Thursday, June 30, 2011

Pope's Prayer for 60th Anniversary

"Thank You For the Grace of the Priestly Ministry"


VATICAN CITY, JUNE 29, 2011 (Zenit.org).- Here is a translation of the prayer Benedict XVI wrote for the 60th anniversary of his priestly ordination, which he celebrated today.
* * *

Lord,

We thank you because you have opened your Heart for us;

Because in your Death and Resurrection

You have become source of life.

Make us living persons,

Living from your source,

And give us the power to be sources ourselves,

Able to give to this, our time

The water of life.

We thank you

For the grace of the priestly ministry.

Lord, bless us
And bless all men of this time
Who are thirsty and in search
Amen.
-Benedictus PP XVI

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Vatican News

Vatican News opens today!!

Monday, June 27, 2011

Taking down the swing set.

My knight and I took the girls' swing set down last night. All the while I couldn't help realizing that this means the end of an era. They no longer use it, there are other activities now replacing their "little-kid" games. Things are changing at the Pillar household. The years have flown by so quickly that my heart is having an incredibly hard time keeping up! I absolutely loved having babies; watching their every step of progress and sewing each and every dress was a labor of, not only love, but celebration of being the mom of two beautiful daughters.

So here I am jotting down my feelings about these transition years. All three of our children are different and their transition from childhood to adulthood unique. So much so that our parental preparation takes some adjustment.

Our son, who will be celebrating his 3rd wedding anniversary in August, was always a loving little boy with blonde hair and bright blue eyes. School was not his forte, but all his teachers just loved him. He went into his teen years without too much difficulty and it wasn't until he turned 18 that he began to be more independent. He never minded me stopping by at his first job, Cost Plus World Market, just to watch him work. I think my knight would say the hardest part of raising him was keeping him in shoes and cars!

Each of our daughters are different all together. Both are amazingly book smart and musically talented. They are blessed with so much creativity and brains.  The oldest is a "doctor doolittle" of sorts, following her daddy's footsteps into the care of animals.  The youngest has a knack for the ivory keys and her nose in a book.

Having three children gives each of them their own special place in the family, from being the first and only son, to being the first and oldest daughter to being the last child and baby, they each know how much they are loved. As the years roll by and these wonderful charges grow, blossom, and succeed, their father and I feel the change in the winds. 

There are things we need to keep saying to them even though they are grown or growing up.  There are things we need to keep doing for them, like praying daily. We need to keep encouraging them to develop an independent prayer life, to depend on God, not their own efforts; keeping their eye on the Lord for guidance and support.  Parenting doesn't stop, it just gets tweeked with the ages.

With all these changes comes one very important fact of life for my knight and I:  no matter how old and/or far away our children are, we will always be their parents and  loving and giving them support as needed.  I can live with that and it does give me comfort, especially when I get a call from our son in the middle of the day and all he wanted was to "hear your voice, Mom."

Friday, June 24, 2011

A book Review: A Catholic Woman’s book of Prayers, by Donna-Marie Cooper O’Boyle

Some of the perks of being a Catholic blogger all these years have been the friends I’ve acquired and the lessons learned from them. Stamina, fortitude, and grace, are the gifts of these friends during my short career as a writer of which I am forever changed. One of these new friends is Donna-Marie Cooper O’Boyle, she has blessed me with several opportunities as a book reviewer to read a few of her many books: The Heart of Motherhood, Catholic saints Prayer book, and Prayerfully Expecting (which I totally forgot to write a review on). All three are wonderfully written with heart, soul, and love for the reader. Now with Mrs. O'Boyle's newest offering, "A Catholic Woman's Book of Prayers, we are yet again blessed with her wisdom as mother and devout Catholic. Besides the precious messages and insights Donna-Marie shares in these books, I like the size of this and the Catholic Saints Prayer book, its purse size as I like to. Easy to carry with me when I am running errands, working, or just getting the many responsibilities of being a mom accomplished during the day.

A Catholic Woman’s Book of Prayer is small but packs a punch in prayers, meditations, and insightful reflections on the different aspects of being a Catholic woman in today’s crazy. Just 80 pages and eight chapters, this book is an easy read without being daunting in our busy schedules. Some of my favorite messages in the book are the prayers, here’s one for example:

Help me to discover my gifts, Lord


Dear Lord, open my eyes to discover my gifts as a woman.
Open my heart to feel your loving embrace of me as your daughter affirming my dignity in your eyes.
Open my arms wide so they will stretch outward to others, loving and serving them with your love, Lord.
Help me to never lose sight of who I am and who You created me to be.
Thank you for the glorious gift of being a woman!

Both married and single women have the gift and responsibility of being a motherly influence to others in their paths and Donna-Marie points that out to us. We have many gifts that possibly we are not aware of until the opportunity presents itself. Donna-Marie shares some of her experience as a mother of five throughout the pages and prayers match some of the lamentations we may share with her as she discusses “Leaving the Nest”. Here our author/mom discloses a secret about our children as they leave, “Don’t worry, they’ll be back!” She shares how times are and can be for us moms with their children on the brink of leaving. Cherish them in our midst and cherish their growth and independence and then cherish their return as adults with wonderful memories then and now.

“Dear Lord, thank you for allowing me the beautiful blessing to raise children and help to mold their conscience. Please give me the grace, strength, and peace to release them when the time is right. Please surround them with angels and protect them from the snares of the devil, so that they will remain on the road that leads to life!”


On Prayer, she quotes Archbishop Fulton Sheen, as he reminds us:

There are not two kinds of answers to prayer, but three: One is “Yes.” Another is “No.” The third is “Wait.”
Sigh, I’ve been given the third answer WAY too many times and at times, I think it may be the only answer I receive. Prayer and patience and having our blessed Mother Mary as our example are highly encouraged here.

Dear Mary, please help me in my role as a woman who mothers others. Please pray for me to have the strength to never shirk my duties and grant me an extra dose of love to reach out with compassion to all in my care. When I’m tired, please allow me to rest my head against your sweet heart, dear Mary, safe within the folds of your mantle!
Our feminine genius is unmistakable and Pope John Paul II appreciated this element of being woman in his Angelus Address in July 1995, “In fact, woman has a genius all her own, which is vitally essential to both society and the Church.” Oh yea! We are gifted with a sense of sensitivity and strength like no other and Jesus was aware of this in His ministry. Mary Magdalene was the first to meet the risen Christ and Pope Paul II spoke of this: “This event, in a sense, crowns all that has been said previously about Christ entrusting divine truths to women as well as men.”

Donna-Marie believes in the feminine genius and gives us hope and encouragement that empowers woman that we are the culture changers our world needs more than ever today. She concludes that we must work hard to build a culture of Life. Prayer will be the help and aid for us as Donna-Marie leads us in prayer:

Dear Lord, grant me the wisdom and grace to understand my God-given gifts, my “feminine genius” so that I may use all that I have for your greater glory. Amen!
Thank you once again, Donna-Marie for your wisdom, your work is a true blessing to us all. I encourage all Catholic women to look for your books as a compliment in their journey as women, mothers, and mighty culture changers.

This review was made possible with compliments of Our Sunday Visitor.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

This story was shared by my daughter-in-law


We don't know who replied, but there is a beautiful soul working in the dead letter office of the US postal service.


Our 14-year-old dog Abbey died last month. The day after she passed away my 4-year-old daughter Meredith was crying and talking about how much she missed Abbey. She asked if we could write a letter to God so that when Abbey got to heaven, God would recognize her. I told her that I thought we could so, and she dictated these words:

Dear God,

Will you please take care of my dog? She died yesterday and is with you in heaven. I miss her very much. I am happy that you let me have her as my dog even though she got sick. I hope you will play with her. She likes to swim and play with balls. I am sending a picture of her so when you see her you will know that she is my dog. I really miss her. 

Love,
Meredith


We put the letter in an envelope with a picture of Abbey and Meredith and addressed it to God/Heaven. We put our return address on it. Then Meredith pasted several stamps on the front of the envelope because she said it would take lots of stamps to get the letter all the way to heaven. That afternoon she dropped it into the letter box at the post office. A few days later, she asked if God had gotten the letter yet. I told her that I thought He had.

Yesterday, there was a package wrapped in gold paper on our front porch addressed, 'To Meredith' in an unfamiliar hand. Meredith opened it. Inside was a book by
Mr. Rogers called, 'When a Pet Dies.' Taped to the inside front cover was the letter we had written to God in its opened envelope. On the opposite page was the picture of
Abbey & Meredith and this note:

Dear Meredith,
Abbey arrived safely in heaven. Having the picture was a big help and I recognized her right away.  Abbey isn't sick anymore. Her spirit is here with me just like it stays in your heart. Abbey loved being your dog. Since we don't need our bodies in heaven, I don't have any pockets to keep your picture in so I am sending it back to you in this little
book for you to keep and have something to remember Abbey by.

Thank you for the beautiful letter and thank your mother for helping you write
it and sending it to me. What a wonderful mother you have. I picked her especially for you. I send my blessings every day and remember that I love you very much. By the
way, I'm easy to find. I am wherever there is love.

Love,
God

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Circles: Are you "In" or are you "Out"?

Circles, you know the kind, clutches of people that seem unbreakable, impenetrable, and a force to be reckoned with when provoked or a 'stranger' moves in? Circles are great when things aren't going so well and numbers help in the solace, but what about the outsiders?


Are you an "in" person, do you have a group that you have been a part of for a long time? How ....honestly, do you feel about new people coming into the area?  Or are you an "outsider" person, do you feel left out, not measuring up with the "In" crowd? Are there things, activities, and collaborations that you feel that you miss out on not being a part of the "in" crowd?

My youngest daughter said a very interesting thing to me the other day, we had gone to my knight's softball game at the nearby park and there were a couple of girls my daughter's age that she knew. We all attend the same parish and we've known them for years from the Men's Softball league, but one was in her class all year and we carpooled with and the other girl attended another school and was a grade ahead of them. Neither girl spoke to my daughters sitting right there on the bleachers. Instead, they just talked about friends they knew and since both will be attending the same school next year, they talked about classes and teachers and other kids. This younger daughter of mine didn't sit with them, but our older one did. Later, going home, I asked her why she didn't sit with the girls, she said without even pausing, "Mom, when a teenage girl sees another teenage girl, she immediately sees her as competition and I'm not playing." Hm, I never thought about that before, but there is some truth to this assumption.

Thinking about this, I was frustrated about being left off the list at a meeting recently, after spending an entire school year working to make it a great one for the students, I got replaced by the "In" crowd who premeditated the meeting and all their nominations.  They literally took over at the meeting with a slight half-hearted "thanks" to me.  Feeling the burn for a few days afterwards, I came across a book of St. Francis de Sales.  In his book the "Introduction to the Devout Life" he talks about friendships.  Being careful to chose friends that are of like-mindedness and centered in things Divine and Godly, otherwise they will not remain and will not serve to grow in faith and spirituality.

"I would bid you love every one with the love of charity, but have no friendship save wiht those who can interchange virtuous love with you, since the more your friendship stands on the foundation of virtue, the more perfect will it be.  If your bond of union be the pursuit of science, it is a commendable friendship; still more if it be prudence, discretion, decision and justice.  But if you bond of intercourse be charity, devotion, and Christian perfection, then inded will your friendship be precious; precious because it has its origin in God, because it is maintained in God, and because it will endure forever in Him."
 I think about all those that have crossed my path.  Learning something from each of them, they come and go in peaceful ebbs and flows.  Careful in how we speak, think, and act leads to a deeper respect for each other and the Lord.  Friends can either aid in this or hinder depending upon the person and their relationship with the Lord.  The Bible speaks of being evenly yoked to another, I think that this means not only to your spouse, but to friends too.  I took a course in college, Intro to Abnormal Psychology.  Besides the obvious things like identifying the problem being half the solve, I learned about the concept of "group think" where in a group many can be changed and charged to do things one would not do alone.  This is not necessarily a bad thing, but it can be.  Knowing how individual we are and the gifts we have been blessed with prior to being in a group might be the benefit of a person.  To go into a group with a strong sense of self worth could curtail any negativity that can be instilled in a person.  I'm thinking of the old adage:  If you don't stand up for something, you'll fall for anything.  Well, if you don't stand up for yourself, you could be moved to do almost anything another things is good, despite your own moral and ethical makeup.  Makes a great deal of sense, doesn't it?

My youngest, at the tender age of 14, knows about circles and has prioritized them as low on her list. At my age, I have lamented over this issue for nearly all my life as one who never made the "In" crowds. Always an artistic mentality either in the drama club, art club, or music, I have paved my own road somehow missing the mark of the "In" crowd's standards. At some point, I'll get it....that it's not important to be "In" and that being "out" is really where the comfort is for me.

Glad that my youngest isn't going to be  hung up by all these details of society, she has found herself as a unique individual with her own gifts and offerings that someday will be appreciated by a crowd of her own.  Maybe even not a crowd, but a small group of close friends that are of like-minds and spirits.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

The Catholic Teen, Young Life, and a better alternative?

So when does a Catholic parent think their child is ready for the trenches?  Many organizations with militant vocations toward all that do not think the way they think are out in numbers for the summer break.  Summer camps are the thing to send your child for the continuing 'enrichment' process of their learning years.  However, not all camps are recommended for Catholic families.

Young Life, for one, is an organization that preys on the youth and evangelizes them to their way of thinking.  In their "About" section, they describe the hierarchy and that each are trained for the next phase with the bottom phase being the young and vulnerable.  They are trained to reach every teen.  There surely is a need to continue to find and help those that even today do not know Jesus Christ.  But I truly believe that no "Christian" organization should take the place or even try to supplement the Catholic parents' role with their children.  The Catholic Church is so misunderstood and misinterpreted that even Catholics get it wrong on many important issues and doctrine, which poses a very detrimental situation of Catholic parents letting their children go off to a Protestant-sponsored camp for an entire week.  It has been a concern for many Catholic families that their aren't enough camps and ministries for our youth and so they resort to other places.  We need to change this situation immediately!

In the meantime, these organizations are making things fun and exciting, full of lively and hip music and great food and games.  Campers and visitors alike come to have fun and find new friends.....is Jesus one of their new friends that they find?  Are they taught that Jesus is God, almighty, omnipotent and our creator; bigger than our minds can conceive, that He is divine?  Is He being worshipped and adored, or just introduced as a friend or a buddy?   Modern theology has thrown the divine and sacred out with the holy water and the Catholic parishes around the country are letting it happen as long as Catholic families continue to be unguided if not ignored when it comes to summer down time and recreating their youth.  Vacation Bible School, (VBS) stops at 5th or 6th grade, of course then the older children can help with VBS, but is that enough?  Life Teen starts at 9th grade, but what about the 7th and 8th graders?

Am I missing something?

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Hermione the new Pillar household family member

Adrienne, as requested!

Here is the little culprit for our last post:




Friday, June 10, 2011

Harry Potter and being "so Catholic"

The "Pillar" household adopted a new kitten this week.  How exciting and I think the most fun is always what to name it.  When the last kitten arrived, I was not consulted, but my dream of one day having an orange cat was their reasoning for bring him home only 3 days after my knight's long-time tabby had to be put down at age 18 of renal failure.  After my initial shock in not letting good old Stanley get cold in the backyard, they told me they wanted me to name it.  "Lolek" was my answer.  There was silence in the room until one of the girls remembered whose name that was.  Blessed John Paul II's baby name his mother called him.  This time the family agreed on Hermione after the character in Harry Potter.  As a tortoise-shell calico with about 3/4 of her face beige and a mystical look to her, it seemed to fit her.

Anyway off to the vet and then to run errands with her in tow.  We ran into a friend who got the pleasure of meeting little Hermione and within a moment or two he made an observation. "It interesting the whole magic, witchcraft and wizardry thing and you being....well".  "So Catholic?" I picked up on that one rather quickly.  "Yeah." He said.

Well, my feeling about the whole Harry Potter and the wizardry is very basic, you can enjoy the story without getting carried away with the logistics.  I know that there has been lots of debate about the Harry Potter books, the magic, spells, the darkness, and witchcraft and wizardry, but as my eldest daughter put it, "It's just reading about something that would be sort of cool if it really existed, that's all."  All five of us read the series and watched the movies.  We all agree that as the books progressed so did the darkness, but all in all, we saw the plot reiterate good vs. evil; love and friendship, devotion, and truth as being the main point, not the potions and spells.

Now I have taught my children that idolatry is evil and that even wearing someone's face on their shirt is somewhat confusing to me. We don't get dragged into the whole commerical thing of costumes, posters, toys, and games, fhe books and the movies are quite enough, really.

So, to bottom line my thoughts on this issue, I don't want my children to believe in magic, or think that witchcraft and horoscopes are to be consulted and they don't.  We talked about all these books, that was the original reason I read the books to begin with and then I just enjoyed reading them.  I know that at first the Church didn't like the book...then JPII ok'd the books and we put them back in the Catholic School our middle daughter attended back in 2000.  Over the past few years, I know that Pope Benedict XVI isn't fond of them, but I don't think he wants them banned.  Correct me if I am wrong!  Being "so Catholic" has it's responsibilities and I'm not the best one to be the example, that I am very aware of.  So, to er is human, but I am very aware of how my children think about this issue and many more.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Pope Paul VI's 1969 Missale Romanum

APOSTOLIC CONSTITUTION


ISSUED BY HIS HOLINESS POPE PAUL VI


MISSALE ROMANUM
ON NEW ROMAN MISSAL
The Roman Missal, promulgated in 1570 by Our predecessor, St. Pius V, by decree of the Council of Trent,(1) has been received by all as one of the numerous and admirable fruits which the holy Council has spread throughout the entire Church of Christ. For four centuries, not only has it furnished the priests of the Latin Rite with the norms for the celebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice, but also the saintly heralds of the Gospel have carried it almost to the entire world. Furthermore, innumerable holy men have abundantly nourished their piety towards God by its readings from Sacred Scripture or by its prayers, whose general arrangement goes back, in essence, to St. Gregory the Great.
Since that time there has grown and spread among the Christian people the liturgical renewal which, according to Pius XII, Our predecessor of venerable memory, seems to show the signs of God's providence in the present time, a salvific action of the Holy Spirit in His Church.(2) This renewal has also shown clearly that the formulas of the Roman Missal ought to be revised and enriched. The beginning of this renewal was the work of Our predecessor, this same Pius XII, in the restoration of the Paschal Vigil and of the Holy Week Rite,(3) which formed the first stage of updating the Roman Missal for the present-day mentality.
The recent Second Vatican Ecumenical Council, in promulgating the Constitution Sacrosanctum Concilium, established the basis for the general revision of the Roman Missal: in declaring "both texts and rites should be drawn up so that they express more clearly the holy things which they signify";(4) in ordering that "the rite of the Mass is to be revised in such a way that the intrinsic nature and purpose of its several parts, as also the connection between them, can be more clearly manifested, and that devout and active participation by the faithful can be more easily accomplished";(5) in prescribing that "the treasures of the Bible are to be opened up more lavishly, so that richer fare may be provided for the faithful at the table of God's Word";(6) in ordering, finally, that "a new rite for concelebration is to be drawn up and incorporated into the Pontifical and into the Roman Missal."(7)
One ought not to think, however, that this revision of the Roman Missal has been improvident. The progress that the liturgical sciences has accomplished in the last four centuries has, without a doubt, prepared the way. After the Council of Trent, the study "of ancient manuscripts of the Vatican library and of others gathered elsewhere," as Our predecessor, St. Pius V, indicates in the Apostolic Constitution Quo primum, has greatly helped for the revision of the Roman Missal. Since then, however, more ancient liturgical sources have been discovered and published and at the same time liturgical formulas of the Oriental Church have become better known. Many wish that the riches, both doctrinal and spiritual, might not be hidden in the darkness of the libraries, but on the contrary might be brought into the light to illumine and nourish the spirits and souls of Christians.
Let us show now, in broad lines, the new composition of the Roman Missal. First of all, in a General Instruction, which serves as a preface for the book, the new regulations are set forth for the celebration of the Eucharistic Sacrifice, concerning the rites and the functions of each of the participants and sacred furnishings and places.
The major innovation concerns the Eucharistic Prayer. If in the Roman Rite, the first part of this Prayer, the Preface, has preserved diverse formulation in the course of the centuries, the second part, on the contrary, called "Canon of the Action," took on an unchangeable form during the fourth and fifth centuries; conversely, the Eastern liturgies allowed for this variety in their anaphoras. In this matter, however, apart from the fact that the Eucharistic Prayer is enriched by a great number of Prefaces, either derived from the ancient tradition of the Roman Church or composed recently, we have decided to add three new Canons to this Prayer. In this way the different aspects of the mystery of salvation will be emphasized and they will procure richer themes for the thanksgiving. However, for pastoral reasons, and in order to facilitate concelebration, we have ordered that the words of the Lord ought to be identical in each formulary of the Canon. Thus, in each Eucharistic Prayer, we wish that the words be pronounced thus: over the bread: ACCIPITE ET MANDUCATE EX HOC OMNES: HOC EST ENIM CORPUS MEUM, QUOD PRO VOBIS TRADETUR; over the chalice: ACCIPITE ET BIBITE EX EO OMNES: HIC EST ENIM CALIX SANGUINIS MEI NOVI ET AETERNI TESTAMENTI, QUI PRO VOBIS ET PRO MULTIS EFFUNDETUR IN REMISSIONEM PECCATORUM. HOC FACITE IN MEAM COMMEMORATIONEM. The words MYSTERIUM FIDEI, taken from the context of the words of Christ the Lord, and said by the priest, serve as an introduction to the acclamation of the faithful.
Concerning the rite of the Mass, "the rites are to be simplified, while due care is taken to preserve their substance."(8) Also to be eliminated are "elements which, with the passage of time, came to be duplicated, or were added with but little advantage,"(9) above all in the rites of offering the bread and wine, and in those of the breaking of the bread and of communion.
Also, "other elements which have suffered injury through accidents of history are now to be restored to the earlier norm of the Holy Fathers"(10): for example the homily,(11) the "common prayer" or "prayer of the faithful,"(12) the penitential rite or act of reconciliation with God and with the brothers, at the beginning of the Mass, where its proper emphasis is restored.
According to the prescription of the Second Vatican Council which prescribes that "a more representative portion of the Holy Scriptures will be read to the people over a set cycle of years,"(13) and of the readings for Sunday are divided into a cycle of three years. In addition, for Sunday and feasts, the readings of the Epistle and Gospel are preceded by a reading from the Old Testament or, during Paschaltide, from the Acts of the Apostles. In this way the dynamism of the mystery of salvation, shown by the text of divine revelation, is more clearly accentuated. These widely selected biblical readings, which give to the faithful on feast days the most important part of Sacred Scripture, is completed by access to the other parts of the Holy Books read on other days.
All this is wisely ordered in such a way that there is developed more and more among the faithful a "hunger for the Word of God,"(14) which, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, leads the people of the New Covenant to the perfect unity of the Church. We are fully confident that both priests and faithful will prepare their hearts more devoutly and together at the Lord's Supper, meditating more profoundly on Sacred Scripture, and at the same time they will nourish themselves more day by day with the words of the Lord. It will follow then that according to the wishes of the Second Vatican Council, Sacred Scripture will be at the same time a perpetual source of spiritual life, an instrument of prime value for transmitting Christian doctrine and finally the center of all theology.
In this revision of the Roman Missal, in addition to the three changes mentioned above, namely, the Eucharistic Prayer, the Rite for the Mass and the Biblical Reading, other parts also have been reviewed and considerably modified: the Proper of Seasons, the Proper of Saints, the Common of Saints, ritual Masses and votive Masses. In all of these changes, particular care has been taken with the prayers: not only has their number been increased, so that the new texts might better correspond to new needs, but also their text has been restored on the testimony of the most ancient evidences. For each ferial of the principal liturgical seasons, Advent, Christmas, Lent and Easter, a proper prayer has been provided.
Even though the text of the Roman Gradual, at least that which concerns the singing, has not been changed, still, for a better understanding, the responsorial psalm, which St. Augustine and St. Leo the Great often mention, has been restored, and the Introit and Communion antiphons have been adapted for read Masses.
In conclusion, we wish to give the force of law to all that we have set forth concerning the new Roman Missal. In promulgating the official edition of the Roman Missal, Our predecessor, St. Pius V, presented it as an instrument of liturgical unity and as a witness to the purity of the worship the Church. While leaving room in the new Missal, according to the order of the Second Vatican Council, "for legitimate variations and adaptations,"(15) we hope nevertheless that the Missal will be received by the faithful as an instrument which bears witness to and which affirms the common unity of all. Thus, in the great diversity of languages, one unique prayer will rise as an acceptable offering to our Father in heaven, through our High-Priest Jesus Christ, in the Holy Spirit.
We order that the prescriptions of this Constitution go into effect November 30th of this year, the first Sunday of Advent.
We wish that these Our decrees and prescriptions may be firm and effective now and in the future, notwithstanding, to the extent necessary, the apostolic constitutions and ordinances issued by Our predecessors, and other prescriptions, even those deserving particular mention and derogation.
Given at Rome, at Saint Peter's, Holy Thursday, April 3 1969, the sixth year of Our pontificate.

PAUL VI, POPE

Friday, June 3, 2011

The Vatican goes social media with new and exciting ways to reach empty pews