Monthly Archives: November 2023

A Trad Dad Thanksgiving… Again!

What a marvelous day and we’ve much to be thankful for this year!

For starters, I am thankful for my Catholic faith; the ancient, august, and venerable Mass of the Roman Church; my wife and children, etc. I am also thankful for the life of the great George Neumayr, may he rest in peace. I am thankful that more and more people are coming around to the reality that Bergoglio isn’t the pope. I’m thankful that Frank Walker is doing well. I’m thankful for God’s mercy. I’m thankful for the music of Karen Carpenter. I’m thankful!

On that last note… No matter what one may think of her musical stylings, Carpenter had one of the most haunting and amazing voices you will ever hear. She wasn’t a bad drummer, either. Her brother Richard is a musical genius to boot. Why do I mention them? I love their Christmas album in particular and I typically begin playing it on Thanksgiving. Then I feast and then close out the day by watching The Karen Carpenter Story – a 1990 made-for-TV movie about her life. Not gonna’ lie; I do this with a large plate of leftovers in front of me. But you already knew I was twisted.

On this day I always think of my dad. What a great man and what a blessing to be his son. The things he taught me in this life could never be found in any book. First and foremost, he taught me my faith. He was a man whose own parents had divorced when he was a child. That was in the 1940’s and that kind of thing simply was not done. His mother sent him to a Benedictine prep school where the monks taught him a devotion to the liturgy of the Church. He met my mom on a blind date. They married. He vowed to do better than his dad. So he stuck around. He brought sixteen of us into the world and faithfully provided for us and protected us. He was intelligent in ways most people cannot fathom. An actuary, he loved statistics and was known to comment on little things like why his own children didn’t have children on the same “schedule” as he and Mom had. It’s true. He literally made a spreadsheet and showed it to me. I was thirteen at the time. Never seen without a tailored suit and his signature pipe in his hand, he was revered by all.

He loved Thanksgiving for he had much to be thankful for. Even when I was a young boy of four and he lost three of his children in a house fire, he gave thanks to God for their lives.

He taught me his Thanksgiving traditions. He taught me all of his traditions. As his youngest son, it fell upon me to learn the craft of stuffing a bird and feeding an army on this day.

But the greatest single thing he taught me was this. With the exception of the last few days of his life on earth, the man was at Mass every single day of his life. People wonder where I get it from. His faith and his devotion to God took second place to no man. He went every day to give thanks. He went every day because he lived the virtue of religion. He went every day because he loved the Lord Jesus who died for him.

Thank you, Daddy.

And because of him, I will cut this post off here. It’s the feast of St. Clement I, pope and martyr, and I have to be at Mass.

PS: He didn’t go for most music recorded after 1957 but Dad also liked her sound.

A Little Different…

I don’t ever (as in never) post about food. But this is the day before Thanksgiving and yours truly is preparing to use his smoker grill for the first time with a turkey. I have visions in my mind of succulent fowl. I also have visions in my mind of the most massive hillbilly grease explosion of all time. We shall see.

But check out this video below. I’m intrigued. Halfway through his list of ingredients I questioned whether he was smoking a turkey or distilling gin. Either way would prove a win for me.

Happy cooking, friends!

Toupee: Gone!!

H/T Mike Parrot/RTF

Gary is out? It seems so.

Follow Up on the Byzantine Video and a Prayer Request

Yesterday I posted a video that had gotten quite the bit of feedback in my inbox.

One reader took the time to write a very thoughtful reply and I am much appreciative. This man states that an omission of the Filioque from the Creed does not imply a lack of belief in the dogma. In theory I can accept that. To this I would reply with the following.

Suppose I were to make the sign of the cross thus: “In the Name of the Father and of the Son” and stop there. I still believe in the Trinity.

I truly hope this does not come across as combative nor as ignorant (certainly not willfully so). Truth be told, if the ancient Roman Mass were taken away I would absolutely head toward my local Byzantine church (which almost just autocorrected to “churro”😂) for that liturgy is also ancient and beautiful and fitting for worship of God.

And to that reader who took the time to dialogue with me, my apologies for lack of a personal response. I hope the next paragraph explains.

I received news from one of my sisters that her adult daughter has cancer. I won’t share any more details out of respect for her privacy but I will beg each of you reading this to pray, in your charity, for her.

Our Lady, health of the sick, pray for us!

St. Peregrine, pray for us!

St. Rita, pray for us!

Tyler, TX, Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception

I’m Sorry to Tell You, Father…

I came across another video while walking on the treadmill today. Sensing a trend? I know, I should be praying my rosary; but at my pace I have no breath. Mental prayer, I guess…

Anyway, I’m not sure who the priest is. He’s speaking on behalf of the Fatima Center. And he is plain wrong. Watch the video and I shall explain.

Father states that we ought not forget the Byzantine Catholic, the Ukrainian Catholic Churches [presumably as alternatives should the TLM be taken away]. He says, “ No monkey business has yet…” and here he trails off but one can assume he means that nothing nefarious has yet to creep into these ancient liturgies.

Except…

I just attended a wedding in a Ukrainian Catholic church three weeks ago. Do you know that the “filioque” was not only omitted in the Creed but when I picked up the equivalent of a daily missal from the pew, it had been literally scratched out with a pencil.

Muddying our understanding of the procession of Persons in the Trinity certainly seems like “monkey business” to me. Of course this may not be the norm in all Byzantine Catholic churches. Perhaps a reader can enlighten me.

The Classics

A little behind on my posting lately. This is because of my duties as a homeschooling father.

Todays assignment: A Tale of Two Cities.

Hint: it was boring when k first read it thirty years ago and not much has changed.

Happy schooling!

Another Excellent Find

I’ve started walking on my treadmill recently and have been on the lookout for decent, hour-long content to watch while pounding the belt.

I came across this today. Though not an hour long, the content is impeccable. It’s from the Marian Friars Minor, a group about whom I know very little. Yet, when one hears authentic Catholic teaching on the spiritual life, one knows.

Fr.’s insights into the virtue of chastity are profound.