Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Hand Painted Crucifixes…



The Sisters of the Holy Cross at Grotto offer beautiful hand-painted crucifixes.  If you are local you can look at the many options at the Grotto gift shop.  Or, click here to see more and for contact information.  I've added this pic to my side bar.  Clicking on the pic will take you to that same link.  

If at any point that link doesn't work, let me know.


For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

Te Deum Laudamus! Home

The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

- Diane M. Korzeniewski

Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.

Sunday, December 1, 2013

Upcoming Tridentine Masses around Detroit



Christmas Masses Scheduled


Tridentine Masses for Christmas Day, Wednesday, December 25, have been scheduled:
  • 12:00 Midnight: High Mass at St. Joseph Church, Detroit
  • 12:00 Midnight: Solemn High Mass at Assumption Grotto, Detroit (orchestral Mass; details here)
  • 9:30 AM: High Mass at St. Joseph Church, Detroit
  • 9:30 AM: High Mass at Assumption Grotto, Detroit
  • 2:00 PM: Solemn High Mass at St. Benedict/Assumption-Windsor
- Choir will sing Michael Praetorius’ Missa a 8 and motets including Hieronymus Praetorius’ In Dulci Júbilo - Deacon will be Deacon Joe Tuskiewicz; Subdeacon will be seminarian Jacob VanAssche from Detroit’s Sacred Heart Seminary

Please note that there will be no Masses at Assumption Church in Windsor on Tuesday, December 24 or Tuesday, December 31.

UPDATE: Fr. Lee Acervo submitted this to the com-box:

  • St. Edward on the Lake in Lakeport will be having High Masses at midnight on Dec. 25 and January 1.

Tridentine Masses This Coming Week

  • Tue. 12/03 7:00 PM: Low Mass at St. Benedict/Assumption-Windsor (St. Francis Xavier, Confessor)
  • Sat. 12/07 8:30 AM: High or low Mass at Assumption Grotto, Detroit (Grotto Carmelites - First Saturday; open to all). 
  • Sat. 12/07 9:00 PM: Low Mass at St. Hyacinth (Immaculate Heart of Mary) [First Saturday]
  • Monday-Saturday 7:30AM: High or Low Mass (varies) at Assumption Grotto




  • Monday-Wednesday-Friday 7:00PM: High or Low Mass (varies) Assumption Grotto
  • Holy Days and Sundays 9:30AM: High Mass at Assumption Grotto (except as noted here)


  • On Sunday, December 8, at Assumption Grotto, Detroit, there will be an orchestral Mass at the 9:30 AM TLM,  probably a Solemn High Mass.  We will hear the Mozart Coronation Mass. 

    Other?




    For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

    Te Deum Laudamus! Home

    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

    Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.

    Christmas Season Schedule at Assumption Grotto




    The above shows you the upcoming orchestral Mass schedule through Sunday, January 5, 2014.  

    Here it is in type:

    Masses for Christmas obligation


    Wednesday, December 25 
    • [checking to see if there are other Masses before Midnight on Christmas Eve]
    • Midnight (orchestral Mass; prelude music beginning at 11:45 p.m. on December 24)
    • 6:30 AM (Novus Ordo, usually vernacular)
    • 9:30 AM (High Mass, TLM, regular Grotto choir not singing)
    • 12:00 noon (Novus Ordo, usually vernacular)
    Other Orchestral Masses 
    • Sunday, December 29, at 9:30 a.m. (Solemn High Mass; orchestral, as above)
    • Sunday, January 5, 2014 at 12:00 noon (Solemn High Mass; orchestral, as above)


    Solemnity of the Mother of God

    • [checking to see if there is an earlier evening vigil Mass around the usual 4:00 time frame]
    • December 31, 2013, at 11:00 p.m. (checking on this: usually a concelebrated Novus Ordo followed by Rosary;  Te Deum Laudamus prayed (chant, in Latin) for indulgence before midnight. And, usually a post-midnight pot-luck or other gathering in the school gym).  
    • January 1, 2014, usual holy day schedule (6:30 a.m., 9:30 a.m., and noon - with the 9:30 being TLM and the other two most likely following the Sunday pattern of being Novus Ordo, mostly in the vernacular).
    I'm working on getting the Confession schedule and other questions answered.  I'll make a new post with the updates so watch my home page or AssumptionGrotto.com



    For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

    Te Deum Laudamus! Home

    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

    Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.

    Friday, November 29, 2013

    Fr. Perrone to speak at Call to Holiness Fundraiser after Noon Mass at Grotto on Sunday



    Come to Assumption Grotto this weekend to hear Fr. Perrone speak at a fundraiser for a Call to Holiness conference coming up in 2014.

    You can pay at the door.


    For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

    Te Deum Laudamus! Home

    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

    Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.

    Blog Updated with iBreviary and Catholic Culture Widgets

    If you scroll the side-bar you will notice some changes. Two things I want to which I want to draw your attention are below.






    Catholic Culture News Link


    Over to the right, in the side bar, I did not realize that my news link from Catholic Culture had disappeared.  But, it looks like they've done some updating and I have an even better one now.  If you click on the readings for the day, it will give you information for both the new and old calendars.  Below that will be other interesting things that should change each day, including top headlines.  Catholic Culture is closed on holidays and weekends, so those would be the only time it would not update.

    iBreviary Widget


    Also, I discovered iBreviary had widgets so I have added one to the sidebar.  This allows you to pray any part of the Divine Office online, right here.  And, the text is pre-loaded for the day and arranged to flow (no skipping from one section to another).  iBreviary was the subject of much discussion back in 2008 when it debuted.  I'm in agreement with the statement given here that if the text is faithful to an approved text, it stands to reason it is valid e-text for those who are required to pray it.  The way I see it, I can imagine how some complained throughout the centuries as text went from being chiseled into stone, to scrolls, then books, etc.  I like the feel of a book in hand, but my iPhone is ever in my pocket and there is no hopping around from this section or that, or consulting a booklet to find out what I should be praying.

    One note is that on Saturdays (for the Blessed Virgin Mary), and certain feast days, you might see notes about using the "More Prayers" section. Note there is a "More" button.  Click that and explore what is in there.

    The daily Mass readings for the new calendar are there, as well.





    For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

    Te Deum Laudamus! Home

    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

    Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.

    St. Cyprian: The world hates Christians, so why give your love to it…?



    The Second Reading in today's Office of Readings in the Divine Office is from St. Cyprian.  Very powerful.


    From a sermon on man’s mortality by Saint Cyprian, bishop and martyr
    (Cap 18:24, 26: CSEL 3, 308, 312-314)

    Let us banish the fear of death and think of the eternal life that follows it

    Our obligation is to do God’s will, and not our own. We must remember this if the prayer that our Lord commanded us to say daily is to have any meaning on our lips. How unreasonable it is to pray that God’s will be done, and then not promptly obey it when he calls us from this world! Instead we struggle and resist like self-willed slaves and are brought into the Lord’s presence with sorrow and lamentation, not freely consenting to our departure, but constrained by necessity. And yet we expect to be rewarded with heavenly honors by him to whom we come against our will! Why then do we pray for the kingdom of heaven to come if this earthly bondage pleases us? What is the point of praying so often for its early arrival if we should rather serve the devil here than reign with Christ.

    The world hates Christians, so why give your love to it instead of following Christ, who loves you and has redeemed you? John is most urgent in his epistle when he tells us not to love the world by yielding to sensual desires. Never give your love to the world, he warns, or to anything in it. A man cannot love the Father and love the world at the same time. All that the world offers is the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes and earthly ambition. The world and its allurements will pass away, but the man who has done the will of God shall live for ever.Our part, my dear brothers, is to be single-minded, firm in faith, and steadfast in courage, ready for God’s will, whatever it may be. Banish the fear of death and think of the eternal life that follows. That will show people that we really live our faith.

    We ought never to forget, beloved, that we have renounced the world. We are living here now as aliens and only for a time. When the day of our homecoming puts an end to our exile, frees us from the bonds of the world, and restores us to paradise and to a kingdom, we should welcome it. What man, stationed in a foreign land, would not want to return to his own country as soon as possible? Well, we look upon paradise as our country, and a great crowd of our loved ones awaits us there, a countless throng of parents, brothers and children longs for us to join them. Assured though they are of their own salvation, they are still concerned about ours. What joy both for them and for us to see one another and embrace! O the delight of that heavenly kingdom where there is no fear of death! O the supreme and endless bliss of everlasting life!

    There is the glorious band of apostles, there, the exultant assembly of prophets, there, the innumerable host of martyrs, crowned for their glorious victory in combat and in death. There, in triumph, are the virgins who subdued their passions by the strength of continence. There the merciful are rewarded, those who fulfilled the demands of justice by providing for the poor. In obedience to the Lord’s command, they turned their earthly patrimony into heavenly treasure.

    My dear brothers, let all our longing be to join them as soon as we may. May God see our desire, may Christ see this resolve that springs from faith, for he will give the rewards of his love more abundantly to those who have longed for him more fervently.








    For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

    Te Deum Laudamus! Home

    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

    Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.

    Thursday, November 28, 2013

    A Thanksgiving Day Reflection


    Normal Rockwell's painting of a family's Thanksgiving feast, probably best captures the holiday the way I remember it.  However, we didn't get dressed up (we dressed down, comfortably); and there were way too many people cramming into our nearly 1200 square foot home, or that of one of my mother's other siblings, to fit around one table.  Thanksgiving was probably that way, or much like it is shown in the painting.  Sometimes there was even a a non-family member or two at Thanksgiving or Christmas Day feasts - the poor souls who had no where else to go.  Maybe that's why I connect so well with reruns of The Walton's.  Life for me growing up was different from that, yet had similarities.

    I miss those days, as aptly as my mother often predicted I would.  She spent  much of her adult life lamenting the loss of holidays as she remembered them in the big three story house on Russell Street in Detroit, where it too was crammed full of people in every nook and cranny, including people with no where else to go on a holiday.

    With the passing of a family patriarch or matriarch, things change and family members go their separate ways.  The first thing that collapses are the big family dinners.  Lots of things are behind it.

    In some cases, younger family members enjoyed the great feasts, but never took an interest in learning how to cook it  (even my mother lamented not being able to make things taste exactly as her grandmother's cooking).  Some mothers were so eager to see the family eat, they didn't bother to ensure a new generation would know the trade, so to speak.  It's intimidating.  My own pastor announced in the bulletin last week that, with the passing of his own mother recently, he is hosting his family at the parish and making them dinner.

    In other cases, a matriarch or patriarch are like glue that holds a family together when they otherwise wouldn't want to be together.  Part of the problem today is that some just don't want to be around others they don't care for or have much in common with.  Yet, pearls are created with friction.  There was a time when parents made children sit with relatives out of respect and charity.  In some cases, parents let their kids hide in their rooms for whatever reason and the net effect was an inability to socialize or be around people they don't like.  For a Christian, learning to be around others you didn't feel like being around was one way to sharpen virtues - something rarely discussed in a society that values a certain "edginess" and "independence."

    I can appreciate what I witness in those Walton's reruns I enjoy -- each episode dealing with the ordinary challenges of daily life and the Christian response to them.  Many today have been formed by Roseanne whose main character, of the same name, ushered in the "edge" which opposed the very virtues programs like The Walton's built.  People came to value the snark of, "The Simpsons" perhaps because one of the main characters, who coined the expression, "eat my shorts," said what was on his mind without reserve.  There are people who think it takes courage to tell someone else off the way Roseanne or Bart Simpson would.  To me, it's the easy way out.  There's nothing really in Scripture to support it.

    Other things that have broken down the big family meals are the natural separation that comes when family members move to distant places - be it local, yet distant; or out of state.  This happens.  Some prefer it that way; others do it out of necessity.

    Now, more than ever, consumerism and materialism continue to erode family values.  It's good to give gifts; but sometimes the best thing to give is yourself.  Focus on what is good in others; not on what annoys you about them.  Talk about the things you have in common; not the things that separate you. Use this season to love others, to listen to others, and to learn from others.

    Have a blessed Thanksgiving and be sure to give thanks to God. Every breath we take is because He wills it.




    For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

    Te Deum Laudamus! Home

    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

    Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.

    Tuesday, November 26, 2013

    Breaking: U.S. Supreme Court to consider Obamacare's Contraception Mandate




    Just spotted this at lunch time on Twitter…



    I'm sure they will take up the case.  All across the countries lower level courts are disagreeing with one another.


    For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

    Te Deum Laudamus! Home

    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

    Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.

    New Apostolic Exhortation: Evangelii Gaudium



    Pope Francis has released his apostolic exhortation, Evangelii Gaudium - the Joy of the Gospel.  

    Don't rely on the secular press, or even on bloggers to do your work for you.  Read it yourself first, then read the various commentaries.  That is my plan.  There's always a rush to get the first commentary out for people who won't take the time to read what the Pope says in his own words.  Some are good; but some are agenda driven, looking for whatever low-hanging fruit they can find to peddle to a particular audience.  Watch one less TV program or give up an hour of social media to read it. Take your time and go through it reflectively.  Those commentaries will still be there tomorrow, next week, next month, and well beyond that.

    Here is the online English version of Evangelii Gaudium

    International readers can find it in various languages here.

    If you want to print it out or read it in an e-reader, here is the PDF in English.

    EZ-PDF Reader Recommendation for PDF's


    I'll be downloading the exhortation to my Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 which runs on Android.  I highly recommend EZ-PDF Reader if you have an Android device.  A friend sent me a draft of a book he is writing, in PDF form, and it is the first time I have tried using the mark-up features.  It didn't take me long to figure out how to write notes (granted, easy on the Galaxy which makes use of a stylus), add text boxes for longer notes, highlights, underlines, strike-outs, etc.  Then, there is a list with all of those things you add so you can navigate back to them for reading, editing, or deleting.  I'll be able to send my thoughts and questions back to him as they came on the fly while reading.  I highly recommend paying the few bucks they charge for the pro-edition.  I got it after trying it free.

    I know there is a version for iPad, but users rate it lower (3 stars out of 5 versus 4.5 stars out of 5 for Android), probably due to some bugs.  But, perhaps try the free version if you have an Apple device.


    UPDATE: 

    Using the mark-up tool in EZ PDF Reader Pro and the Galaxy Note 10.1 stylus, I was able to copy this text into an image.  It is a quote from near the beginning, on page 3.  This is not the latest 10.1, which has even better features.  The small stylus has a button on the side and when you press that in while pressing down, you can draw any shape around something on the screen and it grabs an image.  It then gives you a number of things to do from saving to sharing.





    For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

    Te Deum Laudamus! Home

    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

    Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.

    Monday, November 25, 2013

    Pope Francis: Trust in the Lord not because of fanatical force



    In his homily today, Pope Francis, went back to a recurring theme of late: Living the Catholic faith is not about the extraordinary, but about the ordinary.  Trust in the Lord shouldn't be, "because of some fanatical force."


    Pope Francis focused his homily on those characters from the daily readings who testify to the importance of trusting in God, even in extreme situations. In the Book of Daniel, the young Jewish men living as slaves of King Nebuchadnezzar remain faithful to the Lord, even at risk of their own lives. In the Gospel of Luke, the impoverished widow who puts two small coins into the offering box is praised by Jesus, who says: “Those others have all made offerings from their surplus wealth, but she, from her poverty, has offered her whole livelihood”.  

    The Lord, Pope Francis says, is everything, and they trusted in the Lord. They didn’t do so because of some fanatical force, but because they knew that the Lord is faithful. They trusted in that faith which is always there, the Pope said, because the Lord cannot be unfaithful, cannot deny Himself.


    It strikes me every time he says something like this because we are in an age where there is so much focus on the extraordinary, like signs and wonders.  It's easy to live the faith if you have an extraordinary experience, or know others who have.  It's requires so much more trust and love for God to live out the faith in simple ways with no such thing in return from the Lord.  Are we like the horse who goes forth with just a word, or are we in need of a carrot dangled in front of us?

    Pope Francis then went on to acknowledge the martyrs and people today suffer persecution, while still pointing back to how most of us will live out our faith in doing the little things.


    Choosing to be faithful to the Lord, Pope Francis continued, is equally important in the little things and in the most difficult situations. He remembered the men, women, elderly and young people who every day choose to be faithful to the Lord, who live as martyrs, and as an example to us all. When we read in the newspapers about Christians who are persecuted in our own times, the Pope explained, we must take their lives as an encouragement to offer the Church everything we have, our whole livelihood.  

    Let us think, Pope Francis said, about the brothers and sisters who have made courageous, definitive choices throughout history, and continue to do so today. But let us also think about the many mothers and fathers who make small but definitive choices of faith every day, with their families and with their children. Let us ask the Lord, Pope Francis concluded, for the grace of courage, the courage to go on with our Christian lives, in everyday life and in the most extreme situations. 


    Picture, report and translation from Vatican Radio


    For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

    Te Deum Laudamus! Home

    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

    Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.

    Sunday, November 24, 2013

    Video Homily: Fr. Perrone on the Last Four Things, Dies Irae (Last Sunday after Pentecost, 1962 Missal)



    While many celebrated Christ the King today, those at Masses following the 1962 calendar were in the last Sunday after Pentecost. Before listening to Fr. Perrone's homily, which included discussion on the "Four Last Things" and the Dies Irae, it would be a good idea to read the Epistle and Gospel below, first.

    My apologies for the low quality, and for the sound, which you may need to turn up.

    This is offered online with Fr. Perrone's permission.



    EPISTLE - Colossians 1: 9-14 

    Brethren, We cease not to pray for you, and to beg that you may be filled with the knowledge of the will of God, in all wisdom and spiritual understanding; that you may walk worthy of God, in all things pleasing, being fruitful in every good work, and increasing in the knowledge of God; strengthened with all might according to the power of His glory, in all patience and long suffering with joy; giving thanks to God the Father, who hath made us worthy to be partakers of the lot of the saints in light: who hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath translated us into the kingdom of the Son of His love, in whom we have redemption through the His Blood, the remission of sins.

    GOSPEL - Matthew 24:15-35

    At that time, Jesus said to His disciples: When you shall see the abomination of desolation, which was spoken of by Daniel the prophet, standing in the holy place; (he that readeth, let him understand:) then they that are in Judea, let them flee to the mountains; and he that is on the house-top, let him not come down to take anything out of his house; and he that is in the field, let him not go back to take his coat. And woe to them that are with child and that give suck, in those days. But pray that your flight be not in the winter, or on the Sabbath: for there shall be then great tribulation, such as hath not been found from the beginning of the world until now, neither shall be: and unless those days had been shortened, no flesh should be saved; but for the sake of the elect, those days shall be shortened. Then if any man shall say to you: Lo, here is Christ, or there; do not believe him; for there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall show great signs and wonders, insomuch as to deceive (if possible) even the elect. Behold I have told it to you beforehand. If therefore they shall say to you: Behold His is in the desert, go ye not out; Behold He is in the closets, believe it not. For as lightning cometh out of the east, and appeareth even in the west, so shall also the coming of the Son of Man be. Wheresoever the body shall be, there shall the eagles also be gathered together. And immediately after the tribulation of those days, the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven, and the powers of heaven shall be moved; and then shall appear the sign of the Son of Man in heaven, and then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn; and they shall see the Son of Man coming in the clouds of heaven with much power and majesty. And He shall send His angels with a trumpet and a loud voice, and they shall gather together His elect from the four winds, from the farthest parts of the heavens to the utmost bounds of them. And from the fig tree learn a parable: when the branch thereof is now tender, and the leaves come forth, you know that summer is nigh. So you also, when you shall see all these things, know ye that it is nigh at the doors. Amen I say to you that this generation shall not pass till all these things be done. Heaven and earth shall pass away, but My words shall not pass away.

    For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

    Te Deum Laudamus! Home

    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

    Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.

    Metro-Detroit Area Tridentine Masses Coming this Week





    At the suggestion of P.B., I'm going to be posting upcoming opportunities to assist at Mass in the Extraordinary Form in the Metro-Detroit area.  Included also, is the Assumption Grotto Schedule.

    Metro-Detroit area Tridentine Masses This Coming Week

    • Mon. 11/25 7:00 PM: Low Mass at St. Josaphat (St. Catherine of Alexandria, Virgin & Martyr) [Cancelled due to storm damage.]
    • Tue. 11/26 7:00 PM: Low Mass at Assumption-Windsor (St. Sylvester, Abbot)
    • Fri. 11/29 7:00 PM: Low Mass at Ss. Cyril and Methodius, Sterling Heights (St. Saturninus, Martyr). 
    • See the note at bottom about daily TLM's at Assumption Grotto
    First Sunday of Advent
    • Sun. 12/01 1:00 PM: High Mass at St. Joseph, Detroit
    • Sun. 12/01 2:00 PM: High Mass at Assumption-Windsor (First Sunday of Advent) – Mass will be held this week [only] in the Rosary Chapel, adjacent to the main church.
    • Sun. 12/01 9:30 AM: High Mass at Assumption Grotto

    Assumption Grotto Schedule

    Below is the regular TLM schedule at Assumption Grotto, including many daily opportunities, as well as Saturdays.  

    Thanksgiving Day, there will be two Masses: 7:30 AM - TLM (not sure if it will be high or low).  There is also a 9:00 AM Mass, but not certain if it is a TLM or N.O.  I will try to find out and update this post. 


  • Monday-Saturday 7:30AM: High or Low Mass (varies) 
  • First Saturdays 8:30 AM: High or Low (varies) - Mass for secular Carmelites but open to all.
  • Monday-Wednesday-Friday 7:00PM: Low Mass
  • Holy Days and Sundays 9:30AM: High Mass

  • Note: Confessions are posted at Assumption Grotto for Saturdays at 2:30 PM to 3:30 PM, but Confessions are also heard 30 minutes before the 9:30 AM Mass and the 12:00 Noon Mass (Novus Ordo).  Confessions are often available, outside of posted times, shortly before most daily morning Masses (except Tuesdays).  Confessions are available, also, upon request.  Ask at the sacristy.

    Other Liturgical Events in Metro-Detroit using the 1962 Missal?

    If there are other Traditional Latin Masses happening in the Archdiocese of Detroit, get me those listings by Saturday night so I can post it on Sunday for the upcoming week.   For this week, feel free to drop info in the com-box.


    For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

    Te Deum Laudamus! Home

    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

    Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.

    Friday, November 22, 2013

    Sunday Evening: Assumption Grotto Choir at St. Mary's Cathedral, Lansing - Traditional Latin Mass



    Please note the upcoming Solemn High Mass (1962 Missal)  this Sunday involving Fr. Perrone and the Assumption Grotto Choir (they will not be singing at the 9:30 AM at Grotto because they will be singing in Lansing at 5:00 PM (Fr. Perrone is getting easier on the choir making them sing only once!).

    This is probably a good time to plug, again, the Call to Holiness Fundraiser coming up on December 1, 2013 following the Noon Mass at Assumption Grotto where Fr. Perrone will give a talk on "Dissent and Discipline."  If you cannot attend the event, please consider using the online form used for tickets, to drop in a donation.

    On to the special Mass this Sunday in Lansing, see the notice below.




    Blessed John XXIII Latin Mass Community will host Assumption Grotto (Detroit) choir directed by Fr. Eduard Perrone at St. Mary Cathedral (main church, not chapel) on the Last Sunday of the Liturgical Year. The evening begins with a prelude of organ music. The choir will then sing sacred polyphony from the Renaissance in its intended context: the Solemn High Mass of the Extraordinary Form of the Latin Rite (Tridentine RIte). Included will be all the rituals that make it a sacred, solemn, reverent, and transcendent experience. This is a rare event. The full Solemn High Mass is not celebrated often; even less often with polyphony performed by an accomplished choir.
    This is an opportunity to experience and enjoy the beautiful, yet so-often forgotten, Sacred Music of the Church as it was meant to be experienced!
    As stated in the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy of Vatican II: “116. The Church acknowledges Gregorian chant as specially suited to the Roman liturgy: therefore, other things being equal, it should be given pride of place in liturgical services. But other kinds of sacred music, especially polyphony, are by no means excluded from liturgical celebrations, so long as they accord with the spirit of the liturgical action, as laid down in Art. 30.”
    Blessed John XXIII Latin Mass Community is a personal parish of the in Diocese of Lansing. It was established in 2010 & is is dedicated to the Extraordinary Form of the Latin Rite (Tridentine Rite).

    Event:
    Night of Sacred Music and Holy Worship-Lansing Cathedral
    Date:
    November 24, 2013 5:00 pm
    Cost:
    None; free parking
    Category:
    Updated:
    October 24, 2013
    Contact Name:
    Blessed John XXIII parish
    Contact Phone:
    517-589-8211 (Blessed John XXIII parish)
    Contact Email:
    Facebook: TINYURL.COMM/SOLEMNMISSA
    Contact Website:
    www.getholy.com
    Location Name:
    St. Mary Cathedral
    Location Address:
    219 Seymour Ave, Lansing, MI 48933











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    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
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    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

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    Tuesday, November 19, 2013

    Diocese of Mostar-Duvno on the "Great Sign" of Medjugorje



    Some feel it is not charitable or prudent to talk about the negative aspects of Medjugorje, especially while there is an ongoing investigation by the Holy See.  I think the case could be made that it is not charitable, nor prudent, to dismiss what the local bishops have had to say - information that is undoubtedly in the hands of the commission as much as any positive information.  What harm can come from reading, very carefully, methodical arguments that cause so many to doubt authenticity, including two successive bishops, and could eventually lead to a negative judgment?

    In an effort to help make the diocesan case on Medjugorje more visible, especially since the information is in the hands of the commission, as well as of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, I'm going to be periodically making posts pointing to various documents and sources to that aim.

    Not getting attached to unapproved apparitions and private revelations


    These posts are not an attempt to discredit Medjugorje; it is a way of helping people to discern the prudence, or lack thereof, of being overly attached to the phenomena.

    Some like to hide reality from their children so their feelings aren't hurt, only to set them up for the inability to cope with bad or disappointing things that happen in life.  Putting too much stock or belief in any alleged apparitions, or unapproved apparitions (because they have not yet been approved), or private revelations sets one up for conflict with the Church should a negative judgment ever come.  If you want to know why the Angel of Darkness would tolerate so much piety and conversions, consider how he wins when people reject a negative judgment of the Church in favor of their own personal discernment.  How much more so when the one who cannot cope with a negative judgment is a priest?

    A case study in manipulation following a negative judgment


    Some years ago I discovered a priest was taking a tour bus to a recently condemned apparition in another state.  In his email which I received from a concerned person, he castigated that local bishop and used outright manipulation to get people to go.  This person was suffering terribly because of what he said and had serious interior conflicts of conscience.  After several exchanges, I believe the person made the right decision in not going.  I promptly contacted the diocese in which this priest resided sharing the manipulative nature of his email.  I believe he had restricted faculties already and they were glad I let them know about the bus trip. That's how the Angel of Darkness wins in these cases!  Don't think things like that won't happen if a negative judgment comes for Medjugorje.  I should add the priest in question acted very secretively, making people feel guilty for letting anyone else know what he was doing or saying.  That kind of secrecy is exactly what Satan wants.

    But how will you respond if Medjugorje is approved?


    People often ask me how I will react if the Church should ever approve of Medjugorje.  First, the Church does not require me to believe in any private revelation (CCC 66, 67).  However, if that ever happened, I would open myself to whatever information the Holy See may present that was not previously available to me, along with any theological reflections.  Secondly, even if I could still not bring myself to believe in authenticity in such a case, I would then take the prudent path of silence rather than speaking out against it, once approved.  I would encourage other doubters to take the same path, if such approval ever came.  Nothing hinders me, or my conscience, from sharing information that puts authenticity in doubt, especially when it is coming from the diocese, or sources using diocesan material.

    Moreover, if one wants to argue that it is not prudent to discuss the diocesan case against authenticity, then how can it be prudent to discuss or promote the alleged apparitions while the investigation is taking place?  Furthermore, I would argue that online promotion is just as bad, if not worse for clerics and faithful than attending "conferences, meetings and public celebrations," which was prohibited by the CDF in a letter to US bishops through the papal nuncio.  These websites have already deemed the lady of Medjugorje to be authentic by their very language (i.e., referring to her as "Our Lady" or using the unauthorized title of "Our Lady of Medjugorje"); and by the sale of merchandise including unauthorized medals which have been stamped in that name, statues; and publication of "messages".

    "The Holy See can't rule until…."


    You will see many people on the web saying that the Holy See cannot give a definitive judgment on Medjugorje until the alleged visions have ended.  That is only partially true.  It is true that no unapproved apparition would ever be approved while ongoing. Consider the problem caused for the credibility of the Church, if today, an alleged apparition is approved only to get a "message" the next day, that there are four persons in the Trinity.  But, looking history, there are many cases of alleged apparitions that were condemned as not supernatural while ongoing. The most notable case being "Bayside" where, despite a 1986 decree against authenticity, and dubious "messages", it was ongoing through some months before Veronica Leuken's death in 1995.

    Diocesan Document: "The Questionable Games Surrounding the 'Great Sign'"


    This report was released by the Diocese of Mostar-Duvno in English in 2009.  While you may think this is primarily the argument of critics, what the diocese did was use the words of the alleged visionaries themselves, as well as that of their official chroniclers.  It also uses the the writings of many pro-Medjugorje works which reported the words of the alleged visionaries and contrasts them with other hard evidence.

    No one is forced to read this.  But, I would invite people to read and be aware of the kind of conflicts found in this document.

    Very sadly, the "movement" associated with Medjugorje, does not feel the diocesan bishop is a credible source of information - an unusual attitude for faithful Catholics.  The bishops, current and past, are often vilified in material found on pro-Medjugorje sites with outright calumnies, which I will get into in another post at a later date.

    Questionable Games Surrounding the 'Great Sign' (2009)

    The thing speaks for itself.



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    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

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    Sunday, November 17, 2013

    Video: Consecration and Benedictus by Titcomb


    Here is a short clip I took with the iPhone 5 today as we entered the Consecration at the 9:30 AM High Mass (1962 Missal).  I wanted to capture the Benedictus by Titcomb that the Assumption Grotto Choir was singing. This doesn't do it justice, but you get the idea.  The Hosanna is very powerful and moving.

    I think I need to get an external microphone for my iPhone 5 for stuff like this.  I'll take recommendations if anyone knows which one might be best for recording in a church setting like this.  It has to be for the iPhone 5 though because it has a different connection at the bottom than the iPhone 4.



    For interesting news items I don't have time to blog on, check out my Twitter Feed: @TeDeumBlog

    Te Deum Laudamus! Home

    The obedient are not held captive by Holy Mother Church;
    it is the disobedient who are held captive by the world!

    - Diane M. Korzeniewski

    Note: The recommended links below are automatically generated by the tool, so they are not necessarily related content.