Showing posts with label 40 Hours Devotion; traditional Solemn Masses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 40 Hours Devotion; traditional Solemn Masses. Show all posts

Thursday, June 21, 2018

The Sin of Lust


LUST -- THE SLAVERY OF SIN

“The wages of sin is death.” — Rom. 6: 23.



From the beginning of the world, sin and Satan have made wretched, helpless slaves of innumerable members of the human family. Bound in the chains of guilt, unable to move to work out their glorious destiny, blind and deaf to the true beauties of God’s world and serving him whose servants they have made themselves in a hundred degrading offices; bound perhaps in the bonds of evil habits; bound sometimes forever in the dungeon of hell, where all hope is left behind, where no order but eternal horror abides.
          If this be true, as it undoubtedly is, of all sin, it is especially true of sins of lust. No sin among the long category which are the links that chain men to death, binds them more firmly, is more difficult to cast off by repentance. None becomes more strong as it is worn longer, none sinks the wretched body and soul more deep in degradation, none is a more probable cause of eternal death. No sin in the long record of man’s crimes has left such a history of shame and sorrow, of degradation and disgrace, of rack and ruin, of death and probable damnation, as the sins of the flesh.
Wars have been waged, nations been wiped from the face of the earth, schisms have arisen and heresies taken their origin in it. Treachery in its most revolting forms, even pestilence and other natural calamities have been the consequences of the indulgence of this passion. Commentators hold, and Holy Writ seems to imply, that it was through the lustful loves of the sons of God with the daughters of men that “all flesh had corrupted its wayin the time of Noah. Wherefore God said: “I will destroy man whom I have created from the face of the earth, from man even to the beasts, from the creeping thing even to the fowls of the air; for it repenteth me that I have made them.” The fearful punishment of the deluge was therefore a mark of God’s resentment against lust. (Gen. 6.)
The lascivious conduct common among the men of Sodom and Gomorrha was the cause of the visitation of God’s wrath in a rain of fire and brimstone, which has left the very sites of those cities undistinguishable even to the searching eye of modern research. (Gen. 19.) The unnatural lust of the men of Gabaa, of the tribe of Benjamin, caused a war in which all the men of that tribe were slain. (Judg. 20). The sons of Juda were struck dead (Gen. 9), Joseph was cast into prison (Gen. 39), Samson was betrayed to his enemies (Judg. 16), Ammon, the son of David, was killed (2 Kings 13), and all in consequence of unbridled lust. David himself became guilty of adultery and murder and brought pestilence upon a whole people, and all through an immodest glance. Solomon departed from the service of God and prepared the way for the division of his people, when he loved strange women. (3 Kings II.)
Profane history teaches the same lesson. The sinful desires of Paris brought about the Trojan war and the destruction of proud Ilium.” Those of Cleopatra set the Roman world of her day in arms. The mistresses of French kings kept Europe in a deluge of blood for many years. It is a familiar saying that heresy and schism usually end like comedies in a marriage, and it might be added in the marriage of someone, prince or priest, who had no right to marry. Instances in point are well known. Woes incalculable have afflicted the human family either in the natural course of events or as the avenging act of the Almighty upon this vice.
The injury it works to individuals is not less fearfully striking; injury to body and soul, to intellect and will, and worst of all, eternal death. The unclean spirit when, through the habit of this sin, he is permitted to return again and again to the soul, brings with him many other spirits more wicked than himself and, entering in, they dwell there. They take possession, forcible and complete, of the temple of the Holy Ghost which has been given up to them by its unfaithful guardian. The poets have imagined, and ruder ages may perhaps have seen, torture by binding the body of the culprit to a decomposing corpse. No torment could be more horrible. And no figure could be more apt to represent the soul which is chained for life and for eternity to a body consumed with the fires of lust, corrupt with the rottenness of this most degrading of vices.
The body does not escape punishment even in this world. Physicians know, hospitals could testify, our very newspapers bear daily witness to the misery, the desperation of the victims of its horrors. So revolting are the details of this retribution, that while the contemplation of this living death may be salutary even as the meditations of holy Job as he sat upon his dunghill and thought upon death, to speak of them at length would be unbecoming. Let us not, however, neglect to make for ourselves a covenant as holy Job did, not to yield the slightest way to these temptations. The mind also is enchained and the glorious power of thought, by which man is distinguished from the beasts, becomes enfeebled, bestialized. Bound to a body of death it can scarcely be said to reason, but is guided like the beasts by the lowest instincts. It becomes blinded to the teachings of faith. The holy Fathers, accurate observers of all things in the spiritual life of man, unanimously attest that loss of faith is the usual result of this vice.
The intellect becomes incapable of fulfilling any of its duties properly. Its products (witness some modern erotic writers) are more like the wailings of the unclean spirit within them than the coherent utterances of a self-respecting, thinking being. At last it sinks altogether under the weight of its servitude, madness ensues, such madness as might not unreasonably be supposed to be obsession by an impure spirit, and the intellect is, to all intents, dead. The will, too, becomes enfeebled. It loses all relish for what is good. Modesty, purity, justice, charity, hope, faith itself, are crushed out by the python folds of the master of the sinner. The will becomes no longer able to resist temptation. It is allured instead of repelled, as it should be, by all that is corrupt, sinful, and death-dealing. The eyes of the old serpent fascinate it, and in becoming his willing slave it embraces its death. And then comes the parting of soul and body.
When the body is debilitated and the powers of the soul reduced to their lowest, dissolution cannot be far off. And oh, the terrors of the death-bed—if, indeed, he be allowed a bed to die upon–of the victim of lust. Of all the vices, there is none which produces more or greater varieties of despair. From the hard, dull unconsciousness of danger, which seems to court rather than fear the eternal abode with sin, suffering and Satan, to the raving terror of him who knows and dreads his fate, without hope of escaping it. And after death—judgment; and then eternal death, the wages of sin. Death unending, death to God, death to all happiness, death living like the vulture of Prometheus upon the sinner's misery. A dead soul chained to a body of death, confined with all the horrors of entombment with hundreds of other corpses.


O, may He Who rose from the dead deliver us from the body of this death. May Mary Immaculate, and John the Pure, may all the holy choir of virgins, and that bright band who follow the Lamb wheresoever He goeth, intercede for us and keep us from this death. May they obtain for us from the Most Pure the strength to resist temptation; to suffer, as the holy martyrs Agatha, Agnes, and Lucy suffered, rather than yield to the tempter; to resist by violence, even to blood, as many holy monks and hermits resisted, rather than yield even in thought. May Magdalen, Augustine, and all the holy penitents who have felt the sting of the flesh, and, having yielded, gained grace to rise against their tyrant, and casting off their bonds, found safety in the wounds of Christ, obtain of Him for those who have unhappily fallen into this slavery the rending of the chains of the captive, and restoration from that service whose wage is death to the liberty of the children of God.

~~The American Ecclesiastical Review, Vol. 30(3), 1904.

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Feast of Corpus Christi - Thursday, May 31 at 6PM


 


THURSDAY, MAY 31 – SOLEMN MASS FOR THE FEAST OF CORPUS CHRISTI:

As is tradition, on Thursday, May 31, 2018, at 6PM, there will be a Solemn Mass to celebrate the Feast of Corpus Christi - on its traditional day.

Immediately following the Mass, there will be an outdoor Procession (with triple Benediction) around midtown Manhattan. This year will be Holy Innocents’ 9th annual outdoor Blessed Sacrament Procession for this traditional celebration.

Newly ordained Fr. Leo Joseph Camurati will be the Celebrant of this Solemn Mass. At the end of the Mass and Procession, Fr. Leo Joseph will confer his priestly blessing.

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Rorate Masses at Holy Innocents (NYC) -- Advent 2016

 

CHURCH OF THE HOLY INNOCENTS

 

REPORT: RORATE MASSES AT HOLY INNOCENTS

 

Holy Innocents scheduled 10 traditional Rorate Masses (9 at 6AM and 1 at 5AM) this Advent (2016). It may seem a bit “ambitious” because, you might ask, who in his/her right mind will want to get up at around 4AM in the morning and travel some distance to attend the 6AM Rorate Mass, right?

 

Well, many of the faithful parishioners at Holy Innocents (and some of their friends) have made the sacrifice to attend several (some have attended all) of the Rorate Masses – an excellent way to prepare during Advent!

 

The attendance for the Rorate Masses has been as follows:

Monday, Nov. 28 at 6AM – Sung Mass; 30 people.

Tuesday, Nov. 29 at 6AM – Sung Mass; 35 people.

Thursday, Dec. 1 at 6AM – Sung Mass; 45 people.

Saturday, Dec. 3 at 5AM – Sung Mass; 70+ people.

Monday, Dec. 5 at 6AM – Sung Mass; 34 people.

Tuesday, Dec. 6 at 6AM – Low Mass; 31 people.

Wednesday, Dec. 7 at 6AM – Sung Mass; 39 people.

 

So far, we have had seven Rorate Masses and still have three more to go. For those considering attending any of the three (3) remaining Rorate Masses, below are the remaining days on which the Rorate Mass will be offered:

 

·         Saturday, December 10 at 6AM

·         Tuesday, December 13 at 6AM

·         Thursday, December 15 at 6AM

 

Below, please see some of the beautiful photos taken during several of these beautiful and inspiring Rorate Masses.

 
Rorate Mass -- Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2016 -- Photos taken by Ms. Diana Yuan





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Rorate Mass - Saturday, Dec. 3, 2016 -- Photos taken by Mr. Arrys Ortañez

















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Rorate Mass, Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2016 - Photos taken by Ms. Diana Yuan






Friday, October 14, 2016

Traditional Pontifical Masses at Holy Innocents (NYC) - Bishop Athanasius Schneider


Bishop Athanasius Schneider in NYC
 
The Most Reverend Athanasius Schneider, Auxiliary Bishop of Maria Santissima in Astana, Kazakhstan & Titular Bishop of Celerina, will come to the Church of the Holy Innocents to celebrate:
 
§  A Pontifical Solemn Mass at the Faldstool on Monday, October 24 at 6pm.
 
 
§  A Pontifical Low Mass on Tuesday, October 25 at 6PM. After this Holy Mass, His Excellency will give a Conference on Christ the King & the Social Kingship of Christ.
 
Everyone is encouraged to attend these wonderful Masses and events.
 
 


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Bishop Schneider is an absolute defender of the traditional and immemorial practice of receiving Holy Communion kneeling and on the tongue – so much so that his book Dominus est deals exclusively with this theme. Dominus est was published in Italian, and has since been translated into English, German, Estonian, Lithuanian, Polish, Hungarian and Chinese. (“The awareness of the greatness of the Eucharistic mystery is demonstrated in a special way by the manner in which the Body of the Lord is distributed and received.”).
 

Bishop Schneider has also been an unconditional defender of the permanent and infallible teaching of the Church on the definition and composition of the family. Moreover, he has called for a clarification on Amoris Laetitia in order to avoid confusion and abusive interpretations that would lead to “a permanent, deliberate and free violation of God’s sixth Commandment and of the sacredness and indissolubility of a true and valid marriage.”

Sunday, May 29, 2016

Photos of Corpus Christi 2016 at the Church of the Holy Innocents (NYC)

Corpus    Christi
Thursday after Trinity Sunday

“If any one saith, that, in the holy sacrament of the Eucharist, Christ, the only-begotten Son of God, is not to be adored with the worship, even external of latria; and is, consequently, neither to be venerated with a special festive solemnity, nor to be solemnly borne about in processions, according to the laudable and universal rite and custom of holy church; or, is not to be proposed publicly to the people to be adored, and that the adorers thereof are idolaters; let him be anathema (Canon VI of the Council of Trent Concerning the Most Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist).

Three hundred and forty (340) faithful attended the 6PM Solemn Mass and Procession at Holy Innocents for the 8th annual celebration of the Feast of Corpus Christi this past Thursday, May 26, 2016. Our Pastor Fr. Leonard Villa was the Celebrant of the Mass, Fr. Tomasz Szczepanczyk was the Deacon, Fr. Robert Rodriguez was the Subdeacon, and 17 servers devotedly served Holy Mass.
          As was the case in previous years, Midtown Manhattan, not used to such magnificent Processions and demonstrations of such active and vibrant faith, seemed to stop and wonder what was going on. As the Procession went on, the parishioners jubilantly sang beautiful traditional hymns in Latin, English, Spanish, and Italian. Many passers-by stopped to see the Procession go by and to take pictures of such a wonderful Catholic sight; some even joined the Procession!
                Members of the Legion of Mary and the Catholic Daughters took part in the Procession. One of the members of the Regina Coeli Council of the Knights of Columbus carried the banner of the Blessed Sacrament. Two of our very young parishioners (a boy and a girl) threw rose petals from the moment the Procession left the church until it got back to the church. Four men from The Patrolman’s Fraternity of St. Michael carried the Canopy over the Blessed Sacrament as the Procession marched on around Midtown ManhattanThe choir sang the Messa a tre voci virili by Giuseppe Saverio Mercadante in such an unforgettable way that many of the parishioners expressed that they felt as if “they had died and gone to heaven!”
After the Mass and the Procession, the parishioners enjoyed one of those memorable and, by now, traditional festive receptions  that normally take place after such solemn Feasts at Holy Innocents. Thanks to the generosity of those who helped, it was really a very pleasant reception with the omnipresent Carthusian bottle of green Chartreuse.
Thanks to Mr. Michael Delong, who took around 600 photos of the entire evening, below you will find some of the selected photos.

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Photos taken by Mr. Michael Delong