Saturday, December 20, 2008

Jazz Brunch

The question is simply: So how exactly do you celebrate Christmas over in Rome?

Well it is different! Many of the traditions are the same. We decorate Christmas trees on each corridor, we have a big Christmas party and dinner, and set up a a precepe in the chapel. It is different though being away from family. This is good preparation for the priesthood though when most Christmases will be spent away from the family. Some things are also unique to Rome. First of all is midnight Mass with the Pope at Saint Peter's (I will make sure to post pictures of that one). It is not just that. Seminary life changes. On the last day of classes many of the men empty out of the house and head to all sorts of place to travel for a few weeks. Some make it all the way to South Africa and others only make it to Norcia (a short train ride away).

Over the years a certain cycle of celebrations has developed at NAC to remind us of the season. The first of these is the Jazz Brunch. Unfortunately I did not take any pictures. On the first Saturday of December the student kitchen is overtaken with a number of priest and seminarians. Some are cooking, some a plucking the strings on the string bass, and others are singing jazz-fied Christmas carols. (I was the official pancake flipper).

This kicks off the holiday season, and is also a great community builder. If I can round-up some pictures I will make sure to post them.

(re-post Dec. 7)

Saturday, December 13, 2008

On the dignity of persons:

Yesterday the Vatican issued a long awaited insturction on the use of many bio-medical techonologies and also guidelines for the use of a number of different research methods, including embryonic stem cell research. I have not yet had the opportunity to read it, but I have taken a quick read through some headlines that respond to this instruction, Dignita Personae (On the dignity of persons). Largely these headlines are negative, emphasizing the prohibitions. This is a faulty way of looking at it, because it does not respond to the question that the Church's morality asks.

When we talk about morality on the Church, most people would probably say that the Church is trying to tell us what we cannot do. So the basic question of moral theology would be: What men and women are not allowed to do? These are the questions that newspapers and jounralists ask, these are not the questions that theologians and all Catholics ask. Instead we ask: What allows men and women to live a flourishing life? These are are very different questions, and so the answer to them will also be very different. So as we read the headlines and hear the news stories about this new instruction, let us also keep in mind that as Catholics we are looking for the guidepost that lead us toward a deeply-happy and flourishing life, while the newspapers and journalists are looking for ways to sell newspapers and advertistments.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Noah build another Ark!

The TIBER is flooding! Just a few pictures to let you know how high. I could not find a picture at low water, but I think most of you will know that the water should be much lower then this! So what does a (live) cow, a fridge, and a trailer home have in common? They were all seen by yours truly floating in the flood water. The trailer home had lodged itself underneath one of hte bridges and had to be dislodged with explosives.



Just to help you visualize -- these sets of stairs are supposed to meet at a sidewalk that runs alongside the river.


Monday, December 8, 2008

True measure of society?

We tend to measure a society from the stand-point of progress, technology, material comfort, and even how much freedom a person can exercise in that society. Never do we ask the question, "how do these various criteria help a person to live a flourishing life? A life of deep satisfaction?" Perhaps after examining this question we need to look for another criteria to measure a society by. Simply put a society is not measured by I-pods, and SUV's, but by how humane and compassionate it is.
The true measure of humanity is essentially determined in relationship to suffering and to the sufferer. This holds true both for the individual and for society. A society unable to accept its suffering members and incapable of helping to share their suffering and to bear it inwardly through “com-passion” is a cruel and inhuman society.
(Spe Salvi, 38)
Luxembourg Bishops Speak Out on Euthanasia

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Why believe?

There have been two different campaigns this Advent/Christmas season to campaign against God sponsored by organizations such as the American Humanist Association and the Freedom from Religion Foundation. These are two highly-founded and militant organizations that are trying to elimate our right and freedom to worship as their explicitly stated goal (nice and tolerant of that isn't it?).

They are sponsoring ad campaigns with bus posters and billboards in Washington state and Washington, DC with such slogans as, "God doesn't exist, get over it!" and "Why God? Be good for goodness sake!"

It is natural for each human being to have faith - to believe. This exist at a natural level - such as the faith that I have in a doctor, in whose car I am in - faith because the doctor has a much better medical knowledge than I do - so I believe him (her). Life without belief and faith is impossible.

What is more is that God invites us to believe Him, and this is to know Him and this is because He loves us.

Here is a counter-campaign to the militant-atheistic organizations: I believe too!

Saturday, December 6, 2008

On the lighter side/something sweet

This morning I found a little surprise outside my door, a little bag filled with candies and a little present! I had forgotten it was Saint Nick's day. Here is a little recipe to help you celebrate and sweeten the Advent/Christmas season (originally published on Insight Scoop the blog of Ignatius Insight).
A little history and a seasonal recipe:
Nicholas lived in the fourth century and was bishop of Myra, now in southwestern Turkey. NNothing else is of historic certainty, although his veneration in the East can be traced to the sixth century. A fictitious biography written by Methodius in the ninth century contains all the miracles and legends we now associate with St. Nicholas. The legend of Santa Claus can be traced back to St. Nicholas, and his legend is particularly strong in Holland and Belgium and throughout Europe. In Holland, St. Nicholas has a helper who hands out cookies before the arrival of St. Nicholas on December 6.Here is a recipe for Speculaas, a cookie handed out by St. Nicholas and eaten between December 6 and Christmas Day.
Ingredients:
1 cup sugar
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup shortening
1/2 cup butter
1/2 cup condensed milk
4 tbsp cinnamon
1 pinch each nutmeg, cloves, salt
4 cups flour
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 cup slivered almonds, crushed
  1. Mix together the sugars, the shortening and the butter.
  2. Add the condensed milk and spices and gradually blend in the flour and baking soda.
  3. Crush the almonds with a rolling pin and mix in. The dough will be somewhat stiff.
  4. Roll into logs covered with plastic or waxed paper. Leave in refrigerator overnight.
  5. Cut into slices and place on a lightly greased cookie sheet.
  6. Bake in preheated oven at 375 degrees F for around 10 minutes.
Traditionally Speculaas are imprinted with some pattern created by a wooden mold (before baking). If you imprint the cookies with a mold, they will look better.
Makes about 80 cookies.

Defending Life: A Mission Proper to the Church

As a seminarian I am preparing for to be a spiritual leader in the Catholic Church, but also to exhibit a moral authority among the wider community. John Paul II recognized that for the proper exercise of moral authority the Church must remain neutral when it comes to politics (cf. Centissimus Annus). At the same time I am and will remain a pro-life advocate - remain so without apology. In the United States this looks like a compromise on remaining politically neutral.

The defense of life though it a mission proper to all Christians, Catholics and Protestants. The "right to life" is pre-political - this means that it should not be a political issue, but rather something taken for granted before it even reaches the debates of politics. So when there is a political challenge to protecting innocent human life, the Church must defend the same innocent human life. This was the message that Pope Benedict XVI delivered to the Argentinian ambassador to the Holy See, "To promote the dignity of the person and elevate it in an integral way for the benefit of all,mission proper to the Church."

So I acknowledge that I do not remain politically neautral when I advocate support of the any positions that are truly pro-life. I do not apologize for this, for I have not over-stepped my limits, but rather I ask the apology of the politicians who have over-stepped their own proper limits. It is not in the realm of politics to determine when life begins and end, but within the realm of the laws of nature that are above politics, and even above religious and denominationaly divides.
Saint Nicolas...
...Pray for Us!

Friday, December 5, 2008

Fight FOCA

The Freedom of Choice Act is all around bad legislation:
This is not an intrusion into politics, since the defense of life from any threat is a moral precept for all men and women of goodwill, especially Christians, and most especially those called to be spiritual shepherds. I understand that there are political overtones to this, but while these are foreseen, they are not intended. The defense of life justifies such.
Please continue to pray for your president, George Walter Bush
Please continue to pray for our president-elect, Barak Hussein Obama
Saint Thomas More, Pray for them!
Saint Gianna Beretta Mola, Pray for the United States!

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Going up the mountain to pray...

Death of Saint Francis Xavier by Peter Paul Reubens

Dec. 3 is the feast of Saint Francis Xavier, a saint that I have a great devotion to since he is the patron of the diocese of Green Bay.

He is know as the Apostle to the Indies, since he brought the faith there. As the first missionary in the area, he made a number of mistakes, but he also laid down the ground work for further missionary work that has changed these cultures ever since.


He used artwork to evangelize, since it was difficult to explain the faith in the languages of the different peoples he encountered. For that reason I keep this post short, and leave you with some art.

Relic of the hand of Saint Francis Xavier in the Church of the Gesu in Rome. This is the hand that baptized "100,000" men, women and childre. You can see why I refer to Saint Francis as the "high-five" saint.

An Evil Stocking Stuffer

I think these articles say enough:

Planned Parenthood Issues Christmas Gift Certificates: Give the Gift of Abortion from Lifenews.com
Planned Parenthood Has Reached a New-Low from the InForumBlog of Emmy award winning journalist Shelia Liaugminus
Evil Stocking Stuffers: Gift Certificates for Abortion from the American Papist

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Planned Parenthood selling evil since 1916.
The campaign for birth control is not merely of eugenic value, but is practically identical with the final aims of eugenics....
Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned Parenthood

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Pro-life: Single-Issue voting?


A house without a foundation
No one reading this blog would dream of building a house without first providing for a strong and certain foundation. We know that without a strong foundation the beauty of the rest of the house does not matter, since the whole building is unstable.

The same principle can be applied when we are talking about the various rights and duties. Some rights are more important than other rights simply because they serve as the foundation on which other rights are built. This means that if the first right is not adequately protected, the other rights that are “built” on top of will inevitably unstable.

In the history of our country we have enshrined three rights as these foundational rights, as can be clearly seen by a quick read of the Declaration of Independence when it states,
we hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these, governments were instituted among men...
The Founding Fathers listed these three basic rights, since they knew that no other right could be guaranteed without these being protected. The fact that each human has these rights is so obvious to them that these rights are even considered to be “self-evident.” Simply put if these three rights are violated, none of the other rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights or other laws will last much longer.

Following this train of thought, it also seems that among these three rights that the right to life stands out as the foundation for the other two rights. The reason is simple. A human cannot exercise his or her liberty nor can he or she pursue happiness if they are not living. A dead human does not exercise freedom of speech or freedom of assembly. There will never be a campaign by the NRA to make sure corpses maintain the right to bear arms. Such ideas are just absurd.

Life is simply the foundation for all other rights.

This same sentence from the Declaration of Independence also states that “all men” have these rights. Moving the language to the twenty-first century we can see that the Fathers meant all humans. So a law that violates any human's right to life, violates the basic principles of the United States. So the laws of the country must protect life, and to a certain extent this may even mean compromises on other rights, including to a limited extent the right of privacy (which you will not find in any part of the Constitution).

This clearly includes restricting abortion, since it is a matter of science that at the moment of conception a new human comes into existence. So even the youngest fetus deserves to have his or her life protected. Each of us was a fetus at one time, starting out as one cell than a cluster of cells, and we developed into who we are today. We are the evidence that a fetus is a human.

There is clearly an attraction to politicians that offer comprehensive welfare programs. This appeals to the natural sense of charity that all men and women of good will have. But if this same politician does not support a clear commitment to protecting life, especially innocent life, than his or her policies on any other number of issues become irrelevant.

Hold on, we cannot be single issue voters?!

This is not single issue voting! When a vote is cast for a politician that is committed to protecting life, a vote is being cast for a politician that is protecting the foundation of all other rights. Ultimately there are no other rights if life is not protected. So a vote based on one issue, the issue of life is not single issue voting, a voting for the protection of all rights.

I encourage challenges to this posting.

Monday, December 1, 2008

As Father Benjamin Sember says:

Father Benjamin Sember was my main source of sanity last year, and hence a good friend. So I have decided to share a quote from a recent conversation. Anyone who has spent anytime in Italy will appreciate this:
Welcome to Italy, where you have to obey all the rules that you have to obey. Which rules are the ones you have to obey? The ones you have to obey. You don't need to obey the ones you don't need to obey.