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The Curt Jester

"It is the test of a good religion whether you can joke about it." GKC

HumorPolitics

Write in Blessed Mother Teresa for this election

by Jeffrey Miller October 15, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

PROVIDENCE, R.I. – The leader of Rhode Island’s Catholics suggests voters could write in Mother Teresa or sit out the Nov. 4 election because of a field of candidates he says isn’t “terribly promising” on the abortion issue.

Bishop Thomas Tobin says in The Rhode Island Catholic diocesan newspaper that writing in Mother Teresa in protest would send a signal that some voters want an anti-abortion candidate.

Tobin recently took aim at Democratic gubernatorial nominee Gina Raimondo (ray-MAHN’-doh), who is Catholic, after she won the endorsement of Planned Parenthood and spoke in favor of reproductive rights. Republican nominee Allan Fung also supports abortion rights.

Tobin says it’s a “pathetic spectacle” when Catholic candidates “choose” Planned Parenthood over the church.

He says voters don’t necessarily need to vote for every office or at all. Source

In the runup to the 2008 election I proposed voting for two Doctors of the Church instead in this parody video.

October 15, 2014 0 comment
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Punditry

Relatio post disceptationem

by Jeffrey Miller October 13, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

Today the Synod released Relatio post disceptationem which as Jimmy Akin describes

(i.e., a report after discussion), which summarized the discussions held in the first week of the synod.

As with most things regarding the Synod or the Church in general there are narrative reactions with people always looking for major changes in the Church and those who panic that such changes are going to happen. The truth isn’t always in the middle, although with Vatican documents the truth is usually in the muddle.

The invaluable Thomas L. McDonald posts a initial reaction on a first pass through the document Fisking the Synod “Relatio”. Well worth reading in full.

It’s a summary of the discussion as it stands. Most of it is very good. Out of 58 paragraphs, about four are awful.

Which means that all the attention (media and otherwise) will be on those four paragraphs. Unfortunately the awful paragraphs are truly awful and remove clarity in an area that is such a modern hot issue. Fr Longenecker posts regarding this I fear this is ill thought out, sentimentalist, wishy washy, secularist nonsense.

Since the “law of gradualness” has been much discussed recently along with showing up in this document it is very helpful to read The Law of Gradualness: 12 things to know and share. A couple of points he makes specifically regarding this subject and the document released.

10) Is this same understanding of the law of gradualness present in Familiaris Consortio and the Vademecum for Confessors?

It does not appear so. At least from what has been said thus far, it appears more to reflect the “gradualness of law” that was warned against in those documents, according to which a decisive break with sin is not required before receiving absolution and holy Communion, and in which a different standard of what constitutes sin would be applied to some than is applied to others.

11) Does the Relatio change Church teaching regarding the law of gradualness?

No. The Relatio is a summary what various bishops proposed in discussions. It is not a document of the Magisterium.

The document accurately reports that one group of bishops proposed this—and that others opposed it—but it does nothing to change Church teaching.

John Thavis, a reporter covering the Vatican, called it a “Pastoral earthquake” and that terminology has spread out into plenty of article. Although as we know from scripture, God is not in the Earthquake. Plus after reading John Thavis’ book “The Vatican Diaries”, I am not impressed by his analysis in general.

“Acts of the Apostasy” has some humorous analysis BREAKING! JERUSALEM COUNCIL ISSUES REPORT; CHRISTIANS BRISTLE

October 13, 2014 2 comments
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HumorLiturgy

Catholic Rapture

by Jeffrey Miller October 13, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

While the modern idea of the rapture as popularized in the 1830s by John Darby is a modern invention believed by some Protestants, there seems to be even a more modern version of the rapture regarding Catholics.

Now this is all guess-work and not yet proven. Purely speculation, although it seems to fit some of the facts.

I think I had always been aware of this phenomenon, but I started to connect the dots. Usually sitting in close to the back I am one of the last to receive Communion. Going back to my pew I find that almost half the people sitting around me are now gone. Now since often during Mass I close my eyes to concentrate to attempt to pray I can’t say for sure what happened to these people. Still I draw a couple of speculations together. As Cardinal Arinze said “The Apocalypse, or the Book of Revelation, as it also known, presents a striking imagery of the heavenly liturgy and helps us appreciate how the Eucharistic celebration, as it were, looks heavenward.” Maybe these missing Communion recipients were so caught up in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass and receiving Holy Communion that they were raptured up into heaven?

Looking at Matthew 24:40 “Then there will be two men in the field; one will be taken and one will be left.” That sounds a lot like the proportion of people that make it all the way past the first verse of the closing hymn.

Still I could find nothing in the Catechism or the writings of the Church Fathers to validate this. Another theory which I much less prefer is that people are just leaving after receiving Communion. I would rather believe in the Catholic rapture than that. I really can’t discount this though in this materialistic age. People can be so caught up in the idea of shopping that they have to leave early to go to the mall and do even more shopping. In Catholic shopping Eschatology this can be described as:

  • Pre-mall: Christ returns before a thousand day shopping spree.
  • A-mall: The shopping occurs in heaven and those who have died in the faith share in this shopping during the current church age.
  • Post-mall Christ returns after a thousand day shopping spree.

Photo credit: itmpa via photopin cc

October 13, 2014 1 comment
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The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 76 – 13 October 2014

by Jeffrey Miller October 13, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from 2 – 11 October 2014.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Angelus

  • 5 October 2014

General Audiences

  • 8 October 2014

Homilies

  • 12 October 2014 – Mass of Thanksgiving for the equivalent canonization of two Canadian saints

Speeches

  • 2 October 2014 – To His Holiness Mar Dinkha IV, Catholicos Patriarch of the Assyrian Church of the East
  • 6 October 2014 – Greeting to the Synod Fathers during the First General Congregation of the Third Extraordinary General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops

Daily Homilies (fervorinos)

  • 7 October 2014 – Lest we forget
  • 9 October 2014 – That ‘more’ of God
  • 10 October 2014 – The heart on guard

Papal Tweets

  • “Come, Holy Spirit. Bestow upon us your gifts during the Synod. #prayforsynod” @pontifex, 6 October 2014
  • “Let us ask the Lord for the grace not to speak badly of others, not to criticize, not to gossip, but rather to love everyone.” @pontifex, 7 October 2014
  • “Dear young people, Christ is counting on you to be his friends and witnesses to his infinite love.” @pontifex, 10 October 2014
  • The spiritual power of the Sacraments is boundless. With grace, we can overcome every obstacle. @pontifex, 11 October 2014
October 13, 2014 0 comment
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Humor

Go and synod no more

by Jeffrey Miller October 7, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

Well since everyone was punning on synod, decided to pun on the latter half of the word.

evenHomerNods

October 7, 2014 1 comment
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The Weekly Francis

The Weekly Francis – Volume 75 – 6 October 2014

by Jeffrey Miller October 6, 2014October 7, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

The Weekly Francis – Volume 75 – 6 October 2014

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from 18 September to 5 October 2014.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Angelus

  • 28 September 2014

General Audiences

  • 1 October 2014 – General Audience

Homilies

  • 28 September 2014 – Holy Mass with the Elderly

Speeches

  • 18 September 2014 – Address to the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of the Ivory Coast on their “ad Limina” visit
  • 26 September 2014 – To participants in the General Assembly of the Focolare Movement
  • 27 September 2014 – Celebration of Vespers on the occasion of the Bicentennial of the Restoration of the Society of Jesus (Chiesa del Gesù)
  • 27 September 2014 – To participants in the Plenary of the Pontifical Committee for International Eucharistic Congresses
  • 28 September 2014 – Meeting of the Pope with the elderly in Saint Peter’s Square
  • 29 September 2014 – To members of the Universal Biblical Alliance for the presentation of the Bible in Italian “Parola del Signore-La Bibbia Interconfessionale in lingua corrente”
  • 1 October 2014 – To participants in the pilgrimage sponsored by the Secular Institute of the Little Apostles of Charity and “La Nostra Famiglia” Association

Daily Homilies (fervorinos)

  • 29 September 2014 – Angels and demons
  • 30 September 2014 – Prayers in the darkness
  • 2 October 2014 – We all have an Angel
  • 3 October 2014 – Salvation our way

Papal Tweets

  • “Division within a Christian community is a very grave sin; it is the work of the devil.” @pontifex, 30 September 2014
  • “A Synod means walking together but also praying together. I ask all the faithful to participate. #praywithus” @pontifex, 2 October 2014
  • “Happy families are essential for the Church and for society. #prayforsynod” @pontifex, 30 October 2014
  • “As Jesus told Martha in the Gospel, one thing is necessary: prayer. #praywithus” @pontifex, 4 October 2014
  • “As we begin the Synod on the Family, let us ask the Lord to show us the way forward. #prayforsynod” @pontifex, 5 October 2014
October 6, 2014October 7, 2014 2 comments
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Book Review

Review: The Hope of the Family

by Jeffrey Miller October 2, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

Cardinal Gerhard Müller who is Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has a new book coming out on October 10th during the Synod of Bishops as they discuss ‘The Pastoral Challenges of the Family in the Context of Evangelization.’ The Hope of the Family: A Dialogue with Cardinal Gerhard Müller. This book is done in the interview format with questions from Spanish journalist Carlos Granados.

I’ve never read any of Cardinal Müller’s writings so I was pleasantly surprised to find how much I enjoyed what he had to say. As a rather short book of under a 100 pages, still there is much to reflect on and I copied out a bunch of notes to further reflect on.

Due to all the punditry regarding the upcoming synod you would think it was called “The Divorced Receiving Communion.” You would have no idea of the breadth of the schema to be discussed as specified in Instrumentum Laboris. The actual interview involves a range of issues regarding the family. The hot buttons issue regarding divorced Catholics is addressed in part, and it is obvious the interviewer tried to draw out more on this. This gives just a taste of his reply which is much broader.

Cardinal Müller: Saint Thomas Aquinas said that mercy is precisely the fulfillment of justice, since God thereby justifies and renews his creature man (cf. Summa Theologiae, I, q. 21, a. 3). Therefore, it should never be used as a justification to suspend or invalidate the commandments and the sacraments. To do that would be a crude manipulation of genuine mercy and, therefore, a vain attempt to justify our own indifference toward God and man. — Page 54

If we turn to the Gospel, we observe how Jesus, in his dialogue with the Pharisees concerning divorce, also has recourse to the two terms “divorce” and “mercy” (cf. Mt 19:3–12). Precisely in this passage he accuses the Pharisees of “hardness of heart”, of being unmerciful, since in their tortured interpretation of the Law they have concluded that Moses supposedly granted permission for them to dismiss their wives. Jesus reminds them that God’s mercy is contrary to our human weakness. — Page 55

What struck me the most was what he had to say about the individual in the context of the family and how “our society exalts individual rights.”

The individualistic family is another typically modern category: how many families languish because they are confined to themselves! — Page 38

There is much in that simple statement and category of “individualistic family” that is an accurate diagnosis of the state of the family. Maybe this simple statement hits me because of my own self-absorption.

As for pastoral practices, in my former archdiocese of Regensburg, it is quite common to offer Eucharistic liturgies for families with very young children. This seems to me to be a very good idea. We no longer talk about “a children’s Mass” but, rather, more accurately, about “a family Mass” since the attempt to introduce a child to the faith is useless and even counterproductive if this is done behind the back of his family. — Page 40

Throughout I could see his sense of urgency and his concerns for the family.

As a pastor, I tell myself: This cannot be! Someone will have to present the truth to them! Someone will have to open their eyes and tell them that they have been cruelly deceived by a false anthropology that leads only to disaster! — Page 78

Another unfortunate trend lately has been the “Cardinal vs. Cardinal” narrative. No doubt there has been a very lively debate and at times even name-calling, still there has also been simply discussion and critique without that stain. This book avoids that narrative and while the Cardinal critiques ideas and the manipulation of citations from the Church Fathers, he does not mention specific people.

October 2, 2014 1 comment
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The Weekly Benedict

The Weekly Francis – Volume 74 – 30 September 2014

by Jeffrey Miller September 30, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

pope-francis2-300x187This version of The Weekly Francis covers material released in the last week from 4 to 28 September 2014.

The Weekly Francis is a compilation of the Holy Father’s writings, speeches, etc which I also post at Jimmy Akin’s The Weekly Francis. Jimmy Akin came up with this idea when he started “The Weekly Benedict” and I have taken over curation of it.

Angelus

  • 14 September 2014
  • 21 September 2014 – Tirana

General Audiences

  • 17 September 2014
  • 24 September 2014

Homilies

  • 21 September 2014 – Tirana: Holy Mass in Mother Teresa Square

Messages

  • 8 September 2014 – Message of the Holy Father to the President of the Cuban Episcopal Conference
  • 23 September 2014 – Message of the Holy Father for the 101st World Day of Migrants and Refugees, 2015

Speeches

  • 4 September 2014 – Video conference of Pope Francis with the students of the Scholas social network gathered from 5 continents
  • 4 September 2014 – To participants in the International Meeting of Directors of “Scholas Occurrentes” (4 September 2014)
  • 6 September 2014 – To the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of Cameroon on their “ad Limina Apostolorum” visit
  • 12 September 2014 – Address to Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of the Democratic Republic of Congo on their “ad Limina” visit
  • 12 September 2014 – Meeting with the Italian Biblical Association
  • 13 September 2014 – Holy Mass at the Military Memorial of Redipuglia
  • 18 September 2014 – Address to a group of recently appointed Bishops
  • 21 September 2014 – Tirana: Celebration of Vespers with priests, men and women religious, seminarians and various lay movements in the Cathedral of Tirana
  • 21 September 2014 – Tirana: Meeting with the civil authorities in the Reception Room of the Presidential Palace
  • 21 September 2014 – Tirana: Meeting with the leaders of other religions and other Christian denominations at the Catholic University “Our Lady of Good Counsel”
  • 21 September 2014 – Tirana: Meeting with the children of the “Centro Betania” and the representatives from other charitable centers of Albania in the church of the “Centro Betania”
  • 21 September 2014 – Tirana: In-Flight Press Conference of His Holiness Pope Francis from Albania to Rome
  • 23 September 2014 – To the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of Ghana on their “ad Limina” visit

Daily Homilies (fervorinos)

  • 15 September 2014 – Three Women
  • 16 September 2014 – When God Visits
  • 18 September 2014 – The courage to admit we are sinners
  • 19 September 2014 – Resurrection completes Christian identity
  • 23 September 2014 – Two conditions
  • 25 September 2014 – Like peeling an onion
  • 26 September 2014 – True identity

Papal Tweets

  • “The Lord is always there waiting to give us his love: it is an amazing thing, one which never ceases to surprise us!” @pontifex, 16 September 2014
  • “Mary, give us the grace of being joyful as we walk in the freedom of the children of God.” @pontifex, 18 September 2014
  • “Dear young people, listen within: Christ is knocking at the door of your heart.” @pontifex, 20 September 2014
  • “When a society lacks God, even prosperity is joined by a terrible spiritual poverty.” @pontifex, 23 September 2014
  • “Jesus understands our weaknesses and sins; and he forgives us if we allow ourselves to be forgiven.” @pontifex, 25 September 2014
  • “There is the tendency to place ourselves and our ambitions at the center of our lives. This is very human, but it is not Christian.” @pontifex, 27 September 2014
September 30, 2014 0 comment
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Other

The Golden Age of Catholicism

by Jeffrey Miller September 22, 2014September 22, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

I had toyed with the idea of having a blog post with the title of “The Golden Age of Catholicism” which just had the title and the body of the post was blank. To illustrate the idea that there never was such a golden age.

Charles Dicken’s summed up Church history perfectly even if he wasn’t referring to it

It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to heaven, we were all going direct the other way – in short, the period was so far like the present period, that some of its noisiest authorities insisted on its being received, for good or for evil, in the superlative degree of comparison only. – A Tale of Two Cities

Church history frankly is messy and it started out that way. You don’t read St. Paul and come away with the idea that everybody was properly catechized and faithful. We are always on the cusp of some heresy, in the decline of one, or amidst one.

Sometimes we will idealize a previous generation because of a numeric superiority of priests and those in religious life. We talk about the last forty years or so of bad catechesis as if we had ever been fully catechized. No doubt the quality of catechesis has waxed and wained over generations due to multiple factors. Yet those generations who were supposedly more fully catechized managed to fall apart despite this and to pass along a diminishment in teaching.

When we look at the problems of the day it is easy to look fondly on a time without those exact same problems not fully realizing that they either had a different set of problems or roughly the same set. That each age if full of people with original sin and all that it entails. It is certainly a laudable thing to identify positive aspects of the past and want to bring them forward. The problem comes in when we have a wistful affection of the past that is devoid of the problems of that time also.

It is quite easy to be a critic of the times you live in, not as easy to see the good among the bad.

“The Reformer is always right about what’s wrong. However, he’s often wrong about what is right.” G.K. Chesterton

We can read the sign of the times and despair or we can read those same signs and be a saint. The universal call to holiness has nothing to do with the time period you live in. We are called to “Pick up the cross daily” precisely because our crosses will never be in short supply. Seemingly so many paths to anger and few to prayer, yet this is but the crossroads of what direction we travel in reaction to events. It is just and right to be scandalized by sin, but it is neither to further scandalize others by our reaction to this.

Whether it is the best of times, or the worst of times; our commitment to Christ and spreading the Gospel remains the same.

Now this post is not meant to show an example of any kind of wisdom. Often I find myself not writing posts for others, but to preach to myself my own faults.

September 22, 2014September 22, 2014 8 comments
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Parody

Traditionalists plan national day of mourning and protest

by Jeffrey Miller September 18, 2014September 18, 2014
written by Jeffrey Miller

With the rumor that Pope Francis plans to remove Cardinal Raymond Burke from head of the Apostolic Signatura and and given a non-curial assignment as patron of the Order of Malta traditionalist are up-in-arms. Feeling that no doubt this outspoken cardinal is being punished for his support of the Traditional Latin Mass. Rod Traud the blogger at Novus Ordo Crimes posted:

The only possible explanation of this action is that it is just another spit-in-the-eye at “self-absorbed promethean neopelagianism.” The Pope is a darling of the media because he is willing to throw traditionalist under the bus and abandon Mother Church for popular acclaim.

Instead of just sitting back and watching the purge of the Church of good people like Cardinal Burke we need to take action and to let our displeasure known. We can not just continually be kicked to the curb while the wildest liturgical abuses get no attention at all.

So this Sunday on the Twenty-Fifth Sunday in Ordinary Time I strongly urge that all those who love the liturgy and the faith go to a Novus Ordo Mass in your diocese and protest this action by wearing a dark hood with only the eyes cut out. I realize going to a regular parish Mass will be a great suffering, but we must be willing to sacrifice and do even that.

The black hood, named after the Cardinal, symbolizes.

  • Being silenced by the Church
  • We are kept in the dark and not consulted
  • That our voices are not allowed to be heard
  • Mourning for the loss of the good Cardinal in his role defending the Church canonically.

So this Sunday protest silently with your hoods in solidarity with all the true defenders of the faith!

For further news see Cardinal Burke Demoted To Chaplain Of Akron RubberDucks Minor League Baseball Team.

September 18, 2014September 18, 2014 7 comments
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About Me

Jeff Miller is a former atheist who after spending forty years in the wilderness finds himself with both astonishment and joy a member of the Catholic Church. This award-winning blog presents my hopefully humorous and sometimes serious take on things religious, political, and whatever else crosses my mind.

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About Me

Jeff Miller is a former atheist who after spending forty years in the wilderness finds himself with both astonishment and joy a member of the Catholic Church. This award winning blog presents my hopefully humorous and sometimes serious take on things religious, political, and whatever else crosses my mind.
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  • Brilliance abounds --Victor Lams
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