This is the spiritual journey of me, Eccles, my big brother Bosco, and my Grate-Anti Moly. Eccles is saved, but we've got real problems with Bosco and Anti.
This is me, Eccles
Tuesday, 24 December 2024
The Catholic Advent Calendar 2024
A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year of Whatever it is this time to all readers! This is what we found when
we opened the windows.
1. Out pops Timothy Radcliffe OP, who becomes a cardinal on December 7th.
2. Women are hardly ever depicted in Catholic art, so it is a delight to show you Luce, the symbol of modern Catholicism. Jubilate Luce!
3. As Joe Biden prepares to fade from the scene, we have here a picture of that *Devout Catholic* giving something to Cecile Richards of Planned Parenthood - possibly, a free pardon.
4. A typical three-eyed picture from the pope's favourite artist, theologian and ex-Jesuit, Fr Marko Rupnik.
5. We welcome Uncle Arthur Roche, Vatican hitman, looking unusually holy.
6. Latin Mass may be out of favour, but as an alternative, why not try an approved "indigenous" rite (which you mustn't call the Mayan rite)?
7. Erwin Wurm's outsized hot water bottle on human feet placed next the Stephansdom in Vienna is supposed to evoke "the importance of warming charity in the time before Easter" (quotation from a flyer found in the cathedral).
8. After the excitement of the last few days, we see Cardinal Hollerich relaxing with some liturgical dancing (I think).
9. The French have always had great dress sense ("l'élégance française") and when it comes to modelling "haute couture" vestments Notre Dame has no equal.
10. Coming out today is Fr James Martin SJ, seen here blessing a homosexual couple.
11. We welcome Kevin Farrell, the pension czar, Camerlengo, prefect of the Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life, and Lord High Everything Else. In his spare time he is a cardinal.
12. These lovely ladies are holding a banner that says "Women priests are here". Obviously a witty joke as there can be no such thing.
13. Yes, it's Austen Ivereigh: papal biographer, fan of Pachamama, and connoisseur of Rupnik's art. Also (it seems) a part-time lumberjack.
14. Besides leading the way in the design of vestments, Notre Dame is also known for its novel concept of an altar.
15. We welcome Cardinal Cupich, who will be watching you carefully to see that you do not kneel for Communion, disrupting the flow of the procession.
16. It's Fr Thomas Reese SJ, known for his "Even Jesus got it wrong" scribblings.
17. This lady needs no introduction.
18. It's Sister Nathalie Becquart XMCJ, winner of the prize for the most synodal synodalist of the 2024 synodal synod on synodality (ladies' section).
19. Let's lighten the mood with a sing-song.
Altogether now, "Mary, did you know?"
20. Here comes Cardinal "Tucho" Fernández, author of "Heal Me With Your Mouth: The Art of Kissing" and (mostly) "Fiducia supplicans". Need I say more?
21. Catholics have traditionally liked to worship in beautiful churches that glorify God. So here is a French church (St Pierre Firminy) designed by Corbusier, probably by adapting his plans for a nuclear power station.
22. Here we have one of the real heavyweights, the great Cardinal Reinhard ("Rhino" or "Rainbow") Marx, a keen promoter of LGBT Catholicism.
23. With just two days to go, it's time for us to think of the true meaning of Christmas - SYNODALITY.
24. Pope Francis is seen here admiring the nativity scene, in which the baby Jesus shows solidarity with the Palestinians by lying on their traditional scarf.
Saturday, 14 December 2024
No kneeling in Church!
Top Cardinal Blase Cupich (well he has twice won the
World Cup of Bad Cardinals) has spoken:
A message from our champion:
Certainly reverence can and should be expressed by bowing before the reception of Holy Communion, but no one should engage in a gesture that calls attention to oneself or disrupts the flow of the procession.
What can he possibly mean? Are people doing the Haka? Engaged in weightlifting (muscular Christianity)?
Or pointing at the deacon and giggling at his rose vestments?
Permit Austen Ivereigh, the man with the Pope's ear (he keeps it in the freezer) to explain.
Austen Ivereigh is feeling disrupted.
Apparently, what Bad Cardinal Cupich is referring to is the sin of kneeling. (I don't think I've ever seen anyone
throw themselves down, but who knows what they do in the Ivereigh Towers?)
Presumably he's not referring to the TLM, in which *everyone* throws themselves down - I mean, kneels?
Thanks to Blase's over-zealous interpretation of Trads Cussed, trying to conduct a TLM in Chicago is now as dangerous
as celebrating St Valentine's Day was in 1929, so Al Cupone is unlikely ever to encounter one - not even
an LGBTTLM, which is what he would probably prefer.
In the "Hail Maori" rite, these gestures are permitted when receiving the Sacrament.
Anyway, the following showy and disruptive activities are now discouraged in the Catholic Church.
* Kneeling, especially if it delays Dr Ivereigh when he is anxious to go home.
* Genuflecting.
* Making the sign of the cross, or similar showing off how "reverent" you are.
* Saying "Amen" when receiving. Actually the TLM liturgy already acknowledges that this is showy and disruptive, so it is not done.
* Looking unnaturally pious. Or, in general, taking the whole thing seriously. I hope that helps.
* Genuflecting.
* Making the sign of the cross, or similar showing off how "reverent" you are.
* Saying "Amen" when receiving. Actually the TLM liturgy already acknowledges that this is showy and disruptive, so it is not done.
* Looking unnaturally pious. Or, in general, taking the whole thing seriously. I hope that helps.
Saturday, 7 December 2024
How to resign as head of your church
Mostly on this blog we content ourselves with giving advice on "How to be a good pope" - and you can see the results!
However, the Catholic Church can learn something from the Anglicans (apart from useful advice on how to take over other people's church property, how to mess around with the Bible, and how to ordain lesbians).
So let's see what we can learn from the dignified resignation of Justin Welby, sometimes called the Archbishop of Canterbury.
"I confess that one of us has sinned. Not me, of course."
It could not happen in the Catholic Church, but suppose you, as head of your church/ ecclesial community/ cult/ coven were revealed to have
have protected people guilty of sex crimes. One day the outcry will be too great, and you won't have popesplainers
imamsplainers primatesplainers to protect you. So you stand up and make a speech.
Here are some useful
tips on how to do this. They can also be useful if you go into the confessional.
* Tell weak jokes. This is always a good move.
"I say, I say, I say, Father. I've just killed my parents. Go gently with me, as I am an orphan."
Pause for laughter. Not a sausage. Oh well, carry on.
* Don't take any blame. "I regret, Father, than some grievous sins have been committed by members of the
church to which I belong." Don't add "It was me, in fact."
* Another tasteless joke. "They say that heads must roll. Let me tell you a joke about the archbishop whose
head was used as a football. You'll laugh, I know you will!"
* Finally, make yourself out to be a martyr. "It was inevitable that someone should suffer for these sins, and it had to be me. Now all I have left is a fat pension and a book deal for my memoirs."
The bishopess of London cannot stop giggling.
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