Pints With Aquinas - Father Pine Gives Matt Spiritual Direction for 3 Hours" w/ Father Gregory Pine O.P.
Episode Date: July 21, 2023Matt discusses the history of the holy rosary, private devotions, Medugorje, and more with Fr. Gregory Pine O.P. Show Sponsors: https://hallow.com/matt https://stpaulcenter.com/matt Matt's Marian Book...s: https://tanbooks.com/products/books/marian-consecration-with-aquinas-a-nine-day-path-for-growing-closer-to-the-mother-of-god/ Dominican Rosary Pilgrimage: https://rosarypilgrimage.org Mysterious World Episodes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g6HW2dPnO-8 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJm8j-ufktE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NzFdi4BLwc0 Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everybody, before we jump into the podcast, I wanted to let you know that if you become an annual supporter over at matfrad.locals.com support, you will get a free pines with Aquinas beer Stein, you just pay shipping, you'll get access to our free courses, you'll get access to our post show live streams that are exclusive to our local supporters.
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those perks, and you'd be tremendously helping us as a ministry. Thank you. Alright gents. So I always forget that I know you're not nervous
because we've done this a lot but I forget that when I have a guest in this
is like a new for them. Yeah. Because this couldn't be chiller for me you know.
Nice. Which is probably what you want. Yeah. I mean there's like a sense in
which being a little bit nervous kind of honones your skills or there's a nice the mind is way more space, but behind them and me I did the table
I'll move it. Oh, I see what you mean. Yeah, but then why is that still the case?
Do you like this is how casual the episodes are this is a great way to start the episode because that way you hook people
Look at how bold look at how bald that man is
Yeah, do you mind do you do you want me to move it? Yeah, just I did it on the plane is as bald as he has ever been
Oh, bold. I think you said bold. So we should point this out. Your beard is glorious and there is an episode
There's a clip of a previous episode of us where it's called like beard envy
Remember when I was rocking the full beard? I do remember a couple years ago
Yeah, and you accused me of beard envy, but dude your beard is way cooler
Thanks. Did you know it would look good when you stay out how war was back up?
Why did you decide to do it at what point did you commit and did you know it would look this good?
Yeah, great questions. So I started growing it on May 28th
and the reason is because I took a long hike in Switzerland and
I was trying to ultra light, you know,
to cut weight insofar as I could.
So I was like, like toothbrush.
Mm, seems like I should.
Razor, seems like I shouldn't.
And then after six days I was like,
this doesn't look terrible.
I suspected that it might look decent
because my dad has grown a beard a couple times
in the past, I don't know, 15 years.
And it always grows in nicely.
So, thus earning him the nickname Admiral Beardsley,
which I think comes from a Dennis Quaid movie,
but not important.
And then, yeah, after like six days,
you know, it's still a little bit patchy and thin,
but I was like, let's give it another week
because I'm balding.
And I think it's important when a man is balding
to replace
like the net hair, head
quotient thing, because otherwise
it's just like, oh, that's a very bald man.
So you have to distract people
from your right from your uglitude.
And yeah, that's the strategy at present.
You're balding up there.
I'm just going backwards
until this tuft is like here.
So as I said earlier, that the beard
is only for the bros. So it's a good thing you
live with men. Yes, yeah beard for the bro. Although you might have that, I really like it when a man
has a kind of archipelago, like he has hair kind of like islands. So sometimes this one just gets
cut off from the rest and I like see that guy. It separates. I see that guy. Have you seen William
Lankregg over the years? He's kind of got my hairline. I look at him like that's how I'm going to look in 20 years. Like his hair now starts
back here. Okay. And it's full. Yeah. No, it's a mood. I suppose, you know, you can
care about it or you can not care about it, but I think everybody cares about it at a
certain level. Cause even when you say like, Oh, I don't care. You kind of care. Yeah.
So then how do you, how do you go from there? And I think it's keep it short and grow a
beard and make the occasional joke, but not too many jokes because when you really just So then how do you go from there? And I think it's keep it short and grow a beard
and make the occasional joke, but not too many jokes
because when you really just overindulge in self-deprecation,
people are like, how insecure is that, bro?
The answer is quite insecure.
So there's like a golden mean somewhere of self-deprecation
that you want to hit.
Yeah, like every so often.
Because if it becomes too much, it's like, come on, come on.
You're doing all right.
OK.
Matt Walsh once said that if the internet can choose
between pity and mockery, it will always choose the latter.
You've got to keep that in mind, too, if you're online.
Unless your target demographic is
women between the ages of 65 and 80,
because I think the mothering tendency is so distilled
at that point.
They're like, I just want to feed you.
I want to take care of you.
You look so sad, tired, combination factor. So if you're just right there, then you're
fine.
I see. Well, I was telling you too that the beard is really not for my wife who doesn't
enjoy it. But I told you before the show that I'm trying to decide, do I want Thursday to
compliment me or my wife to kiss me? And it's troubling that it's about 50-50
I'm not sure how I feel
Okay, I love that we're doing this live coming at it coming at it
Nice you're further away from the table is what it is. Okay, I can be further away from the table. No, it's good.
Don't move. You make his job harder.
I mean, I'll adjust it again, but it's I think it's even now.
So before we get into the rosary and all that we're going to talk about there,
I want to let people know about St.
Paul Center dot com slash Matt.
Click the link in the description if you can throw one up there, that would be
great. So St.
Paul Center is Scott Hans's baby as it were and he's created along with the help of
other people an excellent digital resource called Emmaus Academy. So if you
go to stpoolcentre.com slash Matt check it out because you can start a free
trial for two weeks and see all that they have to offer. They have short
courses, book studies, original content,
and all of this stuff is really highly produced.
It's not just Scott Hahn in front of his,
you know, laptop lid in his basement.
These are really well-produced courses.
So if you're like me and you know how easy it is,
just to waste time on YouTube,
and you'd like to maybe put that time to better use,
you could learn to love the Bible.
I think that's what Scott Hahn and
these other fellows do so well. Joan Watson, Scott Hahn, who do we have on the other day? John
Bergsmurr. These are really brilliant folks. They're going to help you love the Bible. I always say
that I don't even know if I want to read the Bible, but often I think that I want to want to read the
Bible. That's the kind of person I want to be, but I feel like I'm not there yet. If I was, I'd be reading. I mean, to be fair, I do read the scriptures daily, but not with the
kind of love and passion that I wish I had. And I don't know if you can force yourself to want
something, but I think what this can do for you is it'll actually help you want to love the Bible
really well. And who better to do that than Scott Hahn. So please go over, because they are supporting the show, to stpaulcentre.com.com. Click the link in the description. When you sign
up over there, you get free access to the entire course for two weeks. That's why you want to use
that URL. And if after two weeks you don't like it, you can quit it or you can binge watch every
single course that they have then cancel jokes on them. Am I right?
Yeah, I've signed up and what's really cool about this is I signed up to this
big Bible study they had and then I got a question that threatened me.
They're like, how many hours a week would you like to dedicate to this?
And like, I was hoping to get really passionate about it today and forget
about it tomorrow. So they kind of like help you with a schedule.
And then when you're doing it, you're actually interacting with people around the world who are going through
these Bible studies and courses as well. So also book studies, Ralph Martin has the fulfillment
of all desire, an excellent book he wrote where he's actually, there's very well produced videos of
him guiding you through this book. There's a ton of stuff, stpaulcenter.com slash matt. Boom.
So do you have a doctorate yet?
Not yet. I submitted my dissertation but I still have to defend it in like October
and November depending on when they set the date.
So do you feel relief having written it and submitted it or do you feel more anxiety
because now it's done and maybe you change things and now you've got to defend it?
I think I feel relief. Yes, so the editorial process that
makes it sound like I published a newspaper regardless. The process for
editing was long and exacting and my director is very careful and he's very
you know intelligent and generous with his comments and so like incorporating
all his comments and then having outside readers look at it and then the last
stage was you can export a written text
as a spoken audio track from Microsoft Word
or just have Word read it to you.
So I had Word read me my whole dissertation.
And as a result of which I've heard it read to me
in another person's voice.
And because it's strange,
you're more likely to pick up orthographic errors,
but also you're hearing it as if for the first time. And at the end of it, I was like, that doesn't stink, you know?
So I'm kind of happy with it.
Luba.
Yeah, exactly. That doesn't stink too terribly much, which the main good thing about our
dissertation is that it's done. And a lot of people will say, I have no intention to
publish this and I want to kind of wash my hands of it. But if it's done, it's done.
So I'm happy that it's done.
I'm looking forward to defending it.
It's only a two hour thing, kind of harrowing, but it's only two hours of your life.
Because if you, if you fail the, um, what do you call it?
Examination?
Yeah, well, yeah, if you fail that, you just have to go back and rewrite big sections depending
on how much you fail.
Is that the idea?
I think it depends on the university or the university system. I suspect it's different in the United
States or in England or in Germany or in France or wherever else. My impression is
that they won't let you get to the defense until you're in a position where
you're going to pass. So if there were serious problems with my written text,
I'm gonna hear about it in the next month. They're gonna ask me to rewrite,
read, submit, so I won't actually be there for a defense for another several
months. So yeah, once you get to that point it's like, read, submit, so I won't actually be there for a defense for another several months.
So yeah, once you get to that point, it's like, okay, we're for you, but we're for you
in such a way that we're going to make you drill down or we're going to make you clarify.
So if you can see it in that way, I think then, yeah.
Did you hit a wall during the process?
So at the end of each chapter, what I did was a lot of reading and writing, or
reading, note-taking, writing, synthesizing, and then I just had these
kind of binge writing things for each chapter. I would just set aside three,
four, five, six weeks and just write for seven to ten hours a day so that I had
everything already, my text document and then my outline documents and everything
such that I could just go, but those were brutal. So I did it to myself.
But at the end of each of those, I took a kind of, oh, exhalation of exhaustion.
And then I'd either just step away from the work for a few days,
read some literature or just tend to other tasks.
Or I just go on a 2D hike or something like that.
Because after my first chapter, I tried just getting right into my second chapter.
And it was like I was dragging my corpse through,
you know, a long, dark, terrible alley.
And so, yeah, you kind of have to be a little bit gentle
with your humanity, not too gentle
because then you can become indulgent, but gentle enough.
And is it called your director?
Who's the fellow who oversees you
and guides you in this process?
Yeah, most people say director.
In German, they say my doctor father, which is pretty cool.
Yeah, exactly.
And why did you choose him or was he assigned to you?
I chose him because he's the best at what he does.
Which is what?
Because presumably he doesn't know nearly as much as you do on this topic.
He probably does.
Okay.
That's helpful.
So he is a Dominican priest and he is a scholar of St. Thomas Aquinas, specifically
of St. Thomas' Trinitarian thought, but he also does stuff in St. Thomas' Christological
thought, which is what I did.
And so for him, Christology is a kind of side hustle.
For me, it's the main event, but even still, he knows more about it than I do.
And I chose him because he's very patient and careful, especially with texts. He
understands St. Thomas, he understands St. Thomas' contemporaries, he understands
the tradition of reception of St. Thomas, and specifically things that have been
written in the last hundred years. So he's a master of many languages and he's
a master of many different sub-disciplines as well. So you come to
him for, one, expertise,
to mediate to you, St. Thomas the Master,
but also for perspective.
He's already done the work, he's hosted the conversations,
he's been at the conferences,
and he knows if you're going in a direction
which is overwhelming because there's so much
written about it and the chances of you contributing
are very low, or if you're heading in a direction
which is highly contentious,
and you're
gonna have to substantiate every point with documentation are you willing to
undergo that work or you know so he's gonna be able to save you a lot of
heartbreak but he's also going to be able to encourage you you're gonna want
to look at this resource and this resource and this resource because he's
been writing book reviews for the last 35 years so like everything that's been
published in English French German Italian and Spanish on this theme he's
read it.
And he also has a memory which is somewhere between a billion and 18 billion times better than mine.
So I'm like, yeah, I read that. Maybe. Whereas he's like, yeah, on page 73, you're going to want to
see that thing about soteriological paradigms. It's like, yes, sir. Yes, I will. Yes. Okay.
Okay. Yeah. Yeah
I know when I obviously at a much lesser level than you but when I started writing for books and articles
One thing I learned really quickly was not to overstate my case
That it's better to be nuanced and make my case seem weaker than otherwise may have been than to be hyperbolic
What was something you learned in this process? Yeah, so one thing is I tend to, you know, go for the 30,000 foot view. I like to survey the landscape and tell you how everything is interconnected
from like whatever kind of contemporary application to how it's rooted in the Most Blessed Trinity, which is cool.
But I was not very careful about particular details.
I jokingly say that I'm a horseshoes and hand grenades man.
So it's basically like, or it's, I think I heard that.
And yeah, some of that's been ironed out,
living with other Dominicans,
because Dominicans can be very attentive to details.
So, well actually, or you know, you know, Father,
it's like, cool, cool, I should probably be better
about that, but also I'm just not especially patient with reality, so I'm just kind of hustling onto the
next thing. But with this process, I learned that you have to pay attention, because the idea is
that St. Thomas is mediating to you a relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ. That's the hope,
right? So his insights or, you know, his particular approach to sacred theology is
wise, so it's orderly, and in, you know, receiving that order, receiving that wisdom, it actually
opens you up to a relationship at a deeper level.
You know, prayer, study, we're talking about a contemplative life, so both are present
in it.
But how do you have access to St. Thomas?
You know, it's not just like in the ether, it's through what he wrote.
So, you have to pay attention to the words like they're a love letter. You know, like they're very precious,
each word was crafted, it was crafted for you because the person who wrote them had a conviction
that they mattered, and that the relationship that they mediate matters above everything else.
So the idea is, you know, pay attention to the words, their setting, their context, the historical
moment, you know, but the words, and the words mediate a reality which puts you in living touch with the Lord. And so I learned to be
a lot more careful about the principles, about the arguments, and about, you know, kind of how to
chase them down. Was there something prior to writing this dissertation that you were wrong
about or that you may have articulated in a way that you certainly wouldn't
now after having done a deep dive in this topic? Yeah, I think so. What I wrote about is how
salvation is communicated. And my basic point is salvation is just God. It's just God. And we have
different ways to describe it, and it's necessary to describe it in those different ways for precision
sake, for distinction sake, because we're creatures, and we don't become God in the strict sense, but we can
share in or partake in the divine life by created gifts like grace, virtues, other things
besides.
But I think I was thinking about salvation like it was some third thing, like God went
into, I don't know, the mines of heaven and started finding
salvation ore, and then piled it up at a certain point, and then when he was
crucified he's like, send down the ore! And then we could, I don't know, refine
that over the course of our lifetime and make precious salvation medals. But it's
just not, it's just God wants to give us himself, and in giving us himself he
adapts himself, not in a creepy kind of process theology way,
but he accommodates himself so that we can recognize him and so that we can receive him.
And so you can think God, you know, laid up in his heavens,
conceiving of the way, doesn't take him time,
he doesn't go through steps, but conceiving of a way whereby best to give himself to mankind.
And, you know, the passion of our Lord Jesus Christ is kind of
the summit of that story, but everything that leads up to it, the Lord's incarnate life,
everything downstream of it, the life of the church, is all a reflection of how God determines,
not necessarily best in a comparative sense, like we've made an Excel spreadsheet of the different
ways in which God could have saved us, and we're like, this is definitely the best, but in a sense
like it reflects the depth of wisdom, it reflects an intensity of love,
and what God is communicating is, I want you to have my life. I want you to partake of my life,
not regardless, or not in spite of what's gone before, but specifically in that history.
We're going to re-orchestrate that history so that you can have me whole and entire.
And the study of salvation, I think, just makes a lot more sense when you see it in this, it's
a relationship rather than pile.
So I know we say that God is what he has, as it were. They're the same thing. So he
is his omnipotence, etc. Is there a sense in which he is what he does, saves, or is
it different?
Yeah, so that was another piece of the dissertation too, was you can think about doing in different ways.
Our doing is largely an expression of our need. So, you know, you go out to Leonardo's coffee shop
because you need the coffee that they serve, because otherwise your life will be sad and your,
I don't know, interior will be just...
Blink.
Yeah, exactly. So we usually do stuff as an expression of need,
but God does stuff as an expression of perfection, as an expression of abundance. So we can make
philosophical distinctions, but they're not that important for this present situation. But like,
operation is a kind of perfection of perfection. So a perfect being is the source of a perfect operation. So when we talk
about heaven, for instance, we'll describe it as not just we're seated on a celestial couch
being served celestial fare. No, it's a kind of entry into, it's a kind of movement, as it were,
into the divine life. So like St. John Damascene quotes St. Gregory of Nazianz as saying that God
is an infinite ocean
of substance, and so you can think of heaven as a kind of like deep dive. But it's to fire on all
cylinders, it's to give perfect expression to our human capacities, it's to live fully, not to just
repose languidly. And so, yeah, when we're talking about God, we're talking about God who is abundant
life, God who is just firing on all cylinders. That's
His very nature, is to be, and that His operation is the deliverance of His to-be. And so, when we
talk about God's engagement with us, we're not thinking about God in the sense of, okay, I was
going to do this, but that seems like a bad idea, so now I'm going to do this, I'm going to re-orchestrate
the plan on account of the fact that... No, God just gives himself.
He adapts the giving of himself to the different states of humanity or to our own temporal
condition. But effectively, it's God giving expression to his abundance, his unsearchable
depths. And I think that, you know, so we say that God is His existence, He is His intellect, He is His
active intellection, He is His object of intellection. So God is His knowing capacity, He is His
very knowing, He is the object of His knowing, and that's a kind of, yeah, a perfection that
spills out, as it were, I mean, He chooses to engage with creation, so it's not like,
oh, wow, look at that, I created a crazy, right? That spills out into the created world, and we're engaging with a God who is simple, but
we receive it in a kind of complex way, because we ourselves are complex.
And so it registers in us as kind of complex.
Like grace is different from virtue, although they're so closely akin, because we need God's
divine life to get into all the nooks and crannies of our interior.
And so it's like, I want to be, you know, like at the level of being, I want to be good
grace.
At the level of operating, I want to be good virtues.
At the level of receiving divine inspiration, I want to be good gifts of the Holy Spirit.
And you've got to go down the line.
But that's all, that's God, God giving Himself to us, and it's articulated in our interior
life, I mean, and in our kind of outworking of it, so that we as human beings can be saved
from top to bottom, so that we can be equipped in every imaginable way in our kind of outworking of it, so that we as human beings can be saved from top to bottom,
so that we can be equipped in every imaginable way in the level of Supernature, just as we are in the level of nature.
Is God responsible for the virtue of the pagan?
Is that like, because I've been reading this book by Matthias Schieben right now on grace, and wow, it's pretty powerful.
He talks about how the grace of God is infinitely,
but maybe not infinitely, you tell me, better than the goods of the world. And we so often
trade what is infinite for like a shiny coin given to us by the devil. And he quoted some,
I think, Roman philosopher, if memory serves, about, I think he said something to the effect of,
if I were in a palace surrounded by golden things, it wouldn't make me any better.
And Sheban says, is it Sheban or Shaban?
If your people say both.
That it's grace that does that, like grace is what perfects the man.
But I guess I don't understand how it works in relation to our virtue,
because obviously there are noble pagans who are far more virtuous than us, I think we
would both agree. And so God was responsible for their growth in virtue?
Is he responsible for our natural growth in virtue? Yeah, I
think at the end of the day God's responsible for everything except for sin
and falsehood, says the catechism of the Council of Trent, or maybe the decree of the Council of Trent regarding original sin. But the idea is that
God gives us our being and our causing at the natural level, and He gives us our being and
our causing at the supernatural level as well. So, like St. Thomas addresses that particular
question in the Prima Secundae where he's talking about, so in that treatise on the virtues before he gets into the particular ones, it's like questions 55 through 70 of
the Prima Secundae, he'll ask about the virtues of the pagans, and he says it's like a step
beyond kind of temperament or natural constitution. Some people might be more inclined to be generous,
or some people might be more inclined to be brave, given how they're made up and maybe
how they were raised and things like that.
And he says, but that's not yet true virtue simply so called is a language that he uses,
like very virtute simplicitare. What would you call it then?
So you'd call it like nascent virtue or the beginnings of virtue, the starts of virtue.
He calls it imperfect virtue is the language that he uses. So we can just say imperfect virtue
for an imperfect, you know, pagan world. But what you really need for true virtue is all of the virtues to be present,
to be interconnected. So in the kind of the natural order, Aristotle will talk about this with
prudence and the supernatural order. Obviously, we talk about it with charity. And you need charity
there to make the whole virtuous life integral and perfect, because charity refers all the virtues
to their final end.
Because charity is able to say, why are we doing this at the end of the day? We're doing it because
God is who He says He is and because He loves us, right? So, to love God above all things and our
neighbor as ourselves gives a kind of transcendent horizon to the whole virtuous life, and it brings
the whole virtuous life together. So, we would say, yeah, imperfect virtue, it's present there at some
level by temperament, natural constitution, maybe by the customs of the land, the time, the place,
but then perfect virtue requires that all of these things come together and that they be united in
the way in which they were intended to be united with the love of God.
Mason- One thing I love about you is you seem to be very comfortable with your humanity,
you know, and I think when people become Christian
or even far along in the Christian walk,
there seems like there is this dichotomy
between body and spirit, right?
And so the spiritual things are those things
that really don't involve my body.
And whatever does involve my body is somehow subpar
or not something I should take, I don't know,
too much stocking or delight in or something. Do you think that's
because of how Aquinas speaks of what man is? And do you see that among your other brothers? And do
you think that's because they've been influenced by Thomas? Or is it just like a temperament thing?
Maybe, maybe yes. I'd have to think about it a little bit longer. I was actually talking to some
of the brothers last night. We were hanging out on the porch and just chatting through things,
and they were saying,
it seems like we're trying to make up our mind
whether to become a bit of Dominican,
I ought to be more observant,
or I ought to become more human.
Better, you said, right?
A better Dominican.
I think you said better, okay, better.
Yes, sorry.
There's a place to do that too, much easier, I'm sure,
to become a bitter Dominican.
Yeah.
Yeah, all you have to, nevermind.
So, whether we ought to be more observant
or whether we ought to be more human.
And so I think that we can have a confidence as Christians
that if we pursue the heights of spiritual perfection,
that our humanity will be drawn into that.
It's not gonna leave our humanity behind
for reasons that we've discussed
and a lot of people have said more coherent things about.
But the basic idea is that, okay, what's the goal? The goal is God. God has made it known and has made
it available that we share a life with Him. And that places a claim on your humanity,
from the top of your head to the soles of your feet. And that's something that's body
and soul. Because you, as a human person, you're one thing. You're an ensouled body,
you're an embodied soul, however you want to describe it, you're one thing. You're an ensouled body or an embodied soul,
however you want to describe it, but you're one thing. Such that St. Thomas will say
that after we die and the soul departs from the body or the soul and body are
separated, in heaven, until the general resurrection, you're not a human person,
you're a human soul. Okay? So there's still some connection with your body and
then at the general resurrection you will be returned to your body. Your body
will be returned to you at some level. How the continuity between what was and what is
works, I don't know.
So I think that when we have this vision of there being one goal, namely God, and that
God wants to wed himself to us, that he wants to give himself to us, without, what would
you say, mediation, but I mean, he uses mediation, but without anything else kind of as a substitute for or filling up the lack of,
he's just like, I want to give you my whole self. And you're like, okay, let's go.
And then that's gonna draw you into it whole and entire.
So like St. Thomas will say, for instance, that we're primarily made to the image and likeness of God
by virtue of the fact that we have an intellect and a will, you know,
so a mind with which to know and a heart with which to love, because it's immaterial and that references the immaterial life of God,
and it also makes us capacious of God. And then when we act out of those powers by knowing and
by loving, we're drawn into God because we can know God with his own knowledge of himself,
love God with his own love of himself, and be assimilated to the interior life of the
blessed Trinity. But still, he says, there's also a sense in which we're made to the image of God in our
bodies.
And he recognizes that, because he compares human beings to angels.
And he says, you can say, I mean, angels, strictly so-called, are more to the image
and likeness of God than men, because their intellectual powers are more acute, they're
more keen.
But we are more to the image and likeness of God insofar as there's, you know, you
can see in our bodies this act of generation, which he says is patterned after or reveals something
of the Father begets the Son.
So there's not the same type of relationality among the angels because they're all created
at the outset and there's no coming to be or passing away of angels.
It's just set like integers.
Whereas for us, there's something of the fecundity of the divine life at work.
So even though angels are greater in nature than us, we reveal something of
God in a way that angels don't, probably in the same way Tyrannosaurus Rex is
less than us, but reveals something of God that we don't. Would that be right or no?
Yeah, I think it's more, I think we're more dignified than Tyrannosaurus
Rexes, even though you might not be led to that conclusion when watching
Jurassic Park, because they seem quite powerful and so we associate power with dignity. But we're more dignified because we have this
spiritual capacity. So I'd say there's a bigger gap probably between us and T-Rexes than there
is between, ooh, I'd have to think about that. Yeah, that's a good question. But yeah, so
I would say that if you're going for God, you know, to return to my original dichotomy between
the observant and the human, if you're going to God, then your humanity is going
to be drawn into it.
And it might make, it might place claims on your humanity, demand sacrifices of your humanity.
You can't be like, I'm going to indulge in whatever because it's so human, you know,
I'm going to like, whatever, look out for myself because it's necessary for my humanity.
You can't do those things in the same spirit once God begins to lay
claim to the whole of your life and says, like, no, I want all of you, like a whole burnt offering.
And I think that worship is always going to take on this dimension where it smells like,
you know, like have animals been slaughtered in this temple? Are those entrails? Is that?
There's like burnt feathers, you know, it's like there's a sense in which that starts to register
in you because you've got the deepened and
more keen impression that he wants the whole of me, and he's not going to settle for anything
less than the whole of me. Which is a terrible prospect, but ultimately a blessed one.
Do you think that people are scrupulous because they don't know what God is? None of us know
what God is, but do you think that maybe our image of God is too small and that's maybe part of what results in scrupulosity?
Because I'm talking, it's the same theme I'm going to here, right, with like being human
and like you began by talking about God and I think most of us just have like such a,
I wonder if for many of us God is accidentally just this idol that we ask to make our life
better and our friends lives better, and that's what we
mean by God, and that's not at all what God is. Do you find that as you grow in your understanding
of God, this scrupulosity begins to lessen as you begin to trust in how great He is?
Does that not make sense? No, that makes sense. I have a couple of related thoughts. Just cut me
off if I'm speaking too long, because I might. I was talking to Thursday about this actually on the way in.
So one way in which God makes known that he wants to save our whole humanity is by assuming our
whole humanity. So he takes a human soul and a human body and a human intellect, a human will,
human emotions, even the defects associated with human sin without the sin itself, so like hunger, thirst, suffering, death.
So he shows, I want your whole...
Is farting a result of original sin, do you think?
See, I don't know, because I think...
So God made it such that...
All right, we're going to have to get rid of gas in some way, shape, or form.
But God made it such that that gas comes out from between the two biggest hams on our body,
and it's like loud and smelly and kind of funny. You know, so it's like, I don't know.
If it is a result of original sin, would Christ have farted? I mean, he
could have assumed the defect but without the sin. Oh, I see. Yeah, like death.
I think so. I think we want to say that. Continue. Yeah, okay. So Christ assumed
the whole of our humanity, but not only from top to
bottom, He assumes the whole of our humanity from start to finish, right? So Christ is conceived,
and He merits infinitely at His conception. So in a certain sense, you could say like salvation's
done at His conception, because He's merited our salvation in its entirety. And yet, there's a kind
of narrative integrity to His life as well, because he wants to live
his life towards the cross and the resurrection and the ascension and the seating at the right
of the Father and the sending of the Spirit.
So his life is shaped by the divine preordination, by the divine wisdom.
God says, wouldn't it be beautiful if he lived a whole life so that you would have the confidence
that your whole life is now a privileged place of encounter with his whole life, so that
his whole life can map to our whole life. And so, what does that say to me? It says that
our humanity, it's not a mistake, it's willed by God, part of our humanity is temporality,
discursivity, like progressive unfolding. And I think that there are things that we don't have
now, which we will have later. I mean, in many other senses, we're going to waste away and the outer man is just going to take a beating. But I think God means for us to grow
further up and further in into the divine life. So I think that when we look at particular moments
with a great anxiety, we often falsify our human experience. Like, what am I doing now? What am I
doing now? What am I doing now? I think it's better to say, where is the Lord kind of on the move in
the present moment, but taking into account weeks and months and years? And then I think you have a better
appreciation for the mercy of God, which is strong and sweet. And so I think, for instance,
humility I think is an old man's virtue. And I think that if we at this stage of the game say,
like, I'm going to show myself humble, then we often make manifestation of false humility, and we often tie ourselves in knots and get overly anguished about our
pride.
It's just easier to say simply like, I'm proud, but I believe that God's healing grace can
grow me beyond my present pride.
But that means that I show up for prayer, for sacraments, for friendships, for whatever
else, you know?
But with this understanding that God's given me a whole life and He intends to perfect me over the course of His whole life, not because
my whole life is an ongoing self-help project, but because He's given me my
whole life to come to a better knowledge and love of Him, and by way of overflow
or like outworking of that experience, it seems like He's going to do
something with my humanity, because He has to do something with my humanity if
I'm going to enjoy the intimacy and the intensity of the relationship which lies
in store.
So I can be patient with myself insofar as I've experienced something of the divine patience
with me, but still a divine patience which is underwritten by a divine zeal which wants
to get rid of every obstacle to that perfect sharing.
So I think that that does help with scrupulosity, just to say simply that God is on the move,
He's bringing you with Him further up, further in, but it's it's gonna take time and we have to see it in those terms.
I saw a meme the other day that gave me great relief. It said,
when God placed a calling on your life, he factored in your stupidity.
I think that's fantastic. Another thing that I think about is, you know, we often think about God providing as far
as our material needs, you know, that He will give you what you need in order to accomplish
what He has called you to do.
But I don't think people hear enough about your time span being involved in that.
I am sure it's just my immaturity and my need for healing, but I sometimes wake up and hit
the ground running, like there's this dread
that I'm not accomplishing what the Lord is calling me to accomplish.
Can you speak to that a little bit about how you talked about over the course of your whole life,
of course some of us die sooner than later, that whatever the Lord is calling us to do,
He's aware of how long we're going to be around to do it, that kind of thing?
Yeah. Yeah, yes. So...
Does that make sense? You've probably thought about this.
Yeah, I have some thoughts. You tell me if they're related or if they're, you know,
pertinent. But I think some people have a notion in their mind that God, in His
infinite wisdom, has an idea of how you ought to be. And until such time as you
meet the mark, you're basically falling short. So there's like two types of people out there, the
Blessed Virgin Mary and failures, which is kind of horrible. Because if we're
always playing catch-up or if we're always lamenting the fact that we
haven't seized whatever graces were offered at the moment, it's like we just
increase the distance between ourselves and the ideal and we never hit the ideal
because the ideal will only ever have been hit if we had always
received those graces, if we had always profited from them.
But I just don't think that's true.
So I think that God has a notion of you, but I think that notion takes into account the
whole temporal sequence.
God has a notion of you from your conception to your death, judgment, and all that follows
in turn.
And God's notion of you is a creative notion.
So God is giving you to be, He is giving you to act, He's working the life of grace into
the whole of that temporal sequence so as to draw you further up and further into the
divine life.
So the standard isn't like, all right, I'm going to judge everything based on how holy
you will be at the age of 83 when you pass, or whatever it is.
That's not a prophecy, that's just a made-up number.
The idea is that, what about now?
This time and this place, can you respond to the grace which I offer you today, which
is the only real grace?
Because past graces, God bless them, I hope they've been enshrined in your heart in a
wonderful way.
Future graces, who knows?
They're downstream of the present, and these are choppy waters, okay?
This is a, whatever, grade five cataract. I'm making stuff up. I don't actually know what river
rafters say. So in light of that, there's no upper bound to our growth except the divine
predestination. God has a notion of how He wants to shape your life for the purpose of
your growth and His glory, but God wills different things in our lives. God loves us differently in
that sense. So, when we think about ourselves falling short, I think we falsify our understanding
of the divine creative love, the divine creative intention, which, you know, underwrites that
creative love. And so, yeah, so I think that it's always possible to partake more richly of the
divine life, but not in the sense that it's always contingent upon our efforts.
Like, I got to strive so hard because, because what? Because there's always more charity to be had in this world. Because charity is infinite.
God is infinitely generous. I'm infinitely capacious. So what are we doing? You know, why are we sitting around talking about it?
Why aren't we with the missionaries of charity in downtown Pittsburgh helping out? You know, it's okay.
Well, it's because I think that God wills this for our lives here and now. And I think that this is part of His plan for our sanctification,
the sanctification of the people who listen in, right? But ultimately for the transformation
of the world, because it's a mystical body, all right? It's not just a mystical heart which beats
at the same rate and everyone is of the same tissue with the same cell structure. It's a mystical
body. And God wants to show by the ecosystematic
harmony of the church, each kind of playing his part, being small, being little, being
humble for the glory of God and the salvation of souls, that it's beautiful and that it's
just, you know, it's good to enjoy friendships, it's good to smoke a cigar, it's good to
do X number of things or Y number of things, because that reflects the subtlety of the
divine plan. And so we're trying to figure out before the Lord, who am I, what am I for,
but you're going to reveal that over the course of my life. I'm going to mature into that vision,
and I hope that with each day I can do so by small stages, you know, more and more faithfully.
But it's not going to be magic. It's not going to be angelic. It's not going to be inorganic. It's
going to be in this body, in this time, in this place, in these circumstances. Sorry, I talked
too long. No, thank you. You know, prior to my conversion,
and then maybe shortly after my conversion, I had an idea of what it would mean to be holy.
And if I'm honest, even though I'm sure I knew I fell short during that time, but I didn't realize
just how wretched I was. Like I was like, I am getting so much better, and I'm doing these
prayers like I said I would. Now at the age of 40, what 22 years into an intentional Christian life or thereabouts,
I am like horrified at how wretched I am. And I don't mean that with false humility. What I mean
is I see my incapacity to love my family as well as I want to, to be present to the people I
encounter every day. Like I would much rather be told read the Bible in the course of a year and go to Holy Mass every day and pray the rosary and,
okay, I can crush that if that's what you're asking of me, Lord, you know? We're a really
large scapula that makes others nervous. Like, I could do that, but like, be patient with your
children when they like, mess up the kitchen for the 18th time and leave the light on in the
bathroom every single time and, and like, love your wife well in her sickness, and don't be moody, and be cheerful. I run smack into
my own impotency, and it's scary. I had a moment the other day where I'm like, I don't know if I...
I often say I want to be a saint, but I think to myself, okay, if the Lord came
down and said, all right, good, in order to do that, here's what I need of you.
I need you to be just cheerful around your wife and your children and serve them.
That's it.
That's it.
I don't know if I could do it.
And then I'm like, do I even want to be a saint?
I believe I do.
I believe I love Jesus, and I believe that my love for Him now is even greater than a
year or 10 years ago, and that He's converting my heart, and I trust in him because he's the one who's going to have to drag me through
this, not me.
And so my confidence is not in my own ability, it's in him.
But if you had a moment like that where you're like, these big things, yeah, I can crush
them, but like, how about don't be a jerk?
Like, how about like, be kind to the barista and look her in the eye and be attentive and...
Yeah, a couple of things come to mind.
I think paying attention is one. I think I'm addicted to efficiency. So even when
I'm going from point A to point B, I have earpods in or AirPods, whatever you
call them, I have the things in. And I'm working on whatever language I need
to get better at to read this article so that I can incorporate it in whatever
else. But I often feel the
division of my heart and that when I walk past people, even if I make eye contact and
smile because I have AirPods in, I'm not present to them. You know, it's just you signal the
fact that I've got something else to do. You know, we have to be 1 billion percent present
to all people at all time as if it were a maximal optimal principle. But just to say,
I can feel that, that I love efficiency sometimes more than I love the other, whether it be the anonymous other or the non-anonymous other.
Another thing is anger. So like sadness and anger both have a kind of hold on my heart
at times. And I realize, especially when you're ideating, when I'm ideating, I should just
own it, when I'm ideating about getting even or getting back or proving wrong or showing myself right,
that it's just poison, it's just death.
And that's like, I can feel that there's an opportunity there to convert, and I don't
know that I always want to.
It's like somebody didn't treat me right, or somebody was just really rude to me.
And then I go to the chapel and I just think about what I ought to have said, or I think
about what I'll do the next time, when, you know, there are moments when I have enough in me at the moment to say,
all right, Lord, I'm sad and I'm angry, and I'm not going to take it beyond that.
So if you want to heal me, if you want to grow me, God be praised. If you want me to sit here for
the next 59 minutes just trying to avoid the near occasion of sin, then I suppose we'll do that too.
Another thing too is, yeah, like with little things. I was thinking about this recently trying to avoid the near occasion of sin, then I suppose we'll do that too.
Another thing too is, yeah, like with little things.
I was thinking about this recently because the house where I'm presently assigned, we
have espers at 5.30, but one day a week we have a holy half hour that starts 30 minutes
early, and I have a mental block against it because it departs from the ordinary schedule.
And also because during exposition, so I've got this thing where I just, when the Blessed
Sacrament is exposed, I don't want this thing where I just, when the Blessed
Sacrament is exposed, I don't want people to be reading books, I don't want people to
be talking, I don't want people to be doing anything else, just being there.
But we say our prayers for our benefactors and we say other prayers in the context of
that holy half hour, and I just don't like it.
And so I don't want my work to be interrupted from its normal schedule, I don't like the
way it's interrupted.
And so if I really wanted to be there, which I ought to be there, it's the one prayer on our schedule
where I'm not present each week. I could just set myself a calendar reminder every Thursday.
It's as simple as that, but I haven't done that. And I think the question is why, and I think the
answer is because I don't want to be a saint yet wholly and entirely, because there are parts of
my life that are still unconverted, and that's awful.
But I also think that that becomes a privileged place
of mendicancy.
It's like, all right, Lord, I'm a little snot.
And I can see that with a little better clarity
at this moment, because I just want myself
at the end of the day.
Like, I am very selfish.
And it's like, if I'm gonna heal and grow beyond that,
I really want your grace to do it.
So I think it's a great moment
to be cognizant of my own poverty
and then ask for the Lord's richness.
And I don't always know,
it's gonna be a week to week thing,
so I have to go next week because I just said this,
but then we'll see about the week after that
and the week after that.
I was reading in the Magnificat the other day. I don't know if you ever read that.
You've got bigger books to read for prayer, I'm sure. But there's these little, not scripture,
but these little kind of inspirational things before and after. And one of them talked about
how the truly humble person is like this, he radiates peace. He's not astonished at
his own faults, nor is he like angered at the success of others.
And I know a lot of saints like Therese and a lot of French saints for some reason talk about this,
about our frustration and sadness at our own faults is really just shows our own pride.
And I don't mean to speak too highly of my wife, but here we go.
She's a very humble person.
Like she's stubborn and she's wretched as well.
And you know, I'm not canonizing her here, nor would she want me to.
But one thing that's different about her and me, and maybe this is just temperament, is
if she blows up or says something stupid or does something wrong, it'll affect her immediately
and then she'll be over it.
Like she'll say, I'm sorry, please forgive me.
And then she's actually over it, you know?
Whereas I do something like that and I hate myself for the entire day.
Again, that might have to do more with just like a melancholic temperament.
I'm, whatever, if these words mean anything to you, like melancholic, choleric, my wife's
like textbook choleric, choleric sanguine. So maybe it has to do with more temperament, but I do sense
a lot of humility in her, just to use anyone as an example. She's not threatened with the success
of others. I see her actually rejoicing in them, and she's not horrified by her own faults. So
to this point of failing as fathers or as priests or what have you, I imagine
like as we grow in humility, it's just there's like an ease about our failures that there
wasn't before.
And whereas before we would have taken that ease of our failures to be neglect, it may
not be.
It might just be this constant relying on the providence of God and recognizing who
I am before Him.
It's hard, right? You don't let yourself off the hook. But I'll tell you this, again,
it might be my temperament, when I don't let myself off the hook, I become a worse person.
So there's a pragmatic reason for me to think greatly on the greatness of God and my trust
in Him. Because when I don't do that, like if I, maybe it works for some people where they're like,
I really have to get serious.
Like I've got to think about hell a lot more and how sinful I am, and that'll motivate
me.
If I do that, it cripples me.
What I need to do is to, and again, you tell me if I'm wrong in taking this approach if
you think I am, but like for me, I have to be like, oh, I am a dear one.
The Father loves me dearly and He really likes me, even when I don't like me.
And I rejoice in that and I thank you Lord that you're at work in me even when I'm not
aware of it.
And I thank you that I love you more today than I did 10 years ago, even when I'm not
aware of it, because you're doing this in me.
And I know I can't trust in you too much Lord.
That's one thing I can never say of you
is that I trusted in you too much.
That kind of language and relationship is what I need
to be a more patient father and a loving child.
Sorry, well, a loving child, but a loving husband.
When I'm harsh with myself, I become an awful person.
And I'm harsher with others, you know?
So a couple of quick thoughts thoughts is first, I mean,
if you adopt a kind of screw tape logic,
if you're a devil, you know, or you're the evil one
and you're trying to get a very talented person to fall,
I mean, it seems like step one would be
get him to rely overly much on himself.
And then step two would be provide occasions for falls
because when he falls, he can only
blame himself.
And if you get in a pattern of blame, guilt, shame, recrimination, it's just death.
And that's the type of stuff that you can speak to.
I mean, with like pornography and stuff like that, guys who like place a lot of pressure
on themselves to get over it.
It's like, I'm not this guy and I ought to be better than this.
And then it just kind of spirals out of control.
The other thing is to, I mean, so I was thinking
about this recently because we talk a lot about fraternal correction in
religious life, and usually when you say fraternal correction you mean you
observe something that a man is doing which is negatively impacting his
relationship with the Lord and with the brothers, and then you bring it to his
attention, and then you help him to troubleshoot it if he wants any help, and
then you kind of step back, but you try to evaluate, one, does this matter or is
this just something
that bugs me because I'm precious?
And two, can it change or should I take a long view?
Should I just simply pray and fast about this thing
and not bring it up?
And then three, do I care?
Do I genuinely care?
Do I love this man enough to communicate
in a way that he can hear it, that he can receive it?
And so, we navigated this in our first few years
in the order with
some success and some failure. And, you know, sometimes you're too hard and you rely upon
people to be gracious, whatever. But what the appreciation that I kind of gained over
the course of months and years was oftentimes it's better to correct by way of affirmation
is to, to, they do that with children too. Oh, okay. Cool. Very. If you want your kid
to keep doing something
Tell him how great it was that he did that thing is all you mean
So no, I mean something that sounds a bit manipulative
So I mean, okay, so you a person has a certain fault
Okay
All right a certain sin or a certain vice which dogs him
But you also see the good act the contrary good act the virtue there, even if it's just weak.
And when you see him exercise that good act
or act out of that virtue undeveloped,
then you note that, right?
Because like, for instance,
one thing you can never tell a man is that he's weak.
No man can hear that.
You know, he just can't hear it about himself.
But when you see an occasion in which he's strong,
note his strength, you know, recall to him his strength.
And I think that that has a way of kind of growing it. Because I think that the Lord affirms us into being. I mean, that's
true of our creation. Right? That's good. That's true of our creation, because we weren't.
And the Lord said, how about you be? And then we were. And it's like, since we aren't at
where we should be as beings, we're not the being we should be, since we're deficient
by sin, he affirms what is that depression within us, if you want, into...
Exactly.
I love it.
Yeah.
So I think that the Lord calls us forth and...
That's beautiful.
Yeah, there's some...
What an attentiveness, right?
To be so attentive to a brother that you know his fault and you see what he struggles with
and to be attentive to him succeeding, even if only mildly, and then to praise him for
that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Gosh, that's good.
Yeah. I talk about my wife a lot because
I know her better than anybody else. And I also know that she doesn't mind me talking about this
because she's extremely open about these things. But like one, one thing I'm noticing in my wife
that I love that she's not great at is vulnerability. She's just a very competent person.
I think she grew up very competent and so she was able to cover up a lot of her like sphere insecurities around things
And when I see this like vulnerable side, it's the most beautiful thing in the world
Fanning it into flame, you know, I like I know you want to make a joke about me
I know you want to curse me right now because you feel really like vulnerable, but I just want you know
I love this bit. I love it. It's so pretty. I love it. I love little Cameron. I love that. That's really cool. It affirms us into being.
That's good. Do you have more in common in your experience with a Dominican from another country,
or with say a Franciscan or a Jesuit or a secular priest in America? What I mean is,
how much does St. Thomas's thought and the
Dominican way of life form you, and is it such that you do experience more in
common with someone over there than someone who grew up in America like you
did? Yeah, I would say there are different styles of Dominican life, and I feel the
greatest sympathy with or closeness to Dominicans who are formed in a similar
style. But yeah,
different ways to go about formation, but those who insist very much on
certain aspects of the common life of choral office, like the divine
office or Liturgy of the Hours together, study of St. Thomas Aquinas, and the
preaching apostolate as we envision in our province, I feel very close to them.
But then if they were raised in a kind of different Dominican environment,
then sometimes it feels stranger. Because it's like, come on. You look like me. Yeah, because we ought to have a similar
vocabulary and a similar grammar, but it ends up that we use somewhat similar
vocabulary but with a very different grammar. And so in those instances, yeah, I
can feel closer to certain diocesan priests or Jesuits. Yeah, I've met a
handful of Jesuits over the course of the last 15 years, and there's a similar spirit, very different emphases when it comes to like
the end, as it were. But yeah, similar spirit. So Jesuits, certain diocesan priests, and
then, yeah, some Franciscans.
This question, believe it or not, is tied to a question I asked you about 20 minutes
ago about how affected are you by Thomas' body and soul, you know what I'm saying
about like the scrupulosity
and that's what I was trying to get out there.
So that's, by the way, you have a new mannerism.
Oh, do I?
I think you've had, you picked up this thing.
This is new.
Oh really?
Yeah.
I like it.
It's like get at the reality.
It's like, yeah.
I like that.
Yeah.
Okay. Speaking of Dominicans, the rosary.
Let's do it.
Let's do the, let's talk about the Holy Rosary.
How do we come at it?
How about, how about, how about,
go back as far as you can in church history
and show me where it began to blossom.
Okay. And how.
What if I just said the natural law? That would be so frustrating.
No, that's okay.
You can do that.
Okay, so you have these, what do you call that?
Well, this is a chotki, right?
A chotki is Russian for knot.
And it's a prayer rope that is used in the East,
but it also has five decades, as you can see.
So I kind of use it for both.
Okay, so it seems like there are quite a few
different religious traditions
which have something like that.
Yeah.
That's not to say like, we're all the same
and there's different paths to the one God.
So whether it's Jesus or somebody else, you be you, sweets.
I'm not saying that.
No.
What I'm saying though, is that it corresponds
to a certain human thing.
Mm-hmm.
So we're made.
I love it.
Okay, we're made.
And in being made, we have the impress of our Creator
in our interior life. You know, we talk about the natural law in these terms. And so there are
certain things we want to know. There are certain things that we want to love, just by virtue of the
fact that we're human beings. And we fall into similar patterns. So like C.S. Lewis makes this
observation in The Abolition of Man, when at the end he talks about the Tao, and he says,
let's survey different religious and philosophical traditions throughout history. You'll notice certain key things come up, and that's significant
because they look a lot like the Ten Commandments. So I think that there's something about the rosary,
or there's something about beads, knots, continuous prayers that you want to, you know,
keep track of in some way, shape, or form, which corresponds to a desire of the human heart.
So I think... Let's stay there for a bit. I don't want to get too much into the keep track of in some way, shape or form, which corresponds to a desire of the human heart.
So I think...
Let's stay there for a bit.
I don't want to get too much into the Christian-y stuff first.
I like this.
You know, because you've got Buddhist prayer beads and Orthodox prayer beads and I'm sure
Hindus and other people have beads of a sort.
That's interesting.
It's just like this thing that we like to hold.
I was in Istanbul recently and yeah, a lot of Muslim prayer beads were being sold
and I actually saw men carrying around holding them. That's just a beautiful thing. We like
to fiddle with things. Maybe that's it. It's just we like to touch things that feel good
and fiddle with them.
Yeah, there's like the fidget spinner kind of vibe. But then there's also, I think that
human beings have a kind of rhythm to their lives and I mean we breathe
so there's a rhythm inbuilt to our organic life and
regularity of
Heartbeats and other things I suppose I don't know enough about the human body to actually say anything further with coherence
But that's good. That's perceived as a good thing. So I think that a kind of rhythmic quality to
good thing. So I think that a kind of rhythmic quality to human life has a spiritual resonance to it. So people will talk about breathing, you know,
moderating your breathing. It's something that happens automatically, but it's also
something over which you have conscious control, and in exercising conscious
control over it, you can gain, I don't know, hold on your interior life. People
talk about this with mindfulness and stuff like that. So I think that prayer,
it's not a surprise to me that prayer would assume a kind of rhythmic quality in different
cultures and different religious traditions or philosophical, theological traditions,
because I think, again, that it corresponds to a desire of the human heart, which I find
to be cool.
And then maybe even more superficially than that is we also like nice things. Like we
want nice rosary beads
That's true. We want a plethora of them
There's the old one doesn't work anymore. So we need a new one from lewards. It was made out of whatever
I remember talking to you about
You were advertising
Rosaries made by gentlemen, maybe three years ago. Okay, calm
You're you're repping it because they had like a good heft to them
Yeah, you know is like you didn't want just an insubstantial Knights of Columbus Okay, cool. And you're repping it because they had like a good heft to them. Yeah.
You know, it's like you didn't want just an insubstantial Knights of Columbus plastic
rosary where you can see the seams.
Exactly.
I also didn't want one that is so absurdly bulky that I need to be like one of the one
of the freshmen at Franciscan and tie it around my loop because it's not fitting in my pocket.
Huh?
I didn't want that. I wanted it somewhere in the middle.
Yeah.
That was practicality,
but I think there is something too about niceness.
Like if someone gives you a plastic rosary
that's like 20 cents to make,
and then they give you a wooden rosary,
you appreciate the wooden one more.
I don't know why we're talking about this.
This wouldn't interest anybody.
You know Father Augustine Weta?
Have you talked to him before?
No.
He's a Benedictine.
He's one of the most hilarious human beings
I've ever met in my entire life.
I want to meet him. Yeah, like I ran to the bathroom at one point because I was in
just dire straits. I was going to wet myself. But he makes rosaries and he sent me a rosary
recently, which I appreciate very much, which it's like my travel rosary. It's like the one
you, never mind, stupid story and it's too long. But it's got like a nice heft to it. I think he
made it out of something like hematite, but I think hematite costs money so I don't think that it's hematite,
hematite. It's something else. I don't know what that is. It's like a, I don't know what it is either.
Is it heavy? Yeah, it's like a heavy thing. It's heavy. He's actually looking it up right now.
I respect that. It's amazing. I can just see the motions from the side of my eye.
So he sent me that and he sent me a little case for it so that way when I go and I sleep in another rectory or something like that, I can bring it into bed as I go to sleep and
then put the case right there on the bedside table so I know when I pick up the case, the
rosary's got to be in it when I travel, which is important or else you're losing rosaries
and beds.
And people are like, oh my gosh, there's a bed in this, I mean there's a rosary in this
bed.
So yes, so there's something nice about a nice rosary.
My mom made this rosary at first.
She bought the beads in Medjugorje
and then she strung them together,
but she did it with like rosary wire
that you would give to a 76 year old Irish grandmother
who praised them in the secrecy of her own home
while sipping tea.
And I just kept hitting things with it
and then it would explode at untimely times.
And so I just bought 18 gauge wire from a hardware store
and then just restrung it on a car trip to Youngstown, Ohio.
Yeah, how many times have you slammed that in a car door?
Many.
Yeah, too many to count.
That's good.
So that's some heft.
All right, but okay, so the origins of-
Do you wanna know what hematite is?
Let's do it.
Yes.
Hematite is a heavy and relatively hard oxide mineral,
ferric oxide, Fe2O3, and it's the most important iron ore.
To a three or to a four, are you sure?
I'm just checking.
It's iron two, oxygen three, Fe2O3.
It constitutes most iron ore in the Earth's core.
Cool, sweet.
I think that's what this is made of.
Yeah, that's pretty heavy.
Oh, that's awesome.
I like a heavy rosary.
There it is. You like to feel it product placement. Yep. Yeah
Okay, so how did the rosary develop my understanding? Yeah, just kind of is that
Maybe the monks prayed 150 Psalms. Yeah, and the lay people wanted to imitate that and maybe offered 150 our vase over the course of a day
Yeah, if that's right or correct that if it isn't, when did that start?
Yeah, so there's a couple other intermediate steps, some of which you will find interesting,
some of which you will not find interesting. So I think that the idea of rhythmic Christian prayer
is a monastic thing, and you'll find this in St. John Cashion's conferences, where you have this
one conference where he's talking to a monk, and the monk talks about repeating,
God come to my assistance, Lord make haste to help me.
About when did he live?
Late fourth, early fifth century, like in Temporary with St. Augustine.
And you'll find this in the East with the Hezekahism movement, so repeating the Jesus prayer.
So something like this is common enough, I suppose.
And then you're right about the early kind of medieval movement, is you have
monasteries are kind of consolidating in the West in about the sixth century is when the Benedictine movement kind of gets in traction.
Mm-hmm. And so the monks would pray the 150 Psalms.
I think at some times in the church's life
it would be like every day and then it was made every week and then more recently
it's been made every four weeks. You make your way through the Salter.
But in order to participate fully in the monastery's life,
you had to be literate and somewhat refined
in your literate culture
because you're just dealing with Latin
and it's, yeah, it's tough.
And a heavy Gothic script and these big antiphonaries
or these big hymnaries or whatever they're called.
So, keep going.
Books weren't hard to come by back then.
Were hard to come by. Exactly. And so, keep going. Yeah, books weren't hard to come by back then.
Were hard to come by, yeah.
Exactly.
And very expensive.
And so, yes, so it'd be like the Lay Brothers in the monastery, because you'd have choir
monks and then you'd have non-choir monks.
So men who wanted to join at some level, and they wanted to participate in the monastery's
life, but they would typically do so by supporting it with work.
So they wanted to have some connection with what was being done in
the chapel, what was being chanted or sung in the chapel. And so they started
with our fathers. So 150 our fathers, you know, Latin Paternoster. And so you have
in the high Middle Ages the development of these Paternosters, which would be
like, yeah, basically a cord of beads or a cord of knots.
150, eh?
Yeah. So apparently in the ancient church, you know, in the patristic church, you had
a practice of counting beads, and I think it's associated with the monks in Egypt. So
some of these first monks like Antony of the Desert or Saint Pecomius who founded one of
the first monasteries. But they were free beads that you would just like move from one
pocket to another as you made your way through the 150 Psalms.
Someone had an idea.
Let's put them together. Yeah. So glorious. And I was reading something that was saying that
you have guilds of Paternoster makers in the 13th century testified to in public chronicles.
So it's like there were people who part of their kind of pious devout acts were to make these
things.
Interesting.
So then it's really, you know-
Do we have any like paintings of them?
I think-
So that we kind of got a sense of what they look like.
Yeah, I don't know about like these kind of rudimentary ones in the 13th century, but
by the 15th, 16th century, yes.
A famous one, a famous example would be the image of Saint Dominic painted by Caravaggio,
who has, it looks like he's handing out rosaries like party favors.
It's not exactly clear what's going on in that image, but it's pretty cool.
Yeah.
And then, so then the organization of the rosary takes some time and it's largely associated with
Carthusians. So I want to say it's in the 14th century that a Carthusian named Henry of someplace, that he started like grouping in ten and
then putting in an Our Father in front of these. So at this point they're the
Hail Mayors? Ah yeah, so at this point they're the Hail Mayors, and that was like 11th
century, I think Peter Damien, St. Peter Damien. Do you know why it switched?
I don't. No, I don't know the reason for which it switched, but it moved to...so I
think that like in the monasteries you had a conscious effort to arrange the
Psalms in conversation with the gospel, because the idea was that the Psalms speak of Christ.
That's something that's solemnly defined in one of the early ecumenical councils.
That's why we pray the psalmody, because it's sung prayer which speaks or testifies
to Christ, that Christ was to come at the time of the composition.
And so you would have, like the monks would
interpolate little verses from the Gospels
when reading through the Psalms or when singing
through the Psalms as a way to kind of put those texts
in conversation.
So that's a kind of rudimentary way of meditating
on the mysteries as it were.
And so I think that, yeah, 11th century,
this idea that Mary and Jesus's life are so obviously
bound up together that that was
a move that you could make. Why you made it, I don't know. But I read, yeah, 11th century,
St. Peter Damon was the first to do so.
Another maybe annoying question. When was it called the rosary and what does that mean?
Yeah, so I've heard it referred to the rosary in the high middle ages. I want to say as
like early as the 11th century. Rosarium just means, you know, like basically a rose garden.
But that it's referred to like this string of beads, it's referred to a rosary in the
16th century.
I want to say like 1597 is the first publicly testified, you know, use of it in that precise
way.
Because up until that it's still been called Paternoster and then maybe there's some intermediate
term.
I don't know.
If you want me to stop interrupting, tell me to.
So you say that's the 16th century, Aquinas is in the 13th century. Was he praying the Rosary?
So he might have been praying something like the Rosary, but not the Rosary that we pray today.
It doesn't seem. So I think it's returning to the Carthusians. You have Henry and then you have
Dominic, Dominic of Prussia specifically. The first comes in the 14th century, the second comes in the
15th century, and they're the ones that really divide it into... So 150 becomes 15 sets of 10.
They're the ones that, you know, put in, or it seems, testify to the fact that an
Our Father has been put in.
And they're the ones that also kind of organize the meditations a little more, because it
used to be that you had a meditation for each bead.
That was kind of hard to keep track of.
So then they proposed certain meditations for groups of 10, and that's what kind of
consolidated into the mysteries and that's still that's still a very potent
Tradition in Germany wherever you say the the Hail Mary you add at the end of the first half
You know the particular mystery on what you're meditating
So you insert those words like how Mary full of grace the Lord is with thee blessed art thou among women and blessed is the fruit
Of thy womb Jesus who came in car exactly. Yep. Yeah, Louie de Montfort talks about this
We're probably not out there yet, but we're probably
not in this history line at, what is he, 17th century?
He is, yes, 17th, 18th.
I think he's ordained like right around 1700.
Yeah, I keep going.
Oh yeah, so that's like, I think that's the basic shape, but then it's after the Council
of Trent, Pope St. Pius V, who was a Dominican, publishes a bowl or he
publishes a document which kind of states what the Rosary is, and that's what's explained in the
Catechism of the Council of Trent. And that's like the Rosary as we have it, or you know, the Rosary
in its rough contours, Our Father Hail Mary, Glory Bees, 15, you know, organized into three sets of
mysteries. And yeah. So I have a lot of thoughts on the Rosary, and they might be upsetting to some, but I'll just
throw them at you and tell them what you think. One thing that really bothers me, and it probably
says more about me than the thing, okay, is what I call piety sprawl. And so you have this very
simple prayer where you have one Our Father, Tenet or Mary's, five of them in a day, you know, but sometimes I'll go to places and they add so they wedge
so many prayers into the middle that what could take 12 minutes now
takes like 30 or 40 minutes.
And I don't like that because it seems like it's making it something other than it is.
But if you criticize it, it's like someone might say, well, you have a problem
with more prayers. I'm like, okay, but if that's your objection, what if at the
end of each decade, the prayer we prayed was another rosary? And then you move on to the
next decade and there's like, you know, so I mean, you can always add more prayers. But
the point is, I also want to kind of contemplate the mysteries without getting sleepy or something.
So what's your thoughts on piety sprawl, as it were? Yeah, so I think you have two poles. Basically,
God reveals and man receives. And I think that God reveals typically in a way that man can receive,
or he makes him able to receive in the way that he reveals. So God reveals, he communicates to the
life of grace, man recognizes the fact he's receiving it, and that's on account of the fact that God's creating in him the capacity for
it. But it's still interfacing with our human nature. And for instance, if you were to say,
I want you to pray a 19-hour prayer, you would look at me and say, that's just not feasible
because I typically sleep whatever, six and a half, seven hours a night. And I would say, oh,
okay, I'm proposing a prayer which is not a human shape.
But it's not just what can you endure
over the course of the day.
It's also like, how does prayer interface
with your human life in all of its complexity?
Because it's addressed to you here and now
in this time and place in these circumstances.
And I think that prayers, they've kind of been refined
over the ages to assume certain contours
which correspond to, you know, like the commute or which correspond to the, you know, the nap time and things like that.
I don't think that's accidental that prayers assume certain times, places, shapes.
And I think that we often feel it, we feel a kind of tension when a prayer gets beyond
its ordinary shape, or it starts to swell beyond, like like a human set of contours. Give you an example. I was at World Youth Day in Canada and we arrived at this church as
teenage pilgrims and we began to pray the rosary and then we finished it and then it was
the first sorrowful mystery like, oh we're praying all three of these, which maybe I could have like
psyched myself up for if I knew that was the case, but I am unwilling. Not that
I can't, but I don't want to do this anymore.
Yeah, yeah. So I think it's good that prayers be what they are, and I think that it's better
that they not grow in the way that you described. Like, piety sprawl I think can actually be
bad because my suspicion is that, one, the thought world behind it is longer is better,
or the thought world behind it is if I don't explicitly mention it, it's not going to happen, or other associated anxieties.
But it can be simply an expression of love, an expression of devotion, but I think especially
when other people are present, you have to be solicitous for their good.
And I think that part of that is adapting the prayer to their capacity.
And so, I don't like that the rosaryary grows and I will sometimes roll my eyes about it.
My, you know, we had an adopted Irish grandmother
at the parish who would pray the rosary at light speed,
but then at the end would add a bunch of prayers.
And even at the age of nine, I was like,
seems like we could do this differently.
You know, it's like, not sure, but yeah.
So I'm generally with you.
And so for instance, the Dominican rosary
is a little more efficient than the typical kind of
essential into efficiency. I am into efficiency. Yeah. I think for me,
in terms of liturgical acts, efficiency is a good thing.
So if you've been at a mass where you feel like what father is wasting time at
the wrong junctures, it's frustrating. Like if he preaches a homily,
which is disorganized,
it's clear that he hasn't made adequate preparation and it's long. You're like,
I I'm, I'm hurt by that. I'm sad, I'm angry and it's your fault.
Or if they've got like a fleet of altar servers
who end up making things more complicated and less devout,
you're like, why are we doing?
Is this just to involve people or is this because,
so I think that when liturgy becomes inefficient,
it becomes distracting
and it becomes an occasion of sadness and anger. So, the Dominican Rosary, it's you to say,
Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee. And then the rest of the brothers respond,
Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. And then you say,
Lord, open my lips, and my mouth will proclaim your praise. God, come to my assistance, so Lord,
make haste to help me. Glory to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, as it was in
the beginning, is now, and will be forever. Amen. Hallelujah." And then you just go straight into the mysteries.
I see.
All right, so no Creed, Our Father, Three Hail Marys, Glory Be, which are fine. It's like not a
bad—I'm not saying those are a bad thing, but I'm saying the Dominican Rosary typically takes
about 13 minutes. It's chanted in choral office. There are a lot of people there. It's cross-generational.
It's a thing that's just been set for a long time. And there's a desire, well, to not tinker with it,
a desire just to kind of perpetuate it in fidelity without adding.
So we don't even say the Fatima prayers, for instance.
So at the end of each Glory Be, you know, people will say, Oh, my Jesus.
We don't even say those.
And at the end, it's just the Hail Holy Queen, and then the presiding priest says, Let us
pray, and he finishes that prayer.
And then it's just, we don't say the St. Michael prayer, it's just, May the souls of the faithful
depart through the mercy of God, rest in peace,
amen, may Almighty God bless you, and you're done. I like it. And I like it
because it's a 13-minute prayer, and we say it in the middle of the day, we
follow by midday prayer, and we've been in the chapel for 20-25 minutes, we go to
lunch, we're back at the desk at 1, and I'm not saying that you're supposed to
rush through your religious life, or you're supposed to rush through your
Christian life, but I also think that you want to punctuate your religious life or your Christian life with ways by which to recollect
yourself in the presence of God, to receive the grace which He is so generous to give,
but without belaboring it such that your humanity takes such a toll, or it takes such a toll on your
humanity, that the chances of you going back to the chapel are less. Because I do think that
fidelity is super important, and I think that we need to be gentle with our humanity in light of
that. Let me tell you how we pray the rosary
and you criticize it if you want.
So we say the Holy Rosary of the Blessed Virgin Mary,
the first mystery.
Boom, yeah.
And then we do it.
And I like that a lot for a number of reasons.
One, I have small children, you know?
And two, I think if I were to like
add all these pious additions like are
they are they in between each decade? Nothing wrong with it. If I was to
start layering up these prayers, then now I've got a 30-minute prayer and it's
hard enough with a family to be like, come on kids, let's take a seat and we'll
pray the rosary. So this is just something that really works for me. I
really like it a lot. I will say as somebody who kind of became an Eastern Catholic, who became, I really liked the Jesus prayer, and
I sometimes find that I like it a lot more than the rosary. And I think the reason I
think that is, one, it's very, you don't have to use your breath when you pray the Jesus
prayer. It's a common misconception, but it does sort of, it lends itself to that and it kind of relaxes the body as it were, and it enables me
to continually focus on Jesus. But I also don't feel the same pressure to be super duper attentive
to every word that maybe I unnecessarily feel about the Rosary. Oh, you're not thinking about
the mystery. You're not thinking about the mystery, you know. So it's something I can just like pick
up in my pocket as I walk
down to Leo's and pray the Jesus prayer in a way that I don't feel I can do to kind of
pray the rosary and to think about the mysteries and things like this. And so the end.
Yeah. So when people ask like, how do you do this? Because there's the vocal prayer,
you know, there's the text that you're working through. Then there are mysteries upon which
you meditate.
You cannot possibly think of both at once. It's not humanly possible.
I don't think that we need to be super concerned about that or super anguished about that.
So I think it's like, here's my perspective. We are saved by the mysteries of the life of Christ.
So God, in saving us, he takes to himself certain instruments because he thinks that those
instruments are very good
for accommodating salvation to us.
Because he's like, I could just snap my fingers
and you're saved.
But I wanna do it in a way that you, as a human being,
can again, begin to appreciate, that you can recognize
that you can receive in a human way
such that it takes deeper hold on you.
And so that it kind of interfaces organically
with your human experience, because I want to save the whole of your human experience.
So our Lord Jesus Christ takes to Himself our humanity, the sacred humanity of our Lord
Jesus Christ.
Boom.
But then that kind of chain of mediation or that chain of instrumentality extends further
still, again, as an expression of the divine generosity.
So you have the church and the sacraments, you know, but one of these things that we don't often talk about are the mysteries of the life
of Christ. So I was saying how our Lord lives a whole human life so that it maps onto our whole
human life, but all of the deeds and sufferings of Christ save. It's not just the passion, death,
and resurrection. It's everything from the conception until the present moment in a certain
sense, the sending of the Spirit. All of those things save. All of those have something to say
about our salvation, and in saying something about our salvation,
they give salvation. And the reason that we meditate on the mysteries of the life of Christ
isn't because it's like, oh, isn't Jesus, you know, such a swell fella, maybe I should
prayerfully consider living like Him in the future. It's like, no, everything that He
does saves. So we're kind of positioning ourselves before those saving mysteries alongside the
Blessed Virgin Mary or in communion with the Blessed Virgin Mary, ultimately so that they can have
their effect on us.
Because the goal is through His humanity, His mysteries, His Church, His sacraments,
and other things besides, we're actually conformed to Him.
And in being conformed to Him, we're assimilated to God.
Like we're drawn into the divine life by interfacing with the means that our Lord appointed to
precisely that end. So when we read the sacred scriptures, you know, a good question to ask is, like,
what is the Lord teaching here? But I think that if we say that as if the Lord were just a
sage philosopher, we're reducing the text, like Thomas Jefferson reduced the text. I think we
should ask, how is the Lord saving here? Because the Lord is saving through teaching, through
working miracles, through exercising demons, and the Rosary is just meant to focus that.
But I think that you can kind of adopt a posture somewhat passively before the mysteries, recall
them to mind, but then just say the prayers without worrying too terribly much, because
I think that worry will actually make it harder just to be washed by, bathed in the mysteries
themselves.
Yes, no, that's really good.
If people are doubtful of what we might be saying here, and I would
encourage people to pick up a copy of the 1962 Latin Missal, turn to where it talks about the
Rosary, and what you'll find is it says exactly what I'm saying, that here's the prayers of the
Rosary. You know, you have the Our Father, Five Hail Mary's, and then I think it may even not
include the Hail Holy Queen, I'm not sure. Sorry, 10 Hail
Mary's. I'm not even sure if it includes the Hail Holy Queen, but the point is it says any other,
something to the effect, I wish I had it with me, any other prayers are optional pious additions,
or something like that. And man, that's good for me. One thing I don't think people realize too,
is that the Holy Mary Mother of God part of the Hail Mary wasn't added until, was it around the
Black Plague or something? When was that? Yeah, yeah, so there were many Black Plagues from
13th to the 16th century. But yes, so obviously the first half is from Sacred Scripture, and it's an
early tradition to append the angelic salutation, as it's called in the medieval tradition, the
words of the Archangel Gabriel to Mary, to the latter half, which are the words of St. Elizabeth
in their meeting at the Visitation. So that was, to the latter half, which are the words of St. Elizabeth in their meeting at the visitation.
So that was an old pious practice, which you see kind of come together in the Middle Ages.
But then different people attribute the Holy Mary, Mother of God, to different people.
That's a somewhat coherent statement.
But first testimony to something like it is at the Council of Ephesus when, third ecumenical
council, Mary was kind of
vindicated as the mother of God, because you had an historians out there saying she's the
mother of Christ but not the mother of God for reasons of complicated Christological
blah, blah, blah. But people kind of acclaimed her Holy Mary, Mother of God, in reception
of that teaching, so that's like one ancient source. But then some people attribute to Blessed Alan de La Roche, who was a 15th century Dominican who is a big part of associating Saint Dominic with the
reception of the Rosary. Some people attribute it to Saint Peter Canisius. It appears in the Catechism
that he wrote, I guess it would be during the Council of Trent, and then it is part of the
promulgation of the Rosary after the Council of Trent. It's like definitely there at that stage of the game. So
different sources disputed as to which holds pride of place, but yeah.
But even like the word Jesus, for instance, wasn't added to the first half
of the prayer until like the 13th century in official fashion. I think it's
like Urban the Sixth and the 1260, who, you know, who adds that because,
you know, the blessed, I mean, in her conversation with St. Elizabeth, the Blessed Virgin Mary
doesn't hear the word Jesus.
It's just, yeah.
There was a prayer rule in the East, and I forget the name of it now, which is essentially
the Rosary.
Okay.
And some in the East claim that it was even prior to what was attributed to Dominic.
And it involves like 150 avays.
That's right.
With the kind of Eastern slant on the Hail Mary.
Yeah.
And even with very, very similar mysteries.
I think there might be one or two that are different,
but that's it.
Okay, cool.
It's quite an interesting thing to look into.
If anyone knows what that prayer rule is, let us know.
Probably on Wikipedia. Yeah. History of the Rosary, Wikipedia rule is, let us know. Probably on Wikipedia.
Yeah.
History of the Rosary, Wikipedia.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Good.
I had someone here recently, Michael Gormley,
who's, I don't know if you know him,
he was a Franciscan-grey, lovely fella,
and he was talking about how they pray that little,
they read a verse from scripture between every Hail Mary.
Oh yeah.
The Bible Rosary or whatever they call it.
And I say I don't like that. But I don't like that not because I don't think it's a beautiful,
meritorious thing that could be encouraged in certain circumstances, or you might want to do all the time and that's fine,
but because it just felt like it kept interrupting what I believe to be like just this natural flowing prayer.
I think that's just a personal preference.
But I can also see how that could be beneficial to say, like, if let's say if you were praying
the rosary every night with your children or on your own, that could be something you
pull out once a week or once a month to kind of like reorient yourself to the mysteries
because it is easy to pray the mysteries. And you're really only thinking of like one
image in your mind and you're not kind of taking into consideration the entire mystery.
So I can see how that could be
beneficial. Yeah I've gone through seasons in my life like my life is
long. Prayer or the Theotokos? I'm sorry keep talking. Boom. Yeah so for a while
there I was using the scriptural rosary which I liked at the time but kind of
fell out of the practice and then for a while there I was using the Magnificat
rosary companion just to look at the sacred images because they had it such that there were a lot of frangelico images, kind of high Middle Ages, even late Middle Ages,
which I found to be helpful for reflecting upon the mysteries, especially since I was praying it at the time in the chapel.
But then for the past three years,
I've basically been praying a rosary while walking,
because it wasn't part of the prayer schedule of the house that I was assigned to when I lived in Switzerland. And I like that.
It's just a different thing. Because I also have a lot of time in the day
dedicated to more contemplative prayer where you're just sitting in silence. And so to
have the rosary just be something different, perhaps a bit more embodied than I might otherwise
experience prayer to be. That was nice.
It's also sometimes easier to concentrate while you're moving.
Yeah. Yeah. So I think it's fine if you try something and then try something else and then try something else.
I don't think there has to be like a somebody told me in a conversation or this saint said
at whatever point that the best way by which to is dot dot dot. It's like, well, no, the church
and the in-caridin of indulgences says if you pray it in a church, like if you pray in the presence
of the blessed sacrament, excuse me, if you pray it in common with other people, there's a
special, you know, indulgence attached to that. So we can take guidance from
that certainly, but I don't think we have to stress about the particular mode and
manner except experimentally just kind of suss through. Let me just read this
real quick. So this is called the Rule of the Theotokos. It's a Christian prayer of
the Eastern Orthodox that consists of reciting angelical salutations 150
times. This rule is similar to the Rosary of the Western Church. Some believe that the Mother of
God showed the rule to people in the 8th century but was later forgotten and was rediscovered
for Eastern Christians by Saint Seraphim of Sarov. That's who I was thinking of. The prayer consists
of 100 angelical salutations which are divided into 15 decades. Isn't this wild?
That is one each decade focuses on some important event the life of Jesus Christ
Here are those 15 decades ready? Let's see how many are similar
So number one birth of the theotokos so that's different the presentation of theotokos
Okay, but then it's annunciation visitation to Elizabeth birth of Christ. Yep
Meeting of the Lord flight into Egypt loss of Jesus in the temple, crazy.
Miracle in Cana of Galilee, theotokos standing by the cross, resurrection of Christ, ascension
of Christ, ascent of the Holy Spirit, dormition of the theotokos, glory of the theotokos.
Oh wow. Yeah. Yeah, that clings pretty close. Interesting stuff, eh? It is. But
But one of the reasons that little addition that Louis de Montfort speaks of in, I forget what it's called, something of the Rosary.
The Secret of the Rosary?
Yeah.
One of the reasons that seemed to make sense is there was not the Holy Mary Mother of God
part.
So saying, Hail Mary, full of grace, Lord, with thee blessed art thou among women, and
blessed is the fruit of thy womb Jesus, who is incarnate. Hail Mary. That seems to make make more sense.
Yeah. Yeah. They still do it, I mean, at present in the German-speaking world or
in a lot of places in the German-speaking world. It's super charming.
Yeah. Charming sounds like I'm patting it on the head, but I like it. Yeah, it's charming. I think what
is probably true of a lot of people who've gotten into the prayer rope, the
Jesus Prayer, and then have gone back to the rosary is it it is a difficult prayer to pray with two breaths
You know with the Jesus prayer you can you can incorporate that into your breath
What would you say to somebody who's like well? I'm just gonna I
Got a couple of thoughts here. Yeah, let me sell on this one first. Yep
Because I do I agree with you that there's often this if it's longer. It's better. Yeah
Because I do, I agree with you that there's often this, if it's longer it's better. But there's also this, if it's original it's better.
So like this is how they really prayed it in the beginning.
Preferential option for the ancient?
That has a lot, yes, thank you.
So if that's the case, I wonder why there hasn't been a move to return to the first,
the angelic salutation, just as it was in the beginning.
Good, yeah? Good question. I heard, and I don't know if this is well attested to, but
Bugnini at the end of the Second Vatican Council made recommendations to Paul VI
that the rosary be adapted, and he's like, we're not touching it. He's like, it's just too
deeply entrenched in pious practice, because it doesn't really change from the
16th century until 1917 with the apparition in July of 1917 that Our Lady requests that you pray the
Fatima prayer at the end of each decade. So I think... So if she's requesting that, why aren't
you Dominicans praying it and playing devil's advocate? No, it's great. I think that there is
a variety of lowercase T traditions. I think that one thing that I love about the church is there's
a kind of let a thousand flowers bloom type disposition when it comes to the devout life and when it comes to pious practices,
which I find to be pretty wonderful, because the idea is there isn't just one optimal
maximal way to conduct your devout life, your pious practices.
There are a variety, and those reflect a variety of temperaments, constitutions, formations, but also the divine
predestination. God wills that you assume a different pious practice than I assume,
like the wearing of a habit, for instance. It wouldn't make sense for a lay person to wear a
habit. You have lay fraternities, you have third orders, which have certain times and seasons in
which they might wear part of a habit or a habit, but it would just be bizarre. It'd be like,
Matt, aren't you married?
You know, like, don't you have four kids?
Yeah, this is at best confusing.
Yeah, exactly.
And that's because God wills different things
for different people.
And I really do like insisting
on the lowercase T traditions of the church.
So like a lot of people will bristle
at the mention of Thomism.
They're like, you guys think everyone should be a Thomist.
I was like, no, I think it's an excellent way
by which to approach reality. And I don't think that we should relativize
it and say it's just one way because I do think it has a kind of pride of place. But
I also think it's super important for the health of Thomism, for the health of other
intellectual traditions, that people develop those other intellectual traditions vigorously.
Because if not, I think that people will eventually reject Thomism because people reject all things
that are proposed with authoritarian confidence. You know, so I think that we will eventually reject Thomism because people reject all things that are proposed with
authoritarian confidence.
You know, so I think that we need to have a vigorous debate in the academy and in the church on
substantive issues, and we need to bring different conceptual resources to the table.
Otherwise people are just going to assume that this is the way they're going to find problems with it.
They're going to reject it. But it's like we found problems with it, too.
That's why we're in conversation with other people from whom we can learn and from whom we can benefit. And so when
it comes to the devout life, I think it's, yeah, let a thousand flowers bloom. And this is one way
of praying the rosary. This is one way of praying the rosary. This is one way of praying the rosary.
The church also doesn't mandate that you pray the rosary. I think it's important to say. I think
it's really important that we distinguish between, say, what the church, I mean, there's a spectrum,
hey, what does the church forbid? What does the Church caution against? What does the Church permit? What does the Church encourage? What does the
Church mandate? And I think too often, maybe not too often, but you occasionally see people,
they take a liking to a particular devotion and they speak about it as if the Church is
mandating it when it doesn't, and I think thereby in a sense, heaping up burdens. Mason-I agree wholeheartedly.
Mason-Yeah.
Because most Western devotions, it seems to me, if you read about them, are attributed
to some saint, or some inner locution, or some vision.
What I'm saying is, if you want to say, but you should pray the Rosary because it was
revealed to Dominic or something. Okay, but you can
say that about many. I wouldn't be surprised if it's hundreds of devotions. So what are
you going to do? Are you going to do all of them and drive yourself crazy? No, what you're
probably going to do is choose a few and hopefully remain faithful to them, and then not mandate
to the rest of the church that they ought to be experiencing prayer and devotional life
the way you have found most optimal.
Yep, I agree wholeheartedly because, and I'm sensitive to this too, especially in the digital
space with podcasting, you have a listenership who trusts you and who looks to you for guidance,
and that's cool, you know, but it also can be abused, right?
It's like you should definitely, it's like I recommend very few things. Right? I recommend
the Ten Commandments, the Five Precepts of the Church, because they're mandated. You know, but
when it comes to like, what's a book that I need to read? My go-to answer is the Gospel of John.
Right? Beyond that, you know, there are other things that you can read, but I really like
GK Chesterton's orthodoxy, but I never recommend it because it's so peculiar. And I think the
chances that the person to whom I recommend it, that they like it, are low.
Or at least not so good that I can have any confidence
in making that recommendation.
Because I think that when you make a recommendation,
you say to somebody, I know you,
and I know what's good for you,
but I think that's often a presumption to a relationship
which isn't really there.
I think that those recommendations are best done
in the context of a relationship.
Like, I see you, I know you, I love you,
and I think this might be for your good.
But you're totally free to reject that
in the context of a real relationship.
Whereas when you really lean on authority
or make a recommendation from nowhere to no one
or into the void, I think that the chances
of misinterpretation and that going off the rails are higher.
So I don't just like, I don't back off moral authority,
but I only wanna use moral authority
in a way that's responsible,
especially, you know, like in the 21st century
when moral authority has been so abused
by so many communities, like in the church, sure,
people will say like, I mean, with scandals,
that's, it's tough, you know, we're in a tough spot.
But also like you think about the pandemic
for the last three years
and the scientific community saying,
we know this for sure
Yeah, you do. Okay, perfect
You know
so like we're in a we're in just a weird spot right now because people have been overplaying the authority hand and then you see
Their cards and you're like, I'm sorry that you did that for what reason, you know, so yeah
Yeah, that's good
the rosary so
That's good. The rosary. So, the church assigns plenary indulgences to four pious acts that you can gain any day without special provision. So, read sacred scripture for 30 minutes,
pray for 30 minutes in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament, make the stations of the cross in a
public church or oratory, and pray the rosary in common. The church says if you do those pious acts
with the other things, so you have to receive Holy Communion on the day of,
you have to have gone to confession either eight days before or eight days after, like within that range.
You have to pray for the Pope, usually people say an Our Father and a Hail Mary, and you have to seek to be
detached from sin. If you do those things, you can gain a plenary indulgence for someone who's died or for yourself,
not for other living people. And so it seems
like the church is saying these are good ways, if you're looking to grow your
devout life, these are good ways to explore. But beyond that, I don't know, I
don't know what else to say. What are your thoughts on the Luminous Mysteries?
Yeah, party on. So they were what, promulgated in 2002 I think? I think it was
October something of 2002. But yeah, St. John Paul II, I suppose he was looking at the landscape and said,
we go from Jesus' twelve, and he's lost to his parents for three days, thus, you know, kind of foretelling the resurrection, and restore to them, I should say, thus foretelling the resurrection.
And then we go from there to the agony in the garden. So it's like, holy smokes. You get the
impression that this man came into the world to die, which is true enough, but he also came into
this world to live. And I think that returns us to the point that I was harping on earlier,
that all of the deeds and sufferings of Christ save. The baptism is an excellent example of this.
Why is the Lord baptized? You ask that question, why are we baptized? Well, it's because we're born in sin, says Psalm 51.
So, we need baptism in order to be healed and grown beyond our fallen state.
I mean, we remain fallen, but we can heal from some of it, we can grow beyond some of it,
so that we can receive this adoption as sons and daughters of God, grace, virtue, gifts of the Holy Spirit,
all kinds of cool things besides. But none of that applies to Christ, because he doesn't need to deal with sin, whether original or personal. He already
is the natural Son of God. He has grace, virtue, gifts of the Holy Spirit out the
wazoo, if I can speak somewhat casually. So why then is he baptized? St. Ambrose
makes this observation, he says, when we, you know, have the waters poured upon us
or are immersed in the waters, they cleanse us. Like, that's the trajectory.
Waters to us, cleansing goes on. In the case of Christ, when he's immersed in the waters,
he cleanses them, which is to say he imparts to them the power to cleanse us.
Mason- What does that even mean?
David- So it's like he's instituting the sacrament.
Mason- He's not actually cleansing the waters that he's within. So what is he doing?
David- Basically, he's instituting the sacrament of baptism.
Mason- Okay.
David- So by his institution of the sacrament of baptism, now when the minister of the church
pours the water over an infant's head and says, you know, child, I baptize you in the institution of the sacrament of baptism, now when the minister of the church
pours the water over an infant's head and says, you know, child, I baptize you in the
name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, that affects what it signifies.
But it would have done that whether or not he was baptized.
So it would have done that provided only that he instituted the sacrament of baptism.
And so we see him institute the sacrament of baptism in his baptism.
But like, with any of the sacraments, the sacraments have a power to communicate a grace, right? So we would
say that sacraments are signs of a sacred thing which make men holy. But we
also say that each of them were instituted by Christ. So it's a
contentious question in the Middle Ages whether that institution is mediated by
the early church, but Christ...
I just don't know why we... I don't know why Ambrose's point is so profound
we you think of other obviously I'm wrong no no no I'm just trying to wrestle no you got it you
got to suss it out yeah so like I mean there are other sacraments that we don't see Christ
engaging in specifically like extreme unction yeah like it's not like that had to happen for
him to somehow hello all of the oil in the world or a specific type of... So it just sounds cute and poetic, like,
we do this, so we are cleansed, he does this, so he can cleanse. Oh, that's nice. Or he absorbs
the sin. Like, I can see it in a kind of poetic interpretation, but maybe when you make it kind of
literal and specific, maybe that's what I'm trying to do and I shouldn't be doing it.
No, it's good. Let's keep going until you're satisfied or until Jesus comes back.
So here's the thing about that gesture. It's a strange gesture. To be baptized. For him to be baptized. Yeah, that is strange. It merits questioning. Yeah, so for one who is less than him, who acknowledges the fact that he is less than him,
I'm not worthy to loosen the straps of your sandals. I should be baptized by you, etc, etc.
But the Lord says that it's necessary for the fulfillment of all righteousness. The word there being tikaosune, which is like justice in the deepest sense of the term, which
is to say to be made right with God. Okay? So he's saying this is for salvation. So that underlines
the fact that all of the deeds and sufferings of Christ save, or that this, at the very least,
this deed of Christ saves. So then you ask the question, how is the Lord saving? And the
paradoxical nature of the gesture, I think,
it makes that question more urgent
because we know how baptism ordinarily saves.
It makes you an adopted son of God.
It gives you grace, virtue,
and the gifts of the Holy Spirit.
It does a lot of cool things,
but none of those apply to Christ.
So when you recount that, you know,
in your own telling of the story,
then you have to drill down,
like what's actually happening here.
And you can just say, juridically,
he's instituting the sacrament. Cool, okay? But what happens in sacraments? Visible signs
communicate invisible graces. So the Lord is investing this visible thing with an invisible
ability, as it were, or an invisible power, right? So we would say, and we just quote the
woman who came up behind him in the crowd who had been hemorrhaging for 12 years. So power goes out from him. Even, you know,
you just grab the hem of his garment, power goes out from him.
And so you get a deeper appreciation in, you know,
like praying through the baptism,
because we're talking about the luminous mysteries.
You get a deeper appreciation for the power that goes out from him.
And you get that also in the transfiguration.
Like the Lord constrains his glory. I was preaching about this maybe yesterday. Yeah,
it was yesterday. So, we often think about, he said in the gospel yesterday,
I'm making humble of heart, you know. And we think about that as like Christ is weak and he's
initiating us into this slave mentality. I should say our atheistic contemporaries think that.
But it's like, no, when we talk about God, you know, he's not a tame God. When we talk about God, we're talking about overabounding life,
but we're talking about overabounding power. Slow down, Gregory, you're getting
ahead of yourself. Okay, so. And what we see in the incarnation is the Lord
actually constrains His glory so that it doesn't destroy us, right? So we talk
about the weight of glory, that God is greater than our hearts, that eye has
not seen nor ear heard, nor has it so much as dawned on the heart of glory, that God is greater than our hearts, that eye has not seen nor ear
heard nor has it so much as dawned on the heart of man what God has ready for those
who love him.
So there's something potent here, all right?
But God veils his radiance, God constrains his glory, God makes mute the word so that
we can actually interact with him, so that we can recognize and receive something which
comes to us clothed in human vesture, because otherwise it would tear us apart. Not in the sense that God is creepy,
right, but in the sense that we're talking about being itself, He whose very nature is to be.
Everything else that we experience in this world is a limited sense of to be. It's a
it's like a kind of narrowed down sense of to be. And so God in the incarnation,
He makes the divine causality like more tolerable
for us in a certain sense. And we see something of that in the baptism, in the transfiguration,
because when the glory breaks through, it's like holy smokes, right? And not just in a
poetic sense, but in a real sense. With the transfiguration, it grinds them under in the
sense that they can't lift up their heads. It's not like, oh, let's bow, this is a holy
thing. It's like they almost go to sleep.
You know, it's so thick.
The atmosphere is so thick.
And I think you have something of that in the baptism.
Like the power goes out from him, that it imparts to the waters the very capacity to
cleanse, and that the Lord, in submitting to the baptism of John, showing his humility,
it's not just like, oh, look how humble he is.
It's like look at the humility of the whole dispensation of salvation history, of God's dealing with men, of the divine
condescension, of the abbreviated word, which adopts this posture so that he can
speak to us face to face in the context of friendship and in the setting of
friendship to draw us up into the communion of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
So, like, I think you can begin to get an intimation of that. Do you have to say all
that to yourself while praying the baptism of the Lord? No, but I think you can begin to get an intimation of that. Do you have to say all that to yourself while praying the baptism of the Lord?
No, but I think that that's at work in it.
Yeah.
And I think you have contact with what is at work in it, and I think that changes you. Which is like, even if you don't
know what you're saying when you're praying the rosary,
I think you have to account for the fact that 40 years later, this dad who led his family in the rosary now has sane kids.
Wow.
You know, it's like, how do you? I mean, when 25% of this generation identifies as something other than, you know, heterosexual, you know, it's like, how do you? I mean, when 25% of this generation identifies as something
other than, you know, heterosexual, you know, it's like, I mean, like this whole family,
you know, they're all, I mean, and not to say like, parents who have seven kids and one of whom
might be a little bit off the rails right now, it's not like you failed, but to say like, how do
you account for sanity cross generationally, except God's fidelity, which is made manifest in,
which is communicated through our sacramental practice, our life of prayer,
our friendship, like the realness of our relationships, you know, whatever. So,
yeah, that's really good. Luminous mysteries. Yeah. I'm, I'm forum. Yeah.
You know, so I wear 150 on my, on my hip. Yeah. Like the aforementioned freshmen.
I wonder how panicked Dominicans were when that came out like, Oh no,
am I gonna have
to get, this is gonna be even longer? Exactly. Are the beads gonna have to get significantly smaller?
Yeah, so I think there are reasons not to do it. You know, when you're thinking about Saint John
Paul II, 2001, he's like, should I, should I, should I? There are reasons not to, because of,
you know, this connection with the Psalms, there are 150 Psalms, the Psalter of Our Lady. Breaks
the imagery. Yeah, and also people have been doing it this way for a long time, so are we sure we want to?
But it sounds like in the church there are already quite a few people who are already
adding mysteries.
And also, to be clear, is a suggestion. John Paul II said, was a suggestion.
That's important too. It's not like he was now mandating something.
Yeah, and then he kind of goes through and says, you know, you can pray these mysteries on these
days if you're in the habit of praying the rosary every day. And he assigns those mysteries
to Thursday because of the connection with the institution of the Eucharist, which is cool.
Yeah, I think let a thousand flowers bloom. I want to point out two books that people might
be interested in. One is I wrote a book on the rosary with ascension press. Would you mind putting a link in the description?
Thank you very appreciate that
You never talked to me like that when I didn't have any hair. I just told me a loser
Yeah, so this this is I'm really I like this little rosary. I actually wrote this for a class in theology
Dr. Michael Barber was my professor and in this book what I do is I show how every Rosary has a type in the
Old Testament. And so it's very biblically based and it's also infused with writings
from the Church Fathers. It's in a little leatherette book. You can get that if you
want it. It's also in Spanish, which is cool. And Braille. That's awesome. I just found
this out after the fact. Another book I want to tell people about is our book that we wrote
together. Here it is.
Can I hold it up for people Thursday?
That camera. Yep.
Marian Consecration with Aquinas, a nine-day path for growing closer to the mother of God that Father Pine and I put together.
So, you know, if you like the rosary,
sorry, and you're into Marian things, but a 33 day preparation just seems a little too
much for you right now. If you're more of a sprint guy like me, I'm thinking of Gimli
from the Lord of the Rings where he says something to the effect of, uh, we're lost in cross
country cross country. We dwarves the sprinters, something to that effect. I support you. I
never regret saying that anecdote. Yeah. Um,. Yeah. Yeah. I think your pocket guide is out of print. Oh,
because it's not on even on Ascension's website. No, unless their only place I can
find it on Amazon is in a five book bundle. It's not because they discontinued it father.
It's because it was that good. Selling like hotcakes. I'll do your Look into that one. But this is a good book, Mary and Consecration, that
we'd recommend that you check out. It's on Audible as well if you want to listen to somebody
do it. But it'll take you nine days of preparation to total consecration with Mary. And we kind
of address some of the concerns that people might have about praying to the saints or
too much attention to the Blessed Virgin Mary or things like that. But boom.
Do people say stuff to you about this book? Yeah, yeah. A couple of people have read it and a
couple of people have liked it and a couple is a loose term. When I became
Catholic I was immediately confronted by Protestants who were very well-meaning
people and loved the Lord and were serious and they had criticisms, you know,
of Catholics devotions to the Blessed Virgin Mary. So I feel like the time, as I was becoming a new kind of Catholic, I was
a little defensive and a little kind of gun shy. Now, 22 or whatever years in, like, you
can't speak more effusively of the Blessed Virgin Mary. And whenever you do, I'm like,
keep going. I just, I can't get enough. I just love her. Yeah. And I think GK Chesterton said that
Mariolatry is the badge and boast of every papist or something like that.
You know, type of thing he would say. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. I'm not concerned about it at all. Like Maximilian Kolbe, he speaks.
I'm like, keep going, baby. That's not even close to what I want.
I just think she's the bee's knees to put it in theological language.
Exactly, yeah.
But yeah, that could be a beautiful way
to kind of develop a devotion
to the Blessed Virgin Mary is the Holy Rosary.
Father, can you translate for us real quick?
Mary is the bee's knees into Latin.
Yeah.
Yeah, what about German?
Holy mackerel, there's a lot of people watching right now.
We have 715 people watching and the chat is a flutter.
It's a dumpster fire is what I call it.
A dumpster fire?
I have this theory.
I don't know if it's real or not, but I feel like here's the theory.
Lay people are angry at priests for ruining their liturgy.
So they're like, fine, you can't touch this. This is our thing. If
you mess with this, we will excommunicate you as best as we're able as laypeople.
Are you talking about the rosary? Are you talking about live streams? Nice.
Yeah. Yeah. That's right. Yeah. No live streams. Beautiful. All right. Now let's see. I have
asked my beautiful local supporters if they have questions and I want to let everybody know two
things about locals. Immediately after the stream, Father Pine, even though he doesn't know about it
yet, is going to lead a quick stream answering your questions directly over on
locals, matfrad.locals.com.
Also, I want to let people know that we are about to lead a five part micro
course in Flannery O'Connor taught by Father Damien Ference, who has his
doctorate in Flannery O'Connor and Thomism. So Ferentz who has his doctorate in Flannery O'Connor and Thomism.
So if you're interested in getting access to that,
become an annual supporter over at matfrad.locals.com.
You get a bunch of free things in return.
Our staff is growing here.
We have other people, at least two,
you don't even know about this,
that I'll be bringing on soon in different capacities.
And so our expenses are going up and there are other issues.
So mapfrad.locals.com, please become an annual supporter
because it actually really is what helps us so much.
Did you have something to say before I dived into?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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But Hello is something he can use.
And Hello has a lot of great stuff.
It has, yeah, yeah, like book studies and all sorts of things.
So if you go to hello.com slash Matt, sign up on that page instead of getting it on iTunes
You can get it. You'll get the first 90 days for free. That's three months
You'll have access to the entire app. One thing I like to do is in the morning
I'll read over the gospel reading and then they have something called gospel reflection
Which is actually a podcast run by an Aussie, and you can listen to that
daily as well. It's really good. So hello, H-A-L-L-O-W dot com slash Matt. Sign up over
there so they know that I sent you so they like me more and that I can then charge them
more to do these ads. Do not sign up through Laura Horn's link. Sign up through my link
because I said so. She's coming after you funny in relation to that I'll tell you later I can tell you now if you want.
Sure. So we were when I was streaming the other day we were watching Laura's videos and she put up her link at the end yeah and I used my like streaming software to put Matt over her name. It's like nobody's. Appreciate that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Um, uh, use the desktop site.
That's the other thing we should say.
Don't sign up on iPhone or Android, even in your web browser.
Use the desktop website.
Yeah.
Because you don't want, if you sign up using their link on a phone, I think so, but at
least just to be safe, everybody sign up on the desktop website because you
will be taking away 30% of their money if you sign up in the app.
Yeah, and you're giving it to Apple.
Apple or Google.
And we use it for our kids. Like sometimes Peter, my son, beautiful kid, love him to
death, can't go to sleep. So we just play these beautiful little sleep stories, but
it's the Bible being read to them. So this app was started by a fella who was into Buddhism
and new age. And he had this particular app for mindfulness and stuff, but it was very much infused by Buddhist
sentimentality. And when he became a Catholic, he's like, we need something. And this, this
app has grown insanely. And it's all because of my advertising. That's not true.
Can I interject two things? One, I realized recently there's a hole in my right shoe on
the bottom of it and it hadn't
rained much in Washington D.C. until this morning.
And I was like on the metro thinking like my feet are sweating a lot but I realized
that my right shoe, my right sock is just totally wet which is awesome.
It's kind of gross.
And then the other thing is, can I plug the Dominican Rosary pilgrimage?
What's the website?
I want to look it up. I think it's the Dominican Rosary pilgrimage? What's the website? I want to look it up. I think
it's just Dominican Rosary pilgrimage. Dominican Rosary Pilgrimagy.com. Boom. So it's uh. We need
to know this. We can put it in the link in the description. Blammo. That's not it. So I'm going
to Google it. You keep talking. Thanks. Tell me when you find out what it is. I should know that
website so that way I can say true things. I got it. Thank you.
You're quicker than me.
Yeah, I'm quickest Google in the West.
Rosarypilgrimries.org.
Oh, Rosarypilgrimries.
Oh, so there's no, yeah, that's much better.
So it's September 30th in Washington, D.C. at the Basilica of the National Shrine of
the Immaculate Conception, and it's basically like a day of recollection.
So I'll give a talk at 10, and then we'll have adoration with confessions throughout
like the next three hours, give people the opportunity to bop out for lunch, and then another
talk, recitation of the Rosary in a vigil mass, but also a cool opportunity to meet
friars from God's Plaining and the Thomistical Institute and other things
besides, so it's just gonna be like a day of recollection, jamboree, at a holy place.
And you're worth, you know, it'd be worth going just to hear you speak, but also
Father James Brent is one of the most brilliant people I've ever encountered,
so he'll be speaking there as well.
What I love is I'm doing the Hello Ad read and you're probably thinking to yourself,
oh, that reminds me, I've got to plug the pilgrimage thing.
But you led with, I have a hole in my shoe and my sock is wet.
And I thought that would come full circle, but it didn't.
No.
Pilgrimage, walking.
Those are just things that I was thinking about.
Yep.
Terrific.
Yeah.
All right. We're going to take some questions from our local supporters, and we'll do that, and then super chats as
well. So Tim Sweeney says, along the lines of children praying the Holy Rosary, I
was brought into the discipline explicitly as a whole family prayer. Was
that the way it always was, or when and how did it spread as a kind of family
thing, he's asking? Yeah, I don't know. I suspect that it started among those
close to monasteries because of the inspiration of the 150 Psalms, the 150
Our Fathers, and then the 150 Hail Marys. But you know how communities grow up
around monasteries like we're seeing this in Clear Creek, Oklahoma.
So I suspect that insofar as the family has kind of always been a principal
means for the transmission of faith, that yeah, it was a family prayer. Certainly
that's how I grew up learning the Rosary is my dad said, we're going to pray
the Rosary every night and we did.
And some of us protested.
I, you know, I certainly protested, but then I was one of the only people who stayed awake
throughout the entirety of it because my one sister and my mom always zonked.
But I attribute that or attribute to that practice a good part of my, you know, becoming
a Dominican and liking the
Rosary in turn.
You know, God stoops to conquer, as Peter Crave once said.
And so Pascal's Wager, for example, it's like, well, should your faith really be at this
level?
He's like, yeah, start there if that's where you're at, that's fine.
And what I want to say in reference to the Rosary about that is, it's a great way to
calm your kids down at the end of the day. So just, I've said this a thousand times, I want to keep in reference to the rosary about that is, it's a great way to calm your kids down at the end of the day.
So just, I've said this a thousand times.
I want to keep saying it because I feel like I need to make up for all the ways I was a
jerk as a new dad, thinking that my family rosary should look a certain way and it didn't.
I found myself getting frustrated.
But my rosary, that we do, Father, is the least impressive thing you will ever see,
my friend.
I mean, I got kids drawing,
I got a kid getting up for their ninth glass of water,
I got a kid who's like backwards on the couch
with their head on the ground
and their feet in the air for some reason,
and we no longer care.
We used to care.
We thought that the Hans, Scott and Kimberly,
they had children that may have levitated.
Maybe one was kneeling on broken glass.
Is this okay, Dad?
Yes, son.
And I saw my ragamuffins and attribute it
to my incompetency as a father or something.
But what I realized was like calm down their children.
And now our rosaries are just really beautiful and calming.
And so, yes, pray the rosary, sit down, here we go.
And I'm even reluctant to allow them
to offer prayer intentions
because that goes off the rails quickly.
See, my mom did that on purpose, but I think she wanted to know what we were thinking about,
what we were worried about, which was great. But my prayer intention for practically every
rosary of my childhood was that we would stop prayer intentions.
Yeah, it gets too long. And so we just get through it and it's beautiful. And I just
want to encourage all the parents out there
You know if you want to pray the rosary don't let the messiness of your family
Deter you you know sometimes we'll be praying the rosary and a kids acting up and I'll say hey
Do you do you want to go to bed like you're welcome if this is too much?
And you just want to go lay down you can go it's totally fun. We'll keep praying that kind of gentleness
Actually makes the rosary way more appealing for children anyway believe it or not people don't like being shouted at every three seconds
Reminds me my next-door neighbor. We were talking about the craziness of family rosaries
And she said this actually happened the other day right all right come on your turn our father idiot
It's the Hail Mary already did that one
That was an actual conversation that took place.
And that's okay too.
Not what you're aiming for,
but where you're at and be gentle with yourself.
Please be gentle with yourself.
All right.
Do you want, if this is something of a lightning round,
cause I know some of these you've addressed before.
So yeah.
Arthur says, hello, father Gregory.
What was it about Dominican spirituality
that led you to become a Dominican?
Same time as Aquinas. Eddie says, father Gregory, do it about Dominican spirituality that led you to become a Dominican? St. Thomas Aquinas. Eddie says father Gregory do you have a favorite chant?
The O Lumen which is an antiphon to St. Dominic and you can find versions of it on YouTube.
It's beautiful. Am I right in thinking there is a Salve Regina that's specifically a Dominican
version? Yeah it's kind of like Cistercian Benedictine but we have our own little adaptations
of it. It's longer, it's beautiful. I love that one. It's kind of like Cistercian Benedictine, but we have our own little adaptations of it. It's longer, it's beautiful.
I love that one.
It's kind of haunting in a way that the traditional one, or the one I'm familiar with, is and
I like it a lot.
Yeah.
Bit of a longer answer for this one.
Kelly says, Matt, as a convert from Protestantism, I find that the scriptural rosary on hallo.com
slash mat is a special blessing.
I no longer fall into Bible idolatry as I perhaps once did as a non-catholic,
excuse me, yet I do find it helpful to connect the scriptural underpinnings with each mystery.
Not sure if that's a helpful perspective or not, it does make Rosary praying almost 40 minutes
though. Beautiful. That's what you want to do, go for it. Also you might like the book,
Marian Consecration with Aquinas, because it kind of has a Protestant mind in the
sense that it's a reasoned argument for the faith and kind of putting the faith, specifically our
Marian practice, in conversation with the roots of it. Dschweitz16 says,
what other options are there for Marian devotion beside the Rosary? And are prayer beads only for
the Rosary in the Roman Catholic Church? Oh, question. I assume so but maybe I'm wrong.
Divine Mercy Chaplet. Yeah. It's like a rosary. Oh right, right, right. Oh sorry.
Yeah. Yeah and then there's like the crown of Saint Anthony. Yeah. There's a ton of stuff.
And there's the Medjugorje Peace Rosary which is like Our Father Hail Mary Glory Bees
seven times. People do that. And The St. Michael chaplet as well.
Oh, the St. Michael chaplet.
There's all sorts of reasons to pray it.
As far as other Marian devotions,
well, I mean, one is to pray the Angelus three times a day.
Can you speak to that?
Yep.
So traditionally, 6 a.m., noon, 6 p.m.,
you pray the Angelus.
It's a way to be recollected in the incarnation
as a saving event for you.
Another one too would be the Memorare, which is a relatively ancient prayer, just asking the
Blessed Virgin Mary with the kind of dire, exasperated urgency to help you with a particular thing.
There's also the practice of the first Saturdays, you know, that you would go to Mass on Saturday,
which is usually assigned to the Blessed Virgin Mary unless there's another feast or solemnity,
or it's a liturgical season where you don't do it. So to receive Holy
Communion to go to confession on first Saturdays, it's like the First Friday devotion in that
way.
I do like the Angelus. It's sort of the poor man's rosary. You know, when you get to the
end of the day and you're exhausted and you're like, I do not have the patience to pray rosary
with these children without hurting one of them physically. Let's do the Angelus and
go to bed. But the Angel Angeles is actually a very beautiful thing
because it's short. It centers all on the incarnation, which is the main saving event.
Right? Yeah. Okay. Good. And then, yeah, yeah. Three times a day. I like that. Yeah. Yeah.
We should do it. There are other things besides, but that's a good list. D. Schweitz again says, I am Protestant, strongly
considering Catholicism. How essentially is the Rosary slash Maryan devotion being Catholic?
Why can't I just pray the Psalms? Beautiful question. That's a great question. If you're
watching right now and you're a Protestant and you're attracted to Catholicism, but you're
like, how much of this Mary Rosary stuff do I have to be just like in on?
What would you say?
So the Rosary is an optional prayer.
Belief in the role that the Blessed Virgin Mary
exercises in the life of the church,
in the history of salvation is not optional.
But I think a lot of people, what they do is they think,
I have difficulty with this,
so I have to drill down on this.
I don't think that's necessarily true. I think that you pay attention to God
and God reveals the things which are precious to Him. If you want to read up on Marian devotion,
great. Or if you want to read up on, you know, Marian kind of doctrine more broadly, great.
But I would say that if you're thinking about becoming Catholic, I wouldn't necessarily
focus on all of the points of division. I would focus on the things that you are attracted by and maybe just spend more time with them,
whether that be at the level of doctrine or devotion or, you know, arts, literature, culture,
whatever it is, and allow the good things to work on you. And then ask God for, you
know, if there are other things that need to fall into place. Cool. But a lot of people
are like, all right, there's a conflict. We need to just face this conflict head on. It's
like, I don't know. We don't do that with our friends always.
Sometimes we just invite them out for coffee
and we're like, we're not gonna talk about this.
I don't intend to talk about this.
I don't wanna spend more time
because oftentimes when my temptation is to spend less time,
that's probably a sign that I need to spend more time,
just normal time.
If we're getting frustrated each other over business,
it's like, when's the last time we took a vacation together?
Because if I've just changed the nature
of this relationship such that it's only the one way, perhaps I've lost sight of the other way, you know, dot dot dot. So I like that.
And then somebody says in response to this, Erin, whose comments are always just spot on, this woman's
amazing. She says, also the one who tricked you yesterday. I know she says, I'm the Catholic and
I prefer slash find more fruitful liturgy of the hours, divine mercy, chaplet and Jesus prayer.
I'll pray the rosary if a friend does it or at a rosary potluck maybe once a week.
Beautiful. There is freedom here, people.
Daniel Mills says, do you think the addition of the Luminous Mysteries has an overall positive or negative impact on the rosary?
I think positive, overall positive. Yep.
Kyle Whittington says, how is the rosary not worship of Mary?
Most of the prayers are directed at Mary, and the Hail Holy Queen has some pretty strong language. So I'm not uncomfortable with worship of Mary,
with the language. Please do not clip that. Or with the concept, because what is worship?
So worship is honor or respect referred to another person. That's just what worship means.
There are two principal expressions of worship. In the Latin tradition, we talk about like adoration or sacrifice, and then
veneration or intercession. The Greek background to that, you've probably heard the words latreia
or latria sometimes pronounced, and then dulia. So there are two modes of worship. But for
instance, in Anglican exchange of marriage vows in an older formulation, one
says to the other, I thee worship with my body.
I thee respect, esteem, honor with my body.
So there are two principal expressions of worship.
The higher, which is for God alone, adoration, sacrifice.
The lower, veneration, intercession, which is also referable to human beings.
So I think that we're asking her intercessioncession and then we're venerating her because God has made glorious in His saints, which is entirely appropriate because we venerate sports
icons, you know, and we ask the intercession of our close friends. I think that where Protestants
have difficulty with quote-unquote worship of Mary is in part because when the Protestant,
you know, most Protestant ecclesial communions kind of get rid of the Mass or they change the
theology of the Mass such that the Eucharist is no
longer present or is no longer confected, what you're getting rid of is something essential
to the worship of God alone, sacrifice, okay?
And then you begin to flatten all of worship into a kind of veneration or intercession,
and then you start having problems referring that to both God and to saints, because you've
changed the nature
of the higher worship and getting rid of the sacrifice of the mass, and so it begins to
introduce a tension which I don't think ordinarily would have been there in the same way. But we have
this reflected in our language, so in litanies, for instance, we ask God to have mercy on us. We
don't ask Him to pray for us. We ask saints to pray for us. That's a different mode of prayer.
It's a different mode of worship. If people don't like the word worship, fine. It's just like, it doesn't bother
me if you... I think what's important for maybe our Protestant listeners is to realize that when
you're using the word worship in the context of relation to Mary, you don't mean attributing
divinity to. No. Yep. Yep. And we should point out that emphasis doesn't mean worship. I mean, of course, the Rosary has
more prayers to Mary. It's a Marian prayer. But at no point are we attributing divinity to the
Blessed Virgin Mary. But you did point out the Hail Holy Queen. So I thought what we could do
is just read through it. It's quite a short prayer when you read it, just to see what's the most
problematic verse here. Hail Holy Queen. So she's the queen because she's the mother of the new Davidic King,
the fulfillment of the Davidic monarchy, Jesus Christ.
Mother of mercy.
What does that mean?
Well, I guess that could mean a number of things.
It could mean that she's the mother of Jesus Christ
who shows us mercy,
or it could mean that she is the dispenser
of all the graces of God,
which would take a long conversation.
Our life.
Oh, we're calling Mary our life,
our sweetness and our hope. Why would we calling Mary our life, our sweetness and our
hope. Why would we call Mary our life, Father, do you think?
I think that's like as a model or as an icon, because we see how she participates in the
divine life with sweetness and it affords us hope. So I think it's her entry into the
divine life, which is a model for us. We have that in Christ, but we have it in the Blessed
Virgin Mary in a different register. And so I think that we make reference to her insofar as she makes reference
to God. So yeah. So there's this, you know, in Latin, these, not in Latin, well, it is Latin,
but in arguments, a fortiori, like from the higher, from the stronger argument that the less
natural follows. So what I like to do with Protestants and Catholics who are squeamish about Marian devotion is to say, the strongest
thing I can possibly say about the Blessed Virgin Mary, if I can justify that, then it follows that
everything else we say of her is okay. So I will say it, if it were not for Mary, I would be damned.
Right? Or I've been saved by Mary. There you go, that's even stronger. I think I can
justify that claim. If I can say of the cross, I've been saved by the cross, or if it were
not for the cross I would be damned, and you know what I mean by that, then how much more
could I be able to say that to the Blessed Virgin Mary, who is not an inanimate object,
who had no say in our salvation, but it is precisely through her yes and bearing and
bringing forth the God man that I'm saved. I can say that of her. In doing that, I'm
not attributing divinity to her. I'm recognizing, as Louis de Montfort so beautifully says in
True Devotion to Mary, that only God is he who is, and Mary is less than an atom, or rather nothing at all in comparison to God.
And yet he has chosen to achieve, accomplish his greatest work through her, and that we
trust that he who doesn't change will continue to do so.
Maybe I just made people a lot more scared, but it's kind of like when you talk to a Muslim
and you're trying to help them understand the Trinity, you begin by saying what you
don't mean. If they believe you in what you don't mean, namely, we're not saying there
are three gods. Okay. Well, then you can kind of wax eloquent about the Trinity and trust
that I've already set up this guard rail. So if it sounds like I'm saying there are
three gods, remember, we agreed that I don't mean that and I think something is true
The Blessed Virgin Mary she is a creature
God had no need of her no absolute need of the Blessed Virgin Mary at all not then not now
Right so now that you've said that then it's like okay now
I can become a lot more comfortable with how some of these saints speak about the Blessed Virgin Mary
So if you come across our life in the Hail Holy Queen, the one thing you can know it
doesn't mean is Mary's God, because we've established that that's not what it means.
Now you can say, okay, fine, I agree that theoretically you're making that claim,
but don't you think that this sort of language would take your attention off God and onto a
creature in an unhealthy way? And okay, sure, maybe that's possible. And if that's
happening in your life or those around you, then then maybe you should discourage that. But the
idea that God is this sort of attention hog who is unwilling that others should participate
in reflecting his beauty just isn't how we live.
It's just like when I see a baby and I talk about how beautiful it is or when I say to
my wife like you are all I would need this side of heaven.
That's lovely. And I don't actually mean it, you know, but I we speak this way in
human language and we shouldn't be afraid to speak that way.
I mean, can I? Sure.
I think it's also like you could make it really simple the answer to
We call her our life in the same way that like a parent might say that their kids are their life, right?
Yeah, or you might say that your wife is your whole life. Yeah, like you come up with a more of a poetic way
Yeah, it's not what do you think about that word vomit? I just I think it's great
Yeah, and yeah, I love to see you get jazzed about it because it's clearly something you care about
Which is beautiful
My one like thing to add I suppose would be we often imagine that all
Relationships are competitive because we think about all relationships the way that we think about pizzas
And if I take one slice that only leaves seven for you
But it's just not the case CS Lewis has a great meditation on this in the four loves
Where he says you got three friends?
I forget the names that he says, let's say Adam, Benjamin, and Caleb, and let's say that they love
each other and they have a wonderful friendship, and let's say that Caleb dies. You might think
that Adam would now have more of Benjamin, Benjamin would now have more of Adam, but what
they discover is that they've lost not only Caleb, but they've lost the parts of each other that Caleb
brought out, that Caleb called forth, and so they lose something of each other as well.
And so I think that in God's dealings with men, God uses instruments, He uses mediators,
and it's not competitive.
It's not like, oh, if you refer X percentage of devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary, that
only leaves 100 minus X percentage of devotion to refer to me.
It's like God is working in and through His saints, and our veneration of them is ultimately
referable to the Lord.
What type of conscious event is going on at the moment?
I don't think that's too terribly important.
I think it looks different in Latin America, in the United States, in Canada, in Europe,
in the, whatever, in different places.
And I think that that's, it's interesting to inquire into but I just want to address this competitive
nature that I don't think is true and I think we need to move beyond. Yeah, yeah.
Kyle says in two minutes or less could you explain the what how and why of the
Rosary to someone who's never heard of it before? What is it? How should we write?
Why should we write? Yeah, what it's, it's a vocal prayer which gives rise to a contemplative prayer whereby we meditate on the
mysteries of the life of Christ so as to be mystically united with him in a disposition
of reception. We pray it, you know, according to time and place and circumstance, I would say,
in a human shape.
And so, it's an Our Father, ten Hail Marys, and a Glory Bee represents a decade.
Typically, you would say five decades.
There might be prayers before and after, but whether or not they're essential is, you know,
it's kind of on a spectrum.
But I tend to think that praying those decades is important, and that you would focus on
a particular part of the life of our Lord Jesus Christ.
And the why is, the why is union with God
and profiting from the graces which he has in store. So what, when, where, how, how.
So that's good. Yeah, I think that was it. Why, how, why. That was great. Thank you.
Lise Vellas has a beautiful question here. It's very honest. She says, I'm struck, stuck very much
with the idea of how to spend personal prayer time. If the Holy Mass and the Rosary are objectively the best ways to give myself in prayer, and I allot myself
thirty minutes for prayer each day, how do I avoid scrupulosity and not spending time
with God in silent prayer, aka, I feel bad when I want to spend prayer reading the Bible
and being in silence with God, rather than going to Holy Mass when I know I am able to
go there every day?
Yeah, so I would say objective goods and subjective appropriation are two things.
So there's an objective hierarchy of goods, and I think that we can refer to the Church's
scriptures and tradition and the precepts, commandments, like this in Chiridion on indulgences,
to which I referred, as a way by which to assemble this objective hierarchy of goods.
But that objective hierarchy is always interfacing with your subjective appropriation.
So the law gives us indications of where the boundaries are, you know, like,
am I outside the bounds of, you know, righteousness?
Am I inside the bounds of righteousness? But once you're inside the bounds of righteousness,
I think there's room to explore, still hierarchically, right, but
room to explore as it comports
with you, right?
Who am I in this time and this place in these circumstances in light of these relationships
for the ultimate end of embracing my vocation unto the glory of God and the salvation of
souls?
And so I think that it's not that because the Mass is the highest mode of prayer that
one thereby ought to dedicate his 30 minutes
of prayer every day to the Holy Mass. I think that you can do different things. I think you go to,
obviously you go to Mass on Sunday, but maybe go to Mass on Tuesday and Thursday, and then work on
a habit of mental prayer. Maybe you spend 30 minutes on mental prayer on Monday, Wednesday, Friday,
and maybe you do a rosary for 50 minutes on Saturday and 50 minutes of mental prayer.
Regardless of what you do, there should be some time every day where you have mental
prayer.
And by mental prayer I mean that you start, recollect yourself in the presence of God,
think about Him, ask Him, you know, inquire with Him, work things out with Him as it were,
but afford a great amount of time for silence, the majority of time for silence.
And you're going to be frustrated, you're going to be bored, you're going to be tired,
but I think it's better to fail at prayer in that way than it is to succeed in an over-planned
time of prayer, just because we feel like we have control or we feel like, I don't know,
more secure in working through a list of things.
Because I think ultimately the Christian life is something that is kind of done unto us
by God, and our prayer posture should reflect that.
Yeah, that's really good, because, you know, if you were to ask yourself, well, what's objectively the best thing I can do today? You know, you might go nuts and,
you know, mass 18 times. Yeah, like, why not? Like, the mass isn't important enough for you
to go 18 times. Like you have something better to do that could be more efficacious. Like,
when you start these, these arguments that you start to realize just what you're saying,
that it has to interface with our humanity. Yeah. There are days I wake up like I don't want to go to Mass so I'm
not going to. I'm gonna just like go and go for a run and then I'm gonna pray in the
sauna. And again, whether I should, I don't even know if should is the question because
you know I'm not being bound to go every day as a Catholic. So yeah you don't
want to get like kind of turned this way and that by whimsy or caprice, you know, or just
like, I feel this way, or I'm going to overindulge in drink the night before because I don't have to
go to mass tomorrow, dot, dot, dot. So you don't want to like just give free rein to potential
excesses or defects in our character. But also, provided that we are seeking to grow in the life
of grace, that means we're going to be healing, and we're going to be able to trust our desires more, such that our desires are a reflection of what God is asking of us or what God is leading
us into. And I think that we have to be able to trust ourselves at a certain level, because why
else would God have made us in the way that He did? Yeah. Gavin says, can Father Pine explain
why he thinks the Blessed Virgin Mary or whether died before being assumed
into heaven, body and soul.
Yeah, I think I tend in the direction that she died and I think in union with our Lord
Jesus Christ.
So there's a lot of things where you can ask interesting questions like was the Blessed
Virgin Mary baptized?
So no original or personal sin, a kind of similar situation to our Lord Jesus Christ,
but then our Lord is baptized.
So she might have wanted to be baptized in union with Him.
He might have wanted her to be baptized, you know, for the same reason.
So you can ask a similar question about death.
So she doesn't, again, no personal or original sin, so no necessary connection to the life
of death, but yet our Lord assumed these co-assumed defects. So he assumed the consequences of sin, hunger, thirst, fatigue, suffering and death. So too
it might make sense that our mother, the Blessed Virgin Mary, in union with her son, would
assume a similar pattern of life, even terminating in death. So I tend to think death, that's
a kind of Western tradition versus the eastern tradition of dormition. And yet it should be said that when Pope Pius XII, assumption, ninth, who declared the assumption,
left that question open.
Exactly.
Yep.
Kelly says, Father, is pride the root of scrupulosity? As in, I should have been or done
better, but I wasn't. Now I can't let it go. But why? Because I need God's forgiveness and annoys me that I do.
Maybe that? Like is it pride is... So I think it's always safe to say that pride is the root,
because pride is the root of all sins. We may mention of Saint John Cashin, or John Cashin,
depending on which tradition you follow. He has one of those conferences dedicated to the
deadly sins or the capital vices, They're called different things in the tradition.
And he identifies seven that we would think of,
but instead of pride, he lists vanity or vainglory.
And he says pride is an eighth
because it's really the mother of all sins.
So pride's at the root of everything.
We're always relying overly much on ourselves,
and we shouldn't be surprised that we do,
but to heal from pride takes a whole life.
Are you referring to, or have you read,
a vagrius of Pontus?
Yeah I believe that one of the sins that they often speak about in the East is
sadness. Mm-hmm. Which is so cool because I heard this Buddhist monk once say this
since we can learn from all traditions when it coheres with the truth. He said
one of the reasons he started to be happy was out of compassion because
other people had to live with him.
I thought that was good.
Yeah, people often talk in the East about sloth or ratchadia, A-C-E-D-I-A, as a kind
of spiritual sadness, because you look at the divine good, you look at what you're made
capable of, you think to yourself, I'll never make it there, and then you just kind of give
up on it.
And that's sinful, because that's not our judgment to make
It's it's God's judgment to make he's like I've called you to this life
So stop being a baby, you know or stop thinking about yourself so much think about me and then I'll work the out
Tim Bryan says Matt your first interview with father pine really changed my life
And so I just wanted to give a big thank you to you and father pine since there's a good chance
I won't be able to thank you guys in person. Thank you so much, Tim.
Cheers.
John the long winded says,
what is the solid definition of worship
and has our understanding of worship changed
before and after Christ?
Feel free to just swipe at this one.
Cause I know you just spent a good deal of time.
No, that's great.
So same time as talks about it in the treatise on justice,
he talks about a virtue called religion.
And in the context of religion,
he refers to like cult or obsequy, but basically, like with respect to God, it's a kind of recognition
and then a referring of our lives to Him in recognition that He is the Creator in the end.
And the two interior acts of worship or of religion are devotion, which is a prompt offering of one's
heart, and then prayer, which is a raising of one's mind. And those are manifested by exterior acts of religion or of worship,
which would be like sacrifice, adoration, sacrifice, oblation, healers, ties, first
fruits, vows, adjurations, all kinds of things besides. But basically, it's like you place
a claim on your life in referring it to one who is worthy of it. But in the broad
definition that I gave of worship, I just said it's a referring of esteem, respect,
or honor. And so St. Thomas envisions that as something which can be referable to both
God and human beings in that broadly construed sense.
C Ramirez, 97, says, interested in learning about the early church? Where can I go to
start to read about the early church fathers? I would recommend Jimmy Akin's book, The Fathers Know Best.
It's an excellent little book that's topical. So one chapter might be the Eucharist or prayers
to the saints or purgatory. And then he shows chronologically the earliest Christians, the
church fathers in this instance, who spoke about those things. That would be, I think, a nice way to kind of, yeah, what do you say? Um, wet your feet. What do you
think? I agree. Johnny 67 67 lowercase g says when and how did you realize you wanted to become a
priest? Feel free to disregard if you've already answered this a bunch in the past. 19 St Thomas
Aquinas. I wanted to love the Lord the way that he loved the Lord.
Now you, you, I asked you earlier about what inspired you to become a Dominican. You said
Thomas Aquinas. I know there was a specific book that you love. The quiet light by Louis
de Waal, which is a fictitious recounting of Thomas Aquinas.
Like historical fiction. Beautiful. Maybe for like a high school audience.
Aaron says, what would you say to someone who doesn't like the rosary, who struggles to
relate with or appreciate Mary?
Yeah, I mean, something similar that you might say to a person who's being nice to you and
you resent that.
Okay, so what am I trying to say?
Let's say you have somebody in your life who's trying to be nice to you, trying to give you
gifts and you don't like them for whatever reason, and you kind of resent them for whatever reason. You have to work through that to find out why,
like what kind of baggage am I bringing to the situation. It might just be that it's not a good
fit, okay, but in this case with the rosary there's a high likelihood that the fit could be there
insofar as it is one of these devotions that's highly esteemed by the church. So be patient with
yourself, maybe do a little work to unpack the baggage. Like why is it that maybe there's something there?
But if not, just give it time. Okay, let's see. I like this. It has nothing to do
with the Rosary or Mary, but it is something. I really like this question.
Tips or guiding principles? That one? No. Let me read this one. Which one? The one
right above it. Oh, I'll get to it
Yeah, I like this one to tips or guiding principles to determine which civil laws are morally permissible to break and he's like
Yeah, I love that my people have all this self-awareness like the last goes like don't answer if it's stupid
I'm so sorry. I'll just let myself out
Well, this guy also says just realize this has nothing to do with the topic of the day ignore if you want
Yeah, it's a good question because I intentionally run red lights in this town.
Oh, really?
And he's joking for legal reasons.
That is a joke.
Yes.
I only mean on Minecraft.
That's what I mean.
I intentionally, as a joke, always blow through red lights because there's way too many in
Minecraft because there's way too many lights in this silly town and the population has like
been cut in fourths
So many of them are ridiculous. Yeah again
I wouldn't just in Minecraft if I come to a stoplight
Sometimes the road is closed because of construction and it's a little street where no cars go this side is closed
I look left and I go mm-hmm. I'm never gonna stop
Unless you tell me to
Which so yeah, there you go.
What civil laws are morally permissible to break?
Yeah, because it's so circumstantial,
I would say I'm gonna give some principles.
One is three reasons that I can imagine
for quote unquote breaking a law.
One is that it's an unjust law, right?
So it's not binding because it's morally offensive
or repulsive and you can imagine something like this,
you don't have to think back too far. So then the next would be, because it's morally offensive or repulsive, and you can imagine something like this,
you don't have to think back too far.
So then the next would be,
and part of that too is an association,
or it's trying to determine whether the,
Gregory, slow down and speak clearly.
You're trying to determine whether the state is saying,
this is a good that I propose to you,
or this is something that we're asking you to do,
and we're gonna penalize you if you don't do it,
but we don't really make a judgment
as to whether or not it pertains to your good
as a human being.
That's pertinent, okay?
And then the next thing is epicaya,
which if the lawmaker could have foreseen
the circumstances in which this law
is presently being applied,
he would not ask me to follow it because it's insane, okay?
And then-
Can you give an example to that one?
Give me a second, I'll come back to it.
Yeah.
And then the last one is dispensation.
When you as a private individual say,
given my circumstances, may I be dispensed from this law?
Because it's good for other people,
but it's actually bad for me.
So it's like the prior of the monastery says,
everyone should drink a daily ration of milk
because I'm worried about bone density.
We've had so many breaks recently. you go up to me to say may
I be dispensed from this law because literally the flatulence is off the
charts like exactly like my farts smell like a small woodland creature crawled
up inside me and died and has been rotting for like the last century like
you can't do this to the community and he might look at you and say you're
dispensed okay so the law is still a law but it doesn't apply to you because
you've asked that it be accommodated.
So in the case of a law that if the lawmaker
could have foreseen the circumstances
in which it were applied, he would not ask you of it.
So like Camden, for instance, is a city across the river
from Philadelphia, and it's widely known
that you don't stop at red lights in Camden
because in certain neighborhoods,
because they're very dangerous.
So you treat them like stop signs. And think if the lawmaker had had foreseen the type
of violent crime which is perpetrated in Camden you wouldn't be like you need to wait there
even if the man is you know currently cutting your window and reaching in the back seat
so like circumstances like that.
Speaking about breaking the law.
What are you doing?
You know where that's from?
No.
Sounds kind of South Parky.
Beaver's and butthead.
Oh, okay.
Breaking the law, breaking the law.
I'm not recommending people watch that.
A friend has suggested that according to the saints, if a soul knows of the rosary and
does not choose to incorporate it, it's a sign of some subtle influence by the devil to avoid it.
Is that always correct or just sometimes? And would a good spiritual life without the rosary be possible?
Well, if it wasn't then Thomas Aquinas is out of luck.
No, I would say that's not true. Yeah. Yeah. Good job. Appreciate that.
Let's see. I get to that question that you recommended earlier.
Yes. Getting to it. Getting to it. Scrolling.
Scrolling. I've got it.
Scrawl. Found it.
Scrolling. Scrawling.
You're look. Did you lose it?
It was too up from the question you just asked.
Scrawling. Kelly Buzzard asked Brother Pine
a dissertation question for you. What kind of organizing system did you use for your quotes, footnotes, outlines, et
cetera?
Yes.
So whenever I read a book, I took marginal notes, even if the book.
So what I typically did was I would take a survey of the book.
I would determine how much of the book I was going to use or how much of it was pertinent
to my studies. And then I would scan that part. And then I would
have the digital copy, and the digital copy was typically OCR-able, so I would just highlight
the things that I intended to use and then make marginal notes. And I'd just read widely
on whatever topic I was going to treat in the upcoming chapter. At the outset, I just
read widely on all kinds of things because I wanted to know where I was going. And then
when I kind of approached the point at which I'm ready to write a chapter because
I've read all of the pertinent primary texts, you have to have those, and all of the pertinent
secondary texts, at least the most important of them, then I would go through everything
that I had read and I would compile documents for each thing that I had read and I'd flesh
out all of my highlights, I'd take quotes if they were things that I thought might be
incorporated full text in the dissertation, or I would just summarize if it was the type of thing that I just wanted
to have on hand, and then organize that for each of those resources, and then kind of
name it.
And then I would go through and I would pass through all of these documents and then color
code them for the chapter that they were pertinent to.
And then when I was going to write the chapter, I would go through all of my documents
and get the color-coded things
and then make a one big text document
and then compare it against my outline
and then arrange them according to my outline.
I know there are some other systems
that are probably more efficient,
like Evernote and stuff like that,
but it was a good way for me to pass over the same text
about three times so that way I'd interiorize them
so that when it came time to write,
I kind of knew what I wanted to say.
I really knew what I wanted to say,
but I'd have all the substantiation close at hand. And then my text documents,
my outline would be about, you know, five pages per chapter.
And my text documents would be about between 150 and 200 pages.
And then I would write like a hundred page chapter on the basis of it.
Very cool. What I have a question. All right. My own question.
This, this may not be something you've thought about before,
but it occurred to me earlier when you guys were talking about
Eastern and Western Marian devotions
So I would love if you could riff on this it seems that there are less private
Devotions to Mary in the East but she is much more present in the liturgy. Why do you think that is?
Hmm. I don't know a lot about the East
But I get the so there's a lot of private devotion
in both East and West insofar as I think it corresponds to human desire and the way in
which God reveals Himself and bestows Himself, you know, throughout salvation history.
It might be that that's a kind of cultural thing, that there are certain cultures which
are more private and certain cultures which are more public.
And when it comes to privatization of religion, a lot of that has been associated with the
Protestant Reformation, at least in the narrative that we tell in Catholic circles, that when
persecution and even just interdenominational tension became a serious concern and when
people were burned out from wars of religion, A kind of typical move, which is in step with secularization, was to privatize.
And so you have to fill the space that you occupy and maybe it corresponds to that.
But at this point, I'm just kind of kind of shooting from the hip, making stuff up.
What are you most excited about in regards to being back in America?
So you've been in Switzerland on and off for the last three years.
Yeah. When you come back here, what are you like? Yeah
Yeah
One thing I fit better here. Yeah, that's certainly the case and I think that fit usually means
Happiness I had thought the other day for the first time in a while. I was like, oh kind of snuck up on me
I was like Gregory. I think you might be happy
kind of snuck up on me. I was like, Gregory, I think you might be happy. Now do you think that's because you're back home or because it's far less intense work that you're doing?
No, it's not less intense. It's just different. Different deadlines, different projects. They're
usually smaller and less unwieldy. But I mean, this is my home. Home is your reset position.
The further that you stray from home, I think
the more you feel the tension of it. Different culture, different languages, just different
approach to the faith, the Dominican life, the priesthood, etc. All of which I like to
struggle and I kind of thrilled at the opportunity to struggle, to learn a new culture, to learn
new languages, to try to serve people in a ministerial context, which was very, very different. But also, yeah, there was no point
at which people were like, well, when are you going to get your citizenship? It's like a known
factor that you're going back. And I think that people treat you like somebody who's going back.
So a lot of the stuff that you do there has a kind of expiration date. And it's hard to live life with
an expiration date, because you're like,, I wanna build something, you know?
Not like I don't wanna build a building because I don't,
but like I wanna build something more steady.
And I think I have more of an opportunity to do that here.
That's nice.
What is a movie that you've seen recently
that you thought, that was pretty good?
Yeah, what is a movie that I've seen recently
that I thought was pretty good?
All right, I'm gonna be a little real with you.
So I had a stomach bug, like a 24-hour stomach bug,
and every once in a while when I feel
just devastated by reality, I'm like,
time for a chick flick.
And I surprised myself because I thought
I was watching a chick flick,
but I ended up watching kind of like a musical drama.
Not that there was a musical,
but that there was a lot of music in it
called A Beautiful Life, and it was a Danish movie
where this guy named Christopher sang the soundtrack for it and it was basically like he was
a fishmonger or like a fish hand or whatever he worked at the docks and then
his musical talent gets discovered and then there's blah blah blah and thus and
such that goes on in the process of it but I was I was more moved by it than I
expected to be because I was like I feel real bad and I need to be like be close
to a bathroom for the next 24 hours and then I just threw that movie on and I was moved.
So I think it's called A Beautiful Life.
And I think I have to provide a caveat.
I think there was like a scene, you know,
where they canoodle, you don't see anything,
but there's a canoodling scene.
But other than that, it was good.
I started watching Terminator 2 again the other day.
Just had this like nostalgic longing for something. And I put it on and I was, I haven't
finished it yet because I have ADD I'm sure and get bored very quickly in movies.
It's amazing what it takes to keep my attention.
You've done well.
But yeah, like, yeah, like I watched about 20 minutes like I really liking this movie.
It's I wonder how like, like television today with like this long series, you know, that
you're supposed to watch back to back. I wonder how that is affecting how we watch movies
and why that might be the case. That it's really hard to watch a movie that was considered
great 20 years ago and appreciate it today.
Well, I think you've probably, I don't know what the actual statistics are, but I suspect
then when Netflix first came out, you had to send away for the disc. So you didn't spend
any time scrolling.
But then when the digital platform became a thing,
I bet you people picked within five seconds.
And in part that was because all of these options were new.
And so it was like, cornucopia,
let's just pick whatever fruit we find first.
But now a lot of people have watched a lot of things
on the platform.
And they're also having greater and greater difficulty
choosing a movie.
So people will spend many minutes just scrolling
and watching the 30 second blip that they give you.
And I think in part it's because it's harder to commit
because you're always looking at how long is this movie.
And if it's longer than 90 minutes,
you're like, that's gonna cost me.
And it's just, you're getting the kind of dopamine
serotonin hit that you want
by watching these 30 minute clips. So even while you're getting the kind of dopamine serotonin hit that you want by watching these 30 minute clips
So even while you're mildly conflicted that you haven't yet selected the thing for which you came yet
Your needs are being served
So I think that we're actually perpetuating patterns of indecisiveness and of lack of commitment because we're treating it chemically
We're auto treating it chemically, but we're not actually getting at the thing itself. That's like the best take on Netflix I've ever heard.
Yeah, that's really interesting.
So you're there to pick a movie
without realizing that you're not there to pick a movie.
You're there to do whatever this thing is that you're doing.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah, our experience of YouTube would be very different
if you typed in YouTube and had a blank page
with a search bar, wouldn't it?
It wouldn't do it. Yeah, we have to find ourselves. The algorithm is against
you. Just like they must know that.
Two minute or two. All right.
What's another movie I want to you see any good
movies lately?
I watched a Citizen Kane.
Wow. And Casablanca
for the first time the other day.
Classic. Which one did you prefer?
I just prefer as far as like, I enjoyed this more.
Uh, Citizen Kane.
Easily.
Yeah.
I, I think, chat's gonna get real mad about this.
I think that the male, the male lead in Casablanca was.
Humphrey Bogart?
Uh, yeah, the guy, Joe, who's played by Humphrey Bogart.
I think he is the definition of a simp
Oh and
Because he like one he's weak enough to to knowingly like continue adultery like consider it
And then at the end he like is willing to just sell his life away for a woman
That's okay. I probably should have watched it by now a woman that he knows is a woman that he knows is loose. So like
Like the whole thing I thought I did not I thought the the movie and the acting and the plot was enjoyable
But his character I found to be just so annoying like I just when when they got to walk off into the sunset together
At the end. I just kind of wanted him to be shot honestly Wow you maybe you do
He's an attractive man I
Think okay, no one's gonna back me up. No worries citizen. Yeah. Yeah real looker. Um, yeah, that's that's kind of brutal though to like judge
Humphrey Bogart by 21st century him. I'm talking about Joe. Okay. Yeah to judge the character not Andrew Tate standards
I hate Andrew Tate. Okay, how did that come up? Did you bring out Andrew Tate before?
He said like sample like alpha male language and stuff like that. That's that's that word
Pre-exists Andrew Tate phenomena about like three to four years. Okay. All right. Yeah, it's just a guy who three to four years
Ideal in centuries in canes. It was good. I'm just looking at pictures of it right now
I'm recognizing a lot of the imagery, but I'm saying it. Yeah
Yeah, Orson Welles is excellent Orson Welles plays the cardinal that dies in a man for all seasons
And he also did F is for fake which I won't spoil the ending of F is for fake
But if you haven't seen F is for fake no. Oh, that's really good. The ending of that is kind of brain-bending
But Citizen Kane is really neat because the whole premise of it is that's this guy who worked for Kane's newspaper who goes around
After he dies trying to figure out what his last words were
And nobody knows and so his last words were this is where we get rosebud rosebud
Who's who do they call like the the master of suspense?
Yeah, yeah, yeah
So I I only started watching hitchcock last year never watched hitchcock movie in my life and I turned one on and I was shocked that I was gripped. Yeah and
Even with an oldie timey film that may have been the first time that I realized
I'm a chronological snob, you know, how could it possibly be good? Sure that kind of thing
Have you ever seen North by Northwest? No, I think that is his best or at least
North? That's the one where the plane shot is, right? Yeah.
With like the crop duster.
Is that right?
I think it's widely agreed upon as one of his best.
I do think a rear window.
I'm gonna check that out.
I like rear window.
That was great.
Rear window is phenomenal.
You see the rope, is it the rope by H-Grope?
Just rope, yeah.
Wow, that was good.
Also, I think that's a single shot film.
It is, except there's a couple of breaks.
Someone will walk past the camera and it goes black for a millisecond.
They must be breaks. But it's yeah, essentially a single shot film.
It's incredibly well done.
You see notorious notorious.
What's that? Also very good.
South American blah, blah, blah. That's inside.
Is that him or what? Strangers on a train.
I'm just seeing a black rapper.
I confess. He didn't want about.
Yes, I watched that one.
You can only find that online in like a square, really poor black
and white film, but that was really good. Yeah. Nice.
Yeah. So would you say Citizen Kane is like that in that it's, it's in your kind of shock?
Okay. This is an old movie that I find it as gripping as anything I've watched recently.
Oh yeah. I found Citizen Kane to be more engaging than all, but like three modern movies that
I've watched in the last two years.
Thanks for telling me that.
I'll check it out.
I think, yeah, it's, it's actually the, I think one of the things that I'm getting bored
of with modern films is like all of the effects and like the actions seem to be doing a lot
of the work of holding you.
And I'm more interested in character studies.
Oh my gosh.
Like just like that's like what I relate to in films.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Like I want to, I want to like feel like I'm engaging in some
mystery of the character or something like Malik films.
Uh, some of them.
Yeah.
We get a couple of super chats here.
If you don't mind, I don't want to, I don't want to miss out on
these fellas here.
Isaiah bowling says the rosary isn't a requirement, but isn't
praying the rosary daily something
we ought to do?
The Blessed Virgin Mary asked at Fatima, and it seems wrong not to listen.
Yeah, I think the point that you made is clarificatory.
So many people have asked us to do many things.
And obviously what our Lord asks us is most pertinent and our lady, you know, obviously,
you know, like our lady.
But that's kind of like judged by the church's tradition, and it's judged in the setting
of the church's liturgical life.
And the documents that the church sets forward instructs us, like you said, as to the difference
between what is mandated and then what is permitted, or like encouraged, permitted, not permitted,
right, strictly forbidden, as it were.
And I think the Rosary is something that's encouraged.
So it's not, if it were like Sunday
Mass or if it were like supporting the temporal needs of the church or if it were like
absent, they would have informed you. But you know, the Blessed
Mother says things and she repeats things because she's a good mother and
she encourages us. Not that we should ever trivialize her word, but that we
should take it in the setting of the church's teaching and like worshiping
office. Forrester says, Father Pyne, can you please share your thoughts on But that we should take it in the setting of the church's teaching and like worshipping office
Forrester says father pine. Can you please share your thoughts on Medjugorje and the issues some people have with it?
Just cards on the table
He's something we spoke about recently and that was that our understanding is you got the first bishop the local ordinary condemning it
Some have accused him of communist influence
The second bishop seems to have not contradicted the position of the first.
The third seems to have reiterated the position. The second reiterated this. The third is not
stated. Yeah. Okay. Well, either way, if the local ordinary either condemns or doesn't give license
to a particular apparition, our understanding is then it's not, it's not something that should be
publicly encouraged, but perhaps maybe privately?
What do you, I'm sure you've thought about this because I know it played a significant role in your own. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So my, I think general comment is, it's the type of thing that I,
it falls basically in between like permitted and encouraged. Well, so it's certainly permitted. So
it is permitted, but I would say that it's kind of like in a space between permitted and encouraged.
And that's, so it's private revelation.
So we would say, strictly speaking, within the bounds of the Church's clarifications,
that we speak of them as alleged apparitions.
So that's the technical language.
I won't continue to repeat alleged apparitions because it's burdensome, but we speak of them
as alleged apparitions. The Church makesome, but we speak of them as alleged apparitions.
The Church makes judgments as to the supernatural quality of things.
There are three categories.
So constat de supernaturalitate, so like we would say that this is supernatural.
Non constat de supernaturalitate, which is we can't say basically that this is supernatural.
And then constat de non supernaturalitate, which is, this is not supernatural, is our judgment.
So with respect to Medjugorje, the current status is established by the Bishops' Conference
of Yugoslavia in 1991 at Zadar, which said, non constat de supernaturalitate. We can't
say that this is supernatural, but that leaves the lay faithful free, basically,
to make visits to Medjugorje.
Because Yugoslavia has been dissolved, the pertinent governing authority to make judgments
of this sort is now the bishops' conference of Bosnia and Herzegovina, because the local
ordinary is the bishop of Mostad Rovno, because it's in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
So there have been no subsequent clarifications on the part of the governing body since 1991 in whatever 30 plus years that contradict the non constate de supernaturalitate,
which is we can't say that it is supernatural. So up until 2019, you know, the lay faithful were
permitted to go there basically with the idea that this is a private revelation, it doesn't add
anything to public revelation, and that
it's basically a message addressed to people in their time to live the faith better, right?
And that's it. In 2019, Pope Francis said that you can now make public pilgrimages.
Did you know that? Yeah.
So you can make public pilgrimages.
I guess I should listen to him more than you.
It's like previously you might just have somebody in the parish who organized
a pilgrimage, but now a parish or a diocese can organize a pilgrimage.
But the church hasn't made a subsequent declaration that we're going to move the needle from non
constata supernaturalitate to constata supernaturalitate.
I love that you thought alleged was going to be the burdensome word.
Yeah, no, exactly.
As he continues to repeat these burdensome words in Latin.
So the first bishop is Zanich.
It's said to have begun in June of 1981.
He preaches a public homily in July of 1981 where he says, you know, the Blessed Virgin
Mary is here, the children do not lie.
There are things that are kind of like widely attested to.
And then his conversations with Father Jozo Zofko are also part of that deposition.
Father Jozo Zofko was the one who was imprisoned by the communist regime. Now, what Father Jozo
Zofko says is that the bishop changed his mind because, quote, I can't go to prison over this,
or I can't be reduced to an ordinary vicar. There's no other substantiation for those things,
so I don't think that our argument should rest on them. But basically, by the time you get to 1987,
on the same date, July 25, the Feast of St. James, so the patronal feast of the parish,
he preaches against them in the town itself, Zanich does. So Zanich is replaced by Perich.
Perich has strong things to say. So he says, not only would I say non constate de supernaturalitate,
but I would say constate non supernaturalitate. I would say that these are not supernatural things.
But then that was clarified by Bertone that, so that's his private opinion, which he is
free to make as the ordinary of the diocese, but it's not of governing authority because
that's reserved to the bishop's conference of, you know, like Yugoslavia at first and
now of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
So the lay faithful remain free to go, permitted obviously, and you might say kind of tending in the direction of encouraged.
Why I would say tending in the direction of encouraged is if a private revelation is for
the people of the time, then we are the people of the time. And I would also say that like going
before a thing is approved is also part and parcel of these experiences throughout the
Church of the Courtses, or of these experiences throughout the Church's history.
So like, Fatima was approved in 1930.
The miracle of the sun happened in October of 1917.
So if nobody were to have gone until it was approved, 70,000 people who saw the miracle
of the sun wouldn't have seen the miracle of the sun.
You know, so it's like part of the way by which apparitions, alleged apparitions, are
judged in this way is how the lay faithful
kind of frequent respond to profit from or not, right? And the church will judge against
some and it will judge for others. Sometimes that's pretty close on the heels of the event,
you know, like a few years. Sometimes it's way long after the event. And so I think that
this is, it falls within the bounds of the church's experience. And yeah, I think that's probably it.
Mason- I've got one more question that I'd love you to, because you seem to have more
of a stronger opinion than I did.
Isn't there some problematic things that have allegedly been said by the Blessed Virgin
Mary?
I think one of them, if memory serves, is God doesn't cut the cake where religion is
concerned, which made it sound like religious indifference was being taught.
I know other people, I can't think of specific ones, which is unfair, but can you think of kind of problematic
things that were allegedly said by the Blessed Virgin Mary to these visionaries, and wouldn't
that discount them if they were indeed problematic?
Yeah, so it depends on the nature of it. So I don't have things ready at hand. I read
some books about the topic at a certain point, like the books of E. So I don't have things ready at hand. I read some, you know, like
books about the topic at a certain point, like the books of E. Michael Jones are the
best, you know, kind of like arguments against. And I know of two that he wrote, one which
is kind of an introductory salvo and the other one's called like the Ghosts of Sirmonti.
And you read them?
I did, yeah. But it's been 15 years, so I don't really remember his arguments too closely.
But with respect to that, so
I think that this functions basically like if we're looking for a known category, a known
category might be prophecy, the charismatic gift of prophecy, which you have listed there
in 1 Corinthians 12, St. Thomas talks about it in Secunda Secunda, Question 174. But basically
it's something that's given to an individual without necessarily sanctifying him, okay?
And it's also going to be
recounted by the individual according to his own kind of individual personal culture. So in his
own language, but also according to his own mediating concepts. So it's not like trance,
one becomes then just...
Mason- Yes, the mouthpiece.
Scott- Exactly. So it's still going, it's going to take account of and it's going to work through
the humanity of the individual. And I think you see that in different apparitions, which is like, I
am the Immaculate Conception. Is the Blessed Virgin Mary the Immaculate Conception? Because
that refers to an event, specifically her conception. So it's like, it requires of us
some interpretation. So there might be things in the messages of Medjugorje which are weird.
They might even be like material heresy,
but we commit material heresy all the time.
Like St. John Henry Newman says,
"'God is three and God is one.'"
So God is not three, right?
God is one, but we understand what he's saying
because he's making reference to the triune God.
But if we were like, we need to drill down on this topic
because you, my friend, have straight,
it would be like hyper-literalism in our interpretation of a text which is poetic. So I suspect that there's probably material heresy
in, you know, the things that have been said by the visionaries at Medjugorje. What we're looking
for though when we're talking about heresy is formal heresy, which is obstinate post-baptismal
denial of something that's to be held with divine and Catholic faith, which I suspect we probably
don't have. I haven't looked at everything,
you know, but I don't think that we probably have that. One last question before Thursday
drills down on you mercilessly is, do you believe that the Blessed Virgin Mary is appearing in Medjugorje?
I do. Yeah. Thursday. Currently or at the beginning?
Yeah, so I've heard people make that distinction and I don't
know, like I don't follow it very very closely. I've been, I've only, so I went
for the first time in 1991. Okay. So my parents took us family, so like a lot of
this is very personalistic, it's very, right, kind of like within the domestic
setting of my family's life of faith. And then they took us back as a family in
1996 and at that point my father and mother felt drawn
to make of this an apostolate.
So basically from 1996 onwards,
they began leading pilgrimages to Medjugorje,
where they would invite people from the parish
and maybe sometimes further afield,
and then they'd go usually for like a week,
nine days, something like that.
So that was basically up until my mom got sick and died,
and now my dad takes
trips himself. So I just went back with him as like the chaplain of a group of maybe 35,
40 people just this past October. And my kind of approach to it is what would you say inductive
or empirical? It's kind of like, you know, judged by its fruits. And I've seen the effect that it's
had on the life of the individuals who have gone and my my parents perish just in
cultivating conversion and then devotion and engagement with the sacramental life the adopting of
Pendences and fasting and things like that and so I'm sure there are exceptions because I haven't followed up with everybody to get documentary evidence
But it seems like the general tendency is a good one
And I just have difficulty kind of probabilistically envisioning a plan of the evil one which would
Produce such fruit because it seems contrary to his purposes. That's kind of like my general thought world
So can I ask on the fruits is one of the fruits to be considered not?
that for a long time and still in a lot of devotees the
ruling of the church on you know
It's not approved is ignored in some circles?
Is that not a fruit to be considered as obstinate ignorance or ignoring of the church's authority on these matters?
Yeah, no, that's a great point. I would say that the church has withheld her judgment about the legitimacy of an apparition for many years in several cases.
Right? So we think first of the ones that came close on the heels,
like Lourdes, I think it was like four years after,
and Guadalupe was longer, but then you look at other ones,
you know, they'd be more minor ones.
Okay, so, but like, I think Amsterdam,
our lady of all nations,
was like 50 something years after the fact.
And so I think there are two complicating factors.
One is the initial negative stance of the bishops,
and then the other is the fact that they're ongoing.
So the ongoing is one to address,
and there have been apparitions
which have been ongoing for a long time.
Usually, I would say the ones that we think of were shorter.
So like Lord's was within a year.
I mean, Fatim was over the course of maybe six, seven months.
I'd have to do the math, May to October.
And, but like Lord, she said,
like come back, you know, for 15 days subsequently.
And in Fatima, she said, come back every month on the 13th.
And even when they were forbidden from going there
on August, you know, like in August on the day itself,
she came into the fields and, you know, things like that.
So I think that you see this in other instances
of an extended process.
And even in Fatima, you know, like our
lady continued to reveal herself or to be in conversation with Sister Lucia throughout the
course of her life, you know, so it's not held up as the main things, but there's something that's
still going on there. Right, but the church hasn't ruled on Sister Lucia's later... No, no, no, no,
no, no, yeah, I'm not trying to suggest that. And so we, you know, we are, you know, so that, but okay.
Do you disagree with anything he said so far? Cause what you just said,
it sounded pretty thorough.
So the,
the current ruling is that the pilgrimage are allowed so long as the apparitions
are not permit perc perceived or forget the exact project.
It as definitely authenticated as authenticated or their authenticity is taken
for granted. And so my
worry is that I think that, you know, when we have these groups going there,
or even the seer, Miriam, I can't say the name, yeah, like telling
these pilgrims that she is seeing Mary, that we're in violation of that
directive of the Church. Yeah, I think that, so as to what is seen and what is unseen,
I think there are different kinds of modes of judgment that we render on that.
So she sees if it is true, if the alleged apparitions are true,
then she sees the blessed Virgin Mary. So she can say,
she can recount her experience and just say,
because for her it registers in a different way. Whereas we, you know,
the members of the worshiping body have a different, you know, like, epistemic
relationship to that, because we don't see it. And so the Church is reserving judgment with that in
mind, communicating to us, the members of the lay faithful. I don't know what specific, you know,
like, things have been told to the alleged visionaries themselves as to how they communicate,
but it would seem, to me, it would seem disingenuous If every time a visionary spoke in my alleged apparition, right?
It sounds like almost cheeky like like she would be making fun of the church almost so I understand that I understand that
But I think that there's a different epistemic quality that the judgment that she makes in the way that she recounts it
And what about the leaders of the pilgrimages taking those people there and telling them that we're going to see an apparition?
Yeah, so so is that whenever I start a conversation about it, I say alleged apparitions. Okay, so yeah
But you do but yeah, like really you recognize that that is not even like the vast majority of I would say that some people
But I would also say that like, you know
The vast majority of the world in the fourth century within the Christian sphere was Aryan
But that doesn't mean that Aryanism was true. Right, I understand. You know, like
Psy had grown to discover that she was Aryan. But I think that just because a
lot of people get it wrong, it doesn't mean that that's a principled argument
against those who get it right or the getting right itself. Well, I'm just saying, I'm just presenting that as a fruit.
I hear the fruits argument a lot, and so I'm presenting as a fruit the fact that
we seem to just be okay with this. But I think that's a second order fruit. I
think that typically the fruits argument is used about first order fruits. So you engage
with a thing, that thing has an effect on your humanity, on your relationships, on your
life more broadly. And then there's a kind of meta narrative whereby you describe like
kind of what has gone on, you interpret what has gone on. So I think that when we talk about fruits,
we're typically talking about conversion.
We're talking about the effect that it has
in the humanity of those who come and their relationships.
And I think that the way that you narrate that
is not nothing, but I think it's kind of
second order consideration.
So I think in Latin America, do a lot of people
get married in devotion excessively?
One might even say wrong, potentially,
but I think that, you
know, it's a risk. I think it's just a risk, and I think that risks can fall on
either of two sides. You can be hyper cautious and prevent yourself from ever
being implicated in the thing from which error might arise, right? Or you could,
you know, potentially be overly generous, but I think that we're trying to be
generous, you know, generous in an appropriate way with the cognizance that,
okay, here's a cool thing. I might be deceived. I should, please Lord, spare me that.
Please Lord, spare me that. Like to be conscious of that at some level.
But also, if you're gonna give yourself to experience, you have to kind of give yourself to an experience.
Yeah.
Can I ask about the thing with Tomislav Lastic? Are you familiar with that?
I'm not, but... he was the one of these
spiritual directors of the of the Seers okay was
Excommunicated and defrocked. Okay, we're impregnating a nun. Oh, is that is that a fruit?
So yeah, so like I I guess I don't mean to be hardened and calloused but that is a fruit
And or that's that's an instance of a man's
sinning, right, for which he is responsible. But that's specifically, like
those, the spiritual life and virtue of those close to the alleged seers are
specifically in the document the church uses for criteria on validating
apparitions. Sure, no, I don't deny that, but I would say like Judas denied our
Lord Jesus. You know, like proximity to a holy thing doesn't necessarily transpire in holiness.
You know, like there were people who saw the Lord and denied Him.
Like that's a terrible, terrible thing. And we should pray, you know, every day that we be spared such a fate.
You know, because it's not, it's just not a given.
It's just not a given. Proximity doesn't save.
It's just not a given. It's just not a given. Proximity doesn't save.
Conversion saves. And so the fact that he's sinned is awful.
And the church should speak about it, condemn it,
and help the lay faithful to move beyond it. Right?
But I don't think that we can discount what's going on, you know,
that that is in proximity to. So I think that's a real thing.
And I don't want to discount that.
Okay. Then if, if the, if the vice in proximity to it cannot be attributed to it,
why can the virtue not just be attributed to the fact
that there's an abundance of people going to the Eucharist
in a state of grace, confessing and praying?
Yeah, so you could make that argument,
but it seems like parsimony here is in effect.
So why are they going?
Because they can receive the Blessed Sacrament anywhere.
And truth be told, the Blessed Sacrament
is a more wonderful phenomenon than the apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary, but if this point about private revelation holds
Namely that private revelation is not an addition to public revelation
But it's addressed to the people in their time as a kind of salutary reminder nothing new but the same thing
Adapted to us in the here-and-now then we might profit from it
I think that's like basically the stance,
which is a pretty modest stance.
So we could attribute it to other things.
That is certainly the case.
We could attribute it to other things,
but I think it would require more of us
in the way of mental gymnastics,
because they're going for a reason,
and it seems like the fruits which eventuate from that
have something to do with the reason.
So are there other explanations, potentially?
Would you not say that if everybody was that pious
in their like towns and like normal everyday lives we
would see miracles and things like that happening
i think so but okay who will make them such
you know the lord jesus
how does the lord jesus choose to communicate himself
through various mediations his sacred humanity the church the sacraments and
this is one of them
but it seems like it's a one of them not that it's like better than those that have gone before
or never to be surpassed by those that come in turn, but it's here and now. And I think it's part of like the
particularistic nature of the faith. It's like you don't have to know everything or do everything,
but we seek to respond to those things that are presented to us here and now within the setting of our concrete life and vocation.
So I'm not saying that everyone needs to go there,
but I'm saying that at the very least we affirm the church's permission and then I might
tend towards encouragement because it is for the here and now and because of the
fruits. So I try to make it a kind of modest claim. Okay, my worry is mainly
that the most... you're the first devotee I've talked to that is willing to
make those like none of the other... like literally I haven't talked to, I've done, I mean, I've been,
I got kicked out of my, um, this is the true story.
I haven't told this on,
I got kicked out of my campus ministry by the chaplain because he was having,
um, a speaker give a speech where he was telling people that it is happening.
And I was like, father, this is, you know, we're not allowed to be, you know, if especially
as a position, public position, and you have these, these students in your care as the
chaplain, like you should be, you know, putting qualifications on this and just taking for
granted the, and not only just taking for granted, but telling them that it is, is, you know, not what the church is asking for
in this case. And his, his, um, he laughed at me and then his direct response was, if
you don't trust my judgment, you shouldn't be a part of this community. And told me I
was not, uh, in so many words told me I wasn't welcome anymore. That's it. So, so I, I, my worry and, and the other devotees at the church that was connected to this
campus ministry told when I, you know, when they heard about this, it got back to me that they were
all saying good because he, he doesn't believe that he's a harm to be around. So like I have multiple and, and this is, I mean,
just to speak candidly on the video that we put up where I talked about this,
all of the comments were that none of them addressed the claims.
They were all just based on personal feelings.
And so my worry is that we are coming to a point where I'm not discounting
people's conversion experiences,
but we're talking about subjective things and weighing that a lot of the devotees are talking about their subjective experiences and weighing them equal to the church's documents on the subject,
to the point that we are literally and like just discounting anything people have to say or excluding them. And I've heard other stories like this.
have to say or excluding them. And I've heard other stories like this. Mason But if the church's documents aren't forbidding
that we take pilgrimages there, it would be one thing if the church had forbidden private
pilgrimages there, right? But since it hasn't, isn't it in the same vein as, say, Fatima or any
other Marian apparition before it's officially been approved? Or is it different? I mean, it might be, but still my worry is that the
don't take the authenticity for granted
is almost universally ignored.
Yeah. So that's that's something that isn't that something that would have been
said before Fatima was approved or no.
Yeah. And I would say I would say that Fatima should not have also until the approval
should be authentic enough. And I would say that Fatima should not have also, until the approval, should the authenticity... Fair enough, but aren't you asking of human beings to display a level of like,
caution and circumspection that humans usually aren't capable of? Like, how many years was it
before the apparition and Fatima was approved? 13.
30? 13.
13, all right. So 13 years where people were naturally enthusiastic, they personally believed
that the Blessed Virgin Mary had approved. Yes, the Church hadn't stated it, but to expect of human beings
to, whenever they spoke of their belief in the Blessed Virgin Mary, that they would have
to qualify every statement, just doesn't seem reasonable, I suppose.
Maybe there's a specific caution where you're like, well, of course we have to wait for
the Church's approval, but it sounds like okay
Can I even just say this maybe it's it's unreasonable to expect the laity?
To live up to that standard, but shouldn't we at least expect clerics to live up to it as a cleric?
I don't expect much more from clerics than I do from the ladies. So I did it. Yeah, actually no joke, but no fair enough
That was actually in leadership. No, no, we should expect it. Yeah, especially when you're like not.
It's not like you're just acting right, like right here.
We're having an impromptu discussion.
Yeah. But like in the example I gave, this is two clerics.
Yeah. Who have weighed the weighed and know what the church has said
and even had somebody in their community bring this concern to them.
Yeah. And and in all of this consideration, we still.
So would you have been like satisfied if the priest had said, I see, fair enough.
We'll I'll just make a one minute announcement at the beginning that the
church hasn't officially ruled on this. Would that have been enough? Or do you think,
no, no, I had to go way further than that. That's not, I don't know.
It's it would have depended on the content
of the speech given I think because the speech also was rather strong in its claims and of
itself. So like you can like I see you can come out and say like the church hasn't approved
this and then but then you have 45 minutes of a talk where like very strong claims are
being made. Nobody remembers that one minute thing or they just assume that it's some
Formality and that it doesn't really matter. You know what I mean? Yeah
Yeah, I know some concerns that people have is you know, if this is not true
Then there's going to be and that could be a fruit of the of the demonic
You know that there's gonna be tens of thousands of people who might give up faith in Christ if it was revealed that this
Was face and fake. Yeah, I guess that might be... I don't know. Yeah, I mean, if I were to hear tomorrow
the church judged, you know, constat de non supernaturalitate, I'd be like, oh, bummer.
And then it would change nothing about my life. You know, I'd have conversations with people who
were let down, who were sad, who were confused, you know, and I try to make myself available within that pastoral setting.
But like, my life doesn't hinge upon any particularities of Medjugorje, except that I've, you know,
been there.
Adamus This has been great.
This has really helped me.
I think I have more of a...I'm more open after what you've shared.
But I suppose that even though the most fanatical devotee of Medjugorje, unless they were very
immature, would grant that there are people who take it too far.
Like is there any devotee of Medjugorje who doesn't think, well, in theory someone could
take this too far?
Probably somewhere someone isn't making that claim, but I think just humans like novelty
too, and that's something else we've got to be on guard about
whenever there's a new apparition or a new devotion,
people get really jazzed.
And maybe they're right to be jazzed.
Cause as you say,
this is meant to apply to these people at this time.
Anything else you wanted to say or are we?
No, I just, it's, I'm chuckling to myself.
Cause the chat is further proving nobody who's disagreeing
in the chat with either of us is going by
Like the actual content. They're just like go there and see it's just still subjective experience. Yeah, which is yeah
That's what like the Mormons say like read our book and just read
Yeah, the burning of the bosom feels reminiscent of that. Yeah, but he doesn't talk like that. No, I'm not saying father pine does
I'm just saying it's it's like yeah
I know I said this to a lot of the comments
But if you're gonna people are gonna comment on this who are in the chat saying this like go there and see like even if I'm not saying father pine does I'm just saying it's it's like yeah I know I said this to a lot of the comments
But if you're gonna people are gonna comment on this who are in the chat saying this like go there and see like even if I went
There and came to the personal conclusion that it might be real or like had a great like yeah
Reconversion I would still hold the same positions on whether or not we should be
Publicly taking for granted authenticity because it's the
documents of the church. I'm not, like, sorry, that's all I'm saying. Like I could go and
have all this experience that everybody thinks I would have. It would not change my position
on how we should be addressing this.
I mean, it also should be stated. Thank you. That was, that was, that was helpful. It should
also be stated that just because a church approves an apparition, it doesn't
mean it's right.
In what sense?
Well, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm,
I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm,
I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm,
I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm,
I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm, I looked at it. That's not a sentence that makes sense. It just seems likely to be false in
my estimation. So here's a, and that's just my estimation. I would encourage people to
go check out Jimmy Akin's mysterious world episode on that. It was a deep dive into that
topic where he didn't draw that conclusion, but it felt to me very much like he was leaning
in that direction. I came away thinking that. So here's a question from Tony RVA. Is there
a chance that once an apparition is approved like Louis de Fadima that the church
can later revoke its approval? Yeah, I don't know, because I don't know what further testimony could
potentially cause one to render that judgment. So like in the case of La Salette, you have these two
seers, Melanie and Maxima, who live tragic lives. Like, she tried religious life,
and she failed with, like, four congregations.
She lived the end of her life dispensed from her vows
and died young.
And he tried the seminary,
but then, like, the people that were visiting
to talk to him about his experience,
he ended up leaving.
I think he threw in his lot
with some guy selling alcohol on his good name, but they
ended up getting totally thrown for a loop, you know, got pulled the wool over his eyes,
and then he ended like as an alcoholic.
Yeah, and they were also seemed to be invested in some other kind of conspiratorial issues
that had not just to do with this.
Yeah, I don't know, obviously, he'll know much more about it, but they both, you know,
seem to die in the practice of the Catholic faith.
And yeah, I think it's good insofar as the challenges or sensibilities as to what a visionary's
life looks like, because I can't remember which apparition.
It might have been a La Salette where the local ordinary said, okay, you know, basically
the job of the visionaries is done.
Now it's the job of the church to convert, right, or to be good custodians, as it were, of the messages which are transmitted here. Because again,
proximity doesn't necessarily convert, it requires more of an individual. And
we're all like St. Bernadette. Well, not like the whole die young
after tuberculosis thing, but maybe that too. But alas, it's more complicated. So I
do like things that complicate the narrative, the kind of pious narrative.
Because oftentimes the hyperpious narrative ends up causing us to despair.
Because when we compare our lives to it, we know they're not adequate, because we're not
X, Y, and Z person.
But when we see how God can work even through failures, kind of tragic failures, it's like,
okay, well then God can use even my trash heap of a life.
That's good.
Yeah, fair enough.
There's another question here.
It's not a question, but oh yes, it is
Tony same fella and he says I recently read a book about ality of cabejo in Rwanda and found it beautiful and compelling
What do you think about that apparition? Just quick interjection?
I would say that I I love Jimmy Akin and I love his podcast called a mysterious world and I'd really recommend that people check
It out. It's it's so well done
I think he writes the entire script and gives his co-host the questions to ask. So it's very tight. It's an excellent podcast. He
has an excellent episode on Allied of Cabejo in which he comes down very positive on this
from what he does the research on. So for those interested, if you want to hear three
great episodes, Rwanda, actually, could I ask you to find the links to those
so we have yeah Cabejo, Lewids and Las, not Lewids sorry Cabejo, Fatima and La Salette if you could
just find the links to those three so people could check them out they're very well done but
Cabejo anything I don't really know much about next question uh Tony says father pine any advice
on improving the prayer life of a dad who feels too busy between work and family to have quality
Time and solitude each day
longer bowel movements
You're the dad of a busy family. What are your thoughts? Yeah, let's see improving prayer life
I think you know like if it were me saying this I would want to ask myself
All right, what, where can I trim the fat in my day?
So obviously there are things that we do for recreation that are important and helpful,
but are there ways throughout my day that I'm just kind of wasting time that I could maybe be more
strict on and in so doing have more time freed up. Another option would be to wake up just half
hour earlier. Like it's advice I don't
want to hear, and it's advice I don't want to hear because I know I could do it but I
just don't want to. That may not be your situation, but that could be another thing. What if I
just wake up half hour early and just dedicate some time to pray? That would be a couple
of ideas.
To elaborate on that, I like to do the clip and add. Whenever you add something you have
to clip something like you just kind of gestured to.
I like that, yeah. something that's been working for me
just in the past however many months is,
I have the, basically I have Safari
and Gmail blocked on my phone, which has been nice
because I usually do those as little,
I'm waiting for somebody and I check
or I'm at the end of the day and I look.
But the reason I think that clip fits
is because it also corresponds to the wake up earlier.
So I would say, don't worry about 30 minutes at the outset
Maybe just do 10
But if you block those things in your phone
You're less likely to be up later than you want to be more likely to be in bed at the time that you want to
Be and so fresher when it comes time. Yeah, this is excellent. So we are gonna do a quick
Local stream after this so go to Matt Fred locals calm. Thank you so much for being here. Um, anything else you want to say, do,
be? Nope. Thanks. Thanks for having me. Thank you very much. Thanks everybody.