Thoughts


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The Altar of St. Petronilla at St Peter Basilica is where I first served as a deacon. Here is a bit of information about the altar:

[UPDATE: In God’s providence, I was able to serve the Mass of  newly ordained friend (oil still on the hands) at the same Altar on her feast day - though we celebrated the Visitation!] 

Most visitors to St. Peter’s Basilica wonder why the candles on the altars are never lit. Early morning Mass attendees of course know that all the candles on the side altars are lit every morning from 7 to 8:30 a.m. as the individual Eucharistic celebrations are taking place.

But as the last taper is extinguished, the altars fall dark, except the one that will be used for the regular morning Masses. But on feast days of saints venerated in St. Peter’s, the altar dedicated to the saint is adorned with flowers and lit candles, standing out among all the others.

Sometimes the honoree is a well-known saint, such as St. Gregory the Great or St. Joseph, but often these little celebrations allow visitors to reacquaint themselves with long-forgotten saints and realize how important they are to Christian history and culture.

On May 31, St. Peter’s paid homage to what is today a somewhat obscure saint, St. Petronilla, but closer study reveals that some of the finest art in the basilica was dedicated to her altar.

St. Petronilla lived in Rome and was probably martyred in the first century during the early Christian persecutions. Her grave, near that of Sts. Nereo and Achilleo in the catacomb of Domitilla, was one of the most venerated tombs in the city up through the seventh century, when the catacombs were finally abandoned.

As early as the fourth century, Petronilla was already an artistic subject. A fresco in an underground crypt from 356 represents the saint assisting a woman, Veneranda, into heaven. But this was only the beginning of Petronilla’s rewarding association with the arts.

The remains of Petronilla, in a white marble sarcophagus, were transferred in 757 to the old St. Peter’s Basilica built by Constantine. The saint was laid to rest in a former imperial mausoleum situated next to the church, which was consecrated as the Chapel of Petronilla and annexed to the Basilica.

The circular building, which can be seen in old drawings of the ancient church, became the French chapel of St. Peter’s, as Petronilla became patroness of relations between the Pope and the first Holy Roman Emperors.

The inscription on the tomb, “of the golden Petronilla, the sweetest daughter,” the distinctiveness of her elegant mausoleum, and the translation of her relics to St. Peter’s gave rise to the medieval legend that the Roman martyr was the daughter of St. Peter.

The charming tale surrounding the identity of Petronilla recounted that Peter’s beautiful daughter attracted the eye of the pagan son of a high-ranking Roman official, and to protect Petronilla from unwanted advances, Peter and his daughter prayed for her to be rendered too ill to be considered for marriage.

The ruse worked for a short time, but finally the young man realized he had been duped and denounced Petronilla as a Christian. Peter prayed to have his daughter spared a harrowing martyrdom and Petronilla died in her sleep.

This story, while adding romance and famous names, nonetheless demoted Petronilla from her high status of martyr to virgin. The artwork dedicated to her, however, went from a hasty catacomb fresco to one of the greatest treasures of the basilica.

In 1498, French Cardinal Jean Bilhères de Lagraulas wanted to commemorate the upcoming Jubilee Year of 1500 with a new work of art for the Petronilla chapel where he planned to be buried. He approached a relatively unknown, 23-year-old Florentine sculptor named Michelangelo Buonarroti, and asked him to sculpt a statue of the Pietà. The rest is history.

St. Petronilla still ranked high as a virgin martyr in Cesare Baronio’s Martyrology of the post Counter-Reformation era (ending in the 16th century). Antonio Bosio’s exploration of the early Christian sites ensured that Petronilla had enough clout to retain a chapel dedicated to her in the new basilica of St. Peter completed in 1612.

The Pietà was briefly placed back in her chapel, which is along the right-hand aisle against the apsidal wall of the basilica. It was soon moved to its present position, and a new work of art was commissioned for Petronilla.

Francesco Barbieri, nicknamed Guercino, star pupil of the 17th-century Carracci academy of Bologna, and Baroque painter par excellence, was hired to paint the enormous oil on canvas of “The Raising of St. Petronilla.”

The original is kept today in the Capitoline Museums, but the mosaic copy in St. Peter’s faithfully re-creates the effect of the landmark work.

This astonishing work, standing 25 feet high, drew on the medieval legend of Petronilla and represents Peter on the lower half of the canvas lowering his daughter in the tomb while the upper half shows Petronilla, adorned in beautiful silks and velvets being welcomed into heaven by Christ.

The brilliant blues and rich reds catch the viewer’s eye from afar and impart a sense of preciousness to the work, but the most surprising effect can only be seen by those attending Mass. As Peter grasps the ropes to lower his daughter’s body into the grave, the corpse of Petronilla seems to hover above the altar. From the lowest border of the work only two outstretched hands reaching upward can be seen.

One might think that the hands belong to a gravedigger ready to receive the body and lay it in the ground, but those hands also recall the supplication of Veneranda, who relied on Petronilla’s intercession for her salvation. The medieval tale blends with the ancient martyrdom.

St. Petronilla’s life in both history and art recall that the examples of the saints are more than just pretty pictures to be admired in church, but also indications of how we too can be part of the great communion of the elect in heaven.

Knowing of your prayers over the next few weeks as I prepare to be ordained a Priest of Jesus Christ, I share with you the Rite of Ordination that the Bishop will follow on June 14th.

  • A link with pictures and the rite together - [here]
  • A link to a video of the Ordination of a fellow seminarian from the College [here]
  • A link to the text of the rite [here]

Thank you for your specific prayers for me. I also ask for your prayers for all the men to be ordained in the following months and for priest and seminarians in general.

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Providence happened a few weeks back. In a completely random place, I ran into two friends from the Sister Servants of the Lord - Sr Trinite SSVM & Sr Revelation SSVM.

I was introduced to the SSVM’s when a friend, Ruth Gaes from Sacred Heart in Bowie, returned from a Pilgrimmage to Rome during the 2000 Jubilee Year and entered the novitiate. They were unknown to me at the time. But they have been growing leaps and bounds and soon they were very much a part of my life and a help to my vocation through their service and prayers. Now Ruth is Mother Mary of the Sacred Heart and serving as the mother of the Novices. Another friend, Sister Ostra Brama is here assistant at the novitiate - now in Upper Marlboro, MD.

When I was in College, they started their Noviate in Bowie and the novices would come to Mass everyday at Sacred Heart’s Chapel on the Hill. When I came to Rome, I would see them everywhere - in the streets, at St Peter’s and at the Angelicum. When I came home last summer for my pastoral placement at Holy Comforter-St Cyprian, their Juniorate house was in the old convent and they would come to daily Mass. Now they are praying for my preparation to the Priesthood as they sew some vestments for me. I could go on … but I think that is enough.

Primarily, I wanted to present a video that I found on them [here]. Enjoy!

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Just before Easter, CNA published a story on Diocesan Priests living in Community. I though this would be interested to share and point out. The charism of the  Companions of Christ, originally established in the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, has been established by seminarians in Denver to formFrom the mission statement:

The Companions of Christ is a fraternity of diocesan priests and seminarians of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis.  While serving as priests of the Archdiocese the Companions of Christ live in community, where they are able to pray together, share meals, and support each other. In their life and ministry as priests, the Companions of Christ offer three emphases:
Diocesan priestly consescration expressed through the observance of the evangelical counsels
Commitment to fraternal life
Dedication to the “new evangelization” including ministries of catechesis, spiritual renewal and the fostering of vocations.

From CNA:

In response to a call from Vatican II for priests to share a common life, four seminarians for the Archdiocese of Denver have decided to begin a priestly community that will eventually be opened up to any priest or seminarian in the archdiocese.
Currently, the Companions of Christ is an association of seminarians established in the Archdiocese of Denver.  Once the four founding men are ordained, they will live together as priests in a rectory close to their pastoral assignments in the Archdiocese of Denver.
The priests will strive to live with three emphases: “Observance of the evangelical counsels in the context of the diocesan priesthood, commitment to a common life of prayer and fraternity, and dedication to the New Evangelization, including catechesis, spiritual renewal, and the fostering of vocations,” according to their website.
The Companions of Christ have already received the blessing of the Archbishop of Denver, Charles Chaput who established the fraternity “canonically” on December 12, 2007, the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe.
“Our priests today face immense challenges: larger parishes, fewer priests to assist them, and a more secular culture that is at times hostile to both the Gospel and the priesthood,” said the archbishop.  “Grouped in rectories in various parts of the Archdiocese, they strive together for the ideal of the priesthood, giving mutual support and holding each other to a strict accountability.”
Noting the difficulties priests face, Father Michael Glenn, Rector of St. John Vianney Theological Seminary added, “All priests want to live a committed and zealous life, but the demands of ministry, human weakness and the difficulty of their work can often discourage them, revealing a life far different than what he expected while in the seminary.”
The Companions of Christ will directly address the problems priests are currently facing and will offer encouragement.  “Fraternal life offers unity in prayer and identity, as well as strength and support for Christ’s mission.  God has truly blessed us with a model of life that will help Companion Priests and many others to be holy, joyful, and healthy shepherds in their service and leadership of God’s people.  Nothing promotes vocations, invites to prayer, or enlivens a parish more than dynamic, fulfilled priests who love the life they live.  Strengthened as brothers in Christ, priests are ready to step forward in leadership for the New Evangelization.”
Companions of Christ is comprised of four Denver seminarians: John Nepil, Matt Book, Brian Larkin, and Mike Rapp who will be ordained in the next two or three years.
Plans for the group began after one seminarian learned about a similar community in St. Paul, Minnesota.  The seminarians there “insisted that it wasn’t a new idea, just something that had been lost, that the Church was seeking to recover.”
After years of prayer, three other seminarians were drawn to the idea of the fraternity.  “The four men spent the next year together quietly praying and sharing meals, all the while fully immersed in the life of St. John Vianney Theological Seminary.”
Since the announcement of the community, the Companions of Christ have been received with support and encouragement.

Lenten Ecumenism

An interesting way to present the conversation! Ecumenism is the dialogue between the Roman Catholic Church where the Pope is the Vicar of Christ and other Churches and Ecclesical Communities. Other Churches designate the Orthodox Churches - one with the same sacraments and priestly orders. Ecclesial Communities designate those who do not have orders and the Eucharist in the same way we do. Our dialogue in the States is primarily with the Ecclesial Communities - Episcopal, Lutheran, Baptist, Methodist, etc.

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A milestone in the cause for sainthood of El Paso native Archbishop Fulton Sheen comes Sunday, with a special mass of thanksgiving at 10:30 a.m. at the Cathedral of Saint Mary of the Immaculate Conception, Peoria. It is part the “postrema session,” which ends the Peoria Diocese’s role in Sheen’s path to sainthood. During the mass, documents collected over the past few years will be officially packed, sealed and notarized. Sheen was a diocesan priest who later became famous worldwide as a radio and television personality, author and orator. He died in 1979. The documentation for sainthood includes about 100 testimonies of 15- to 30 pages each; reviews of each of Sheen’s nearly 70 books from the diocese’s Theological Commission; and about 1,500 pages of historical/archival materials, said Monsignor Richard Soseman, the diocese’s judicial vicar. There is some open seating for the public, but any reserved seats that remain unoccupied by 10:15 a.m. will be opened to the public. Bishop Daniel R. Jenky will lead the mass, which will be broadcast internationally through the Eternal Word Television Network (EWTN) starting at 9:30 a.m. Sunday. The broadcast will include interviews with Sheen experts. The ceremony is the culmination of thousands of hours of gathering documents, books and personal testimonies. Dr. Andrea Ambrosi, a specially trained theologian, will carry them to the Vatican, said Soseman. The items will be examined by the Vatican Congregation for the Causes of the Saints, which will review the documents as well as those describing a reported miraculous healing of a Champaign woman, said the diocese in a statement. If the congregation concurs a miracle occurred, the group will recommend the Pope declare Sheen as “blessed.” More review and the possible response of the Holy Father could take another two to five years or more. Another process follows beatification, including evidence of another miracle, before Sheen could be canonized as a saint, the diocese statement said. Part of the early materials came from the El-Paso based Archbishop Fulton John Sheen Foundation, a museum inside the Freight House Exchange. The foundation donated a set of his books along with personal testimonies, said Karen Fulte, a key volunteer. Sheen was born in El Paso on May 8, 1895. The foundation received hundreds of letters attesting to Sheen’s virtues, along with communications crediting him with miraculous intervention in people’s lives. “We’re vessels of clay — an instrument,” said Fulte, who said the experience has been “overwhelming and awesome.”

I’ve shared about Rich Mullins before. I’ve been listening to his Jesus Record, the last recordings he left before dying in a car accident. He had made a vow of celibacy as a Christian Man. His thoughts…

This whole “family values” thing is hugely misleading. It sort of implies that what your life is about is being happily married and having a beautiful family. And I go, “Wow, that’s not what Jesus said.”

You can have a wonderfully happy marriage or you can have a very successful experience with singleness and still not have anything at all when it’s over. When we’re dead, we�re not married or single. And who we are is who we will be when we die. I think everyone should keep in mind that we will be dead very soon and live our lives in light of that. And your identity has to be something other than your marital status or your income.

This past weekend, I was honored to participate in the Diaconate Ordination of two brothers from the Religious Family of the Missionaries of Charity. Brother Ralf and Brother Jacob are now Deacon Ralf and Deacon Jacob. The weekend was full of joy and celebration of the gift of these two men to the Christ, to his Church and to the poorest of the poor.

I thought it would be proper share a poem of Mother and her message of Love.

Poem by Mother Teresa

People are often unreasonable, illogical and self-centered; Forgive them anyway.

If you are kind, people may accuse you of selfish, ulterior motives;
Be kind anyway.

If you are successful, you will win some false friends and some true enemies;
Succeed anyway.

If you are honest and frank, people may cheat you;
Be honest and frank anyway.

What you spend years building, someone could destroy overnight;
Build anyway

If you find serenity and happiness, they may be jealous;
Be happy anyway.

The good you do today, people will often forget tomorrow;
Do good anyway.

Give the world the best you have, and it may never be enough;
Give the world the best you’ve got anyway.

You see in the final analysis. it is between you and God;
It was never between you and them anyway.

An update from University of Maryland Catholic Student Center

Students at the Catholic Student Center are trying to infuse the present-day Mass with some customs from the past.

For the past two months, students at the CSC have gathered each Wednesday before the evening Mass, or the Catholic worship service, to learn prayers and portions of the service in Latin, the formal language of the Catholic Church. During the same time period, four students learned the traditional songs and chants of the church as part of the Schola Cantorum, an all-male choir with a name that means “school of song” in Latin.

The semester’s work culminated in an extra Mass celebrated Nov. 30 in Latin with music provided by the schola. Approximately 25 students attended that Mass, said the center’s chaplain, the Rev. Kyle Ingels.

Ingels, who taught the Latin translations for the service, said he decided to start the informal classes because he wanted the students to learn the official language of the church. Teaching the Latin traditions is also a way to diversify the activities offered at the center, he said, which helps the center reach out to a wider variety of students.

“There is a lot of interest these days in learning about some of the more traditional aspects of the faith, Latin being one of them,” Ingels said. “Latin is a beautiful language, a beautiful tradition, and it is still the official language of the Catholic Church throughout the world.”

The students are learning the modern Mass translated into Latin and accompanied by the traditional Gregorian chants rather than the older regimented Tridentine Mass, Ingels said. The Tridentine Mass, celebrated entirely in Latin, was discontinued in the mid-1960s after Catholics expressed concern that it had become too impersonal. Some churches have added Tridentine Masses since September, when Pope Benedict XVI decreed that they could be celebrated once more.

The schola was taught by Dominican Brother Louis Senzig, who has long had an interest in traditional music, Ingels said.

Students who learned the Mass in Latin said they have benefited from it.

“It is a return to tradition,” said sophomore government and politics major Martino Choi. “It is a way to praise God in a vocal manner, which appealed to me.”

Learning the ancient language is a way to separate everyday life from spiritual life, senior philosophy major Josh Guenther said.

“The saints talk about how spirituality is separate from the world, and Latin is separate from our everyday conversation, and I think that makes the Mass said in Latin all the more special,” he said.

Rich Mullins, a great witness of Christ’s love and a successful Christian recording artist, was very close to the fullness of the faith when he passed away. See the following article below…

Terry Mattingly

http://tmatt.gospelcom.net/column/1998/05/06/

Father Matt McGinness had never heard the song playing on his car radio, even though “Sing Your Praise to the Lord” was one of superstar Amy Grant’s biggest hits.

“Gosh, I really like that song,” the priest told a musician friend that night back in 1995. “Well, thanks,” responded Rich Mullins. This mystified the priest, who asked what he meant. “I wrote that,” said Mullins.

McGinness hadn’t realized that Mullins was that famous. The priest simply knew him as another seeker who kept asking questions about doctrine, history and art and was developing a unique spiritual bond with St. Francis of Assisi. At the time of his death in a Sept. 19 car crash Mullins was taking the final steps to enter Catholicism.

“Rich had made up his mind and he wasn’t hiding anymore,” said McGinness, chaplain of the Newman Center at Wichita State University. “But I really don’t think it’s fair to make him the poster child for Catholic converts. …The key to Rich is that he was searching for a deep, lasting unity with God. He was such a reflective man and that quality brought him both peace and a great deal of anxiety.”

Even friends described Mullins as “enigmatic” and “eccentric” and there was much more to him than hit songs, led by the youth-rally anthem “Awesome God.” Grant summed up his legacy during last month’s Dove Awards in Nashville, in which Mullins received his first “artist of the year” award.

“Rich Mullins was the uneasy conscience of Christian music,” she said. “He didn’t live like a star. He’d taken a vow of poverty so that what he earned could be used to help others.”

McGinness said Mullins often said he felt called to a life of chastity and service, while staying active in music. It was hard to predict his future. His final recordings are slated for release on June 30 as “The Jesus Record.”

“Rich didn’t know for sure if he was called to ministry, which in the Catholic context would be the priesthood,” said McGinness. “He also feared that converting to Catholicism could mean losing his audience. … He knew there might be rough days ahead.”

It’s crucial to remember that Mullins grew up surrounded by fiercely independent brands of Protestantism such as the Quakers and the Churches of Christ, said his brother David Mullins, minister at the Oak Grove Christian Church in Beckley, W. Va. This taught him to fear formality and hierarchies, while also yearning for a faith that united people in all times and places - - with no labels.

“Rich had a very low view of church structures, but he had very high ideals about what the church could be,” said his brother. “He was sincerely drawn to Catholicism, but he also wondered where he would fit in the Roman Catholic Church.”

Nevertheless, Mullins’ recent music was steeped in Catholicism, from his autobiographical album “A Liturgy, A Legacy & A Ragamuffin Band” to his “Canticle of the Plains” musical about a Kansas cowboy he called St. Frank. His greatest-hits set was filled with photos of Celtic churches, crucifixes, nuns and statues of Mary. He quoted G.K. Chesterton and Flannery O’Connor, defended the pope and told one interviewer: “I think that a lot of Protestants think that Pentecost happened and then the church disappeared until the Reformation. So there is this long span of time when there was no church. That can’t be if Jesus was telling the truth.”

After playing telephone tag for a week, McGinness and Mullins talked one last time the night before the fatal accident. Mullins was going to Mass weekly, if not more often. He was ready to say his first confession and be confirmed. They set a meeting in two days. Others said Mullins was aiming for Oct. 4, the feast of St. Francis.

“There was a sense of urgency,” said the priest. “He told me, ‘This may sound strange, but I HAVE to receive the body and blood of Christ.’ I told him, ‘That doesn’t sound strange at all. That sounds wonderful.’ … Of course, I’ll always remember that conversation. Rich finally sounded like he was at peace with his decision.”

See also:
http://www.cwnews.com/news/viewstory.cfm?recnum=5876 

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