Saturday, June 4, 2011

Solemnity of the Ascension. "You will be my witnesses": Ascending to the right hand of the Father, Christ gives power to the Church

What happens far away impacts each one of us here and now.

Images of tornadoes, floods and other disasters are almost immediately available to the curious through telephones and the internet. We gain powerful impressions of their size and scope through the pictures of damaged homes and land and most tragic, lost lives.

With all the data that is available to us about these and other events and people in our world, what can often be lacking is the process of meditating on the meaning of these events. We were made to think and to seek understanding about our world and ourselves and without this process our humanity is incomplete. The sheer size and constant flood of the tsunami of images and news reports tends to prevent the needed process of meditating on the import and meaning of these things for us personally, thereby allowing us to move beyond our first instinctive fears aroused by these disasters toward a more serene sense of resolution.

For the full text of the homily for Ascension visit Meeting Christ in the Liturgy by clicking here.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Father's Day: give the gift of a great meal at La Famiglia, Baltimore

105 W 39th Street
Baltimore, MD 21210

443.449.5555

Make your reservations soon.

Trinity Sunday: the chant propers

Introitus:(Tobias 12: 6)


Blessed be the Holy Trinity and undivided Unity: we will give glory to Him, because He hath shown His mercy to us.
Vs. (Ps. 8: 2) O Lord, our Lord, how wonderful is Thy name in all the earth!
Vs. Glory be to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit. As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.
Blessed be the Holy Trinity and undivided Unity: we will give glory to Him, because He hath shown His mercy to us.

Graduale (Daniel 3: 55-56)


Blessed art Thou, O Lord, that beholdest the depths and sittest above the Cherubim.
Vs. Blessed art Thou, O Lord, in the firmament of heaven, and worthy of praise forever.

Alleluia (Daniel 3: 52)


Vs. Blessed art Thou, O Lord, the God of our fathers, and worthy to be praised forever. Alleluia.

Offertory (Tobias 12: 6)

Benedíctus sit Deus Pater, unigenitúsque Dei Fílius, Sanctus quoque Spíritus: quia fecit nobíscum misericórdiam suam.

Blessed be God the Father, and the only-begotten Son of God, and also the Holy Spirit; because He hath shown His mercy to us.

Communion (Tobias 12: 6)


Benedícimus Deum coeli et coram ómnibus vivéntibus confitébimur ei: quia fecit
nobíscum misericórdiam suam.

We bless the God of heaven, and before all living we will praise Him; because He has
shown His mercy to us.

MP3 files of all of the chant propers for Mass of Holy Trinity Sunday are available at ReneGoupil.org by clicking this link. Page down to find the collection for Trinity Sunday under the date June 19, 2011.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

"He was taken up"


While they were looking intently at the sky as he was going, suddenly two men dressed in white garments stood beside them. They said, “Men of Galilee, why are you standing there looking at the sky? This Jesus who has been taken up from you into heaven will return in the same way as you have seen him going into heaven.”

Art: Ascension by Copley.

John Boehner is still on the "Catholic reservation"

Reactionary Liberalism and Catholic Social Doctrine
Jun 1, 2011
George Weigel

The debate over Catholic social doctrine and U.S. social welfare policy took an unhelpful turn in May when a gaggle of academics fired a shot across the bow of House Speaker John Boehner, prior to his commencement address at the Catholic University of America. Their charge? That Boehner’s House voting record showed him to be a man who fails “to recognize (whether out of a lack of awareness or dissent) important aspects of Catholic teaching.” Why? Because he had not supported legislation that, in the professors’ view, addressed “the desperate needs of the poor.”

Speaker Boehner, a Catholic with a solid pro-life voting record, is a big boy who can defend his votes on various issues. What bothered me about the open letter to Boehner was its tone (smarmy), its assumptions about the one-to-one correspondence between the principles of Catholic social doctrine and the policy preferences of the Democratic Party, and its suggestion that anyone who challenges that linkage is in “dissent” from settled Catholic teaching.

The 2012 election seems likely to be defined by a major national debate on the welfare state, government spending, and social responsibility. If libertarian minimalism of the sort espoused by Ron Paul sits poorly with the rich and complex tradition of Catholic social doctrine, so does reactionary liberalism of the sort espoused by the anti-Boehner pedagogues. So perhaps a review of the basics is in order, to put the forthcoming argument on a more secure footing.

(1) The Church’s concern for the poor does not imply a “preferential option” for Big Government. The social doctrine teaches that the problem of poverty is best addressed by empowerment: enabling poor people to enter the circle of productivity and exchange in society. The responsibility for that empowerment falls on everyone: individuals, through charitable giving and service work; voluntary organizations, including the Church; businesses and trade unions. Government at all levels can play a role in this process of empowerment, but it is a serious distortion of the social doctrine to suggest that government has exclusive responsibility here. On the contrary: In the 1991 social encyclical, Centesimus Annus, Blessed John Paul II condemned the “Social Assistance State” because it saps welfare-recipients of their dignity and their creativity while making them wards of the government.

(2) Fiscal prudence is a matter of justice extended toward future generations, and is therefore an intergenerational moral imperative (as is provision for the retired elderly). To leave mountains of unserviceable debt to future generations is shameful. The reactionary defense of governmental pension and social welfare programs with no evident concern for their fiscal implications violates the moral structure of Catholic social doctrine: the portside analogue to a cool indifference toward the fate of the poor.

(3) There are legitimate disagreements about the implications of the Church’s social doctrine for American social welfare policy. To suggest that the social doctrine provides obvious, clear-cut answers to questions about the future of Medicare or Medicaid is to misrepresent that teaching. To charge someone with “dissent” from Church teaching because that someone disagrees with one’s own prudential judgments about the application of the social doctrine to complex policy issues is a serious misuse of the notion of “dissent” and borders on calumny (a false statement that “harms the reputation of others and gives occasion for false judgments concerning them”—Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2477). It ill behooves anyone to make such a charge; it particularly ill behooves academics who publicly dissent from settled Catholic teaching on marital chastity, sexual morality, and qualifications for Holy Orders from chairs at Catholic universities.

(4) The moral imperative to legally protect innocent human life from conception until natural death is a settled matter in Catholic doctrine. So is the nature of marriage as the stable union of a man and a woman. Catholic legislators who support the abortion license are manifestly in dissent and have damaged their communion with the Church. So have legislators who support “gay marriage.” Academics eager to demonstrate their fidelity to Catholic social doctrine might point this out—and support the bishops who do.

George Weigel is Distinguished Senior Fellow of the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C.

RESOURCES

George Weigel, Catholic Social Thought and the 2012 Election

R.R. Reno, The Preferential Option for the Poor

In Ascensione Domini: the chants of the Liber Usualis

Introit






Alleluia. Asendit Deus in jubilatione, et Dominus in voce tubae.



Alleluia. Dominus in Sina in sancto, ascendens in altum, captivam duxit captivitatem.

Offert.



Ascendit Deus in jubilatione, Dominus in voce tubae, alleluia.

Comm.



Psallite Domino, qui ascendit super caelos caelorum ad Orientem, alleluia.

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

In Vigilia Ascensionis: "Vocem iucunditatis annuntiate"

... ,et audiatir, alleluia: annuntiate usque ad extremum terrae: liberavit Dominus populum suum, alleluia, alleluia.



In photo: Rev Carlos Viego of the Archdiocese of Newark celebrates the extraordinary form of holy Mass in observance of the vigil of the Solemnity of the Ascension of the Lord at the church of St Francis de Sales in Benedict, Md.

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