“Breaking the Spell”
April 22, 2022
ANTONY C. BLACK at Unz Review has written a review of Nick Kollerstom’s book: The Holocaust: Myth and Reality.
Black’s review is a good summary of the book and the issues involved.
April 22, 2022
ANTONY C. BLACK at Unz Review has written a review of Nick Kollerstom’s book: The Holocaust: Myth and Reality.
Black’s review is a good summary of the book and the issues involved.
April 21, 2022
I WAS listening to Easter music on the radio while making dinner on Sunday when the programming was interrupted for a sermon by an Anglican minister. Her name was Judy or Elizabeth, I can’t recall which.
There was nothing particularly offensive about the text of her Easter message, but I wondered who was making Easter dinner at Canon Judy’s house.
Jesus chose only men for His Apostles for a reason. St. Paul enjoined against women preaching for a reason. We know that their momentous decisions had to do with hierarchy and social order. We know women have other things to do.
There was a reason women were the first to learn of the Resurrection. They were favored by God — men have said — because of their ardent love. The Holy Women went to the tomb on Easter morning to dress the body of Jesus, a perfectly feminine way of expressing the depth of their devotion.
It was for women to repair the damage done by Eve when they found the tomb empty.
Women are not needed at pulpits or on altars. The fact that they dominate churches is one sign that we live in a wilderness without true altars.
Mary Magdalene retired to a cave for the rest of her life after the events of the Resurrection.
There, she contemplated the great mysteries she had witnessed. In the stillness, her love only grew.
April 20, 2022
FROM “Relentless Truth” on Telegram:
– Where the flu went in 2020
– Why the global death count didn’t change in 2020
– Why Covid didn’t wipe out the homeless population Read More »
April 20, 2022
“FOR regular people, good architecture is about beauty. For contemporary architects, good architecture is an intellectual game.”
April 20, 2022
“SIMON PETER, when he heard that it was the Lord, girt his coat about him (for he was naked) and cast himself into the sea. But the other disciples came in the ship (for they were not far from the land, but as it were two hundred cubits) dragging the net with fishes.”
Paintings of the scene on the shores of the Lake of Galilee.
The blog Ad Imaginem Dei features artworks depicting this scene:
The setting on the shore of the great lake, the misty morning light, the catch, the recognition of the Risen One, the sharing of bread and fish, recalling both the miraculous feeding of the multitudes and the Last Supper combine to create the mysterious reality of this apparition. Ghosts may appear, but they don’t cook and share meals with their friends.
It is surprising, then, that these verses have not inspired more works of art. One of the aspects of this passage, which may have caused difficulties for artists and their advisors is how to distinguish this scene from other, very similar, scenes, i.e., the miraculous draught of fish associated with the calling of the apostles or the scene in which Peter leaves the boat and attempts to walk on water. The differences between these scenes and that of the post-Resurrection encounter described by John are sometimes subtle.
Among the elements that hint at the post-Resurrection scene are: Jesus stands on the shore, not on the water, the sea is calm and not stormy (although this is not always so), Peter jumps into the water when the boat is near the shore, there are often elements of the meal Jesus invites the apostles to [share] somewhere in the picture.
April 18, 2022
My mother took this color slide on Easter Sunday in 1965. It shows our good friend Lynn and her children Lori and Mark. I wrote about them four years ago (“Remembering a ‘60s Housewife”, The Thinking Housewife, Sept. 4, 2018).
They are standing here in the back yard of the four-family flat on Dewey Avenue where all of us lived that year, in a residential area of south St. Louis. We met them in 1963 and remained friends for ten years.
It was along the walkway in this picture (lower right) that I walked at the noon hour on schooldays in 1962-64, through the yard, up on the porch, and then into our kitchen where my grandfather had a bowl of hot chicken noodle soup ready for me.
It was in this back yard in July 1965 that we celebrated his 86th birthday.
It was in this back yard that my father and I set up our small telescope and taught ourselves to identify stars, planets, constellations, and artificial satellites. It was here that we first viewed Jupiter and its four large moons, the ringed planet Saturn, the planet Venus, and stars like Altair, Deneb, Arcturus, Capella, and Vega. On winter nights, we found Orion’s belt and followed it to Sirius, a scintillating beacon in the black sky. In the hour before dawn and in my winter coat, I ventured outside to see planets in the eastern sky as the lovely melody of Bert Kaempfert’s “Red Roses for a Blue Lady” played in my head. How well I remember the moon rising above the row of small houses on 37th Street and the challenge of viewing the brilliant red star Antares, low in the southern sky, through layers of air on summer nights.
It was here in this yard and this house that I discovered the joy of playing with uncorrupted children who were just discovering the ways and wonders of life. Although I was terribly stupid, evidently I did something right, because Lori, at age 1½, trusted me from the day we met, as did Mark a year later. Of course prolonged periods of peace between them alternated with occasional expressions of sibling rivalry. And what a temper Lori had. Read More »
April 17, 2022
“AND ON THE first day of the week, very early in the morning, they came to the sepulchre, bringing the spices which they had prepared. And they found the stone rolled back from the sepulchre. And going in, they found not the body of the Lord Jesus. And it came to pass, as they were astonished in their mind at this, behold, two men stood by them, in shining apparel. And as they were afraid, and bowed down their countenance towards the ground, they said unto them: Why seek you the living with the dead?
“He is not here, but is risen. Remember how he spoke unto you, when he was in Galilee, Saying: The Son of man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and the third day rise again. And they remembered his words. And going back from the sepulchre, they told all these things to the eleven, and to all the rest. And it was Mary Magdalen, and Joanna, and Mary of James, and the other women that were with them, who told these things to the apostles.
“And these words seemed to them as idle tales; and they did not believe them.” [Luke 23:1-11]
April 16, 2022
“FIRM hope in God. No matter what the trouble in which a man finds himself, he should always put trust in God’s help and rely on it. There is no trouble greater than to find oneself in hell. If then Christ freed those who were in hell, any man who is a friend of God cannot but have great confidence that he too shall be freed from what-ever anxiety holds him. Wisdom forsook not the just when he was sold, but delivered him from sinners; she went down with him into the pit and in bands she left him not (Wis. x. 13-14). And since to His servants God gives a special assistance, he who serves God should have still greater confidence. He that feareth the Lord shall tremble at nothing and shall not be afraid: for he is his hope (Ecclus. xxxiv. 16).
“We ought to conceive fear and to rid our selves of presumption. For although Christ suffered for sinners, and went down into hell to set them free, he did not set all sinners free, but only those who were free of mortal sin. Those who had died in mortal sin He left there. Wherefore for those who have gone down to hell in mortal sin there remains no hope of pardon. They shall be in hell as the holy Fathers are in heaven, that is for ever.
— St. Thomas Aquinas, Meditations for Lent
April 15, 2022
NOWHERE in painting has the truth of the scourging of Jesus been accurately depicted.
Caravaggio’s painting (above) is a good example. It is a highly romantic version of what occurred. The scourging was much more brutal than typically shown. I am not a big fan of Mel Gibson’s movie The Passion of the Christ, but I think it provides a fairly accurate depiction of the beating of Christ at the pillar by the Roman soldiers.
Pierre Barbet, M.D. in his book A Doctor at Calvary: The Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ as Described by a Surgeon, explains that a normal person undergoing a similar scourging would have died from blood loss before reaching Calvary. In addition, Jesus was so violently beaten before the scourging that his nose was broken and his body was cut and severely bruised. It was only by a miracle that Jesus’s life was preserved until He was crucified. Here is some of what Barbet, who believed in the authenticity of the Shroud of Turin and explains why, wrote on the scourging alone:
EVERYONE punished with death as a preliminary was always scourged, whether he was to die on the cross or otherwise; by beheading (Livy) or at the stake (Josephus). Only those were exempt, according to Mommsen, who were senators, soldiers or women who had the freedom of the city.
However, in the case of beheading, the scourging was done with the rods from the bundles of the lictor: “Nudatos virgis csedunt secutique percutiunt—They strip them and beat them with rods and strike them with an axe.” (Livy.)
As we have seen, scourging was an ancient custom in Rome. It was also inflicted under Alexander and Antiochus Epiphanes and at Carthage. One keeps on coming across the formulae “proaikistheis anestaurothe—verberatos crucibus adfixit—crucifying after scourging.”
This scourging, which as we have seen was formerly inflicted on the cross, now took place in the area of the tribunal. The condemned man was bound to a column (probably with his hands above his head). As Plautus wrote: Abducite hunc intro atque astringite ad columnam fortiter—Take him inside and bind him firmly to the column” (Bacchides). Read More »
April 14, 2022
PANGE LINGUA GLORIOSI CORPORIS MYSTERIUM
SING, my tongue, the Saviour’s glory,
Of His Flesh, the mystery sing;
Of the Blood, all price exceeding,
Shed by our Immortal King,
Destined, for the world’s redemption,
From a noble Womb to spring. Read More »
April 13, 2022
THE manufactured flu terror is over for the time being, and the war propaganda is not as fresh, so there is more time to work on mass shootings.
Expect much more of this.
I’m not rushing to conclusions, just suspending belief.
In staged shootings, one chaotic scene with lots of screaming is always played over and over. Realistic cell phone footage — there should be dozens of quick clips — from real people is missing despite the fact that cell phones are everywhere and at the same time there is always someone there to film a prolonged scene calmly. Realistic carnage is always missing. Instead, you get candy-colored wounds that your local, amateur theater group could produce.
It’s all so tedious. So predictable. So incredibly boring, like made-for-TV thrillers.
And conservatives who worship their government never make a peep against it. They’re too exalted to be lied to in this blatant way.
April 12, 2022
“ST. Luke’s Greek text is more exact: “Egeneto o hidros autou ôsei thromboi aimatos katabainontes epi tèn gèn” Now, thrombos means a clot. These clots have always presented translators with difficulty; they quite rightly say that clots cannot come out of a body. And thus they have set out to do violence to the words, because they do not understand the physiological phenomenon. Some ancient manuscripts have gone further still and have suppressed the passage, as if it was unworthy of the Divinity of Jesus. Father Lagrange, who was a most attractive exegetist, but not a doctor, translates it ‘like globules of blood, running right down to the ground.’
“Now, this phenomenon, which is known in the profession as hematidrosis, consists of an intense vasodilatation, of the subcutaneous capillaries. They become extremely distended, and burst when they come into contact with the millions of sweat glands which are distributed over the whole skin. The blood mingles with the sweat, and it is this mixture which pearls over the whole surface of the body. But, once they reach the outside, the blood coagulates and the clots which are thus formed on the skin fail down on to the ground, being borne down by the profuse sweat. St. Luke thus proved himself to be a good doctor and a good observer when he wrote: ‘And His sweat became as clots of blood, trickling down upon the ground.’
— Pierre Barbet, M.D., A Doctor at Calvary (Image Books, 1963); p. 88
April 10, 2022
IT’S hard for us to imagine today just how powerful, emotionally charged, solemn, festive and dramatic the observance of Palm Sunday, the commemoration of Jesus Christ’s triumphal entrance into Jerusalem, was in the Middle Ages.
In his great work, The Stripping of the Altars: Traditional Religion in England, 1400-1580, Eamon Duffy describes Palm Sunday in pre-Reformation England:
The Palm Sunday procession was by the end of the Middle Ages the most elaborate and eloquent of the processions of the Sarum rite, with the possible exception of the Sarum rite. The parish Mass began as usual with the blessing and sprinkling of holy water. Immediately that had been done the story of Christ’s entry into Jerusalem and greeting by the crowds with palms was read from St. John’s Gospel. The priest then blessed flowers and green branches, which were called palms but were usually yew, box, or willow. The palms were distributed and clergy and people processed out of the church, led by a painted wooden cross without a figure. The procession moved to a large cross erected in the churchyard, normally on the north side of the building at its east end, the choir singing a series of anthems recapitulating the biblical story of Palm Sunday (Pl. 3). Read More »