Posted on 10/25/2006 5:35:19 PM PDT by Frank Sheed
Great news CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 11:00 am
Folks, I received very good news today. Three sources confirmed something for me of great importance and a matter of consolation. At the moment, it is best not to publish it or talk too much about it, until it is brought to light by the proper authority.
Nevertheless, I would kindly ask readers of WDTPRS in print and in this blog general to say in advance a prayer of thanksgiving to God. Whenever we have petitions, it is good to add a prayer of thanks together with the petition.
So, I ask you kindly to say a prayer of thanks for something in particular, even if you dont know yet what it is. I am really not trying to be cageywith this. Sometimes people who run blogs or write article rush to publicize soemthing before its times and, in doing so, create unnecessary complications. Just say a prayer of praise to God, for this and other blessings in your lives.
We praise Thee, O God: we acknowledge Thee to be the Lord. All the earth doth worship Thee: the Father everlasting.
To Thee all Angels cry aloud: the heavens and all the powers therein. To Thee Cherubin and Seraphin: continually do cry, Holy, Holy, Holy: Lord God of Sabaoth; Heaven and earth are full of the Majesty: of Thy glory.
The glorious company of the Apostles: praise Thee. The goodly fellowship of the Prophets: praise Thee. The noble army of Martyrs: praise Thee.
The holy Church throughout all the world: doth acknowledge Thee; The Father: of an infinite majesty; Thine honourable, true: and only Son; Also the Holy Ghost: the Comforter.
Thou art the King of glory: O Christ. Thou art the everlasting Son: of the Father.
When thou tookest upon Thee to deliver man Thou didst not abhor the Virgins womb.
When Thou hadst overcome the sharpness of death: Thou didst open the kingdom of heaven to all believers.
Thou sittest at the right hand of God: in the glory of the Father.
We believe that Thou shalt come: to be our Judge.
We therefore pray Thee, help Thy servants: whom Thou hast redeemed with Thy precious blood.
Make them to be numbered with Thy Saints: in glory everlasting.
O Lord, save Thy people: and bless Thine heritage. Govern them: and lift them up for ever.
Day by day: we magnify Thee; And we worship Thy Name: ever world without end.
Vouchsafe, O Lord: to keep us this day without sin. O Lord, have mercy upon us: have mercy upon us.
O Lord, let Thy mercy lighten upon us: as our trust is in Thee. O Lord, in Thee have I trusted: let me never be confounded.
A big {{{{{{{{ HUG }}}}}}}} to your mother!! Please let her know that she is missed.
A small step up is better than a step back into the abyss.
"Bless thine inheritance" I believe is a line from one of the 15th-16th century English anthems on "Faire is the Heaven." Don't remember which one. I don't have CD handy, but will check on it later.
So these are the possibilites:
1. Latin indult.
2. Latin indult requiring bishops who deny permission to justify that denial to Rome in writing.
3. Prohibition of cleansing altar vessels by the non-ordained.
Anything else?
Is he going to be off the hook? Are the charges being dropped?
That could well be how that phrase got into my head, although I don't recall right offhand an anthem in which it is used . . . of course, we crossed the Tiber in late 2003/early 2004, so it's been awhile now!
Uhhh...correct me if I am wrong, but weren't practically all the innovations of the NO defended as ancient liturgical practices that the bad ol' medieval Church got rid of?
The adoption of a policy allowing free use of either the Tridentine liturgy or the post-conciliar Novus Ordo, Infocatho said, would divide the Church, because "Eucharistic bi-ritualism in the Latin Catholic Church contradicts what the Eucharist signifies."
Stuff and nonsense! What are the four Eucharistic Prayers then? Why does the East have different liturgies for different feasts? (Chrystostom, Basil, James, etc.)
Yes, he'll probably be out of prison before you are.
O Lord,
save Thy people
and bless Thine inheritance,
grant victory to Orthodox Christians
over their adversaries
and by Thy cross
preserve Thy people.
Hello, Maeve. Please give my best to your mother. I've spent a little time in Rome myself this year.
I knew it was firmly engrained in my memory banks . . . it's from the old 1928 BCP Evening Prayer service, the responsory before the Collects . . .
Minister. The Lord be with you.THAT explains why I couldn't identify it immediately. I attended Morning Prayer (Matins) every Sunday until they revised the prayerbook to make Communion every Sunday, and often twice a Sunday because my parents sang two services. Until the mid-70s, Episcopalians only took communion once a month. If you get me started with the Preface to Morning Prayer ("The Lord is in His holy temple; let all the earth keep silence before Him") I can run the whole service from memory.
Answer. And with thy spirit.
Minister. Let us pray.¶ Here, if it hath not already been said, shall follow the Lord's Prayer.
Minister. O Lord, show thy mercy upon us.
Answer. And grant us thy salvation.
Minister. O Lord, save the State.
Answer. And mercifully hear us when we call upon thee.
Minister. Endue thy Ministers with righteousness.
Answer. And make thy chosen people joyful.
Minister. O Lord, save thy people.
Answer. And bless thine inheritance.
Minister. Give peace in our time, O Lord.
Answer. For it is thou, Lord, only, that makest us dwell in safety.
Minister. O God, make clean our hearts within us.
Answer. And take not thy Holy Spirit from us.¶ Then shall be said the Collect for the Day, and after that the Collects and Prayers following.
Evening Prayer (Compline) I attended much less frequently . . . so I couldn't identify the quotation, but it was still rattling around in there.
The version of Ps 28 that uses that language is in the KJV . . . the Episcopal prayerbook has always used Cranmer's translation of the Psalter rather than the KJV Book of Psalms.
Of course, no one died and left these dissenting French bishops (or Curial officials of similar rebellious nature) in charge of bossing the Holy Father around either. They can comply with his decisions or get out. Not one of them became a bishop without taking a priestly vow of obedience. Excommunicate any who refuse to submit to and obey Christ's Vicar on Earth.
Some of the bad French bishops have such appropriate names: Le Gall, Lacrampe!!! Archbishop Vingt-Trois of Paris and Bishop Pansard of Chartres seem to be especially nervy items as well.
Without further info, Bishop Dagens may have promise.
My next rosary is for the intentions of the Holy Father (whom this very moment was described by Protestant Rush Limbaugh as "the Vicar of Christ") and that we all have the good grace to accept his judgments. If his judgments may differ from my private opinions, I particularly pray for the grace to accept his judgments cheerfully and enthusiastically as gifts from God Whom Benedict XVI serves.
God bless you and yours.
( . . . good for him, though. BTW, I didn't know he was protestant, I didn't know he was a member of any church.)
I will make that prayer my own.
A caller compared Michael J. Fox and John Paul II's reaction to Parkinsons. She pointed out that the media made a victim soul out of Fox and mocked the Pope, calling him a moron, etc. she finished up by saying that this is really about abortion.
Rush agreed, and recalled the media asking why the pope didn't step down. I believe that when Rush said "Vicar of Christ", he actually put quote marks around it as he was suggesting what the lib elite types were describing. (e.g. "That man is the Vicar of Christ, he can't represent the Gospel quaking like that.") Both agreed that John Paul II allowed his weakness to go on display, not as a show, but to let people know that suffering isn't evil. And bearing it patiently is good. That was the understanding I got while driving and hearing Rush. I don't believe he actually said "The Pope is the Vicar of Christ" in his own voice. He is deeply respectful of the Holy Father, however.
Our broadcast of Rush is delayed here, but I believe it was in the segment which was broadcast just now - a caller was making the point that the media was very unsympathetic when the Holy Father spoke in public and his Parkinson's was so obvious - and that this whole stem cell flap is just all about abortion. I didn't hear the whole thing, but Rush said (paraphrasing) that the Holy Father believed that his suffering was for a purpose, that he showed courage in his suffering, and that he was the leader of his flock, which grew while he was its leader, and the media couldn't stand it. (I was unloading the dishwasher and not paying full attention. Sorry ...)
Thanks! I'd already missed it here.
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