Saturday, July 27, 2024

The Real Marie-Antoinette

With the recent horrific mockery of the murdered Queen in the city where she died, I thought it important to remind everyone who she really was. From Catholic Exchange:

Catholic historian and writer Elena Maria Vidal sets the record straight on the oft-maligned Catholic Queen of France and martyr of the Revolution. While candidly acknowledging the queen’s faults, Elena’s work paints a portrait of Marie Antoinette in all her complexity.

Drawing from her years of research, Elena discusses:

  • Popular misconceptions about the queen, then and now
  • The origin of the “let them eat cake” rumor
  • What modern TV series and movies get wrong
  • Marie Antoinette’s strong Catholic faith and moral character, and many recorded charitable works
  • The deeply Catholic milieu of the French court and its role in Christendom
  • The truly demonic nature of the French Revolution and its pagan “Cult of Reason”
  • How the queen was able to secretly receive the sacraments before her death
  • Marie Antoinette’s piety and equanimity at the guillotine

(Read more.)


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J.D. Vance’s Road to Catholicism

 From Callista Gingrich:

Newt and I recently attended the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. On July 17, we listened as Ohio Senator J.D. Vance accepted the Republican vice-presidential nomination and said, “My friends, tonight is a night of hope. A celebration of what America once was, and with God’s grace, what it will soon be again.”

During his acceptance speech, as thousands watched in Milwaukee’s Fiserv Forum and millions more from their homes, Vance told his story, articulated the values he lives by, and affirmed that he will fight for Americans who have been overlooked, forgotten, and ignored. 

Vance spoke of being raised by his Christian grandmother, “Mamaw,” in Middletown, Ohio, “a small town where people spoke their minds, built with their hands, and loved their God, their family, their community and their country with their whole hearts.”

Though Vance was surrounded by Christian faith and values in his youth (and greatly admired his Catholic uncle), it wasn’t until his teenage years that he joined an organized church.

As an adolescent, Vance attended a large Pentecostal church with his biological father after the two reconnected. “I’m not sure if I liked the structure or if I just wanted to share in something that was important to him — both, I suppose — but I became a devoted convert,” Vance wrote in his best-selling memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy.”

However, throughout his young adulthood, Vance’s faith lapsed, as he described in a nearly 7,000-word essay for The Lamp titled “How I Joined the Resistance.” After finishing his service with the Marines and attending college at The Ohio State University, Vance discarded his faith and claimed to be an atheist.

Surrounded by secularism in college, Vance was ingrained in a culture that saw faith “at best, provincial and stupid; at worst, evil” and got caught up in “the madness of crowds,” which caused him to abandon his faith. “Much of my new atheism,” he wrote, “came down to a desire for social acceptance among American elites.”

Though Vance admitted to adopting a worldview tinged with an air of arrogance at this time, seeds of doubt surrounding his newfound perceptions took hold throughout college and later in law school.

For Vance, the “first crack in [his] proverbial armor” would come from a meditation by Saint Augustine that he read while attending Yale Law School as he contemplated his “twin desires – for success and character – and how they conflicted (and didn’t).”

The passage from Saint Augustine criticized man’s arrogant attempts to conform Sacred Scripture to his own opinions when man’s aim ought to be to conform his opinions to the truth in Sacred Scripture. (Read more.)


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Two Minerals Never Before Seen on Earth

 From Beauty of Planet Earth:

A giant meteorite that fell in Somalia in 2020 contains at least two minerals that have never before been seen on our planet. The minerals have been identified by researchers at the University of Alberta, according to a press release.

Tons of space material enters the Earth’s atmosphere every day but very few actually survive the journey through the atmosphere and hit the ground. Instead, they tend to burn up instantly from the outside in, as friction with the atmosphere causes them to ablate.

For this reason, few large meteorites reach the planet’s surface, and the one that fell near the town of El Ali in Somalia is definitely an exception. The celestial piece of rock weighs a massive 16.5 tons (15 tonnes), making it the ninth-largest meteorite ever found. (Read more.)

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Friday, July 26, 2024

Friends of Marie-Antoinette, Part I

Madame de Polignac in Court Dress. No jewels, just flowers.

Here is a broadcast from Tea at Trianon Radio. Part 2, HERE. Part 3, HERE.

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Biden's Choice

 From The New York Post:

Biden’s always been crafty. Cunning. Not for the country. For himself. For family. He never christened some extra special anything else for anybody else. Always the No. 2 guy. Never the brains. Not really sweating. Just glad-handing. We’re talking smiling. Surviving. Taking bows. Photos. Making friends. Connections. Learning how everything operates. But for him. Accomplishing for any other guy — zilch. When it comes to him, he’s savvy. The way he operates is it’s permanently his ass he’s saving. The man always knew how to hang on. If looking for accomplishments, try Biden’s son. Or Joe’s wife’s hairdresser. Or certain business people who operate his home state of Delaware, which is smaller than my Raisin Bran box. (Read more.)

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The Vacuum of Space

 From Popular Mechanics:

In new preprint research, scientists in Slovenia have adjusted a calculation to determine how long we have before the vacuum of space decays. While this date is still an extraordinarily long time into the very, very far future, our math model to determine it is loose enough to invite more questions than answers.

It’s intuitive that we struggle to nail down the far future this way—it’s honestly more amazing that we can estimate the date at all. So, how do scientists do it?

Matt von Hippel explains about the “vacuum” in the standard model for Quanta. Our universe is filled by quantum fields, many of which are empty or zero. One, the Higgs field, is not:

 Called the Higgs field, it controls the mass of many fundamental particles, like electrons and quarks. Unlike every other quantum field physicists have discovered, the Higgs field has a default value above zero. Dialing the Higgs field value up or down would increase or decrease the mass of electrons and other particles. If the setting of the Higgs field were zero, those particles would be massless.

(Read more.)


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Thursday, July 25, 2024

The Cathars and the Eucharist


The Cathars were not Christians nor did they belong to any monotheistic religion because they believed in more than one God. From William Hemsworth:

The Cathars were dualists who believed in two gods. One who created everything good and another who created everything evil. Essentially they believed that the god of the Old Testament was Satan, and the New Testament was the God we know. As they did with the Eucharist, they didn’t hold to the validity of any sacraments because the sacraments involve some kind of material. In their view all material is bad.

The human body was an evil construct because in entrapped angels in human flesh. Therefore anything to do with the human body was also deemed evil. Even procreation. Suicide was seen as a good way of escaping human bondage. Yes, they were opposed to the Eucharist as the Gnostics of old were. Their beliefs were dealt with by great saints such as St. Augustine and St. Irenaeus. Again I emphasize that they were not protestants that were persecuted by the Catholic church, but believers in type of modified Gnostic heresy. (Read more.)


Read more about the Cathars in my novel The Night's Dark Shade.

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Pope Benedict XVI's Liturgical Theology

 From Stephanie Mann:

What I really appreciated was the clarity and balance of Millare's writing style; his declarative yet comprehensive sentences as he described the theologian-Cardinal/Pope's interaction with other theologians. Since I have read many of Romano Guardini's liturgical theology works, I was able to follow Millare's analysis of the issues of Ethos and Logos and even the models of meal/banquet and sacrifice easily. And when Millare compares and contrasts Ratzinger's thoughts with other theologians I'm not familiar with, like Moltman and Metz, he provides the necessary detail and context, even as he emphasizes the central themes of Logos and the eschaton.

In fact, the "consistency and centrality of the Logos" versus placing Ethos at the center of theology, liturgical, moral, or fundamental is one of most crucial themes of the entire book. It informs Millare's discussion of the Sacrifice of the Mass, of the Communion of the Church and the Second Coming, with hope for the New Heavens and the New Earth, of the mission of the Church and the congregation attending Mass and receiving Holy Communion and then going to the world to share the Love of God and neighbor; and the beauty of art and architecture of the celebration of Mass and our churches, etc.

Millare summarizes his study of Pope Benedict XVI's theology of worship and the eschaton thusly on page 266:

Ratzinger describes his work as having an "incomplete character," yet I have demonstrated that there is a unity within his "fragmentary" writings that is defined by the primacy and centrality of the Logos incarnate. It has been argued throughout this book how the focus on the loges consistently unites his eschatology with his theology of liturgy, in whose orbit can also be found his Christology, ecclesiology, theological anthropology, and ethics.

The text is supplemented with extensive footnotes and a substantial bibliography. Well worth reading, even for a non-specialist. I read it after a discussion of the Resurrection and Ascension chapters in Pope Benedict XVI's Holy Week volume in the Jesus of Nazareth trilogy with my theologian friend and in the midst of the Eucharistic Revival here in the USA. (Read more.)
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