The Narthex
Ash Wednesday Welcomes
'Repent and believe the Gospel' is the Church’s message today, from her Master
By John M. Grondelski | February 14th 2024 12:48 PMThe Church offers two formulae as options to be used during imposition of ashes, the sign of penance. The older formula is “Remember, man, that you are dust and to dust you will return.” The newer one is actually not new at all, because it repeats the first public words…
READ FULL BLOG POSTThe Leprosy-Sin Analogue
And other commentary on Readings for the 6th Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year B)
By John M. Grondelski | February 12th 2024 1:13 PMThe First Reading and Gospel for the Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time, Year B, focus on leprosy. The reading from Leviticus 13:1-2, 44-46 (one of the few times that Old Testament book appears in the Lectionary) prescribes procedures for determining if one is a leper and how he was to…
READ FULL BLOG POSTProperly Celebrating the Liturgy & Sacraments
Improvisation belongs in the comedy club, not the Church
By John M. Grondelski | February 8th 2024 12:55 PMOn February 2, the Vatican's Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF) issued the Note Gestis verbisque, reiterating that sacramental ministers, when celebrating the sacraments, must adhere to their matter and form. From February 6-9, the Dicastery for Divine Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments (DDWDS) is conducting a…
READ FULL BLOG POSTIn Persona Christi or Liturgical Personality?
Neither 'we' nor the 'community' nor the 'Church' baptizes. Christ baptizes.
By John M. Grondelski | February 6th 2024 9:41 PMGestis verbisque, the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith’s recent "Note" on sacramental validity, raises questions about the spirituality of a sacramental minister. Occasioned by apparently growing concerns about the number of potentially invalid baptisms resulting from priests or deacons who tampered with the essential form of the sacrament…
READ FULL BLOG POSTCatholic Education Should Be the Model
Real education treats the whole person -- spiritually, academically, socially, culturally
By John M. Grondelski | January 29th 2024 3:03 PM“Celebrate Catholic Schools Week,” an initiative of the National Catholic Educational Association, is observed January 28-February 3. Parishes with schools traditionally have a special student Mass on Sunday and at least one open house during the week. In that sense, “Celebrate Catholic Schools Week” seems a kind of recruitment tool…
READ FULL BLOG POSTActionable Intelligence
It's what every executive, boss, client, man, woman, and child wants
By James Thunder | January 9th 2024 10:20 PMIn the middle of the Gulf War of 1991, the commanding general, the late General Norman Schwarzkopf, Jr. (“Stormin’ Norman”), complained publicly that he was receiving intelligence reports filled with so many caveats, qualifiers, and footnotes, that it was as though, he said, the reports had been written by lawyers.…
READ FULL BLOG POSTThe Virtue of Obedience
There’s no expiration date to 'Honor thy father and thy mother'
By John M. Grondelski | January 3rd 2024 1:10 PMThe readings for the Feast of the Holy Family seem, by some contemporary standards, to be a bit quaint and dated. That’s because they put a lot of emphasis on obedience. Obedience correlates with other concepts, including authority and even hierarchy. Those are words at which our “democratic” world (and…
READ FULL BLOG POSTNatures, Persons, and Mary, Mother of God
Proper catechesis on our holy days of obligation would benefit many
By John M. Grondelski | January 2nd 2024 12:58 PMThe Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God, is poorly understood by contemporary Catholics. It doesn’t, in that regard, differ from many of our other holydays of obligation, the significance of only one of which -- Christmas -- is arguably at least somewhat well grasped. Consider the others. There are still…
READ FULL BLOG POSTGetting Holy Innocents Right
It is celebrated in red because the children were dead, not because the Family fled
By John M. Grondelski | December 27th 2023 12:36 PMTomorrow, December 28, is the Feast of the Holy Innocents, Martyrs. I make that explicit because in the past few years there has been something like an ecclesiastical version of bait-and-switch in some quarters to change the focus of the feast. Today’s feast is about children: baby boys aged two…
READ FULL BLOG POSTWhy Aren't We Celebrating January 1?
Why continue the Saturday or Monday holyday 'get-out-of-Mass-free' card?
By John M. Grondelski | December 26th 2023 3:46 PMThanks to the Catholic Bishops of the United States’ Complementary Norms, January 1, 2024 -- the Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God -- will not be a holyday of obligation. That’s because, under those Norms, certain holydays cease being holydays of obligation if they fall on Saturdays or Mondays. The…
READ FULL BLOG POSTBlessings, Grounded in Love
Truly pastoral counselling does not involve any development of doctrine
By James Hanink | December 21st 2023 12:31 PMThe Declaration Fiducia Supplicans, signed by Pope Francis, calls for our close attention. Its overarching context is the Church’s wealth of blessings, each a gift of God’s love, and their place in the economy of grace. The most frequent, and liturgically grounded, blessing comes at the conclusion of the Mass.…
READ FULL BLOG POSTContraception & Cremation
Both require we grapple with the reality of embodiment
By John M. Grondelski | December 18th 2023 2:50 PMRegular readers know I am a harsh critic of cremation and of the Church’s misconceived 1963 decision to tolerate it. I have repeatedly argued that that 1963 rescission of the prohibition on cremation allowed the camel to poke its nose under the tent, upending the latter. The most cursory survey…
READ FULL BLOG POST'Reforming' a Religion
Why pray 'Thy will be done' when one can pray 'my will be done'?
By John M. Grondelski | December 15th 2023 2:51 PMRabbi David Ellenson died December 7 in New York. I read about it in The New York Times. I’ll admit to knowing nothing about the man before I read his obituary. The phenomenon of reading obituaries kicks in at a certain age. As a child, I was always puzzled by the…
READ FULL BLOG POSTSo, You Failed?
The problem is not failing but what we do about it
By John M. Grondelski | December 12th 2023 12:31 PMIdeas for essays are sometimes like grace: they come from the most unexpected places. Today’s comes from Facebook, in a post by Scott Hahn about failure. Hahn posted a passage from St. Josemaría Escrivà’s rich book of spiritual aphorisms, The Way. The excerpt (no. 405) deals specifically with failure. “So you…
READ FULL BLOG POSTFor God So Loved the World
Here’s a thought experiment: Would you become a toad to save toads?
By James Thunder | December 11th 2023 12:39 PMWe see occasional reports that attempt to quantify the number of species that have become extinct over a certain period of years or centuries or millennia. And we see occasional reports identifying various species at risk of extinction. We go to great lengths to save species. Think of the bald…
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