Saturday, December 16, 2006

Priest Profiles: Fr. Albert Lauer

A couple of weeks ago, I provided a review of the 2002 book by Michael S. Rose, entitled Priest - Portraits of Ten Good Men Serving the Church Today. The book gives those considering a vocation a look at ordinary men who have done extraordinary things within the Church. It leaves the rest of us to ponder our own path to sanctity and how important things like Eucharistic and Marian devotion, confession, self-denial and sacrifice, charity, a deep prayer life and orthodoxy are in general to functioning as instruments of God on earth.

The book opened with the story of Fr. Albert Lauer. Like the other priests profiled in the book, his life story has many twist and turns. If you have a vocation and are leaning towards working with the poor, Fr. Lauer's example can show you how to do it in a secular, material, and relativistic world. Learning about his days at the seminary and how lax he had become with prayer reveals how good works alone cannot suffice. It almost destroyed him. But, his example further shows how a priest or religious can triumph during these times of loose doctrine, loose worship, and loose living. It was only after he went back to basics that his attitude changed and God's graces worked through him to accomplish awesome things for the poor in the ghettos, and through his catechetical ministries. This is a priest who turned a parish from red ink to black through Eucharistic Adoration and unambiguous preaching of the Catholic faith. The very thing that some priests fear will drive more away, actually brought them to Fr. Lauer's parish. The debt was retired far faster than anyone expected, including Fr. Lauer. That aspect of his life story - drawing people through truth and devotion, reminded me of Pope Benedict's words to the Austrian Bishops in their 2005 ad limina:


You, dear brothers in the episcopacy, know this well: there are some topics relating to the truth of the faith, and above all to moral doctrine, which are not present in the catechesis and preaching of your dioceses to a sufficient extent, and which sometimes, for example in pastoral outreach to youth in the parishes or groups, are either not confronted at all or are not addressed in the clear sense understood by the Church. Thanks be to God, it is not like this everywhere. Perhaps those who are responsible for the proclamation [of the Gospel] are afraid that people may draw back if they speak too clearly. However, experience in general demonstrates that it is precisely the opposite that happens. Don’t deceive yourselves! Catholic teaching offered in an incomplete manner is a contradiction of itself and cannot be fruitful in the long term.


Fr. Lauer's story gives us several examples of how material things can interfere with our spiritual development and our faith. He made remarkable choices in dealing with adversity and in return, God graced him with likely saving not only many lives on the street, but with many souls - perhaps for years to come. Those details will have to be read in the chapter on his life which spans some 20 pages.

Unfortunately, Fr. Lauer can only look down and marvel along with God at the many who benefit from his tireless efforts. He passed away in 2001, but not before working right to his last breath. This man made the Energizer Bunny look like a turtle.

Some of his accomplishments can be found on the web. One of those was Presentation Ministries, which I will soon be adding to my sidebar. It has been recognized by the Church as an official Lay Association and it is something you can bring to your parish. I am likely to add a section called "Catechism" and include PM among the many other such sources. His catechesis is very solid. He was on local radio stations and can still be heard on some of them with rebroadcasts just like we so often hear Fr. Corapi. From what I understand in this link, Ave Maria Communications, has added him to their satellite feed, but I am unable to find his program on the programming guide of AveMariaRadio.net. If anyone knows, drop the info into the comment box. Regardless, you can use info in the same link to learn more about bringing his recordings to your area. Consider writing to Ave Maria Radio and Relevant Radio to carry it, as well as the new Catholic Channel on Sirius Satellite Radio if it is not already there.

The Presentation Ministries website also has audio that you can listen to online or as a podcast. They have audio and video tapes, as well, but I don't see DVD's.

Presentation Ministries also has some excellent Catechetics write-ups in the form of brochures you can read online or order for your parish. In particular, I want to draw attention to his section on Marriage and Family Life where his teachings on chastity in marriage, for example, are more in line with that of Fr. John A. Hardon and my own pastor, Fr. Eduard Perrone.

There is much more to explore on the Presentation Ministries website, but I want to shift over to some of his other works with links. For example, he started a private Catholic school for the poor boys in the ghetto. Their tuition depends on donations much of the time as they cannot afford the $4000 tuition. His goal when he began the school a year before he died was to make it both an elementary and a high school by the year 2010. This is not just any school, but a Latin school for boys. They are in need of another Latin instructor after the one they had passed away. They are also in need of a Music teacher. Financially they are struggling, but are determined to make it continue working. The Cincinatti Enquirer discusses the school in greater detail in a November 2006 article entitled, "Priest's vision carries on without him".

There is so much more I could say about Fr. Lauer, but I think you should get the book, curl up on your couch and enjoy reading the twists and turns in his life story all on your own. I've only provided links to those things mentioned in the book, but the details are something you will need to read for yourself. It will be hard to put down, and will leave you with pure hope and a better understanding for how things truly get done in the Church.

For details on how to get the book, go to my original blog-post about the book, "Priest".

Those familiar with Fr. Lauer - either through his media, or personally, please feel free to add your comments - anonymously or otherwise in the comment box below. Also, if you have read the chapter, tell us your thoughts and what you learned from the portrait of this good priest.

The jumbled letters you are asked to type in prevents web-spam from entering the comments section via "robots". Hence, don't be intimidated by it.

Friday, December 15, 2006

God's "TV" Programming


It's funny how you can find time to stand around and just watch a flock of birds in awe for several minutes - unexpectedly.

I don't do it often these days, but it was Friday and there was a Starbucks right in front of me and the thought of Capuccino hit me, perhaps prompted by the aroma, so I stopped in and got one. It was dusk and I was finished a long day of work. As I got out of my car, I noticed a few birds hanging out on some wires - perhaps a couple hundred in a flock. When I came out, what a sight. Those hundred birds took flight for some reason and were joined by several other groups to make one giant flock of probably several thousand.

Starlings are not the most graceful bird ndividually, but when one starling is joined with thousands it is purely a majestic site. I continued to sip my capuccino and decided to purposely lean against my car and enjoy the show. This was not just any program, it was God-TV.

Unlike regular TV, God-TV turns on and off all on its own and it goes with you, whether you want it or not. Sometimes, God-TV turns on and you just pass by without even taking the time to watch. I had seen this same flock of birds several times at the same intersection of Masonic and Gratiot, and wanted to just marvel at them, but was always in too much of a hurry to watch. Tonite I had much to do, but this time, I was not going to ignore this show again.

As the birds flew in circles and the flock split several times then rejoined, I began to ponder why they were doing this. Why didn't they just land on the nearby sign? Or, couldn't they make up their mind as to where they wanted to park for the evening?

The answer soon came. Out of nowhere, I watched as a hawk or falcon darted head-on into the crowd of birds. As clear as daylight, these birds banded together to evade a predator - one rarely seen in the middle of suburbia.

I came home and googled "starling flock" using the "image" tab and found this photo, taken by Manual Presti of the very thing I witnessed.



After he made a bold attempt to capture the evasive little creatures, he left and from what I could tell, went home with an empty belly.

While the Lord does not typically charge us for such shows, there was one small price to pay. I knew it was a risk for me and my head as so many birds flew straight overhead, but I held my ground under fire. After several more long minutes, I decided to head home as the birds continued to fly in circles. Getting in the car I found the price-tag. It was white and outlined in hues of green and yellow and it was right smack in the middle of my windshield.

Well, it was worth it. God's TV programming is far suprior to anything seen on regular television sets. Sometimes we need to just stop and watch.

Thursday, December 14, 2006

December 14 Te Deum Bulletin Board


2005 Archive Photo: The Pieta of Grotto during Christmas Season


Posts Since the
December 8 Bulletin Board

Catholic Blogger Selections

Selections from News and Online Magazines

Magister: “Habemus Papam.” Twenty Months Later, a Portrait

One of the blogs I enjoy checking in on most each week is that of Sandro Magister who writes for the Italian weekly, L'espresso on religion - mostly Catholic and often with a focus on the Vatican.

Benedict XVI doesn’t seek applause, he doesn’t harangue the crowds, but he’s still extremely popular. He himself has explained his secret: it is “obedience to the truth, not to the dictatorship of popular opinion”

by Sandro Magister


[snip]Read the lead-in to an article Magister provides within his blogpost that was recently in L'espresso. Here I give you the beginning of that excellent article.


Benedict XVI, a Pope Armed with “Purity”

by Sandro Magister


The numbers speak. Benedict XVI is the most popular pope in history, if by people one understands those whom he draws like a magnet to St. Peter’s Square each Sunday for the Angelus and each Wednesday for the general audience, from Rome and from all over the world.

Attendance is routinely more than twice that seen by his predecessor, John Paul II, who in his turn had shattered all the records. But the most amazing thing is the relationship between the demand and what is on offer. The winning product that Benedict XVI offers to the crowds is made of nothing but his plain words.

At the Angelus, two times out of three pope Joseph Ratzinger explains the Gospel of that Sunday’s Mass to an audience that includes people who don’t go to church every week – and some who don’t go at all. He explains this with simple words, but these demand and receive attention. There is an impressive silence in St. Peter’s Square when he is speaking. And at the end of the very short homily, he immediately begins the Angelus prayer, without even a momentary pause. This is his effective means of preventing an outbreak of applause. This does happen, but at the end of the entire ceremony, at the moment of the greetings in the various languages.

As pope, Benedict XVI doesn’t give an inch to the preconceptions that were formed about him as a cardinal. He doesn’t thunder condemnations, he doesn’t hurl anathemas. He reasons staunchly, but serenely. His criticisms against modernity or against the “pathologies” that he sees even within the Church are fully elaborated. That is part of the reason why he has practically silenced Catholic progressivism: not because this has turned friendly toward him, but because it is not able to reply to him with arguments of similar persuasive power.

[snip]

Continue reading Magister on Benedict XVI after 20 Months...

As a Catholic and a blogger there is something more to Pope Benedict's style to learn from. He does not use a sledge hammer approach to dealing with dissidence or progressivism. He uses a soft tone, but with words that carve through an issue in a way that just can't be dismissed or outspoken. Magister makes this precise point in that last paragraph.

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe and the Rorate Mass at Grotto


Today is the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe. Why not celebrate this Marian feast day with Holy Mass at Assumption Grotto tonite where the Priests of Opus Angelorum will have a rare Advent, Rorate Mass.

Arlington Bishop Releases Pastoral Letter on Pornography

This is long overdue.

Statistics on pornography are staggering given the ease with which it can now be viewed, and without having to go into a store and buy a magazine. The internet makes it accessible with the wrong click after a google search (all the more reason why kids should not have a computer in their rooms), and it comes to us through email hoping we will click the link with obvious filth attached.

I highly advise parents to read through this and anyone whose family is affected by pornography.

You can read it through hyperlinks for each section in this document:

Bought with a Price: Pornography and the Attack on the Living Temple of God


You can also get the entire 24 page document as a PDF file (may take a minute to load)


I mentioned statistics and the Diocese of Kansas City, Kansas provides them for us. They are indeed shocking and should draw our attention to this growing problem. How the children can avoid this lure today is beyond me. TV, billboards, music - all lure the unsuspecting innocent into curiosity like a mouse exploring a piece of cheese on a mousetrap - it's deadly. Here are those startling statistics.

Internet Pornography
4.2 million pornographic web sites
372 million pornographic pages
68 million daily pornographic search engine requests
2.5 billion daily pornographic emails
100 thousand websites offering illegal child pornography
as little as 6 hours of exposure to soft-core porn
(soft core porn is anything that is designed to arouse one sexually)
is enough to destroy the viewers satisfaction with his or her spouse
decrease in the value of faithfulness
decrease in partner satisfaction
increase in the thought that women enjoy rape
lose ability to be with one person and cherish that one person
(university study)

Children Internet Pornography Statistics
8 years old average age of first Internet exposure to pornography
12yrs.old to 17 yrs. old largest consumer of internet pornography
8-16 year olds having viewed porn online – 90% (most while doing homework)

Adult Internet Pornography Statistics
20% men admitting to accessing pornography at work
40 million US adults who regularly visit internet pornography websites
47 % christians who said pornography is a major problem in the home
[My comment: I personally witness the dismissal of people several times yearly from my large corporation for viewing and storing pornography at work. You may wonder how they could be so stupid as we so often do. However, we are talking about a forceful addiction. What else could it be when they see others getting fired, losing their pension, their benefits, and pay, and know the company can track it, yet they persist?]

Women and Pornography
70% of women keep their cyber activities secret
Women favor chat rooms 2X more than men
1 out of 3 visitors to all adult web sites are women
9.4 million women access adult web sites each month.

Pornography Industry Revenue Statistics
US porn revenue exceeds the combined revenues of ABC, CBS, and NBC (6.2 billion)
adult videos 20 billion dollars
cable pay for view 2.5 billion dollars
magazines 7.5 billion dollars
internet 2.5 billion dollars
size of the industry 57 billion dollars


I provide them because so many people are in denial. So many parents wouldn't believe their child has stumbled into this. All one has to do is to click through Catholic forums on morality and see the children admitting to others that they are addicted and trying to break free from its grip because they know it is wrong and they have discovered its gripping, destructive nature. Some want to go to confession and are too embarassed and look for support in Catholic forums. I've had exchanges with kids who claim to be as young as 11 or 14 who are struggling through this and are too embarassed to even tell a priest in a confessional. Other Catholics such as myself encourage them to make use of frequent confession (which they often do), to fast, to devote themselves to the Blessed Mother. Some have success stories and are often very happy when they do overcome it while it is not too far along. Here is one example of a 19 year old asking for such help. More than likely this is not something that started happening at 19. This thread also highlights how the interent can be used in God-pleasing ways and the support is evident. A soul reveals his desire to stop this sinful addiction and looks for help in an anonymous way.

TRUE KNIGHTS - A CATHOLIC APOSTOLATE
True Knights is a Catholic apostolate for those deal with this difficult affliction. There is hope. Organizations such as True Knights, help men overcome this addiction. The founder, Ken Henderson, was himself heavily addicted and is living proof that it can be overcome, but not without some work.

While this apostolate is dedicated primarily to men, women who are addicted will find the approaches here just as applicable: Mortification, Eucharist, Marian devotion, devotion to the Sacred Heart, and if you really want to cease - sacrificing those things that bring you into the near occassion of sin.



PRAYER
If you are not addicted, be thankful to God and pray for all souls who are caught in the deadly trap of pornography. They need not our judgment, but our compassion and prayers that they are willing to make the necessary sacrifices to overcome the problem, even if it means shutting off the computer for a time. Remember them and their struggles in adoration and keep in mind we are also talking about kids as young as 8 years old.

Proper Translation of Pope Benedict's Address to Swiss Bishops

Apparently, the first release of the Holy Father's address to Swiss Bishops this year was inaccurate, so it has been re-translated and re-released by the Holy See.

I often like to post text of ad limina visit speeches because they are often so rich, and truly so applicable to more than those being addressed. In this case, the Holy Father did not have a prepared speech. He speaks of attitudes among Christians about faith, and he talks about worship, about confession, catechesis, and about how bishops function. Here is one quote about confession:

The second subject I would like to talk about concerns the Sacrament of Penance, whose practice in the past 50 years or thereabouts has gradually diminished. Thanks be to God, cloisters, abbeys and shrines exist where people go on pilgrimage, where their hearts are opened and also prepared for confession.

We must truly learn this Sacrament anew. From a purely anthropological viewpoint it is important, on the one hand, to recognize sin and on the other, to practice forgiveness. The widespread absence of an awareness of sin is a disturbing phenomenon of our time.

Thus, the gift of the Sacrament of Penance not only consists in the reception of forgiveness, but also and above all in being aware of our need for forgiveness. With this Sacrament we are purified, we are inwardly transformed and subsequently able to understand others even better and to forgive them.

For the human being, the recognition of sin is elementary—he is ill if he no longer perceives it—, and the liberating experience of being granted forgiveness is equally important for him. The Sacrament of Reconciliation is the crucial place where both these things take place.

In this Sacrament, furthermore, faith becomes something completely personal; it is no longer concealed in collectivity. If man faces up to this challenge and in his need of forgiveness presents himself defenseless, as it were, before God, he then has the moving experience of a quite personal encounter with the love of Jesus Christ.


Pope Benedict's full address to Swiss Bishops from Zenit.org

Monday, December 11, 2006

St. John of the Cross - Carmelite Feast (and fast) Day Approaches


All secular Carmelites join in fasting on the day before certain feast days. Thursday, December 14, 2006 is the Feast of St. John of the Cross.

For those who don't know about St. John of the Cross....

Who was St. John of the Cross?

Online collection of his works

A few quotable quotes:

"Conquering the tongue is better than fasting on bread and water"
(Maxims & Counsels)


"The Father spoke one Word which was His Son, and this Word He always speaks in eternal silence, and in silence must it be heard by the soul." (Maxims & Counsels)

"Keep this in mind daughters: The sould that is quick to turn to speaking and conversing is slow to turn to God" (Letter to Ana de Jesus)

"The soul that journeys to God, but does not shake off its cares and quiet its appetites is like one who drags a cart uphill" (Sayings of Light and Love)

"Be joyful and gladdened in your interior recollection with Him, for you have Him so close to you. Desire Him there, adore Him there."(The Spiritual Canticle)

"The soul in which God alone dwells has no ohter function than that of an altar on which God is adored in praise and love" (Ascent of Mount Carmel)


These quotes came from a booklet I picked up about 25 years ago in a Catholic bookstore and I recently learned that not only is it still being produced, but there are many other Carmelite flip-card booklets for other saints. You stand it up and just flip it each day for another Carmelite quote.

These are made by the Carmelite sisters in Terra Haute, Indiana and can be found through a few online stores. I'm not sure if they can be obtained through ICS Publications, but perhaps someone could check it out.

Here is one source: Monastery Greetings


ADVENT MASS OPPORTUNITY

While daily Mass is not obligatory for secular Carmelites, if you are local and can squeeze it in, consider assisting at Holy Mass at Assumption Grotto during Advent this Tuesday or next evening at 7:00pm . The Priests of Opus Angelorum have been doing a beautiful and rarely seen (in the US) "Rorate Mass" which originated in German-speaking countries. It is quite meditative to be in total darkness only under candlepower through the entire Mass. This includes an altar and altar steps aglow with candles, and candles on stands so the readings may be done. There are no lights used!!! This only happens during Advent so there are two more to catch. Fr. W.S., ORC provided me with a write-up which goes into the history and details of this Mass as it was done originally, and as it is done today.

Te Deum Laudamus! Homepage

Letter from Cardinal Re to Bishop Bruskewitz on Call to Action Excommunications

Ok - I know this will either be hard to read, or impossible. It's the only version I could find and it's a JPG. If you click on it, you may be able to see it better. If someone runs across a PDF file of this on the web, let me know and I'll swap this one out. You should find almost the entire content of the letter in the links I've provided below.



Now, this only applies to the Lincoln, Nebraska diocese. If this kind of thing doesn't start happening in other dioceses Catholics will go on thinking it's ok to belong to organizations which promote open dissent from Catholic teaching with the mistaken notion that there are "two sides to every issue".


From the Diocese of Lincoln, Nebraska

More from the Catholic News Agency, CNA - the reporting arm of the USCCB.

Original letter of excommunication from 1996 by Bishop Bruskewitz, including the list of other organizations which were included (not known if any others appealed the way Call to Action did)....


All Catholics in and of the Diocese of Lincoln are forbidden to be members of the organizations and groups listed below. Membership in these organizations or groups is always perilous to the Catholic Faith and most often is totally incompatible with the Catholic Faith.

*Planned Parenthood

*Society of Saint Pius X*(Lefebvre Group)

*Hemlock Society

*Call to Action

*Call to Action Nebraska

*Saint Michael the Archangel Chapel

*Freemasons

*Job's Daughters

*DeMolay

*Eastern Star

*Rainbow Girls

*Catholics for a Free Choice

Any Catholics in and of the Diocese of Lincoln who attain or retain membership in any of the above listed organizations or groups after April 15, 1996, are by that very fact (ipso-facto-latae sententiae) under interdict and are absolutely forbidden to receive Holy Communion. Contumacious persistence in such membership for one month following the interdict on part of any such Catholics will by that very fact (ipso-facto-latae sententiae) cause them to be excommunicated. Absolution from these ecclesial censures is "reserved the Bishop." This notice, when published in the Southern Nebraska Register, is a formal canonical warning.

By mandate of the Most Reverend Bishop of Lincoln.

(signed) Reverend Monsignor Timothy Thorburn Chancellor

March 19,1996"

December 8 Te Deum Bulletin Board

Posts since December 1, 2006


Selections from the December 1, Bulletin Board

From the Te Deum Archives:

Saturday, December 9, 2006

Opus Angelorum: Advent Day of Recollection - December 10, 2006

EDIT #2: I'm bumping this up today - the Day of Recollection is tomorrow. Scroll down to the next post for the Te Deum Bulletin Board which accumulates recent posts.

While we complain about how secularized "the holidays" have become, we can unwittingly contribute to this sad state of affairs when we spend much of our "holiday" time engaging in and preparing for parties - often before Christmas, or spending long hours at the mall buying gifts, or completely getting lost in the height of sports. These things become the central focus and nothing opposes spiritual development and devotion greater than being overly busy

It took 44 years for me to recognize, internally, the magnitude of the very heart of Christmas: God became man!!! This realization was prompted by a pastor and group of priests at my parish who made sure I unbusy'ed myself from secular activities by distracting me with spiritual and religious things all through Advent. I still say it was a conspiracy - and a good one at that. While other places decrease in activity so people can get their shopping done and prepare for parties, Assumption Grotto went into high gear. There simply was no time for my usual secular holiday routine. Last year I kept wondering when I would begin that routine. But Christmas came and Christmas went with fewer gifts bought, absolutely no time at "Christmas" parties before Christmas, and I actually (gasp), gave up football on a given Sunday or two - a favorite past time. I survived just fine!!!

Here is one of those terrific opportunities as Christmas approaches. Let go and spend an afternoon at Assumpion Grotto, if not for your sake, for God's sake. Give Him the gift of your time.


Day of Recollection Theme
"The Holy Angels in our daily Lives"


The Priests of Opus Angelorum are holding another Day of Recollection at Assumption Grotto. Here are the details for those interested. Details are as follows:

Advent Day of Recollection

When: Dec, 10, 2006 from

From: 2:00 to 5.00pm

Where:
Assumption Grotto Parish

There will be two conferences with question and answer. At the conclusion of the conferences, there will be Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament in the Church, along with opportunities for Confession. Benediction will follow at the conclusion of Exposition.


If this interrupts a typical family meal time....not to worry: Following the 9:30 and Noon Sunday Masses, you can purchase hot dogs for $1.00 and hamburgers and sausages for $2.00 with some other items. With Noon Mass and weekly Benediction ending around 1:10, you will have plenty of time to grab something to eat in the gym, or even run out quick before the start of the first conference. The gift shop is also open following the Mass, as well so you can browse the many items available, including a section from Opus Angelorum with their many tapes, books and other items.

It is not uncommon for whole families to be present at a Day of Recollection. In July, there were about 120 people present. I would not be surprised to see these popular conferences shift to the gym in the future. More photo posts from the Day of Recollection in July can be found at the bottom of Photopost 6 from that session.

EDIT: I've just learned that Opus Angelorum is having a silent retreat the last weekend in January in Holly Michigan. Contact them at opusangelorum@rc.net or at 313-527-1739 for details.

Friday, December 8, 2006

Vatican supports Bruskewitz on Excommunication of Call to Action Members

You may recall many years ago that Bishop Bruskewitz Excommunicated members of several organizations within his diocese, unless they disassociated themselves with them. He deemed them to support things that were harmful to one's faith and the Church. This included Call to Action which has dissented on many levels including abortion and homosexuality, among others.

H/T to Domenico Bettinelli Jr. for the lead to CWNews which covers the Vatican's support for Bishop Bruskewitz. This comes about after Call to Action - Nebraska Chapter appealed to the Holy See.

Here you get more background and the latest news. I pray that other dioceses will follow suit now that Bruskewitz has the backing of the Vatican.

Vatican confirms excommunication for US dissident group

Dec. 7, 2006 (CWNews.com) - The Vatican has confirmed an American bishop’s decision to excommunicate members of the dissident group Call to Action.

Call to Action is “causing damage to the Church of Christ,” wrote Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re (bio - news), the prefect of the Congregation for Bishops, in a letter to Bishop Fabian Bruskewitz of Lincoln, Nebraska.

In March 1996, Bishop Bruskewitz had announced the excommunication of all Catholics in his diocese who were members of Call to Action or several other dissident groups which he described as “totally incompatible with the Catholic faith.”

The Nebraska chapter of Call to Action appealed the bishop’s decision to the Vatican. In his November 24 letter to Bishop Bruskewitz, Cardinal Re reports that Vatican’s finding that the disciplinary action was “properly taken.”

The Vatican has determined that “the activities of ‘Call to Action’ in the course of these years are in contrast with the Catholic Faith due to views and positions held which are unacceptable from a doctrinal and disciplinary standpoint,” Cardinal Re writes. He concludes: “Thus to be a member of this Association or to support it, is irreconcilable with a coherent living of the Catholic Faith.”

The excommunication that Bishop Bruskewitz announced covered not only to Call to Action, but also to members of Catholics for a Free Choice, Planned Parenthood, the Hemlock Society, the Freemasons, and the Society of St. Pius X.

The excommunication order applies only within the Lincoln, Nebraska diocese. But the Vatican’s judgment against Call to Action raises clear questions about the status of the group’s members in other dioceses.

December 8: Feast of the Immaculate Conception


Today is a Holy Day of Obligation for Catholics. It is the feast of the Immaculate Conception - a commonly misunderstood doctrine.

I leave you with some great resources which explain the doctrine behind this feast day, including some excerpts.

Catholic Answers: Immaculate Conception and Assumption

The Marian doctrines are, for Fundamentalists, among the most bothersome of the Catholic Church’s teachings. In this tract we’ll examine briefly two Marian doctrines that Fundamentalist writers frequently object to—the Immaculate Conception and the Assumption.


Was Mary's Immaculate Conception Absolutely Necessary?

All the Immaculate Conception did was make Mary as Eve was before the Fall (precisely why the Fathers often called her the Second Eve or New Eve): unfallen and sinless; not subject to original sin. As Cardinal Newman remarked: why is it considered such an extraordinary thing that God chose to simply make one person -- the Mother of God the Son, the Theotokos -- the way that all of us would have been, but for the Fall? What better person to choose than the one who bore our Lord Jesus in her own body for nine months?! It makes perfect sense to me. I never had much difficulty with Marian doctrines once they were properly explained to me.


Fr. Martin Fox: Even Catholics get it wrong...

A lot of people think today’s feast—
the Immaculate Conception—
is about when Jesus was conceived.

That’s an understandable mistake to make.

But here’s the correct information:
the Immaculate Conception refers to
when Mary’s life began,
long before Jesus was born.


A beautiful photo on the blog of Fr. Zuhlsdorf

Jimmy Akin posts on the Immaculate Conception - and takes a "blogger day off" for the feast day. Mea culpa! for not doing the same.

And, as always, don't forget the Catholic Encyclopedia at New Advent

A young priest, a good sermon, and a long confession line...

 A young priest in his Angelic Chasuble this spring


I had wanted it myself but felt funny asking for it. After being flanked by several people asking me if I could get it for the blog, I mustered the courage to ask, and I managed to get it. "It" was a sermon delivered by one of the Canons Regular of the Order of the Holy Cross (ORC) (pictured above) at the 9:30am Latin Novus Ordo on the feast of Christ the King. He offered the homily if I would allow him to remain anonymous. He did not want to draw attention to himself.

Reading it is one thing. But, sitting in the pew listening to it was very.....humbling. Banality is something that simply is not found in sermons at Assumption Grotto. Rather, they are always moving and always getting us to dig deep within our souls in fruitful ways. For a person serious about pleasing God, this is not negative, but very positive. A pearl is created by friction and abrasion within a clam, and in a like manner, the soul must be polished.

When I first came to Assumption Grotto and was going to the 7:30am Mass each day, I would notice this priest going to his confessional right after Lauds ended (about 7:20/7:25), along with the co-pastor who also goes to his confessional outside of posted hours.  He would also just show up spontaenously at times when people were in Church, like during 40 hours devotion or First Friday Adoration.  You could almost count on him being there, if there was an event in Church.  I often thought of St. John Vianney who spent many hours in the confessional.  People respond to a priest in his confessional, especially at Grotto.

After the Mass, about 1/2 hour before the noon Mass on Christ the King, I walked through the parking lot with the young priest, in my quest to get a copy of his homily. As he walked in the vestibule we could see  the long line at his confessional through a window in the door. Our jaws dropped simlultaneously and we looked at one another. It wrapped around the wall, longer than I was use to seeing. He turned to me, beamed with an enthusiastic smile, and said, "Oh I must get in there, I already have a long line". As he rushed off - I tugged at his jacket and whispered tersely, "What did you expect after a sermon like that?!!!"  He smiled, put his head down, and hurried past the line of people to his confessional.

This is key. I believe a priest can see the fruits of his sermons in the confessional where souls work to respond to God's grace. I know all too well with myself when I first began to take my faith seriously in May of 2005, that the wholesome, soul-searching sermons and homilies at Assumption Grotto made me desire frequent confession even if only for working through venial matters and imperfections. The priests at Grotto encourage this and are so very patient in this regard. They never rush or hurry someone and the people wait just as patiently knowing that time the priest takes with others, will also be taken with them. I suppose along with the good sermons, the lines had a luring effect to this awesome sacrament, as well.

Anyone in metro-Detroit in need of a great confessor will find their fill at Assumption Grotto. Just come on a Sunday and you'll blend right in with the rest of us poor sinners.

Without further delay, here is that simple, fine homily.

When we give up our stubbornness, CHRIST can reign in us!

Assumption Grotto, CHRIST the King, November 26, 2006, 9:30am


I don’t know if there is anyone here who enjoys to be corrected. We don’t like it when somebody points out our mistakes and faults, or tells us what we do or how we think is wrong and has to be corrected.

We don’t like to be corrected because it humiliates us: we have to admit a mistake.

We don’t like to be corrected because we think: ‘Who is that person who tells me what I’m supposed to do!’ We prefer to follow our own opinion and will.

We don’t like to be corrected because we might have to change something when a person tries to correct us.

In our pride we can even build a wall around us – a wall that makes it impossible for others to approach us and tell us the truth about us, because they fear hurting us or they fear that we are going to hurt them. We react even harshly when we get corrected, and in this way we make sure that the other person won’t try this again!

How proud can we be? How self-righteous? How blind? How insincere!? We put a blindfold over our eyes which make us unable to be sincere with ourselves!

So powerful is our human will! Through our will we can decide over our eternal life or death. How stubborn and fixed on one’s own will a person can be!

Certainly you have already experienced wanting to convince another person of something, but that person – even listening to your best arguments and reasons – didn’t want to change his mind. Stubbornness, we call it. The person even understands your reasons, but when he doesn’t want it, you won’t change his mind.

We celebrate the Solemnity ‘CHRIST the King’ today. CHRIST wants to reign in our souls, and He starts to reign in us when we lovingly submit our will to His Divine Will. St. Maximilian Kolbe said that holiness is when the small w (my will) equals the big W (GOD’S Will). The more our will becomes similar to His, the more He reigns in us and loves in us! CHRIST establishes His kingdom in our souls step by step: it’s a process in which we have to cooperate!

But what hard work to try to submit our will to CHRIST: To give up our plans, when the Lord wants it differently! To give up the pride to think that I’m always right and I know it better.
How often do we live in that illusion that we are already advanced in holiness?

We don’t like to be corrected. But, how good it would be for us if we were to sometimes ask our spouse, a good friend, parents, children, what they think we should make better or what we should change? We would see ourselves in a different light and could be more attentive! We could discover things which we never thought before and submit it also to CHRIST!

How beneficial would it be if we would accept correction?!

Every now and then it happens to me that a dear brother would come to me and – in true brotherly love – tell me something about my behavior. Though he said it in a gentle way, I didn’t like it very much. But then, afterwards, I started to think about it and I began to see myself in a more self-critical way – and I had to admit that he was right. With his help, I found another aspect which I didn’t want to see before, that I didn’t submit to CHRIST’S power over myself, and from that moment on I could give my will more perfectly to CHRIST.

The Lord has many ways to show us the truth about ourselves. The HOLY SPIRIT makes us discover our faults.

He sends our Guardian Angel to hold a mirror before our eyes, so we see who we really are, and to take the blindfold from our eyes which makes us unable to see ourselves in the true light.

He tries to help us to get on the right track to eternal life. He made us social beings who depend on one another… But very often we don’t want to accept the help of others.

But HE also sends us people, or a good book, or a situation in our life, that make us examine our conscience again in humility and recognize that there is something which has to be submitted to CHRIST’S Kingship.

In this way – with our cooperation – the Lord can conquer our heart slowly for Himself, when we don’t mess His plans up with our stubbornness of will.

The Collect prayer today mentions the ‘slavery’ in which we live. This slavery is the slavery of our own will. His Will is the best for us. His Will leads us to freedom.
Our will just enslaves us.
We want to put our will into His hands, so that CHRIST the King may be able to use us as channels of love. In this way, we will reign with Him.
Fr. E.S., ORC

That's FATHER Al Kimmel now - The Pontificator becomes a Priest

Al Kimmel, the former Episcopalian parish priest and "Pontificator" of the blog "Pontifications" was ordained on December 3, 2006. His blog profile reads as follows:

Al Kimel (aka “Pontificator”) was a parish priest in the Episcopal Church for twenty-five years. He has published articles in the Anglican Theological Review, Sewanee Theological Review, Interpretation, Scottish Journal of Theology, Worship, Faith & Philosophy, Pro Ecclesia, and First Things. He has also edited two books: Speaking the Christian God and This is My Name Forever. He began Pontifications in March 2004 as a way to reflect on the meaning of the Church and to invite others to share in these reflections. In June 2005 he entered into full communion with the Catholic Church. On 3 December 2006 he was ordained a priest in the Catholic Church. He is currently serving as the lay Catholic chaplain at Kean University in Union, New Jersey. All unsigned articles on Pontifications are written by Fr Kimel.


Pontifications Photo Post of the ordination

More from others on Fr. Al Kimmel's ordination

Further down the blog, Kimmel talks about another former Anglican is soon to be ordained to the priesthood, along with a related National Catholic Register article.