Pastor’s Columns

Father Thomas Nathe Father Thomas Nathe

A Brief History of the Rosary: Part 1 of a 2 Part Series

Last week I wrote on the rosary and now I’m back at it again. October is the month of the rosary and as you know by now, I’m a big fan of every Catholic praying it daily (so is God). For those reasons the next few pastor columns will be on a different aspect of the rosary. For today and next Sunday, it will be a short history of the rosary, a very good place to start.

What follows in two parts, is taken from a small booklet called The Rosary – The Great Weapon of the 21st Century. Information to obtain a copy of the booklet can be found at the end of this pastor’s column. Enjoy reading.

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October is Respect Life Month

Jesus Christ: Yesterday, Today, and Forever ~

I haven’t written on this subject in a few years, but a couple of very serious recent developments have come to light and they have given me pause to reflect and share.

The first is the “heart beat” law in Texas. In case you are unaware, the Texas state legislature passed a law allowing citizens to sue abortion providers who perform abortions beyond the detection of a heartbeat, which is about six weeks after conception. What makes this case so newsworthy, as opposed to hundreds of state laws in the past 45 years that have tried to restrict abortion, is that the Supreme Court didn’t stop it. This is a huge victory for life. Over 50 thousand babies a year in Texas will not be killed because of this law. The Supreme Court is set to hear a case this year on whether or not Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court ruling that forced abortion upon all 50 states, should be overruled. If it is, and much prayer and fasting are needed for this outcome, then abortion will go back to congress or the states to decide. If the Supreme Court overturns Roe, then legal abortion in this country, which kills hundreds of thousands of defenseless, innocent, babies a year, will still be legal in most states, but the number of abortions will begin to dramatically decline.

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October is the Month of the Rosary

We live in an age unlike any other in the 2000 year history of Christianity. A spiritual “Dark Age” that has seen the loss of faith in Christ and His Church by family members and the world at large; the breakdown of the Church, marriage, family, and society; as well as a steep climb in the rate of addictions to all things: impurity, screens, internet, video games, alcohol, drugs, overeating, sports, gambling, news, and every other vice. We need supernatural help – a way to powerfully pray anytime and anywhere for consolation, hope, and miracles. To that end, God has given us a gift from heaven: the rosary – a light in the darkness when all other lights have gone out.

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Catholic News Sources

The vast majority of Catholics in America do not get their news about the Church from Catholic news outlets. Rather, like the vast majority of all Americans, Catholics get their news from internet news sites, television news, or their local newspaper. This is a problem. I can’t tell you how many times in the last 20 years I’ve seen a headline about something Catholic that is misleading at best. We must remember that news outlets exist to make a profit, and some of them make big profits. How they make profits is not by running detailed and balanced stories, but by running splashy ones. Hey, splash sells newspapers and makes you tune into that TV program.

Here’s an example. About 11 years ago the European Union was attempting to come up with a constitution for itself. The bishops of Europe got together and wrote up a long-winded series of suggestions for the politicians to consider such as Europe’s Christian heritage and how that heritage made Europe possible as a continent of law abiding nations. The headline in Europe’s papers: “Catholic Church Hung up on Sex” – huh?

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Schooling

Ever since the pandemic took hold and schools were closed in March of 2020, parents have been asking me questions about schooling.  I should have wrote this column then, however questions keep coming up 18 months later so here I go.

Due to the pandemic, most American kids lost more than a year of schooling.  When schools were closed in March of 2020, almost all schools were simply out for the summer.  When schools reopened 5-6 months later online, in August/September of 2020, the retention of what they learned the previous year was seriously lacking for most kids, so they didn’t simply pick up where they left off.  Then in the 2020/21 school year, the kids did online classes until the spring of 2021.  As a learning model, the internet is way worse for most kids (and most adults) than in-class.  Now kids are back in school, but between what they missed in the past 18 months and what they have forgotten, most kids are honestly a year or two behind where they would have been otherwise.  Which brings me to some recommendations.

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Some Great News! (Mass Time Change)

I want to thank all of you who participated in the survey last Sunday about changing the Sunday Mass schedule. A majority of you chose the 8:30 & 11:00 option. The 8:30 & 11:00 Mass times fit our programing a little better than the other, so I was relieved to see that outcome in the voting.

I want to also thank all of you for being so understanding. Changing routine is annoying. Change that replaces something that one prefers with something that one doesn’t prefer can be painful, yet I have not heard one complaint (so far) which speaks volumes about your selflessness. Thank you for your understanding and patience as we move toward a new Sunday Mass schedule.

Starting on Sunday, October 3rd, we will be moving the Sunday Masses to 8:30 & 11am.

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Changing Sunday Mass Times

Our current weekend Mass schedule is as follows: Saturday 4:30pm, and Sundays at 7:30, 9:30 and Noon. At some point in the near future we are going to restructure our three Sunday Masses down to two, while keeping our Saturday evening Mass at 4:30pm. Here’s why.

  1. Need: In terms of seating capacity, we don’t need four weekend Masses. Our church comfortably seats 700 people; 800 elbow to elbow, and 900 thigh to thigh. We have 900 people in the pews twice a year; for the first Christmas Eve Mass, and the 9:30 on Easter Sunday. Pre-pandemic we were averaging 400 people per Mass, or 1,600 per weekend. Meaning, that even before Covid we had 1,200 empty seats per weekend, or 57% of our full capacity (pre-pandemic). Currently we are averaging 1,128 people per weekend with 1,672 empty seats, or 40% full. While it remains to be seen how many Mass-goers will return when the pandemic is completely finished, we don’t expect that number to return to what it was before the pandemic; some people have gotten used to not going to Mass. By the numbers, we’re offering more Masses than we need.

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First Friday and Saturday Devotions

I’m recycling this pastor’s column from six years ago because the subject matter never loses its importance. Devotions, religious practices that are not obligatory, are the surest way to reveal God to us and to deepen our relationship with Him. To that end, I encourage all of you to develop a devotional life to grow in your relationship with God through Jesus Christ and the Communion of the Saints. You will be richly rewarded for your efforts. One of the devotions that I want to encourage is known as: First Friday & First Saturday devotions. I found a website that does a fantastic job explaining these devotions that I include below. We are blessed at Holy Redeemer to have confessions and Mass available every Friday and Saturday, making these devotions possible. I encourage you to start observing them.

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Stages of the Spiritual Life

After having been a priest for about five years I came across the stages of the spiritual life. That’s right; I got none of this in my seminary formation! Having the knowledge that there is a path or way in the spiritual life, common to all saints, is super helpful – if you know what it is. One of my sabbatical goals was to explore the stages of the spiritual life; specifically to answer the question: how does one go from living in habitual mortal sin, to the highest state of holiness? I’m not the first to explore this topic; as one day on my sabbatical a monk simply handed me the information you’re about to see.

There are three basic stages of the spiritual life (holiness), called the Purgative, Illuminative, and Unitive Ways. One passes from the lowest (purgative) to the highest (unitive) along a spectrum.

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The Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary

What you ask, is the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary? The Church has always taught that like her Son, the Blessed Virgin Mary ascended body and soul into heaven (not just soul). There are two differing traditions as to where this took place: Jerusalem or Ephesus in Turkey [much more likely]; both traditions relate that at the death of the BVM, her soul left her body, then returned a few days later to reenter and reanimate her body, and then ascended into heaven with apostles looking on. Along with Jesus, the BVM is the only other person in heaven with both her soul and body – who has died. Two others have ascended into heaven but have yet to die: Enoch and Elijah – Genesis 5:24 & 2 Kings 2:11. Tradition holds that they will return in a later generation and give witness against the Antichrist, be slain, rise from the dead, and ascend again into heaven.

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I’m Back

Well where do I begin? I’ve been gone now for over three months, the longest absence (by far) of my 17 year priesthood. I was on a sabbatical for the first three months; two of them at Mt. Angel Abbey living as a monk, the third month staying by myself at my family home in Stevenson, in the woods without TV or internet. The last week away was a family vacation. It was arguably the best three months of my life.

A little refresher: diocesan priests (parish priests) are entitled to a three month sabbatical every so many years depending on the diocese, for the Archdiocese of Seattle, it’s every seven years. Most priests never go on one as they never feel like it, or more likely, they don’t feel they are worth the effort, given all that goes into planning one. In my case, I had to find the priest coverage and of course know that things wouldn’t fall apart in my absence. There is also a stigma that I wasn’t aware of until I was on my sabbatical: lazy priest, or more likely, problem priest.

So why did I go away on a sabbatical?

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The Precepts of the Catholic Faith, Part 6

If you only remember one thing from this pastor’s column, let it be this:

Catholics who marry are obligated to wed in the Catholic Church.  Failure to do so would constitute grave evil and the union would not be a valid marriage in God’s eyes. 

I never heard this fact growing up Catholic, so it was news to me when I discovered it in my early 30’s, and it may well be news to you too. 

So what happens to a Catholic who weds outside of the Catholic Church?  Although the union is recognized by civil society as marriage, it is not recognized by God as such: thus the couple are sleeping together outside of marriage. 

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The Precepts of the Catholic Faith, Part 5

There is no Jesus without the Catholic Church, and hence, there is no salvation without the Catholic Church. Let me explain. Jesus Christ, God, founded only one Church and that Church is the Catholic (Greek for ‘universal’) Church. Before the Catholic Church, God made a covenant with the chosen people, now called Jews. If you belong to a religion other than Judaism or Catholicism, then God is not your founder. Jesus is the Messiah of the Jews and Gentiles, with his revelation a new covenant of salvation was created through the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church. Everything we know about Jesus Christ, the Holy Trinity, the Communion of saints, heaven, purgatory, and hell comes from the Catholic Church. It was the Catholic Church that wrote the New Testament and decided what books and letters would go into the Bible.

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The Precepts of the Catholic Faith, Part 4

Remember the first precept, that we are obligated to attend Mass on all the Holy Days of Obligation, and Sunday is always a Holy Day of Obligation. However, we are not obligated to receive the Holy Eucharist (Communion) at each of those Masses, for that-we need to be in a “state of grace” or free of mortal sin. Concerning the fourth precept, as evident by the percentage of people who receive the Holy Communion at Mass, most Catholics in the U.S. assume that they are supposed to receive Holy Communion if they attend Mass, this is not correct. Only those who are Catholic, have received their 1st Communion, and are not aware of unconfessed mortal sin are able to receive Holy Communion.

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The Precepts of the Catholic Faith, Part 3

Forgiveness of sins is so important that God decided to sacramentalize it. Today the Catechism of the Catholic Church calls that sacrament by various names: Confession, Reconciliation, Penance, Forgiveness, and even Conversion. A supernatural thing happens when we go to confession: our sins are absolved (removed), no matter how bad or how often they have been committed, and we are restored and strengthened in our life of grace with God. There is no other way on earth to have our mortal sins absolved other than through sacramental confession. So why don’t more people take advantage of it: ignorance of the information being presented here, and pride.

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The Precepts of the Catholic Faith, Part 2

This week we continue our series on the Precepts of the Catholic Church: “pre” meaning “before”, and “cept” meaning “life” – before there can be full life in God, these seven laws must be observed. Failure to live them out would constitute a mortal sin: when one has knowledge of them, and acts without undue coercion to disregard them. “The obligatory character of these positive laws decreed by pastoral authorities is meant to guarantee to the faithful the very necessary minimum in the spirit of prayer and moral effort, in the growth in love of God and neighbor”. Catechism #2041. This week we continue working our way through them by exploring the second precept.

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The Precepts of the Catholic Faith, Part 1

We know how to add, subtract, multiply, and divide; we know how to drive a car with all its myriad rules; we know about photosynthesis; we know what it takes to do our taxes annually; but when it comes to knowledge of our faith, we can be woefully uninformed. Almost four years ago I ran a multiple part series on the precepts of the Catholic faith. I run them again now because they are critically important to know and live, and most of you don’t have them memorized and should, finally we should be able to teach them to others.

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The Eucharist, Part 20

The easiest way to develop a greater devotion to the Eucharist is to attend daily Mass, so you can partake of Christ’s body and blood on a regular basis. You can also take part in a holy hour at a local chapel that hosts perpetual adoration or the Forty Hours Devotion. “This devotion takes place, as its name suggests, for forty hours after the sacrament is exposed. In Scripture, the number forty symbolizes the transformation for holy people, such as when the Israelites wandered for forty years in the desert or when Jesus fasted in the desert for forty days. Likewise, through the Forty Hours Devotion, the worshipper can take part in a spiritual transformation by spending time adoring the Lord (though he is not obligated to remain in adoration for the entire forty hours).

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The Eucharist, Part 19

Although there have been no miracles involving the Eucharist that the Church has required Catholics to believe as articles of faith, there have been several reports of miracles that the Church has investigated and deemed appropriate for Catholics to accept. Here are just a few of them:

  • Lanciano, Italy, 8th century: During Mass the consecrated bread and wine became actual flesh and blood. The host and globules of blood were preserved and are on display to this very day. A team of researchers in the 1970s and ‘80s examined the host and determined that the flesh came from a human heart and the blood was type AB.

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The Eucharist, Part 18

The Church, of course, adores the Eucharist at every Mass, and treats it with adoring reverence whenever it is transported. The practice popularly called “eucharistic adoration” refers specifically to praying before the Eucharist outside of a liturgical setting, when it has been reserved or exposed in a sacred vessel.

The first recorded instance of eucharistic adoration took place on September 11, 1226, when, “In compliance with the wish of Louis VII, who had just been victorious over the Albigensians [a group of heretics], the Blessed Sacrament, veiled, was exposed in the Chapel of the Holy Cross, as an act of thanksgiving. So great was the throng of adorers that the bishop, Pierre de Corbie, judged it expedient to continue the adoration by night, as well as by day, a proposal that was subsequently ratified by the approval of the Holy See,”

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