Catholic Info
Traditional Catholic Faith => The Sacred: Catholic Liturgy, Chant, Prayers => Topic started by: Kephapaulos on June 10, 2023, 01:08:28 AM
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Someday let us pray we have this again!
This just never gets old for me! Enjoy!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFySLiIxI04&t=1s
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Someday let us pray we have this again!
This just never gets old for me! Enjoy!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFySLiIxI04&t=1s
Back when I was a little child (still in the novus ordo) I used pray for the grace to see a Pope and a saint in my lifetime. We almost had a chance to see JPII but once I became traditional I was grateful that didn't happen.
I still pray that I live to eventually see a good Pope on the chair of Saint Peter. :pray:
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Not sure how much of that is real vs. staged, since it's from a movie.
I didn't care for it. If this was normal at the Vatican (vs. staged for the movie), we can see that the idea of the "Rock Star Pope" didn't originate with the V2 papal imposters. He's making the old "bring it on" gesture immortalized by Wojtyla. They're singing Handel (a Protestant) with lots of female voices. Of course, singing "Alleleuia" for the Pope (rather than directed toward God) is also a bit over the top. Finally, the worst part, clapping and cheering in church as if they were at a rock concert.
This is a visual of the same thing that happened theologically / doctrinally, where Pius XII's papacy was THE watershed that ushered in the Vatican II era.
I'd much rather see a quiet, somber, uncharismatic pope ... who restored the Sodalitium, stamped out Modernism, and condemned all the errors of the day (which were pervasive among the Catholic clergy and the hierarchy).
Oh, LOL, as per the one video of a +Thuc-line consecration where someone criticized the bishop for tracing upside down crosses with his hand in the air ... Pius XII did the same thing.
Pius XII ushered in the Vatican II era, and this is a visual representation thereof.
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That's some pretty kick-butt German he's speaking there, with no notes, nothing. It's Italian-accented but otherwise pretty fluent. Very impressive.
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That's some pretty kick-butt German he's speaking there, with no notes, nothing. It's Italian-accented but otherwise pretty fluent. Very impressive.
He was well known as a major Germanophile ... and early in his "career" he served as the Papal Nuncio to Bavaria (and effectively to Germany and Prussia as well), from 1917 to 1929, so he would have had 12 years to become comfortable with German.
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Just compare that spectacle with the demeanor of Pope St. Pius X (as well as the demeanors of all the others in this picture):
(https://d2sze6qxvc07yt.cloudfront.net/cdn/topfoto/previews/6423/d26e91ac65769b9028a466ca65ed8d6c/5/4d806591bd7de3f121624e5426638d6a/1926673.jpg)
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I hope that didn't actually happen.
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He was well known as a major Germanophile ... and early in his "career" he served as the Papal Nuncio to Bavaria (and effectively to Germany and Prussia as well), from 1917 to 1929, so he would have had 12 years to become comfortable with German.
I am aware of that. My point was that his German was formidable.
If Newchurch was seeking to persuade Anglophones of the correctness of the new religion (and that's what it is), they needed to elect a Pope who was fluent in English, which is the lingua franca of many countries, not just the US, the UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Ireland. Francis's command of English, by his own admission, is not all that good.
Perhaps trying to make a point that the Anglosphere isn't all that important? (But don't forget that the Philippines, which is very much the model Newchurch country, docile, poor, uncritically accepting of Vatican II and the Novus Ordo, in love with Francis like a teenage schoolgirl with posters of boy band idols on her bedroom wall, of huge numbers, and of color, has English as its lingua franca too.)
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I hope that didn't actually happen.
What is the "that"?
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Not sure how much of that is real vs. staged, since it's from a movie.
I didn't care for it. If this was normal at the Vatican (vs. staged for the movie), we can see that the idea of the "Rock Star Pope" didn't originate with the V2 papal imposters. He's making the old "bring it on" gesture immortalized by Wojtyla. They're singing Handel (a Protestant) with lots of female voices. Of course, singing "Alleleuia" for the Pope (rather than directed toward God) is also a bit over the top. Finally, the worst part, clapping and cheering in church as if they were at a rock concert.
This is a visual of the same thing that happened theologically / doctrinally, where Pius XII's papacy was THE watershed that ushered in the Vatican II era.
I'd much rather see a quiet, somber, uncharismatic pope ... who restored the Sodalitium, stamped out Modernism, and condemned all the errors of the day (which were pervasive among the Catholic clergy and the hierarchy).
Oh, LOL, as per the one video of a +Thuc-line consecration where someone criticized the bishop for tracing upside down crosses with his hand in the air ... Pius XII did the same thing.
Pius XII ushered in the Vatican II era, and this is a visual representation thereof.
But keep in mind that Pius XII was the first Pope of the era when mass video communication was possible. Prior to 1939, you didn't have television, and video of world events would have been limited to newsreels at the cinema. Mass media brought the expectation that the faithful would actually see the Pope, hear what he sounded like, and so on. John XXIII and Paul VI were about as untelegenic as it's possible to get, but John Paul II was a handsome, relatively young man, reasonably fluent in English (albeit heavily accented), and a professionally trained actor on top of that.
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(https://i.imgur.com/vhpNdgI.png)
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I would guess that this is staged, perhaps even with a double serving as Pope Pius XII. While color film was first available in 1935 (I was surprised when I looked it up, I would have guessed much later), black and white was still the norm for docuмentaries into the 1960's.
Here is a more authentic film clip (I appologize for not knowing how to more directly provide a YouTube link).
https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=68e8da573dab9f98JmltdHM9MTY4NjM1NTIwMCZpZ3VpZD0zYWNmODI1OS1iN2M4LTYxMWUtMjU0Zi05MGEzYjZlNTYwYTImaW5zaWQ9NTUzOQ&ptn=3&hsh=3&fclid=3acf8259-b7c8-611e-254f-90a3b6e560a2&u=a1L3ZpZGVvcy9zZWFyY2g_cT1WaWRlbytvZitQb3BlK1BpdXMrWElJJnZpZXc9ZGV0YWlsJm1pZD1DMkRCMTk3OUZFNkQ2OUU0MUQzMkMyREIxOTc5RkU2RDY5RTQxRDMyJkZPUk09VklSRQ&ntb=1 (https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=68e8da573dab9f98JmltdHM9MTY4NjM1NTIwMCZpZ3VpZD0zYWNmODI1OS1iN2M4LTYxMWUtMjU0Zi05MGEzYjZlNTYwYTImaW5zaWQ9NTUzOQ&ptn=3&hsh=3&fclid=3acf8259-b7c8-611e-254f-90a3b6e560a2&u=a1L3ZpZGVvcy9zZWFyY2g_cT1WaWRlbytvZitQb3BlK1BpdXMrWElJJnZpZXc9ZGV0YWlsJm1pZD1DMkRCMTk3OUZFNkQ2OUU0MUQzMkMyREIxOTc5RkU2RDY5RTQxRDMyJkZPUk09VklSRQ&ntb=1)
One of scenes is from the canonization of St. Dominic Savio in 1954 I’m assuming. At the 2:18 mark there is a cameo appearance by Cardinal Montini of the Vatican Secretariat of State. At the 4:44 mark the people in St. Peter’s square are applauding and the Holy Father is making what someone described as the “bring it on” gesture.
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I would guess that this is staged, perhaps even with a double serving as Pope Pius XII. While color film was first available in 1935 (I was surprised when I looked it up, I would have guessed much later), black and white was still the norm for docuмentaries into the 1960's.
Here is a more authentic film clip (I appologize for not knowing how to more directly provide a YouTube link).
https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=68e8da573dab9f98JmltdHM9MTY4NjM1NTIwMCZpZ3VpZD0zYWNmODI1OS1iN2M4LTYxMWUtMjU0Zi05MGEzYjZlNTYwYTImaW5zaWQ9NTUzOQ&ptn=3&hsh=3&fclid=3acf8259-b7c8-611e-254f-90a3b6e560a2&u=a1L3ZpZGVvcy9zZWFyY2g_cT1WaWRlbytvZitQb3BlK1BpdXMrWElJJnZpZXc9ZGV0YWlsJm1pZD1DMkRCMTk3OUZFNkQ2OUU0MUQzMkMyREIxOTc5RkU2RDY5RTQxRDMyJkZPUk09VklSRQ&ntb=1 (https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=68e8da573dab9f98JmltdHM9MTY4NjM1NTIwMCZpZ3VpZD0zYWNmODI1OS1iN2M4LTYxMWUtMjU0Zi05MGEzYjZlNTYwYTImaW5zaWQ9NTUzOQ&ptn=3&hsh=3&fclid=3acf8259-b7c8-611e-254f-90a3b6e560a2&u=a1L3ZpZGVvcy9zZWFyY2g_cT1WaWRlbytvZitQb3BlK1BpdXMrWElJJnZpZXc9ZGV0YWlsJm1pZD1DMkRCMTk3OUZFNkQ2OUU0MUQzMkMyREIxOTc5RkU2RDY5RTQxRDMyJkZPUk09VklSRQ&ntb=1)
One of scenes is from the canonization of St. Dominic Savio in 1954 I’m assuming. At the 2:18 mark there is a cameo appearance by Cardinal Montini of the Vatican Secretariat of State. At the 4:44 mark the people in St. Peter’s square are applauding and the Holy Father is making what someone described as the “bring it on” gesture.
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What makes you think it could be a double?
There would really have been no point to it.
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What makes you think it could be a double?
There would really have been no point to it.
It is reportedly from a movie and a lot of it appears to me to have been staged, for many of the reasons given by Ladislus. I doubt an anthem (which at least now is often associated with Christmas) written by a Lutheran would be the processional music. I don't think the attending Cardinals would be chatting each other up as is shown, and an actual pontifical event in the 1950's would have been filmed in black & white, like the clip I posted. The producers could have taken authentic clips of His Holiness and colorized and inserted them. I'm wondering if it just wouldn't have easier for them to have found a double.
I'd like to go back and rewatch the video but it won't play for me right now (I live on a farm with DSL internet running over ancient phone lines).
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jnuval
1 year ago
Is this footage from a movie?
Reply
silvan500
1 year ago
Yes :"Der veruntreute Himmel".
Matias Javier
4 months ago
Really beautiful, is this from a movie or real footage?
Reply
silvan500
4 months ago
Both together.