May 29

Beginner

  • A Short History of the Roman Mass by Michael Davies (TAN)
  • For the Visitor At Mass by Father Richard Ginder (Angelus)
  • The Roman Rite Destroyed by Michael Davies (Angelus)
  • The Ottaviani Intervention by Cardinal Alfonso Ottaviani (TAN)
  • Understanding the Mystery of the Mass: Si Scires Donum Dei by Father Matthew Buettner (Queenship)
  • The Mass of the Early Christians by Mike Aquilina
  • Hidden Treasure by St. Leonard (TAN)

Intermediate

  • Turning Towards the Lord: Orientation in Liturgical Prayer by Father Uwe Michael Lang (Ignatius)
  • The Latin Mass Explained by Msgr George Moorman (TAN)
  • Explanation of the Holy Mass by Dom Proesper Gueranger, O.S.B. (Loreto)

Advanced

  • The Spirit of the Liturgy by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger
May 22

visitordonation

Una Voce San Bernardino is donating 15 copies of For The Visitor At Mass (Angelus Press, 43 pages) by Fr. Richard Ginder to San Secondo D’Asti Catholic Church in Guasti, CA and 10 copies to the Latin Mass Community over at Christ the Good Shepherd Catholic Church in Adelanto, CA. This little booklet gives a brief explanation of the sights, sounds, and smells of the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite. It is a perfect resource for an introductory group study of the Traditional Latin Mass.

Laurence Gonzaga
President, UVSB

visitor

May 17

Order from the Fraternity of St. Peter: 

http://www.fraternitypublications.com/1962-missale-roma.html

May 15
Iota Unum - Romano Amerio
icon1 | icon2 Uncategorized | icon4 05 15th, 2009| icon3No Comments »

Iota Unum: A Study of Changes in the Catholic Church in the XXth Century
By Romano Amerio

Purchase on Amazon.com

This is an excellent work, largely ignored and only recently brought back into the mainstream discussion. We have seen what the so-called fruits of Vatican II brought, much confusion, to say the least. A favorable review of a book regarding the thought of Amerio was published in the publication of the Jesuits in Rome, La Civilta Cattoloica. For the record, he never rejected Vatican II, nor supported the actions of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre. But, even Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger saw the revolution which was taking place before his very eyes:

“The impression grew steadily that nothing was now stable in the Church, that everything was open to revision. More and more the Council appeared to be like a great Church parliament that could change everything and reshape everything according to its own desires. Very clearly resentment was growing against Rome and against the Curia, which appeared to be the real enemy of everything that was new and progressive. The disputes at the Council were more and more portrayed according to the party model of modern parliamentarism….For believers, it was a remarkable phenomenon that their bishops seemed to show a different face in Rome from the one they wore at home. Shepherds who had been considered strict conservatives suddenly appeared to be spokesmen for progressivism. But were they doing this all on their own? The role that theologians had assumed at the Council was creating ever more clearly a new confidence among scholars, who now understood themselves to be the truly knowledgeable experts in the faith and therefore no longer subordinate to the shepherds….But now in the Catholic Church all of this - at least in the popular consciousness - was up once again for revision, and even the Creed no longer appeared untouchable but seemed rather subject to the control of scholars. Behind this tendency to dominance by specialists one could already detect something else: the idea of an ecclesial sovereignty of the people in which the people itself determines what it wants to understand by Church…” (Milestones: Memoirs 1927-1977, pp.132-134).

The review can be found here at Chiesa.

Pax.
Laurence Gonzaga