The Curt Jester
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The Curt Jester

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

Other

Eight Things

by Jeffrey Miller August 1, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

Paul VI tagged me with the list 8 facts/habits about themselves meme.

  • The first thing I do when I wake up is to read the Liturgy of the Hours, pray the Rosary, and try to spend some time in contemplative prayer. I do this first thing because I know otherwise I will keep putting it off and then it won’t have prayed at all. Plus I know if I turned on my computer first thing in the morning I know for sure I would never get to prayer.
  • I tend to read three or four books at a time. One for morning spiritual reading, another one for evening spiritual reading or theology, some fiction to end the day, and another book of fiction in my iPod that I listen to while driving and at other times.
  • I would like to rename my blog to the Contemplative Jester one day, but despite my prayer time and spiritual reading I figure at my current pace this will happen sometime after we actually have flying cars.
  • I really like Evelyn Waugh, but I have never been able to finish Brideshead Revisited.
  • My first internet connection was a shell account and my first internet site back in 1995 was a Access database driven freeware site for software called "Rage against the Cash Machine."
  • I have never had or used an Apple computer. My path to geekdom was Commodore Plus 4, Commodore 64, Amiga, and then PCs starting from an IBM XT. I am not anti-Apple and certainly wouldn’t mind having one of their new machines.
  • Even though I am a major SF fan I have never been to a convention. Though I have met Frank Herbert and Frederick Pohl.
  • I failed an eye exam on purpose when I was a kid since I thought glasses were cool. My parents never did understand the "miraculous" cure of my vision later.
August 1, 2007 5 comments
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Other

Requiescat in pace

by Jeffrey Miller July 31, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

Fr. Richard Rego

July 31, 2007 0 comment
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Liturgy

From the department of liturgy disinformation

by Jeffrey Miller July 31, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

It is rather sad when a Diocesan Director of Liturgy can write such an ignorant piece. It starts off on a incorrect note with the title "One Rite, Two Forms: The Mass, English and Latin" and goes downhill from there. Though I must say the idea of those guiding the liturgy in many diocese not knowing what they are talking about is sadly my first assumption. I just wish reality would stop conforming with my skepticism.

July 31, 2007 8 comments
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Book Review

Summa on the Summa

by Jeffrey Miller July 31, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

Once years ago while driving on the beltway in D.C. on my way to a meeting at NAVAIR I heard G. Gordon Liddy on his talk show explain St. Thomas Aquinas five ways of knowing God to an atheist caller. As I have previously described I count this event as the first milestone on my way to the Church. It was a slight shake up for me since I was arrogant enough as an atheist to automatically assume that there could be no logical arguments towards the existence of God and the use of reasoning would always destroy those annoyingly persistent hunter-gatherer myths. Though hearing these ways of knowing God did not make me rush out and investigate St. Thomas Aquinas’s claims or to look for how theism was defended in a rational manner. I let it slip to the back of my mind or more correctly I pushed it back there. This though did put a small crack in my atheism, thought it would be another eight or nine years before I finally entered the Church.

So now as a Catholic I have always felt a debt to St. Thomas Aquinas for this and even keep a statue of him on my computer desk. Because of this on my way into the Church I once bought a copy of The Pocket Aquinas hoping to learn more about his writings. I am loathe not to finish books, but this one I couldn’t finish. For me it was like reading some foreign language where you might understand a couple of words, but that is about it. I had about a zero understanding of philosophical terms and words I though I understood, obviously had a different connotation then what I was use to. Throughout my life I had pretty much disregarded the field of philosophy. To me it had seemed like a system used to explain away reality or in some cases to deny reality.

So after this initial reaction to the world of Thomism I pretty much put him aside besides the more biographical aspects of his life. Now though after several years of heaving reading within the faith and with more familiarity to philosophical terms and seeing how much I was reading often referred back to this great saint, I was looking for a book that would help me to dive into the Summa, but with water wings. That book turned out to be Peter Kreeft’s Summa on the Summa. Now I am a great fan of Peter Kreeft’s writings and I figured he would provide a good guide to the Summa, and indeed he has.

I really like the approach that he used in the book. There are plenty of books that summarize the Summa in the authors own words, but this book takes a different approach. Peter Kreeft believes the best way to explore the Summa Theologicae is by immersion in the work itself and not a mere summary of points made. The book starts off by defining the terms used in the book and this was highly useful. Meanings of words often shift so it is a good idea to ground them first in how they are used in philosophical language. Kreeft simply presents large chunks of the Summa along with plentiful footnotes. At around 530 pages Summa on the Summa takes a good representative sample of the Summa. Often included are the objections, the "On the contrary" (Sed Contra), the I Reply, and then the specific replies to the objections. For each article Kreeft picks from these as to what might be most helpful to the reader. Thus not always are the objections shown for each question, but mostly at least some of the objections are used.

In this day and age of writers erecting straw men and then demolishing them it is so refreshing to read Aquinas’s objections on a question since he makes them as complete as those objections could go. It becomes quite interesting as you read the objections and wonder how they are going to be answered. I found though after reading most of the book I could actually start to forecast how he would answer them. This rather surprised me since I had thought that a lot of Aquinas’s arguments were mostly going over my head. By reading the words of Thomas himself directly I got much more out of him then I had in summaries of his works. Plus I got a much deeper appreciation of his work. I also found that questions of Aquinas being rather cold in a cold as reason sense to be mistaken. I loved the way that in his Sed Contras how he would first go to scripture before laying out the case by reason.

Kreeft’s footnotes were very helpful and he has the knack of explaining things that needed to be explained and not intruding when most readers would understand directly. Though he does have the tendency of cheerleading for Thomas at points, but I pretty much enjoyed those footnote fawnings by a true lover of Thomas as Peter Kreeft is. The footnotes were often used when there would be problems for a modern reader who would normally misunderstand what the saint was saying. This is a great book for anybody who wants to go deeper into the Summa, but needs a helpful (but not intrusive) guide to help out.

Interestingly Rich Leonardi posts on Peter Kreeft’s other book on the Summa called A Shorter Summa which I have not yet read.

On a side note I wonder if in the history of mystery fiction if there was ever a Dominican detective used. I think a Dominican detective novel could be pretty cool. It seems to be the thought processes that lead someone to the Dominican charism could certainly be used in this direction. There have been plenty of parish priest detective’s such as Fr. Brown and Fr. Dowling, so why not a Dominican one? I can just see the last chapter when the detective lays it out saying "On the contrary, I answer that." They have Monk on television, why not Mendicant.

July 31, 2007 10 comments
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Humor

What if the Church was an opensource software project?

by Jeffrey Miller July 31, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

Here is a very funny post by a seminarian in St. Louis, Nicklaus Winker, imagining a conversations with a project leader of SSPX AB_Lefebvre.

Jester Hat Tip: Quid est Veritas

I am going to have to steal the idea at some point and apply it towards progressives.

July 31, 2007 5 comments
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Link

Companion of Jesus

by Jeffrey Miller July 30, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

Tomorrow being the feast of Saint Ignatius of Loyola, www.companionofjesus.com is launching a 10 installment set of videos focusing on Jesuit/Ignatian spirituality, Jesuit history and contemporary Jesuits. The first installment in on their site now.

July 30, 2007 0 comment
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Liturgy

The Party Line

by Jeffrey Miller July 30, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

Thankfully Fr. Z fisks the Commonweal hysterical rant on the Motu Proprio so I don’t have to. Now if only Commonweal was as against abortion and true evil as much as they are against the extraordinary form of the Mass.

July 30, 2007 4 comments
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Other

Contraception vs. NFP

by Jeffrey Miller July 30, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

The Saginaw Seminarians are producing a set of videos and judging from the first one this looks quite promising. Based on the Mac vs. PC commercial they make some great points.

 

 

July 30, 2007 21 comments
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News

Sending flowers to the Pope

by Jeffrey Miller July 30, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

Here is one method people are using to thank the Pope for the Motu Proprio.

July 30, 2007 1 comment
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Humor

Food for thought

by Jeffrey Miller July 29, 2007
written by Jeffrey Miller

Mulier Fortis tagged me with this unique meme.

If you could invite your five favorite saints to dinner, what would you serve them to eat, and why?

You do have to be rather careful what you would make a saint for dinner to avoid a faux pas. For example Bar-B-Que is not a good idea for St. Laurence, but then again he does have a great sense of humor. Or you would not want to serve chicken breasts to St. Agatha. Asking St. Joan of Arc if she wants a steak is another one. French speakers might have a problem with English homophones. Plus you would never want to serve chocolates to Blessed Elizabeth of the Trinity. She had the same illness as JFK, only it wasn’t treatable then, and as her illness progressed she ended up having to eat lots of chocolates because that was all her stomach allowed. Eating chocolate in Carmel is quite mortifying for proper Carmelties. And of course serving wine with dinner to Venerable Matt Talbot is not a good idea.

  • I am not sure what to serve to St. Teresa of Avila considering her stomach ailment, but I would have something for heartburn around in case she had another Transverberation of her heart.
  • St. Thomas Aquinas is rather easy to cook for. Judging by his girth, just about anything would be fine.
  • St. John of the Cross would also be easy to cook for. Beef stock or any other very simple meal would be right up his alley. (Or would that be St. Simon Beef Stock for Carmelites.) You couldn’t take John to MacDonald’s because then you would have to explain fast food, and I don’t think he will get “fast” being associated to eating without wasting too much time better spent otherwise.
  • St. Catherine of Siena would also be easy to cook for. When you are the 23rd of 25 children your happy just to get something to eat. Though I hope she wouldn’t bring her incorrupt head along.
  • With St. Elijah you wouldn’t want to cook anything with flour since he spent a year eating just bread with that one widow. Though you might ask him if he could perform the same miracle on your refrigerator. Talk about saving on food bills.
July 29, 2007 4 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.
My conversion story
  • The Curt Jester: Disturbingly Funny --Mark Shea
  • EX-cellent blog --Jimmy Akin
  • One wag has even posted a list of the Top Ten signs that someone is in the grip of "motu-mania," -- John Allen Jr.
  • Brilliance abounds --Victor Lams
  • The Curt Jester is a blog of wise-ass musings on the media, politics, and things "Papist." The Revealer

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I also blog at Happy Catholic Bookshelf Twitter
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Email: curtjester@gmail.com

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