tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post7562430972155985230..comments2024-03-28T09:14:32.869-04:00Comments on southern orders: POPE FRANCIS VERSUS CARDINAL BURKE ON ALLOWING HOLY COMMUNION TO THOSE IN MORTAL SINFr. Allan J. McDonaldhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16986575955114152639noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-55707813047002446502013-12-19T17:23:10.216-05:002013-12-19T17:23:10.216-05:00Heard James Carroll speak on his New Yorker articl...Heard James Carroll speak on his New Yorker article about snow angle Pope Francis. He is of the opinion that PF is repudiating any teachings on homosexuality, birth control, and abortion as an act of contrition for selling out priests in Argentina to the junta. He said that the Pope has told them that they are OK. there is a lot more so I encourage everyone to listen to it on 'Fresh Air' on the NPR web site. This is what people are thinking about the Pope. The most interesting feature of the interview was the life of John Carroll. He entered seminary at the start of Vatican II conclave and left the priesthood in 1970 because he felt there was not enough progress implementing it. How could he have become so formed in it before it was even released to depart when it was not implemented in only a few years? This speaks to a few other posts about what happened. I stick with my theory that Vatican II was not the start, but the terms of surrender for the Church to progressive non-Catholic objectives. rcghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09131930849106490711noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-12472226382089558112013-12-19T13:08:09.584-05:002013-12-19T13:08:09.584-05:00Certainly that is an option to say the least. Certainly that is an option to say the least. Fr. Allan J. McDonaldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16986575955114152639noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-42145401364213625812013-12-19T12:26:43.412-05:002013-12-19T12:26:43.412-05:00Fr. McDonald,
What about, at least for now, recit...Fr. McDonald,<br /><br />What about, at least for now, reciting the Prayers at the Foot of the Altar in the sacristy before Mass, and the Last Gospel in the sacristy after Mass, doing so with the deacon and servers?Rood Screenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09816036539243214384noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-12706383698985083552013-12-19T10:26:30.735-05:002013-12-19T10:26:30.735-05:00None of us knows, nor should we know, 100% why Car...None of us knows, nor should we know, 100% why Cardinal Burke was removed from the Congregation that submits names of bishop candidates to the Holy Father. It does seem that Burke has his plate full. If he is removed from his main "gig" then we know he has fallen completely out of favor with the pope. If he is removed from the Congregation for the Divine Liturgy, the same can be said also. But if he is named the head of Divine Liturgy, well, well, well. But at this point given what Pope Francis has made clear to the Roman Curia about not looking or acting like princes, (a models a more drab look at Mass himself) I would be shocked beyond blogging if Cardinal Burke were named the new liturgy head, but if he were to be named such, he would not only promote SP but would fix the Ordinary Form so that it isn't so drastically different from the EF and I would say that his fix would be in line with the Anglican Ordinariate's wonderful compromise of having in the appendix of their Missal the Prayers at the Foot of the Altar, EF offertory Prayers, Roman Canon's EF rubrics and the Last Gospel, all in English if one so desires. This is a wonderful accommodation and I cannot see why it would not be extended universally in the Latin Rite. Fr. Allan J. McDonaldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16986575955114152639noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7846189835239594160.post-80817952243924468212013-12-19T09:39:28.101-05:002013-12-19T09:39:28.101-05:00There's another comparison we can make, and it...There's another comparison we can make, and it's between the Holy Father's approach and effect compared to the papacy of Paul VI. Both use strong words, such as in 1964's Ecclesiam Suam: "The Church itself is being engulfed and shaken by this tidal wave of change... It drives many people to adopt the most outlandish views. They imagine that the Church should abdicate its proper role, and adopt an entirely new and unprecedented mode of existence. Modernism might be cited as an example. This is an error which is still making its appearance under various new guises, wholly inconsistent with any genuine religious expression. It is surely an attempt on the part of secular philosophies and secular trends to vitiate the true teaching and discipline of the Church of Christ." <br /><br />But it remains to be seen whether Pope Francis will show the force of pastoral action that was sometimes lacking in Paul VI's time (e.g. against clergy abuse of children and the liturgy). A good adviser like Burke could help with this, if he can stick around. Rood Screenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09816036539243214384noreply@blogger.com