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The Curt Jester

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

News

New Bishop for Birmingham

by Jeffrey Miller August 14, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

As Rorate Caeli reports:

Yes, it is highly unusual for a Bishop to be transferred to a new diocese with a smaller population and an even smaller number of nominal Catholics. Yet, Birmingham, the new diocese of Robert Baker, the former Bishop of Charleston, includes one specific Catholic institution, which deserves special treatment (for better or for worse).

People were wondering when the diocese that contains EWTN would get a new bishop since Bishop Foley retired in May of 2005 and was subsequently appointed administrator.
I have read nothing but good thing
about Bishop Robert J Baker.
The Bishop is also the author of a novel on the Florida missions and has spoken in my diocese before.

Update: Amy Welborn has some more information on Bishop Baker and she also reminded me that he was originally from my diocese. I had forgotten he was the pastor of Christ the King in Jacksonville, Fl before he became the Bishop of Charleston. He is also the Chairman of the USCCB Ad Hoc Committee on Stewardship. This makes a lot of sense because while pastor of Christ the King he stressed stewardship and because of his efforts was able to make the Catholic school run by the parish free for the parishioners.

August 14, 2007 11 comments
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Liturgy

Responding to abuses

by Jeffrey Miller August 14, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

Paul at Alive and Young fisks the article by Elizabeth Harrington that I posted on the other day. He makes some good points in reaction and ends in noting:

I am going to go out on a whim here and assume that Elizabeth writes this article because she has been confronted by individuals in most uncharitable ways. If you do have to bring up a liturgical issue in a parish or diocese be sure to do your homework on the topic first. Then if you must present it to a liturgist or priest be sure to do it gently and with charity.

That is always the danger whenever we have an "us and them "attitude and we turn problems we perceive with the liturgy into confrontations.
It is quite easy to get upset when the liturgy is abused and if we carry this anger when we talk to a person involved we will likely achieve nothing.
I remember one occasion when I spoke to a priest after Mass that I tried to be charitable and first complimented him on his very good homily before I addressed my concern. Though I got the runaround from him and a reply that stretched credibility and I am afraid I left with some parting replies that I immediately felt bad for afterwards. I should have prayed first before talking to him.

What struck me about Elizabeth Harrington article was how she had developed what appears to be a defensive attitude and an "us against them" attitude. The problem with so many liturgical experts is that they just never acknowledge that there is such thing as a liturgical abuse (or you get the idea a liturgical abuse is celebrating a Mass with accord to the rubrics.) That sometimes people are correct in their liturgical gripes and that the situation needs to be resolved. Having an elitist view where only the liturgical expert can talk about the liturgy is quite ironic since so many liturgists put so much emphasis on the people involved in the liturgy in the first place.

August 14, 2007 3 comments
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Liturgy

Undo restriction?

by Jeffrey Miller August 13, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

Gerald has a letter from the director of liturgy, Fr. Willis, in my diocese (St. Augustine) that I was rather disappointed with in its restriction concerning the celebration of the extraordinary form of Mass.

Bishop Galeone has determined that a group of 50 people registered at the parish is the minimum threshold for the Mass to be celebrated in the extraordinary form. Now I really love my bishop and consider him to be quite solid, but I do think this is a mistake that infringes on the authority given to priests by Summorum Pontificum.

Once again the bad translation of "stable group" is being used in a restrictive way. I find it ironic that the memo has strict requirements in priests knowing Latin before celebrating this form of Mass when as Fr. Z notes:

The diocesan norm quotes an unofficial and inaccurate translation of the Latin, which has the word coetus. A coetus has no specific number and can be, in fact, very small. It is certainly more than two. Some say as small as three people, which could include the priest himself since he is at the parish. The adverb used in the Latin, NOT an adjective like English "stable" – no derivation of which is to be found in the Latin document – is continenter which means "continuously". There must be a group of an unspecified number continuously present (Art. 5, § 1. In paroeciis, ubi coetus fidelium traditioni liturgicae antecedenti adhaerentium continenter exsistit…)

What if 40, 43, or even 49 people of the parish request the Mass.
Will they need Abraham to step in for mediation like he did for the people of Sodom. This seems to me that this should be an area of prudence specifically by the pastor
and it is micro-management to set an artificial number. The pastor in his prudence has to be the one to decide if the number of parishioners requesting the 1962 missal is enough for him to be able invest the time.
It seems to me in the majority of cases that to celebrate the extraordinary form of Mass that another Mass has to be added to the parish schedule which certainly presents difficulties, but they are difficulties the pastor should decide. Surely one of the purposes of the Motu Proprio was to give this authority at the pastor level and undo restrictions by a diocese defeat that purpose.
The concept of subsidiarity
is really lost when you do this.

Now I can understand a diocese concerned that the 1962 missal is celebrated correctly and that the priest knows Latin well enough to celebrate the Mass correctly and that the rubrics are followed. But being an expert in Latin is not required and their are plenty of resources to learn the rubrics and to celebrate the older form correctly. It will really depend on how this memorandum is carried out in reality and whether it becomes rigorously restrictive. If only bishops across the country who are so concerned about the rubrics being celebrated correctly with the ordinary form of Mass. Now I have noticed since Bishop Galeone became our bishop there has been less outright liturgical abuses in the various parishes I sometimes attend so I am not trying to knock him here.

I also happen to somewhat know Fr. Willis who wrote this memorandum. I once attended a class he gave at our Eucharistic Congress and have been to several Masses as this parish. I found him to be a solid priest and that his Masses were abuse free. Though I wasn’t happy with his rebuilt parish Church where the sanctuary is extended out into the congregation and the altar is almost in the middle of the Church. He did celebrate a quite beautiful Mass during the interregnum and the choir was spectacular, especially the chanted Litany of the Saints. I just think his memo is unduly restrictive.

Read Fr. Z’s post on the subject for a much better and more technical look at this memorandum.

August 13, 2007 11 comments
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Vocations

New priest finds joy in sacrifice

by Jeffrey Miller August 12, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

By Rebecca Howerton

One of the Catholic clergy’s newest members, Michael Cassabon of Simpsonville, said he looks forward to serving joyfully, following the example of his parents, Michael and Mary Cassabon, as well as others such as Mother Teresa, who have given their lives in service to others.

Cassabon, who was ordained July 27 in Columbia and celebrated his first mass July 29 at his home parish, St. Mary Magdalene Catholic Church in Simpsonville, said he first felt the call to the priesthood during confession while he was a senior at St. Joseph’s High School.

“It was in that sacrament that I really experienced God, not as a concept but as someone who was in love with me and had a plan for me,” he said.

After studying political science at Furman for two years, Cassabon transferred to the Pontifical College Josephinum to study philosophy. He taught religion and led a campus ministry at Bishop England High School in Charleston before continuing his studies in Rome at the suggestion of the Bishop of the Diocese of Charleston, the Most Rev. Robert Baker.

Cassabon lives at the Pontifical North American College, the national American seminary in Rome, which was established in 1855 and is considered an extra-territorial part of Vatican City. He attends classes at the Pontifical Gregorian University, a Jesuit University founded in 1551 by St. Ignatius of Loyola. He received a degree in theology in 2006, and will complete another graduate degree in canon law in 2009. All of his classes — except Greek — have been taught in Italian.

“Being a priest for me means preaching the truth of God’s mercy and the reality of the resurrection in people’s lives that are so often marked by heartbreak and disappointment,” he said. “Letting them know God is there, and that He loves them, that’s where my heart is.”

…Cassabon said he and other young priests feel that by living lives of honesty and integrity they can facilitate healing in the wake of abuse scandals, while helping parishioners find the path to true fulfillment.

“We’re scandalized by it, too,” he said. “The hearts and minds of my peers are on restoring the hope, faith and trust among people. We’re also very concerned about bringing people back to the church. People are trying to fill an emptiness in their hearts with consumerism, with a frenzied search for more and more, with relationship after relationship. Nothing can bring peace and make them joyful and happy but God himself.

As for the shortage of priests, Cassabon related it to a societal fear of commitment, including reluctance to commit to a spouse.

“We also need men and women to commit to good marriages,” he said. “There’s no shortage of vocations, just a shortage of responses.”

Cassabon said that while giving up the chance to marry and have children to become a priest can be seen as a loss, it can also be viewed as a gift and gain, as the desire for family is filled in many ways by the parish family.

“It’s a timeless Christian paradox that to find life, you have to first lose it,” he said. “The responsibility and burdens are huge, but the honor of sharing in people’s lives at births, funerals, weddings, at confession, just being there for them; these are moments of extraordinary intimacy.”

August 12, 2007 10 comments
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Liturgy

I'm the expert, all bow to me

by Jeffrey Miller August 11, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

SOMETIMES it seems that everyone is an expert on liturgy and that personal preference carries more weight than the considered judgement of someone with years of study and experience in the field.

The self-proclaimed liturgy “experts” will often quote liturgical law to prove their point.

Thus starts an article dripping with arrogance and a "I have a degree and so you all should just please shut up" attitude. The article was written by Elizabeth Harrington the education officer with the Brisbane archdiocesan Liturgical Commission.

Creative Minority Report has thoroughly fisked the article so I would suggest you go there first.

Elizabeth Harrington does make some valid points in writing about not reading documents in isolation and that training in theology, liturgy, and canon law are quite helpful. The problem is that often these experts require that we accept their interpretation and not the plain text. "Who are you going to believe me or your lying eyes." For example the term active participation has a history not at all keeping with its modern interpretation and was first used by Saint Pius X and was as Fr. Fessio S.J. notes to be consistent with "holiness," "dignity," "sacred mysteries," and "solemn prayer." So knowing context and history is truly important and yet the "experts" have totally ripped this term and many others from their moorings.

Besides you can read much of Redemptionis Sacramentum and know exactly what is proscribed without having a degree or intensive liturgical knowledge. Yet this document had to be interpreted by so many liturgists before it could be handed down to the parish level. Plus one of the smokescreens within recent years is that Vatican documents must first be implemented by a diocese before they can take effect. In recent history we can look at the indult that was revoked by Pope Benedict for Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion to assist the priest in the purification of the vessels at Mass. Compliance required nobody to have a degree in liturgy and yet this had to be slowly implemented or in case of some diocese totally ignored.

She ends her attack on the "liturgical police" by reminding us "“Love one another as I have loved you”… if we’re not prepared to act by this commandment, what good will all the liturgical laws in the world do us?"

While there is much to commend in this in regards to the liturgy wars, much of the problem was because the authority of the Church was ignored and substituted by the liturgist’s own agenda. Love is willing the good for another and you have to wonder how much love some liturgists have had for others when liturgical creativity becomes the norm and when people are upset that the liturgy is treated like a lab rat it is their own fault for not listening to the experts. No doubt they intended good, but the liturgy wars have been the result and to blame those who are the victims of liturgical attack is rather misplaced.

August 11, 2007 8 comments
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Pro-life

Sad and disgusting

by Jeffrey Miller August 10, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

Boston Globe on"doctor work arounds" regarding partial birth abortions.

In response to the Supreme Court decision upholding the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, many abortion providers in Boston and around the country have adopted a defensive tactic. To avoid any chance of partially delivering a live fetus, they are injecting fetuses with lethal drugs before procedures.

…The injections are generally done in abortions after 18 or 20 weeks gestation. (Massachusetts bans virtually all abortions at and beyond the 24th week, except to protect the life or health of the mother.) Medical staff inject either the heart drug digoxin or potassium chloride, a potentially poisonous salt also used in state executions.

NRO has an email from a lawyer who does criminal trails and is familiar with potassium chloride.

Wowsa. I have done some litigation in the area of lethal injection, and potassium chloride is typically the third drug used in the "three drug cocktail" most states use when they execution someone. It is a painful, painful drug that stops the heart. To mitigate that pain for prisoners, states give them sodium thiopental, which is a short-acting barbituate, then pancuronium bromide, which acts as a paralyzing agent, THEN they give the potassium chloride. It would be extremely painful for a prisoner to have an injection of potassium chloride alone. It stuns me that that’s what they’re using to kill these babies in utero.

This just shows how the creativity of the Culture of Death is of course all ordered towards death.
If only we had an appeals process for the unborn, especially one that lasted at least nine months.

This also shows the total inconsistencies of our laws since the method of how a baby was killed was outlawed, but another and even more painful method remains legal.

Red State
August 10, 2007 5 comments
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News

They can not understand the developing world

by Jeffrey Miller August 9, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

In a volume of essays put together by an agency of the Bishops’ Conference in England and wales and published in association with Caritas contains attacks on Pope Benedict and John Paul II and even uses scare quotes around terrorist in regards to 9/11. The book has been given a glowing foreword by the Bishop of Plymouth, Christopher Budd.

According to Fr Tissa Balasuriya, the author of the relevant essay, both John Paul and Benedict lived their lives “in a world dominated by white racism” and therefore could not understand the developing world.

Damian Thompson who blogs for the Telegraph has the full story here. I have been following Damian Thompson’s blog for the last couple of months since he linked to one of my posts and can highly recommend it. He is the editor-in-chief of the Catholic Herald and you got to love someone who was described by The Church Times as a "blood-crazed ferret".

August 9, 2007 10 comments
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Parody

Separation of Faith and Actions

by Jeffrey Miller August 9, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

NEW YORK (Roto Reuters) Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani and front runner Republican presidential nominee has faced increasing questions on his standing as a Catholic. In recent articles he has responded, saying it was a question that "I prefer to leave to priests." He added that clerics would "have a much better sense of how good a Catholic I am or how bad a Catholic I am."

With increasing questions on this subject Mayor Giuliani has now responded by given a much fuller statement on his views on the subject.

"It all comes down to Thomas Jefferson’s concept of building a wall of separation between church and state as he wrote to the Dansbury Baptists. I have only taken Jefferson’s concept to a personal level. I have built a wall of separation between my actions and my faith. As a mayor and a presidential nominee I know that you are part of the state 24/7 and so all of my actions must be separated from my faith."

"It really can be quite a struggle since for example I am personally opposed to abortion and that wall of separation keeps my donations to Planned Parenthood and appointment of pro-abortion judges while mayor from affecting my faith life. As I have said before I don’t like and in fact hate abortion, but also as I have said before if my daughter going against my personal advice wanted one then I would give her the money for that. That is how separation of actions and faith work."

"Now I can’t take the credit for taking this separation to the personal level. I can thank trailblazers like John F. Kennedy who was quite skilled at keeping his faith contained and separated from his actions. Plus there are a plethora of Catholic politicians that have maintained a high degree of detachment from their personal actions and their personal faith. Though I do have a certain degree of pride by kicking it up a notch by having married three times, supporting homosexual acts, and federal funding of Embryonic Stem-Cell Research while still going to Mass on Sundays and calling myself a Catholic."

"My daughter in fact has learned so well from me that she has separated me as her father from her voting for Obama in the election."

August 9, 2007 15 comments
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Liturgy

Concert cancelled

by Jeffrey Miller August 9, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

Julie at Happy Catholic posted Fr. L’s. announcement on church etiquette and as a result Deacon Greg sent her another bulletin announcement.

BRITNEY SPEARS CONCERT CANCELED! Unfortunately, our efforts to get pop sensation Britney Spears to perform a benefit fund raiser for the parish have proven unsuccessful. Her calendar is full. Therefore, those who have been arriving at Mass every Sunday dressed for a Britney Spears concert should know that they don’t have to do that anymore. Modest church-going attire will do nicely. We will notify you if the situation changes.

August 9, 2007 5 comments
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News

Envoy Magazine

by Jeffrey Miller August 8, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

With the recent news of Crisis magazine getting rid of the print version and going web only it is quite interesting that Envoy Magazine, which has not published for the last three years, is back. On my way into the Church I read all of the back issues they had online and then subscribed to the magazine. For those who have never read Envoy it has a different style than most Catholic magazines. While the magazine has a heavy emphasis on apologetics, it does it with a unique style. From the graphic layout on down it is a fun magazine to read and their is humor interspersed within the magazine and usually a one page parody. In some ways my own blog was influenced by Envoy’s parodies and their parody site smellsandbells.com (which is no longer around but is in the internet archive)

People who had been subscribed to Envoy can expect to have new issues delieved to them and I received mine two days ago. Envoy is just as good as it was and is back with some of the same great authors such as Tim Staples, Carl Olson, and of course the magazines founder Patrick Madrid.

Now to give a full disclosure – a couple of months ago Patrick Madrid contacted me about contributing to Envoy’s humor section. Patrick is behind the majority of the humor in the magazine and is quite a funny guy himself with such classics as his Top Ten: Orthodox Catholic Pickup Lines. So is was quite a honor to be invited on to contribute ideas from time to time. The first issue only contains one line from me for Pat’s Top Ten Rejected Envoy Marketing Slogan, but the other nine were better than my suggestions anyway. So we will just have to see how many of my ideas make it in, but Patrick Madrid has some pretty funny ideas that I was able to build on.

This time around Envoy is based at Belmont Abbey College in North Carolina at what is called the Envoy Institute. You can sign up for a free issue here. Envoy is bimonthly and you can subscribe to a print edition or to a reduced price PDF version.

August 8, 2007 5 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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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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