Showing posts with label Catholic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catholic. Show all posts

Monday, July 19, 2021

My Dad's speech at the Newport Vets Town Hall, 2021

Hello, my name is Rod Auclair. I'll be 82 two months from today, and I find that the real pleasure and treasure of being elderly are our memories. 



God knows, we don't have a lot of time left to make new ones. "Young men shall dream vision and old men shall dream dreams," it says somewhere in the Bible. And some of my best memories came from the beginning of my service in the U.S. Air Force in January, 1962 in enlisted men's basic training at Lockland AFB, San Antonio, to its end as a captain at Stewart AFB in Newburgh, NY in Dec, 1966. Four months before our son, Douglas, was born, his crib, a dresser drawer on a 3rd floor walking opposite the police station on 77 Ann St., Newsburgh.

I started as a weapons controller, better understood as a defense fighter aircraft interceptor director in a 4 story block house, two stories of which housed our giant IBM 2000 computer, no chips then, only very hot and very many glass radio tubes that were our 0101 on/off computing switches. And it worked and we watched those antique fighters (and their pilots) that you once could see lined up outside the gate of Vermont's ANG (Air National Guard) at Burlington, the tubby F-89 Scorpion, the Delta winged darts of the F-102 and F-106, the fantastic F-16. I was a gold bar 2nd Looey then, and learning to direct fighter pilots with no flight experience myself was stressful and scary, but I remember the smile and congratulations from a Korean War vet captain who patted me on the shoulder and said, "Congratulations, Auclair, you got your first [vulgar word deleted] when I and my younger airman ?/c guided a real fighter to attack a real mark inwards, probably a T-80 Korean war vintage Shooting Star.

The affirmation from that good-hearted captain, the lasting affect of what affirmation must mean to all of us. That we had worth, that we have done, and can do, well. This was something special that I found in my military service, for more than in civilian life. And I would find it so even more when I was puzzled to find I was assigned to a year's remote tour to Thule, Greenland, after I had asked for duty in West Germany. THULY? UltimaTule? which translates roughly to "the end of the world."

We were a special squadron, given the task of "bluesuiting" [militarizing] the operations control center of the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System, ironically acronymed "BMEWS"ed, which it wasn't. We would take over from very highly paid RCA contract people to run the monster radar arrays out there, away from the seaport airbase of Thule, formerly the home of Inuit Native Greenlanders who were moved across the icy bay, our whole base including us out in booneys, powered by generators and steam from a permanently moored WWII Liberty Ship.

But the magic was I served with officers and enlisted men who were WWII-Army Air Corps (brown shoe) vets called back to duty for the "Korean" police action of the fifties, who decided – what the hell! – might as well get my 20 [years of service] and retire, courtesy of Uncle Sam. And they (mostly) were a hoot! They had this perspective of "you gotta be kidding" to razing each other by making midnight phone calls (when it was our shift cycles) to their buddies asleep back in the BOQ as the 2th clk, GMT.

11:11 "TOOTHPICKS!" or 22:22 hrs "TRAIN TIME! [too-too:too-too!]" 

Your tax dollars at work.

But the most exciting moment was when Major Lynn F. Walker, Senior Space Surveillance Officer and I, his assistant officer on duty in Ops with our enlisted crew, headed by a very competent and calm Senior M. Sgt, picked up what looked like bogies [missile] coming in our only, huge scanning radar which was about 4 stories high and groaned like one of monster dinos from Jurassic Park. when it moved and locked onto a threat. Alarms went off from Greenland to North American Air Defense Command (NORAD) in Atom Bomb-proof control center mounted on giant springs in Cheyenne Mountain, Colorado Springs. The system console that controlled this radar (alarm lights flashing) to use that the lunar cancellation switch had not been thrown. We were tracking the moon! Sarge reached up and flicked the switch and all became quiet, except for the dripping sweat.

Major Walker and I remained friends for the few short years he lived after he retired. He was so often homesick for his wife at Thule. His wife was Catholic, and he became so also at Thule, and I, half his age, was honored to be his God Father.

Tuesday, January 8, 2019

One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church

Question from a dear reader: Tell me how a Maronite differs from Roman?

Answer:

So, we're all One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. We express our faith and worship to God in different Rites (mostly along cultural lines, but there are Rites for how the mass is celebrated, even within the same culture). The Eritrean Catholic Church is a Rite in its own right, but based upon the Coptic Rite, I am told, but the Eritrean Mass is in no way celebrated like the Coptic Mass is. The Byzantine Rites (I learned from VassalOfChrist that the Byzantine tradition has several Rites associated with it) has a very Eastern (European/Russian/Slavic/German) way of celebrating the Divine Liturgy (what those Rites call the Mass). The Latin Rites ('Roman') have several Rites associated with that tradition, did you know that? Each with their distinctive way of celebrating the Mass. The Maronite Rite is a very different Rite than all the other Rites, being 1,000 years in isolation, surrounded by Islam on all sides, but it has hints to it of both the Latin Rites (after the reunification with Rome in only very recent history) and the Eastern Rites.

Each of these Rites have their distinct form of worship, but each is unified in One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Faith, so we all share some traditions with Rome and all have parts of the Mass/Divine Liturgy that you could recognize if you stumbled into a different Rite accidentally on purpose.

Others can talk about the beauty of their own Rites, let me talk a little bit about the Maronite Rite.

What strikes me in a Maronite Mass, like in a Byzantine Divine Liturgy, is the absolute awe and certainty of God's Divine Majesty. In both Rites during our Mass/Divine Liturgy, we keep calling out to God and praising Him. This is the Trisagion in the Maronite Rite:

ܩܰܕܺܝܫܰܬ ܐܰܠܳܗܳܐ
ܩܰܕܺܝܫܰܬ ܚܰܝܠܬܳܢܳܐ
ܩܰܕܺܝܫܰܬܠܳܐ ܡܳܝܽܘܬܳܐ
ܐܶܬܪܰܚܰܡ ܥܰܠܝܢ



(Here is the youtube link to Quadishat Aloho/Holy God if video does not play.)

Note that we sing this in Syriac, which is close to Aramaic, the language Jesus spoke. And that you notice right away: parts of the Mass are in the vernacular (English in the USA), Arabic, and then the high, holy parts (the Consecration and the Trisagion) are in Syriac.

Also, a lot goes into preparation both for the priest and the people. There are chants for vesting and incensing, even before the Mass begins (so don't be late, or you'll miss out!), the priest is asked for blessings before the readings, and the people are asked to pay attention to the word of God. The Gospel is read in the vernacular, then in Arabic. After Mass, at Our Lady of Lebanon in Washington, D.C., we have a holy hour of adoration. There are no kneelers in the church, because we remember when families had to run or be killed in the church by the monotheists (both Islamic and Arian) both in history and even today, with the our brother Coptic martyrs of the Church in the Middle East.



What I think, when I think of the Splendor of the Truth of the Catholic Church, is this: what a superabundant grace God has given us! He speaks to us each in his own language and tradition, but He speaks to us in one voice: Jesus, the Christ, our Lord and Savior, and we bow down and we worship the Lord in this various and diverse Rites in one voice in response, glorifying and praising God.

But not only that, but each Rite has something to give to its own, but to other Rites. You want the proof of the Universality of the Church on Earth? Look no further than the length and the strength of the reach of the Latin Rites! You want absolute fall-on-your-face adoration of God-Most-Holy, spoken in Jesus' native tongue? Look no further than the Maronite Rite! You want to know with certainty that Mary – Mary, ever pure, ever virgin, is the Θεοτόκος/Theotokos, the Mother of God? Look no further than a Byzantine Divine Liturgy! I have found, attending other Rites' sacrifices of the Mass – Maronite, Roman (both Novus Ordo and Extraordinary Form), Eritrean, and Byzantine – that my Catholic Faith is not only strengthened, but deepened. What does the 'Holy, holy, holy' mean, viscerally? Is Mary really the Mother of God? What does 'Universal Church' mean, physically? Certain Rites show you things about your Faith that you take for granted in your own Rite.

One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church: the Catholic Church has it all, because we have Jesus, the Christ, and Christ has us.