Welcome, Sacred Heart of Jesus

514f13a9-63b3-47cc-92e5-08b9d556dd05On this First Friday of the new year, we look forward to the installation of our Sacred Heart statue.  He is 50 inches tall and arrived in Omaha on the First Friday of December, new and unpainted.  The CMD Sisters finished painting him this week.

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Slowly, but surely, we are transforming our plain box of a building into a Catholic chapel.  Soon Fr. Geckle will start saying Mass on First Fridays for us.  Deo gratias!

In this 20-minute sermon, Fr. Benedict Hughes, CMRI, explains the history of the devotion to the Sacred Heart.

For the New Year: Catholic Doctrine Class Online

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Fr. Casimir Puskorius, CMRI

With today’s Feast of the Circumcision being a holy day of obligation, it seems the perfect time to draw attention to things we can enjoy on our respite from servile work.  

In September 2017, Fr. Casimir Puskorius,  CMRI, the pastor at Mt. St. Michael’s in Spokane, WA, launched a course on the errors of Vatican II, using Part II of the book, Tumultuous Times, as the basis for the study.  The class meets for one hour every Tuesday at the Mount, but there is a PDF and an mp3 audio recording posted after each lesson.  

Fr. Casimir’s style is relaxed and conversational.  His voice is clear and pleasant to listen to.  The lessons are broken down into manageable bites with the layperson in mind.  Father also provides a helpful resource list of other reading/listening to supplement Tumultuous Times, which you do not have to have to benefit from the class.

Tumultuous
From the MIQ Center website:  “The history of the Catholic Church has been very turbulent, as the Radecki Fathers show in this history of the General Councils. The last section reveals her most tumultuous time, the Second Vatican Council and its destructive aftermath.”

One of the resources Father lists as “Highly Recommended!” is Sedevacantism: A Quick Primer, an online article by Fr. Anthony Cekada.

The classes are presented during the school year, and so they ran through May 2018 and resumed in September 2018.  The most recent one posted is that of December 18, 2018.  Here is a link to the course page:  Catholic Doctrine Class.

We know that God can draw good out of evil; surely this class is an excellent example, as the disaster of Vatican II prompts us to study what the Church really teaches.

Mass Tomorrow for the Feast of the Circumcision

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Tomorrow is a day of Holy Obligation for the Feast of the Circumcision.  Fr. Geckle will say Mass for us at 4:30, with confessions at 4:00 pm.

Here is an excerpt from Dom Gueranger’s Liturgical Year for this Feast:

On this the Eighth Day since the Birth of our Emmanuel, let us consider the great mystery which the Gospel tells us was accomplished in his divine Flesh–the Circumcision. On this day, the earth sees the first-fruits of that Blood-shedding, which is to be its Redemption, and the first sufferings of that Divine Lamb, who is to atone for our sins. Let us compassionate our sweet Jesus, who meekly submits to the knife which is to put upon Him the sign of a Servant of God.

Mary, who has watched over Him with the most affectionate solicitude, has felt her heart sink within her, as each day brought her nearer to this hour of her Child’s first suffering. She knows, that the justice of God does not necessarily require this first sacrifice, or might accept it, on account of its infinite value, for the world’s salvation: and yet, the innocent Flesh of her Son must, even so early as this, be torn, and his Blood flow down his infant limbs.

What must be her affliction at seeing the preparations for this painful ceremony! She cannot leave her Jesus–and yet, how shall she bear to see Him writhe under this His first experience of suffering! She must stay, then, and hear His sobs and heartrending cries; she must bear the sight of the tears of her Divine Babe, forced from Him by the violence of the pain. We need St. Bonaventure to describe this wonderful mystery. “And if He weeps, thinkest thou his Mother could keep in her tears? No–she, too, wept, and when the Babe, who was standing on her lap, perceived her tears, He raised His little hand to her mouth and face, as though he would beckon to her not to weep, for it grieved Him to see Her weeping, whom He so tenderly loved. The Mother, on her side, was touched to the quick at the suffering and tears of the Babe, and she consoled Him by caresses and fond words; and as she was quick to see His thoughts, as though He had expressed them in words, she said to Him: If thou wishest me to cease weeping, weep not Thou, my Child! If Thou weepest, I must weep too. Then the Babe, from compassion for the Mother, repressed his sobs, and Mary wiped His eyes and her own, and put His Face to her own, and gave Him her Breast, and consoled him in every way she could (Meditations on the Life of Christ, by St. Bonaventure).”

And now, what shall we give in return to this Saviour of our souls for the Circumcision, which he has deigned to suffer, in order to show us how much He loved us? We must, according to the teaching of the Apostle, circumcise our heart from all its evil affections, its sins, and its wicked inclinations; we must begin, at once, to live that new life, of which the Infant Jesus is the sublime model. Let us thus show Him our compassion for this His earliest suffering for us, and be more attentive, than we have hitherto been, to the example He sets us.

Read the whole post at Catholic Harbor of Faith and Morals

Our Mass Time to Change But Not Yet

Despite the info on the cmri.org site, Fr. Geckle has confirmed that we still have one more Sunday mass at 1:30.  This Sunday, Dec. 16th, will be the last early afternoon mass.

Starting Sunday, Dec. 23rd, our schedule will change to 4:30 pm, with confessions at 4:00 pm.

Meanwhile, enjoy the jousting knights of the Wells Cathedral Clock, built when England was Catholic.