2024-02-03T19:07:17-04:00

Why “Groundhog Day” Is Secretly a Catholic Film Okay, I’m not really going to do one of those. But I do want to talk about Candlemas, which is the feast that falls on yesterday’s date (and whose themes could, maybe, have influenced the observance of Groundhog Day via the German Catholic immigrants who more or less brought it here1). I hesitate to say that Candlemas is an important feast—only one of the Gospels, Luke, so much as mentions it, and... Read more

2024-01-29T06:21:08-04:00

The Gospel for the What Now? This post continues the topic from my last, i.e. the Gospel of Mark, and more particularly the bits of it read on most Sundays of January 2024. Due to other assignments I am a bit behind—I’m hoping to catch up by getting this post and my next published before the end of the month. The 21st was the Sunday of the Word of God. This is quite a new observance. Pope Francis established it... Read more

2024-01-26T02:27:51-04:00

The First Gospel A statue of St. Mark the Evangelist, surmounting his basilica in Venice. (Used under a Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike 4.0 license—source.) We’re now in the more ordinary part of the Lectionary; in fact, this season is literally called Ordinary Time in most churches. Its Sunday readings are arranged on a three-year cycle. That cycle is known as Years A, B, and C: each year in turn draws chiefly from one of the Synoptics, Matthew, Mark, and Luke... Read more

2024-01-14T05:27:57-04:00

When Were We? This question is relevant to two things: the liturgical date, i.e. the second Sunday after Epiphany; and the Gospel text itself, which picks up from the same sequence as the Johannine readings of Advent. First, some readers may be a little confused that this is the second Sunday after Epiphany (or, in the mainstream Roman rite, the second Sunday in Ordinary Time), given that last Sunday was Epiphany. However, if I’ve understood the rules correctly—which, heh, is... Read more

2024-01-07T18:50:19-04:00

The Pretext I’m once again offering a translation of the epistle instead of the gospel reading, mainly so that I can take this opportunity to complain. A few things bug me about the way liturgical readings are handled in the Roman Rite. Most of them boil down to our normal translation (which I’ve discussed elsewhere). Some of them, it bears saying, are truly silly: for instance, I hate that our lectionary inserts the phrase “brothers and sisters” at the beginning... Read more

2023-12-28T23:48:41-04:00

NOTE: As of 28 December 2023, this post has been lightly edited throughout; contrary to my usual practice, I have not highlighted the edits individually, as I felt the notes would get pretty tedious if I did. I’ve decided to change things up a little, and do the epistle for Christmas Day. It’s from one of my favorite books of the New Testament, namely the letter to the Hebrews. There are some really fascinating aspects of this book that I’ve... Read more

2023-12-17T02:12:20-04:00

John 1.6-8, 19-28 (RSV-CE) There was a man sent1 from God, whose name was John. He came for testimony, to bear witness2 to the light, that all might believe through him. He was not the light, but came to bear witness to the light. … And this is the testimony of John, when the Jews sent priests and Levites from Jerusalem to ask him, “Who are you?” He confessed, he did not deny, but confessed, “I am not the Christ.”3... Read more

2023-12-14T23:20:24-04:00

(Those who read Roman numerals easily may have spotted that the Arabic and Roman numerals in the title are misaligned, and can’t I count? The answer is: yes, but the liturgical year changed on 3 December. See my post on the Feast of St. Andrew for further details.) The Moment of the Rose This coming Sunday will be the Third Sunday of Advent, known as Gaudete, or Rose, Sunday. The name comes from the text of Philippians 4.4, which forms the... Read more

2023-12-08T17:52:21-04:00

(I’m so sorry for this title, it’s absolutely awful and as soon as I thought of it I had to use it, like taking a jump in checkers.) It is indeed Saint Nick’s day today! I don’t have time for a fully fleshed out post, but I did want to pop in and note a few things about the season of Advent and the saints’ days we’re coming up on. I. Immaculate Conception This Friday! The Immaculate Conception—which, for anyone... Read more

2023-11-30T17:15:22-04:00

There’s Something About Andy 2024 is upon us, and I don’t mean five weeks from now—I mean this weekend. The Catholic liturgical year begins on the First Sunday of Advent (which puts it about a month ahead of the civic new year). Christmas commemorates the terrestrial beginning of the life of Christ, and thus of the Church in “embryonic” form; the ritual year accordingly begins with the preparation for this solemnity, which is the season of Advent. Unless you’re in... Read more

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