Archive for September, 2008

Sep 30 2008

Priests of the day 09/30

Published by ubipetrus under Prayer Calendar

Today we pray for Rev. Andre Bedard and Msgr. Charles Crosby.

Fr. Bedard was ordained in 1957 and is a retired priest in residence at Blessed John XIII’s Parish in Nashua.

Msgr. Crosby was ordained in 1956 and is the rector of St. Patrick’s Parish in Hampton Beach.

May they continue to strive to conform themselves ever more closely to the one High Priest, Jesus Christ, and may they always grow deeper in their love for Him and His Church through the intercession of Mary.

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Sep 29 2008

Priests of the day 09/29

Published by ubipetrus under Prayer Calendar

Today we pray for Rev. Thomas Bresnahan and Rev. William Babineau.

Fr. Bresnahan was ordained in 1960 and is now retired.

Fr. Babineau was ordained in 1968 and is a retired priest in residence at St. Peter Parish in Auburn.

May they both in their retirement years find new ways to live their ordination as alter Christus and to grow ever closer to Him whom they brought to parishioners over the years through the example of Mary, Mother of all Priests.

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Sep 28 2008

Bishop of the day 09/28

Published by ubipetrus under Prayer Calendar

Today we pray for Bishop Odore Gendron, Bishop Emeritus of the Diocese of Manchester.

He was ordained to the priesthood in 1947 and ordained to the episcopate in 1975.  He retired as Bishop of the Diocese in 1990.

As a successor to the apostles let us pray his retirement is used in powerful witness to the continual conversion to Christ to which we are all called.

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Sep 27 2008

Priests of the day 09/27

Published by ubipetrus under Prayer Calendar

Today we pray for Rev. John Wright and Rev. Edmund Babicz.

Fr. Wright was ordained in 1982 and is now retired.  I am unable to find any information on where he served while in active ministry.

Fr. Babicz was ordained in 1984 and is pastor of St. Joseph’s Parish in Center Ossipee and St. Anthony’s Parish in Sanbornville.

May God watch over them in everything they do, may they always imitate Mary in her acceptance of all things for and in Christ and may they grow ever more conformed to her Son, Jesus our Savior.

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Sep 26 2008

Priests of the day 09/26

Published by ubipetrus under Prayer Calendar

Today we pray for Fr. Armand Turgeon and Fr. James Walsh.

Fr. Turgeon was ordained in 1943 and is now retired.  He served the Diocese at both St. Joan of Arc’s Parish and Infant Jesus Parish.

Fr. Walsh was ordained in 1973 and is pastor of Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish in Greenville and Sacred Heart Parish in Wilton.

May Mary shelter them under her mantle and always point them and those entrusted to their care to her son, Jesus in His Heavenly glory.

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Sep 26 2008

And I was just feeling sorry for myself this morning

Published by ubipetrus under life

Yeah, work is kicking my keester and I’m feeling perpetually further behind than I was the day before. But I’ve got nothing on this. ‘Scuse me, I have to go admit that I’ve got it easy to a few people.

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Sep 26 2008

Ember days

Published by ubipetrus under Uncategorized

If you, like me, have never heard of Ember Days you’ll want to read this article at Rorate Caeli. It’s a reprint of an article by Michael P. Foley from The Latin Mass Magazine. After reading it I feel, in a way, as if I’ve been robbed of some of my patrimony all these years. There is still too much of a “we threw everything out with Vatican II” attitude and all too often people glibly state that “we don’t do that any more” neither knowing why we did it before nor why we do it now. History is a powerful teacher, if only you are willing to learn.

Update: I’m way behind (again) on my blog reading, or I’d have known to include a pointer to this post at NLM. So much about Ember Days I never knew, so much to have missed…

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Sep 25 2008

Deacons of the day 09/25

Published by ubipetrus under Prayer Calendar

Today we pray for Deacon Paul Boucher and Deacon Richard Shannon.

Deacon Boucher was ordained in 2002 and serves at St. Mary’s Parish in Claremont.  He also serves on the Diocesan Lay Ministry Formation Commission.

Deacon Shannon was also ordained in 2002 and serves at the Parish of the Transfiguration in Manchester.  He also serves on the Diocesan School Board.

May they find their inspiration in the example of St. Stephen who gave all he had to the Church and in our mother Mary who loves and watches over all who serve her Son.

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Sep 24 2008

Signs and Mysteries

Published by ubipetrus under books

Okay, I admit it. When I saw this book on the list of possible books for review from Catholic Company I just about jumped out of my seat. I haven’t met a book by Mike Aquilina yet that I haven’t found both intellectually and spiritually stimulating. This one was no different.

It’s a fairly slim volume, tipping the scales at 188 pages including references. A good number of these pages are accented by beautiful artwork by Lea Marie Ravotti; a book on symbols cannot survive without good artwork and this work does not disappoint. I’ve seen a couple of quibbles over the use of a relatively fine font combined with a medium brown ink. When I first opened the book I said, “oh yeah, I see what they’re talking about”. Then I started to read it. In the end analysis I’ll say this: it may take a couple of pages to get used to it, but as long as you’re not trying to read it by candle light by the time you’re out of the Introduction you won’t even notice it. And that’s from someone who is destroying his eyesight by staring at a computer screen for eight to twelve hours a day for a living.

As important as the aesthetic of the book may be, without content it would be a niche intellectual object. Content, however, is not a problem for this book. In fact, I am in complete agreement with the author’s plaintive cry in Chapter 1:

Few of us today, however, can even begin to understand the messages left for us by our ancestors. We have lost our Christian mother tongue – the code of the martyrs – and we are impoverished by the loss. They have become like hieroglyphics, a language that only academic specialists understand. What is worse is that we have forgotten how to think the way these distant ancestors thought, and this has rendered them even more remote from us. Their symbols seem incomprehensible now.

Yet delivering the message was, for them, clearly an urgent matter, a matter of ultimate consequence. To carve or paint or scratch these symbols, they burrowed into the ground and breathed foul air while laboring in dim lamplight. Our ancestors did this so that their message might reach us. We owe them at least the effort of a sympathetic study.

We do indeed, and this volume is an excellent start. By turns intellectual, historical, philosophical, academic and spiritual it lays out for us a world all together too many of us take for granted when we even acknowledge its existence at all. We have, by and large, lost the use of this language and that is only to our detriment.

I can say that within only a page or so of the first symbol explored in this book I was thinking “now there is something I can use with our RCIA class”. The book is not so simple as to be redundant for all but the true patrologists out there, nor is it so complicated as to be over the heads of those with a thinner Christian formation. It is clear that Aquilina is not only comfortable with his subject matter but fluent in it. There is a point at which one becomes sufficiently steeped in a topic that conversing about it no longer requires complex explanations and stiff wording. No, in this topic the author is closer to conversational in tone which makes for a very comfortable reading even as the reader works his way from the author’s words to a quote from a Church Father to a quote from the Bible and back again. It is a rare treat to read a book this informative that is simultaneously this fluid.

In my last review I said I was going to buy a copy of the book for myself since I had received an unbound galley copy; this copy was “the real thing”. This time, though, I’m going one better than before. I’m not buying another copy for myself, I’m buying one for our RCIA director. If you know me, you know it’s a rare thing indeed for me to buy a book for someone else; the last time I did that it was Pope Benedict’s Jesus of Nazareth so Mike Aquilina is in good company here. Does this mean I’d recommend this book to someone else? Absolutely, and for this price it’s an absolute steal given how much you will learn. Buy it, read it, learn something about your faith. Then read it again and learn something else. Yeah, it’s that kind of a book.

This review was written as part of The Catholic Company product reviewer program. Visit The Catholic Company to find more information on Signs and Mysteries-Revealing Ancient Christian Symbols .

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Sep 24 2008

Priests of the day 09/24

Published by ubipetrus under Prayer Calendar

Today we pray for all deceased priests and religious of the Diocese.  I remember in a special way Fr. Denis Horan, my first Pastor, and Bishop Leo E. O’Neil, the Bishop who welcomed me into the Church.

Requiem æternam dona eis, Domine, et lux perpetua luceat eis. Te decet hymnus Deus, in Sion, et tibi reddetur votum in Ierusalem. Exaudi orationem meam; ad te omnis caro veniet. Requiem æternam dona eis, Domine, et lux perpetua luceat eis.

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