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    AmP Countdown: Time left to demand that Congress make health care reform pro-life: 2009-11-07 18:00:00 GMT-05:00


    Sunday, December 31, 2006

    In preparation for Anno Domini 2007

    "The object of a New Year is not that we should have a new year. It is that we should have a new soul and a new nose; new feet, a new backbone, new ears, and new eyes. Unless a particular man made New Year resolutions, he would make no resolutions. Unless a man starts afresh about things, he will certainly do nothing effective. Unless a man starts on the strange assumption that he has never existed before, it is quite certain that he will never exist afterwards. Unless a man be born again, he shall by no means enter into the Kingdom of Heaven."
    - G. K. Chesterton
    [photo: REUTERS/Tony Gentile (VATICAN)]

    Thursday, December 28, 2006

    Reminder: Abp. Burke in Detroit Dec. 30th for Hardon day of rememberance

    Diane tells us all about it:

    "Just wanted to slip you a reminder about Archbishop's upcoming visit to Assumption Grotto in Detroit on December 31. It is for a day of rememberance for Fr. John A. Hardon. While there was a form for people to use for signup, it is not necessary as it is a free event. People will need to bring their own bag lunch."

    [click here for the complete schedule]

    I'm not yet positive I'll be able to attend - but I will try. I have several old friends in town this weekend and already-made plans might not allow a trip into Detroit. I heartily encourage others to attend if they are able.

    Diane also has some beautiful pictures taken during Assumption Grotto's Christmas Midnight Mass, which yours truly was thrilled to attend. For the interested, here's a stylish shot of me that a friend took during the reception afterwards. And, for what it's worth, here's another.

    B16's year-in-review

    Presented by Sandro Magister:

    "This is the synthesis that Benedict XVI read in person to the Roman curia, in the traditional pre-Christmas address. At the center of it all is the question of God. Everything relates to this – the clash of civilizations, Islam, the Holocaust, the drop in the birth rate, gay marriage, clerical celibacy..." [More...]

    Also excellent reading: Holy Midnight in Roma: "God made his Word short, he abbreviated it..."

    Pope Benedict Roundup December 2006

    Friday, December 22, 2006

    Fair warning...

    ... that blogging will continue to be sporadic until early January. Like most everyone, I'll be spending time with friends and family. I'll also be taking the opportunity to recharge the spiritual and physical batteries.

    Maranatha!

    Wednesday, December 20, 2006

    I saw The Lady in the Water last night

    I saw M. Night Shyamalan's Lady in the Water last night and I was not very impressed. I've really enjoyed Shyamalan's earlier work (especially his lesser-known Unbreakable and Wide Awake), but Lady in the Water, even more so than The Village, seemed to be a big step backwards.

    Sure, it's only supposed to be a "bedtime story," but even bedtime stories can be better than I thought this turned out to be. And M. Night Shymalan's character in the movie (his most recent interjection of himself into one of his movies is far more than a cameo) was a distraction from the plot. Really, if you want to act, Mr. Shymalan, act. But if you want to direct, please limit yourself to directing. One good thing at a time.

    Back to the movie ... am I missing the point?

    Your PPOTD! Monday, Dec. 20th

    "Finally, on a more personal note, I would like to say that I'm awaiting the American Papist's return with great impatience. I've been refreshing his site during this entire presentation and still no updates!"
    [photo: AP Photo/Andrew Medichini]

    Tuesday, December 19, 2006

    500,000 Page Views/300,000 Visits

    AmP passes a couple significant markers today.


    I began blogging in earnest around early January of this year (by which I mean writing for other people besides my friends). Around August I realized I might pass these two markers by the end of theyear ... and even with my blogging hiatus these past two weeks or so we've still made it well before Christmas, let alone New Year's.

    So, to everyone who has made AmP a regular part of their online reading this year - Thank You! It's the best Christmas present you guys could have given me. :-)

    I would also be remiss if I didn't say that your constant kind words and emailed encouragement - and most of all - your prayers, have helped me more than you'll ever know. God Bless and keep you.

    Grace & Peace,

    - Thomas Peters

    P.S. If anyone is interested in "AmP trivia", this post was the one that first got me excited about blogging for other people. I loved the little mp3 tune very much and found myself wanting to share it with other people, so, on a whim, I sent the post to a few of the bigger Catholic blogs and they were kind enough to post it. That day a couple hundred people visited the site (a staggering number to my mind) and listened to the tune ... I was hooked. :-)

    An exciting AmP milestone will be reached today...

    ... can you guess what it is? :P

    Monday, December 18, 2006

    LifeSiteNews headlines, Dec. 14th-18th

    Playing a bit of catch-up...

    LifeSiteNews:

    Dec. 18th:

    Dec. 16th:

    Dec. 15th:

    Dec. 14th:

    Your PPOTD! Monday, Dec. 18th

    Pope Benedict ends his Sunday Angelus prayer
    with the ever-popular golden beach ball toss.

    [photo: AFP/Alessia Giuliani]

    ... and we're back!

    Many thanks for the prayers and encouragement. Exams and papers are well behind me and it's time to get blogging again! Hoorah.

    Friday, December 15, 2006

    AmP emerges from his homework laborings ...

    ... to give you this hilarious link.

    ViAmy.

    Thursday, December 14, 2006

    Your PPOTD! Thursday, Dec. 10th

    "Papal musical chairs, while more formal, was no less competitive."

    [photo: AP Photo/L'Osservatore Romano]

    Wednesday, December 13, 2006

    Last-minute notice...

    At 5PM EST (yes, 10 minutes from now...) I will be speaking with Lino Rulli "The Catholic Guy" on the Catholic Channel of Sirius internet radio. More details from last time here. I believe we'll be talking about my posts from this week as well as how my finals have been going (yikes!).

    Your PPOTD!, Wendesday Dec. 13th

    Pope Benedict thought to himself: "What's with this hand-holding? I just wanted to give him a papal high-five!"
    [photo: REUTERS/Dario Pignatelli (VATICAN)]

    Tuesday, December 12, 2006

    Prayer for the intersession of St Joseph of Cupertino

    In the same vein as this post:

    Prayer for the intersession of St Jospeh of Cupertino

    Eternal Father,

    Through the intersession of your servant, Joseph of Cupertino, enlighten my mind to the direction of your Spirit. Help me with these studies that I undertake, and may all of the knowledge that I gain be used to help my brothers and sisters in our Lord Jesus Christ, Amen.


    To all my student readers: good luck with your finals and exams!

    Monday, December 11, 2006

    LifeSiteNews headlines, Dec. 11th

    LifeSiteNews:

    Not dead...

    ... just floating on the brink.

    No worries, however: regular blogging will resume after my finals and papers are completed! In the meantime, enjoy this small compilation of Joseph Cupertino links. Cupertino, as many of you know, is the the patron saint of test takers...

    Catholic Encyclopedia on Cupertino

    Wikipedia on Cupertino

    Cupertino's entry in Saints for Sinners

    Gotta love the hovering Cupertino on this site.

    .. and before folks ask: no, finals aren't that bad for me personally this year, however, it's always a good idea to send a few prayers to Cupertino. They can't hurt!

    Sunday, December 10, 2006

    Your PPOTD!, Sunday Dec. 10th

    The washing of the hands is always a dangerous affair when you've got a Pontiff this hot.
    [photo: AP Photo/Pier Paolo Cito]

    Saturday, December 09, 2006

    Your PPOTD, Saturday Dec. 9th

    If David believed he was tough for slaying Goliath, he had never tried incensing a fourteen-foot statue with a solid silver thurible at the age of 79.
    [photo: AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia]
    (... finals and papers are going well - thanks for the prayers!)

    Friday, December 08, 2006

    AmP review of Mel Gibson's Apocalypto

    I went to see Mel Gibson’s Apocalytpo this afternoon and, well, it is certainly not your average movie. Tortured artists produce the best art, they say, and I would have to say that Apocalypto could only be the brain child of a rather tortured soul ... it is also a great film.

    First to get the important question out of the way: yes, Apocalypto is incredibly violent. But the violence is not unnecessary (as I'll explain below). The gruesome events, while somewhat stylized, are (however) realistic enough that in general the movie feels like the results of a documentary film crew getting stuck with the wrong tribe in the wrong area of the jungle during the wrong century.

    Who can handle the violence? I'd personally only feel confident recommending the film to 18+ guys (and ladies only on a case-by-case basis ... the movie is intense). Personal tastes differ, for sure, but I think I have a rather high tolerance for movie brutality, and Apocalypto stretched my limits.

    But to the good stuff: Going into the theater, I expected myself to be psychoanalyzing Mel Gibson himself and trying to find things that we know about his life and convictions writ-large on the screen. However, Apocalypto was so impressive a film, so compelling a story, and so realistic (as far as I know) a depiction of its subject matter that most the movie I spent thinking about the subject of the movie, and not the movie itself, let alone the director. In a phrase: I was sold.

    The movie has two acts: a shorter introductory segment that introduces the characters and portrays the idyllic forest-life of the Mayans. The second act takes the viewer on a harrowing journey to the heart (pun intended) of the sickening, decaying city-life of the Mayans and an even more heart-pounding escape from the city back to the forest (as we follow the movie’s hero, Jaguar Paw).

    It remains unclear in my mind exactly what fish Mel is out to fry in Apocalypto. One of the themes is very prevalent: an ecologically-conscience “closer to nature” lifestyle is better than the destructive, overly-consumptive city way of life. But the point is not quite that easily cut-and-dried (to get back to my fish analogy). One could also say, for instance, that the movie supports a family/tribe-based society as opposed to the bloodthirsty cult and slave-making/selling city setup.

    In other words, the movie is best understood as a story of one man that includes various snapshots of the good and bad in the culture he inhabits. And I think one will find the “message” of the movie more easily if one gives up looking for connect-the-dots parallels with modern society and instead looks at what the movie portrays as good and bad about the Mayan culture it explores.

    (*Spoiler warning* Read on if you wish, but be warned…)

    What is good? Jaguar Paw’s love for his family. His relationship with his father. The honor of being his father’s son and his son’s father. The forest as the place where he gathers food to provide for his family. By extension, the other members of his village. And even – himself. His own dignity.

    What is bad? Human sacrifice. Violence against innocents. Slavery. Bloodsports. And pretty much everything else we’ve come to know as evil (and widespread) in pagan cultures. Indeed, the contrast between the beauty of Jaguar Paw’s family life and the life of the city is so stark that one is left with nothing but hope that the city is torn down. The popular myth of wonderful peaceful natives being conquered by bloodthirsty conquistadors gets its unspoken but unmistakable condemnation in Apocalytpo.

    And it is at this nexus in the plot that I’m putting on my papist glasses to find out what Apocalypto is about. As those who have seen the movie know, it is the arrival of the conquistadors that provides the ending twist that saves Jaguar Paw (after all his valiant efforts).

    The movie constantly lets the viewer know that something is deeply wrong at the core of Mayan society – the crops are dying, there is a mysterious “sickness” beginning to claim lives, and the ruling cult of priests and kings is ravaging the peaceful boarding villages in search of sacrificial victims. This is a society, in the movie’s own quotation from Will Durant, that has “destroyed itself from within” long before it has been “destroyed from without.” Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.

    What causes the Mayan empire to get more and more rotten? Two things: the false notion of the gods that demands innocent blood, and the false notion of man that allows them to be killed to appease the gods. To be powerful, in the minds of the Mayans, is to kill those weaker than them. The Mayan warriors, wishing to be powerful, intentionally image their own gods as they slay, rape and humiliate the weaker villagers. The foil to their bloodlust is the honorable death of Jaguar Paw’s father. Amid all the screams and cries of his fellow villagers and in front of his very son, the father dies with the simple words “do not be afraid.” He can say this because he has a conception of the afterlife that calls for an upright life in this world. He’s a noble savage. And they don’t come much nobler.

    Now, what of the most dramatic scene in the movie when Jaguar Paw is at the top of the Mayan ziggurat and his life is miraculously spared by the eclipse? Here I admit there is an obvious parallel to Mel’s Passion of the Christ, with an innocent man on a hilltop about to be sacrificed unjustly. So what can we say about it?

    I could well have missed what the movie means at this stage, but here’s a try: As we know, Jaguar Paw’s death (unlike Christ’s) cannot be efficacious – his death will do nothing for his family who needs him. Before Christ has shown man the way there is no way to follow, and so the divine intervention at the top of this mountain is not to accept the sacrifice but to definitively, cosmically say no to that type of human sacrifice – God eclipses the Sun because He will only accept the Son in sacrifice. All other burnt offerings do not please Him.

    I think this interpretation might actually work even better than I’ve just put it. Christ’s death was the first with power in it. Christ, in dying, killed death, as the Church fathers liked to say. But before Christ, the God of life intervenes in Jaguar Paw’s life to prevent his death and allow him to attend to his greatest duty – to safeguard his family. To be sure, Jaguar Paw will suffer whips, arrows, and everything else outrageous fortune can have in store for someone. To speak in the imagery of the movie: he is born from water at the base of the waterfall, and from earth in the quicksand pit. In each of these events God is continually giving him his life back. The God of life, while death still has its sting, keeps Jaguar Paw alive past all probability and beyond all likelihood.

    What is Jaguar Paw’s reaction? In his defining moment, he turns and faces his captors and recites the same words as his father has taught him about his “father and his own father hunting in this forest” and “his son and grandson after him doing so as well.” He expresses, in the most poignant terms, an intuitive apprehension that - despite the incredible death and destruction he has witnessed, despite the pain and suffering, exploitation and debasement all around him (which we might think would shatter his hold on hope) - life is in fact the greater reality than death. The works of the wicked come to nothing. And the survival of the good man is not due to the good man's works.

    This realization of Jaguar Paw's is why when the conquistadors arrive (complete with robed monk holding the cross aloft), he and his family retreat back into the forest. Their retreat does not so much mean that they are going to lack the positive possibility of encountering the gospel, but rather that they will be spared the judgement of destruction that history tells us the conquistadors visited upon the disintegrating Mayan culture. Jaguar’s family doesn’t need to be destroyed, though they do still need to be saved.

    I’m a couple hundred words past the self-imposed limit I set for myself before sitting down to write this review, so I’ll cease my comments with one more point: The violence in Apocalypto is nothing more than what many Mayans, as well as countless people in human history, have witnessed or underwent. And I believe that the life-affirming message present in Apocalypto would be impoverished and weak if it didn’t have the challenging task of overcomeing the full reality of the evil that we see displayed by the Mayan empire and its minions.

    Hopefully this review provided a couple themes with which the movie can be watched (or watched again) more profitably. Or then again, maybe it’s just a chase movie.

    (P.S. One thing I do have to look at again is the prediction of the child afflicted with the sickness, I'm sure I'll probably be seeing the movie again within the next couple weeks and I'll be watching for it.)

    Thursday, December 07, 2006

    Rather stretched this week...

    Apologies for the lack of blog updates this week - finals are always a ridiculously overcommitted time of year for me. I'm going to force myself, however, to take a couple hours off from exam preparation and paper writing to go see Mel Gibson's Apocalypto sometime tomorrow afternoon. I'll post my thoughts on it once I've seen it...

    "After the Visit to Turkey, the Travel Diary of His Holiness"

    Sandro Magister:

    After the Visit to Turkey, the Travel Diary of His Holiness

    Here is how Benedict XVI recounted to the faithful his four days in Ankara, Ephesus, and Istanbul

    LifeSiteNews headlines, Dec. 7th

    LifeSiteNews:

    Wednesday, December 06, 2006

    Fetal-pain disclosure bill fails by slim margin

    From the NYT:

    WASHINGTON, Dec. 6 — The House on Wednesday rejected an anti-abortion measure offered by Republicans as Congressional leaders struggled to bring the 109th Congress to a close.

    On a 250-to-162 vote, backers of the measure fell short of the two-thirds majority necessary to pass the bill, which would require medical personnel to inform women that a fetus could experience pain and to offer anesthesia for the fetus. The supermajority vote was required under special rules used to consider the bill. [Full article.]

    A slightly different take on the Advent calender

    Your PPOTD, Wednesday Dec. 6th

    The Pope's invisible handpuppet act, while a change of pace,
    failed to amuse his Wednesday audience.
    [photo: (AP Photo/Plinio Lepri)]

    Vatican archaeologists unearth St. Paul's tomb

    An amazing story:

    Vatican archaeologists have unearthed a sarcophagus believed to contain the remains of the Apostle Paul that had been buried beneath Rome's second largest basilica.

    The sarcophagus, which dates back to at least A.D. 390, has been the subject of an extended excavation that began in 2002 and was completed last month, the project's head said this week.

    [snip]

    Filippi said that the decision to make the sarcophagus visible again was made after many pilgrims who came to Rome during the Catholic Church's 2000 Jubilee year expressed disappointment at finding that the saint's tomb could not be visited or touched.

    The findings of the project will be officially presented during a news conference at the Vatican on Monday. [Full story.]

    I know a Pauline teacher at school who I'm sure will be ecstatic about this news.

    Hear AmP interviewed on the Catholic Channel today at 5PM EST!

    Today at 5PM EST I will be interviewed by Lino Rulli ("The Catholic Guy") of the Catholic Channel on Sirius internet radio.

    You can get a free trial to Sirius internet radio on their website.

    I'm not sure if they'll be allowing phone-in questions or if it'll just be a straight-up interview. Either way y'all are more than welcome to listen in!

    Update: It doesn't appear that you can listen to the Catholic Channel online via the free subscription service. If anyone knows a way please let me know...

    Update 2: For anyone who heard it, feel free to let me know what you thought about the interview, either below in the comments box or via email. Thanks!

    Monday, December 04, 2006

    Leonardo DeFilippis in S.E. Michigan the next few days...

    From Diane:

    If you get this in time, you may want to give Leonardo DeFilippis a little advertisement. St. Luke Productions - the makers of Therese and the recent St. John of the Cross movie seen on EWTN, often depend on grass root efforts to get the word out about their stage performances.

    He was at Grotto today and it was absolutely awesome. I'm not a big stageplay person and he really had me hooked. If you get this in time to see one of his performances locally, do it. You won't regret it.

    Here is my post: http://te-deum.blogspot.com/2006/12/photo-post-leonardo-defilippis-at.html

    I was able to attend Leonardo DeFilippis' one-man production of Francis of Assisi many, many years ago but still remember the experience vividly. Do go see him if you are able!

    LifeSiteNews headlines, Dec. 4th

    LifeSiteNews:

    Sunday, December 03, 2006

    Blogging will be lighter this week ...

    Finals fast approach. Prayers are always appreciated. Thanks!

    Your PPOTD, Sunday Dec. 3rd!

    Having proven his diplomatic skills in Turkey, it was time for
    Pope Benedict to meet the emissary from planet Vorticon 6.

    Looking with the right lens (at the Pope's visit to a Mosque)

    I've talked before about proudly looking at life through papist glasses, and it seems that Fr. Martin Fox has recently done the same (again, entirely appropriately) for the Pope's recent visit to the Blue Mosque in Turkey:

    "Seems to me this is an event that acquires most of its meaning from the lens through which one views it.

    If you view it through a fearful/defensive/paranoid lens (surf the blogosphere, you’ll find plenty of examples), it is capitulation, "political correctness," fake nicey-nice, syncretism, etc.

    If you view it through the lens of confident trust in the Holy Spirit and in the ability of our very able pope, it is considered, deliberate, courteous, astute.

    If you view it through the lens of ultimate triumph, it is victorious, prophetic.

    If the latter is less clear, consider—wasn’t there a question some time back about an Imam visiting a Christian cathedral, and how awful that was? Well, which is it: is a leader of a religion coming to the turf of another a sign of strength or of weakness?

    Seems to me the very fact a priest entered a mosque represents an invasion of Christian sanctity-— Christ himself has entered, in persona Christi capitis; in fact, not merely a priest, but a bishop, a successor to the Apostles; and not any successor, but Peter’s successor!

    Now, some won’t be happy unless he came tossing holy water around and making the sign of the cross. But I would say the pope’s very person-- as bishop and as successor to Peter-- is vastly more significant in bringing Christ into that mosque.

    Of course the Muslim triumphalists think they’ve won something, but they believe in Islamic eschatology, whereas we know the truth. Why should we see things through their lens?"

    Dom adds his comments next.

    I think it's important to note that Pope Benedict was touching his pectoral cross throughout the prayer. And I agree with Dom that we should place our trust in the wisdom of the Pope's decision. Who knows how many Muslims will now be more favorably disposed towards him, as well as Christianity. And that's the image to be focusing on right now.

    Saturday, December 02, 2006

    Some *really* impressive vestments

    I can't remember having seen him wear these before...




    [photo: REUTERS/Giampiero Sposito]

    Video: Pope Benedict visits the Blue Mosque

    Watch for yourself:



    If you want to skip ahead, go to 6:50.

    He's got his thumb on that cross...

    Your PPOTD, Saturday Dec. 2nd

    Sure the release was clean, sure the trajectory was right, sure he had compensated for the wind ... but would he make it through the hoop?
    [photo credit: AP Photo/Pier Paolo Cito)]

    Saturday potpourri of links

    I'm too rushed to give these topics the time they deserve at the moment, but here are the links for the industrious:

    The phenomenal cathedral of Wheeling, West Virginia - Closed Cafeteria

    "The USCCB announces that, beginning Sunday, the readings of Daily Mass will be available in podcast form" - Whispers

    Commentary: "The Pope in the Blue Mosque" - BettNet

    AFQB: Should lay people give blessings at Communion? - WDTPRS

    Pope Benedict, master of words, shows mastery of gestures in Turkey - CWNews

    Turks surprised by Pope, says bishops’ spokesman - CNA

    Pope says Church in Turkey asks to live with the freedom to reveal Christ - CNA

    Milingo to ordain more married men - BettNet

    ... feel free to add your own news links in the comment box (and, needless to say, please exercise good sense).

    Friday, December 01, 2006

    AmP follows the Pope to Turkey: Day Four

    Friday - a great deal of news links and analysis today (especially of Pope Benedict's visit to the Blue Mosque).

    Please also visit The Benedict Blog and Open Book for the latest news updates.

    Today's schedule of events:

  • 1st: Holy Mass at the Cathedral of the Holy Spirit [Homily of the Holy Father]
  • 2nd: Farewell ceremony at the Airport of Istanbul
  • 13:15 (local time): Departure from the Airport of Istanbul to Rome
  • 14.45 (local time): Arrival at the Airport of Ciampino (Rome)
  • Speeches of Pope Benedict:

    Analysis:

    News stories, set #1:

    The essential links:

    [photo caption: Pope Benedict XVI release a dove before celebrating a mass at the Holy Spirit Cathedral in Istanbul. Benedict has wrapped up a momentous visit to Turkey by celebrating mass at an Istanbul cathedral and making a final appeal for freedom of religion. (AFP/Pool/Patrick Hertzog)]