
Preparatory Novena for the feast of Our Lady’s Immaculate Conception recited today after the 10:15 Missa Cantata at Sts. Cyril and Methodius in Bridgeport, CT
On Tuesday, December 7, at 6pm, there will be a Solemn Mass for the Feast of St. Ambrose of Milan.
Fr. Robert Turner will be the celebrant, Fr Michael Clark, the deacon. The sacred music for the Mass will be Thomas Tallis’ Mass for 4 voices and setting of texts by St Ambrose following the ordinary and communion propers.
A reception following.
St Augustine Church, 30 Caputo Road, North Branford
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This morning Father John Ringley celebrated a Rorate Mass, the Advent Votic Mass of Our Lady, at St. Mary’s Church, Norwalk. Mr. John Pia served as Masters of Ceromony and Charles Weaver led the choir in chant.





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The devil keeps popping up now and again in the most unlikely places. Pope Francis, of course, has accused his critics within the Church of directly doing the devil’s work – most recently, when speaking of EWTN in conversation with his Jesuit pals. Now the secular establishment in Germany has taken up his lead.
Recently, in a celebration of the work of Jurgen Habermas, the presenter of the panegyric, Jan Philipp Reemtsma, 1) did have one reservation. In 2004 Habermas and Cardinal Ratzinger has engaged in “dialogue” in an elaborately staged encounter before the media and select guests. Pro – Ratzinger sources like Peter Seewald’s book Benedikt XIV alleged that the two were in agreement as to the necessity of the continuing (if nebulous) role of religion in modern secular society. 2) According to Reemtsma, Habermas had thereby played Faust to Ratzinger’s Mephistopheles – and had entered into a pact with the devil. Indeed, like Lucifer, Pope Benedict also reeks of sulfur.
Habermas himself felt compelled to dispute this “accusation.” In no way had he acknowledged any continuing role for “pre-secular” thought (=Christianity) in modern society. Habermas denied any continuing dependency of secular thought on the “lost heritage” of religion. In fact he claimed that he argues for the complete separation of the two “dimensions.” 3)
It is a sad experience for Pope Benedict to still be denounced as a demon in his own country. And it must be even sadder to hear that his own attempt to “dialogue” with the German Left establishment has been completely and summarily rejected. But to point out that this meeting of the minds was a fantasy is only telling the truth! And I think Christianity has objectives going beyond seving as a launching pad for secular modernity and providing it intermittent moral advice.