Sunday, 15 April 2018
Saturday, 31 March 2018
Reflection on Multiculturalism
The multiculturalist displays a hatred of his own culture and an ignorance of any other.
Saturday, 24 March 2018
Sunday, 28 January 2018
Tuesday, 26 December 2017
Reflection on Papal Faith and Morals
The pope who dies in the arms of his mistress does less harm than the one who attempts to defile the faith of Holy Mother Church.
Sunday, 29 October 2017
Wednesday, 11 October 2017
Saturday, 26 August 2017
Reflection on Progress
"Progress" may an alteration in some direction, but not necessarily forwards.
Monday, 14 August 2017
Monday, 31 July 2017
Reflection on Catholic Heritage
The most fitting renunciation of self consists in the laying claim to Tradition for oneself.
Thursday, 29 June 2017
Reflection on the Liberality of God
The generosity of God pours as a torrent forth from the pierced side of Christ.
Wednesday, 28 June 2017
Reflection on the Value of the Soul
When man appears to disolve indistinctly into a deluge of passing humanity, the Christian soul remembers she is still worth a drop of His Blood.
Friday, 23 June 2017
Saturday, 17 June 2017
Reflection on the Church and the Cross
The scarlet merits of Christ are the only adornment of His Spouse.
Tuesday, 13 June 2017
Reflection on Feigned Charity
The broad mind of the liberal is narrower than the mantle of the care of the Church.
Monday, 12 June 2017
Reflection on Liberal Catholicism
Light and darkness were once reconciled in the Cross of Christ. It may not hence be reconciled in the principles of the Church and of the Revolution.
Saturday, 10 June 2017
Reflection on Vocations
To discern a vocation is to listen intently to the beatings of the Sacred Heart.
Friday, 9 June 2017
Tuesday, 6 June 2017
Thursday, 1 June 2017
Sunday, 21 May 2017
Reflection on Liberalism
Modern liberalism may be defined as the attempted "reasoning out" of our baser instincts.
Monday, 8 May 2017
Reflection on Bigotry
The "bigot" is the one who has the audacity to think what he believes to be true.
Wednesday, 26 April 2017
Monday, 10 April 2017
Wednesday, 29 March 2017
Reflection on the Wood of the Cross
The dead wood of the Tree blossomed with the Blood of the Saviour.
Tuesday, 28 March 2017
Reflection on the Properties of God
God in His goodness, creates. In His justice, conserves. In His mercy, restores.
Sunday, 19 March 2017
Reflection on the Ascension of the Lord
As Christ ascended with a pierced side, the soul who wishes to follow Him, must be accompanied by a heart pierced with compunction.
Reflection on Prayer and Recollection
If you are unable continually to speak before God, let your soul always repose in His Presence.
Tuesday, 14 March 2017
Reflection on the Wounds of the Crucified
Tears of repentence are the only salve for the Wounds of the Crucified.
Monday, 13 March 2017
Reflection on Priestly Celibacy
The divine purity of the Victim upon the Altar is the root and principle of priestly celibacy.
Reflection on The Little Way
To produce a great work with little love is more to create a deformity than a magnanimity.
Reflection on the Stripping of Christ
The stripping of Christ as He approaches the Cross undoes the clothing of Adam when he fled the tree.
Friday, 10 March 2017
Wednesday, 8 March 2017
Tuesday, 7 March 2017
Reflection on Rigidity
In divine matters and for the security of the soul, a certain rigidity is to be preferred over a tepidity disguised by sophistication.
Friday, 3 March 2017
Reflection on Pope Francis
To claim as a defence of Pope Francis that he is unconscious of the danger he is propagating against the Church, is merely to shift him from the category of heretic to fool.
Sunday, 12 February 2017
Reflection on Suicide
The option of suicide is to seek to depose Christ from the Cross instead of longing to ascend It with Him.
Saturday, 11 February 2017
Reflection on Tradition and Treason
The divesting of Catholic Tradition has only led the Church to be hand herself over to be despoiled of her identity by the world.
Thursday, 9 February 2017
Reflection on Tolerance
Tolerance is the prized prejudice of the enlightened fellow who believes the majority of mankind is wrong and that is makes not the slightest bit of difference. Such a viewpoint can hardly be said to spring from a culture of love.
Wednesday, 8 February 2017
Reflection on Conservatism
In contrast to the liberal who chases after each novelty before its time, the conservative hobbles towards the new after its expiry.
Friday, 20 January 2017
Sunday, 15 January 2017
Reflection on NeoCatholics and Papolatry
Papolatry. A corruption of human respect, tinged with superstition. An amnesia of Catholic Traditon and an abdication of the intellect.
Thursday, 29 December 2016
Reflection on Leftist Slogans
What is most abstract, is most fit to be malleable. The abstract containing unconditional reality in thought, in their hands contains nothing at all.
Monday, 26 December 2016
Reflection on the Motive for the Incarnation
The limp, plump hand of the Christ Child was born to be straightened and drained on the Cross.
Sunday, 11 December 2016
Saturday, 10 December 2016
Reflection on the Reform of the Reform
Any extraordinary attempt to infuse the Novus Ordo with solmenity and dignity is only a pale imitation of what is standard in the Old Rite.
Friday, 2 December 2016
Reflection on Forgiveness
The pierced hand of Christ always lays outstretched to the sinner's constricted heart.
Saturday, 26 November 2016
Wednesday, 16 November 2016
Reflection on the Pope and Tradition
For the Sovereign Pontiff, Sacred Tradition is both a support and a boundary.
Wednesday, 2 November 2016
Wednesday, 5 October 2016
Reflection on Politics
The much-vaunted centre ground of politics is often more a trough than a peak.
Monday, 19 September 2016
Reflection on the Creation and the Annunciation
As the "let there be" produces the natural order, so does the "let it be done to me" in the supernatural order.
Reflection on the Holy Eucharist
The other Sacraments confer the grace they signify, but the Eucharist contains Him Who is the very source and consummation of those same graces.
Sunday, 18 September 2016
Reflection on Hell
Hell is nothing other than the soul to find herself alone with God at last and for Him not to know her.
Reflection on Catholic Tradition
Tradition is no more than the echo of our Lady's words of "Do whatever He tells you" throughout the ages.
Reflection on Tranquility of Spirit
In this life, the slumber of the sinner is not to compared with the repose of the righteous.
Friday, 16 September 2016
Monday, 12 September 2016
Reflection on the Wounds of Christ
For thoughtless sins of mortal man do pierce the hands of the Immortal One, while balm to the same doth compress, where hidden graces impress for sincere repentance.
Thursday, 8 September 2016
Reflection on Religious Liberty and The Social Reign of Christ
In public discourse the Church must not merely ask for a place at the table to be heard out but for a throne to be placed for Christ.
Tuesday, 23 August 2016
Monday, 22 August 2016
Reflection on Liberty of Thought
It is proper to man to have an opinion, but not any opinion at all.
Friday, 19 August 2016
Reflection on Committees and Discussion
The consultative man is rarely one of a broad bent of mind but rather of none at all.
Saturday, 30 July 2016
Reflection on Governments and Laws
The acceleration of legislation can only mark the arrest of civilisation.
Reflection on Republics and Monarchies
In a monarchy, an office granted can ennoble the most inferior of men. In a Republic, an office gained can only be vulgarized by the most commonplace of characters.
Friday, 29 July 2016
On the Spirit of Religion and the Unity of Peoples
''The more one examines things closely, the more one will be convinced that the social edifice rests entirely on the cross and that what still saves us from a general upheaval is that the various governments in this part of the world, perhaps by instinct and habit rather than by conviction and wisdom, continue to maintain the religious establishment. In France, the culpable foolishness of the government having favoured the spread of impiety or indifference became too generalised, we see the consequences.
Whenever education ceases to be religious, there is no longer national education. You will still make mathematicians, physicists etc., but it is a question of making men, Moreover, a proper system of education to create real public spirit will be religious or it will not accomplish anything.
Religion surrounds us on all sides; everything speaks its language to us. Its characters are imprinted on our flags, our coinage, our medals of honour, our ornaments, our buildings, and all our monuments. It animates, vivifies, perpetuates, and infuses our legislation. It sanctions our customs; it presides over our treatises. It has formed the great European family. Its gentle laws calmed our ferocity and helped unite our divergent spirits. From St Petersburg to Madrid, people made contracts in the name of the very holy and indivisible Trinity. It was the great family title and the proof of a common kinship. The hideous hand of revolutionary genius came to efface this sacred formula...''
- Joseph de Maistre
Monday, 25 July 2016
Reflection on the Pharisee and the Publican
Apparently virtuous acts when polluted by pride, invert the order of justice and, as it were, place God in a position of gratitude to us.
Wednesday, 20 July 2016
Reflection on the Rights of Man
The notion of the Rights of Man if borne aloft by moral virtue can only sink to the god in men's bellies.
Sunday, 10 July 2016
Repost: On Death
''Ivan Ilyich saw that he was dying, and he was in continual despair.
In the depths of his soul Ivan Ilyich knew that he was dying, but not only was he not accustomed to it, he simply did not, he could not possibly understand it.
The example of a syllogism he had studied in Kiesewetter's logic - Caius is a man, men are mortal, therefore Caius is mortal - had seemed to him all his life to be correct only in relation to Caius, but by no means to himself. For the man Caius, man in general, it was perfectly correct; but he was not Caius and not man in general, he had always been quite, quite separate from all other beings; he was Vanya, with mama, with papa, with Mitya and Volodya, with toys, the coachman, with a nanny, then with Katenka, with all the joys, griefs, and delights of childhood, boyhood, youth. Was it for Caius, the smell of the striped leather ball that Vanya had loved so much? Was it Caius who had kissed his mother's hand like that, and was it for Caius that the silk folds of his mother's dress had rustled like that? Was it he who had mutinied against bad food in law school? Was it Caius who had been in love like that? Was it Caius who could conduct a court session like that?''
The Death of Ivan Ilyich, Leo Tolstoy.
Human beings do not live in the abstract. The abstract, the proposition, the concept, these are all easy for the average man to assent to. However, they remain abstract, propositions and concepts. Man is untouched. The proposition may illumine but is often utterly irrelevant to man's experience. Man does not exist in a textbook but lives as flesh and blood, limited by space and time. He is finite, restricted, bound. There was a vast amount of time on earth when he, the individual, was unknown. Even while existing, he is unknown, a statistic, a dot in a crowd to the multitude. He decays, passes away, turns to dust or ashes. I decay, pass away, turn to dust or ashes. My friend decays, passes away, turns to dust or ashes. We die, not humanity, we perish. We make plans for our future or for the enjoyment of present things, such is necessary for fruitful living. But what if we were to die in a few moments time? Us here, as the seconds tick by, death approaches surely but slowly. A particular hobby of mine is historical reading, especially that of Ancient Rome. I marvel at the adventures of Pompey Magnus throughout the east, I wonder at the military genius of Caesar as he destroys the Gallic tribes, I consider the rise to power of Octavian from a weak youth to the most powerful man in the world as the first Roman Emperor. What each of them achieved has had lasting effects on mankind and on the history of our continent. However, each of these individuals has died, two were violently murdered. Both betrayed. One at the end of his glorious career, one at the height of his power at the hands of men he had forgiven. Death came suddenly and unexpected to each, and judgement was shift. Both are no where to be seen among the sons of men. I shall reserve judgment on their eternal fate but neither was prepared for death.
We assert that humanity will continue on, but we forget the fact that humanity does not exist as a shape-shifting mass of material, but is made up of actual, individual human persons of flesh and blood. Our common sense notions about the universal fact of death is only consented to as a concept, not as a reality. The faithful Christian recognises that he will stop breathing at one instant and be swept along to the Judgement Seat. All has been written, all decreed. We will be unable to renegotiate our choices, we ourselves have made them. We have not lived on paper or in the hypotheticals of the intellectually curious. We have lived and died. I make an appeal not to indulge your passions before the opportunity has passed, but to recognise the true end of man and once this is attained, man will joyfully await his end, certain in the hope our Lord promised to those who persevere to the end in His love. As the dawn fades to dark, may we awaken to the full and unending glory of day.
Lord, save us from a sudden and unprepared for death!
Tuesday, 5 July 2016
Reflection on Progressive Morality
A most unabashed liberty of morals can only be reinforced by a cringing totalitarianism.
Saturday, 25 June 2016
Reflection on Brexit and the European Union
A restoration of the position of the Catholic Church and the promotion of the Latin tongue would serve as a far greater source of European unity and cordiality of the peoples. Ten Commandments and five declensions are easier to file than thousands of directives.
Sunday, 19 June 2016
Tuesday, 14 June 2016
Reflection on Penitence
In the silent, sorrowful breast of the penitent sinner, can only resound the rejoicing of the angelic host.
Monday, 6 June 2016
Reflection on Righteous Anger
Righteous anger or holy hatred is obtained when one loves more what one defends than detests what one opposes.
Saturday, 4 June 2016
Reflection on the Sacred Heart
The Sacred Heart of Jesus is the source of consolation to the penitent, a source of reproach to the obstinate. To one, the appears the crown, to the other, the thorns.
Wednesday, 1 June 2016
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