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Tuesday, October 26, 2021
New Book: From Benedict's Peace to Francis's War: Catholics Respond to Traditionis Custodes
Monday, October 25, 2021
Interview with InfoCatolica
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Procession to St Peters at the 2019 Summorum Pontificum Pilgrimage, Rome |
1. What does it mean to be
president of the International Federation Una Voce?
The Federation an an umbrella
group for lay Catholics attached to the ancient Latin liturgy of the Catholic
Church. We do not exercise authority over our members, but they come to us for
advice, and we represent their concerns in the Holy See and in the world-wide
media.
The Federation’s members elect a Council, currently about 20 people from all over the world, and a President; the Council elects the Treasurer and Secretary and allocates other tasks to its members. Because of the geographical spread of councillors, we communicate mainly by email and have instituted regular Zoom meetings.
The President, generally with a colleague or two, usually travels to Rome once a year to meet Curial officials, clergy, journalists, and others, to keep up with what is going on. As Secretary I have been involved in such trips for some years, and it has been very interesting. As well as concrete information, one gets a feeling for the assumptions and habits of mind which govern the Holy See. This insight is reflected in the way we carry out all our work: whether we want to appeal to these assumptions in our representations to the Holy See, or to modify them, one needs to know what they are.
Thursday, October 21, 2021
Summorum Pontificum Pilgrimage: 29-31 October
Wednesday, October 20, 2021
The Last Rites and the Emergency Services
As the United Kingdom has secularised, so the role of Christian ministers has diminished. If you read stories of natural crises from fifty years ago, priests and Anglican vicars are often involved. At the 1966 disaster at Aberfan in Wales, when a heap of spoil from a coal mine engulfed a school, the local vicar was practically the only person regarded as having responsibility for the emotional and spiritual trauma suffered by the people of the town. One of the most memorable images from the “troubles” of Northern Ireland is of a Catholic priest waving a white handkerchief, escorting a group of people carrying an injured man to safety, on “Bloody Sunday” in 1972. Times, sadly, have changed.
As the role of the Church has diminished, so have priests’ opportunities to make a positive difference. Last week a prominent Catholic Member of Parliament, David Amess, was stabbed by (apparently) an Islamist fanatic. As he lay dying, a Catholic priest was refused admission through the police cordon to give him the Last Rites. The priest seemed to accept the explanation: Amess, surrounded as he was by police officers and medics, was in a “crime scene” which couldn’t be disturbed by anyone as trivial as a priest.
LMS Oxford Pilgrimage: photos

Tuesday, October 19, 2021
LMS Pilgrimage in honour of the Chideock martyrs

Wednesday, October 13, 2021
The Traditional Mass and Diversity
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Venerating Our Lady of Walsingham at the end of the LMS Walking Pilgrimage in August this year. |
It’s not an accident that all of these Catholics at the old Mass are white, because one of the things that happened after Vatican II was an ‘inculturation’ of the liturgy. …The Latin Mass is white and European by its definition, because it’s a product of the Catholic Church of the 16th century. So, this is creating serious problems because it is never limited to the liturgy only, but it is always the first step to saying Vatican II was a disaster.
I would far rather ignore these childish accusations, but I fear that if they are repeated frequently enough without rebuttal they will become established as part of the liberal narrative about the Traditional Latin Mass. But in order to shoe-horn the movement for the ancient Mass into the role of the bad guys in some racially-charged political confrontation, Faggioli needs to distort the past and ignore the present. Let’s start with the past.
Read the whole thing there.