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Dom Mark Kirby's Conference: "The Mass: You Can't Live Without It"

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Many of our readers may already be familiar with the beautiful and profound meditations of Dom Mark Kirby, O.S.B., Prior of the Monastery of Our Lady of the Cenacle (also known as Silverstream Priory) in Ireland, and author of the Vultus Christi blog.

On Saturday, July 5, 2014, Dom Mark gave a talk at the Evangelium Ireland Conference  for young people held at St Patrick’s College, Maynooth, with the title "The Mass: You Can't Live Without It." He has now published it on Vultus Christi in two installments: Part I& Part II.

Here are some excerpts:
          In my long monastic life how often have I heard young men aspiring to become monks say, “I want to be myself”? And how often have I found myself saying to young men aspiring to become monks, “Be yourself”? The one thing I can say unreservedly about this need to be oneself is that man becomes his true self only on the way to the altar. God created man to be an offerer, a sacerdos, one who makes things over to God. God gave man all created things that they might become, in his sacerdotal hands, an offering of thanksgiving. Finally, God willed that this whole round world, created by him, should serve as man’s altar: a place from which man can reach into heaven to present there his sacrifice to God. Man becomes his true self, his best self, the self God intends him to be insofar as he recovers his own sacerdotal dignity and discovers in all things created matter for a holy oblation. Ultimate the search to become one’s true self leads one to the altar and to the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
[ . . . ]
          Then came the tragedy of original sin. Satan, hating the liturgy of the earthly paradise, despising the royal priesthood of Adam and Eve, and disgusted by the consecration of all things created to the Creator, laid his plans to destroy the liturgical, to defile the sacerdotal, and to stop the sacrifice. Deceived by Satan, Adam and Eve fixed their gaze upon one thing and refused to give it up to God. Instead of making an offering to God of the good, the true, and the beautiful things given them, they took what was given them to be sacrificed and left untouched for God — the fruit of the tree — and, grasping it, clutched it to themselves. In that terrible moment they sinned against their sacerdotal dignity. The temple of the earthly paradise was defiled; their royal priesthood was perverted; the earth, designed by God to be an altar, became instead a tomb. The original sin was, it is clear, anti-eucharistic, anti-sacerdotal, and anti-liturgical. Thus was the great and glorious plan of God frustrated; thus did man stop being himself as God intended him to be.
[ . . . ]
          In some way, the history of the Chosen People is a history of altars. The building of multiple altars marks a movement toward the one altar of the the one God that, in the temple of Jerusalem, will be the sign of the one worship offered by God’s one people. The religious life of Israel revolves around the altar. The prophet Ezekiel describes in detail the temple altar and its fittings (cf. Ezechiel 43:13-17). While the Levites will be charged with ordering the service of God in a more general way, the Aaronic priesthood will be centered exclusively on the service of the altar (cf. Numbers 3:6-10 and 1 Chronicles 6:48-49).
[ . . . ]
          The consecration of the altar is the high point of the rite of the Dedication of a Church. The altar is anointed lavishly with Holy Chrism, making it a sign of Christ, the Anointed of the Father. The smoke of burning incense rises from the altar itself; it is the prayer of Christ and of the Church ascending to the Father in the sweet fragrance of the Holy Spirit. The altar is clothed in holy vesture; more than merely functional or even festive table linens, the altar cloth signifies the splendor of the risen Christ in the midst of the Church. “The Lord has reigned; He is clothed with beauty” (Psalm 92:1). The illumination of the altar with candles evokes the gladsome radiance of Christ; all who look to the altar and all who approach it reflect something of the light of Christ. “Look towards Him” says the psalm, “and be radiant” (Psalm 33:6). Worked into the base of the altar, beneath the holy table itself, is a miniature sepulchre prepared for the relics of the saints. Thus does the altar signify Christ the Head’s indissoluble union with the members of His Mystical Body.
It would be really tempting to keep quoting this talk, but then there would be no incentive to check it out at Vultus Christi. Thank you, Dom Mark, for sharing this meditation with us.


How Liturgy, Prayer and Intuition Are Connected - Recognition of Pattern and Order

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Modern scientific research into how firefighters and nurses respond to a crisis supports the idea that a traditional education in beauty will develop our powers of intuitive decision making.

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In a great series of recorded lectures entitled The Art of Critical Decision Making, former Harvard business school professor and current Trustee Professor of Management at Bryant University, Michael A Roberto discusses the importance of intuition in making decisions; and the factors that influence the reliability of our intuitive faculty. What he described seemed to me to tie in directly with traditional methods of forming the person to apprehend beauty, and this has the liturgy at its foundation.

Before I describe this connection, I am aware that some people worry that discussion of this type is devaluing the liturgy by instrumentalizing it. That it is encouraging people to see it as a self-help tool by which they can get ahead in life. My response is that I do believe the the liturgy does help us more powerfully than anything else to reach our full potential, to be what we ought, so to speak. I think too that this includes work and business - we might say that if God is not good for business then business is not good at all. However, this is only true to the degree that our everyday lives are ordered to the liturgy. The liturgy comes first and is the primary source of inspiration and guidance for sanctifying our day as we go about our lives so that it can, in turn, point others towards and lead us back to the summit to which we aim, union with God in heaven - the liturgy again. Our mundane lives flourish to the degree that they emanate from and point back to our participation in the liturgy. 

Coming back to Prof Roberto then, he tells of a number of occasions when nurses in cardiac intensive care units predict that a patient is going to have a heart  attack. This is despite the fact that the specialist doctors could see no problem and the standard ways of monitoring the patients' condition indicated nothing wrong either. When such nurses are asked why they think the situation is bad, they cannot answer. As a result their predictions were disregarded. As it turned out, very often and sadly for the people involved, the nurses were right. In order to protect patients in future people started to ask questions and do research on why the nurses could tell there was a problem. What was it they were reacting to, even if they couldn't say initially?

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The most dramatic tale he related was of a crack team of firefighters who were specialists in dealing with forest and brush fires and would be helicoptered into any location  within a large part of the West to deal with fires when they broke out. The leader of the group was respected firefighter who was a taciturn individual who lead by example. He was not a good natural communicator, but usually this did not matter. One day they responded to a call and went to a remote site in California. When they assessed the situation they discerned the pace of spread of the fire, the direction it was going and so worked out how to deal with it safely. These judgments were important because if they got it wrong the brush fire could move faster than any man could run and they would be in trouble. Initially things went as expected but then suddenly the leader stopped and told everybody to do as he was doing. He threw a match to the ground and burnt an area in the grass of several square yards and then put it out. He then lay down on the burnt patch and waited. When asked why, except to say that he thought they were in danger he was unable to answer - he couldn't articulate clearly the nature of the danger or why this would action help. As a result even though he was respected, his advice was ignored by the team. Suddenly the fire turned and ran straight at them, in the panic the reaction of even these firefighters, was to run. This was the wrong thing to do, as the fire caught them and tragically they died. The only survivor was the leader. He was lying in the already burnt patch that was surrounded by brush fire as it swept through the area, but was itself untouched by the advancing blaze as there was no grass to burn within it. He just waited until the surrounding area burnt itself out and then walked away.

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In both cases, the practitioners were experienced people who got it right, but weren't believed by others because people were not inclined to listen to the intuition of others if it couldn't be supported by what they thought was a reasonable explanation.

Dr Roberto describes how research since suggests that it is the level of experience in situ that develops an intuitive sense that is accurate enough to be relied upon. What experience teaches is the ability to spot patterns of events. Through repeated observation they know that when certain events happen, they are usually related to others and in a particular way. Even in quite simple situations the different possible permutations of events would be quite complex to describe numerically and so scientific theorems may have difficulty predicting outcomes based upon them. However, the human mind is good at grasping the underlying pattern of any given situation at an intuitive level, and then can compare with what usually happens by consulting the storehouse of the memory of past events. In these situations described, of the fire and the cardiac unit, all the indicators usually referred to by the text books were within the range of what was considered safe. However, what the experienced nurse and firefighter spotted was a particular unusual combination that pointed to danger. This apprehension of truth was happening at some pre-conscious level and is not deduced step by step, hence their difficulties in articulating the detail of why they felt as they did.

While this ended in disaster at first, lessons were learnt. As a result of this, it was recognized that a good decision making processes ought to take into account at least, the intuition of experienced people. Prof Roberto described how hospitals and firefighters and others learning from them, have incorporated it into their critical decision making processes. This should be done with discernment - intuition is not infallible and the less experienced we are in a particular environment, the less reliable it is so this must be taken into account as well.

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It also depends on the person. Some people develop that sense of intuition in particular situations faster than others because the intuitive faculty is more highly developed. This, in my opinion, is where the traditional education in beauty might help. In order to develop our sense of the beautiful, this education teaches us to recognize intuitively the natural patterns and interrelationships that exist in the cosmos. When we do so, we are more highly tuned to its beauty and if we were artists we could incorporate that into our work. For non-artistic pursuits we can still apply this principle of how things ought to be to make our activity beautiful and graceful. Also, we have a greater sense of the cause of lack of beauty, when something is missing and the pattern is incomplete or distorted. In these situations we can see how to rectify the situation. This is the part that would help the firefighter or nurse, I believe. The education I am describing will not replace the specialist experience that gave those nurses the edge, but by deeply impressing upon our souls the overall architecture of the natural order, it will develop the faculty to learn to spot the patterns in particular situations and allow them to develop their on-the-job intuition faster.

The greatest educator in beauty is the worship of God in the liturgy and especially when the liturgy of the hours harmonized with our worship of the Mass with the Eucharist at the center. When we pray well it should engage the whole person, body and soul, in such a way that we conform totally to that cosmic pattern. In our book, The Little Oratory, A Beginner's Guide to Prayer in the Home, I describe both the nature of that pattern and also how in the home we can even reinforce certain aspects of it in the formation of children. In God's plan that intuitive sense is developed to help us in ordering all our daily activities to his plan (which would include potentially firefighting and nursing and indeed most human activity). This development of intuition not only improves decisions made in a crisis, but also makes us more creative. I discuss the connection between intuition and creativity in a past article about creativity in science. Through this at work, in the home or in our worship, we can contribute to a more beautiful culture of living for everyone. This is the hoped for New Evangelization and John Paul II's 'new epiphany of beauty' that draws people to the Faith.






Young Catholic Adults - Retreat Weekend at Douai Abbey

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By way of a reader comes news of a weekend retreat for young adults at Douai Abbey, to the west of London.

Young Catholic Adults National Event
Guest Speakers - John Pridmore, Fr. Gregory Person, OP, Fr. Matthew Goddard, FSSP

There will be Sung/High Masses, talks, rosaries, confessions, a Marian procession, and socials.

Cottages (student style dormitory accommodation) are £18 per person per night (incl. food).

Guest House accommodations (mostly single rooms - hotel style accommodation) are £60 per person per night (incl. food).

Day Guests: for those wishing to come for the day on Saturday or Sunday, please bring a packed lunch. It will not be possible to provide food in the Guest Refectory for people coming for the day.

Please note to guarantee your place this year Douai Abbey have requested that everyone books in 3 weeks before the start of the weekend i.e., 29th August 2014.

For more details, please see:- http://www.youngcatholicadults.co.uk/events.htm. Or use the online booking system at: https://bookwhen.com/yca-douai-2014.

Here are some pictures from past events the group has hosted.







«Missale Romanum cum lectionibus» ad usum cotidianum

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For those who are interested in an extremely user-friendly electronic version of the now out-of-print four-volume Ordinary Form Missale Romanum cum lectionibus, a site called presbyter.eu has made it available in four djvu-format files, with a supplement file noting changes ("additiones et mutationes") to the original edition. (I'll admit I had never heard of the djvu format, but it took only a few minutes to download the free WinDjView software.) Once I was able to open these files, I was blown away by the labor that has been done to organize the material. If you are utilizing the modern Missale Romanum in Latin or doing any scholarly research on it whatsoever, you will definitely want this resource.  (h/t Fr. Z)


Sermon for the Requiem Mass of Fr. Kenneth Walker, F.S.S.P.

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On June 20th, Fr. John Berg, the Superior General of the Fraternity of St. Peter, said the Funeral Mass for his confrere Fr. Kenneth Walker, who was killed during a robbery at the Mater Misericordiae Parish in Phoenix, Arizona on June 11. The Mass was said in the Church of the Sacred Heart in Paxico, Kansas, with Their Excellencies Thomas J. Olmstead, Bishop of Phoenix, and Fabian Bruskewitz, Bishop Emeritus of Lincoln Nebraska, attending in choir; Fr. Walker was ordained by Bishop Bruskewitz in 2012. The website of the F.S.S.P. has published the sermon which Fr. Berg delivered at the Mass, which contains some very beautiful reflections on the ceremonies of the traditional Requiem liturgy; the full text can be read by clicking here. (Our thanks to the Fraternity for permission to reproduce the text and pictures.)
O death where is thy victory? O death where is thy sting?

Just as a father is stunned by sorrow when he must mourn the death of a son who has gone before him, so too, as a superior of such a young community, one never expects to have to carry out such a terrible duty, and yet today we are gathered to offer the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, and carry out the absolution and burial of Fr. Kenneth John Walker, a young man of 28. Just two years ago he was ordained a priest at the hands of Bishop Bruskewitz. Two years ago I stood at his side as he joyfully offered his first Mass as a priest, but today we have the sad and untimely duty to commend his soul to God.

... the Requiem Mass for a priest contains the cry of St. Paul: “O death where is thy victory? O death where is Thy sting”, as if to stir us from our sorrow and remind us that death is but one half of the Christian paradox: for because of the victory of the cross, death has been transformed into the very gateway to life. This same cross is understood by so few that St. Paul says it is “unto the Jews a stumbling block and unto the Gentiles foolishness.” (1 Cor. 1:23) ...

The Church rightfully forbids eulogizing at a funeral as it would be an abuse to the liturgy which has the glorification of God as its end. And Fr. Walker himself never lived his life as such a man who would need to have his own chapter written about him in Church history or even that of the Fraternity of St. Peter. He was probably not infrequently the most knowledgable man in the room, but he would be the last one to put himself forward or into the spotlight.

And yet despite his quiet and unassuming nature, now his name, his life and his virtues have been published in a multitude of news outlets both nationally and internationally. A news media which in our day and age can’t seem to bring up the Catholic Church – and especially its priesthood – without trying to attach it somehow to scandal and abuse, has been resoundingly respectful in recognizing the life of a steadfast priest who served his flock. It is remarkable that this man, who did not call attention to himself or accomplish feats which would be considered as great by the world should by his example now goad so many to a greater awareness of God and perhaps even cause them to the return to the Church. There may be some here today who are among them.

If this is the case then, “O death, where is thy sting?” When Father Walker prostrated himself before the altar on the day of his priestly ordination, and there sounded over him the voice of the cantors invoking God, Our Lady, and the great saints of the Church (and many who are here today responded as with one voice "ora pro nobis") we hardly expected to need to reaffirm those words once again in such a context as that which calls us together today. On that day two years ago Father Walker offered himself wholly to God and therefore, as we know that death is not an end but a beginning, we beg God to accept his offering even as we grieve the necessity to do so.

... But the fact that death has lost its sting, and that we live not as those who have no hope, but as those who believe that when the soul departs from the body life has changed but not come to an end, it does not mean that there is no place for sorrow today. Our Lord showed us at the tomb of His dear friend that tears can be concomitant with great confidence in God and the resurrection. Today the liturgy has the church and its ministers draped in black to share in the mourning of one who has been lost to his family his friends and his community. The Church as a good mother is compassionate upon our sorrow. She acknowledges the wrenching truth about death but she does not fail to impart hope - even in the very context of that truth.

On behalf of all of my confreres I would express our deep sympathy to all the members of the Walker family. You gave your son to us years ago and entrusted him to our care. I pray to God that we cared for him well, as a family should, in every aspect, especially spiritually, since the day he entered the doors at Our Lady of Guadalupe Seminary. Two years is such a short time as a priest, but knowing Fr. Walker, I believe he would not have traded in 50 more years in this valley of tears for even one as a priest, as another Christ. Every day of his priesthood he had the consolation of celebrating the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. To do so even once is a gift from God of incalculable grace and lies at the heart of the Fraternity’s vocation. If we need consolation it should come from recalling that Father had the gift of standing before the altar each day and renewing the sacrifice “ad Deum qui laetificat iuventutem meam”. For Father Walker those words are literally true now and for all eternity.

Our primary purpose today, however, is not to seek our own consolation or commemorate the deceased, but to offer prayer and sacrifice for the repose of Fr. Walker that he may rest eternally in the Beatific Vision, one with the Divinity Whom on earth he was privileged to hold in his consecrated hands. This is our primary and solemn duty as those who knew him; those who loved him; those who were absolved by him; those who received Our Lord in Holy Communion from him; and those who were blessed by him.

The rite of this Requiem Mass expresses this urgency again and again in her prayers: Lux perpetua luceat ei: Requiem aeternam dona ei Domine. But this urgency is also seen in the very gestures of the priest. In this Mass there is no blessing of objects; the priest does not concede a blessing to the deacon and subdeacon at the Epistle and Gospel; not even the final blessing of the congregation is allowed. There is no exchange of peace between the ministers and the clergy. It is as if the Church reserves all for the deceased; as if every last grace of this Mass and absolution is jealously guarded for the repose of his soul.

This urgency was also beautifully seen on Monday when hundreds of priests offered Mass for the repose of Fr. Walker’s soul. The first of the day was offered by a confrere at 7 a.m. in Sydney, Australia; eight hours before the break of dawn in Europe, and the last was offered in California by another confrere as the next day was already breaking in Europe. We were mindful of the words of God through the Prophet Malachi: “For from the rising of the sun even to the going down, my name is great among the Gentiles, and in every place there is sacrifice, and there is offered up to my name a clean oblation.” (Mal. 1:11) ...

In a few short moments Christ’s infinite sacrifice will be offered to the Father once again for the remission of sins and in particular for the soul of the faithfully departed. Then the absolution will be carried out with its blessings. Finally, as a last word, the liturgy of the Church will provide us with the hymn, In paradisum, as the coffin departs. This last liturgical text is also a very fitting bidding of goodbye, and again, on behalf of all priests of our Fraternity, I would like to make it our own and offer it directly to our confrere:

Dear Father, May the angels take you into paradise: may the martyrs come to welcome you on your way, and lead you into the holy city, Jerusalem. May the choir of angels welcome you, and with Lazarus who once was poor may you have everlasting rest. Amen.

Fr. Berg delivering the sermon.
The Absolution over the Catafalque.

Visiting Boston in Episode 2 of Extraordinary Faith airing on EWTN, Plus Free TLM Priest Training

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After the April premiere of Episode 1 of Extraordinary Faith, I am delighted to hear that Episode 2 will air on July 13 and 17 on EWTN, and this time in very good slots (5 p.m. and 10 p.m. respectively).

The episode will feature the Boys' Choir at St. Paul's in Cambridge, interviews with members of Juventutem Boston, and footage of the April 2013 Solemn High Mass offered there, the first since the implementation of the new missal.

If you haven't already watched it, Episode 1 is available in toto here.

Also, be sure to check out Extraordinary Faith's main website where there are a number of helpful resources for introducing people to the TLM, including a very generous offer which parishes would do well to consider. From the website:

Are you a priest or bishop interested in learning how to celebrate the Extraordinary Form of the Mass? Looking for an easier alternative than one of the multi-day training workshops offered by various religious communities? Extraordinary Faith has an innovative option for you to consider.

Over the years, members of the staff of Extraordinary Faith have trained numerous priests, bishops, and musicians to celebrate and sing for the Traditional Latin Mass. We recognize that not every person can afford to attend one of the out-of-town training workshops, either financially or time-wise. We are therefore providing a convenient alternative: we will come to you instead. We offer a condensed course, to be conducted in one or two days according to your availability, at your parish, in how to celebrate the Extraordinary Form Sung Mass (Missa Cantata) and Low Mass. No experience is necessary, just a desire to learn the Church’s historic Liturgy. By the end of our time together, you will have celebrated at least one Mass – we guarantee it. In fact, we’re happy to provide references to prove our capabilities.

Our philosophy is simple: One does not need to be a mechanic in order to drive a car. We believe you will be motivated to learn more about the Classic Form of the Mass after you learn how to celebrate it. We’ll get you started; how much additional learning about the Mass to pursue afterwards is a matter of personal preference.

Best of all, celebrant training is provided at no charge anywhere in North America as part of our apostolate. Even the travel expenses will be covered. There is only one requirement: Clergy taking us up on this offer must commit to holding Mass in the Extraordinary Form at least once per month, for at least three months, commencing within two months of our visit.

For further information, please call (248) 952-8190, or e-mail info@extraordinaryfaith.tv

If you are looking for resources to help you start a TLM in your parish, share this information with your pastor and priests who would be willing to learn the Mass.





New Stations of the Cross in Ireland

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I had not heard of the Irish traditional sculptor Ken Thompson--not to be confused with the abstract Michigan-based sculptor Kenneth M. Thompson--until a priest friend pointed me to this article on a set of Stations of the Cross for St. Mel's in Longford, Ireland. I am pleased (and not a little amused) at the tone of wonder that accompanies the article, as if the discovery that traditional religious art could be an exciting and even fresh thing was itself newsworthy. Mr. Thompson's work for the cathedral has a strongly Romanesque cast to it, and yet contains many small touches that are both novel and thoroughly rooted in tradition: the intense intersection of human emotion and stylized iconography, the simple but dignified use of color, and some elements that might seem whimsical to the untutored. (As an aside, I find it puzzling how afraid we are of color these days, design-wise, both within the Church and without). For instance, a mouse appears in a few of the panels:
The remainder, finished or unfinished, indicate that there is a kind of relativism at work in these depictions. That mouse, for example, is a reminder of a traditional belief that as a carpenter St Joseph made mouse-traps. The less benign legend has the mouse as the devil disguised, and Thompson manages to weave this reference into an almost textual example of sermons in stones.
I find it rather comic that the writer considers this "relativism," when it is clearly a judicious application of the Christian artistic imagination to the work, especially as the priest who directed me to his work tells me Ken is possessed of a genuinely theological sensibility to accompany his great skill as an artist and craftsman. It is undoubtedly apparent in his work. We are so used to imposing an almost Sulpician primness onto the great works of previous centuries, we forget all the well-rooted iconographic oddities that gave vigor, wit and even depth to so many paintings and sculptures in cathedrals from Bayeux to Krakow. I am also glad to see that the panels have been given scriptural tags to accompany each number ("II. For in His Cross is Salvation and Life"), rather than the usual museum-catalog headings they often get ("Jesus is condemned to death," etc.), which invite a healthy interplay between the sacred page and its visual representation. Let us hope for more works that so capture both the technique of our Catholic heritage but also the fruitful, prayerful, literate yet playful mindset that truly made its art breathe and live.

TLM Altar Boy Camp in Taylors, South Carolina

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Prince of Peace Parish in Taylors, South Carolina, is offering later this month an opportunity for young men to learn how to serve the traditional Latin Mass, along with some other summertime activities. (See here for details from the parish website.) The training camp will be held from July 23-25, on the Prince of Peace campus, given by our good friend Fr. Christopher Smith, who writes for Chant Café, and whose articles we have occasionally reproduced here, and other clergy of the diocese. To register, please email Mr Brian Mershon: bcmershon@gmail.com, or call 864-292-6492 for more details. The camp is being offered at no cost to the participants, along with materials for the boys to take home with them to keep studying and learning about the traditional Mass. The parish is accepting donations to offset the cost of providing these materials.

The Feast of St Benedict

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Nihil operi Dei praeponatur - Let nothing be put before the Work of God. (The Rule of St Benedict, chapter 43. The “work of God” is here used to refer the Divine Office.)

The Funeral of St Benedict, by Spinello Aretino, 1388, in the sacristy of San Miniato in Florence.
St Benedict died on March 21 in the year 543 or 547, and this was the date on which his principal feast was traditionally kept, and is still kept by Benedictines; it is sometimes referred to on the liturgical calendars of Benedictine liturgical books as the “Transitus - Passing” There was also a second feast to honor the translation of his relics, which was kept on July 11. The location to which the relics were translated is still a matter of dispute, with the Abbey of Monte Cassino in Italy, founded by the Saint himself, and the French Abbey of Fleury, also known as Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire, both claiming to possess them. This second feast is found in many medieval missals and breviaries, even in places not served by monastic communities. (It was not, however, observed by either the Cistercians or Carthusians.). The second feast was in a certain sense the more solemn in the traditional use of the Benedictines; March 21 always falls in Lent, and the celebration of octaves in Lent was prohibited, but most monastic missals have the July 11 feast with an octave. In the post-Conciliar reform of the Calendar, many Saints, including St Benedict, were moved out of Lent; in his case, to the day of this second feast in the Benedictine Calendar.

Pontifical Mass at the Throne - Albuquerque, NM

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On the occasion of the 7th anniversary of the promulgation of Summorum Pontificum, His Excellency Archbishop Michael J. Sheehan celebrated a Pontifical Mass at the Throne at St. Thomas Aquinas Parish in Rio Rancho, a suburb of Albuquerque. All the best from NLM to Archbishop Sheehan and all those who helped to make this Mass possible.








Thanks to Patrick Mitchell for the wonderful photos

Of Considerable Interest on the Benedictine Front

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Gregory DiPippo has reminded us today, on St. Benedict's "second" feast, of the primacy that the Father of Western Monasticism and Co-Patron of Europe placed on the OPUS DEI, understood as the solemn public celebration of the sacred liturgy. Today, then, seems a fitting time to mention two important sets of articles that take St. Benedict or the Benedictine tradition as their point of departure, but develop ideas that are deeply relevant to all of us who love the Church's liturgy.

The Benedictine-Jesuit Controversy

First, Dom Mark Kirby recently published a series of posts on Vultus Christi about the grand debate, in the first half of the 20th century, between the Benedictines and the Jesuits—more particularly, Dom Lambert Beauduin and Dom Maurice Festugière on the one side, R.P. Jean-Jacques Navatel and R.P. Louis Peeters on the other—concerning whether the formal liturgy of the Church or personal meditation should be seen as having primacy in the Christian life of prayer. Dom Mark's four posts are a brilliant summary of and commentary on the debate, all the way down to the intervention made by Pius XII in his encyclical Mediator Dei of 1947, and really bring home the contemporary (almost frighteningly contemporary) relevance of this debate to the situation today. Highly, highly recommended.

Part 1: The Liturgy: Foremost and Indispensable
Part 4: Nowhere Else as in the Liturgy


The Spirituality of the Traditional Monastic Office

The redoubtable Benedictine Kate Edwards—who runs three blogs, one for lectio divina of the Gospels, another for the careful study of the Psalms, and still another dedicated to the ancient Benedictine monastic office!—has inaugurated a series of articles that will explore "the liturgical genius of St. Benedict's office." In the first post, for today's feast, she writes:
Most modern commentators on St Benedict's Office have struggled to find any systematic thematic or programmatic intent in St Benedict's psalm selections beyond a few allusions to the morning or light at Lauds.
          Certainly the Rule itself provides only a few rather oblique clues as to the factors that shaped St Benedict's Office, and don't go to the reasons for selecting this or that psalm for a particular hour or day. Nonetheless, in this series of posts on the liturgical genius of St Benedict, I will argue that in fact the Benedictine Office reflects a very deliberate theological and spiritual program indeed, one that links together the seven days of creation with seven 'days' that set before us the life of Christ: seven days, in short, of the new creation. It is, in my view, a structure that builds into each day and hour key themes and ideas for us to meditate on. And it is a program that is closely integrated with the spirituality of St Benedict's Rule more generally.
To all Benedictines out there who are reading this—priests, monks, oblates—I wish you a happy feastday! And to everyone else: let us worthily honor this great saint and patriarch, making our own this verse from today's hymn Iste Confessor:

          Whence we in chorus gladly do him honor,
          Chanting his praises with devout affection,
          That in his merits we may have a portion,
          Now and forever.

The Lassus Scholars Sing at FOTA VII

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A number of videos have been posted on Gloria.tv from the FOTA VII Liturgical Conference recently held in Cork, Ireland, with some excellent performances of sacred music by the Dublin-based Lassus Scholars. Here they are heard singing the Magnificat octavi toni by Tomás Luis de Victoria, as His Eminence Raymond Cardinal Burke incenses the altar during Pontifical Vespers. Click here to enjoy the rest. We will be posting reports from the conference shortly.

ICRSP Children's Summer Music Camp

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Now in its fifth year, the Sacred Music Summer Camp of the Institute of Christ the King has become a summer activity that many choristers eagerly anticipate. The camp is a week of intense musical training immersed in an authentically Catholic atmosphere. They study vocal technique, Gregorian chant, and Latin. The choristers have Mass in the EF every day at noon and chant the Litany of the Sacred Heart every evening in the Chapel, as well as Rosary walks and the availability of an Institute priest all week to hear confession.

This year’s camp takes place from August 18-23, 2014. Online registration is available.

We are also looking for donors to help make this year's camp possible for many families, especially those with multiple choristers. Please support this endeavor and donate.

Our Lady of Mount Carmel, East Harlem, NY - 130th Anniversary Events

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A reader has sent in the following information on the upcoming events in honor of the 130th anniversary of the founding of the Pontifical Sanctuary of Our Lady of Mount Carmel in East Harlem, New York and the arrival in America to staff the shrine of the Society of the Catholic Apostolate, better known as the Pallottines.

On Sunday, July 13th at 5:00 p.m. there will be a Ukrainian Greek Rite Liturgy celebrated for a pilgrimage of Eastern Rite Catholics that day.

On Tuesday, July 15th, at 7:00 p.m., there will be sung at the main altar of the shrine church Vespers of the Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary (1962), followed by a candlelight procession at 9:00 p.m., and a Solemn High Traditional Latin Mass at midnight. Rev. Canon Jean Marie Moreau of the Institute of Christ the King will be subdeacon and homilist.

On the morning of July 16th, the feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, there will be a Traditional Latin Missa Cantata at 9 a.m., and at 10:00 a.m. a Mass in the Novus Ordo with Latin ordinary, followed by the Grand Procession with the Miraculous Image of Our Lady.

On Saturday July 19th, at 11 a.m., there will be celebrated a Solemn High Traditional Latin Mass at the altar of the Pontifically Crowned Madonna on the occasion of the third annual pilgrimage being made that day by faithful attached to the Extraordinary Form of the Latin Rite. The Rosary, Litany of Loreto, Investiture with the Brown Scapular and Solemn Benediction will follow at 2:30 p.m.

There have been several documented miracles that have been performed by the Blessed Mother at this shrine. The image located there was proclaimed miraculous by His Holiness Pope Leo XIII, and crowned during the pontificate of Pope St. Pius X on July 10th, 1904. There are only three images of the Blessed Virgin that have been crowned by Pontifical authority in North America. The Church of Our Lady of Mount Carmel at 115th Street is one of the first Italian National Parishes in the United States. At one time more than 500,000 people attended the feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel during the month of July before and after the feast day. The crown of the Madonna and child is gold, adorned with precious stones, the emerald of which was donated by the Pope. The crowned statue is taken down in procession only on special occasions, this year's anniversary being one of those special occasions, and with the authorization of ecclesiastical authority. For more information on the Saturday, July 19th pilgrimage please contact: nyctlmpilgrimage@gmail.com.

A picture of the shrine sent in by a reader two years ago.

Fota VII: Card. Burke Presents Proceeding of Fota V

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Last Monday, His Eminence Raymond Cardinal Burke presented the collected papers of the Fota conference from two years ago, which have been edited by Fr Gerard Deighan and published by SMENOS Publications. (www.smenospublications.com) We are pleased to present the Cardinal’s address; further reports from the recently concluded Fota VII will be published here this week.

ST. COLMAN’S SOCIETY FOR CATHOLIC LITURGY SEVENTH FOTA INTERNATIONAL LITURGICAL CONFERENCE

CELEBRATING THE EUCHARIST: SACRIFICE AND COMMUNION PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIFTH FOTA INTERNATIONAL LITURGICAL CONFERENCE, 2012

It gives me great pleasure to present this evening the fifth volume of the Fota Liturgy Series, the Proceedings of the Fota International Liturgical Conference held in July of 2012. It is the first volume to be published by Smenos Publications who are to be highly complemented on the quality of the printing and binding. Due to a lengthy delay in publishing the Proceedings of the First Fota Conference, there has been a persistent delay of over a year in publishing the proceedings of the subsequent Conferences. I am happy to say that, within this year, the acts of the Sixth Fota Conference will also be published, making the proceedings of this year’s conference and future conferences, God willing, more immediately accessible.

The volumes of the Fota Liturgy Series have enjoyed the interest and acclaim of both liturgical scholars and other members of the faithful, especially priests, who have wanted to deepen their appreciation of the greatest richness in the Church’s life, Her worship of God. With the careful planning of each annual conference, the Series provides a prized tool for the more in-depth study of the many aspects of the great mystery of God’s action in our midst through the Sacred Liturgy. Volume Five, entitled Celebrating the Eucharist: Sacrifice and Communion, is an especially important volume in the whole of the Series, both because it addresses the highest and most perfect act of Divine Worship, the Mystery of Faith which is the Holy Eucharist, and because its individual essays open our eyes and hearts to see and to love the Mystery, the Sacrifice of Christ made sacramentally present on our altars, in order that we may receive the incomparable fruit of the Sacrifice, His Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity, as the spiritual sustenance for our earthly pilgrimage and the pledge of the final destiny of our pilgrimage in the Kingdom of Heaven.

Father Robert Abyneiko, Professor Klaus Berger, Dr. Mariusz Bliniewicz, and Father Gerard Deighan open up to us the revelation of the Eucharistic mystery in the Sacred Scriptures. In the context of the emphasis on the liturgical theology of Joseph Ratzinger, Pope Benedict XVI, in all of the Fota Conferences, I draw special attention to the presentation of Dr. Mariusz Bliniewicz on the Pauline notion of reasonable worship, which is key to the hermeneutic of reform within continuity for the authentic reform of the rites of the Sacred Liturgy, in accord with the directives of the Second Vatican Ecumenical Council. In the same line, I commend the excellent study of the continuity of the notion of sacrifice from the Old Testament to the New Testament by Father Gerard Deighan who is also the Editor of the volume.

Father Daniel Jones provides a profound study of the notion of the true sacrifice of Christ and of Christians, as presented in the De civitate Dei of Saint Augustine of Hippo, while Father Patrick Gorevan presents us the great treasure of theological reflection on the Holy Eucharist in the works of Saint Thomas Aquinas, taking his inspiration from the Angelic Doctor’s hymn, O sacrum convivium. Monsignor Joseph Murphy presents the spiritual theology of the Holy Eucharist in the writings of Father Divo Barsotti, one of the greatest Italian spiritual writers of the last century, who sadly is little known in the anglophone world. Father Michael Stickelbroeck unfolds the important reflection on the Holy Eucharist in the theology of the great German theologian Matthias Joseph Scheeben. The rich Eucharistic magisterium of Saint John Paul II is presented by Father Thomas McGovern. Lastly, Father Manfred Hauke, a most faithful and highly-qualified contributor to the Fota Liturgy Series, provides a systematic theological presentation on the heart of the Eucharist as Sacrifice.

Father Neil Xavier O’Donoghue presents an historical study related, in particular, to Ireland, the setting of the annual Conference. His study explores the understanding of the Eucharistic sacrifice in the pre-Norman period.

Two contributions are devoted principally to the canonical discipline by which the mystery of the Holy Eucharist as Sacrifice and Communion is safeguarded and promoted. Father D. Vincent Twomey, a central figure in the development of the Fota International Liturgical Conference, offers a timely reflection on the importance of rubrics, drawing especially upon the liturgical thought of Joseph Ratzinger, Pope Benedict XVI. Lastly, I offer a study on the safeguarding and promoting of the Holy Eucharist as Sacrifice and Communion through canonical discipline, drawing upon the classic work of Pietro Gasparri, renowned canonist of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and principal editor of the 1917 Code of Canon Law.

I conclude by expressing once again the heartfelt gratitude of us all for the commitment of the Saint Colman’s Society for Catholic Liturgy and, especially of Monsignor James O’Brien, official of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, to the work of the International Liturgical Conference. A particular word of congratulations to Father Gerard Deighan for the editing of the volume.

I highly commend to your reading the fifth volume of the Fota Liturgy Series, Celebrating the Eucharist: Sacrifice and Communion. May it lead its readers into an ever deeper knowledge and love of the Mystery of Faith, the Most Holy Eucharist.

Raymond Leo Cardinal BURKE - 6 July 2014

Mons. James O’Brien, Cardinal Burke and Fr. Deighan at the presentation.

Church Music versus Utility Music

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Joseph Ratzinger has often spoken about the sharp contrast between authentic sacred music and “utility music” (Gebrauchsmusik). By their own admission, the architects of the liturgical reform tended to favor the latter over the former, because their sole criterion was creating a new body of vernacular music that was catchy and easy to sing. Here is how he describes it in The Ratzinger Report:
Many liturgists have thrust this treasure [of the traditional music of the Catholic West] aside, calling it “esoteric” and treating it slightingly in the name of “an intelligibility for all and at every moment, which ought to characterize the post-conciliar liturgy.” Thus instead of “church music”—which is banished to cathedrals for special occasions—we only have “utility music,” songs, easy melodies, catchy tunes. (127-28)
But there are at least two major problems with this shift from the lofty ideals of traditional sacred music to the simplistic repertoire of the postconciliar era, whose populist agenda has, of course, triumphed everywhere in the church, except for small fortunate pockets of survival or restoration. The first problem is what Jeffrey Tucker aptly calls “a truncated range of emotional experience”:
One of the failings of mainstream parish music today (and I mean the style more than the text) is that it appeals to and expresses a truncated range of emotional experience. Mostly it suggests a sense of contentment and satisfaction, often to the point of superficiality. There seems to be little about struggle, disappointment, pain, suffering, and finding peace even within great difficulty. If “happy” is all that our parishes offer, what happens when tragedy strikes? Sometimes it seems that our missalettes are training us to live in denial, so that when we have to deal with terrible illness, war, depression, we are asked to buck up and get with the happy program or go somewhere else.
Again, Ratzinger pointedly agrees with this diagnosis: “Every phase of life has to discover its own specific maturity, for otherwise we fall back into the corresponding immaturity” (Christianity and the Crisis of Cultures, 111). Superficial, frivolous elation is far removed from the solemn joy or “sober drunkenness,” sobria ebrietas, of the mystics. As Arvo Pärt once remarked: “Music, like other arts, is a result of a certain way of thinking. What do you think about life?”

Ratzinger is famous for his exposure of the Dionysian, diabolic spirit behind rock music. Apart from some aberrations that occurred more in the seventies than today, the devil knew he could not get straight-up rock music into the churches. So he got his cloven hoof into the Mass by a softer, subtler device: insipid, uninspiring, artistically banal, relentlessly horizontal music that derives from rock and pseudo-folk music, but has something of an appearance of reverence without the substance. In this way it was possible to retard an entire generation’s transformation in Christ by institutionalizing the sensual shallowness of profane existence.

The second problem is the very loss of artistic greatness itself, manifested in a truncated range of aesthetic response to the majesty and holiness of God. The utility music in contemporary liturgy suffers not only from emotional impoverishment but also from intellectual vacuity. It does not challenge, elevate, expand, and refine the senses of man so that he may become a more fit vessel for divine action and for the suffering of divine mysteries.

In an interview in Dominicana, the philosopher Roger Scruton speaks of the critical role played by fine art and the treasury of artistic works:
I agree with you that the high [European] culture in which I have always put my trust has been effectively destroyed by its own appointed guardians, and that without the religious core it persists only as a fragile shell. . . .  But this [renewal] means, as you say, rejecting the premise of modern life, that God is dead, and starting all over again, seeking for the living God, and hoping to be visited by his grace.  If people are prepared to live the religious life, then their example will once again make this course available to the mass of mankind, and there will be hope.  At the same time, we must constantly fight those who are trying to destroy the memory of the spiritual way of life, and assailing all those things in which that memory is contained.  In particular we should exercise our aesthetic choices in art devoted to the ideals of beauty and order, and refrain from the kind of desecration that has become the norm in modern art schools.  (Dominicana 55.2 [Winter 2012], 65)
For Scruton, art represents or contains the memory of a spiritual way of life: it is the embodiment or echo of some experience, some way of seeing or hearing, that has happened deep within the artist’s mind and heart, and, as a result, it can become the activating occasion for such an experience in the mind and heart of another. The great work of art gives the viewer new eyes, the listener new ears. It is as if every work of art is a mnemonic device that demands of us the recollection of some truth or mystery we have transiently encountered in life—and art will evoke or assist this recollection more or less depending on its inherent “goodness of form” (to use a phrase from St. Pius X’s motu proprio Tra le Sollecitudini).

Scruton’s insight finds support in an observation made by St. Thomas Aquinas:
In the emergence of artworks from art, a twofold coming forth may be considered: first, that of the very art from the artist, which he discovers in his own heart; and secondly, the emergence of the works of art from the art thus discovered.  (In egressu artificiatorum ab arte est considerare duplicem processum; scilicet ipsius artis ab artifice, quam de corde suo adinvenit; et secundo processum artificiatorum ab ipsa arte inventa.)  In I Sent., d. 32, a. 3, ad 2
So, art has a twofold birth: the first is an interior origination of the work, which, being from the artist’s heart, is akin to his nature, his character, his soul; the second is the outward emergence of that work into the world where it can be seen or touched or heard by others, and can gently but powerfully mold them. The work of art is born in the heart, and is shaped according to the heart’s total formation—psychological, cultural, spiritual.

Without denying the crucial role of trained skill and an unpredictable factor of genius, Scruton and Aquinas alike suggest that art is an unfailing barometer of a person’s worldview and of an age’s aspirations and ideals. This is no less true of music than of any other art; indeed, it may be most of all true of music, which has a more intimate connection with the human heart, and more immediately moves and moulds its listeners and singers. Hence, what we need most of all today is a renaissance of music that will challenge, elevate, expand, and refine our powers of spiritual perception and bolster our ability to live a godly life in the midst of the world’s corruption—the most subtle form of which is a self-satisfied mediocrity that aspires to nothing great or difficult, an utter lack of magnanimity.

Pope Benedict XVI brought to the Church a vivid faith in, and wonderment at, the awesomeness of Christ Jesus—and so, the awesomeness of the Holy Eucharist that deserves our adoration, our total dedication of all powers of body and soul, and the very best that we can give. Like John the Baptist, he was a voice crying out in the wilderness of the contemporary Church, preparing the way of the Lord. It is time for us to heed the call to repentance and artistic conversion as we prepare to receive Christ anew in our hearts, in our churches, in our liturgies. Only in this way will Christians be able to transform the world; otherwise, we ourselves will keep on being changed more and more into its image.

Beauty for Truth’s Sake: A Book Linking Liturgy and Education by Stratford Caldecott

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This book is recommended reading for all serious travelers on the via pulchritudinis. It is an argument for the inclusion of the ‘quadrivium’ in education as an important part of the antidote to modernism. I posted this review when the book first came out about three years ago. I re-post it now because my friend Strat is very ill and will most likely not live through the summer. It is by way of a tribute to him and that I would like to draw attention to his work.

So much of what he has written ought to be read (and I am about to read his newly published book on Catholic social teaching, here). In connection with the liturgy his presentation, Towards a Liturgical Anthropology in the proceedings of the 2001 Conference on the Liturgy at Fontgombault called Looking Again at the Liturgy with Cardinal Ratzinger is edited by Alcuin Reid is recommended. It is a brilliant analysis of how the Enlightenment affect Catholic thinking detrimentally and created the problems in the liturgy in the early 19th century that remain with us to this day and began the discussion on liturgical reform that are still not resolved.

In this book, Strat pulls together and builds on themes raised earlier and discussed in issues of the journal of faith and culture, Second Spring, which he co-edits. I was lucky to be able to contribute some of these articles to this journal myself. The articles of mine are the product of many enjoyable hours of conversation between Strat and myself over the years and I am flattered that he refers to our conversations in the foreword to this book.

Stratford has been one of the main influences on my thinking over the years and one the people who first encouraged me to start writing about my ideas. To the degree that I have done so, I could not have written anything worthwhile without his help. I first went into his office in Oxford 15 years ago looking for help in establishing a new sort of Catholic art school. I had phoned him up out of the blue because someone had told me that he was interested in similar things. He instantly agreed to see me and I travelled up to Oxford a week later.

In this meeting he patiently listened to me and said that he would like to help me. He then invited me up to Oxford again and took me through a week of guided reading and helped me to write the first article I had ever written containing these ideas. This was published in Second Spring and was entitled the Way of Beauty (this is where the name for my blog came from!).I remember two things about this, first of all how slow and difficult writing was for me at that point (I hadn't written an essay for the consideration of others since I was sixteen years old!). Second was how patient he was in molding it, suggesting changes for reasons of both style and unorthodox content in such a way that the elegance and clarity of the prose were improved dramatically, but somehow he preserved the essential ideas in such a way that it was my voice that was talking. Several articles followed this, the next was connecting the patterns of the liturgy to the patterns and beauty of numerical description of the cosmos and was called the Art of the Spheres. It was these articles that caused me to be noticed by Catholic institutions such as my current employer, Thomas More College and by Shawn Tribe when he was looking for an art writer for the New Liturgical Movement website. He opened the door that led to what I do now.

The theme of liturgy and number is one that Strat picks up on in his book here, discussing them in the context of the formation of man in education. Translated as the ‘four ways’, the quadrivium is the collective phrase for four of the seven liberal arts: number, geometry, harmony (music) and cosmology.
The quadrivium is concerned with the study of cosmic order as a principle of beauty. The patterns and rhythms of the liturgy of the Church reflect this order too. As it is all expressed mathematically it allows for the possibility of the liturgical ordering of all our work - the whole culture - to the divine. The patterns of our days, the dimensions of our buildings, the ordering of our institutions can all be in harmony with heaven, creation and the common good.

Interestingly, Pope Benedict XVI drew our attention to the quadrivium in his address about St Boethius. He described Boethius's work in adapting this aspect of Greco-Roman culture into a Christian form of education. Boethius wrote manuals on each of these disciplines. Stratford describes how at a medieval university, around say 1400AD, students received a Bachelor of Arts for the 'Trivium' or 'three ways' (rhetoric, logic, grammar - the other three liberal arts). After this they progressed onto a Master of Arts by studying the quadrivium. This prepared them for the final and longest stage of study, for a doctorate in for example Theology or Philosophy. For Caldecott does not wish to eliminate or undo progress, but rather to add a unifying principle to all that is good about the developments of the modern world and which binds it to its ultimate purpose, and ours.

In his beautifully clear, penetrating prose he describes how each of these subjects is linked to the traditional idea of beauty. I found the chapter on music particularly interesting in this respect. He even speculates on how these areas could be developed in the light of modern scientific developments, for example in his chapter on the Golden Section.

Then in the final chapter he sets out his stall, explaining how he feels this will benefit modern society. He writes: ‘The modern era can be characterised by a certain outlook shaped in part by the overthrow or displacement of ancient metaphysics. We call this outlook 'secular,' and it may take the form of an extreme form of materialism, though it may also take religious forms...even the protection of religion often takes the form of privatization, with faith being exlcluded from any real influence over public life, morality and technology...The modern person feels himself to be disengaged from the world around him, rather than intrinsically related to it (by family, tribe, birthplace, vocation, and so forth)...'

'This all pervasive modern mentality is what we are up against, in education as everywhere else. So the question is now, what can be done about it, if anything? The Enlightenment is not something you can simply unthink. So how do we combat the negative effects of individualism, without losing the benefits of self-consciousness and rationality? The key lies, I believe in revelation and worship. What defines secularism more than anything is inability to pray, and he modern world in its worst aspects is a systematic attack on worship, an idea that begins with the acknowledgement of a Transcendent that reveals itself in the immanent. [Hans Urs von] Balthasar was right: once we lose the sense of objective beauty, of the Forms of the fabric of the world (confirmed and strengthened by revelation), then the ability to pray goes too. The fully ‘buffered’ self has no Forms to contemplate in the cosmos, no reality higher than itself, it has no God to turn to. Prayer is a vital dimension of fully human living. But while we can all pray on our own, it is always in some sense a community thing. It turns us away from ourselves toward God, and in so doing it turns us toward each other (or should do). In fact human civilization had always been build around an act of worship, a public liturgy. Liturgy (from the Greek leitourgia: public work or duty) technically means any kind of religious service done on behalf of a community. Liturgical prayer is a way of being in tune with our society, with other people. But if we are to renew our civilization by renewing our worship, we must understand also that liturgy is a way of being in tune with the motions of the stars, the dance of atomic particles, and the harmony of the heavens that resembles a great song. And Catholic liturgy takes us even deeper than that. It takes us to the source of the cosmos itself, into the sacred precincts of the Holy Trinity where all things begin and end (whether they know it or not), and to the source of all artistic and scientific inspiration, of all culture.’

These are words that even the colleges who think of themselves as faithfully Catholic should take to heart. How many I wonder, truly integrate the liturgical life with the academic life rather than viewing the liturgy as a supporting player that is practised peripherally, albeit beautifully, to the activities of the classroom?

Back issues of Second Spring and subscriptions can be obtained online here.
To buy Beauty for Truth's Sake, go through to Amazon.com here.

His newly released book Not as the World Gives is available from Amazon, here





Fota VII Liturgy Conference 2014: First Report

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The St Colman Society for Catholic Liturgy has very kindly shared with us the following report of the proceedings of the Fota VII liturgical conference recently held in Cork, Ireland. The second part will be published on Friday.

The Conference was opened by Cardinal Burke who outlined the significance of the term “agens in persona Christi” (acting in the person of Christ) from Pius XII’s encyclical Mediator Dei and its assumption into the decree of the Second Vatican Council on the life and ministry of priests, Presbyterorum Ordinis. He emphasized the need to recover the Council’s image of the priest especially today as the priest is often seen in terms of a social worker, an NGO representative or an institutional manager.

Dom Paul Gunter OSB
“Astare coram te et tibi ministrare: The Priest agens in Persona Christi”

Dom Paul Gunter OSB delivered the opening paper in which he considered the priest agens in persona Christi by reflecting on the rite of Ordination, De Ordinatione, and by comparing the typical editions of 1968 and 1990.
“That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our own eyes, which we have looked upon, and touched with our own hands, concerning the word of life,” is the subject of any consideration of the ordained priest agens in persona Christi. Like eternal life itself, priesthood is pure gift, and, as nobody can claim a right to be saved, none can claim the right to be ordained. For an ordained priest, the mystery of vocation will be at the heart of such a reflection, whether about the ordained priesthood itself, whether about what such a priest does in his ministry.
It is only within the mystery of vocation that any priest can say as in the Second Eucharistic Prayer, “we offer you, Lord, the Bread of life and the Chalice of salvation, giving thanks that you have held us worthy to be in your presence and minister to you.”

Dr Philip Boyce
“The Role of the Priest as Intercessor, with particular reference to Blessed John Henry Newman”

Dr. Philip Boyce, Bishop of Raphoe, delivered a paper on the role of the priest as intercessor with particular reference to Blessed John Henry Newman. He emphasised the importance of this ministerial role both in the celebrating the sacraments, especially the the Holy Eucharist, and in prayer. Emphasising the unity of Newman’s intellectual life and his spiritual and religious life, Bishop Boyce illustrated how Newman’s understanding of the intercessory role of the priest embraced not only his theological writings but also his personal life as a priest as can be seen in his diaries and notebooks in which he carefully noted all those for whom he prayed. For Newman, the great mystery of the priest as intercessor focused not so much on the fact that the priest made intercession to God for the world but that he could have any influence at all on the work of God's providence.

Father João Paulo de M. Dantas
“Agere in persona Christi capitis”. A clarification on the systematic Theology of the ordained ministry.

The author presented a summary of his doctoral research, in which he studied the origin, the biblical-theological sense, the importance and the way in which the expression “in persona Christi capitis” is used in the post-conciliar magisterium and in contemporary theology.

The formula “in persona Christi capitis” officially joins the theological vocabulary of the ordained ministry with the Second Vatican Council (Presbyterorum Ordinis n. 2). This expression was prepared by the Magisterium of Pius XII, in his encyclical Mediator Dei (1947) the Pope stated: “Christi fideles autem per sacerdotis manus Sacrificium offerre ex eo patet, quod altaris administer personam Christi utpote Capitis gerit”. (Now it is clear that Christ’s faithful offer the Sacrifice by the hands of the priest from the fact that the minister at the altar bears the person of Christ, that is, the person of the Head of the Mystical Body.)

This expression was established with the purpose of saying the specific nature and mission of the ministerial priesthood which, as Lumen Gentium n. 10 recalls, essentially distinguished the common priesthood of the faithful.

Those who act “in persona Christ capitis” are by virtue of the sacramental configuration with Christ impressed in them living instruments through which Christ proclaims the Gospel, sanctifies and guides men on the way of the Kingdom. The research began with a view of the biblical meaning of Christ’s headship, after which it proposed a historical-theological leading down to the coining of the expression in the context of Vatican II. The research presented the theological meaning of that expression and finally presented the importance of the expression “in persona Christi capitis” for contemporary theology.

Saturday afternoon Pontifical Vespers were celebrated at the day’s conclusion in Sts Peter and Paul Church, Cork, by His Eminence Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke

Sunday at 11:30, Terce was followed by Pontifical Mass offered by Most Rev Philip Boyce OCD, standing in for George Cardinal Pell, who was unable to leave Rome due to work commitments. Sacred Music for the ceremonies was provided by the Lassus Scholars, directed by Dr Ite O’Donvovan, with organ accompaniment by Mr Paul McKeever.

Celebrating the Liturgy “Worthily, Attentively and Devoutly”: Interview with Fr. Samuel F. Weber, O.S.B.

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NLM is pleased to announce the publication of a new book for the celebration of the Liturgy of the Hours, namely, the Hymnal for the Hours, produced by Fr. Samuel F. Weber, O.S.B., Director of the Benedict XVI Institute for Sacred Music and Divine Worship, Archdiocese of San Francisco. This book is a comprehensive collection of English plainchant hymns for all the hours of the office in the modern Roman Rite (Lauds, Terce, Sext, None, Vespers, Compline, and the Office of Readings), for both the temporal and sanctoral cycles. The book includes a letter by Archbishop Cordileone and a substantial foreword by Cardinal Burke.

For the launching of this book, I asked Fr. Weber if he would answer some questions about the project, the Institute, forthcoming publications, and how these all tie in with larger issues of liturgical theology. He graciously consented, so read on!

*          *          *

PK: As a Church musician who loves Lauds and Vespers, I’m extremely excited to see the publication of your Hymnal for the Hours. For the benefit of those who aren’t familiar with your project, can you explain what it is and how it will be useful?

Fr. Weber: This book gives suggested translations of the real, correct hymns of the Liturgy of the Hours in English, preserving, so far as possible, the authentic Gregorian hymn melodies that accord with seasons and feasts (this is not always possible—more elaborate melodies do not always work with English words). It is my hope that those who want the richness of the patristic/liturgical tradition and desire to pray the authentic texts of the liturgy will be delighted with this volume.

PK: Why would using plainchant settings of the hymns be better than just falling back on metrical strophic hymns? After all, many editions of the Liturgy of the Hours simply substitute such hymns for the original office hymns.

Fr. Weber: First, the words. Use the real words of the liturgy itself. Just like we prefer "singing the Mass" to "singing at Mass," I believe it is important that we should prefer singing the hymn that corresponds to the Latin editio typica of the Liturgy of the Hours. The present English versions of the 1970 LH contain almost none of the authentic texts (there are a few exceptions). This new Hymnal for the Hours rectifies that long-standing problem.

Regarding music, this will then be a matter of necessity and taste. When I am conducting a Vespers service with a parish group that has never sung Vespers before, I usually use the metrical “O Salutaris” melody, so that everyone can sing easily without too much practice. In seminaries, religious communities, and some parishes, on the other hand, I am gradually teaching the chant tradition and moving toward the correct seasonal and festal chants. In general, it is praiseworthy to aim at singing in the plainchant style, which is the ecclesiastical manner of singing par excellence, as Joseph Ratzinger/Pope Benedict explains in many places. This would be the right goal for the sung celebration of the Liturgy of the Hours, and this new Hymnal can supply an important piece of it.

In short, sing as you can, not as you can’t—but at least use the right words, the words of the liturgy!


PK: Can you tell us about the translations used?

Fr. Weber: There are many fine poets responsible for the translations—just to list a few, Thomas Buffer, Edward Caswall, John David Chambers, William Copeland, Percy Dearmer, Mark Higdon, Placidus Kempf, Thomas Ken, John Mason Neale, Dylan Schrader, as well as translations taken from the Monastic Diurnal, Saint Cecilia's Abbey, and Stanbrook Abbey. I have used the most elegant and accurate translations available at the present time; some of the texts rhyme, others do not, but all are in what could be called "the classic style," which suits the nobility of the chant melodies. There are 481 hymns in toto, with a supplement of additional texts.

As time goes on, it is my hope that this collection will inspire gifted poets to improve on the translations included in this volume, and so enrich the prayer life of the Church for those who choose to use the English language.

The book also includes the Gospel Canticles—the Benedictus, the Magnificat, and the Nunc Dimittis—with all their ferial antiphons, and each in all 8 modes. For a celebration of Lauds, Vespers, or Compline in English, this will all come in handy.

I should add that it has been my goal all along to make these chants available either for free or at the lowest possible cost of publication. A condition for the use of many of the hymn texts was that the Hymnal generate no profits but be simply a service to the People of God. That is the reason we can make the book available for only $17.10 (paperback) or $25.50 (hardcover).

PK: For priests and religious who wish to fulfill their obligation to pray the office, does this book come with official ecclesiastical approval?

Fr. Weber: As this book is being published as a hymnal, it requires the approbation of the local ordinary. The Archbishop of San Francisco has given his approbation for the book to be published and used for the Liturgy of the Hours as a source for hymns for the Church throughout the world. I am also grateful to Cardinal Burke for contributing a splendid Foreword that is really a mini-treatise on the history and theology of hymns.

PK: Out of curiosity, how long did it take to produce this 730-page book?

Fr. Weber: I have been collecting hymn texts and melodies and fitting English hymns to the Gregorian models for decades, so it would be no exaggeration to say that this book, which collects all of these chants in one place in a systematic way, is the result of more than four decades of work. Over these years many have made special requests for these hymns. For the most part, the hymnal now presented is the result of fulfilling those requests, brought together in one volume.

PK: Why is the sung celebration of the Liturgy of the Hours (or Divine Office) something we should be striving for? And is it even attainable for most communities?

Fr. Weber: For me it would depend on the group. Some weeks ago I was with a corporate retreat group of lay people who work in chancery offices. At 6:00 a.m., 60 of them gathered for Lauds. I had prepared a booklet for chanting. We practiced for about 90 seconds. They had never prayed the Office before. A bishop was present, and he was so kind as to be the celebrant. I was the cantor and alternated with all, thus “lining-out” the chant tones. All present imitated and repeated the tones. They did an excellent job. They even imitated the pauses at the *. It was quite an uplifting experience. After Lauds, we celebrated a sung Mass singing the Propers and using Latin for the Sanctus, Pater noster and Agnus Dei. No problem. It went off without a hitch! It was quite impressive.

Later, I was in a rectory with three other priests. Before supper in the evening, we gathered in the common room of the rectory with our Breviaries. They were not singers. We just quietly read the sacred texts, with pauses for silence after the psalms and readings (the silence is as important as the sound in our prayer!), about twenty seconds of silence. This approach worked fine with this small group.

Singing is a wonderful thing and should be encouraged much more than it is, but it's not as if we must always sing everything; there are times for quiet recitation. Still, as Vatican II reminded us, singing the text of the liturgy elevates it to a more solemn level, makes it altogether more "impressive" in the fullest sense of the word, and that is very important, whether it happens daily or weekly or whenever practicable.

PK: There is a resurgence today around the United States (and even abroad) of singing chant at Mass, whether in Latin or in the vernacular. Could you comment on this movement—why is it important, what are its prospects for the future, and what steps can be taken at the local parish?

Fr. Weber: Again, first, it is all about the Word of God. The sacred texts are of primary importance. (I've written more about this in "Taking Up the Psalter: A Letter to Some Friends.") It's especially clear in the Liturgy of the Hours, which is almost entirely made up of Scripture, but it is no less true of the Mass.

Once the decision is made to “sing the Mass, rather than sing unrelated words at the Mass,” then correct, well-arranged music is needed, music that will work well with the congregation assembled for worship. This works best a cappella. A solid, confident cantor is needed to lead. All follow.

Again and again—in seminaries, in convents, in parishes—I hear the words "reverent, devout, holy" in reference to the music needed for divine worship. Indeed, for all the sacred signs, and for the atmosphere that best serves those who gather to adore the One God as it behooves His true servants to do. The Mass is about God, it’s not about me...  in the first place. The sacred liturgy shapes me; I don’t shape the sacred liturgy.

Cardinal Arinze once said: "Let’s not confuse what we do in the parish hall at coffee and donuts with what we do in Church." Recently an Archbishop gave a talk to his seminarians about the crisis of “narcissism” that has taken over today in the Latin Church. This pretty well sums it all up. In contrast, a recent article in the New York Times, about vocations to the priesthood and religious life in rural Michigan, can tell us volumes just from the accompanying photo. Look at the parish church. This is not an accident. Sacred signs that are treasured by the whole community bring blessings to the people. Our Catholic culture lived to the full produces holy men and women, families filled with blessings.

My Irish grandmother frequently used to say: "There are only two things worth doing in life: to know the truth and to be in love." We sing the appointed psalms of David because we want the truth, and we want to know love in our lives. These are the words God wants on our lips, and God wants them planted in our hearts. In virtue of Baptism, we are all “custodians of the sacred formulas” that God wants planted in our hearts. These are the sacred formulas that nourish us and bring about growth in the spiritual life. These are the holy words that bring blessings to family life, inspire the spouses, and delight the children.

PK: But isn't it true that the hymns in your book are not the Word of God? Couldn't someone say: "We have always sung poems written by Christians; aren't we doing the same thing today when we pick out contemporary hymns?"

Fr. Weber: Yes, it is true: over the centuries God inspires other poets, like St. Ambrose, St. Gregory the Great, and St. Thomas Aquinas, to create sacred texts: orations, sequences, the hymns of the Divine Office. With the approval of the Church, they too can serve as spiritual nourishment. They paraphrase and meditate on the Word of God. They lead us back to the sacred Scriptures as the Church reads these holy writings in her sacred Liturgy. But never, in the history of the Church, have the clergy or laity replaced the appointed texts of the sacred liturgy with words of their own choosing simply because it “pleases” them to do so.

I was once celebrating Mass in a parish. The appointed Communion Antiphon was NOT being sung during Holy Communion. Instead, these words: "Let us break bread together on our knees. Let us drink wine together on our knees." The “on our knees” part was okay—I can support that! I appreciate that. But what about the message? After Holy Communion, I asked the congregation to be seated. I used the opportunity to explain to them that we are “not drinking wine” during Holy Communion. Nothing of "what it is to BE wine" remains; only its appearance remains, but "what it IS" is Christ the Lord. I spoke—by way of reminder, I hope—of the meaning of the Sacrifice of the Mass, of propitiation for our sins, of our growth in grace. I shared with them the antiphon of St. Thomas Aquinas, “O sacrum convivium” and explained it to them phrase by phrase, hoping to undo the harm done by singing over and over again false words that directly contradict the most essential truths of our Faith.


PK: The Propers of the Mass, in particular, are receiving much attention. What if someone objects they are too hard to sing?

Fr. Weber: To such an objection I would say: this issue is not the real issue. The real issue is: Are we prepared to do what the Church is asking us to do? Once we say yes, the rest flows—and with surprising ease.

The responsorial method of involving the congregation works well. In the seminaries, religious communities, and parishes, retreat centers and at meetings of the faithful, I have used simple settings that require no practice ahead of time for the congregation. The most important thing (sorry to repeat myself) is that we sing the Word of God given to us in the liturgy, so I am most concerned to cultivate the habit of chanting the Propers. Later, one can work on learning more beautiful melodies or even moving to the Graduale Romanum. We never, not once, practiced these Propers with the congregation. They worked perfectly each time. In the past 40 years I have been in many parishes and religious communities for Mass and Divine Office. Never once has there been anything but the most positive outcome when we sing the Propers in ways that are accessible to the congregation.

I am just putting the finishing touches on a new book, ‘Proper’ of the Mass, which contains four levels of settings for the Entrance, Offertory, and Communion antiphons, from elaborate (neumatic chant) to simple (psalm tone). My hope is that there is something there for everyone.

Also, one should be creative with solutions in this time of transition. At the beginning of Holy Mass, for example, the congregation may sing an opening hymn related to the mystery of the day. The text of this hymn, of course, must be theologically correct. The music needs to be worthy, religious music. As the celebrant enters the sanctuary and begins the incensation of the altar, the choir or a cantor may sing the Entrance Antiphon. The congregation may experience full and active participation through a “holy and quiet listening of the heart” as our Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI was wont to say.

Another approach: the Entrance Antiphon could be sung as a “call to worship” before the Holy Mass begins, a kind of “quiet meditation” to help foster a prayerful, religious atmosphere. This could then be followed by a congregational hymn with a big organ sound as the Priest enters and Mass begins. There are many possibilities. Where there is a will there is a way.

PK: You were recently appointed the director of the Benedict XVI Institute in San Francisco. Can you tell us some more about this Institute, what has already been done, and what are its future plans?

Fr. Weber: The Benedict XVI Institute exists to aid us in doing “what the Church is asking us to do” in regard to sacred music and liturgical ministries. Workshops, classes, audio/visual resources—whatever helps, whatever works, is available. A particular emphasis is placed on the sacred liturgy itself: that it be celebrated “worthily, attentively and devoutly” according to the mind of the Church.

Forthcoming resources include:

THE IGNATIUS PEW MISSAL — a beautiful annual resource for the parish, with simple psalm-tone antiphons, Mass settings (English chants and a choral Mass by Healey Willan), and a generous selection of Catholic hymns. This Missal includes the Latin chants that the Church has asked all Catholics to know and use frequently.

'PROPER’ OF THE MASS FOR SUNDAYS AND SOLEMNITIES — ca. 1200 pp. The Entrance, Offertory, and Communion antiphons of the Mass in four levels of settings, from ultra-simple English psalm tone, to Latin psalms tones (where the English text allows), to a simple through-composed setting, and finally an elaborate through-composed setting. The traditional chant patterns that come to us from the Hebrew of the temple and synagogue, through Aramaic, Greek and Latin, are tailored to adorn the English text of the excellent new translation of the Roman Missal that we are now enjoying. In short, something for every need and situation. The publisher, Ignatius Press, will make recordings, organ accompaniments (in low, medium and high keys), and a cantor book available as well.

If you want to sing the Mass in English, please take a look at these resources!

PK: The Pew Missal and the Proper of the Mass do sound like fantastic resources. When will they be available?

Fr. Weber: These two books are in their final stages of preparation by Ignatius Press and are planned to be available early this Fall.

PK: Do you have any last thoughts to share with NLM readers?

Fr. Weber: “Let’s do what we do with the greatest reverence, devotion and correctness” has been my driving force. Or maybe it could be said even better in the words of the old prayer before the Divine Office—we ask that we may “worthily, attentively, and devoutly” sing our prayers and praises. Having devoted the past 50 years of my life working for the sacred Liturgy in English, I can see that finally the tide is beginning to turn, and there are more and more people who are hungry for the liturgy as the Church gives it to us. I hope and pray that this movement will continue strong and will take advantage of the many resources becoming available.

*          *          *
To purchase the Hymnal for the Hours:

Paperback edition ($17.10) click here
Hardcover edition ($25.50) click here

The photos below give a sense of the content of the Hymnal and how it is presented.








On Wine, Music, and Feasting

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Over at Rorate Cæli, Fr. Richard Cipolla has posted a translation of a sermon given on the feast of St. Benedict by Fr. Benedict Nivakoff in Norcia. Here's a snippet, but head over there and read it in its entirety, as it is a wonderful portrait of the playfulness of the liturgy, feast days, and monasticism, indeed the spiritual life as a whole.
“The memory of a saint is like music at a feast with wine”.  This is what the book of Wisdom tells us in today’s Epistle reading from chapter 49.  Like music that accompanies drinking wine, or even beer if you prefer, but in any case in the context of a great feast where one eats and drinks well, and where one as well hears beautiful music.  This rings true especially for us who live here in Norcia, this poetic description of a festive banquet in which we celebrate a special occasion,  a day marked by solemnity, an important person.  We think, in this context, of every March 21st, the day on which we celebrate the transitus of Saint Benedict, his passing to eternity.

There are processions, special dress, dinners, the participation of the civic officials, there are fireworks, and so forth.  But although this great feasting makes this event  solemn and happy, it also can obscure the reality that is being celebrated.  For this reason we can take advantage of July 11 for a more intimate form of festivity, we monks with the citizens of this town who venerate Saint Benedict.

The reading from the book of Wisdom helps us very much to understand what we are celebrating in the person of Saint Benedict.   “Et ut in musica in convivio vini”.  We can say so many things about Saint Benedict.  Even better, so many things have been said about Saint Benedict that are repeated year after year.  But when have we heard him compared to music played at a banquet with wine?  Everyone likes music, whether it is rock, jazz or Gregorian chant, and there are very few people who are not able to have some appreciation for music.

But to have a feast: is it really necessary to have music?  Can we not imagine a feast without music?  Even wine:  can we say that it is really indispensable? And in the end, do we really need a feast to remember a person?  But in fact, the idea to have a feast day belongs to a deep level of Catholicism.  It means to put aside the rhythms of daily life to celebrate, without any sense of necessity or usefulness. But it is the very fact that a feast is not necessary or indispensable or useful from the vantage point of productivity that gives it its character of joy and makes it a true feast. [...]
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