Saint Edward the Confessor

With the death of the late Queen Elizabeth II still fresh in our minds, it is worth turning our attention to her saintly predecessor, Edward the Confessor, whose feast day is today. He was the son of the unfortunate King Æthelred the Unready and Emma of Normandy. Being the King’s seventh son, he never expected that he himself would reign, and he took […]

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Publication!

On today’s memorial of Our Lady, Untier of Knots, I’m pleased to announce the long-delayed publication of my Altar Server Manual. It is available in both a regular (server) edition as well as an expanded Trainer Edition. They are available in book shops and Amazon. “Altar servers should be properly trained and properly formed. This manual provides altar servers with […]

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Anniversary of the Last Day of Holy Rosary

This is an annual post, updated only slightly. Much of the language reflects my thoughts and feelings of the day, taken from my journaled notes. Over the past two years, my feelings have mellowed and matured somewhat. It is, however, good to recollect the day. Depart from me, I will weep bitterly; labour not to comfort me. (Antiphon 1 of […]

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The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Who is she that cometh forth as the morning rising,fair as the moon, bright as the sun,terrible as an army set in array?(Benedictus antiphon, Monastic Office of Lauds for the Assumption) The Death and the Assumption of the Virgin by Fra Angelico, circa 1432. Today’s great Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, which in the East is […]

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Sawdust Memories

I came late to the hobby of woodworking, and I’m terrible at it. Like many people, I suppose, I took up a new pastime during the COVID-19 lockdowns. In my case, it was working wood. I use both power tools and hand tools: power tools for the big cuts and rough shaping, and handtools for the fiddly details. It’s fun, […]

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Saint Irenæus: Doctor Unitatis

A post-Protestant friend of mine has a particular fondness for that great Doctor of the Church, Saint Irenæus of Lyons, whose feast day is today. He occasionally quotes from the saint’s great work, Adversus Hæreses (Against Heresies), and he is particularly fond of the saint’s assertion that “the proper glory of God is man fully alive.” He refers to the […]

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Eucharistic Revival

The same Jesus who was incarnated in Nazareth and born in Bethlehem is incarnated on every altar in the world in the Eucharist. The same sacrifice of the Cross that occurred two millennia ago in Jerusalem may likewise be seen on every altar in the world in the holy sacrifice of the Mass. This is the great Paschal Mystery, in […]

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Discernment on the Camino Primitivo

We are all now finally back from our Camino. Those of you who have been following along over on our Camino blog know that – in addition to the physical and mental challenges – the Camino is a powerful tool for discernment. I’ll get back to what we were discerning later, but I was again reminded that walking the Camino […]

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Blessing of the Pilgrims, 2022

Blessing of the Pilgrims, 2022

This morning, Francine and I received the pilgrims’ blessing from Rev. David Mulholland at Saint Patrick Church, where I was baptized and we were married. It is a beautiful and ancient rite. In its current form it appears the Missal of Vich Cathedral, Barcelona, Spain, dated to AD 1078. In addition to blessing the pilgrims themselves, the packs (“rucksacks”), sticks (“staves”), and […]

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And Then There Were Three

Earlier today as I was taking out the trash, I heard a symphony of panicked squawks from our hens in Paradise Towers. I’d heard that sound before. It could only mean one thing. One of the hens had died. And indeed, the three surviving hens were huddled near the body of Amelia, who we usually called “Big Red”. She was […]

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A Weary and Distraught Humanity

Earlier today, Pope Francis consecrated to the Immaculate Heart of Mary “ourselves, the Church and all humanity, especially Russia and Ukraine”, thus fulfilling the wishes of Mary at Fátima in 1917. Theologians can debate whether this consecration was somehow more “valid” than the ones performed by Venerable Pope Pope Pius XII in 1942, Pope Saint Paul VI in 1964, or […]

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