Saturday, September 20, 2014

Gates of Hell

From the beginning of Christianity, it has been assailed from the outside and the inside. Some could not accept the Catholic Church in its totality, interpretation, or its members. With its colorful history, they expect a pure, perfect Church just like Jesus. A Church with a Judas, a Borgia, corrupt clerics, sexual abusers, political activists, "prayles' who steal land and so on just doesn't go with Divine institution. The expectation from the Catholic Church is high because she claims to be instituted by Jesus, God incarnated.

As history moves forward, more and more anti-Catholics rise. There would always be someone (eventually becoming a group)who wants just a part of it modifying it. Making god into our own image. Every new age adds another group that opposes her or would want to change her.

So why would one want to be in a Church that is continually being contested from the inside and the outside? Why when there are so many religions to choose from. One can even found a new religion tailor-made for one's self. One can even go without religion.

The Church has the keys to the Truth. Jesus who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life will always be the Founder and Head of the Church. The ways of perdition, lies, and death would always seek to pervert it diminish it, and denigrate it. The gates of hell would always try to prevail against it, precisely because, the Catholic faith is the Truth. Lies need the Truth for its existence as darkness depends on the light.

Pascal: “Christ is in agony until the end of the world.”

Benedict XVI: "I am now facing the last chapter of my life and I do not know what awaits me. I know, however, that the light of God exists, that he is Risen, that his light is stronger than any darkness, that the goodness of God is stronger than any evil in this world. And this helps me to go forward with certainty. May this help us to go forward, and at this moment I wholeheartedly thank all those who have continually helped me to perceive the “yes” of God through their faith."

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

Replay Vatican II

The upcoming extraordinary synod on family probably stirs the same atmosphere as that of Vatican II Council. It is of curiosity what it was like then, that it brought about more splinter groups in the Catholic Faith. The Sede vacantists consider the papacy still vacant since Pius XII. There is also a group that claims that Cardinal Siri was the legitimate pope and not Pope John XXIII. Expectations, apprehensions, power playing, and propaganda.

Doubting the intent of the October Synod, Christopher A. Ferrera of The Remnant Newspaper has an online petition to stop the synod.

The symptoms are unmistakable: after a period of relative remission during the years of Pope Benedict’s mysteriously self-terminated reign, the postconciliar “process of decay” remarked by the former Cardinal Ratzinger has resumed with a vengeance, like a rebound infection after an incomplete course of antibiotics. The progressivist priests and prelates who are the disease-causing agents of Vatican II Fever are now running amok throughout the ecclesiastical bloodstream. They have been let loose by a Pope who is so fond of publicly staged “surprises,” all tending to the diminution of traditional Roman Catholicism, that Respice in Me (look at me) could serve as the motto of this pontificate.


On the other hand, the Jesuits and Jesuit-formed are excited and promoting their agenda, THE FAMILY: Event to discuss ‘women’s take’ on PH families.

The talks are as follows:
• “The Catholic Church in the Philippines: Some Perspectives on Gender and Public Policy on the Family” by Eleanor R. Dionisio
• “Women, Family and the Church in a Changing Society: An Introduction to the Socio-Cultural Issues” by Mary Racelis, Ph.D
• “Gender and Family Dynamics: Building Climate Resilience Among the Urban Poor” by Emma E. Porio, Ph.D
• “Gender Roles in the Context of Feminization of Migration: Challenge to Papal Teachings?” by Agnes M. Brazal, Ph.D
Reactor: Fr. Ruben Tanseco, SJ


Will the Synod have the same outcome as the Council? When I think of Vatican II, the personalities that come to mind are Popes John XXIII and Paul VI, and French Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre of the post-Vatican II created SSPX. Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre before Vatican II was gifted with apostolic zeal working in French Africa and later in the diocese of Tulle, France. He was a member of the Preparatory Commission of the Council of Vatican II as appointed by John XXIII.

Newly released was the The Personal Diaries of
Mgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton
(1906-1969)

Monsignor Joseph Clifford Fenton was a priest of the diocese of Springfield, Massachusetts, ordained in 1930.
“I had always thought that this council was dangerous. It was started for no sufficient reason. There was too much talk about what it was supposed to accomplish. Now I am afraid that real trouble is on the way.” (Oct. 13, 1962)
“I started to read the material on the Liturgy, and I was shocked at the bad theology. They actually have been stupid enough [to say] that the Church is ‘simul humanam et divininam, visibilem et invisibilem’ [at the same time human and divine, visible and invisible]. And they speak of the Church working ‘quousque unum ovile fiat et unus pastor’ [until there be one fold and one shepherd], as if that condition were not already achieved.” (Oct. 19, 1962)
“Liberal Catholicism as understood by these men was and is the system of thought by which the teaching of the Catholic Church were represented as compatible with the maxim that guided the French Revolution.” (May 11, 1963)
“[Fr.] Ed Hanahoe gave me two books on Modernism. In one of them I found evidence that the teaching in the first chapter of the new schema on the Church [the one that became the Vatican II dogmatic constitution Lumen Gentium] and the language are those of [the excommunicated Modernist Fr. George] Tyrrell. May God preserve His Church from that chapter. If it passes, it will be a great evil. I must pray and act.” (Sept. 24, 1963)
“M [Fr. John Courtney Murray] has just come in to see the triumph of his false doctrine [of religious liberty].” (Sept. 21, 1964)
“[Mgr.] Joseph Quinn just told me that the H.O. [Holy Office] is being abolished and that Card. Ottaviani will not be the head of the new, non-supreme, congregation which will take its place. The old man is being humiliated. He is a saint.” (Nov. 21, 1964)


The post-council was even worst. From Australia's Reaping the whirlwind

Yet I would not for one instant trivialise the abuse of minors by clerics and other people in positions of authority in the Catholic Church.

Rather, I want to do two things. First, I want to offer some thoughts on how this process of obstruction has been used by the same Church authorities to neutralise protest against other obvious abuses of liturgical practice and doctrine. Second, I want to show how this process—and the bad theological thinking behind it—began well before the Council, and how the rot that appears to have followed it actually predates it.

The author talked about the parish priest being sent to the United States and coming back to implement the renovation of the church and change the Missal and hymns. Going to other parishes was to no avail since the same thing was happening. (mid-1970's)

It wasn't happening in diocesan sector but also in Religious congregations were revision of constitutions were done in keeping with the Council losing the spirit of their founding fathers. Catholic Schools, too, changed into modernist schools again losing the vision and mission of their founders.

It was truly the Universal Church and it was happening everywhere. Anne Roche Muggeridge’s book The Gates of Hell (1975) chronicled that of Canada.

Unfortunately, the hammer of Vatican II continues to pound as related by John B. Manos' The Forensics of an AmChurch.

So would the Synod be like the Vatican II? The trend since Vatican II had continued its direction. It was disrupted for a while by the pontificate of Benedict XVI. He was given seven years or... we were given seven years so we can make our choices well.

So it seems that the extraordinary synod is just a continuation of Vatican II. Vatican II's drivers are still pushing for their humanistic worldview. The motor is running and many are cheering them on as they hammer on and try to break the gate of heaven. Of course, they can't. They need to make their own "heavenly" kingdom.

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Seekers of Heaven


There is that innate desire in each one for heaven. In our struggle with ourselves, in marriage, in family life, religious affiliation, ideological adherence, in everything, there is that seeking of heaven. Our hearts, minds, and strength are expended to that fulfillment now and forevermore.

We may be conscious of it or not, but it is a great impulsion that drives us to be better in virtue, health, justice. solidarity, equality, and the elusive search for happiness and love.

As intrinsically seekers of heaven, we are impelled to seek the Truth and find salvation from this longing. At the same time, there will always exist in us varying degrees of messianic complex. There is the tug of war. We are torn between heaven and humanity. We interiorly know that we are participants in Jesus' work of salvation, yet, we are being pulled into a self-righteous task of bringing about Utopia without Jesus, without God.

Such is the dilemma of humanity manifested through out history. The Islamists, even the Jihadist, are seekers of heaven and they were taught that such is the way of heaven. The west may criticize the Moslem women, but they subjugate themselves willingly because that is the way to heaven.

The West, likewise, seek heaven in a secularist way. Abortion, same-sex marriage, euthanasia which are abominable to the Moslems. But to the West, these were the answers given to them to quench their longing for heaven.

So often, two extremes may seem so opposite that they are deemed irreconcilable enemies. Yet, if they stop and think, they are actually the same. Even in the minute aspect of our lives - buying things, relationships, acts of charity, jobs, health-consciousness, environmentalism, learning, we are seeking heaven or a glimpse of it. It will not go away but continually manifests itself in our loneliness, neediness, pain, and restlessness.

Does it make every sin or evil excusable because it comes from a misdirected impulsion of a desire for heaven? Or perhaps it was the only answer given to us to quench our thirst?

John Henry (Ven.) Cardinal Newman said “We can believe what we choose. We are answerable for what we choose to believe." The Truth had been knowable and accessible through Divine Revelation and ultimately through Jesus Christ. Through faith and reason, we can respond to the heavenly invitation.

To an individual, there is pain which is our first teacher of truth. We know even before we learn to speak the physical, emotional, mental, or spiritual pain. We have also been given common sense that allows us to sense the right and wrong of things even if we can not express it.

Of greater importance is our being with people from conception to our last breath. Being with people allows us to give and be given the Truth. It allows us to lead and be led, to guide and be guided. We are here for each other. In this respect, I remember Ratzinger's "concern for the faith of the little ones must be more important than fearing the opposition of the powerful."

We can identify the "little ones" as those who simply TRUST. We are not capable of knowing everything. We have been given limits of time and resources in our pilgrim world. Thus, we need each other and in trust, we guide and be guided... hopefully towards the fulfillment of our desire for heaven.

Benedict Said So

From Left Footer, an excerpt of Benedict XVI's comment on Nostra Aetate:

Thus, in a precise and extraordinarily dense document, a theme is opened up whose importance could not be foreseen at the time. The task that it involves and the efforts that are still necessary in order to distinguish, clarify and understand, are appearing ever more clearly. In the process of active reception, a weakness of this otherwise extraordinary text has gradually emerged: it speaks of religion solely in a positive way and it disregards the sick and distorted forms of religion which, from the historical and theological viewpoints, are of far-reaching importance; for this reason the Christian faith, from the outset, adopted a critical stance towards religion, both internally and externally."




Rev. George W. Rutler writes of the naivete of leaders towards cruel regimes, quoting Benedict XVI:

“Violence is incompatible with the nature of God and the nature of the soul…. God is not pleased by blood—and not acting reasonably is contrary to God’s nature. Faith is born of the soul, not the body. Whoever would lead someone to faith needs the ability to speak well and to reason properly, without violence and threats.… To convince a reasonable soul, one does not need a strong arm, or weapons of any kind, or any other means of threatening a person with death….”

Sunday, August 24, 2014

The Forgotten Hell

From St. Philip Benzini's Fear of Damnation

St. Philip Benzini is honored by the Church today. He is not among the more well-known saints, but the Bear wishes to invite your attention to the extraordinary contrition this holy man felt. How it contrasts with the carefree presumption of today! Who gives the real prospect of eternal damnation a thought nowadays?

The Ideologue

I have wondered why the neo socialists are so accepting of Islam... Anthony Esolen writes "The Mind of the Ideologue".

Saturday, August 23, 2014

The Sentimental Factor

Photo Source

From one of the watchdog blogs, the writer was thinking through what can save the West from the onslaught of the passionate Jihadists from conquering the West. His answer was "freedom", it was the only thing the West cares about and can be passionate about to stop an Islamic Regime. Unfortunately, the kind of freedom the West and of most modernists is personal liberty. It is this ideal of personal liberty and personal right that brought forth a highly tolerant and pluralistic society.

Tolerance and pluralism are good things but there are boundaries when crossed become detrimental. At this point the tolerance and pluralistic levels had reached a point of relativism wherein rights and wrongs had been obscured even irrelevant. Individuals will be MOVED only when their personal liberty is threatened.

Personal liberty (right) is individualistic and is always in conflict with another's personal liberty. Such is the case with abortion, same-sex marriage, euthanasia. It is a society that runs on fractures wherein the most moneyed, the loudest, and most active are the arbiter of personal liberty. Thus, the kind of freedom the West wants will not be a polarizing factor against an expanding Islamic control.

Personal liberty thrives in a narrow view. It lives in a self-centered reality, thus, it is often desensitized to a wider reality. It is difficult to wake up a society unconscious or indifferent of what is happening around. It will be too late when the reality sinks in.

Personal liberty that had lost its boundaries has become dependent on government. To a certain extent, it has become a slave, too, except for speech and expression. A society whose prime value is personal liberty will welcome a tyrant, an atheist, a communist, a monarch, a caliph or whoever as long as there are promises of the desired personal liberty.

Fear, passionate nationalism, or a strong conviction of one's Religion can be the only force to turn the tide. Legitimate fear, though, is often ignored in the "positivist" prosperity gospel. In a self-centered reality, there is lack of sensitivity or an enduring concern for what's happening beyond his/ her personal realm. Thus, what is happening somewhere else is not scary. However, if the prospect of losing personal liberty is hammered in, fear will be a MOTIVATING factor to stand guard.

A conviction of Religious belief is the best defense because it is the one that is really at stake. The way things are, with many atheists, humanists, nominal believers, ecumenists, there is hardly religious conviction in modern society to counter the conviction of the jihadists.


Nationalism is the only way, that is, the love of one's country (and country of origin) and its tradition and heritage. We all hold precious memories no matter how imperfect our lives are. Those memories are imbedded in our country and country of origin. Even our cultural religion would be of some value. These are things we don't want taken away from us. We may call it "sentimental value" but it is perhaps the only thing we have in common. It is the homeland that links the precious memories of people, and it is the only polarizing agent to protect and defend it from aggressors.

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Co-creatorship

In designing, one starts with the mind. An idea is conceived and nurtured. Then, it is translated into a drawing - preliminary drawings (rough draft) into the final and detailed plans (working drawings). From paper, it is, then, constructed into a physical reality.

Notre Dame dalla Senna, from Wikimedia Commons

This process is the same in almost everything- in writing, painting, composing, inventing, or filming. This simple and common process manifests the existence of a Creator, the First and Ultimate. The intricacy of the universe to the magnificent cells of the human being manifests God as "Logos" as Benedict XVI often talks about. We, human beings, made in His image had been gifted with this co-creatorship. In God alone, can we truly be creative.

Monday, August 18, 2014

We are Humans First


"We are humans first" is a motto often invoked. It is quite right in many ways because we are more than our gender, we are more than our job, we are more than our family role, we are more than our age, we are more than our nationality. In architecture, you consider the "human" first before the aesthetics; Better yet, to make it aesthetically and functionally suitable for the "human being".

Yet, there is something that is unsettling about the "we are humans first" that I never use it as my motto. It raises the question of what it is to be human? There would be a whole lot of variance that I simply can not trust that motto.

The Nazi Regime considers the Arian race as the supreme human race while the rest are sub-human. The White race used to call the black race as sub-human. Even the pre-Christian era has sub-human slaves. The pro-abortion advocates call the child in the womb as sub-human. Socialism's criterion of humanity is productivity. Those who believe in the physical being alone would have health as a criterion of one's humanity.

I can not entrust myself to such a motto. Our humanity comes from our Creator who created us in His Image with a Divine plan.

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Paths to True Humanity

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, from Wiki Commons

ADDRESS OF HIS HOLINESS BENEDICT XVI
ON THE OCCASION OF CHRISTMAS GREETINGS TO THE ROMAN CURIA

Sala Regia
Monday, 20 December 2010


Dear Cardinals,
Brother Bishops and Priests,
Dear Brothers and Sisters,

It gives me great pleasure to be here with you, dear Members of the College of Cardinals and Representatives of the Roman Curia and the Governatorato, for this traditional gathering. I extend a cordial greeting to each one of you, beginning with Cardinal Angelo Sodano, whom I thank for his sentiments of devotion and communion and for the warm good wishes that he expressed to me on behalf of all of you. Prope est jam Dominus, venite, adoremus! As one family let us contemplate the mystery of Emmanuel, God-with-us, as the Cardinal Dean has said. I gladly reciprocate his good wishes and I would like to thank all of you most sincerely, including the Papal Representatives all over the world, for the able and generous contribution that each of you makes to the Vicar of Christ and to the Church.

Excita, Domine, potentiam tuam, et veni. Repeatedly during the season of Advent the Church’s liturgy prays in these or similar words. They are invocations that were probably formulated as the Roman Empire was in decline. The disintegration of the key principles of law and of the fundamental moral attitudes underpinning them burst open the dams which until that time had protected peaceful coexistence among peoples. The sun was setting over an entire world. Frequent natural disasters further increased this sense of insecurity. There was no power in sight that could put a stop to this decline. All the more insistent, then, was the invocation of the power of God: the plea that he might come and protect his people from all these threats.

Excita, Domine, potentiam tuam, et veni. Today too, we have many reasons to associate ourselves with this Advent prayer of the Church. For all its new hopes and possibilities, our world is at the same time troubled by the sense that moral consensus is collapsing, consensus without which juridical and political structures cannot function. Consequently the forces mobilized for the defence of such structures seem doomed to failure.

Excita – the prayer recalls the cry addressed to the Lord who was sleeping in the disciples’ storm-tossed boat as it was close to sinking. When his powerful word had calmed the storm, he rebuked the disciples for their little faith (cf. Mt 8:26 et par.). He wanted to say: it was your faith that was sleeping. He will say the same thing to us. Our faith too is often asleep. Let us ask him, then, to wake us from the sleep of a faith grown tired, and to restore to that faith the power to move mountains – that is, to order justly the affairs of the world.

Excita, Domine, potentiam tuam, et veni: amid the great tribulations to which we have been exposed during the past year, this Advent prayer has frequently been in my mind and on my lips. We had begun the Year for Priests with great joy and, thank God, we were also able to conclude it with great gratitude, despite the fact that it unfolded so differently from the way we had expected. Among us priests and among the lay faithful, especially the young, there was a renewed awareness of what a great gift the Lord has entrusted to us in the priesthood of the Catholic Church. We realized afresh how beautiful it is that human beings are fully authorized to pronounce in God’s name the word of forgiveness, and are thus able to change the world, to change life; we realized how beautiful it is that human beings may utter the words of consecration, through which the Lord draws a part of the world into himself, and so transforms it at one point in its very substance; we realized how beautiful it is to be able, with the Lord’s strength, to be close to people in their joys and sufferings, in the important moments of their lives and in their dark times; how beautiful it is to have as one’s life task not this or that, but simply human life itself – helping people to open themselves to God and to live from God. We were all the more dismayed, then, when in this year of all years and to a degree we could not have imagined, we came to know of abuse of minors committed by priests who twist the sacrament into its antithesis, and under the mantle of the sacred profoundly wound human persons in their childhood, damaging them for a whole lifetime.

In this context, a vision of Saint Hildegard of Bingen came to my mind, a vision which describes in a shocking way what we have lived through this past year. “In the year of our Lord’s incarnation 1170, I had been lying on my sick-bed for a long time when, fully conscious in body and in mind, I had a vision of a woman of such beauty that the human mind is unable to comprehend. She stretched in height from earth to heaven. Her face shone with exceeding brightness and her gaze was fixed on heaven. She was dressed in a dazzling robe of white silk and draped in a cloak, adorned with stones of great price. On her feet she wore shoes of onyx. But her face was stained with dust, her robe was ripped down the right side, her cloak had lost its sheen of beauty and her shoes had been blackened. And she herself, in a voice loud with sorrow, was calling to the heights of heaven, saying, ‘Hear, heaven, how my face is sullied; mourn, earth, that my robe is torn; tremble, abyss, because my shoes are blackened!’

And she continued: ‘I lay hidden in the heart of the Father until the Son of Man, who was conceived and born in virginity, poured out his blood. With that same blood as his dowry, he made me his betrothed.

For my Bridegroom’s wounds remain fresh and open as long as the wounds of men’s sins continue to gape. And Christ’s wounds remain open because of the sins of priests. They tear my robe, since they are violators of the Law, the Gospel and their own priesthood; they darken my cloak by neglecting, in every way, the precepts which they are meant to uphold; my shoes too are blackened, since priests do not keep to the straight paths of justice, which are hard and rugged, or set good examples to those beneath them. Nevertheless, in some of them I find the splendour of truth.’


And I heard a voice from heaven which said: ‘This image represents the Church. For this reason, O you who see all this and who listen to the word of lament, proclaim it to the priests who are destined to offer guidance and instruction to God’s people and to whom, as to the apostles, it was said: go into all the world and preach the Gospel to the whole creation’ (Mk 16:15)” (Letter to Werner von Kirchheim and his Priestly Community: PL 197, 269ff.).

In the vision of Saint Hildegard, the face of the Church is stained with dust, and this is how we have seen it. Her garment is torn – by the sins of priests. The way she saw and expressed it is the way we have experienced it this year. We must accept this humiliation as an exhortation to truth and a call to renewal. Only the truth saves. We must ask ourselves what we can do to repair as much as possible the injustice that has occurred. We must ask ourselves what was wrong in our proclamation, in our whole way of living the Christian life, to allow such a thing to happen. We must discover a new resoluteness in faith and in doing good. We must be capable of doing penance. We must be determined to make every possible effort in priestly formation to prevent anything of the kind from happening again. This is also the moment to offer heartfelt thanks to all those who work to help victims and to restore their trust in the Church, their capacity to believe her message. In my meetings with victims of this sin, I have also always found people who, with great dedication, stand alongside those who suffer and have been damaged. This is also the occasion to thank the many good priests who act as channels of the Lord’s goodness in humility and fidelity and, amid the devastations, bear witness to the unforfeited beauty of the priesthood.

We are well aware of the particular gravity of this sin committed by priests and of our corresponding responsibility. But neither can we remain silent regarding the context of these times in which these events have come to light. There is a market in child pornography that seems in some way to be considered more and more normal by society. The psychological destruction of children, in which human persons are reduced to articles of merchandise, is a terrifying sign of the times. From Bishops of developing countries I hear again and again how sexual tourism threatens an entire generation and damages its freedom and its human dignity. The Book of Revelation includes among the great sins of Babylon – the symbol of the world’s great irreligious cities – the fact that it trades with bodies and souls and treats them as commodities (cf. Rev 18:13). In this context, the problem of drugs also rears its head, and with increasing force extends its octopus tentacles around the entire world – an eloquent expression of the tyranny of mammon which perverts mankind. No pleasure is ever enough, and the excess of deceiving intoxication becomes a violence that tears whole regions apart – and all this in the name of a fatal misunderstanding of freedom which actually undermines man’s freedom and ultimately destroys it.

In order to resist these forces, we must turn our attention to their ideological foundations. In the 1970s, paedophilia was theorized as something fully in conformity with man and even with children. This, however, was part of a fundamental perversion of the concept of ethos. It was maintained – even within the realm of Catholic theology – that there is no such thing as evil in itself or good in itself. There is only a “better than” and a “worse than”. Nothing is good or bad in itself. Everything depends on the circumstances and on the end in view. Anything can be good or also bad, depending upon purposes and circumstances. Morality is replaced by a calculus of consequences, and in the process it ceases to exist. The effects of such theories are evident today. Against them, Pope John Paul II, in his 1993 Encyclical Letter Veritatis Splendor, indicated with prophetic force in the great rational tradition of Christian ethos the essential and permanent foundations of moral action. Today, attention must be focused anew on this text as a path in the formation of conscience. It is our responsibility to make these criteria audible and intelligible once more for people today as paths of true humanity, in the context of our paramount concern for mankind.

As my second point, I should like to say a word about the Synod of the Churches of the Middle East. This began with my journey to Cyprus, where I was able to consign the Instrumentum Laboris of the Synod to the Bishops of those countries who were assembled there. The hospitality of the Orthodox Church was unforgettable, and we experienced it with great gratitude. Even if full communion is not yet granted to us, we have nevertheless established with joy that the basic form of the ancient Church unites us profoundly with one another: the sacramental office of Bishops as the bearer of apostolic tradition, the reading of Scripture according to the hermeneutic of the Regula fidei, the understanding of Scripture in its manifold unity centred on Christ, developed under divine inspiration, and finally, our faith in the central place of the Eucharist in the Church’s life. Thus we experienced a living encounter with the riches of the rites of the ancient Church that are also found within the Catholic Church. We celebrated the liturgy with Maronites and with Melchites, we celebrated in the Latin rite, we experienced moments of ecumenical prayer with the Orthodox, and we witnessed impressive manifestations of the rich Christian culture of the Christian East. But we also saw the problem of the divided country. The wrongs and the deep wounds of the past were all too evident, but so too was the desire for the peace and communion that had existed before. Everyone knows that violence does not bring progress – indeed, it gave rise to the present situation. Only in a spirit of compromise and mutual understanding can unity be re-established. To prepare the people for this attitude of peace is an essential task of pastoral ministry.

During the Synod itself, our gaze was extended over the whole of the Middle East, where the followers of different religions – as well as a variety of traditions and distinct rites – live together. As far as Christians are concerned, there are Pre-Chalcedonian as well as Chalcedonian churches; there are churches in communion with Rome and others that are outside that communion; in both cases, multiple rites exist alongside one another. In the turmoil of recent years, the tradition of peaceful coexistence has been shattered and tensions and divisions have grown, with the result that we witness with increasing alarm acts of violence in which there is no longer any respect for what the other holds sacred, in which on the contrary the most elementary rules of humanity collapse. In the present situation, Christians are the most oppressed and tormented minority. For centuries they lived peacefully together with their Jewish and Muslim neighbours. During the Synod we listened to wise words from the Counsellor of the Mufti of the Republic of Lebanon against acts of violence targeting Christians. He said: when Christians are wounded, we ourselves are wounded. Unfortunately, though, this and similar voices of reason, for which we are profoundly grateful, are too weak. Here too we come up against an unholy alliance between greed for profit and ideological blindness. On the basis of the spirit of faith and its rationality, the Synod developed a grand concept of dialogue, forgiveness and mutual acceptance, a concept that we now want to proclaim to the world. The human being is one, and humanity is one. Whatever damage is done to another in any one place, ends up by damaging everyone. Thus the words and ideas of the Synod must be a clarion call, addressed to all people with political or religious responsibility, to put a stop to Christianophobia; to rise up in defence of refugees and all who are suffering, and to revitalize the spirit of reconciliation. In the final analysis, healing can only come from deep faith in God’s reconciling love. Strengthening this faith, nourishing it and causing it to shine forth is the Church’s principal task at this hour.

I would willingly speak in some detail of my unforgettable journey to the United Kingdom, but I will limit myself to two points that are connected with the theme of the responsibility of Christians at this time and with the Church’s task to proclaim the Gospel. My thoughts go first of all to the encounter with the world of culture in Westminster Hall, an encounter in which awareness of shared responsibility at this moment in history created great attention which, in the final analysis, was directed to the question of truth and faith itself. It was evident to all that the Church has to make her own contribution to this debate. Alexis de Tocqueville, in his day, observed that democracy in America had become possible and had worked because there existed a fundamental moral consensus which, transcending individual denominations, united everyone. Only if there is such a consensus on the essentials can constitutions and law function. This fundamental consensus derived from the Christian heritage is at risk wherever its place, the place of moral reasoning, is taken by the purely instrumental rationality of which I spoke earlier. In reality, this makes reason blind to what is essential. To resist this eclipse of reason and to preserve its capacity for seeing the essential, for seeing God and man, for seeing what is good and what is true, is the common interest that must unite all people of good will. The very future of the world is at stake.

Finally I should like to recall once more the beatification of Cardinal John Henry Newman. Why was he beatified? What does he have to say to us? Many responses could be given to these questions, which were explored in the context of the beatification. I would like to highlight just two aspects which belong together and which, in the final analysis, express the same thing. The first is that we must learn from Newman’s three conversions, because they were steps along a spiritual path that concerns us all. Here I would like to emphasize just the first conversion: to faith in the living God. Until that moment, Newman thought like the average men of his time and indeed like the average men of today, who do not simply exclude the existence of God, but consider it as something uncertain, something with no essential role to play in their lives. What appeared genuinely real to him, as to the men of his and our day, is the empirical, matter that can be grasped. This is the “reality” according to which one finds one’s bearings. The “real” is what can be grasped, it is the things that can be calculated and taken in one’s hand. In his conversion, Newman recognized that it is exactly the other way round: that God and the soul, man’s spiritual identity, constitute what is genuinely real, what counts. These are much more real than objects that can be grasped. This conversion was a Copernican revolution. What had previously seemed unreal and secondary was now revealed to be the genuinely decisive element. Where such a conversion takes place, it is not just a person’s theory that changes: the fundamental shape of life changes. We are all in constant need of such conversion: then we are on the right path.

The driving force that impelled Newman along the path of conversion was conscience. But what does this mean? In modern thinking, the word “conscience” signifies that for moral and religious questions, it is the subjective dimension, the individual, that constitutes the final authority for decision. The world is divided into the realms of the objective and the subjective. To the objective realm belong things that can be calculated and verified by experiment. Religion and morals fall outside the scope of these methods and are therefore considered to lie within the subjective realm. Here, it is said, there are in the final analysis no objective criteria. The ultimate instance that can decide here is therefore the subject alone, and precisely this is what the word “conscience” expresses: in this realm only the individual, with his intuitions and experiences, can decide. Newman’s understanding of conscience is diametrically opposed to this. For him, “conscience” means man’s capacity for truth: the capacity to recognize precisely in the decision-making areas of his life – religion and morals – a truth, the truth. At the same time, conscience – man’s capacity to recognize truth – thereby imposes on him the obligation to set out along the path towards truth, to seek it and to submit to it wherever he finds it. Conscience is both capacity for truth and obedience to the truth which manifests itself to anyone who seeks it with an open heart. The path of Newman’s conversions is a path of conscience – not a path of self-asserting subjectivity but, on the contrary, a path of obedience to the truth that was gradually opening up to him. His third conversion, to Catholicism, required him to give up almost everything that was dear and precious to him: possessions, profession, academic rank, family ties and many friends. The sacrifice demanded of him by obedience to the truth, by his conscience, went further still. Newman had always been aware of having a mission for England. But in the Catholic theology of his time, his voice could hardly make itself heard. It was too foreign in the context of the prevailing form of theological thought and devotion. In January 1863 he wrote in his diary these distressing words: “As a Protestant, I felt my religion dreary, but not my life - but, as a Catholic, my life dreary, not my religion”. He had not yet arrived at the hour when he would be an influential figure. In the humility and darkness of obedience, he had to wait until his message was taken up and understood. In support of the claim that Newman’s concept of conscience matched the modern subjective understanding, people often quote a letter in which he said – should he have to propose a toast – that he would drink first to conscience and then to the Pope. But in this statement, “conscience” does not signify the ultimately binding quality of subjective intuition. It is an expression of the accessibility and the binding force of truth: on this its primacy is based. The second toast can be dedicated to the .

I must refrain from speaking of my remarkable journeys to Malta, Portugal and Spain. In these it once again became evident that the faith is not a thing of the past, but an encounter with the God who lives and acts now. He challenges us and he opposes our indolence, but precisely in this way he opens the path towards true joy.

Excita, Domine, potentiam tuam, et veni. We set out from this plea for the presence of God’s power in our time and from the experience of his apparent absence. If we keep our eyes open as we look back over the year that is coming to an end, we can see clearly that God’s power and goodness are also present today in many different ways. So we all have reason to thank him. Along with thanks to the Lord I renew my thanks to all my co-workers. May God grant to all of us a holy Christmas and may he accompany us with his blessings in the coming year.

I entrust these prayerful sentiments to the intercession of the Holy Virgin, Mother of the Redeemer, and I impart to all of you and to the great family of the Roman Curia a heartfelt Apostolic Blessing. Happy Christmas!


© Copyright 2010 - Libreria Editrice Vaticana

Saturday, August 16, 2014

May we truly see

The technological advancement in the world had made many things visible to us. Taking our eyesight beyond our immediate surrounding. Communication had become possible, even instantaneously, although geographically we may be in different time zones. So many things had been accessible to us. We even consider ourselves in a global community. In spite of this, we seem closed-in in a self-centered reality and remain oblivious or desensitize to a wider reality.

We can see pictures of aborted babies. We can see beheaded children and the genocide in Iraq and other lands. We can see and know what is happening in our world. Yet, there is hardly any moral indignation. Is it our tolerance for evil? Is it our incapacity to make any judgment? Is it just live and let others live the way they want? Is it erasing the negative and just focusing on the positive?

I still believe there is much goodness and beauty in this world but evil and its ugliness continue to assert itself aggressively. We can all be misled into resorting to abortion or joining evil cults. We do not want it for the people we love or even for those we do not know... because it is wrong and harmful to one's self and the world.

The late Jaime Cardinal Sin during the Martial Law regime reminds people to never get used to the stench of the garbage or else we will not mind living in it. We have been living in so much garbage in our world. We may not have the power to clean it all but if we remain alert, sensitive, indignant, and watchful, we can make a difference. We can keep the garbage from piling up. We can choose not to add our garbage by cleaning up what we can. We can not resign ourselves to the evil that seduces us. With God's light our senses can truly see, hear, smell, taste, and feel what is Truth or lie, love or use, beauty or ugliness. We surely need God to make it through.
Payatas garbage dump from Wiki Commons

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Hastening the End

I often see commenters post a lot of tlig.org links in Catholic FB pages and blogs. One such poster seems like a faithful Catholic. So active, then, in posting news but also with the private messages from the tlig link. They even have prayer groups but I was uncomfortable with private revelations of uncertain origins. He was eventually banned from the page. Apparently, it is a group following a mystic and speaker Vassula Ryden who continues to receive divine messages supposedly from our Lord and our Blessed Mother since 1985. She must have a strong following all over the world but I leave it to the Church to decide its merits and veracity.

Vassula Ryden, from Wikipedia


What I am curious about is an article posted on a blog: Fr. Joseph Iannuzzi Speaks on Why the TLIG Messages are so Important. Dated, October 14, 2012.


As in the past, so today Christ comes to us through his prophet Vassula with a message of unity. He wants us to join under the one banner of Jesus Christ. Christ is calling all of us to unite through these the TLIG messages by way of love. However, he asks us all to bend. He reminds us that he would never break our human will. Therefore, he wants us to freely bend our wills so that we might choose unity, and in so doing, forge together our love and compassion in order to join under the one banner of Christ.

Now, this unity doesn’t in any way denigrate the independent rites of different denominations of the Orthodox, of the Protestants, or of the Catholics; it respects these rites. Such rites are encouraged to continue, but we are to join in our common belief. Why? Because Satan’s dictum is “divide and conquer”, whereas Jesus’ dictum is “unite and conquer”! So in uniting in one belief, we will stave off the impending disaster that threatens our world today and the faith of our children. If we unite, we will have more impact in the political world and in religious arena, and dispose ourselves for the era of peace that our Lady prophesied at Fatima.

Therefore, we can respect and eagerly embrace the iconography of the Eastern Orthodox Church, which they look to in many respects as a font of revelation, and to their profoundly rich patrimony of literature on “divinization” and mystical union with the Trinity; we can respect and embrace the scriptural contributions of the Protestants and their well-preserved charismatic gifts that enable us to deepen our faith and develop our gifts received in Confirmation. In sum, the Catholics, the Orthodox, the Protestants, all of us who are in God’s eyes Christian brothers, are asked by the Son of God himself to join NOW under the one banner of Jesus Christ. Without placing superiority or inferiority on these different roles that we all occupy in the Church, we can humbly acknowledge that we are all equal in God’s eyes, while carrying out different roles. And all we need to do is freely bend our human wills so that God’s Divine Will can reign in us. All it takes is two things: intention and desire; we have to have an intention to unite and a desire to make it happen. Then, little by little, we will begin to establish on earth the New Jerusalem, the New Heavens and the New Earth.


I wonder how much influence this private revelation has on the Church today with its mission of unity packaged in ecumenism. They are so in sync with Pope Francis.

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Resigned World?

It is so creepy that the world sits quietly while the Jihadists continue to occupy one location after another over defenseless citizens.

A cry for help!


It is as if the world had resigned to its fate. Just waiting for it all to reach one's doorsteps. As unsettling as it was to have that Vatican Garden Peace and Prayer, Jews, Christians, and Moslems hardly found peace after.

Too many messiahs. Too many control freaks. Too many self-sufficient humanists. The world seems unmanageable with its disorder within and without continually escalating into a dark new world.

Lord, have mercy on us and let me be a better person today. Let me live in Your Truth and Love, and let it overflow unto others.

Fallen Ideals


My niece doesn't want any religion for her child and so on with the brainwashing stuff. I tried to put forth some logic into her view but to no avail. She considers herself liberal and she wants to teach her child just what it is to be human. Her ideal president is Uruguay's Jose Mujica.

I was tempted to tell her, "I think you will like our new pope, Francis." Of course, I did not. She isn't a Catholic, she's with the Victory Church. I do love her and I am not going to reinforce her humanistic idea by telling her about the pope. Soon enough, without my help, she had an FB post with adulations for the pope.

Oh my! Surely Mujica and Francis.

José Mujica is a non-believer in God but he believes in austere living, championing the poor, legalized marijuana, legalized abortion, legalized same-sex marriage, strict ban on cigarettes, and environmental protection. All this, he was able to accomplish in a predominantly Catholic country.

For a brief period in my life, I was inclined to socialism as influenced by my university. It seems so ideal. Equality. Freedom. Concern for the poor. Concern for the environment. Coexistence.These are all good things wherein believers or non-believers can agree upon.

When Pope Francis says communists are closet Christians who’ve “stolen our flag", it drew varied reactions from professional media and bloggers. Actually, I had the same line of thinking but I do not think Communists or Socialists as "closet Christians". It was more like the Communists/ Socialists aped Catholicity but removing God. It was a similar thing that Julian the Apostate (b 331, d 363) did but with pagan gods. For Julian albeit with most of Socialism adherents, there is resentment or hatred for Christianity because of the actuations of some Christians. In his case, it was the massacre of his family. He could not accept the God of the Christians. The God of the Christians had been obscured by the Judases among them. He cried out when dying: Nenikekas Galilaie (Thou hast conquered, O Galilean).

For Julian the Apostate, it was the Christian virtues that he liked most especially charity, mercy, and justice. On the other hand, socialism is like the monastic life wherein there is common ownership of goods. There is work according to one's capacity that brought dignity to manual labor. There is discipline. Yet, paradoxically even if the structure of socialism is the same with Christian monasticism, the product is different.

I did not have any underlying anger towards "perceived" Christians, I just find socialism sounding so right and good. Yet, even when socialism wants to empower the masses, there will still arise a pyramid of power, just different personalities from that which was rejected.

As one grows in experience and exposure, we recognize the difference between permissiveness and freedom. Most of the things permitted like abortion, illegal drugs, euthanasia, same-sex marriage are all short cut solutions to man's ultimate desire but only leads him/her to a dead-end wall of bondage. Sameness is not equality but a grave injustice because it suppresses the uniqueness of each person in the seasons of life.

All these liberal ideas of abortion, euthanasia, same-sex marriage have gone against the connectivity of all things and all humanity and most importantly our First Source, God. It would be so crazy,to think of someone so adamantly against smoking and yet find no qualms in killing the life of a child in the womb where human life begins. It would be so crazy to care so much for the environment and go against the very basic natural law of man-woman marriage.

We all love. We love our family. We love our neighbors. We love the poor. Yet, without our relationship with God, we really would not know how to love. We will not know what is good for us, let alone what is good for others.

In the socialist / humanist way of life, there will be someone or something who would replace the true God, and that idol will be the source of our way of love and goodness and our sense of humanity. A false god is a false god and it will invert the way. The only way to find happiness and contentment in a socialist/ humanist environment is to be a robot. It keeps on moving with all semblances of activity and life, but in reality, it has fallen to sloth and numbness. Creativity has been stifled. And one can not ask one's self if this is really love and is this really life.

Socialism and humanism will breed people with messianic complex. A suppressed woundedness masked in the idea that "I can do good, charity, mercy without having a need for God." In spite of its "equality, liberty, and fraternity" slogan, it is in socialism and humanism where you will find . And behind the picture-perfect love for the poor and the minorities are atrocious denigration of human life. Behind every liberties granted is a dependency borne. Still, a creative minority will still exist impelled by higher goods beyond what the world could give.



Back to P. Francis, he may be technically orthodox, but in all practicality, what he had been doing is affirming and reinforcing people in a humanist/ socialist worldview that will not bring them joy here and the hereafter. Perhaps... that is what he really wants.

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Humility of the Facade

When a dress code in Church is brought up, you would hear echoes of "what is important is what is in your heart". The very same people would judge Pope Francis based on the physical as humble and adjudged Benedict as extravagant. This shallow judgment callers would use "who am I to judge?" as the slogan of mercy, compassion, and humility.

Daniel Burke's "The lavish homes of American archbishops" at CNN chronicles the residences of US bishop and judged them by the humility of Francis.

The residence of Pope Francis, not the imaginary, but the real one is featured in the Italian journal La Istampa, entitled "Pope in Square Meters and Demagoguery." or as translated with a little commentary at Rorate Caeli, entitled, "The High Cost of Frugal Living".

The choice of Domus Sanctae Marthae is not really a cost-cutting measure nor a show of humility. It is just a personal preference. Very much like politicians do not want "hand-me-downs" of previous regimes. In the case of P. Francis, it might be quite extreme.

STEWARDSHIP OF THE GIFT

It boils down to the stewardship of the gifts. Many things have been given to us. Some may be deemed good, some bad. Do we out rightly reject what's been given? What will we do with the rejected gifts? Will a new one really be efficacious? Or will the new one become old just as easily and would need again for a replacement?

There's room for the old and new in the scheme of life. What matters is the stewardship of the gifts? What may be perceived as humility can actually be arrogance that rejects the gifts? What may be perceived as lavish can actually be a humble acceptance of a gift for a better purpose and not self-serving? Still, it can go the other way. A humble exterior can truly have a humility of heart that recognizes God as the giver of gifts and feels sufficiently endowed that there is no neediness. A lavish exterior can actually reflect an extravagant, self-indulgent, or even corrupt lifestyle.

Our perception must be honed to look at the bigger picture and deeper into the heart of things. If we go by the surface, we will easily be fooled by propaganda, or much worst be taken in by a false prophet.

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

1917 Face-off


1917 must be a significant year. There were many forces asserting itself in the world, yet, apparently it boils down to two opposing forces. The shades of grey is becoming clearly a black and white.

Looking first at some of the holy people at that time, we have Gilbert Keith Chesterton who was 43 years old by 29 May. GKC was already an established journalist. Working in Vatican was Eugenio Pacelli (future Pope Pius XII) who was 41 years old by 2 March. Another Italian was Guissepe Moscati who was 37 years old. There was also a famous Italian Franciscan Friar Francesco Forgione who was 30 years old and popularly known as Padre Pio. In Europe's intellectual circle was Jewish Edith Stein (future Sr. Teresa Benedicta) who was 26 years old by 12 October. There is also the Polish seminarian, Raymond Kolbe (wh will take the name Maximillian) who was 23 years old. Another Italian was Giovanni Battista Enrico Antonio Maria Montini (future Pope Paul VI) who was 20 years old by 26 September. Italian Pier Giorgio Frassati was 16 years old. British Malcolm Muggeridge was 14 years old. The Albanian Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu (future Mother Teresa) was 7 years old by 27 August. The Dutch Philip van Straaten (future Fr. Winifred) was 4 years old.

In the Vineyard of the Lord, we can say it was the worst and the best of times. In the chair of Peter was Benedict XV, 63-year-old Giacomo dela Chiesa. World War I had begun and amidst a war-torn world, so much more was brewing.

In March, the monarchial Russian society was in a revolution. Alexander Kerensky freed all political prisoners. Czar Nicholas abdicated and a provisional government was established. Among the political activists was Stalin who returned to St. Petersburg in this power vacuum. Lenin, too, was back with the slogan, "All power to the soviets!" and pushing for reforms – demanding peace, immediate land reform, worker’s control of factories and self-determination for the non-Russian peoples. It all sounded so wonderful for the people- a promising program of governance. It competed with the provisional government that brought forth conflict and rivalry between Lenin and Kerensky. Finally, Lenin was in control and Russia was no longer a player in the war and society was awaiting the promised reforms. Stalin remained in the background while Lenin was in the front. Stalin was mainly involved in the preparation for the Bolshevik revolution as administrator for the plans for Russia.

On April 20, the new pope, Benedict XV appointed Monsignor Pacelli as Nuncio to Bavaria, Germany, a nation on the verge of military defeat and revolutionary chaos. Benedict XV was desperately seeking peace efforts but the war continued its destructive force. Shells containing deadly gases were introduced; and amidst the shelling, rain, too was pouring which left Belgium and Germany into a sea of mud where many of the wounded drowned.



On 5th of May, Benedict XV with his futile efforts to effect peace among the countries sent a pastoral letter urging the people to pray to the Sacred Heart of Jesus for peace through the Immaculate Heart of Mary. He also added the invocation to the Litany of Loreto, “Queen of Peace, Pray for us”. In spite of mankind’s inability to communicate with each other in this one small planet, Heaven and earth seemed closer in hearing distance.

13th of May, Benedict XV consecrated 41-year-old Pacelli into a bishop at the Sistine Chapel. On the same day in Portugal, on a hillside outside Fatima, three children, Francisco and Jacinta Marto and Lucia Dos Santos were playing in the field with their herd of sheep. It was a usual daily routine for the children, something they enjoyed immensely spending time together. Most of the adults were wary of the war in Europe but not the children in the pasture with the sheep. They suddenly saw a flash of lightning and thought a storm was coming. They got ready to take the sheep home when they saw above a small holm oak tree a Lady dressed entirely in white and shining more brilliantly than the sun. They were so close that they were standing in the light. The beautiful Lady said, “be not afraid, I shall do you no harm”. The Lady requested the children to come back to the place every 13th for six consecutive months. 10-year-old Lucia asked questions to the Lady. Such was the event in Fatima, a place named after Mohammad’s daughter, Fatima, who became a Christian. Could three kids keep this event secret to themselves? Even before Pacelli was able to go to Germany, he was again given more responsibilities and he was elevated to an Archbishop. He went to Germany to present his credentials to Ludwig III, King of Bavaria on 28th of May 1917. Meanwhile in the United States of America, John Fitzgerald Kennedy was born on the 29th of May to a prominent Catholic family in Massachusetts.

13th of June and it was the feast of St. Anthony de Padua, a Portuguese and the three Portuguese shepherd children were again with the Lady of Fatima. The Lady asked them to pray the rosary daily. She talked of Jacinta and Francesco going to heaven soon but Lucia would remain to have a mission of establishing devotion to Her Immaculate Heart. What a supernatural encounter for the three children. In Prussia, Archbishop Pacelli visited Kaiser Wilhelm II begging him to use his power to end the war. The kaiser found the archbishop quite likeable and all, but it was war. Pacelli’s encounter and Benedict XV’s pleas with the powers of world seemed fruitless. Would powerful leaders back out from the challenges of war? For 26-year-old Edith Stein, it was a time of encounter with those whose families had lost their loved ones in the war. Edith's friend, Reinach died in battle and Edith came to give her consolation to his Christian wife. But there was something about the widow that touched her - her hope amidst the loss. "This was my first meeting with the Cross, with the DIVINE STRENGTH it brings to those who bear it. I saw for the first time within my reach the Church, BORN of the REDEEMER's SUFFERINGS in his VICTORY over the sting of DEATH. It was at that moment that my incredulity was shattered and the LIGHT of Christ shone forth, CHRIST in the MYSTERY of the CROSS."



The 13th of July, Jacinta, Lucia and Francesco were again with the Lady of Fatima giving them a secret in three parts which they were to guard. There were prophetic messages about the war, a war to come, Russia, the pope, and the world. The children were also asked to receive Holy Communion every first Saturday of the month in reparation of sins. The children were given a vision of hell, and although they were assured of heaven, the thought of anyone going to hell made them do sacrifices for sinners. The children were taught to add after every decade of the rosary the prayer, “O my Jesus, forgive us our sins, save us from the fires of hell, take all souls to heaven, especially those most in need of Your mercy.”

It was the 13th of August, and the three shepherd children from Fatima were supposed to meet with the Lady, but the three young children aged 10, 9 and 8 were in prison in Ouren, a few kilometers from Fatima. Could they cajole the children into saying it were all but lies? Or intimidation perhaps might make them break? No, the three children did not change their story. Meanwhile, twenty thousand people gathered in Fatima and saw and heard the rumble of thunder and a vividly brilliant flash of lightning in the clear blue sky. The sun grew pale and the whole atmosphere changed to a dull, sickly sort of yellow, while a light cloud of beautiful shape, appeared and hovered a while over the oak tree. On the 19th of August, our Lady appeared in Fatima to the children in the area which was called Valinos, a small village near Fatima. Once again, she appeared above a holm oak tree. They were asked to go to Cova de Iria on the 13th and pray the rosary. “I shall do a miracle, so that all people may believe.”

13th of September, rumours were spreading that God was going to do something special. Lucie’s mother who would often hit her as she thought Lucie was telling lies had fixed all her hopes on a miracle. Nothing happened. The children suffered much but they offered it up for sinners.

So much of the world had nothing much to believe in except the ideals of their rulers to truly empower the masses with socialism. Malcolm Muggeridge grew up with socialism but now as a 16-year-old student at Selwyn College, Cambridge University in England, he was exposed to an organized religion in the Anglican Church. In Austria, a young high school student, Viktor Frankl was involved in the local Young Socialist Workers Organization.

The Artificial Contraception promoter Margaret Sanger followed in 1917 another book with "What Every Mother Should Know". She also launched the monthly periodical "The Birth Control Review" and "Birth Control News" and contributed articles on health to the Socialist Party paper, The Call. A perfect fit. “Though sex cells are placed in a part of the anatomy for the essential purpose of easily expelling them into the female for the purpose of reproduction, there are other elements in the sexual fluid which are the essence of blood, nerve, brain, and muscle. When redirected in to the building and strengthening of these, we find men or women of the greatest endurance greatest magnetic power. A girl can waste her creative powers by brooding over a love affair to the extent of exhausting her system, with the results not unlike the effects of masturbation and debauchery.” - Sanger


The country of Portugal was under the presidency of Democrat Bernardino Luís Machado Guimarães. On this October day, the 13th, around 70,000 people gathered in Cova de Iria in Fatima. Why? The people were still waiting for a miracle. To some of the educated, they were like desperate people believing in fairy tales. By noon, the weather didn't seem convenient for a miracle. It was rainy and Fatima was a muddy place to hang around for a miracle. The three young children, Jacinta, Francesco, and Lucia were there. Suddenly, they exclaimed, “Holy Maria”. Instantaneously, the rain stopped and the clouds cleared to reveal the sun. The sun began to turn around radiating rays into the trees, hills and people with beautiful colors. The people were jubilant the miracle was at hand. Then, the sun seemed to be getting bigger and bigger as if falling from the sky towards them. There were shrieking and praying, some were thinking it was the END OF THE WORLD. Many knelt on the muddy ground and asked forgiveness. Then, it suddenly stopped and the ground was dried. What an experience for the people there. Lucia’s mother, who never believed her own child “can’t deny it”. The people were all agog pestering the children with questions all through the next days. Fatima was in the news but most people had other bigger concerns to attend to. Some devotees of our Lady were excited while some ignored it as some hoax or hallucination.



Whether Franciscan seminarian Raymond (Maximillian) Kolbe was aware or not of the Fatima apparition, he was ready to respond to the Call. On Oct 16, 1917, he founded with six companions the Militia of the Immaculata. His inclination for the military life had developed into the church militant not with swords but with the aim of "converting sinners, heretics and schismatics, particularly freemasons, and bringing all men to love Mary Immaculate. He didn't like what he saw of the world, in fact he saw it as downright evil. The fight, he decided, was a spiritual one. The world was bigger than Poland and there were worse slaveries than earthly ones.

Across the Atlantic in a different time zone, October 16 in the United States, Sanger opened a family planning and birth control clinic at 46 Amboy St. in the Brownsville neighborhood of Brooklyn, the first of its kind in the United States. It was raided nine days later by the police. She served 30 days in prison.

It was November 6-7 in the Gregorian Calender but Octobrist (October 24-25) in the Russian calendar, the Bolsheviks acted. By the next evening the capital was in their hands, though fighting in Moscow went on for several days. Soon the Bolshevik revolution had installed their own general as commander in chief of the armed forces. When the second All-Russian Congress of Soviets met in the capital, most members of other socialist parties walked out, leaving the impression that Lenin's party best represented the interests of workers, farmers, and soldiers. The congress called upon all parties in the war to negotiate immediate peace. It also abolished all private ownership of land and took all property of the imperial family and the Russian Orthodox Church. The eight-hour workday was made compulsory, and factory workers were given the right to supervise their enterprises. Could Russia be in error as the Lady of Fatima had warned?

Fatima was just an obscure village of Portugal and a war was raging on that cannot be distracted by visions of three young shepherds. 34-year-old Mussolini returned to the newspaper he founded, Il Popolo d'Italia (The People of Italy) while the 41-year-old, tall and slender Archbishop Pacelli continued his diplomatic efforts in behalf of the Holy See in seeking peace and end of war.

Edith’s thirst for the TRUTH was even greater and she read "The Spiritual Exercises" of St. Ignatius. Although, she read it intellectually as she would read any other book, it inflamed in her a DESIRE for this GOD. Something revolutionary, too, was happening inside the agnostic Jew, Edith Stein.



Although Pope Benedict XV couldn’t stop the war, he made the Catholic Church the international center of charity. He mobilized aid for starving regions, he organized negotiations for the exchange of prisoners of war, missing persons were located, correspondence were handled between prisoners and their distant families and efforts for brief cease-fire. In this mission of the church amidst war, Archbishop Pacelli, went hands-on to visit the wounded and to assist the prisoners of war.

In Megiddo, known as Armageddon, the war was also being fought by the British Army led by General Allenby.

It was an age of messianic complex pushing their version of utopia and their way is the only way. Margaret Sanger launched a revolutionary solution to liberate women and to solve poverty. Lenin and Stalin launched a revolution that will liberate the working people into a productive society eradicating poverty. Good intentions for Margaret Sanger, Stalin and Lenin – wanting to ease the travails of humanity. Margaret Higgins Sanger was the sixth of eleven children of a devout Catholic mother. She conceived of her ideal life and that life was not like her mother’s and she embraced atheism. Her slogan, ”No Gods and No Masters". God must be out of the picture during sexual act and conception. Stalin was baptized in the Russian Orthodox Church and even entered the seminary, but he was kicked out. “God must be out of the picture for the working humanity". Lenin, “Our program necessarily includes the propaganda of atheism”.



Impossible to have no gods and no masters, someone or something is bound to take each place. 1917 and hence forth, the battle had not ended.

Ref: Encyclopedia Brittanica, Fatima Organizations, New Advent Catholic Encyclopedia

Monday, August 4, 2014

Mega Churches and the Old Church



Hillsong NYC is attracting more than 6,000 young, attractive urbanites every Sunday with a simple approach to religion: A hot pastor covered in tattoos gets onstage to a rock introduction to preach an anti-Kennedy gospel: Ask not what you can do for God — ask what God can do for you.

“We don’t use the word ‘religion,’ because it’s hard to get people excited about religion,” says Carl Lentz, 35, the pastor of this megachurch for millennials. “Religion is dead. I don’t know anything about religion, I couldn’t help you. Religion has no power. But a relationship with God is a superpower.”

Hillsong was founded by Brian and Bobbie Houston in Australia in 1983 as an evangelical chuch to spread a Jesus-died-for-our-sins message. The church also includes Pentecostal baptism — which explains why Justin Bieber reportedly journeyed around Manhattan with Lentz this year to find the perfect hotel pool for the spiritual shvitz.



Iglesia ni Cristo is a unitarian church founded by Felix Manalo, registered in 1914. They do not believe that Jesus is God, although anointed by God. Manalo, too, is considered the prophet from the east.


There are Catholic mega churches like Bo Sanchezes' Ministry with weekly meetings called "the Feast". There is also the El Shaddai Catholic Charismatic Renewal led by Brother Willie Velarde.

My old, old Church is decimating.
In the West, the Catholic Church is being destroyed from the inside. Many old heritage Church buildings are being sold. It continues its self-destructive trajectory with Liturgical abuse, sexual abuse, corruption, and giving in to the pressures of societal culture of death.



In the East, she is being destroyed from the outside. Convert or else get jailed, killed, taxed, and driven away.



In this Old Church, I will remain. She holds the fullness of Truth. She could only be instituted by God, our Creator who knows and loves His creation.

What can be more personal than the Holy Eucharist, who is Jesus Himself. The Holy Mass, minus the Liturgical abuse and experimentation, is the most welcoming Sacrament of love. I can just be me, sad or happy, broken or complete, young or old, sick or healthy. There, Jesus waits with love. There, Jesus is, was, and will be. There, through Jesus, with Jesus, and in Jesus, we can transcend time and space. We can rise above our human tendencies, moods, and interests. The Catholic Church is about Truth and Love, in spite of, its members. I couldn't leave it.

In the Churches' beauty, she embraces the darkness trying to transform it with its Light. With the sinners, she gives healing. With those in bondage, she gives freedom. If only we would allow her to embrace us rather than trying to change her with our decadent humanity; We will find our true humanity. We will find the true WAY of LOVE.


St. Michael



In 1884, Pope Leo XIII ordered the inclusion of an exorcism prayer after every low mass. This is popularly known as the Prayer to St. Michael. It was enacted in 1886 and suppressed in 1964 (80 years after the pope so ordered). Pope Leo XIII wrote the prayer after a vision he had. A vision wherein the Devil boast of being able to destroy the Catholic Church in 75 years (or 100 years) given time and power. The Lord granted.

This is an unfamiliar long version by Most Holy Family Monastery (A Sede Vacante(?) site) as taken from The Raccolta, 1930, Benziger Bros., pp. 314-315.

O Glorious Archangel St. Michael, Prince of the heavenly host, be our defense in the terrible warfare which we carry on against principalities and Powers, against the rulers of this world of darkness, spirits of evil. Come to the aid of man, whom God created immortal, made in his own image and likeness, and redeemed at a great price from the tyranny of the devil. Fight this day the battle of the Lord, together with the holy angels, as already thou hast fought the leader of the proud angels, Lucifer, and his apostate host, who were powerless to resist thee, nor was there place for them any longer in Heaven. That cruel, that ancient serpent, who is called the devil or Satan, who seduces the whole world, was cast into the abyss with his angels. Behold, this primeval enemy and slayer of men has taken courage. Transformed into an angel of light, he wanders about with all the multitude of wicked spirits, invading the earth in order to blot out the name of God and of his Christ, to seize upon, slay and cast into eternal perdition souls destined for the crown of eternal glory. This wicked dragon pours out, as a most impure flood, the venom of his malice on men of depraved mind and corrupt heart, the spirit of lying, of impiety, of blasphemy, and the pestilent breath of impurity, and of every vice and iniquity.

These most crafty enemies have filled and inebriated with gall and bitterness the Church, the spouse of the immaculate Lamb, and have laid impious hands on her most sacred possessions. In the Holy Place itself, where has been set up the See of the most holy Peter and the Chair of Truth for the light of the world, they have raised the throne of their abominable impiety, with the iniquitous design that when the Pastor has been struck, the sheep may be scattered .

Arise then, O invincible Prince, bring help against the attacks of the lost spirits to the people of God, and give them the victory. They venerate thee as their protector and Patron; in thee holy Church glories as her defense against the malicious power of hell; to thee has God entrusted the souls of men to be established in heavenly beatitude. Oh, pray to the God of peace that He may put Satan under our feet, so far conquered that he may no longer be able to hold men in captivity and harm the Church. Offer our prayers in the sight of the Most High, so that they may quickly conciliate the mercies of the Lord; and beating down the dragon, the ancient serpent, who is the devil and Satan, do thou again make him captive in the abyss, that he may no longer seduce the nations. Amen.

Behold the Cross of the Lord; be scattered ye hostile powers. The Lion of the tribe of Judah has conquered, the root of David. Let thy mercies be upon us, O Lord. As we have hoped in thee. O Lord, hear my prayer. And let my cry come unto thee.

Let us pray. O God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, we call upon thy holy name, and as suppliants we implore thy clemency, that by the intercession of Mary, ever Virgin immaculate and our Mother, and of the glorious Archangel St. Michael, thou wouldst deign to help us against Satan and all other unclean spirits, who wander about the world for the injury of the human race and the ruin of souls. Amen.



Saturday, August 2, 2014

Then and Now

The history of the Catholic Church is very much intertwined with the history of humanity. The Catholic Church considered as the new Israel goes through the same experiences as the Jews of the Old Testament. A cycle of unfaithfulness, slavery, repentance, resolution, and freedom. There is comfort in seeing how the Church survives through it all and, at the same time, it shows even more her Divine Institution.

THEN. According to Church historian, Baronius (b.1538; d.1607), the tenth century was perhaps the saddest in Christian annals which he described as "that Christ was as if asleep in the vessel of the Church."

I wonder if future historians would look at our time the same way. However, there are so many similarities. In Benedict XVI's final address in 2013, "I have felt like St. Peter with the Apostles in the boat on the Sea of Galilee: the Lord has given us many days of sunshine and gentle breeze, days in which the catch has been abundant; then there have been times when the seas were rough and the wind against us, as in the whole history of the Church it has ever been—and the Lord seemed to sleep. Nevertheless, I always knew that the Lord is in the barque."

Even (St) Bruno, Bishop of Segni, Italy spoke of that period upon the election of Pope Leo IX (152nd pope, 1049-54) as: "the whole world lay in wickedness, holiness had disappeared, justice had perished and truth had been buried; Simon Magus lording it over the Church, whose bishops and priests were given to luxury and fornication."

CHURCH ESTATE

Then. During that time, the Church had many estates, and thus, priests and religious were also landlords. On the other hand, the secular world was governed by monarchs, dukes, and emperors. With the Church's material wealth, worldly and power hungry people took interest in her.

Now. The Church's estate had been reduced to the Vatican State within Rome, Italy. The rest of its material property is spread out in monasteries, buildings, and dioceses. The Catholic Church is still considered rich with its precious assets.

SIMONY and RELATIONSHIP with WORLDLY POWERS

Simony was the biggest problem of the Church wherin clerical office are bought. The emperor at that time was from the Franconian line. Germany was the Imperial land. Kings and dukes were fond of investing clerics for political influence.

Now. There are many independent nations with their own system of government. Majority is governed by electoral process. In issues of artificial contraception, abortion, euthanasia,and same-sex marriage, majority of bishops' conference are still at odds with the government.

ECCLESIASTICAL EDIFICE

How bad were things? [1] Then,Leo IX also appointed Hildebrand as propositus or promisor of the monastery of St. Paul extra Muros (St. Paul outside the walls). The historic and venerable establishment had suffered much from the past violence of lawless bands of the Champagne. The building had been so neglected that sheeps and cattles would roam around through the unrepaired broken doors. Just as broken down was the monastic discipline within the establishment. The monks were being attended by women in the refectory and the regiments of prayers were not being observed.

Now. From those of age at the time of Vatican II's implementation witnessed the demolishing of sanctuary rails, moving of altar table to accommodate priest facing people, moving of the tabernacle to the side. Many Churches after Vatican II function like multipurpose edifice where cultural presentations are held. Modern Church architecture had also emerged taking away much of the symbolism of old churches.


SEXUAL IMMORALITY

And the extent of sexual immorality then?
Peter Damian, monk, published his treatise on the vices of the clergy, the "Liber Gomorrhianus" (Book of Gomorrha) in 1051, dedicating it to the pope who was two years into his pontificate. It became a controversial book. Those that were alluded to were certainly not happy with the author. The pope who at first praised Peter Damian’s work soon distanced himself with the author with the rising controversy and considered the writing as an exaggeration. Peter vigorously protested in his letter to the pope.

The issues tackled in the book were:
•The problems of homosexual bishops or heads of religious orders who engage their "spiritual sons" in acts of sodomy.
•The sacrilegious use of the sacraments by homosexual clerics and religious.
•The special problems for the Church related to the seduction of youths by clerical pederasts, and
•The problem of overtly lax canons and penances for clerical and religious offenders that make a mockery of the seriously sinful nature of homosexual acts.

During the time of Ratzinger in Rome, the sexual abuse scandal erupted in the press. The extent, though, about 0.1% of the priesthood was alarming.
Worst was the clique that developed from it and became a homo lobby within the Church which can be likened to (St) Peter Damien's Book of Gomorrah.

Cardinal Ratzinger and later as Benedict XVI tried to clean up the Church and more succinctly fight the homoheresy. Ratzinger called it the "filth" within the church.

EASTERN CHURCH

Then, there was also the continuing tension between the Church in the East with the Church in the West. The conflict that allowed the Moslem an advantage in conquering several territories in the East.
Pope Leo IX didn’t live to see the result of his embassy to Constantinople. On 16th of July, 1054 the two cardinals excommunicated Caerularius and the Greek Patriarch, likewise, excommunicated the Roman pontiff.

Now. Pope Paul VI, on his trip to the Holy Land, together with the Patriarch mutually lifted the excommunication. Succeeding popes have traveled to the Holy Land but "communion" had not been arrived.


ISLAM

Then. Islam was aggressive in occupying territories. Pope Gregory VII (Hildebrand) tried to call a crusade to help the Christians in the Middle East but his call was met with indifference.

Now, Islam had become the dominant religion in the Middle East. Israel also has its own land but the conflict remains in the East. Shari'a law is enforced in both Sunni and Shiite controlled areas. Most of Middle East had become rich through its oil and gas production. However, Christian persecution of Political and militant Moslems prevail in greater intensity.



HOLY EUCHARIST

Another notable problem then was the heresy of Berengarius of Tours (b.999; d.1088) questioning the REAL PRESENCE of Jesus in the Holy Eucharist.

Although there is no outright Berengarius heresy, the actuations of priests and laity towards the Holy Eucharist speak tons. Clown masses, Priests distributing Holy Communion as if they were handing out coins to be received by the hand. The churchgoers dressed up for another occasion and the Mass was just a convenient incidental in their schedule. The unrecognizable Sacrifice of the Mass abound.



DISSENT/ CELIBACY DEBATE

In spite of reforms, condemnations, and sending papal legates, bishops and priests were openly dissenting. Dissent became the norm and those who are faithful to the teaching of the Church were treated with contempt. It was then and it is now.

Deacon Ariald and Anselm of Lucca were amongst those going against the current. Deacon Ariald was slained in 1065 on his way to Rome.

Now, open dissent from bishops and lay leaders. Kasper, Mahoney, with many dissenting organizations.

HILDEBRAND AND RATZINGER



After Hildebrand's 20 year long service to the pope's, he was elected pope on 1073. He was about 50 years old and took the name of Gregory VII. The Holy Roman Emperor at that time was 23-year-old King Henry IV of the Franconian line. He was consecrated on the Feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, 29 June 1073, which was the anniversary of his priestly ordination.
Hildebrand asked for a lot of prayers and he wrote to Desiderius, Abbot of Monte Cassino, referring to his elevation to the pontificate with the words of Psalm: "I am come into deep waters, so that the floods run over me... Fearlessness and trembling are come upon me, and darkness hath covered me."

Ratzinger after serving as prefect of Congregation of Doctrine and Faith was elected into the papacy on 2005 and took the name of Benedict XVI
In his inaugural address on April 24, he said, "Pray for me, that I may not flee for fear of the wolves." Joseph Ratzinger was ordained in the priesthood on 29 June 1951.

January 1075, Pope Gregory VII to Abbot Hugh of Cluny: "The Eastern Church has FALLEN AWAY from the Faith and is now assailed on every side by infidels. Wherever I turn my eyes--to the west, to the north, or to the south--I find everywhere bishops who have OBTAINED their office in an irregular way, whose lives and conversation are strangely at variance with their SACRED CALLING; who go through their duties not for the LOVE of CHRIST but from motives of WORLDLY gain. There are no longer princes who set God's honour before their own selfish ends, or who allow justice to stand in the way of their ambition... And those among whom I live-- Romans, Lombards, and Normans --are, as I have often told them, worse than Jews or Pagans".

In the flight en route to Fatima, 13 May 2010, Ratzinger said, "As for the new things which we can find in this message today, there is also the fact that attacks on the Pope and the Church come not only from without, but the sufferings of the Church come precisely from within the Church, from the sin existing within the Church. This too is something that we have always known, but today we are seeing it in a really terrifying way: that the greatest persecution of the Church comes not from her enemies without, but arises from sin within the Church, and that the Church thus has a deep need to relearn penance, to accept purification, to learn forgiveness on the one hand, but also the need for justice."

23 January 1076, King Henry who continued to practice Simony called his own council with bishops aligning with him and declared Gregory VII deposed, putting his own anti-pope. Hildebrand excommunicated King Henry and his allies. In spite of the terrible state of Christendom, the masses still believe in Christianity and declared they want a new king rather than the excommunicated one. King Henry, thus, realized he needs the approval of the pope.
In 1084, after so many attempts King Henry succeeded in occupying Rome and consecrated Guibert as Clement III. 61-year-old Pope Gregory VII was exiled at the Castle of Sant’ Angelo. He was liberated by the Normans, but their abuses were too much for the Romans who went on uprising. Hildebrand went into self-exile at Monte Cassimo then at Salerno.

On May 25, 1085, Hildebrand/ Pope Gregory VII died at Salerno around the age of 60 or 65. His last words were: "I have LOVED JUSTICE and HATED INIQUITY, therefore I die in EXILE."

On February 11, 2013, Ratzinger/ Benedict XVI announced his renunciation. Beginning the 28th of February, he began his life of reclusion at Castel Gandolfo then at the Monastery of Mater Ecclesiae within the Vatican City.

POST- HILDEBRAND

Several pontificates and anti-popes came after Hildebrand. It would be in the age of St. Bernard of Clairvaux (B. 1090; D. 21 August, 1153) when Christianity would blossom again.

Reference: New Advent: Pope St. Gregory VII