind and I generally do, but many distractions are my own fault easily eliminated by just closing my eyes. And what a blessing that would be for my own soul and for those for whom I could be praying.

And so I have a new resolution for 2016. To come back to the pew after Communion and close my eyes until the priest says, "Let us pray." What an opportunity to imitate Francisco and Jacinta of Fatima who longed to receive the "hidden Jesus," but hadn't made First Communion. How much they longed to console Him for the sins of men and to save poor sinners. How many sinners go to hell, the Blessed Mother told them, because they have no one to pray for them. What better time to offer reparation for the conversion of poor sinners than after Communion when the hidden Jesus resides right below my own heart for a precious few minutes.

And so I will try to do better and hope to make good use of the new opportunity to practice every day. Please Lord, help me to do this tiny thing "for love of You, for the conversion of sinners, and in atonement for sins against the Immaculate Heart of Mary." My Jesus, I love You. Make me love You more and more.

20:03

Answer to prayer [Musings of a Pertinacious Papist]

Last October I solicited prayer for a fellow parishioner named Mike who had undergone a heart transplant operation in July of last year (see "Prayer requests," Musings, October 1, 2015). At the time, Mike was battling infection from a respiratory virus that pushed his condition back to the critical brink where some worried we might lose him.

Thanks to your prayers, and those of many others, I am happy to announce that Mike has sufficiently recovered to return home this week and has been reunited with his long-suffering wife. Upwards of half-a-year is a long time to spend on your back in a hospital. Mike's muscles were so atrophied that it took months just for him to be able to hold a book in his hands, much less get out of bed and stand.

Please stop to offer a word of thanksgiving to God for answered prayer. I'm sure he and his wife couldn't be happier than to be reunited at home again. And, thank you, again, for your intercessions.

18:32

The problem of political priests [Semiduplex]

Gabriel Sanchez has a very interesting—provocative, even—post at Opus Publicum about celebrity priests. He discusses primarily the example of Fr. Robert Sirico, the president of the Acton Institute and a free-market cheerleader, but he also mentions Bishop Robert Barron. You ought to read the whole thing at Opus Publicum. For our part, we think Sanchez’s point deserves some serious reflection by the laity.


18:07

A Returning Remark for Sunday [Opus Publicum]

Upon returning to his childhood faith, Fr. Robert Sirico could have opted for a quiet life of peace and piety with nary a soul knowing. Instead he opted to found the Acton Institute, an international think tank committed to promoting liberal economic ideology largely at odds with the magisterial teachings of the Catholic Church. Rather than commit himself solely to a life of humble service in the Church he renounced in his youth, Sirico spends his time courting high-level donors for Acton while using the platform the institute gives him to water-down Catholic social teaching and “correct” the Pope for his “economic errors.” As a liturgical conservative, Sirico has managed to draw an impressive following to his parish in Grand Rapids, believing—rightly—that most people are willing to dial-down demands for strict doctrinal orthodoxy in exchange for a pretty Mass and a semblance of communal stability. (It’s hard to argue with this compromise given the number of priests in the diocese who openly reject core tenets of the Catholic Faith.) Some folks in these parts murmur against those who choose, out of conviction, to bypass Sirico’s parish in favor of the chapel established by the Society of St. Pius X on the outskirts of town, never once stopping to consider that consistency and coherency are principles some people can’t let go of. As numerous individuals have expressed to me over the years, it’s not that Sirico espouses bald heresy from the pulpit or lacks good pastoral sense; it’s that they cannot bring themselves to support a parish with priests and laity who believe it is their right to dissent from the Catholic Church when it does not comport with economic—and sometimes social and religious—liberalism.

This is not the time or the place to go into the Acton Institute’s ideological orientation or the specific statements of Fr. Sirico. I make mention of them mainly because I can find few reasons why it is meet and right for any priest of the Church to so flagrantly and unashamedly involve themselves in politicking and propaganda when the flock of Christ is so dreadfully under-served by the dwindling number of clergy left to care for it. Even “politically neutral” enterprises, such as Bishop Robert Barron’s “Word on Fire” ministry, raises certain problems insofar as it risks creating “celebrity clergy” who, intentionally or not, publicly fail to conform to the virtues of Christ. This development is particularly distressing at a time when there is a renewed thrust in the Church to uphold the discipline of priestly celibacy with the idea of the priest as an image of Christ being one of the primary arguments for it. Although not every Latin priest takes vows, there is still a great deal to be said for the ideals of poverty, chastity, and obedience, to say nothing of humility and self-effacement.

None of this is going to change anytime soon, of course, and really, a lot of the blame rests on the shoulders of bishops who fail to police their priests and make sure that their time is spent in the confessional rather than a FOX News studio. The laity, perhaps, share some of the blame as well. Long gone are the days of viewing priests for what they are, ministers of Christ’s Sacraments with an indelible mark upon their souls made by the Holy Spirit. They are now “part of the gang,” common-folk with no particular distinction except that they happen to be unmarried. In this era where the clergy have become “secularized” by the perception of the people, doesn’t it make sense that they might be tempted by “secular purists”? Or perhaps something more pernicious and complex has taken place in the Catholic Church over the past 50 years, and that helps explain the present situation better than hierarchical laxity and lay indifference. There will be a time and a place to discuss that in more detail soon enough.

They say that in France and several other parts of Europe that the only Catholicism set to survive the century is traditional Catholicism. I wonder: What sort will survive in the United States? America lacks the cultural fiber and communitarian ethos to give any form of traditional religiosity a fighting chance. There will always be pockets, but that’s all they will ever be. American Catholicism, no less than American Protestantism and Orthodoxy, is a bourgeois religion which lacks both an eschatological horizon and transcendent orientation. And unlike most of American Orthodoxy and pockets of traditional Protestantism, much of American Catholicism is ugly, if not grotesque. In no way do I believe that Catholicism in America will “die out”; it will just continue to capitulate until there is almost nothing authentically Catholic about it. Whether that means it’s no longer Catholicism will have to debated, though hopefully long after I have parted ways with this earth. I shudder to think that the most enduring form of Catholicism will be the “conservative” type, the one which takes its bearings from “classical” American liberalism and pro-capitalist sentiments rather than the Gospel.


Filed under: Church, Politics

16:49

The Horrid Traditionalist [RORATE CÆLI]

Joseph Shaw recently introduced the new book released by Angelico Press, "The Gentle Traditionalist". Is there a greater symbol of gentleness and kindness than the Holy Family, that we celebrate today?
This has unfortunately led us to be reminded of that old foe of all that is good and proper in Catholic Tradition, the Horrid Traditionalist. The Horrid Traditionalist is bitter, resentful, judgmental, duplicitous, and aggressive. As Saint Paul warns in his Second Epistle to Timothy about some men in the last days, the Horrid Traditionalist is "without affection," "without peace," "without kindness" -- they have "an appearance indeed of godliness, but denying the power thereof."

Remember that the Mass is Sacrifice, and that it must foster peace and joy, not resentment and rancor. It is because of the Horrid Traditionalist in our midst, in our congregations, chapels, parishes, families, that we must often hear and read disparaging words about all traditional or even conservative Catholic faithful by bishops, and even the Supreme Pontiff, who are not the greatest friends of the Traditional Mass. They bring no one to Christ with their behavior, not even themselves. They certainly do not help to spread the Good News of the Salvation of the Lord to the world at large -- who wants to hear good news from those who seem to embody only bad news? How many have been led away from Tradition when they were just getting to know it by being humiliated by the Horrid Traditionalist and his venomous mouth and spirit?

Do not let yourself fall into this trap. If you see a loved one with the first signs of the Horrid Traditionalist, take him to spiritual direction urgently (in these cases, regular confession is not enough, but true spiritual direction from a good and meek priest). Otherwise, it may be too late. "But thou, why judgest thou thy brother? or thou, why dost thou despise thy brother? For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ. For it is written: As I live, saith the Lord, every knee shall bow to me, and every tongue shall confess to God. Therefore every one of us shall render account to God for himself. Let us not therefore judge one another any more. But judge this rather, that you put not a stumblingblock or a scandal in your brother's way. ... For the kingdom of God is not meat and drink; but justice, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost. For he that in this serveth Christ, pleaseth God, and is approved of men. Therefore let us follow after the things that are of peace; and keep the things that are of edification one towards another." (Romans 14)

16:11

Sapphisches am Sonntag [Denzinger-Katholik]

Hör! Das Lied aus Pontifexfeder, einstmals
sang man jede einzelne Strophe; doch dann
tilgte Dom Lentini fix, wie er wollte,
sapphische Verse.
Okay, nach diesem Schaustück eigener Dichtkunst wird niemand auf die Idee kommen, hier einen zweiten Leo XIII. vor sich zu haben. Aber wie dem auch sei, interessant ist allemal, wie Ambrosio Lentini den Hymnus auf die Heilige Familie für die Liturgia Horarum beschnitt. In den Metten zu Beginn des heutigen Tages fehlen nun gleich folgende - ehemals einleitende - Verse:

Sacra iam splendent decorata lychnis
Templa, iam sertis redimitur ara,
Et pio fumant redolentque acerræ
Thuris honore.

Schon erstrahlen die Tempel von Lichtern
erleuchtet, schon ist umwunden der Altar mit Kränzen,
es dampfen und duften die Weihrauchkästchen
aus frommer Verehrung.

Welch' ein Bild der festgeschmückten Kirche, der heiligen Mysterienfeier! Ich glaube, man muss sich die Frage kaum noch stellen, warum diese Strophe nicht mehr so recht in die runderneuerte Liturgie passen will ...

Übersetzung: Adalbert Schulte

16:07

Good things from Francis [The Paraphasic]

At Aleteia they have some excerpts from the Pope's upcoming book-length interview with Andrea Tornielli.  This passage was sufficiently excellent that I wanted to re-post it.  I may read this book.

“Corruption is the sin which, rather than being recognized as such and rendering us humble, is elevated to a system; it becomes a mental habit, a way of living. We no longer feel the need for forgiveness and mercy, but we justify ourselves and our behaviors. 
Jesus says to his disciples: even if your brother offends you seven times a day, and seven times a day he returns to you to ask for forgiveness, forgive him. The repentant sinner, who sins again and again because of his weakness, will find forgiveness if he acknowledges his need for mercy. The corrupt man is the one who sins but does not repent, who sins and pretends to be Christian, and it is this double life that is scandalous. 
The corrupt man does not know humility, he does not consider himself in need of help, he leads a double life. We must not accept the state of corruption as if it were just another sin. Even though corruption is often identified with sin, in fact they are two distinct realities, albeit interconnected. Sin, especially if repeated, can lead to corruption, not quantitatively—in the sense that a certain number of sins makes a person corrupt—but rather qualitatively: habits are formed that limit one’s capacity for love and create a false sense of self-sufficiency. 
The corrupt man tires of asking for forgiveness and ends up believing that he doesn’t need to ask for it any more. We don’t become corrupt people overnight. It is a long, slippery slope that cannot be identified simply as a series of sins. One may be a great sinner and never fall into corruption if hearts feel their own weakness. That small opening allows the strength of God to enter. 
When a sinner recognizes himself as such, he admits in some way that what he was attached to, or clings to, is false. The corrupt man hides what he considers his true treasure, but which really makes him a slave and masks his vice with good manners, always managing to keep up appearances.”

15:50

Horton hears a homicide [Zippy Catholic]

In fact, body and soul are inseparable: in the person, in the willing agent and in the deliberate act, they stand or fall together. – Veritatis Splendour

The physicalism-relativism dichotomy in moral casuistry is a false one, a false dichotomy which arises from the post cartesian separation of reality into utterly distinct physical and subjective realms.

Kant allows that things in themselves do exist, but only as etherial noumena that we can’t know anything about.  (How he manages to include things he can’t know anything about in his philosophy is left to the ouroboros). Modern materialists allow that consciousness exists, but only as a ghostly and irrelevant epiphenomenon of the mindless bouncing around of wave-particles in accordance with the laws of physics. Their putative knowledge of this is illusory on its own terms.

Back here in the real world, a man’s behavior follows from his intentions. Different intentions imply different behaviors, and vice versa.  That is why things like contraception and usury are and shall be judged based on objective standards: the notion of ‘subjectifying’ morality by confining moral judgment to someone’s ‘heart being in the right place’ rests on false, question-begging metaphysics.

A man who intends to mow the lawn doesn’t run the mower over a concrete parking lot, or take off the blade before he starts his task. A man who intends to win the lottery doesn’t buy a ticket and then destroy the numbers on his ticket with a sharpie.

Likewise, a man who runs the mower over the grass intends to cut the grass (whatever further intention he may have); and the man who buys a lottery ticket and does not mutilate it intends to participate in the lottery, even if the notion of winning millions of dollars fills him, to his credit, with trepidation at the thought of the concomitant complications and responsibilities.

[28] But what think you? A certain man had two sons; and coming to the first, he said: Son, go work today in my vineyard. [29] And he answering, said: I will not. But afterwards, being moved with repentance, he went. [30] And coming to the other, he said in like manner. And he answering, said: I go, Sir; and he went not.

[31] Which of the two did the father’ s will? They say to him: The first. Jesus saith to them: Amen I say to you, that the publicans and the harlots shall go into the kingdom of God before you. [32] For John came to you in the way of justice, and you did not believe him. But the publicans and the harlots believed him: but you, seeing it, did not even afterwards repent, that you might believe him.

Matthew 21:28-32

It is sometimes objected that (for example) when one surgeon murders his patient while making it look like an accident, and a different surgeon actually does accidentally cut the aorta, that these are “the same physical act”. The idea is that in the rarified world of subjective intentions the acts may be different, but that physically they are identically the same.

As I’ve mentioned before, this begs the question by very carefully looking at the situation at only a certain fuzzy resolution, and then quickly looking away. Because even a strict physicalist would have to agree that different neurons are firing in different ways in the different brains of the different surgeons in the different cases.


15:46

Rationalization [Siris]

Schwitzgebel and Ellis have an interesting discussion of rationalization, in which they ask the question, "Would it be epistemically bad if moral and philosophical thinking were, to a substantial extent, highly biased post-hoc rationalization?" After giving three possible reasons for thinking that No is the correct answer, they give four reasons for thinking that Yes is the correct answer, claiming that the costs of rationalization outweigh the benefits. The four are:

(A) Rationalization leads to overconfidence.
(B) Rationalization impedes peer critique.
(C) Rationalization undermines self-critique.
(D) Rationalization disrupts the cooperative enterprise of dialogue.

None of these seem particularly strong. A major problem in general with taking rationalization to have a major effect on inquiry, individual or communal, is that we are almost never in a position to know whether an argument is a rationalization or not. Nothing about the argument works any differently; the only difference is the cause of its being put forward. It takes causal analysis, and, what is more, causal analysis of motives, to assess whether something is a rationalization. In most forms of inquiry, in most kinds of dialogue, in most kinds of peer interaction, we simply don't have enough information to know; the question of whether it's a rationalization or not will be invisible in those contexts. Why would one think that inquiry, dialogue, peer critique, are so fragile that subtle differences in motivations gum up the enterprise? And subtle they often are; we often have difficulty determining in our own case whether we are rationalizing or not. We still have to do the same kind of causal analysis on ourselves, and, while we have more information about ourselves than others, the experience of having difficulty sorting it is a common one.

It's unclear why they take rationalization to be a particularly significant cause of overconfidence, for instance. The argument is that "If one favors conclusion P and systematically pursues and evaluates evidence concerning P in a highly biased manner, it's likely (though not inevitable) that one will end up more confident in the truth of P than is epistemically warranted." But what's missing is a reason to think that rationalization is any more likely to be "highly biased" in this way than any other kind of reasoning, particularly given that we often have difficulty distinguishing rationalization from other kinds of reasoning. To be sure, the question is specifically about "highly biased post-hoc reasoning", but why would one be fretting about the post-hoc part if one already knew that it was highly biased? Why think rationalization is the problem when you are already postulating severe biases?

I've talked before about what I call convalidation of rationalization, in which what is originally a rationalization becomes, over time, our real reason for holding something. Rationalization is one source of real reasons. Schwitzgebel and Ellis seem not to countenance such a possibility, because (B), (C), and (D) seem to require that a rationalization is permanently a rationalization. Motives in reasoning, however, can change. What is more, they both seem to make significant assumptions. If one held a view that a major purpose of peer critique and dialogue is to understand possible reasons or to find public reasons or develop shared arguments (for instance), arguments and reasons that both groups can use regardless of how central they actually take them to be, would it really make any sense to say that rationalization impedes or disrupts this? Why assume that peer critique should always and everywhere examine the "real basis" for the argument? If I destroy someone's argument by showing that it is incoherent, and they just hunt around for a new argument, why does that even matter? I'll destroy that one, too, or, if I fail to do so, the discussion will at least have been upgraded to one in which we're not dealing with obviously incoherent arguments.

There are, of course, goals we might have in mind that would be interfered with by rationalization -- persuasion being the most obvious case. But there are good independent reasons going back to Plato for denying that rational dialogue and interaction should be primarily driven by persuasion. Other goals that would be messed with by rationalization seem all to be cooperative -- that is, we'd both already made a commitment that implicitly requires [rejecting] rationalization. They don't seem generalizable.

The strongest of the four reasons given is (C). But we're not always able to determine what our real reasons for believing are -- there are plenty of cases where the evidence will be ambiguous even to ourselves whether an argument is the real reason why we believe something. What do you do if you are not sure? It seems that you would just have to explore various arguments. Schwitzgebel and Ellis give sober assessment of evidence as a contrast to rationalization. But if you already believe something, how do you distinguish sober assessment of evidence that confirms your belief from rationalization? I see no reason to think we can do so consistently. The argument given seems to make the assumption that all rationalization is deliberate; but this is surely not so, and does not follow from their description of rationalization. Likewise, it seems to assume that we have extraordinary introspective clarity on these things; but in reality the only cases in which we can tell rationalization immediately is when we are deliberately lying.

It's also not clear how rationalization would itself impair self-critique. Surely one of the things self-critique is supposed to do, when it is possible, is uncover rationalization? The particular argument that Schwitzgebel and Ellis gives does not cover all self-critique, just an "important type"; but however important it is, there's no obvious reason why all reasoning, or even all philosophical reasoning and argument, needs to conform to this important type.

Rather amusingly, I'm always suspicious that arguments that rationalization is epistemically bad are really themselves rationalizations. The real reason most of us have a problem with rationalization is that there are lots of cases where it is morally bad -- I don't think it's true that most cases of rationalization are morally bad, but there are certainly some very morally bad situations that can arise through rationalization. And if it were true that "moral and philosophical thinking were, to a substantial extent, highly biased post-hoc rationalization" one would at least be reasonable to worry about the intellectual integrity and courage of people engaging in the moral and philosophical thinking, or to hope that there are things in place to compensate for the potential bad effects. But is it epistemically bad? Aren't we just trying to beef up our sense that rationalization is morally bad by finding ways it could be epistemically bad, too, in the way that people try to beef up their moral conclusions by saying that the bad thing is also unhealthy? There are likely some goals that are interfered with by some kinds of rationalization. But there are possible reasonable goals that can be interfered with by much more reputable kinds of reasoning than rationalization. And as I note above, it makes very little sense to suggest that our processes of inquiry, dialogue, and critique are so fragile that they can't handle or compensate for small, often undetectable, differences in motivations.

14:05

The First Sunday after Epiphany in Ordinary Time [Vox Cantoris]

Today is the First Sunday after Epiphany and until the Feast of the Holy Family was added to the traditional calendar in the 1920's it was known as this. The Gospel was then and is now, the Our Lord's presence in the Temple, doing His Father's will, for the "escapade" as a bad boy who had to apologise as the Bishop or Rome surmised on the Feast in the modernist calendar. The cycle of Gospels in the traditional lectionary dates from at least the sixth century, it was a very rare thing indeed for anyone to change it, so to change the name of the "day" and to honour The Holy Family, which was not "irregular" as Tom Rosica surmised, was not a major shift in liturgical praxis. 

In the modernist calendar, today is the Baptism of the Lord which falls on January 13 in the traditional calendar unless it falls on a Sunday. While this is a good thing, to have it on a Sunday, changing it to the First Sunday after Epiphany derogated chronologically the continuing manifestations, or showing, of Our Lord after His birth. We have the Epiphany, the Temple appearance to the Elders, the Baptism, the Wedding Feast at Cana, the curing of the Leper, the witness of the Centurion and so on. All beautiful elements of our liturgical cycle that help us to wonder in the glow of the season of Christmastide and Epiphanytide. Today, in the  modernist calendar, marks the end of the Christmas season which ends in the traditional with the Presentation in the Temple and Purification of Mary on Candlemas. 



One should note that prior to the Roman Missal of 1962, there was also an Octave of the Epiphany which I would argue should be restored in both Forms of the Roman Rite along with the Octave of Pentecost in the modernist rite.


One might wonder why I have called it the "modernist rite." Really, what else can one say about it? While I do not debate its validity, it truly was an invention of men who must have truly hated the faith for there can be no other explanation for why they tore it apart. It is worth noting that in the new Ordinariate (Anglican Roman Catholic) Missal, today is Baptism of the Lord but next Sunday is the Second Sunday after Epiphany and they follow After Trinity later in the year, an Anglican tradition versus After Pentecost.

The liturgical calendar wheel, above, displays beautifully, the "Half Year of the Lord" and the "Half Year of the Church" which is clear in the Time After Pentecost and so lost in the pick-up of Ordinary Time.

In our home, the Fox and Vox will maintain our Christmas celebrations with tree and manger and decoration and food and outdoor lights until Candlemas. From a practical point, Christmas week is just so busy with all the singing that we really need this time to enjoy the season.

Southern Orders blog by Father Allan J. MacDonald had a post on this matter and I wish to lift from there a comment by a Canadian, "Andrew" which summarises well, the importance of maintaining our traditions. 


Andrew said...

The traditional calendar I think is much more in synch with a fuller understanding of the human person, created body and soul in the image of God to adore his creator. Most people don't like abrupt changes.
I wonder if anyone who actually stopped to think about it really likes Christmas screeching to a halt with the feast of the Baptism instead of the gentle continuation of the Sundays of Epiphany with the gospel readings each Sunday speaking to Christ revealing himself as God, which connects to the 40 days after Christmas feast the Presentation of the Lord which itself beautifully combines the true light of the nations from his crèche to the cross in the temple where we encounter his mysterious beauty and divine light each Sunday.
Or who really likes Ash Wednesday bombing out of the air without Septuagesima to prepare for unless we've happened to check the secular calendar to see when it is. Lastly who really likes Pentecost since we are supposed to be all about mission these days being relegated to a Sunday instead of the full Octave an important day would seem to call for. No wonder people don't think it is important. You can only do so much in one day before you have to get back to ordinary time, which I guess is supposed to be important on its own... but maybe we would be better able to live it if we took proper time to live God's mysteries and the reason we have ordinary time.
That being said thanks to the bishops saying it was too hard for everyone to get to Mass except for Sundays and thereby moving all the obligation days to the closest Sunday who thinks Sunday Mass itself is even important anymore? Instead of fewer people committing sin (which they wouldn't be if they legitimately couldn't make it anyway) we have more people committing sin it would seem... at least in my area in Canada it seems that since New Years and Christmas were so close to Sunday people skipped their Sunday obligation in favour of the only two holy days of obligation we have all year!!
It is just bad psychology. People aren't dumb and they hear the message you send. Days of Obligation are not important so stay home or go shop or whatever... therefore Sunday isn't that important either after a while.
Abrupt changes aren't how we actually want to live our life because they are stressful and therefore the Church year is stressful and one more thing to jettison, along with all the mystery and beauty in it. A psychology rooted in a better understanding of the human person would have advised bishops in the danger of all of this nonsense.



13:44

Non si utilizzi Benedetto XVI per giustificare i flop o sminuire la preoccupazione per gli attuali dati deludenti (R.) [Il Blog di Raffaella. Riflessioni e commenti fra gli Amici di Benedetto XVI]

25 dicembre 2011 Cari amici, fino a questo momento avevo deciso di fare "fioretto" e di evitare di commentare i dati poco entusiasmanti del Giubileo o il calo vertiginoso di fedeli che assistono a udienze, Angelus etc. Mi pare che tutto ciò sia sotto gli occhi di tutti anche se i vaticanisti sminuiscono e i pompieri in servizio permanente si affrettano a trovare ogni sorta di giustificazione

13:29

Tenterhooks [ignatius his conclave]

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Dear Frank,

How kind of you to loan us the Gregory crozier for our forthcoming meeting of Anglican Primates! Anglicans are not big on relics – in fact we had a rather colourful episode when we smashed them up – but it was a kind thought: the successor of Gregory to the successor of Augustine. It nicely expresses both fellowship and condescension.  I got the point.

I must confess that I have been having sleepless nights over this meeting (which is not like me – Caroline always jokes about ‘the sleep of the Justin’). The truth is that I can see only too clearly that we cannot ‘indaba’ our way out of this one. The chaps are beginning to see through the ‘facilitated dialogue’ ploy. At some stage, I fear, we will have to talk turkey – which is very uncomfortable and very unanglican.

Spare a thought, then, for those of us who simply cannot get away with writing the summary of the meeting before it has taken place, the way you can.  The best I can hope for from a gathering like this is that nothing much happens. But it will.

Still – fingers crossed!

Your friend,

Justin.


13:27

Who do the German Greens blame for the Cologne attacks? [Oz Conservative]

The German Greens just don't want to know. German women were assaulted in Cologne by a crowd of young men from North Africa and the Middle-East. So who then is to blame for what happened? Claudia Roth, a Green Vice-President of the German Parliament, refuses to recognise the migrant link and has instead insisted that "this is about male violence". Similarly, another leading Green, Michael Gwosdz, has responded to events in Cologne by claiming that "every man is a potential rapist".

Very easy for the left, ideologically, to shift the blame to all men. They can then refuse to recognise the problem they have helped to bring about.

More positively, there was a demonstration of around 3000 people in Cologne organised by a group called Pegida to protest what happened on New Year's Eve. One of the speakers was an Englishman, Tommy Robinson. I don't know much about his politics, but he was right when he told the protesters:

it is our God-given right and duty to protect our women. It’s what men do.

In a healthy, traditional society men and women are not set against each other they way they are in modern liberal societies. And men do think in terms of "our women," just as women think in terms of "our men" And, yes, the protector role of men is taken seriously.

I also had a quick look at the website of a new German political party, Alternative for Germany. It has two party representatives writing about events in Cologne. Both uncompromisingly reject the open borders policy of Angela Merkel. Frauke Petry, for instance, writes about the Cologne attacks that:
Here we see the terrible consequences of catastrophic asylum and immigration policies in the living reality of Germany in the year 2016...Germany finally needs again a government which is ready to bear responsibility for its own citizens.

Jörg Meuthen writes:
It has become clear how Merkel's naïve "We'll manage it" has plunged our society into a dramatic crisis. The acts of violence on New Year's Eve are the first effects of a dangerous mixture of uncontrolled immigration, obvious government failure, and political suppression of a self-created reality.

Opinion polls do show a steady growth in support for Alternative for Germany over the past few months, roughly doubling from 4.5% to 9.0%. That's nearly one in every ten Germans - which is something of an achievement for a new party. Even so, you would hope that a larger number of Germans might start to question the more established parties, given the radical effects of the current open borders policy.

13:22

The Ethics of Dress [The Paraphasic]

Many Bothans died to make this man's wig.
Many Bothans died to bring us this wig.

When morals and clothing come up together in religious circles, the connection usually has to do with debates over modesty (which seem to be restricted in scope, peculiarly, to women's clothing).  "How many times should women lash themselves for exposing an ankle to the weak eyes of a man?"  Etc.

That's not what I want to talk about.  Instead I'd like to talk about an ethical dimension of clothing which is a little bit more amusing and less commonly addressed: the nature of the relationship between the dignity of one's dress and one's personal moral integrity.

In college, when I converted to Catholicism, I had the good fortune of converting in the context of a social group made up of some really odd (and very helpful) conservative Catholics.  This group of people was united by membership in a loosely aligned set of organizations.  Almost all were members of Choose Life at Yale (CLAY), the campus pro-life group.  Most were members of a conservative political debating society called the Tory Party, which revered Edmund Burke and Russell Kirk, and professed a sort of aesthetic paleo-conservatism interested in the importance of manners and "pleasing illusions".  Many attended the Dominican-run local parish, St. Mary's, in preference to the liberal campus Catholic chapel, St. Thomas More.  And, finally, a number were intermittent members of a nightly rosary group.  All in all there were a couple of dozen people in this little network.

In any small group united by ideas, peculiar interests and emphases shared among any sizeable subset of the group tend to be incorporated into the broad mindset and culture of the group, sometimes in a way disproportionate to the representation of those ideas in any similar group with a larger population (intellectual founder's effect).  One of the amusing ways this happened with the conservative Catholic circle at Yale, in my day, was in the infusion of a vaguely Burkean aestheticism into the group, courtesy of the internal habits and emphases of the Tory Party and its members.  And because for these young people the moral and political order were intimately tied to manners and aesthetics, the cultivation of a 'conservative' personal style was quietly raised to the level of quasi-morality.

This is where things get fun.  My personal mindset at that time was minimalistic when it came to clothing.  Modesty, simplicity, and restraint were good, and an intentional poverty of style was also good.  (All of this came in large part as a result of the fact that I hated thinking about and shopping for clothes.)  For much of college I wore plain t-shirts, increasingly worn-out khaki pants, and sandals with white athletic socks.

So, in retrospect, both my personal habits and my inchoate moral ideas about clothing were challenged as I became a member of the conservative Catholic set at Yale.  Due to a severe case of late-onset social conformism, I failed to objectively appreciate the difference between my own way of being and that of the people I was spending time with, and therefore failed as well to appreciate the value of my established habits.  Concerned about the matter, I had conversations on more than one occasion with friends about whether dressing "well" was a moral issue.  The consensus reply was "yes".

Of course, dressing "well" is not a moral issue — especially not if we understand "good dress" to be defined by conformity to a conservative stereotype or a set of aesthetic norms based on arbitrary class standards accepted a couple of generations ago.  Clothing oneself according to haute bourgeois ideals (or refusing to do so) does not make one a better or worse person.  Wearing a tie and "presenting oneself well" do not have any bearing on moral integrity.

After departing from college, the aestheticism of that set lost its influence on a number of us, and some of its silly pretensions can now be seen as silly.  But having had the experience of belonging to a group where a certain type of clothing was broadly accepted as being morally superior to other types of clothing, not because of modesty but because of its conformity to a cultural type, it becomes easier to see echoes of that same way of thinking elsewhere in society.  There are all sorts of little sayings hovering around the topic: "dress how you want to be addressed" implies that personal dignity is a function of one's outward appearance, rather than one's actual behavior.  Conservative Catholics (even of non-traditionalist stripes) periodically lament the lack of "formal attire" among congregants at Mass.  Granted there's something to the lament, just as there's something to the idea that hygiene and clothing can indirectly reflect a person's self-image.  But the idea is worth questioning.

So here's a closing question: supposing the concept of "formal attire" were abolished completely, along with class stereotypes about "dressing well", so that class signaling could no longer sneak into the domain of morals by way of clothing, and arbitrary, inherited stylistic norms no longer held sway.  In this case, what would matter about one's clothes?  And what bearing would dress have (and be thought to have) on one's moral integrity?

11:00

Maronite Year XVI [Siris]

The Season of Epiphany that begins with this Feast is highly variable, because it has a fixed beginning but its end is ultimately determined by the variable feast of Easter. It may be as little as one week or as many as seven. Most of these currently celebrate a revelation of Christ, and as the season proceeds, the revelations expand outward: to John the Baptist, to the Apostles, to Nicodemus and the Judeans, to the Samaritan Woman and the Samaritans, to the Royal Official and all peoples. The weekdays of the weeks of Epiphany alternate an A liturgy and a B liturgy; the A liturgy focuses on the revelation to John the Baptist and the B liturgy focuses on the revelation to the Apostles. You'll notice, incidentally, that John the Baptist is very prominent in the Maronite liturgy.

Sometimes the three weeks of commemoration to follow are treated as being part of the Season of Epiphany, as well. Since Easter falls early in 2016, there is only one Sunday of Epiphany and the three commemoration Sundays before we begin to prepare for Easter.

First Sunday after Epiphany
2 Corinthians 10:1-11; John 1:29-34

John by the river saw Jesus
and proclaimed with true prophecy:
Behold the holy Lamb of God!
He takes away all of our sins;
I came that He might be revealed,
forgiveness radiant on the river.

O Son of the Almighty God!
You stooped to receive Your baptism.
The Father proclaimed You His Son.
The Holy Spirit like a dove
in power rested on Your head,
divinity radiant on the river.

With Your baptism You have clothed us,
the robe of glory you give to us,
the seal of the Holy Spirit,
the promise of holy rebirth
in water and in the Spirit
with Your light radiant on the river.

We do not fight with human strength;
we wield weapons of the Spirit.
The darkness has already lost;
with a glance from God light poured down
in magnificence and glory,
through His grace radiant on the river.

May divinity dwell in us
through the Spirit's descent on us;
may our minds receive Christ's great light.
Through Word and Spirit God made all;
Word and Spirit He gave to us
in splendor radiant on the river.

10:50

Mutually enriched corruption [Fr Hunwicke's Mutual Enrichment]

My friend Professor William Tighe has very kindly sent me photocopies of letters including one written in 1985, from Fr Michael Moreton to himself. Sadly, many Roman Catholics will not recognise the name Michael Moreton. He was one of our really great Anglican Catholic liturgical scholars; he wrote a paper Eis Anatolas Blepsate, one of the first (it was read at the Oxford Patristic Conference of

08:41

Benedetto XVI battezza 13 neonati: Ogni bimbo che nasce ci reca il sorriso di Dio (YouTube) [Il Blog di Raffaella. Riflessioni e commenti fra gli Amici di Benedetto XVI]

LINK DIRETTO SU YOUTUBE Buona domenica a tutti!!! Il 7 gennaio 2007 Benedetto XVI battezzò, nella splendida cornice della Cappella Sistina, 13 neonati. Grazie, come sempre a Gemma, per il regalo :-) Il testo dell'omelia è consultabile qui. In particolare: "ci ritroviamo anche quest’anno per una celebrazione tanto familiare, il Battesimo di 13 bambini, in questa stupenda Cappella Sistina,

08:40

A(nother) Call for Ritual Sanity (rant warning = moderate) [Catholic Sacristan]

The Ordinariate has received its new missal. Meanwhile, we tradition-minded Novus Ordinarians are frequently (mostly, that is) stuck with liturgies that are removed from the rubrics intended to, among many things, protect the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass from tinkering.

Once again, stating the obvious.

The celebration of the Mass on any given Sunday in most North American parishes resembles a cafeteria or a nightclub experience more than reverent Catholic worship: the music is awkward and frequently contains heterodox texts; deep reverence for the word of God and the Holy Eucharist is merely paid lip service; priests act like talk show hosts and barroom comedians.

It has been said elsewhere by learned voices far better prepared than yours truly—Dr. Peter Kwasniewski, for one—that there is a pressing need to restore to the Mass, at minimum, certain fundamental orientations and practices which safeguard the Mass from abuse and which preserve and communicate the Apostolic Faith.
  • Ad orientem worship. Priest and people worshipping God facing liturgical East as has been the practice from the beginning of the Church.
  • Communion on the tongue, which fosters intimacy and reverence for the most precious Body and Blood of Jesus Christ.
  • Restoration of the traditional Offertory prayers which immerse us in the sacrificial depths of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
  • Chanting of the Proper chants (Introit, Offertory and Communion) assigned to each Mass. Chants that "enflesh" the distinct character of each Mass.
One could easily add that a restoration of the beautiful Prayers-at-the-Foot-of-the-Altar would greatly enhance an appreciation for the awesome nature of the Mass and the absolute necessity of humility as we approach the sanctuary of the Lord.

During these in-between times, that is, these times after the widespread abandonment of our Latin Catholic patrimony and before the restoration of the dignity of the Mass according to the authentic vision of the Second Vatican Council, for starters, we must contend with and defend the Mass from the bizarre, ridiculous and downright diabolical manipulations of innovation crazy priests and liturgists—professional manglers or rank amateurs—who attempt to impose their narcissistic inventions on the Divine Liturgy while ignoring the heritage of the Church upheld by the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council.


Unfortunately, any good intentions that the much maligned Archbishop Bugnini and the Consilium may have had during the coordination of the renewal of the Sacred Liturgy were undone by an obvious oversight: Bugnini's Consilium forgot that people need scaffolding (rubrics) like vines need trellises in order to grow in the direction of the light and to help them rise upward to keep them from rotting in the dirt. Human beings need (liturgical) laws to guide them in right action, right worship. As it is, the garden of the Sacred Liturgy is without the necessary trellises to help support the cultivation of right knowledge and right practice or right worship.

By all appearances, and in many ways, the Consilium somehow forgot—if the liturgical mayhem which has followed in the wake of the Council is any indication—to realize the intentions of the Council made clear in the document Sacrosanctum Concilium, the dogmatic Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy. How on earth did the Bugnini Consilium not see the obvious need for tighter rubrics? Did they so lack a basic understanding of human psychology and the example of the anarchic 1960s in which they were fully immersed that they trusted the Liturgy to the narcissistic proclivities of men and women driven to conquer not only others' bodies but the Body of Christ and the Liturgy? Did they forget that the Mass requires a defence from sacrilege?

The rubrics or liturgical norms are part of the very fabric of the Mass. The rubrics are like the fine thread which holds together a perfectly tailored suit or dress. Without attention to the rubrics, and by attention is included the necessary application of considerable pressure on priests to conform to the rubrics, the content of the Mass has been tinkered with to the point that many Catholics have little idea about what constitutes right worship, i.e., worship that is pleasing to God.

By whose authority?

Sadly, many in the hierarchy were of a similar antinomian or anarchic mindset to those who subjected the West to the worst aspects of the sexual revolution. The tendency to think oneself the sole arbiter of the moral and spiritual life is the culmination of Luther's sola fide doctrine. His doctrine, you will recall, liberated believers from the responsibility to measure or confirm their faith in communion with the Church Christ Himself founded for the salvation of souls.
Protestant groups display a wide variety of different doctrines. However, virtually all claim to believe in the teachings of sola scriptura ("by Scripture alone"—the idea that we must use only the Bible when forming our theology) and sola fide ("by faith alone"— the idea that we are justified by faith only).

The great diversity of Protestant doctrines stems from the doctrine of private judgment, which denies the infallible authority of the Church and claims that each individual is to interpret Scripture for himself. This idea is rejected in 2 Peter 1:20, where we are told the first rule of Bible interpretation: "First of all you must understand this, that no prophecy of Scripture is a matter of one’s own interpretation." A significant feature of this heresy is the attempt to pit the Church "against" the Bible, denying that the magisterium has any infallible authority to teach and interpret Scripture.

The doctrine of private judgment has resulted in an enormous number of different denominations. According to The Christian Sourcebook, there are approximately 20-30,000 denominations, with 270 new ones being formed each year.—Catholic Answers.
Among other false dichotomies, Luther pitted the salvation of the individual against the salvation of a people. Which is to say, Luther's doctrine created antagonism between the Body and individual believers leading to the fragmentation of the Body of Christ. Luther, among others, elevated the individual as the final arbiter of truth. The sola fide and sola scriptura heresies, then, go hand in hand. Said doctrines have enabled a tyranny of the individual over the very Church and Faith that Christ established. The result is that said doctrines have fractured the Body of Christ and have led many souls into serious error.

The reformers of the Mass appropriated to themselves the authority to modify the Liturgy in ways that can only be described as inorganic, artificial, academic and contrived (cf. Ratzinger, The Spirit of the Liturgy). They overlooked the importance of the rubrics which preserved the focus on integral components or details of the Mass that were necessary to preserve vital structural or architectural pillars of faith constituting vital content of the Mass. Furthermore, the reformers of the Mass woefully under appreciated man's ability to assume license where none is or should be permitted. That is, man's unfortunate ability to promote change for the sake of change leading to rupture and a loss of Tradition.

Floor but no windows.

Left in the hands of artless renovators, the foundation of the Liturgy is still there, but the Liturgy has, in many ways, become opaque to the beauty and truth of the Holy Spirit. It is entirely consistent, given the guiding aesthetic, that most churches built in the last 50 years resemble entirely the fast-food liturgy that the Mass has become at the hands of artless and liturgically illiterate priests and people. Liturgical relationships tend to be conditioned by the spaces in which the Sacred Liturgy is celebrated, which means the Mass, if housed in a shopping mall of a church design, will likely pander to the baser instincts in man, especially consumerism. Cafeteria liturgies tend to produce cafeteria (c)atholics.

The changes made to the Liturgy, while not precluding the true consecration of the bread and wine, have made abuse more likely than not because change was forcibly interpreted as license to commit additional but unsanctioned changes or innovations or improvisations. History is a reliable witness to the negative effects of cutting at "the source and summit of the Christian life", i.e., the Holy Eucharist.

Beautiful and true and good elements essential to Catholic worship left when the sense of respect for liturgical law was excised from the minds of Catholics. Those elements—some would say elements designed by the Holy Spirit Himself—are only hinted at in the orientations and practices briefly listed above. When those and other elements were cut from the flesh of the Mass, reverence for the Holy Eucharist began to evaporate quickly and in place of Catholic worship a spirit of preoccupation with innovation for the sake of innovation (and entertainment and capitulation to pop-psychology) and spiritual narcissism sat down in parish pews. When said unholy spirits sat down to juice and biscuits, people walked out, many never to return.

A psychology more than a philosophy of autonomy accompanying the renewed Mass permitted—to the minds of the minions of the "Spirit of Vatican 2", that is—that hermeneutic of rupture identified and roundly condemned by Pope Benedict XVI. Bugnini's work, unfortunately, did little to protect the Mass from ideologically driven priests and laity who were/are embodiments of an era of anarchy.

Quo vadis?

Perhaps it is best for the mental and spiritual well being of "Novus Ordinarians" seeking to worship God with due reverence, in order to preserve a sense of sanity, to move to an Ordinariate parish now that the new Ordinariate Missal will be in use. Faithful Catholics might consider praying that the little seed found in the Ordinariate might grown to become a massive tree capable of sheltering a multitude of God's faithful who, made weary by years of dwelling in a barren land and exposed to the elements (e.g., relativism and a watered-down gospel), find the peace of worshipping God according to the design He intended and which is preserved in a typical celebration of the Liturgy according to the rubrics preserved in the Ordinariate Form of Holy Mass.

Postscript

Having re-read the preceding essay more than a few times, this blogger must admit that parts may read as promoting a complete abandonment of the Ordinary Form. Readers should not conclude that the criticism of the celebration of the Mass in ways unacceptable to the Tradition-minded should be taken as license to flee the Ordinary Form. No, the reorientation of the Mass must be the goal, not its wholesale abandonment. One should make friends, allies, that is, through gentle conversations which focus on the nature of the Mass and by modelling Catholic worship with reverence of heart and mind and body.

If, however, one must make a temporary departure to a safer shore—the Ordinariate, an Eastern Catholic rite or the Extraordinary Form—in order to preserve one's sanity, then so be it. Catholics cannot be expected to sit in a pew and choke on a diet of liturgical bile week-after-week without complaining at last a little bit. Enabling parishes that treat the Liturgy like entertainment or a picnic or an experiment in spiritual narcissism by offering material support to such a parish would be misguided. Better to shift one's support to a parish that honours the Holy Eucharist.

08:00

The Magi Reach Their Destination [The Jesuit Post]

¡Lograron! Braving this difficult time of year, the Magi made it to the manger. What better way to celebrate than a meal with the migrants awaiting their arrival. We hope that your own star-guided journey-to-the-Lord was equally beautiful.  

Before we bid adieu from Nogales, we want to share with you our favorite Magi-sighting from elsewhere. In this photo, our friend Joanne McPortland captures the contradiction of Christmas. Amid the joy of Jesus’s coming, we are reminded of the sin and suffering that draws the compassionate Lord to come to Earth in the first place. Or, as McPortland’s picture shows, without the evil of the Abominable Snowman, there can be no star of Bethlehem. (Don’t believe the Abominable Snowman from 1964’s Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer is evil? Look below and think again.) Here’s that champion photo:

07:54

The Baptism of the Lord 2016 [iBenedictines]

The third great theophany of the Christmas season, the Baptism of the Lord, is one we ‘understand’ or can relate to because of our own baptism. We too go down into the Jordan are anointed with the Holy Spirit, but (…)

Read the rest of this entry »

04:51

Too Late? [The Rad Trad]


An article by Msgr. Charles Pope, a priest of the archdiocese of Washington, DC, is now bothering some circles with the empirical realization that wider legal availability of the 1962 Mass has not been met with standing room only congregations. Pope himself reflects that his once-a-month Latin Mass was full in the 1980s, but now only fills a third of the church (as an aside: the neighboring diocese of Arlington has at least one Latin Novus Ordo Mass and numerous old rite Masses every Sunday, which wasn't the case even ten years ago). After Summorum Pontificum old rite Masses doubled in number and attendance at such Masses increased by volume, although not per Mass. Pope's message is that the old Roman Mass will not save the Church in the modern day, and he is right, but I cannot help but think an interesting point has been missed: did Benedict XVI's legislation come too late?

Popularly, traditionalists correlated the replacement of the old Mass with Concilium's concoction to the decline in Mass attendance. Logically, a reversal of this error would revive attendance, a mistake of thought Pope keenly quashes. What if that was true? I believe it was true once. This author cannot recall the year, but he remembers an old issue of the Tablet, England's "Catholic" magazine, which polled believers in that country as to whether or not they believe the new Mass should be replaced by the old. This survey, done in either 1982 or 1984, found nearly a majority favored the old Mass, the next closest had no opinion, and the smallest group liked the new rites. The Tablet took that survey thirty years ago, when the old Mass was within living memory for most Roman Catholics and laity. In 2016 the old Mass has not been the norm in any form for forty-seven years, two generations going on three. One cannot simply "turn the clock back", although that once would have been a reasonable pastoral option, one the bishops would not have heard.

Today spots of genuine growth, unrelated to immigration patterns, center on fonts of orthodoxy and reverence, not of the 1962 liturgy. While Oratories and vibrant churches do occasionally utilize older rites, they thrive because of the impulse to celebrate those rites, not the rites themselves. Traditionalists will doom themselves if they wall themselves into their parishes—inevitably posting dress codes on the door which as the women to dress as characters from Little House on the Prairie—and expect the unbelieving world to come to them. The old Mass could be an effective tool of conversion if only it and its environs were ordinary rather than extraordinary. Today I met a priest who takes an incrementalist approach with his congregation, singing the Agnus Dei and Pater noster in Latin; he hopes to install a genuine altar that can accommodate the "big six" in his parish of 3,000 families. Perhaps if he celebrates the old Mass once a week in his parish a few years down the road he might gain a side congregation; if he celebrated it thirty years ago he would have converted the city; if he did it now he would lose his flock.

The old Roman rite has a place in the restoration of the Latin Church, but it cannot be the only solution.

03:30

Urgent prayer request [Musings of a Pertinacious Papist]

A very good family friend, named Julia, who has suffered all her life from a degenerative bone disease, is scheduled to have yet another surgery in a few days (she has had numerous surgeries throughout her life).  The bones in her neck and back have developed sharp spurs where they have broken, which make turning her head or turning over while sleeping excruciating.  She says the pain is so overwhelming she literally feels like she is dying.

Please pray for Julia.  She is a wonderful, strong woman, who trusts completely in our heavenly Father; but she has suffered immensely.  She also has had a stroke that left part of her face paralyzed. Even so, she has a beautiful disposition and often endeavors to find humor in her sad situation.  Lord Jesus, please have mercy on Julia and bring her relief -- a relief that now appears to be nearly beyond the possibility of medical science.

02:37

The Baptism of the Lord [Καθολικός διάκονος]

The significance of his Baptism by John in the River Jordan is one of the mysteries of our Lord's life that is very often overlooked or underplayed. Our Eastern Catholic and Orthodox brothers and sisters refer to today's feast as the "Feast of the Holy Theophany." A "theophany" is when God manifests himself in a manner detectable by our senses.

It's easy to miss that in our Gospel for today's feast that, immediately following his baptism, Jesus is confirmed (Luke 3:15-16.21-22). Because he is the anointed One, the Messiah, Jesus is anointed directly by the Holy Spirit, who descended on him in the form of a dove, as the voice of the Father declares that he is the Father's beloved Son. This is the Theophany of the Most Holy Trinity, God making himself fully manifest for the first time in Scripture.

All four canonical Gospels agree that his baptism by John marked the beginning of Jesus' public ministry. I think that one reason why the Feast of the Baptism of the Lord is so closely linked on the liturgical calendar to his Nativity (in the United States it brings the season of Christmas to its end) is because these events set in motion the Paschal Mystery, which is the very mystery of our redemption.



Our brothers and sisters who observe today's feast as the Theophany also see his baptism as making holy all the waters of the world. As we see in the blessing of water in our Roman Catholic baptismal rite, water is both necessary for life and, at times and under the right conditions, a deadly force.

In baptism God claimed you as his own. When you were baptized, you were called by name. Through baptism God made what was implicit in you explicit. In the waters of baptism we are reborn as God's children, which adoption is only made possible by Jesus Christ through the power of the Holy Spirit.

As he ascended, the Lord sent his disciples (his sending is what made them apostles) to make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in God's thrice holy name (Matt 28:16-20). It was on the first Christian Pentecost that 3,000 people were baptized in response to Peter's preaching (Acts 2:14-41). Such has been the case for more than 2,000 years. We, too, are sent to proclaim the Gospel, to glorify the Lord by our lives, to make disciples of all nations. In order to make disciples, you must first be a disciple.

In light of his own baptism, we certainly Jesus by receiving baptism ourselves. As I pondered today's feast, an event from Jesus' life popped into my mind is when Peter wanted to walk on water to the Lord, who was himself walking on the water (Matt 14:22-36). At the Lord's urging Peter stepped out of the boat and began to walk on the water of the Sea of Galilee. But he lacked faith and so he sunk. As he sunk, Peter cried out "Lord, save me!" St Matthew tells us, "Immediately Jesus stretched out his hand and caught him, and said to him, 'O you of little faith, why did you doubt?'" Who knows, perhaps that was Peter's baptism?

01:56

Why was the newly written hymn Christe splendor Patris substituted... [marcpuck]

For Pope Leo XIII's O gente felix hospita at Lauds for the feast of the Holy Family? Did anyone ever publicly address the whys and wherefores of this? What's his name who is responsible for this and the other new hymns in the Liturgia Horarum-- Lentini, is it? I have to look it up-- anyway, I believe there is in Italian his notes or schemes for the project, whether available or not, I do not know. Pft. 

I am going to copy this comment in two parts from the Music Sacra Forum from November 2014, bolding the sentence about the author and his or her copyright; doesn't address the O gente felix hospita question directly but it's quite informative. From Pope Urban VIII to Anselmo Lentini, tsk, and of course what 'hymns' are actually sung are often straight from the missalettes. There is an entire series of posts and comments at Musica Sacra about the hymns of the Office. (The book mentioned somewhere infra, by Dom Patrick Hala OSB and published at Solesmes, looks interesting but may, as well as being limited to discussion of the hymns for the hours from Terce to Compline, also exclude discussion of the feasts of the sanctoral cycle. And I have to replace my now lost copy of Connolly....)


I do not have the books (my interest in liturgy is pre 1962 perhaps pre-1933!) But I do have a commentary... This remains copyright of the author who will for the time being remain Anonymous!
Part 1.
  • We are better informed about what was done, and why, in repairing and extending the hymns for the renewed/revised Litugia Horarum than for virtually any other aspect of the post-V2 reforms (except perhaps for the Sanctorale of the Calendar, whose reform was accompanied by a fairly full and remarkably well-reasoned commentary). This was because Dom Anselmo Lentini, who was leader of the Coetus involved (I wonder sometimes if he was the only active member) published two volumes about it.

    Initially he issued "Hymni instaurandi breviarii romani" in 1968, with Latin commentary. This was a series of provisional texts for 296 hymns, and users (in monasteries? cathedrals? one wonders where else) were invited to submit comments. These were then considered, and the next stage was the publication of definitive texts in the volumes of the Liturgia Horarum; many more hymns by Lentini were incorporated at this stage to replace texts which had been thought inadequate or unsatisfactory; other changes included restorations - thus Lentini in 1968 had omitted the 3 hymns for the Guardian Angels - though bits were used on 29 Sept - since the calendar then envisaged had suppressed the feast of 2 Oct, but Bd Paul VI objected so the feast and the hymns were restored.

    Finally in 1984 Lentini published a volume "Te decet hymnus" on the hymns in the Lit Hor. This volume is in a very similar format to the 1968 volume, but the commentary is in Italian and the texts are updated. This has 291 items, 57 of which (on my reckoning) were not in the 1968 proposals. Lentini claimed authorship of 42 of these 291 ourtright (though of course his was the hand behind many other small alterations elsewhere - he was particularly concerned to improve the doxologies - he didn't for example like a Trinitarian doxology if a hymn was addressed to Christ alone, etc. - and to remove inappropriate references as he saw them - e.g. in the Te lucis ante terminum he removed the entire 2nd stanza because of "ne polluantur corpora" where he complained of its "crudezza", and substituted 2 verses from another ancient compline hymn [Christe, precamur annue]). He actually listed 43, not 42, as his own, but one is by Prudentius, a slip, I think.


  • The figures for the number of items can be misleading, as a some hymns are divided (the Dies irae appears divided into three for the last week of the liturgical year, believed to have been the period for which it was originally written; the Pange lingua gloriosi praelium certaminis is divided into two; the A solis ortus cardine and the Hostis Herodes impie for Christmas and Epiphany are parts of the same hymn by Sedulius, etc.)

    For comparison, the 1568 breviary had (according to Lentini, 1984, xxix) about 90 hymns; by around Pius X's time there were about 150. Joseph Connolly's Hymns of the Roman Liturgy (1957) has 154 items. Of course many others had come and gone in the intervening period. 19th-century breviaries have a good number of feasts which later disappeared, many of which had proper hymns. And that, of course, is without even considering the neo-gallican liturgies.

    One item that was in the Tridentine breviary (for Lent) but which had disappeared apparently thanks to Urban VIII (an accident?) was Ad preces nostras deitatis aures (or Aures ad nostras deitatis preces). It was restored by Lentini in two parts for the (daytime) Office of Reading in weeks 2 and 4 on Tuesdays and Wednesdays.

    Of the 42 Lentini hymns in the Lit Horarum and the 1984 volume, 31 had not been in the 1968 volume. It looks as if Lentini frequently took the opportunity, where people complained about items in the 1968 version, to include more of his own work. One notable change from 1968 was his hymns for individual Apostles. In the 1968 book he had not actually claimed authorship of any items - his own were just described as anonymous. He also added his own compositions for the Office of the Dead, which had not been thought to be required in 1968. His hymns include O virgo mater, filia, and Quae caritatis fulgidum which are a remarkable Latin version of Dante, Paradiso, 33.1-21 - apparently Paul VI particularly praised these. I don't think he adopted any other Latin renderings of a vernacular text.

    There is also a volume published by Solesmes in 1983 - the Liber Hymnarius. This gives the same hymns, along with the best-researched versions of the melodies (mostly much as in the 1934 Antiphonale Monasticum, rather than in the last editions of the Liber Usualis, which unfortunately were still following Solesmes' earlier efforts in the Antiphonale Romanum of 1912). For the Monastic Supplement in the 1983 volume a further 60 hymns are included, many from earlier OSB antiphoners, especially those for the Gallic Congregation.

    Lentini was a very fine Latin poet - born I think in 1902, early enough to get a decent classical Latin training. He clearly had a profound and spiritual sense of Latin hymnography, and lived early enough to have spent much of his monastic life singing the office. But it is arguably unfortunate that so many of his own efforts were included - far more than those of any other writer (though 152 items in the 1984 book are anonymous) - thus Ambrose has 8 items, Bede has 2 or 3, Leo XIII likewise, Peter Damian has 9, Prudentius has 10 (all selected from much longer texts of his). Other relatively modern writers do get a look in. D'Anversa (died 1968) has 2, Genovesi (d 1967) has 5, Piacenza (d 1919) has 2, and Verghetti (d 1945) has 1 (Beata caeli gaudia, where each stanza begins with the next letter of the author's Christian name, Blasius - rather absurd really).

    I think I'm right in saying that all the authors whose texts were adopted and who lived after the 16th century were Italian - was Lentini prejudiced? Certainly there is no trace of any of the neo-gallican hymns (of Santeuil, Coffin etc). So no "Iordanis oris praevia"/On Jordan's banks the Baptist sings. Strangely, that's a policy rather different from that pursued by the 1970 Missale Romanum, which has pillaged a good number of collects, prefaces etc. from the neo-gallican books.

    It is obviously possible to criticize the extent - or indeed the lack of it - of the restoration of the ancient pre-Urban VIII texts. Vat II (SC 93) asked for it to be done "quantum expedire videtur", mythology was to be removed (so, out with Olympus, Avernus etc - though Tartarus survives in the Requiem, but Lentini didn't deal with that - personally I'd have let the words stand as poetic, rather than mythological, expressions for Heaven and Hell). Legendary material was removed - thus St Agnes now got the hymn Igne divini radians amoris by Alfano di Salerno (died 1085), but 5 of the 10 stanzas were dropped for their legendary material. Other confusions were also avoided. Thus Lentini produced two new hymns for Mary Magdalen, because nearly all medieval hymns for her tie themselves in knots by identifying her with the anonymous woman in Luke c. 7 and/or with Mary the sister of Martha.

    SC 93 also said that other items from the "treasure" were to be accepted "pro opportunitate" - but interestingly there was no reference to writing new hymns!

    One criticism I would have for some of the hymns taken from the early "treasure" is that there is often no real evidence, or likelihood, that they were ever actually used in a liturgical context outside perhaps very limited areas - they just didn't catch on. I don't know if Bede's hymns were ever sung even in his own monastery.

    Nearly everywhere the restoration of the ancient texts is a benefit. Just take the Veni Creator - the 2nd line now read "donum Dei altissimi" as in the original. Urban VIII's people had objected to the hiatus. But their version - Altissimi donum Dei - produces when sung wrong accentuation on the first word. And the unsingable "digitus paternae dexterae" was replaced with the original "dextrae Dei tu digitus" (Urban's people had objected to this because the 1st syllable of digitus is short, not long). Sometimes Lentini modified the original to his own taste. Thus, he replaced the odd phraseology of the Easter hymn "Ad regias Agni dapes" with its original "Ad cenam Agni providi", but then altered various lines. Lines 7-8 were "cruore eius roseo gustando vivimus Deo" - but he wrote "sed et cruorem roseum gustando, Deo vivimus" - but I can't see that this was an improvement.

01:01

EVENT: January 23 Conference on Catholic Higher Education in Arlington, VA [RORATE CÆLI]

Conference on Catholic Higher Education to be held in Arlington, VA


For the first time in Arlington Virginia, the Institute of Catholic Culture and The Cardinal Newman Society and are cosponsoring a presidential conference entitled CRISIS: Catholic Higher Education and the Next Generation. With hundreds of thousands of pro-life activists descending on the nation’s capital for the March for Life, this conference invites attendees from around the country to come head-to-head with the ever increasing crisis in Catholic higher education.

Society is at a crossroads in the educational formation of the next generation, and the Church offers the only true way forward. Under attack from the secularist agenda, a new generation of Catholic intellectuals have reacted by working to reestablish centers of opportunity in which our youth can engage in a genuine Catholic education.

Join the Institute of Catholic Culture and The Cardinal Newman Society in welcoming the presidents of faithful Catholic colleges to discuss and debate the crisis and¬ find a solution to the education of the next generation.

This conference will be held Saturday, January 23, 9 am - 3:00 pm at St. Thomas More Cathedral Hall in Arlington, Virginia. The conference is free and open to the public. Registration is required.


Conference Speakers and Topics:

Dr. Timothy O’Donnell, President of Christendom College
Catholic Higher Education, the Church's View

Dr. Michael McLean, President of Thomas Aquinas College
Catholic Education and the Order of Learning

Dr. George Harne, President of Northeast Catholic College
The Human Person, Culture, and the Promise of Catholic Higher Education

Dr. Kevin Roberts, President of Wyoming Catholic College
False Egalitarianism: Problems with American Education

Rev. Sean Sheridan, TOR, President of Franciscan University of Steubenville
Catholic Higher Education & the New Evangelization

All details of the event can be found at the Institute of Catholic Culture’s website, www.instituteofcatholicculture.org/presidentconference/

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Transalpine Redemptorists at home XML 22:00, Thursday, 21 January 23:00, Thursday, 21 January
Unam Sanctam Catholicam XML 22:00, Thursday, 21 January 23:00, Thursday, 21 January
Unequally Yoked XML 22:00, Thursday, 21 January 23:00, Thursday, 21 January
Voice of the Family XML 22:00, Thursday, 21 January 23:00, Thursday, 21 January
Vox Cantoris XML 22:00, Thursday, 21 January 23:00, Thursday, 21 January
Vultus Christi XML 22:00, Thursday, 21 January 23:00, Thursday, 21 January
Whispers in the Loggia XML 22:00, Thursday, 21 January 23:00, Thursday, 21 January
ZENIT - The World Seen From Rome XML 22:00, Thursday, 21 January 23:00, Thursday, 21 January
Zippy Catholic XML 22:00, Thursday, 21 January 23:00, Thursday, 21 January
Archives...
January 2016
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
28293031010203
04050607080910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
December 2015
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
30010203040506
07080910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031010203
November 2015
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
26272829303101
02030405060708
09101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30010203040506
October 2015
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
28293001020304
05060708091011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26272829303101
September 2015
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
31010203040506
07080910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293001020304
August 2015
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930310102
03040506070809
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31010203040506
July 2015
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
29300102030405
06070809101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930310102
June 2015
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
01020304050607
08091011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
29300102030405
May 2015
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930010203
04050607080910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
April 2015
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
30310102030405
06070809101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930010203
March 2015
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
23242526272801
02030405060708
09101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30310102030405
February 2015
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
26272829303101
02030405060708
09101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272801
January 2015
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
29303101020304
05060708091011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26272829303101
December 2014
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
01020304050607
08091011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
29303101020304
November 2014
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930310102
03040506070809
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
October 2014
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
29300102030405
06070809101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930310102
September 2014
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
01020304050607
08091011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
29300102030405
August 2014
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
28293031010203
04050607080910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
July 2014
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
30010203040506
07080910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031010203
June 2014
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
26272829303101
02030405060708
09101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30010203040506
May 2014
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
28293001020304
05060708091011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26272829303101
April 2014
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
31010203040506
07080910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293001020304
March 2014
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
24252627280102
03040506070809
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31010203040506
February 2014
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930310102
03040506070809
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627280102
January 2014
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
30310102030405
06070809101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930310102
December 2013
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
25262728293001
02030405060708
09101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30310102030405
November 2013
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
28293031010203
04050607080910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293001
October 2013
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
30010203040506
07080910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031010203
August 2013
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
29303101020304
05060708091011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26272829303101
July 2013
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
01020304050607
08091011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
29303101020304
June 2013
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930310102
03040506070809
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
May 2013
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
29300102030405
06070809101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930310102
April 2013
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
01020304050607
08091011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
29300102030405
March 2013
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
25262728010203
04050607080910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
February 2013
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
28293031010203
04050607080910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728010203
January 2013
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
31010203040506
07080910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031010203
December 2012
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
26272829300102
03040506070809
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
31010203040506
November 2012
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
29303101020304
05060708091011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26272829300102
October 2012
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
01020304050607
08091011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
29303101020304
September 2012
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930310102
03040506070809
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627282930
June 2012
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
28293031010203
04050607080910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293001
May 2012
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
30010203040506
07080910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031010203
March 2012
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282901020304
05060708091011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26272829303101
February 2012
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
30310102030405
06070809101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282901020304
December 2011
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
28293001020304
05060708091011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26272829303101
November 2011
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
31010203040506
07080910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293001020304
July 2011
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
27282930010203
04050607080910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
April 2011
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
28293031010203
04050607080910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293001
March 2011
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
28010203040506
07080910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031010203
November 2010
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
01020304050607
08091011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
29300102030405
August 2010
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
26272829303101
02030405060708
09101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30310102030405
June 2010
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
31010203040506
07080910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293001020304
January 2010
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
28293031010203
04050607080910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
December 2009
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
30010203040506
07080910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031010203
November 2009
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
26272829303101
02030405060708
09101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30010203040506