Fourth Sunday of Advent

We find ourselves in something of a quandary this year about the concurrence of the fourth Sunday in Advent and Christmas Eve. My Sarum ordo by Dr William Renwick quotes the following from the Pie:

4th of Advent All of the Sunday until the 3rd. Nocturn exclusive. then all of the service of the Vigil. At Lauds mem. of Sunday with mass of Sunday in Chapter with the little hours as in the vigil without the Ps. Deus Deus meus respice etc.

That is for the Office. For the Mass in Chapter, it is of the Sunday. The last time this concurrence (Sunday 24th December in the Gregorian Calendar) happened was in 2000. We have this article in The Rad TradVigilia Nativitatis: Nulla Fit Commemoratio?

For the Use of Sarum, Dr Renwick has this to say about the fourth Sunday in Advent:

In the earliest sources this Sunday was designated Dominica vacat and had no propers assigned to it. This would account for the variety of proper chants to be found amongst the Gregorian sources. Thus Sarum, in common with York, Rouen and the Dominicans has the Officium Memento while the Roman Missal repeats the Introit Rorate Celi from the previous Wednesday. However, the Ps. Peccavimus in the Sarum Use differs from that in the York, Rouen and Dominican Uses, which is Ps. Confitemini.

Where the Roman Use has the Offertory Ave Maria, the Sarum and Dominican Uses have Confortamini. This is a reversal of the previous Wednesday where the Roman Use has Confortamini and the Dominican and Sarum Uses have Ave Maria.

Officium. Memento nostri. Ps. 105:4-6. ad letandum is omitted.
In the Roman Use the Introit is Rorate celi, repeated from Wednesday in the Ember Days of Advent. Memento nostri appears ‘in the Transalpine regions’, László Dobszay, ‘The Proprium Missae of the Roman Rite’ Uwe Michael lang, Ed., The Genius of the Roman Rite (Chicago: Hillenbrand Books, 2010): 86.

Prayer. Excita quesumus Domine potentiam tuam
The York Use omits quesumus.

69
Epistle. Phil 4:4-7
In the Roman Missal the Epistle is 1 Cor. 4:1-5. In the Roman Missal the Epistle Phil. 4:4-7 appears on Advent 3.

Gradual. Prope est. This Gradual is repeated from Wednesday in the Ember Days of Advent.

Alleluya. V. Veni Domine et noli tardare.
The text is also found in Responsory 7 of the Third Sunday in Advent.

70
Sequence. Jubilemus omnes una. 11th c.
Anon. Translation © 2015 by Matthew Carver. Used with permission.
Roger Sorrell, St. Francis of Assisi and Nature : Tradition and Innovation in Western Christian Attitudes toward the Environment (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988):105 discusses the possible influence of this sequence on Francis of Assisi’s Il cantico di Frate Sole. This was also noted by Samuel W. Duffield in Latin Hymn-Writers and their Hymns (New York: Funk and Wagnalls, 1899):393.
The opening notes of the melody clearly reflect the opening pitches of the Alleluya.

71
Gospel. John 1:19-28
In the Roman Missal the Gospel, Luke 3:1-6, is repeated from the previous day.

72
Offertory. Confortamini. After Is. 35:4,5.
The Dominican and Hereford Uses also have the Offertory Confortamini here. The Roman and York Uses have Ave Maria. This is the opposite of the case on Wednesday in the Ember Days of Advent.

73
Secret. Sacrificiis presentibus quesumus Domine

Communion. Ecce virgo concipiet. Is. 7:14.
This Communion is repeated from Wednesday in the Ember Days of Advent.

Postcommunion. Populum tuum quesumus Domine donoroum tuorum
The Roman, York and Hereford Uses have the Postcommunion Sumptis muneribus quesumus Domine.
The Sarum Postcommunion also appears in the Westminster Missal.

What is interesting is the complete divergence between the Roman resumption of the Rorate Mass from Ember Wednesday on this Sunday and the alternatives from the French traditions. In the pre-1962 Roman rite, the solution would be to celebrate the Vigil of Christmas and commemorate the fourth Sunday of Advent. The Rad Trad article has a comment by Paul (I assume Paul Cavendish) affirming that this memory of the fourth Sunday of Advent was not an innovation of Pius X.

In the Sarum missal, the rubric is as follows in the Christmas Eve Mass:

If this Vigil occur on a Sunday, the mass of the Sunday is said in chapter ; and then there shall be a memory of saint Mary, and of All Saints only. But the mass of the Vigil is to he said at the high altar without any memory, with this Alleluya.

V. To-morrow the iniquity of the earth shall be blotted out, and the Saviour of the world shall reign over us.

It would seem logical not to commemorate the Sunday, given that the Sunday proper is recent in the diverging traditions. The Sarum solution is to celebrate two distinct masses on distinct altars, one in capitulo and the Vigil Mass at the high altar. It often happens that there is no memory when the displaced Mass is said on another altar by another priest. In a church where there is only one priest and one Mass on that day (without considering the Mass at the crowing of the cockerel which is in reality on Christmas Day), it might seem reasonable to commemorate the Sunday collect, secret and postcommunion prayers. That is what I am going to do.

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“New Goliards – Mission” Page

I have just updated the page that originally defined the intentions and purpose of this blog – New Goliards – Mission. Five years later, I find that it was linked with my situation as an “orphaned” priest facing the choice of finding another Church or turning my back on churches to find other human and cultural references. I joined the ACC and am still in it…

This old page attracted some attention because it received some new comments. I left the old page in place, otherwise the comments would have no meaning, and I am scrupulous about “revising”. Since then, I have had to come to terms with my own lack of leadership skills and that others just don’t see things the way I see them. It has ceased to matter for me.

I am grateful for the Christian fellowship with my Church, and I give what little I can contribute in the way of ideas and as a priest. I am living in the wrong place, but that is the story of my life! My role is what I can contribute as an individual and not the idea of grouping or leading, an idea that has proven to be illusory.

Discussion of some of the old ideas seems somewhat moot, but I appreciate feedback from what I wrote five years ago.

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The Post-Modern Prometheus

My mind has been bothered somewhat over the last few days by some of these “hot-button” issues, and as always, I seek the roots of the malaise. One of the most powerful and accessible articles I have seen recently is Surpassing Man, a dialogue between Dr Sam Vaknin and one of his friends. Dr Vaknin seems quite a high-powered character, but at the same time interested in exposing the narcissistic personality. His approach is partly scientific but mostly philosophical. This page on Nietzsche’s Ubermensch is profound and thought-provoking, misrepresented in the twentieth century and now at a crossroads between the life of the spirit or the ultimate nightmare. Nietzsche lost his Christian faith, but had a spiritual vision that is capable of the most sublime interpretation.

Even my reflections on euthanasia and doctor-assisted suicide have their place in this vast Babel’s Tower of human pride. It is a comprehensive and terrifying vision of man’s future, captured two hundred years ago by Mary Shelley and today in science fiction cinema, the campaign for material immortality and a world order that would make Hitler look like a choirboy. The dystopian (utopian?) vision is that of the man-machine, the cyborg, the present-day version of Frankenstein’s monster.

Before long, humans will design and define nature itself. Whereas until now we adapted very limited aspects of nature to our needs – accepting as inevitable the bigger, over-riding parameters as constraints – the convergence of all breeds of humanity will endow Mankind with the power to destroy and construct nature itself. Man will most certainly be able to blow stars to smithereens, to deflect suns from their orbits, to harness planets and carry them along, to deform the very fabric of space and time. Man will invent new species, create new life, suspend death, design intelligence. In other words, God – killed by Man – will be re-incarnated in Man. Nothing less than being God will secure Mankind’s future.

It is, therefore, both futile and meaningless to ask how will Nature’s future course affect the surpassing of Man. The surpassing of Man is, by its very definition, the surpassing of Nature itself, its manipulation and control, its re-definition and modification, its abolition and resurrection, its design and re-combination. The surpassing of Man’s nature is the birth of man-made nature.

The big question is how will culture – this most flexible of mechanisms of adaptation – react to these tectonic shifts?

This is the stuff of Star Wars, but perhaps – theoretically – possible in a century or two if the “evolution” continues.

The  transforming of earth by technological means. It is the old dream of the titans: to overthrow the gods. But they always lose and are punished, will they win this time? Will this be the century of the titans? It seems so…

History has, at least until now, given the same answer as nature itself, that man’s pride is met with defeat and downfall. We have to surpass ourselves spiritually. We have, each one of us, to meditate on this Promethean nightmare and make of it that fear of God that brings knowledge and understanding – and wisdom.

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Euthanasia

I came across this video this morning on YouTube.

The video is centred on two persons wishing to die, an old lady in good physical and mental health who could not get over her grief on losing her daughter, and a more borderline case – a young man and father of a family stricken with some disease that caused unbearable head pain.

The first thing that struck me was the complete absence of religious or spiritual notions. The old lady seemed to believe in an afterlife, because she wanted to be with her daughter who died from a surgical complication. She was given a glass of a sugary liquid containing a lethal dose of barbiturates by Dr Marc van Hoay who in 2015 faced a murder charge. The video gives us the impression that Belgian law protects doctors prepared to help people to commit suicide rather than give guarantees that there would be no slippery slope towards compulsory suicide and trains to gas chambers for reasons of money or convenience.

Where is the line drawn? Some cases are known to be quite flippant, sometimes involving children and young adults suffering from depression, far from the cases calling on a sense of compassion of terminal cancer or complete and degenerative paralysis. There are cases that make it difficult to refuse the possibility of a painless death, and others where it is not so sure that the medical profession can be certain that this is really what the person wants without any kind of coercion. In the Van Hoay case and the old woman, we are marked by the seeming lack of emotion and the almost banalisation of death. The woman went about her morning routine as always on the day she had the appointment with Dr Van Hoay.

Pope John Paul II in 1995 taught in Evangelium Vitae:

I confirm that euthanasia is a grave violation of the law of God, since it is the deliberate and morally unacceptable killing of a human person. This doctrine is based upon the natural law and upon the written word of God, is transmitted by the Church’s Tradition and taught by the ordinary and universal Magisterium…

To concur with the intention of another person to commit suicide and to help in carrying it out through so-called ‘assisted suicide’ means to cooperate in, and at times to be the actual perpetrator of, an injustice which can never be excused, even if it is requested…

Laws which legitimize the direct killing of innocent human beings through abortion or euthanasia are in complete opposition to the inviolable right to life proper to every individual…

Abortion and euthanasia are thus crimes which no human law can claim to legitimize.

This is the traditional teaching of the Church, and the ACC certainly teaches the same thing. One thing that struck me in the video was the question of whether medical care could be improved for people expressing a desire to die. One big problem is that interested parties are making excessive profits from health care. There is a true risk that the heart-wrenching cases will lead us to something little better than what the Nazis were doing to get rid of “useless eaters” and races they considered as inferior. Where is the line, and in a society where spiritual values have all but gone? The death of that old woman left me with the idea that her suicide was not justified. We all lose loved ones and have to come to terms with our grief, and she would have found salvation through conversion to Christ and self-transcendence.

I have known people who have died of cancer and other terrible diseases, and have been edified by the way they faced death in whatever way God would bring it to them. It is reassuring to know that hospice care is more available than many people think. The agonising pain from cancer can be very effectively managed with drugs, and many professionals and volunteers dedicate their time and effort to looking after the terminally ill. It certainly takes humility to accept the loss of autonomy and the need of others. The choice of life and death is not ours to make, except – certainly – the choice to forego being (for example) kept alive by a machine. As medicine and the prolongation of life progress, these issues become harder and harder. We also live in a world where Christianity is hardly a reference any more.

I am very preoccupied with the notion of the human person and the “nobility of the spirit”, which are increasingly scarce in today’s world. What really went through the mind of that woman who drank the fatal potion? Did she ever ask for a priest or other minister? Who of us is not torn by these moral dilemmas and calls for compassion?

What does this facial expression mean to you as the potion is poured out of its bottle?

A little research showed the young Belgian man to be Peter Ketelslegers, still alive and relying on medical help a year after this video was made. We should pray for him and for others suffering from the same condition, that they may find relief and hope in God against all hope. It’s not always clear cut, but we must be pro-life in all circumstances.

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The Great North Road

With a hat tip to Fr John of Ad Orientem, I reproduce this link to a beautiful piece of silent film. It narrates a short journey from London to Stamford (Lincolnshire) in August 1939. Colour photography in those days was expensive.

War was looming as could be seen from the anti-aircraft blimps above London. Hitler was less than a few weeks from invading Poland, which was the immediate cause of England declaring war against Germany. In this film, it all looked so peaceful and bucolic as the stately cars with their running boards made their way along the road at about forty of fifty miles per hour. My mother had my paternal grandmother’s old black Austin in the 1960’s when I was a little boy, and I remember it well, especially the sound of the pneumatically powered windscreen wipers.

I looked at people in the streets of those towns, some of whom (in their late 30’s) were contemporaries of my grandparents. In 1939, my father was eleven years old and still at preparatory school in Yorkshire. My mother was nine, living with her brother, sisters and parents in Surrey. It was twenty years before I was born. Visibly, the 1960’s were not very different, except that there was more plastic and the cars were more streamlined.

As can be seen in the link to the Great North Road, most of it is traced by the modern A1, but the modern road bypasses most of the towns. I motorcycled from London to York on the A1, return trip, in 1979 on an old Suzuki T200 – which was quite an adventure. I have some old footage from my grandfather on an outing with his bowling club, and it was from shortly after World War II and going through provincial towns untouched by the bombing.

As was testified by George Orwell in Down and Out in Paris and London, the 1930’s was a hard time except for the wealthy. The film probably hides as much as it shows. My father’s family was quite well off, but my mother’s family struggled, worked hard and spent money wisely. Times have indeed changed.

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Away from the Stereotypes!

The more I think about my subject matter of yesterday (it was Rev. Clatworthy who got in my cross hairs, but I’m tackling the ideas and not the suspected inner intentions of persons), the more I find myself with various notions whirling around. I would like to dig out my old post on Stages of Spiritual Life. I am reminded of the crude and basic imperatives of the God of the Old Testament, the narratives of jealousy and anger, his vengeance against the “baddies” who were swallowed up by the earth and presumably went to hell or non-existence. Is this the same God Jesus called Father? The Gnostics thought not, and that the Demiurge was some being other than God, not all evil like our notion of the Devil, but childish and showing defects of personality. The Father is presented to us by Christ as unknowable except though him, and entirely without sin and only loving. Such a state of things would be a noble attempt at explaining the mystery of evil. Perhaps, to some extent, orthodox Christianity fills in the gaps and cognitive dissonance with the narrative of angels who sinned and became evil. The narrative has its parallels in just about every religion in the world, monotheist and polytheist.

I am particularly concerned with learning about some of these ancient Gnostic themes and the way they are expressed in more modern narratives. I wrote these four postings where this theme is uppermost.

What is it? I am not claiming to be better or superior to anyone else, but expressing an old notion of St Paul:

For I through the law died to the law that I might live to God. I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me. I do not set aside the grace of God; for if righteousness comes through the law, then Christ died in vain.” (Galatians ii. 19-21)

I see the parallel between the Pauline notion of sanctifying grace and the old notion of γνῶσις, which is a spiritual knowledge and aristocracy. Culture predisposes persons to receive this knowledge, because we have to be open and transparent, not hide-bound by ignorance, prejudice and bigotry. Just today, I came across The Age of Hooper which begins with an extract of Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited: “Hooper was no romantic…” I read the extract and the rest of the article. We have a very fine and subtle analysis of different stages of growth, both in faith and philosophy, and in human life in general.

Our artists chase after every faddish movement, but few contemplate much less venerate the depths of our iconographic tradition. Lovers of the old Roman Rite too frequently possess an irrational hatred of oriental rites. Devout laymen glory in thoughtless repetition of things written in books meant for the formation of children.

We can say the same of liberal and conservative Anglicans in their conflicts over the “hot-button” issues. How many of us have troubled to research into the history of feminism, Jung’s analysis of the hermaphrodite basis in each of us preceding the definition given to our bodies by the X and Y chromosomes during our foetal development? Things are not clearly cut, neither from the point of view of someone with “gender dysphoria” nor from that of those who would sentence such people to four dozen lashes with the whip. There are clearly conditions in which more subtle thinking is possible. All the issues brought up by liberalism, these concerning human rights and the dignity of the person, and also the future of our planet being exploited and irremediably polluted to make money for the few. Like William Blake, I easily understand the evils of uncontrolled capitalism and oligarchy, and the problem has only changed in its external appearance from the 1780’s to our own days. The most powerful message of the Romantics lifted its voice against children being exploited in factories and chimneys of houses, but not only. They sought beauty and transcendence in nature and human art. It is the same today as we turn our backs to the hubbub and superficial activism.

What is the alternative to all these evils? Socialism has been tried, and killed more people in its fanaticism than religion ever did. So had Robespierre’s system been tried and the curse is with us ever since. The answer is elsewhere.

The way of spiritual nobility is the work of a lifetime, and is often experienced only for brief moments outside the humdrum of our middle-class lives. Being an Ubermensch is not something we are born with, nor from belonging to this or that race of humans or social class. It is transcending our human condition and its evils and conflicts. It is becoming a person as opposed to an individual or part of a herd of conformity and peer pressure. It is the condition of true freedom of ourselves and others.

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Relevant?

On reading two postings by Fr Jonathan Munn on matters related to liberalism and our Anglican Catholic identity, (Revising Anglican Catholicsm and Sacramental Validity: a response to the Rev Mr Clatworthy) I discovered the website Modern Church, which seems as “single issue” about hot-button topics as those the liberals call intolerant or fundamentalist. The article by Rev. Clatworthy to which Fr Jonathan links has at some stage been taken down. That is a pity, because I would have loved to see how he would analyse and criticise Romanticism. Other articles by this gentleman seem to equate Romanticism with anti-intellectualism or fideism without quite mentioning it by name.

Update: the article in question seems to be Women bishops and valid sacraments in his personal blog. Fr Jonathan also wrote a posting in criticism of Catworthy in which he says that any commandment of God recorded in Scripture is suitable only for a time. I link to it in my response: The Relative Truth? Fr Jonathan is more courageous than I when it comes to working on Clatworthy’s reasoning and expose what may well seem to be logical sophisms or other faults related to double standards. As for the question of the Sacraments, would it not be easier to do away with Sacraments altogether – and then you can have women ministers of the word or social service or whatever, no problemo.

In his concluding paragraph, he writes:

Our minds are fuzzy about what sacraments are, what conditions are needed to make them work, what effects they have, and how we would know whether the effects have been achieved. A century ago these questions were coherently answered within a worldview which few today accept. Today we live in a society with a very different worldview. From the perspective of Christianity it is the best one western society has produced for many centuries. We do not know how long it will last, but why not make the most of it? We no longer need the strained, counter-cultural special pleading which we once needed to defend our faith. Life is full of sacramental processes. We can afford to spend less time defining them, more celebrating them.

So sacraments depend on the ambient culture, and our own is the best (!). Does he refer to the Welfare State, better health, comfort and safety – which are all non-religious concerns. Perhaps we no longer need religion at all – but he would be in need of a job! I would agree that the Sacraments are mysterious and cannot be completely explained by scholastic theology, that it is better to celebrate the Sacraments than talk about them. But, this article is about one thing and one thing only – women’s ordination.

Do we even share the same worldview? I don’t think he and I do. I am a come-out Romantic and go on Romantic Pride marches – or might do if they existed! He seems to be thoroughly secular, separated from atheism and materialism only by semantics. I can’t even imagine what kind of music or “music” he listens to or anything much about his cultural references. I obviously don’t live in his world, even if we live at the same time. I use a computer, a smartphone and go and see the doctor if I have a health problem. I have to relate to this world, but in myself, my mind and soul are elsewhere.

I agree with him about the problems in the world, the environment in particular, but his solution is obviously cultural Marxism and socialism. Priests giving up Christianity to embrace left-wing ideology are old hat. It all makes me think of French priests in the late 1940’s and early 50’s supporting a Communist revolution to atone for churchmen who had collaborated with the Nazi occupation. The ideology is tired-out and tiring.

There are some Liberal theology articles by Jonathan Clatworthy. Most of them are short and concise. The language isn’t obtuse as one might expect, but quite clear and sometimes quite compelling. I wondered whether I might not like what I found on reading Clatworthy any more than my beginning to read Nietzsche (yes, I have begun to read Human, All Too Human which is not easy reading). Perhaps Clatworthy might find Nietzsche a good idea himself, given that every idea is expressed, assimilated by other people, banalised, distorted and made into a fashion. The “herd mentality” as opposed to the lone Ubermensch destroys all meaning and inspiration.

To be honest about the three main hot-button issues, I sympathise with the earlier feminist ideas and freedom for women in relation to masculine dominance and competitiveness – but I also believe in the same freedom for men in relation to women. Homosexuality is a highly complex subject and easily manipulated by those who are both for and against it. Very little is said about friendship as understood and taught by the likes of Cicero and St Aelred of Rievaulx. Where are the limits to physical intimacy? The answer to that question will not be given by the LGBT crowd or the bible-thumpers. I might suggest a one-to-one between a person concerned with this issue and a priest he trusts. As for transsexualism, it has also become a fashion and children and adolescents are being encouraged and allowed to have surgery to make them look like the opposite sex. I am opposed to such mutilation of human bodies and it is repulsive to think about. However, I don’t see why gender models need to be set in stone. Some men are effeminate or “camp”, and I treat them with respect. Inclusion and exclusion are two emotionally-charged words. I could demand to belong to the Mothers’ Union. What would I do? Pretend to be a woman? Act in a feminine way? Change the purpose of that association into a union for both sexes – and then it has no purpose at all, even if some men like sewing, knitting and looking after children. Admit women to the priesthood, and then the priesthood ceases to be any more than a function in an elite pseudo-religious organisation whose purpose is unclear. And so it goes on.

Clatworthy is also aware of the problems of clashing dialectics and finding relevance in a “liberal” church. It really all boils down to the relationship between reason and faith, a favourite theme in the writings of Pope Benedict XVI, which I greatly admire. His attempt to harmonise and reconcile the two is obviously the right way, as with John Paul II who had to find a way to affirm the human person against the ideological backdrop of socialism and communism. But, will Clatworthy stop flogging faith in order to support reason and scientific certitude? Reading his arguments, I try to see where he is going, what is the purpose of a liberal church. Perhaps it is the notion of relevance, making the institution that is giving him a paid job able to continue to do so, by continuing to appeal to its paying customers. That sounds quite cynical, but I do wonder. Alternatively, the Church has to go the way, not of the saints who were individuals like the great and famous, but of the herd. If that is so, Christianity is in very big trouble.

Liberal theology has a positive message to offer: religious faith which is honest enough to admit that it doesn’t have all the answers but committed enough to seek them; which conducts its mission not by threats of hell or emotional manipulation, but by honestly giving reasons, listening to others and trusting that truth will prevail; which defines itself not by how it disapproves of society but by what it offers to society, a way of exploring who made us, for what purpose, and how we can all respond to our calling.

If that is what he believes, it sounds perfectly reasonable. We need to teach with kindness and respect, really nothing new since St Francis de Sales and St Charles Borromeo, two Counter-Reformation bishops who believed in Renaissance Humanism and had a genuinely pastoral attitude. You don’t need to set yourself up on an ideological pedestal to be pastoral, kind and ready to dialogue and discuss things with people. I too eschew those who threaten and manipulate to get the truth over. But that doesn’t make me accept the whole agenda lock, stock and barrel. Frankly he has not succeeded in presenting anything that is appealing and calls itself liberal.

This is quite disturbing:

How can we present our case more effectively? Recently we have heard opponents of women bishops complaining that Inclusive Church isn’t at all inclusive because it doesn’t include them. Interesting question: if you believe in inclusiveness, do you include the excluders? If you believe in toleration, do you tolerate the intolerant? In my experience most liberals are too quick to accept blame. Our first instinct is to acknowledge the sincerity of our critics. We need to do more. Liberalism, like all generous traditions, needs to defend itself against those who would abuse its generosity in order to undermine it. Even doves sometimes need to defend themselves.

It is a good question, and I admire the fellow’s honesty. It, like freedom, equality and fraternity is the paradox faced by the French revolutionaries and men like Robespierre. Not only did people have to refrain from attacking the revolutionary ideas (atheism, hatred of the Church and the aristocracy, etc.), they had to support them positively. Otherwise they were taken to the guillotine. We had the supreme hypocrisy in the Terror: tolerance except to the enemies of tolerance. It was the same with Communism, and in the present-day clash of ideologies in Europe and America about the hot-button issues, and other questions like globalism against nationalism. Who has the right to impose the prevailing “orthodoxy” and “dogma” (in the way this word is abused to mean coercion and force)?

Liberalism needs to defend itself? It strikes me that nothing can be affirmed or defended in the world of herd humanity and mobs. These (like the moral issues I mentioned above) are matters for individual thinkers, scholars and contemplatives. What I most loved about Benedict XVI was not being the Pope and dressing up, but that he appealed to people like himself to go to our books and study, to go to a church or other quiet place to pray and enter into communion with God. This is how these problems can be solved for those who seek to transcend the braying and baying of the mob. Thus, we will make progress with faith and reason, with the needs of both men and women, with questions of friendship and intimacy between persons, with gender questions and the male/female duality within each one of us.

Clatworthy is addressing himself to the mob, hoping to bring the mob to reason. Mobs cannot reason, but can only go breaking things up and killing people when some powerful psychopath tells the mob his “enemies” are bad and unworthy of life. Doesn’t this sound familiar? That is not the humanity God came to save and transfigure, but the communion of persons in the image of the Trinity. Persons produce great works of art and literature, persons are saints and elevate the believer to a new aspiration, persons are icons of God, not mobs and crowds.

The subject goes to another level. Perhaps Clatworthy in his intimate life understands this, but it is not apparent in his liberal writings.

Our first task is to make sure our case is heard more often and in more places. At the moment in most churches, in most of the church media, in most newspapers and television programmes, our voice is rarely heard at all.

I suggest that he should not aspire to get into the mass media. I personally abhor the idea of being the kind of person who gets on with journalists and TV presenters. I believe in things too, but I do not seek to modify the thinking of others. I offer ideas, but I do not seek to influence, not even in this posting. If the world wants to blow itself apart, let it just go ahead! All I will do is to say what I think – and others can give these ideas some consideration in forming their own ideas and expressing them intelligently.

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Creek Sailing

I have just made a wonderful discovery of the blog of an English gentleman who is a lover of halyards, sheets, sails, rudders and the gentle lapping of water against the bow. He also has a more elegant term than gunkholingcreek sailing, meaning navigating through inland tidal waters. In England, they are most plentiful on the Essex and Suffolk coasts, and right the way up to East Anglia and Yorkshire.

The discovery is Creeksailor and the man running it is called Tony Smith. His favourite sailing areas seem to be similar to those of Dylan Winter. I wonder if they know each other with such close common interests. If not, perhaps they will discover each other thanks to this posting! Mr Smith not only sails his gaff cutter, but also has a duck punt and an eight-foot rowing boat he converted into a beautiful sailing dinghy. I look forward to looking into this blog in greater detail. I ought also to buy his book.

Here in France, there are some interesting waters fitting such a description in Normandy south of the Seine and both north and south Brittany. I greatly enjoyed the Dives as I wrote in Gunkholing but found my rig-down arrangement in my 12-foot Zef a little awkward for ultra-low bridges. From there I came up with the idea of adapting my 10-foot Tabur for this purpose with an Optimist rig like on the Mersea Duck Punt. I intend to “do” some other creeks in Basse Normandie (the Orne in particular) and the Eure (where it can be navigated away from the weirs and rapids). I also intend to return to Abbeville to continue my journey on the Somme towards Amiens. One day, I am going to take some time off along the Essex coast and find the El Dorado of creek sailors and gunkholers – before hauling the boat up to my native Lake District and Windermere! Mr Smith is also on Facebook.

Creek sailing is something I only really discovered this year, with the encouragement of reading Dylan Winter’s blog and seeing his wonderful videos. I think my true initiation was the Rade de Brest and the Golfe du Morbihan, where many muddy creeks radiate out from the deep water. Creeks are a challenge because the water can get very shallow, and the boat has to sail without centreboard or rudder, just a carefully trimmed sail and an oar to steer with. The punt has a hard chine to allow a reasonable upwind angle. A more “conventional” dinghy has to be rowed – and that can be a slog against the wind. But, creeks bring the rewards of natural life relatively unmolested by man and a profusion of wind birds and mammals. Sometimes, the top of a creek is filled with a small village, a place to tie up the boat and go and buy some food and get into conversation with some lonely soul dedicated to wind and sail in some way. Each has his tale to tell.

I have now finished work on my little ten-foot creek boat and hope for a daysail or two in December between the damp and rain on one extreme and the brass-monkey freeze on the other. I have hardly done any winter sailing, just once on a lake in January 2014 (see First Boat Outing of 2014). Same boat but with the Optimist rig, since the Mirror rig went to my sea boat Sarum. I will doubtlessly venture up the Orne and the Eure, and go and have another sail on the Lac des Deux Amants at Poses like in January 2014. The sea is too heavy for winter sailing in anything less than a ballasted yacht, though there are calm and sunny days to take the bite out of the frost. Winter is no time for capsizing and hitting the drink! Up the creeks, winter has its charm like the other seasons.

There are a few of us. We should encourage each other by mutual linking in our blogs. We are Romantics – with a foot outside the world of “reality” and people, men of another philosophy of life who cannot be imprisoned in any system or fashion trend. My faith in human nature is somewhat restored!

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The modern western secular world is itself a Christian creation.

It often happens in these gloomy November days that I become more reflective about some of the fundamentals of our existence. Today is the feast of St Martin and Remembrance Day, celebrating the end of World War I in 1918. As I wrote yesterday, the twentieth century knew crimes so heinous that civilisation could not survive their being repeated – to quote the chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Tribunal, Justice Robert Jackson.

The title of this little piece is perplexing. It is about the notion that human persons have rights to dignity, life, freedom and the pursuit of happiness. The utter paradox of Christianity proposed something so radical in the place of competition, power, money and the use of “lower” human beings for the use they would bring to their “masters”. Today, concentration camps, slavery and torture are repugnant to us. Going into a church and killing tens of innocent human beings with a gun without a care in the world is beyond most of us – but wasn’t to a young man whose mind had flipped in some mysterious way.

I refer my readers to Scholar: ‘Human Dignity’ Rare Before Christianity by Michael Liccione and Human Dignity Was a Rarity Before Christianity by David Bentley Hart. These are remarkable studies of a very profound theme in Christianity. If we totally extirpate Christianity from our world and our philosophy, the result could be horribly inhumane. Is that what we want?

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In Memoriam

Richard Strauss wrote these words in 1945 shortly after he completed Metamorphosen, a study for 23 solo strings: “The most terrible period of human history is at an end, the twelve year reign of bestiality, ignorance and anti-culture under the greatest criminals, during which Germany’s 2000 years of cultural evolution met its doom“. Here is that sublime piece conducted by the great Herbert von Karajan.

It occasionally quotes Beethoven’s Eroica. Other than the above quote from the composer’s diary, scholars continue to discuss the meaning of this work. I find the idea of an elegy for the downfall of Germany and the whole of Europe in ruins, with millions of lives lost, altogether plausible. Some lewdly suggest that Strauss was a Nazi sympathiser. His initial sympathies for the Hitler regime rapidly evaporated. He feared for his family’s lives, especially his Jewish daughter-in-law and grandchildren, some of whom ended up in concentration camps. How much would any of us have done in his place?

This seems to be an ideal piece to contemplate Remembrance Day as we consider man’s ultimate folly in warfare. Syria today is London, Dresden or Nuremberg in 1945. Culture and civilisation are lost and countless people are dead. When I drive along the coast of the D-Day beaches to Caen and the Bessin area to Sainte-Mère Eglise, there is a German military cemetery. They too died doing what they believed to be their duty, hopefully loving what of their country transcended the Nazis. This cemetery invites us also to pray for the souls of the fallen enemy soldiers as well as those who fought on our Allied side.

I was born fourteen short years after the end of World War II, and only occasionally saw ruins of buildings destroyed by the bombing, including a church near St Paul’s Cathedral in London. I did not suffer those dark days, but I could in my childhood feel the anguish in my grandfather who was a prisoner in an Oflag camp near Linz (now in Austria) and my parents who saw the devastation of the bombings.

Two world wars in the century of my birth destroyed Europe and civilisation. We are still paying the price now. The collective memory is long and the suffering is still present. Man’s inhumanity to man was supposed to have been condemned and hanged at Nuremberg, but the basis of the same old ideology is still there in the “herd” mentality so denounced by Nietzsche in his agony – fascist or socialist. Tweedledum and Tweedledee are essentially the same smoke of Satan.

We can’t do much about the political situations in our countries and the underlying conflicts, but we can discover our own souls and come to terms with them, enter into communion with a God who is Father and truly cares for us all, and thereby to transcend the bestiality and the cruelty of whoever it is at a given time. Perhaps if all those people died in the prime of their lives, it was to teach us this.

We will remember them…

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