8/14/2025

The Line of Seth

Read the whole thing, but it is always interesting to find one's name in a church document: 

“To enlighten our pastoral discernment, we must allow ourselves to be challenged by the Word of God. It does not give us ready-made answers, but it does inspire us,” the document said, noting the numerous examples of polygamy within the Old Testament.

“Nevertheless,” the document concluded, “despite this strong tendency towards polygamy, monogamy is exalted.”

“God created man and woman, Adam and Eve. This parable of creation has paradigmatic value” it said. “Moreover, the patriarchs of the line of Seth are monogamous,” it observes, and “the preaching of the prophets leads to an ever-increasing respect for women, symbolizing the people in their relationship with God. Biblical law guarantees their promotion.”

“Finally,” the document notes, “the theology of the Covenant exalts the figure of monogamous marriage: Israel is the unique spouse of the One God.”

“In conclusion to this listening to the biblical experience, it emerges that God the Father is a teacher who gradually educates his children,” said the text.

“This is the case with marriage and its different forms. He allowed polygamy to continue for centuries. But, in his Son, he shows that polygamy is not the ideal of the couple wanted by God. In the spirit of the Matthewian antitheses, Jesus recalls the ideal of monogamous marriage wanted by the Creator: one man and one woman.” 

https://www.pillarcatholic.com/p/what-does-the-african-bishops-draft

One Man, One Woman-- this is the consistent teaching across continents, no matter how a culture is striving to disrupt God's plan for the dignity of the marital act. 

8/13/2025

Scapular promises

from The Pillar post for the Assumption:

Isidore Bakanja was born in a tribal village on the Congo River in Africa, in territory then occupied by the forces of King Leopold II in Belgium. He was born sometime between 1885 and 1890, though it’s not certain exactly when.

Bakanja lived in a territory called the Congo Free State.It was claimed personally as the territory of King Leopold — it was not a part of Belgium, but was ruled instead as an absolute monarchy, and controlled by unspeakable brutality. Leopold saw in the Congo Free State ivory, minerals, and rubber, which he had exported and sold to increase his personal wealth. He did not see, or seem to see, the people of his territory, many of whom lived in forced labour on expansive rubber plantations.

Bakanja’s family worked intermittently at farming and brickmaking, but they were very poor, and there were few opportunities for young men to earn money in Bakanja’s village. So as a young man, he moved downriver to a larger town, where he became a stone mason.

More important, Bakanja became a Christian — he was evangelized by Trappist monks in the area, and in 1906, was baptized, confirmed, and received the Eucharist.Bakanja took to wearing a brown scapular — a sign of faith — and to carrying with him always the rosary.In 1909, Bakanja decided to move closer to his village, and his family, and he found work on a rubber plantation.

His boss — like many of the Belgian plantation overseers — was fanatically opposed to Christianity, and to the Christian missionaries who spoke out on behalf of the dignity of Congolese people.

Plantation owners and overseers often said that when the Gospel came, their workers would stop working —but there is little evidence of that. Instead, it seems clear that the real danger was that Christian missionaries would upend the forced labor system which benefited the Belgians who had come to work it.

Soon after he started on the plantation in April 1909, Bakanja was ordered beaten when he refused to take off his scapular. His boss began mocking him, calling him the little priest. In May, still wearing his scapular, Bakanja was ordered beaten again.

A few months later, in July 1909, Bakanja’s boss saw him praying the rosary. The boss flew into a rage. He ordered Bakanja beaten more than 250 times with a leather whip into which nails had been embedded. After his skin was beaten to ribbons, Bakanja was locked into a cell, in which no medical care was available. There, infection set in.

Bakanja ran up a fever, and there in his cell, he fought off flies. He stayed there until an inspector was due to visit the plantation, nominally charged with evaluating the conditions of workers. While Bakanja was being sent to a village, to be hidden from the inspector, he escaped into the forest.

He lay dying for days, his infection growing worse, his wounds stinking and covered in flies. Eventually, he dragged himself back to the plantation, knowing inspections were still underway.

The inspector took pity on him. He had him carried to a riverboat, taking to a home where he could convalesce. But Bakanja’s infection had become sepsis. He would not recover. In late July, a Trappist priest was brought to him. Bakanja was anointed. But he held out for two weeks, dying on August 15th, the feast of the Assumption.

His boss, a man named Van Cauter, was eventually imprisoned. But Bakanja died forgiving him — and asking his caretakers to tell his mother that he died for following Jesus Christ.

When Pope St. John Paul II beatified Isidore Bakanja in 1994, the pontiff praised Bakanja’s conviction.

“Isidore, your participation in the paschal mystery of Christ, in the supreme work of his love, was total,” the pope said.

“Because you wanted to remain faithful at all costs to the faith of your baptism, you suffered scourging like your Master. You forgave your persecutors like your Master on the Cross and you showed yourself to be a peacemaker and reconciler.”

May Blessed Isidore Bakanja intercede for us. May we keep the faith.

8/01/2025

Conviviality

When Newman converted to Catholicism in 1845 and prepared for priestly ordination thereafter, he discovered in the Oratory of St. Philip Neri the community he was looking for and introduced it to England. Newman lived as an Oratorian in Birmingham until his death in 1890, and his relics are venerated there. 

In choosing St. Philip Neri as his model, Cardinal Newman chose the convivial approach over the combative one. In 16th-century Rome, with the post-Reformation challenges for the Church at their height, two saints offered contrasting, but not contradictory, approaches. Philip Neri was the “saint of gentleness and kindness” as Newman would write, while Ignatius of Loyola was the man of martial combat. Ignatius viewed Philip’s approach as too soft, unequal to the moment.

Both are needed, but Newman chose Philip Neri. It is therefore amusing that Leo chose the feast day of Ignatius to confer the title of “Doctor of the Church” on a son of St. Philip Neri. 

Ignatius preached the importance of sentire cum Ecclesia (“thinking with the Church”) — and no one did it better than John Henry Newman. To think with the Church does not mean simply repeating with the Church. Thinking with the Church begins with thinking, and the convivial atmosphere of conversation, not combat, is conducive to working out one’s thoughts.

When setting out to found a Catholic university in Ireland, Newman set down his thoughts on the character of the men he wished to form. In his Definition of a Gentleman, Newman laid out what might be considered a thoroughgoing rebuke to the internet “manosphere” and its Catholic accomplices:

“[A gentleman] is never mean or little in his disputes, never takes unfair advantage, never mistakes personalities or sharp sayings for arguments, or insinuates evil which he dare not say out. From a long-sighted prudence, he observes the maxim of the ancient sage, that we should ever conduct ourselves towards our enemy as if he were one day to be our friend.

-from Fr. deSouza's list of 8 Ways we need Newman now

https://www.ncregister.com/commentaries/newman-is-the-doctor-of-the-church-we-need-now

7/31/2025

Consolation

The enemy would like us to despair, trapped in the belief that “this” - whatever drought or suffering we’re in -  will never end. But our life on earth follows the cyclical rhythm of creation, the “law of undulation” in the words of C.S. Lewis. Whatever the season, whether it be disappointment, worry, frustration, or grief, we must know that joy will come again. It’s the eighth rule of St. Ignatius of Loyola to remember, while in desolation, “that he will soon be consoled.” Maybe you feel like you are in the middle of a long desert, or that your own inner house is getting “knocked about” and banged upon “in a way that hurts abominably and does not seem to make any sense” (C.S. Lewis again!). This is your reminder that it will not last forever. -from the editor of Spiritual Direction.com

For help in discerning spirits the Ignatian way, visit here: https://www.discernment.institute/

7/16/2025

Carmel Cloud

 from the Avila Institute newsletter:

Do you know that devotion to Our Lady of Mount Carmel is tied to the story in 1 Kings when the prophet Elijiah implored God to send rain? Elijiah told his servant to look toward the sea and watch for a sign that his prayer had been heard. The servant came back, saying, “There is nothing.” Elijah sent him back seven times, and on the seventh time, the servant returned saying, “A cloud as small as a man’s hand is rising from the sea.” And it began to rain. 

 

The small cloud is seen by many Christian saints and mystics—especially in the Carmelite tradition—as a symbol of Mary, who brings the hope of salvation just as the cloud brought rain to the dry land. 

 

In preparation for the feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, I invite you to pray with the first stanza of the poem, “The Cloud of Carmel” by Jessica Powers (Sister Miriam of the Holy Spirit, OCD) and meditate on how Our Lady encloses us within herself like a cloud, hiding us in her tender motherhood: 

 

The Cloud of Carmel

 

Symbol of star or lily of the snows,

Rainbow or root or vine or fruit-filled tree:

These image the Immaculate to me

Less than a little cloud, a little light cloud rising

From Orient waters cleft by prophecy.

And as the Virgin in a most surprising 

Maternity bore God and our doomed race,

I who bear God in mysteries of grace

Beseech her: Cloud, encompass God and me. 

7/12/2025

Collapsing while rebuilding

excerpt from an article in Huffpost:

From research participants and grief scholars, I’ve come to understand this as the loss of self-familiarity. We aren’t sealed-off individuals, we’re co-created through our relationships. So when someone central to you dies, it’s not just grief. It’s the slow, disorienting unraveling of who you were in their presence...

Because what grief did to me and to other mourners wasn’t just emotional. It was embodied. It was cognitive. It was identity-shattering...

When you begin to lose yourself, you realize you are made of multiple parts. Some are intact — even strengthened — and others are still collapsing...

And here is what becoming unfamiliar with yourself does: It makes it incredibly hard to rebuild and heal. People ask you what you need and you have no clue. You don’t like what you used to. What used to bring you joy no longer does. And so, you lose trust in yourself. You become alienated from yourself and from others...

It is possible to rebuild, but let’s not pretend this is simple. It is complex, layered, and you have to start from scratch in places you thought were solid...It’s not a clean return. It’s slow. Layered. And still, somehow, holy.

6/24/2025

Sacred Heart of Jesus!

 My daughter, look into My Merciful Heart and reflect its compassion in your own heart and in your deeds, so that you, who proclaim My mercy to the world, may yourself be aflame with it (Diary, 1688).


6/19/2025

Way of the Beatitudes

Evangelization, dear brothers and sisters, is not our attempt to conquer the world, but the infinite grace that radiates from lives transformed by the Kingdom of God. It is the way of the Beatitudes, a path that we tread together, between the “already” and the “not yet,” hungering and thirsting for justice, poor in spirit, merciful, meek, pure of heart, men and women of peace. Jesus himself chose this path: to follow it, we have no need of powerful patrons, worldly compromises, or emotional strategies. Evangelization is always God’s work.        -Pope Leo XIV, on the vigil of Pentecost

6/10/2025

The Order of the Lay Faithful

"Loaded with gifts" - from the homily of Fr. Riccardo for his brother priest, Abp. Byrnes, with whom I once served at young adults masses, when he was still rector of the seminary:

Fr. Riccardo also invoked St. Joan of Arc, patron of the parish where Archbishop Byrnes served as an associate pastor from 1996-99, and where he spent his final years until he died on May 30, St. Joan of Arc’s feast day.

Fr. Riccardo likened St. Joan of Arc’s story to that of Archbishop Byrnes’ time leading the Archdiocese of Agaña, a Church that was in great distress upon his arrival.

St. Joan of Arc's determination and obedience to God led her to take part in a "resistance movement" in France, Fr. Riccardo noted, “so it could come back under its proper leadership.”

“Mike was fond of thinking of the Church in that way," Fr. Riccardo said. "We need to remember, as disciples of Jesus, we have no human enemy. The only enemy is Satan and his minions, and the weapons that we use are love and character and mercy and kindness and truth and beauty.

“He was eager to mobilize the Church, both here and in Agaña,” Fr. Riccardo continued. “And especially the laity, whom he saw as something like a new religious order: Men and women loaded with gifts, waiting for marching orders.

Archbishop Byrnes was eager to remind everyone that while the Church's mission is to evangelize, "it's not enough to proclaim the Gospel," Fr. Riccardo said.

"There's also the work of re-creation," Fr. Riccardo said. "And that's the mission: to not just proclaim the Gospel, but to allow the Gospel to penetrate and perfect every dimension of human life: sports, health care, law, education, entertainment, you name it. And that's your task."

All of Archbishop Byrnes’ life is a lesson that to believe in Jesus Christ is to acknowledge that death has been defeated, forever, Fr. Riccardo said, and to live a life proclaiming Christ’s kingdom is the greatest life anyone could live.

“If you had been there on the Friday we call ‘Good,’ we would have thought it was a waste,” Fr. Riccardo said. “And we would have been wrong because the Cross redeemed the world. So our crosses, joined to Jesus’, help in the redemption of the world…

“Brothers and sisters, we do not know how much time we have. It might be decades, it might be weeks," Fr. Riccardo said. "Whatever time we have left, let’s be great. Let’s be the kind of men and women who will say to us, ‘It’s just enough to see you. You make me strong. You remind me who Jesus is. You encourage me to have hope, to trust him, to bank my life on him, to surrender to him day in and day out, and to live my life with joy, even when I’m sharing in the Cross.'”

https://www.detroitcatholic.com/news/archbishop-byrnes-allowed-god-to-write-the-story-of-his-life-funeral-homilist-says

6/06/2025

Succinct

Responsible Parenthood vs. Contraceptive Mentality

One is a constant journey of discernment and surrender; the other seeks control over fertility in ways that reject its nature.

https://refinelife.co/what-is-contraceptive-mentality/

5/29/2025

Facelift

Vatican.va has been updated. What was panned for being a "beige" background is actually parchment. I always thought that was clever, to have their webpages be pages of parchment. 

I like the way the information is being organized on the homepage. 

5/22/2025

Get with it

A voice of reason at the helm of the JPII Institute:

In an interview with The Pillar during the 2024 consistory, Reina said that the antidote to secularization was “a new evangelization, as John Paul II already called for more than two decades ago now.”

Asked if the Church should adapt its teaching to the times, Reina said “the Church always listens to what man lives today. Yet, the moral teachings have a solid foundation: the teachings of Holy Scripture and what God has always revealed.”

“So, the Church does not need to adapt to the times but must act in such a way that the times adapt to the logic of the Gospel,” he added.

https://www.pillarcatholic.com/p/paglia-replaced-at-jpii-institute

5/16/2025

Crucified

Jesus said to me today, You often call Me your Master. This is pleasing to My Heart; but do not forget, My disciple, that you are a disciple of a crucified Master. Let that one word be enough for you. You know what is contained in the cross (Diary, 1513).

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