30
Jan
30
Jan
30
Jan
The Church Music Association of America will hold the 30th Colloquium in 2020, at Jesuit High School in Tampa, Florida, from June 22 to 27. The CMAA’s Sacred Music Colloquium continues to be the largest and most in-depth teaching conference and retreat on sacred music in the world. Our 2020 program offers new and expanded opportunities for learning, singing, listening, and interacting with some of the best minds and musicians in the Catholic world today.
The CMAA Colloquium is primarily focused on instruction and experience in chant and the Catholic sacred music tradition, participation in chant choirs, lectures and performances and daily liturgies. During the week, you’ll be able to participate in ordinary and extraordinary form Masses, in Latin, Latin/Spanish and English, Vespers, and daily sung morning and night prayer.
For more information and to register:https://musicasacra.com/events/colloquium-2020-main/
27
Jan
27
Jan
The St. John Neuman Chapter is sponsoring a day of prayer and reflection on how to achieve holiness in our lives. It will take place in the Cathedral Basilica of SS. Peter and Paul in Philadelphia. The speakers will be His Eminence Raymond Cardinal Burke, Most Reverend Joseph Strickland and Father Gerald Gill. There will be an opportunity for Confession, Eucharistic Adoration, Rosary, Procession and Crowning of the National Pilgrim Virgin Statue of Our Lady of Fatima and a beautiful Palm Sunday Vigil Mass (please note: this is a Novus Ordo Mass). Lunch will be served, registrations are required and may be made on Eventbrite or on a registration form downloaded from our website:https://www.stjohnneumannchapter.org
23
Jan
Immaculate Conception Church, 414 E. 14th Street, New York, will be offering a Solemn Mass for the feast of St. John Bosco, patron saint of youth and educators on January 31 at 7 pm. A reception will follow in the Parish Center. RSVP iccya@yahoo.com if you are coming to the reception.
22
Jan
On the weekend of Septuagesima Sunday, Fr Hernan Ducci of the Fraternity of Saint Joseph the Guardian will preach a retreat for men based on the Ignatian Exercises, at the Church of Saint John the Baptist, located at 1282 Yardville-Allentown Road, in Allentown, New Jersey. The Spiritual Exercises comprise an ordered series of meditations and contemplations born from the profound spiritual experience St Ignatius, gained from his conversion and his time as the first Superior General of the Society of Jesus. The purpose of these exercises is to help the retreatant discern God’s will for his own life.
The retreat will begin on the early afternoon of Friday, February 7, and finish with lunch on the afternoon of Sunday, February 9. In order to cover the expenses (Fr. Hernan’s travel from France, food, donation to the parish, etc.) we suggest a donation of $60. Also, please bring a sleeping bag. In addition to the meditations, the traditional Mass will be sung each day, as well as parts of the Divine Office; there will also be plenty of opportunities for spiritual direction and Confession. To confirm your attendance please read the following Google doc and fill in the registration form. If you have any questions, please contact hernan.ducci@gmail.com. Feel free to forward this invitation to anyone else you think would be interested.
22
Jan
Beautiful patronal Solemn Mass at Holy Innocents in Neptune for the Feast of the Holy Innocents on December 28.
22
Jan
On the Anniversary of Roe v. Wade
by Father Richard Gennaro Cipolla
Today I offered, as did many other priests, a Votive Mass for Peace, with a commemoration, of course, of SS. Vincent and Anastasius. I did so on the anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion in the United States. The Collect and the readings make it quite clear that the Peace of which we are speaking and for which we are asking has little to do with peace as understood by the world. The Collect says it best: “O God, from Whom are holy desires, right counsels, and just works, give to Thy servants that peace which the world cannot give; that our hearts being devoted to the keeping of Thy commandments, and the fear of enemies removed, our times, by Thy protection, may be peaceful.” The peace we are asking for in this Mass is not freedom from anxiety and the tempests of this world, nor from the obligations of the Catholic in this world, a world that denies and opposes the moral law of Christ founded on love of God. We are not asking for “peace in the world”, per se. We are asking for that peace that only God can give, that peace that is an inner glimpse of the peace of heaven.
The epistle from 2 Maccabees asks that God will “ give you all a heart to worship Him, and to do His will with a great heart and a willing mind. May He open your heart in His law, and in His commandments, and send you peace. “ This reading makes it clear that this peace is firmly linked to the worship of God and to doing his Will, that Will enshrined in the Law of God. The primacy of the worship of God for the Catholic has certainly been eroded in the past forty years, and this erosion is surely at the heart of the weakened and broken state of the Church today.
But it is the Gospel for the Mass above all that reminds us what we often forget in an age of sentimental worship where the understanding of peace has degenerated into handshakes and waves. This Gospel is familiar to us, for it is read on Low Sunday every year. The resurrected Christ comes through the locked doors of the Upper Room and says to his disciples: “Peace be to you.” Then Luke adds: “And when He had said this, He showed them His hands and His side.” The Peace of Christ cannot be separated from, and in fact is founded upon, the suffering and death of the Lord on the Cross. The Peace of Christ has little to do with the peace of the world. It is not an absence of conflict and strife, but rather the gift of the knowledge from faith that Christ has overcome the world of sin and death. The encounter with St. Thomas and the invitation to touch Christ’s wounds further emphasize the radical difference between what the world calls peace and what the Peace that passes all understanding is.
What does this have to do with the March on Washington which includes so many Catholics, who are right now witnessing to the Right to Life based on their faith in the God who is the source of all life? It must be said clearly that the law of the land, which in this case is truly unjust, nevertheless can never solve or eliminate transgressions of the moral law of God. The ambiguity of the situation must be made clear, an ambiguity that is part of being a Christian in a non-believing world. The goal of an end to all abortions is not achievable in this world. While it is true that it is a scandal that in this country abortion is seen as a “right” included in “life, liberty and happiness”, it is also true that this grievous sin is part of the sinful and obstinate state of the world, the “World” that St. John sees so clearly in his Gospel, the World that is always in opposition to the Truth of God in Jesus Christ and will be so until the end of time at the Second Coming.
To march publicly in protest is the point of the Washington March for Life. This is an act of witness. But to use this act of witness in the hope that the Supreme Court will overturn Roe v. Wade to “end the scourge of abortion” is to misunderstand the use of law, for the law cannot prevent crime, the law is never the final answer in a fallen world, and the law of the world can never be the Law of God, again, in a fallen world. The individual Catholic must witness to the Law of Love not only once a year in the March for Life. His or her whole life must witness to the Law of Love, and this, and only this, will change hearts and minds, and this is what we must do and hope for.
The Catholic Church today finds herself in the unenviable position of organizing marches for life when her own life is threatened by those within her fold who support moral corruption and corruption of the Faith of Catholic Tradition that founded on the Apostolic Tradition, and manifested in the Traditional worship of the Church. It is the secular law that forced the bishops of the Church to confront the crimes of her priests. As destructive and disgusting as the moral crimes of her priests in the sex scandals are, the greater scandal is that the bishops did nothing about this moral rot in the Church until the secular law came after them. But the secular law cannot force the bishops to address the deeper disease of the rot of Faith itself that so deeply enfeebles the Church of Jesus Christ today.
There is no way to make peace with the World. We must stop looking there, we must stop wanting to be accepted by the World. We must minister to the World, absolutely. We must never turn our backs on the World. We must do what we can wherever we can to see that Love conquers the deep selfishness of the World. But in the end, we must realize that our longing for the Peace that passes all understanding can never be realized in its fulness in this world of sin and death. And that should not make us sad at all, for at every Mass we encounter in a real way, a way that transcends this space and time, the One who has overcome the World, He alone who can give us that Peace we so long for, the One who alone is our hope for the salvation of the World of sin and death, who alone is our hope for the Peace of Everlasting Life.