Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Va Bene!

Caio! from Assisi. What a great place to be for four weeks. It is beautiful. It still hasn't rained since I've been here. Apparently that changes in the winter. I am in class from nine to one every day followed by an afternoon two hour session of small group conversation. My Italian is coming along slowly. For some reason I really enjoy learning languages although I wish I was better at it. The town is bookended with the basilica of Saint Claire on one side and the basilica of Saint Francis on another. I havent been to pray at San Chiara but each morning so far a group of us have prayed the office of readings and lauds and celebrated mass with the franciscans at the tomb of San Francesco. This is the mother convent of the Franciscans. Thats kind of cool when you think about it. As a gauge of my progess in italian, I'll use the homily that the priest speaks in italian.

Most of the guys are in the main hotel, but 10 of us are in a near by apartment run by the hotel. Our rooms are further from the noise at night and we have a beautiful porch that overlooks the city that we hang out on at night. It is about 10 degrees cooler at night here than at rome and thats just enough to make a difference between a wet pillow and a dry pillow in the morning.

Again, its great to visit first hand the places that saints and martyrs have walked and the tombs where their holy bodies await the ressurection of the dead. Because we are not just spiritual beings when we spend time at these sacred places we can more easily enter into the same kind of attitude they had. It makes real their being, they are not just a story. They are people who unreservedly gave themselves up to the will of God, whatever that may be. Granted, nothing beats spending time with our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist, but with the saints we have fallen creatures like ourselves that can truly say:

"I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith." (2 Tim 4:7).

I was praying and wondering why we don't have tombs of saints in our dioceses in the States. Its because we don't have any saints declared by the Church. Why can't we in a few hundred years have tombs of saints in our dioceses that others can be inspired to persevere in holiness? Obviously this shouldn't be our ultimate goal but it sure is a possilble result if all of you and me and many others...

"Run with perseverance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the pioneer and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God." ( Heb 12:1-2)

Again, know that you are in my prayers. Don't be afraid to send me specific prayer requests to bring to these holy sites.

Nick

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Its Sunday here. We are just about to celebrate mass and head to Assisi for a month. I will be doing Italian immersion. I apologize for no posts in the past couple of days, and probably not many in the coming weeks because I will not have private computer usage. I will be able to check email, but I doubt I will have the time on a computer to write a blog post.

Yesterday, we visited the town of Orvieto. It is the home of the relic of the Eucharistic miracle from the 13th century. The Cathedral that was built for the relic took 400 years to build. It has a chapel that holds the blood stained corporal. The church from the outside and inside looks like a prison inmate because it has stripes, alternating light and dark stones. There are few churches from that time that utilized that style. There is a side chapel called the Chapel of San Brizio. It is beautiful. We weren't able to take pictures but you can see pictures online. It has frescos that look much like the sistine chapel. That is because Michelangelo received his inspiration from the Chapel of San Brizio. Art back then was meant to be catechetical for the illiterate. So in this chapel it depicts the resurrection of the dead, hell, judgment, heaven, and the anti-Christ.

Anyways, I'm off to mass. My transition has been smooth. The vice-rector and second year seminarians who have helped with early orientation have been most hospitable. May God bless you all back in the states.


Thursday, July 23, 2009

Oh the beach!


Congratulations to tynelson8, thats my dad, on answering the question correctly! He also declared the doctrine of papal infallibility. The painting above depicts that declaration and is also in the room where he is buried. Notice the keys in his right hand.

Yesterday, we visited the Catacomb of Priscilla. From the 2nd to 4th century it was used as a burial for Christians. Because of the great number of people living in Rome and the high mortality rate Christians needed a better spot to bury their dead. So they used the old quarry. It was the site of burial for seven popes and many martyrs. All of which have been translated to various churches and shrines throughout the city. One of the neatest things is to see paintings, frescos from the 3rd century. These include various depictions of stories now in our gospels. Such as the multiplication of loaves and the infancy narrative. Now what is so amazing is that these are some hundred years before the canon was approved as it now is in 393 at the Synod of Hippo. These books especially the gospels had long been taught before the Church had made any official declaration. Also in the catacombs, exists the earliest existing painting of Madonna and Child. Unfortunately they would not allow any photos.

Me at the Catacomb of Priscilla

Msgr. Mueggenborg, our vice rector, celebrated mass for us at the church which is now built on the same foundation on which Pope Sylvester I erected a church in the early 4th century. He made a good point in his homily which relates to the martyrs. When they sacrificed, they didn't give something "up" as if it will be worth nothing to them in the future. But they "handed it over to God." They gave their lives over to Him so that He would then make them holy. For myself who left family and friends and what is familiar for a significant period of time, I desired the Lord to stretch me through this experience. But with Msgr's homily he gave me some vocabulary to be able to put what I hope for into words. I am handing over family and friends and the possibility of a beautiful catholic wife and children to God so that he can purify me with them and make me holy. The more we give to God the more we receive back. I guarantee the martyrs and saints would do it all again knowing what they are experiencing now.

One thing that I heard from a wise spiritual director, when he was asked why there aren't more saints? He replied because people lack generosity, both to others and to God. We need to hand more over to God.

Today we spent the whole day at the beach. I spent 10 euro to rent a chair to lay on and a large umbrella. I knew enough that I didn't want to get burned. It was a beautiful day and the Mediterranean water was refreshing.

Me soakin' in the rays
There are 10 or second year guys here who have set most of this week up. They have been really selfless and made this week so enjoyable. They know the top 5 or so things to see and do in Rome and therefore we are getting the best possible Rome experience only a week into my stay here.

Mike Garry and Eli Gieske

Again, this college is amazing. It is ginormous. I wish you all well.

"He has now reconciled in his body of flesh by his death, in order to present you holy and blameless and irreproachable before him, provided that you continue in the faith, stable and steadfast, not shifting from the hope of the gospel which you heard, which has been preached to every creature under heaven, and of which I, Paul, became a minister." Col 1:22-23

Today's question: Pope Pius IX was the 2nd longest serving pope. Who was the longest?



Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Four more years! Four More years!...


I arrived in Rome, Italy yesterday with 45 or so other guys, all Americans but for 4 Australian seminarians. Apparently Foster's beer is not that popular down under as they make us believe, as a few of them told me. The college is beautiful and large. A college is basically a residence over here. Universities are where men and women study. So you live at a college and study at a university. It is a different distinction between colleges and universities than we have in the states. So I live at the Pontifical North American College and I will take classes at the University of St. Thomas Aquinas or the Angelicum as it is more commonly called.
We were given a tour yesterday of our college, but it will take some time to become familiar with the whole college. My room faces the east and is very hot in the morning as the sun rises. I have a great view of our new field turf soccer field. It is smaller than regulation size, but I am still looking forward to shake the rust off of my soccer game from high school. My room also faces Bambino Gesรน, a pediatric hospital which is just outside the walls of the college. I'm told they like to watch the games that we play on the field.
There is much more I can say, but I just wanted to mention our excursion today. We ventured out into Rome where we rode some buses and did some walking all the way to San Lorenzo Fuori le Mura, St. Lawrence Outside the Walls. St. Lawrence is the patron saint of comedians because of his great sense of humor. According to tradition there are two instances that show this sense of humor. First, during the persecutions under Valerian in 258 A.D. the prefect of Rome demanded the deacon Lawrence to bring the Church's treasures so he could confiscate them for Christianity was still illegal at the time. St. Lawrence showed up with the poor, the infirmed, and the lame. The prefect asked Lawrence what this was all about. St. Lawrence responded, "These are the treasures of the Church." Second, apparently the prefect didn't find it funny, because he had St. Lawrence put on a gridiron and burned to death. During his martyrdom, St. Lawrence yelled, "This side is done, turn me over and have a bite."
There is a basilica built with its alter directly over the tomb of St. Lawrence along with St. Steven, the Church's first martyr whose remains they moved from jerusalem to Rome, and St. Justin Martyr.
In the same basilica, Blessed Pope Pius IX is buried. He is important because he is the founder of our college. He founded a number of other national seminaries here in Rome. He wanted countries to send their seminarians to Rome to ensure that they were being taught orthodox theology and were being formed correctly.

Can you guess why the main chapel at the PNAC is the Immaculate Conception Chapel?
Hint: It has to do with this painting