While there are pertinent reasons for continuing a public platform for All Saints Parish parishioners, it is time for this particular blog to go on hiatus. It will remain online, but most likely no new posts will be added.
Friends of St. Vincent's remains in good hands, and you can contact them at fosv.smiller@gmail.com.
The comments section will remain open for a few days. I heartily recommend the Cleansing Fire blog for good information about the Diocese of Rochester and its parishes. They also include links to various local Catholic blogs/sites.
God bless each parishioner at All Saints Parish, and may Immaculate Heart of Mary, St. Vincent de Paul, and St. Mary's remain to bless the community.
One last thing. The Church has been moving, for many, many years, into deep waters. The Catholic parishes in Corning have experienced--and continue to experience--a profound lessening of the faith. This long article by writer Steve Skojec: Something Wicked, is worth reading. He follows it up with another post about how to protect oneself in spiritual warfare: Some Resources for Spiritual Battle.
May we keep the faith when all else fails. Kýrie, eléison.
Now is our chance to choose the right side. God is holding back to give us that chance. It won’t last forever. We must take it or leave it. – C.S. Lewis
Sunday, March 30, 2014
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
Comfort Ye My People
A dear friend has passed away. May God speed his way to heaven and bring mercies and comfort to his family.
)
)
Wednesday, March 5, 2014
The work of God
“All Good Works together are not of equal value with the sacrifice of the Mass, because they are the works of men, and the Holy Mass is the work of God. Martyrdom is nothing in comparison; it is the sacrifice that man makes of his life to God; the Mass is the sacrifice that God makes to man of His Body and of His Blood. Oh, how great is a priest! if he understood himself he would die. . . . God obeys him; he speaks two words, and Our Lord comes down from Heaven at his voice, and shuts Himself up in a little Host. God looks upon the altar. “That is My well-beloved Son, ” He says, “in whom I am well-pleased. ” He can refuse nothing to the merits of the offering of this Victim. If we had faith, we should see God hidden in the priest like a light behind a glass, like wine mingled with water.”
-St. John Vianney
(Via Traditional Catholic Priest)
(Via Traditional Catholic Priest)
Saturday, February 8, 2014
The Church in Spain
Once again, think it can't happen here? Think again.
From the Eponymous Flower, an article about an 84-year-old cardinal who is being prosecuted for saying that it is possible for homosexuals to be restored. FTA:
"For the first time charges have been brought against a Cardinal of the Church, because he has said what the Catholic Church has always taught on homosexuality and what is part of the truth of faith, which they can not change...Perhaps it's the comfortable Christians who think it would already not so bad, should wake up and start with the resistance in the countries where there is no homophobia Act, before they too need to weigh with care every word, and because of a Catholic thought crime, stand trial."
Additionally, here is a disturbing article about the homosexual rights movement in the USA and the Church, first published in the New Oxford Review in 2006.
From the Eponymous Flower, an article about an 84-year-old cardinal who is being prosecuted for saying that it is possible for homosexuals to be restored. FTA:
"For the first time charges have been brought against a Cardinal of the Church, because he has said what the Catholic Church has always taught on homosexuality and what is part of the truth of faith, which they can not change...Perhaps it's the comfortable Christians who think it would already not so bad, should wake up and start with the resistance in the countries where there is no homophobia Act, before they too need to weigh with care every word, and because of a Catholic thought crime, stand trial."
Additionally, here is a disturbing article about the homosexual rights movement in the USA and the Church, first published in the New Oxford Review in 2006.
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Friday, January 24, 2014
Of interest
Here is a pertinent blog post from Fr. Peter Carota about how "the questioning everything Catholic" contributed to 1.72 billion abortions worldwide: Traditional Catholic Priest
From the article:
But this “climate of questioning everything Catholic” had already been fomented by the way Vatican II was run. Everything seemed to be up for grabs. We were now “the new educated generation of Catholics” who could now clearly throw away medieval doctrine and come up with “modern” christianity that would be “relevant” to “modern man”. And we see this in the wording of some of the councils documents. They used words that changed the meaning of what the Church had always taught before, like on ecumenism, collegiality, and freedom of religion. Many, many bishops, priests, religious and theologians began publicly and privately to dissented from the Church’s prohibition of the use of birth control. I have read over and over their statements of dissent. Most of you are too young to have lived through these times.
Here's a post from Fr. Ray Blake's blog titled "Once we had millions of Evangelists"
From the article:
There can be no worthwhile evangelisation unless it begins and ends in Truth and unless the evangelisers are believable. Personally, I believe that the 'misson' of the Second Vatican Council was to find a way to express the Truth in the modern world, however in the interpretation of the Council's teaching a fracture was introduced between the Church's practice and prayer, and the Church's belief. The fracture meant the Church lost its credibility, hence our churches emptied. We became seen as 'hypocritical'. We lost the sense of 'noble simplicity' which comes from the basic premise of the Catholic Church that Jesus Christ is God, God founded the Church and promises to be with it until the end of time, hence you can -and must- trust the Catholic Church, the Church ceased to be immediately intelligible, the greater Truth was obscured by lesser truths.
Fr. Hunwicke (who is quoted at Fr. Blake's blog) has a series of posts about the fracture in the Church that has resulted in the crisis we have been experiencing for decades. Here, here, here, and here.
Here's a blog post (that went viral) about Steve Skojec's experience with fellow Catholics who aren't happy with his views on Pope Francis. It doesn't take a rigorist
The Church is attractive because she is beautiful. The Church is appealing, despite her many rules and requirements, because she alone claims fullness of truth. The Church is inspiring because she is noble, and her traditions and customs give witness to her profound sacramental beliefs.
Much of this, perhaps even most of this, has been lost since Vatican II. The Church has become an instrument of compromise, of syncretism, and of mediocrity. A bourgeois, bubble gum-chewing religion of suburban good cheer. Her architecture has become banal, her music profane, her liturgies humanistic. She no longer challenges the world with witness to Christ Crucified, but instead tells the world that there are many paths to heaven for people of good conscience.
For the life of me, I can’t fathom why anyone faced with the Church of 2013 would choose to convert to Catholicism. For fellowship? I can get fellowship from the local MegaChurch, with far fewer impositions on my personal liberty. For the sacraments? But most Catholics don’t even believe in the Real Presence, most parishes have no adoration or Eucharistic devotions, most priests offer an hour or less per week of confession time on the parish schedule.
From the article:
But this “climate of questioning everything Catholic” had already been fomented by the way Vatican II was run. Everything seemed to be up for grabs. We were now “the new educated generation of Catholics” who could now clearly throw away medieval doctrine and come up with “modern” christianity that would be “relevant” to “modern man”. And we see this in the wording of some of the councils documents. They used words that changed the meaning of what the Church had always taught before, like on ecumenism, collegiality, and freedom of religion. Many, many bishops, priests, religious and theologians began publicly and privately to dissented from the Church’s prohibition of the use of birth control. I have read over and over their statements of dissent. Most of you are too young to have lived through these times.
Here's a post from Fr. Ray Blake's blog titled "Once we had millions of Evangelists"
From the article:
There can be no worthwhile evangelisation unless it begins and ends in Truth and unless the evangelisers are believable. Personally, I believe that the 'misson' of the Second Vatican Council was to find a way to express the Truth in the modern world, however in the interpretation of the Council's teaching a fracture was introduced between the Church's practice and prayer, and the Church's belief. The fracture meant the Church lost its credibility, hence our churches emptied. We became seen as 'hypocritical'. We lost the sense of 'noble simplicity' which comes from the basic premise of the Catholic Church that Jesus Christ is God, God founded the Church and promises to be with it until the end of time, hence you can -and must- trust the Catholic Church, the Church ceased to be immediately intelligible, the greater Truth was obscured by lesser truths.
Fr. Hunwicke (who is quoted at Fr. Blake's blog) has a series of posts about the fracture in the Church that has resulted in the crisis we have been experiencing for decades. Here, here, here, and here.
Here's a blog post (that went viral) about Steve Skojec's experience with fellow Catholics who aren't happy with his views on Pope Francis. It doesn't take a rigorist
The Church is attractive because she is beautiful. The Church is appealing, despite her many rules and requirements, because she alone claims fullness of truth. The Church is inspiring because she is noble, and her traditions and customs give witness to her profound sacramental beliefs.
Much of this, perhaps even most of this, has been lost since Vatican II. The Church has become an instrument of compromise, of syncretism, and of mediocrity. A bourgeois, bubble gum-chewing religion of suburban good cheer. Her architecture has become banal, her music profane, her liturgies humanistic. She no longer challenges the world with witness to Christ Crucified, but instead tells the world that there are many paths to heaven for people of good conscience.
For the life of me, I can’t fathom why anyone faced with the Church of 2013 would choose to convert to Catholicism. For fellowship? I can get fellowship from the local MegaChurch, with far fewer impositions on my personal liberty. For the sacraments? But most Catholics don’t even believe in the Real Presence, most parishes have no adoration or Eucharistic devotions, most priests offer an hour or less per week of confession time on the parish schedule.
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Friday, January 17, 2014
Startling stats, but who will take up the challenge?
Blunt words. Needed to be said.
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Deconstructing the Catholic Faith
An interesting site and book...it details the systematic destruction of the Catholic faith by those who were tasked with preserving it. Oh so familiar.
Death of a Catholic Parish
Death of a Catholic Parish
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Bishop Matano
Cleansing Fire reports on Bishop Matano's New Year's Day Mass. The Bishop will be installed Friday, and there should be local news coverage. CF also notes that the Bishop will be visiting the local parishes.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)