Quantcast
Channel: New Liturgical Movement
Viewing all 8572 articles
Browse latest View live

The Theology of the Offertory - Part 7.5 - The Use of Toledo

$
0
0
The Iberian peninsula was the last part of Western Europe to adopt the Roman Rite; a detailed history of how its ancient Mozarabic liturgy was gradually replaced by the Roman, starting in the later decades of the 11th-century, is given in the old Catholic Encyclopedia. When the Roman Rite was introduced into the various kingdoms which now form the nations of Spain and Portugal, the Offertory prayers were certainly not new; they were, however, still in the process of formation, as I have documented elsewhere. Like all the later additions to the Mass, (such as the Sequences, the prayers at the beginning of the Mass, etc.), they were subject to a great deal of variation in the Medieval period, in Spain no less than elsewhere.

For this series, I will describe the Offertory in the pre-Tridentine missal of the Primatial See of Toledo in this article, and that of Seville, one of the most ancient Christian centers in Spain, in a later article. This selection is determined partly by the materials available for consultation, and partly because within those materials, these are the two most interesting and complex variants. Many other Spanish cathedrals used forms of the Offertory which were very similar to these two; others simply adopted the Roman form. Among the latter is also the Use of Braga, the Primatial See of Portugal, in which the Offertory varies only slightly from the Roman Use; I will therefore not include it in this survey, although it was the only See on the peninsula to retain its medieval use after the Tridentine reform.

The Cathedral of Toledo (image from wikipedia)
The Use of Toledo

The Missal of Toledo, printed at Lyon in France in 1551, (available on googlebooks) is unusual for its period in that it contains a fairly detailed “Ordo celebrandi Missam – the Order for celebrating Mass.” Unfortunately, this Ordo does not always agree with the rubrics given in the missal itself, and mixes the rites of both Solemn and Low Mass. Here I will follow the order of the Solemn Mass.

While the subdeacon sings the Epistle, the priest or the deacon opens the corporal in the middle of the altar, directly over the altar stone, saying, “In nomine Patris etc. In tuo conspectu, quaesumus, Domine, haec nostra munera tibi placita sint; ut nos tibi placere valeamus. – In the name of the Father etc. May these our gifts be pleasing to Thee in Thy sight, we ask, O Lord; that we may be able to please Thee.” To these words are added, from the end of Psalm 23, “Lift up your gates, O ye princes, and be ye lifted up, O eternal gates: and the King of Glory shall enter in. Who is this King of Glory? the Lord who is strong and mighty: the Lord mighty in battle. The Lord of hosts, he is the King of Glory.” This may also be done at the beginning of the Mass, or before the Gospel, or after it.

The Ordo celebrandi says that the chalice and host are prepared before the singing of the Gospel, but a rubric in the missal says that it may also be done before the Mass, or before the Offertory. (These variants may be for the celebration of Low and Sung Masses.) As the priest or the deacon lays the host on the paten, he says “Benedictio Dei Pa+tris omnipotentis, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti descendat et maneat super hanc hostiam tibi Deo Patri offerendam. Amen. – May the blessing of God, the Fa+ther almighty, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, descend and remain upon this host that is to be offered to Thee, God the Father. Amen.” (It is unusual for deacons to bless something in this way, but the letter of the rubric clearly says “either the deacon, or the priest himself” does this.)

The missal gives a prayer to be said while cleaning the inside of the chalice, “Dignare Domine mundare vas istud, in quo sumere preciosum sanctum corpus tuum valeam. Qui cum Patre etc. – Deign, o Lord, to cleanse this vessel, that I may be able to receive in it Thy holy and precious Body. Who with the Father.” It is odd that the Ordo celebrandi makes no mention of it; I strongly suspect that “sanctum corpus” instead of “sanguinem” is a printer’s error. As he pours the wine into the chalice, the priest or deacon says, “Misce quaesumus Domine in calice isto, quod manavit ex latere tuo, ut fiat in remissionem peccatorum nostrorum. Qui cum Patre etc. – Mix, we ask, o Lord, in this chalice, that which came forth from Thy side, that it may be unto the remission of our sins. Who with the Father etc.”

The deacon or an acolyte then proffers the water to be blessed, saying “Give the blessing, lord.”; the priest says “Ab illo benedicatur, cujus spiritus super aquas ferebatur. In nomine Patris etc. – May it be blessed by Him, whose Spirit moved above the waters. In the name of the Father etc.” The priest then pours a small amount of the water on the floor, saying “Ex latere Domini nostri Jesu Christi sanguis et aqua exivit. – From the side of our Lord Jesus Christ came forth blood and water.” He continues with “haec ideo nos pariter commiscemus – therefore we likewise mix these things”, and then pours a few drops into the chalice, saying, “ut misericors Deus utrumque ad medelam animarum nostrarum sanctificare dignetur. Per eundem etc. – that God in His mercy may deign to sanctify them both for the healing of our souls. Through the same etc.”

Two leaves of the 1551 Missal of Toledo
Assuming that this is all done before the Gospel, when the priest has read the Offertory, he receives the paten and host from the deacon, and standing in the middle of the altar, lifts it with both hands, and raising his eyes, says “Acceptabilis sit majestati tuae, omnipotens Deus, haec nostra oblatio, quam tibi offerimus pro reatibus, et facinoribus nostris, et pro stabilitate sanctae Catholicae et Apostolicae Ecclesiae. Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen. – May this our offering be acceptable to Thy majesty, almighty God, which we offer to Thee for our sins and offenses, and for the stability of the holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.” He then makes the sign of the cross with the paten and host, saying “In the name of the Father etc.”, and lays the host on the corporal above the altar stone.

The same is done with the chalice, the prayer being “Offerimus tibi, Domine, Jesu Christi Filii tui calicem, humiliter implorantes clementiam tuam, ut ante conspectum divinae majestati tuae, cum odore suavitatis ascendat. Per eundum Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen. – We offer to Thee, o Lord, the chalice of Jesus Christ, Thy Son, humbly imploring Thy clemency, that before the sight of Thy divine majesty, it may ascend with the odor of sweetness. Through the same Christ our Lord. Amen.” The chalice is set behind the host, and then covered with a small corporal, which is called “filiola (the little daughter)” in Latin, “hijuela” in Spanish. This is also accompanied by a prayer: “Hanc oblationem, quæsumus, omnipotens Deus, placatus accipe, et omnium offerentium, et eorum pro quibus tibi offertur, peccata indulge. Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen. – Peaceably accept this offering, we ask, almighty God, and forgive the sins of all who offer (it), and of those for whom it is offered to Thee. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.” The Ordo celebrandi specifies that it is to be folded (plicaturas habeat), both to cover and decorate the chalice (ut calicem et tegat et exornet).

Bowing low and folding his hands, the priest says “Domine Deus, omnipotens Pater, bene+dic et sanctifica hoc sacrificium laudis, quod tibi oblatum est ad honorem, et gloriam nominis tui, et parce peccatis populi tui, et exaudi orationem meam, et dimitte mihi omnia peccata mea. Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen. – Lord God, almighty Father, bless + and sanctify this sacrifice of praise, which is offered to Thee for the honor and glory of Thy name, and forbear the sins of Thy people, and hear my prayer, and forgive me all my sins. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.”

In the Solemn Mass, incense is then blessed with the same blessing as in the Roman Rite. The words which the priest says while incensing are, “Placare, Domine, per hoc incensum mihi et populo tuo, parcens peccatis nostris, et quiescat ira et furor tuus, et praesta propitius, ut bonus odor simus tibi in vitam aeternam. Amen. – Be thou reconciled, o Lord, through this incense, to me and to Thy people, forbearing our sins; and may Thy wrath and furor rest, and grant in Thy mercy, that we may be a good odor to Thee, unto eternal life. Amen.”

As in other rites, such as that of Paris, the people may then present their offerings; if this is done, the priest “gives a blessing to the people, and extending his stole to those who make the offerings with his right hand, says, ‘Centuplum accipias, et vitam aeternam possideas in regno Dei. Amen. – May thou receive a hundred-fold, and possess eternal life in the kingdom of God. Amen.’ ”

This is followed by the sermon, and in parish churches, by the blessing of bread, with the following prayers: “Adjutorium nostrum. Sit nomen Domini. Bene+dic, Domine, creaturam istam panis, sicut benedixisti quinque panes in deserto; ut omnes gustantes ex eo recipiant sanitatem tam animæ quam corporis. Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen. Bene+dictio Dei Patris omnipotentis, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti descendat et maneat super hunc panem, et super omnes ex eo comedentes. – Our help is in the name. Blessed be. (as in the Pontifical blessing). Bless +, o Lord, this creature of bread, as Thou blessed the five loaves in the desert; that all who taste thereof may receive health of both soul and body. Through Christ our Lord. Amen. May the bless+ing of God, the Father almighty, the Son and the Holy Spirit, come down and abide upon this bread, and upon all that eat thereof.”

At the Lavabo, only verses 6, 7 and 9 of Psalm 25 are printed in the missal, but the Ordo celebrandi says that the priest may say all the verses (from 6-12) said in the Roman Rite. Bowing low again, and “cum gemitu – with a groan”, the priest then says In spiritu humilitatis and Veni Sancte Spiritus. The former differs from the Roman Rite exactly as in the Dominican Use: “In a spirit of humility, and in contrite heart, may we be received by Thee, o Lord; and so may our sacrifice take place in Thy sight this day, that it may be received by Thee, and please Thee, o Lord.” The latter reads as follows: “Veni sancte Spiritus, sanctificator, sanctifica hoc sacrificium, de manibus meis tibi praeparatum. – Come, o Holy Spirit, the sanctifier, and sanctify this sacrifice, prepared for Thee from my hands.”

He continues with “In nomine sanctae Trinitatis, et individuae Unitatis, descendat - In the name of the Holy Trinity, and undivided Unity, may there descend”; he then stands up and says “hic Angelus bene+dictionis, et consecrationis super hoc munus. Amen. – here the angel of bless+ing and consecration upon this gift. Amen.” At this point, there is a discrepancy between the rubric of the missal and the Ordo celebrandi. The former says that he makes the sign of the Cross once over “the whole offering” (i.e. the host and chalice). The latter says that at the words “blessing and consecration”, he makes the sign of the cross over first the host, then the chalice, with two fingers; after which, at the words “upon this gift”, he touches the host and chalice with his hands.

Toledo’s form of the Orate fratres is as follows: “Obsecro vos, fratres, orate pro me peccatore ad Dominum, ut meum sacrificum pariterque vestrum votum sit Deo acceptum. – I beseech you, brethren, pray for me a sinner to the Lord, that my sacrifice and your prayer may be acceptable to God.” The response is “Suscipiat omnipotens Deus sacrificium de manibus tuis, et dimittat tibi omnia peccata tua, ad laudem et gloriam nominis sancti sui, et utilitatem Ecclesiae suae Sanctae. – May God almighty receive the sacrifice from thy hands, and forgive thee all thy sins, to the praise and glory of His holy name, and the good of his holy Church.”

The main façade of Toledo Cathedral, seen from Plaza del Ayuntmiento. The brick work on lower right side is part of a belltower which was begun to match the one on the left, but never finished. Within it is the Chapel of the Sacrament, founded by Francisco Jiménez Cardinal de Cisneros to preserve the Mozarabic liturgy. (image from wikipedia)
Two observations

Two unusual characteristics of the Missal of Toledo call for special note. One is the absence of the prayer Suscipe Sancta Trinitas, which is found (with many variants) in every other Use I have studied thus far. The other is the presence of two long prayers which the priest may say after the Lavabo “if he wishes, and time permits,” while standing at the middle of the altar. The first of these is labelled “An apologetic prayer of St Ambrose”, the other simply “another prayer.” In a previous article of this series, I have described the “apologia”, a prayer in which the priest protests his unworthiness to offer the Eucharistic Sacrifice. Many early sacramentaries contain prayers of this type, but Toledo is highly unusual in having preserved them so late as the mid-16th century. Elsewhere, they had largely disappeared by the end of the 12th century, in no small measure because they tend to be unbelievably long. They were effectively replaced by the collections of prayers, to be said in preparation for Mass, which can be found in most later Missals, including that of St Pius V. I will give the Apologias of the Toledo Missal in Latin and English in a separate post.

A Roman Pilgrim at the Station Churches 2015 (Part 3)

$
0
0
Ember Wednesday in the First Week of Lent - Station at Saint Mary Major
I have written previously about the Station Churches on the Ember Days of Lent, and their relationship to the Scriptural readings of the Mass, once in an article written jointly with Shawn, and again in this article.





Thursday in the First Week of Lent - Station at Saint Lawrence ‘in Panisperna’
As can be seen in the last two photographs taken at this church, it is the home of a very impressive relic collection.







Ember Friday in the First Week of Lent - Station at the Basilica of the Twelve Apostles
Last year, our intrepid correspondent Agnese was prevented from reaching one of the Station Masses when the street on which the church of Ss Cosmas and Damian sits was blocked off for the visit of a foreign dignitary. Continuing the tradition, on Friday she was unable to reach the church of the Twelve Apostles because of a major political demonstration, one of the recurring plagues of life in Rome, in the nearby Piazza Venezia. Click here to see her photos from last year.

Ember Saturday in the First Week of Lent - Station at Saint Peter’s
St Peter’s is also home to a fantastic collection of relics, a sizeable portion of which are displayed on the main altar on the two days when the Lenten Station is held there, Ember Saturday and Passion Sunday. Click here for an explanation of the arrangement which you can see in the photographs below. 







Cantantibus Organis 2015-16

$
0
0
Once again we are delighted to announce the annual Cantantibus Organis course to be held at the Abbey of St Cecilia in Rome.

The "Cantantibus Organis" music school was founded to offer training in ars celebrandi within a monastic setting. Our aim is to provide those who hold positions of liturgical responsibility - cantors, choir directors and organists in monasteries, parishes and other places of public worship - with professional training in the teaching and directing of Gregorian chant. Anyone else interested in making liturgical music an important part of his/her spiritual life may apply to attend.
The approach is twofold, combining training in music with spiritual and theological studies. General sessions, in Italian, will be concentrated between Fridays and Monday afternoons. Individual sessions will take place on other days during the week. On completion of studies a certificate of attendance will be issued.
The next course will open on the first Sunday of Advent, 29 November 2015, extend over the complete liturgical year, and conclude on the solemnity of Christ the King, 20 November 2016. Anyone wishing to become fully proficient on the organ or as a cantor is encouraged to stay for a second year or longer. Instrumental lessons are provided for all levels, from beginner to advanced studies.
The "Cantantibus Organis" course has been fortunate to gain the services of outstanding figures in the contemporary world of music and liturgy.

For further information, please write to Sister Margaret Truaran OSB at: cantor@benedettinesantacecilia.it
Italian lessons are available for those who wish.

You can download a PDF here.

A Symposium on the Architect Patrick Charles Keely

$
0
0
Holy Innocents New York, designed by Keely
On Friday, March 20, 2015, The Monuments Conservancy will present its 25th Annual Symposium at the New York Marriott East Side, 525 Lexington Avenue, 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 pm, to discuss the life and legacy of Patrick Charles Keely. Although he was the designer and builder of at least 700 churches and ecclesiastical buildings in the eastern and western United States and Canada, Keely is relatively unknown, even among authorities in the fields of American and European art and architecture of the 19th century. For more information please see the PDF here. Admission free, to reserve a place call 212-764-5645 x10 or email symposium@nationalsculpture.org

Ex ore infantium: Children and the Traditional Latin Mass

$
0
0
A subject that deserves much more attention than it has received (at least, so far as I know) is how children relate to the traditional Latin Mass. One thing seems very clear to me from my experience with my own children and those of my friends who attend this Mass regularly, namely, that, contrary to all the predictions of the liturgists about the need for children to have simplified liturgies that hand-feed them bits of Gospel food, children are often not only content to attend the TLM but can become quite captivated and entranced by it. We all know of boys who are squirmy urchins until, donning cassock and surplice, they enter the serried ranks of altar servers and behave like soldiers, or young ladies who, with a veil on their heads, give themselves over to prayer in a way that is truly edifying even for their parents.

As a homeschool writing exercise, my daughter was asked by her mother to write down her thoughts on the Mass we attend on Sundays. (This was a few years ago, when our daughter was 9.) Below are the handwritten pages, followed by a transcription.



Thinking about the Tridentine Mass
     I have noticed that the Tridentine Mass is quiet for a while. I have also noticed that the priest says most of the prayers in the Tridentine Mass especially at consecration.
     I think that the quiet part of the Tridentine Mass is like the Carmelite nuns who are mostly silent. I have also noticed that in the Tridentine Mass the priest says most of the Our Father.
     There are only two liturgies that make me feel like I am in heaven, the Tridentine and Byzantine. I like both the High Mass and the Low Mass. I like the High Mass because I love to sing, especially chant. And the Low Mass because there is a lot of time to do silent prayers.
     Also the priest says Amen for you at communion.

A Little Prayer by me
     Yes, Lord, I believe that you are
     present in the Eucharist
     and I believe that you are with me
     in all of your holy sacraments.
     Amen.
How beautiful are these simple, unaffected sentiments, straight from the heart of a child encountering the mystery of the Lord! “Out of the mouths of infants you have perfected praise to foil the enemy and the rebel” (Ps 8:2). Would that more children could be exposed to the singing and the silence that help the soul to feel and to know that the Lord is truly present among us!

Now, I’ll be the first to admit that there are plenty of challenges with bringing children to the TLM, especially babies and toddlers who cannot yet “follow” the liturgy and who often make a tremendous amount of noise and trouble for their parents. Even in this case, though, we should not underestimate the subtle formation of the psyche that is taking place due to exposure to prayer-saturated silence, liturgical symbols, the pageantry of the Mass. After all, if children begin to be formed in their souls even from the moment of conception by the music and voices they hear coming to them from outside the womb, how much moreso after birth will their surroundings influence the development of their memory, imagination, intellect, and will? Let us not underestimate our children’s need for exposure to the sacred liturgy in all its demanding and rewarding fullness, nor underestimate their ability over time to absorb this fullness and make it part of who they are!

Over at OnePeterFive can be found a pair of articles on “Helping Children Enter into the Traditional Latin Mass” (Part 1, Part 2), which discuss how parents can assist in this process of gradual immersion in the Mass of the Ages and how they can “buy time” for the littlest ones. Here, I would like to elaborate on a particular point adumbrated in those articles.

Kids need to practice sitting still at home before they can do it well in Church. We parents often make the mistake of trying to correct bad Mass behavior at Mass, where it is ineffective and awkward. A month or so of a family rosary can teach most kids how to sit still, because at home one can be insistent about the expected behavior in a way one can’t readily do at Mass. It is a chance to practice sitting still and, for older children, kneeling, so that their little bodies become familiar with a certain discipline of formal prayer, which feeds right into the Mass. Those with large families know that you can see the difference between children who have been given such opportunities and those who have not.

The art of sitting still... something everyone needs to learn
Connecting with this art of sitting still is the deeper question of instilling in children a love for peace and quiet as well as a habit of keeping themselves occupied (i.e., not having to be entertained, but being able to entertain themselves). To put it bluntly, if our homes are inundated with the noise of television, stereo, audio books, or other aural stimuli, the quietude of soul essential for participation in the TLM will not be nurtured. We need ample spaces of simply “natural noise” and even “quiet time” in the household. One thing that works well for some families is having a quiet hour in the early- or mid-afternoon, to acclimatize children to the need (and, dare one say, the possibility) of a general down time where each has to keep him- or herself occupied quietly. The importance of such things can hardly be overestimated: how else are young Catholics going to learn how to listen to the “still, small voice” (1 Kgs 19:12) of the Lord, how will the soil be plowed for the meditation and contemplation characteristic of mature prayer? What we are looking at is nothing short of a training in the awareness of self and other that defines human interiority and relationality, and separates us from the beasts of the field.

As Maria Montessori noticed and documented so well, small children have an innate ability to concentrate. Alas, modern parenting practices thwart this ability due to the mistaken idea that children must be “entertained” and endlessly distracted by all sorts of artificial stimuli. The created world is mysterious and wonderful in itself, and, if given the opportunity, even very young children can concentrate on something as simple as their own toes for much longer than adults think possible. The wife of a friend of mine took a video of their then-eight-month-old playing with blocks for over twenty minutes. The key to this happening, however, is preventing others from disturbing the child who is concentrating.

I was recently corresponding with a father who was telling me about his own family’s experience of transitioning from the Novus Ordo to the Traditional Latin Mass, and how it has helped all of them to become more devout Catholics. Because what he says is so heartening for all of us, I am sharing (with his permission) the substance of his remarks:
Our daughter is partially responsible for us being at an FSSP parish now. She was involved in a girls’ program there and attended Mass every Saturday. She started to veil. Then she told me about how the Extraordinary Form impacted her, and her misgivings about the Novus Ordo. (I had not at that time talked to the children about my study of the N.O. Our conversations dealt only with liturgical abuses.) She developed a devotion to the Little Flower, and just become much more reverent. It was impressive. (She’s a normal girl. She competes in Irish Step and takes horseback riding lessons and jumps on the tramp with her brothers.) But it was partially the wisdom of a child that brought us to the Extraordinary Form.
          I am so fascinated by how otherwise seemingly faithful Catholics are so obtuse or just blind when it comes to the Mass. They must be much better people than I to be sustained by a guitar Mass. I really need all the Church can give me - all the smells and bells - to be able to make it through the week. The devil has so many avenues of communication today to get his message across. I think it’s time the Church pulled out the big guns . . .
          Our daughter noticed the differences as early as age 10. She said she fell in love with the EF. She also said once she veiled, she became more effective at prayer. She felt like she could concentrate more - no distractions. In addition, she felt like she could image Mary more because Mary is always depicted with her head covered. I often tell our sons that our daughter is going to get us into Heaven.
          Our boys also noticed the difference in the reverence of the priests. Our oldest is 14 and now serves the Mass. He talks about the precision in the priests’ movements, and how they do not allow their eyes to lift above the altar rail when they turn towards the congregation. Also, he has been impressed with how the priests prepare for Mass, and how they attend to prayers of thanksgiving immediately afterward. No meet and great after Mass.
          There was a good article in the most recent edition of Adoremus in which a priest described his experience in Chicago at a Catholic school where they were taught Gregorian Chant from the 1st grade. I really think such formation is possible for young children. I also think that the EF is not above them, although I do think parents need to be more engaged in explaining the meaning behind all the rituals. It does come alive for them. Our 11 y.o. son loves to follow along in the Campion Missal. In addition, I try to go over the readings and the propers the night before at the dinner table. So, I do think the EF demands more of us, but those demands are worth it.
Parents, be not afraid to embrace these demands, and be not discouraged by the challenges and setbacks! Your efforts will be rewarded. Priests who celebrate the traditional Latin Mass, thank you for making this profound education and sanctification available to us and our children! Priests who are not yet offering the TLM or not doing so publicly, please consider what a powerhouse of grace and truth this venerable form of the Roman Rite offers to the entire People of God—beginning with the littlest. “Let the children come to me, and do not hinder them; for to such belongs the kingdom of God” (Luke 18:16).


Photos by Joseph Shaw and Ron Lawson, used with permission.

Start an Alpha and Omega Group!

$
0
0
Meet for Vespers and Compline; plus a meal and conversation...and if you have a Dominican from the Western Province to hand all the better! 

I remember that the Anglican Church in England designated the 1990s as the decade of Evangelism’, with the goal of evangelizing the whole of the nation prior to the millennium. This seemed an absurdly optimistic goal to me, but I suppose if we remember that to evangelize means to show people Christ, rather than to convert them ,then they might have come close, depending on what you believe showing people Christ means.

One thing that did come out of this energetic push to carry the gospel was the proliferation of  ‘alpha groups. This was based upon a series of recorded talks about Christianity. Parishes set up groups in which people brought along food for a potluck meal, watched the video, and then had a discussion based upon it, perhaps guided by a series of questions that came with the video. I dont know how successful it was in converting people, but it was certainly successful at reinforcing the faith of existing Christians, which is a very good thing too. It was good enough for many other churches, including the Catholic Church, to follow the format and add additional videos that filled the gaps in the presentation of Christianity of the protestant Evangelicals.

My father ran one at his local Methodist church, and I attended on the evenings he lead. It was popular enough that they repeated for several years; what was interesting was that quite a number of people came to the alpha groups each year that they took place, even though the materials were repeated. What they enjoyed I think went far beyond what they were learning intellectually; it was the fellowship with like-minded people.

As far as I recollect, the hub of this evangelical (and Evangelical) push was Holy Trinity church in Brompton (HTB). In the minds of many, this is the epicenter of Evangelical Christianity in the UK. Readers in London will be aware that, ironically, it is situated immediately adjacent to a church which is at the other end of the spectrum, the traditional Catholic and very liturgically-minded Brompton Oratory. In fact, when I was living in London and attended the Oratory regularly, a group of us used to go and sit in the grounds of HTB on pleasant summer afternoons and have a picnic, after attending Solemn Mass at HMO (Holy Mother Oratory).

I do remember one of the Fathers at the Oratory joking that the name of the group - alpha - indicated that they had made a start but it was incomplete; he was referring to a verse from the Book of Revelations: I am the Alpha and the Omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end. The Oratory even started a series of talks of their own, and they called it the Alpha and Omega Group. If there is one church in England that understands evangelization it is the Brompton Oratory, and they do not need to do it via organized talks or alpha-type sessions. Many, many converts have come to the Faith as a result of its mission of beautiful liturgy and spiritual direction from the Fathers. I am one of them.

I wanted to play my part in the evangelization of the Faith, and so all I had to do was invite people to attend Mass their with me - perhaps with the promise of beautifully sung polyphony, even if they didnt like the rest of it. A number of those converted, including one who was his death bed a few months later at the age of 40, dying of cancer (may he rest in peace.) All I had to do, I reckoned, was get them in there and the Fathers of the Oratory and the Holy Spirit would do the rest.

A beautiful Mass is always going to be what draws most powerfully to the Faith, but I think that there are things on the line of the alpha group that we could do to support that. My brother and his wife have just started a regular group in Berkeley, California, that meets for Vespers, a potluck meal and then Compline. It involves minimal organization and runs at a relaxed pace from about 6:30 pm to 9 pm. They just invite friends, and because they and they are lucky enough to have a room in their home sufficiently large to accommodate perhaps 20 people, they encourage friends to bring others along. This is not an official parish event, its all done through their own networks. There is no need to have a priest involved, or to use church space if it is not available.

When Rob and Anna described the evenings to me, they said they were a great success. The great thing is that the liturgy gives the evening a purpose, inspires conversation if they need it, and engenders deep fellowship through the Holy Spirit. Also, there is enough repetition that people who are totally unused to what is going on will pick it up over the course of an evening and subsequent evenings (they meet fortnightly); and enough variation so that it distinguishes one evening from another and maintains interest. We have been encouraged in recent times by the popes since Pius XII (to my knowledge) to sing the Office in the domestic church, and here is a simple way that it is being done.

They sang in the vernacular, and were lucky enough on the first couple of occasions to have a local Dominican priest come along. The Western province of the Dominicans in the US has done a lot of good work in creating good and singable chant for the English language (apologies to other Provinces if Im being unfair and you have contributed too!). Before he moved to where he is now, Rob used to live walking distance from St Alberts Priory in nearby Oakland, and whenever I stayed with him we used to go down there and pray with them. I made use of much of what I heard either directly or indirectly in the singing of the Office at Thomas More College of Liberal Arts. It was one of the recently ordained priests, Fr Dominic David, whom we used to see there when he was a student, who came to this evening.

He helped people by explaining what the Liturgy of the Hours is, and taught people the tones. Some had never done anything like this before in their lives, but they happily joined in once things got going. They have some simple Anglican style, four-part harmonies, and there were one or two others present who were experienced choristers who could easily pick up the simple harmonies. Rob told me that it was a wonderful thing to be part of this, especially since all those praying were also chanting.

Benedict XVI told us that the domestic church, i.e., prayer in the home centered on families, is crucial to the new evangelization, both because of the effect that it has on those who pray, and because their participation in families and in society in general helps to establish a ‘culture of love. (cf. Address to Plenary Assembly of the Pontifical Council for the Family, Thursday, 1 December 2011).

Provided that the ultimate purpose is the worship of God, so that the liturgy isnt instrumentalized, then fruits will ensue. Then, as Sacred Liturgy, our prayer is showing us the alpha and the omega, the first and the last, the beginning and the end and, to quote Sacrosanctum Consilium, the source and the summit of all.

So perhaps you could think about this at home...start your own Alpha and Omega group.


Don't forget the Way of Beauty online courses www.Pontifex.University (go to the Catalog) for college credit, for continuing ed. units, or for audit. A formation through an encounter with a cultural heritage - for artists, architects, priests and seminarians, and all interested in contributing to the 'new epiphany of beauty'. 

Dominican Rite Solemn Mass of St. Thomas Aquinas, March 7, 2015, SF Bay Area

$
0
0
The Elevation at Dominican Solemn Mass
I am pleased to announce that this month the First Saturday Devotion Mass at Saint Albert the Great Priory in Oakland CA will be a Solemn High Mass of St. Thomas Aquinas in the traditional Dominican Rite.  This is because the First Saturday, March 7, is the solemnity ofSt. Thomas in the traditional calendar.

Those performing the devotion of the Five First Saturdays may receive Communion at this Mass for the exercise.  The Mass celebrated does not matter.  Confessions for the devotion will be heard in the chapel's right transept from 9:30 to 9:50 a.m.; Mass will be at 10 a.m., followed by the Marian Rosary. St. Albert the Great Priory Chapel is located at 6172 Chabot Road, Oakland CA, 94618, where there is ample parking in the tennis court lot. Visitors and guests are welcome; pew booklets with the text of Mass in Latin and English will be provided.

Please note the the First Saturday of April is Holy Saturday.  There will be no morning Mass that day, but those who wish to receive Communion for the Devotion may do so at the St. Albert's Priory Easter Vigil at 7:30 pm (Ordinary Form) or at the Easter Vigil of the Carmel of the Holy Family, Kensington CA at 11 pm, which will be a Solemn Mass in the Dominican Rite.  Dominican Sung Masses will also be celebrated at the Carmel for Palm Sunday (Solemn) at 11:30 a.m., and Holy Thursday (Missa Cantata) at 4 pm.  On Good Friday, a Liturgy of the Passion in the Dominican Rite will be sung at 3 pm.  The Passion will be sung according to the Dominican chant on Palm Sunday and Good Friday. All of these Masses will be served by priests and students of the Western Dominican Province.

Fostering Young Vocations (Part 3)

$
0
0
Speaking of children and the Traditional Latin Mass...
The reader who sent us this picture of himself, taken in the late 1950s, tells me that his mom also made him a Lenten set in violet.

The Theology of the Offertory - Part 7.6 - Two Prayers from the 1551 Missal of Toledo

$
0
0
The prayers of the Offertory emerged as a feature of the Roman Rite in the post-Carolingian period, which is to say, the middle to late decades of the 9th century. The most widely used among them, Suscipe sancta Trinitas, first appears in a form similar to that which it has in the Missal of St Pius V, and almost identical to that of the Ambrosian Rite, in the Sacramentary of Echternach, written about 895 A.D. At the same time, there appear in the sacramentaries of the Roman Rite another kind of prayer, also said at the Offertory, known as an “Apologia”, a prayer in which the priest protests his unworthiness to offer the Eucharistic sacrifice. These prayers originated in the Gallican liturgy, the Rite used in Gaul before the time of Charlemagne, and are commonly found in Roman sacramentaries and early missals; by the end of the 12th century, however, they had largely dropped out of use.

As noted in the previous article of this series, the Missal according to the Use of Toledo is very unusual in still having two Apologias included among the Offertory prayers in the middle of the 16th century. I will here give the text in Latin, followed by my own translations of them. The first is labelled “Oratio Apologetica S. Ambrosii – An Apologetic Prayer of St Ambrose,” but is actually by St Anselm; the words in brackets appear in earlier versions of this prayer, but are omitted as it is printed in this Missal.

Si tantum Domine reatum nostrae delinquentiae cogitamus, deputatum observantiae ministerium non implemus. Grave est enim, quod ad mensam tuam mundo corde et innocentibus manibus non venimus, sed gravius est, si dum peccata metuimus, etiam sacrificium non reddamus. Licet igitur per obedientia assistere, pro indulgentia petere, pro officio ministrare, pro remedio immolare, obsecrare pro populo. Quaeso, Domine, conforta in me quod trepidat, cura quod taedet, reconcilia quod discordat, evacua quod corrumpit, humilia quod superbit. Sit pia justitia, clemens correctio, [quae peccatum coerceat], non quae me peccatorem absorbeat. Da in salutem disciplinam, non in mortem sententiam. Exaudi peccatoris precem, qui visitas in dolore gementem.

Lord, if we only think of the crime of our delinquency, we do not fulfill the ministry entrusted to (our) observance. For it is a grave matter that we do not come to Thy table with pure heart and innocent hands, but graver still, if, while we fear for (our) sins, we also do not render the sacrifice. Therefore it is permitted to be present (at the sacrifice) for the sake of obedience, to ask for forgiveness, to minister in accord with our office, to implore remedy, to make supplication for the people. I ask, o Lord: strengthen in me that which trembles in fear, heal that which offends, reconcile that which is at variance (with Thee), remove that which corrupts, humble that which is proud. Let (Thy) justice be gentle, merciful Thy correction, [such that it restrain the sin, and] not destroy the sinner. Grant (me) discipline unto salvation, not condemnation unto death. Hear the prayer of the sinner, who Thou visit as he groans in grief.

The prostration of priestly ordinands in the tradition ordination rite. (photo courtesy of the Fraternity of St Peter)
The second prayer is found in various Missals at various points in the ceremony. In the Use of Lyon, it was said by the priest before coming up to the altar at the beginning of the Mass; in other places, it was appointed to be read while the choir sang the Gloria in excelsis.

Deus, qui non mortem sed poenitentiam desideras peccatorum, me miserum fragilemque peccatorem a tua non repellas pietate, neque aspicias ad peccata et scelera mea, et immundas turpesque cogitationes meas, quibus flebiliter a tua disjungor voluntate; sed ad misericordias tuas, et ad fidem devotionemque eorum, qui per me peccatorem tuam petunt misericordiam. Et quia me indignum medium inter te et populum fieri voluisti, fac me talem ut digne possim exorare tuam majestatem, pro me, et eodem populo tuo. Et adjunge voces nostras vocibus sanctorum angelorum tuorum, ut sicut illi incessabiliter in aeterna beatitudine te laudant, ita nos quoque eorum interventu mereamur inculpabiliter te laudare in hac peregrinatione.

O God, who desirest not the death of sinners, but their repentence, from Thy mercy drive me not, a miserable sinner and weak, nor look upon my sins and crimes, and my unclean and base thoughts, by which I am lamentably separated from Thy will; but (look) upon Thy mercies, and on the faith and devotion of those who through me, a sinner, ask for Thy mercy. And because Thou didst will that I, though unworthy, should be between Thee and the people, make me such that I may be able to worthily beseech Thy majesty, for myself, and for the same Thy people. Join our voices to those of Thy holy Angels, so that, just as they praise Thee unceasingly in eternal blessedness, we also by their intercession may merit to praise Thee without blame in this pilgrimage (on earth.)

A Roman Pilgrim at the Station Churches 2015 (Part 4)

$
0
0
The Second Sunday of Lent - Santa Maria in Domnica
Over the 16th century, this church became the titular church of four different Cardinals of the Medici family, the ruling family of Florence, including the future Popes Leo X (1513-21) and Clement VII (1523-34). To the former we owe the façade of the building, the work of the architect Andrea Sansovino.
The church is sometimes called in Italian as “Santa Maria della Navicella - Saint Mary of the Little Boat”, because of this fountain in front of it.
The extensive 16th-century modification of the interior left intact the early 9th century mosaic from the reign of Pope St Paschal I (818-22).


Monday of the Second Week of Lent - Saint Clement
The Station at San Clemente traditionally begins with a procession which starts in the lower church, the remains of which were excavated over the mid-to-late 19th century. Although very much altered over the course of the excavations, the lower church dates back to the early decades of the 4th century.






Tuesday of the Second Week of Lent - Saint Balbina
The church of Saint Balbina on the Aventine Hill is very close to the Norbertine College, and each year, members of the latter participate in the stational procession, while the college’s choir sings the liturgy. The second photograph shows members of the clergy exiting the main door of the college, followed by the procession though the rather narrow streets on the way to Santa Balbina.





Program for the Fourth "Summorum Pontificum" Conference in Rome.

$
0
0
The Italian organizations “Amicizia Sacerdotale Summorum Pontificum” and “Giovani e Tradizione”have announced the program of their Fourth Conference on the motu proprio Summorum Pontificum, to be held on June 13 and 14 this year, at the Pontifical University of St Thomas in Rome, (the Angelicum). The conference is titled “A Treasure for the Whole Church.” I was fortunate enough to be able to attend this conference in 2011, and it was an extraordinary event; this year’s conference looks to be just as interesting.

Saturday, June 13

Church of Ss. Dominic and Sixtus (at the Angelicum)
8:30 a.m. : Prelatitial Mass celebrated by His Eminence, Raymond Leo Card. Burke, Patron of the Sovereign Military Order of the Knights of Malta.

In the Aula Minor
9:15 a.m. : Reception and enrollment of the participants
9:45 a.m. : Presentation of the conference by Fr. Vincenzo M. Nuara O.P., Moderator of the Association “Amicizia Sacerdotale Summorum Pontificum” and honorary President of “Giovani e Tradizione.”

morning session

10:00 a.m. : Introduction by Cardinal Burke, “Tradition as the Foundation of Catholic Liturgy.”

10:30 a.m. : “Lex orandi-lex credendi in the Motu proprio Summorum Pontificum: A Theological Approach”, by Prof. Dom Cassian Folsom, O.S.B. of the Pontifical Atheneum of Saint Anselmo in Rome).

11.30 a.m. : “Justice, Religion, True Worship: the Perspectiv of Saint Thomas Aquinas”, Prof. Giovanni Turco (Università degli Studi of Udine)

12.10 p.m. : “Worship in Spirit and in Truth: Liturgy and Symbolism”, Don Marino Neri (Università degli Studi of Pavia)

1.00 p.m. : lunch break

afternoon session

3.30 p.m. : Introduction by His Eminence Gerhard Ludwig Card.  Müller, Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and President of the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei: “Tradition as the Basic Principle of Catholic Theology.”

4.00 p.m. : “Where Heaven is Opened: the Paleochristian Altare in Liturgy and Art”, Prof. Mons. Stefan Heid (Pontifical Institute for Christian Archeology in Rome).

5.00 p.m. : “The Dwelling of God Among Men : The Altar and It s Treasures”, Mons. Marco Agostini (Secreteriate of State of Vatican City).
5.30 p.m. : “The Treasure of the Altar: The Ineffable Majesty of Holy Communion” His Excellency Athanasius Schneider, Auxiliary Bishop of the diocese of Maria Santissima in Astana
6.10 p.m. : Conclusions

Church of Ss. Dominic and Sixtus
6:30 p.m. : Chant of the Te Deum, and Eucharistic Benediction, celebrated by His Eminence Walter Card. Brandmüller, President Emeritus of the Pontifical Committee for Historical Sciences

Sunday, June 14 (Third Sunday after Pentecost)
At the basilica of Saint Peter, Solemn Pontifical Mass, celebrated by His Eminence Velasio Card. De Paolis, President Emeritus of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See. The choir of Trinità dei Monti in Rome, directed by Mons. Ildebrando Mura, will sing the Mass for Four Voices of Domenico Scarlatti. (The Mass will be held in the morning, the precise time will be announced as soon as it has been established.)

Seat of the Conference : Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinus (Angelicum)
Largo Angelicum, 1 – 00184 ROMA – tel. +39.06.67021 – www.pust.it
To contact the organizers : www.giovanietradizione.org
email: info@giovanietradizione.org; amiciziasacerdotale@gmail.com

N.B. Enrollment for the conference can be done on-line at the website of the Association Giovani e Tradizione linked above. The enrollment fee is 20 euros; a light lunch is included.

A Few Words on the Roman Stational Processions

$
0
0
In response to a recent question from a reader, our pilgrim-on-the-scene Agnese has sent me some information about the processions held before the Lenten stational Masses at the Roman basilicas, a commenter has also chimed in on this post. The processions begin with the Sign of the Cross, a prayer, and the invitation for the procession to begin sung by the deacon. They are accompanied by the singing of the Litany of the Saints; the name of the titular Saint of the station church is added, (if not already in the Litany), and the invocation of that Saint is sung three times. At the end of the stational Mass, the hymn Vexilla Regis is sung, and the people are blessed with a relic of the Cross. The stational churches bring out at least a large number of the relics which they have, and display them for the veneration of the faithful. The latter initiative has been much encouraged by the Pontifical Academy for the Cult of the Martyrs, and it must be noted that the Vicariate of Rome has in recent years really stepped up its promotion of the Lenten stational obnservance.

There is generally a fair amount of latitude to add things to these types of ceremonies, and Agnese also sent me two photos of pages of the booklet used when the station was at Santa Balbina on Tuesday. The first shows the addition of the Psalm Miserere to the Litany, and the second the Gregorian Ave Maria, and the beginning of an Italian hymn.


Help the FSSP Expand into Mexico

$
0
0
We have received the following information from Fr Daniel Heenan of the Fraternity of St Peter, concerning their plans to open a new house of formation in Guadalajara, Mexico.
I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for your prayers and support, and to let you know about our project to establish here in Guadalajara a new center for Apostolic Activities which we plan to develop into a House of Formation for the FSSP in Latin America. We invite you to click the links and watch these promotional videos where Fr. John Berg FSSP, Superior General, and Fr. Jonathan Romanoski FSSP, the pastor in Guadalajara, explain this important project.

I am constantly amazed at the strong Catholic faith and devotion here in Guadalajara and almost everywhere I travel across Latin America. At the same time I can see forces at work here to erode and disregard the traditions of the faith in the same ways it has been is occurring in North America and Europe. Nevertheless, I am encouraged by what I experience here every day and have great hope for the future.

In the more than six years that the Fraternity of St. Peter has been working in Guadalajara, we have seen our apostolate steadily grow. Thanks be to God, the work we have been doing has borne fruit not only in Guadalajara, but throughout Mexico and Latin America. Last year the FSSP opened its second Mexican apostolate in one of the largest cities in the world, Mexico City. We also regularly receive requests to celebrate Masses in various cities throughout Mexico and Latin American and a steady flow of vocational inquiries.

Just the other day, there were several new faces at Mass who, leaving the High Mass obviously overjoyed by what they had experienced, commented that they were so glad to have finally found a church where the faith is preached clearly and unambiguously. Others, after experiencing the Traditional Mass for the first time, have commented enthusiastically how wonderful it is to see our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament treated with such reverence and devotion.

It is also quite evident, even after being here just a short time, that although there is certainly a richness to how the faith is expressed here with so many devotions and beautiful traditions, there is an underlying lack of catechesis and strong understanding of the faith. There are many souls here eager to serve Christ, but they need formation.

By the grace of God we hope to be able to help with this is some small way.

We have the opportunity to purchase a new house which we want to turn into a Formation Center or Center for Apostolic Activities. The church we are in charge of in downtown Guadalajara, Our Lady of the Pillar, although historic and beautiful, lacks adequate space for classes, meetings, and social activities. Additionally, it is located in a part of town which, sadly, is not family-friendly, especially after dark. This new house provides us with ample room to increase the pastoral activity of our parish.

With fifteen bedrooms, offices, classrooms, a chapel, and a library, it will also give us the opportunity to offer retreats both for lay people and for those discerning a priestly vocation. We are eager to start a program of Catholic formation for lay people, and we plan to initiate a program for priests and seminarians to come during the summer to study Spanish and learn the Traditional Mass, all in the ambiance of traditional Latin American Catholic culture. Thus, this project promises to have an impact not only on the Church in Latin America, but in the United States as well.

The most important possibility that this new house will afford is the chance, in a few years’ time, to begin a first year house of formation for the Fraternity of Saint Peter in Mexico. We currently do not have a formation program in Spanish, so candidates from Latin America and Spain have to learn English, French, or German before being able to enter our seminary. With the growing interest we have seen from Latin America, we want to make sure that these possible vocations are not lost.

The investment we need for this project is relatively little considering the fruit we are confident it will bear, and we have already made great progress towards our goal among our own faithful.

We are now beginning the second phase of our mission and want you to be a part of it. We are making it possible for you, the devoted faithful in North America and Europe, to help us acquire and grow this new house of formation and Apostolic center in the heart of Guadalajara. We have secured a loan to purchase this property on the condition that we find a sufficient number of people to commit to a monthly donation. Please consider making this project a reality through your pledge.

Please visit our website to read more and view the videos our faithful have made to explain this project. Here you can also sign up to make a monthly pledge. A small monthly contribution can go a long way here. Click here to visit our Facebook page: Visit our YouTube channel to see more promotional videos: Donations are tax deductible and can be made either through PayPal or directly through the FSSP North American District website: (Select Mexico House of Formation from the drop down list) If you have further questions or would like more information, please don’t hesitate to contact us. Please help us spread the word by forwarding this information. May God reward your generosity.

In Corde Jesu,
Rev. Daniel Heenan FSSP

Parochial Vicar, San Pedro en Cadenas, Guadalajara, Jalisco

Dominican Rite Masses: Feast of St. Thomas Aquinas (Mar. 7), Salt Lake City UT and Oakland CA

$
0
0
A note to our readers that the Western Dominicans of the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, will celebrate the traditional feast of St Thomas Aquinas with a Dominican Rite Mass at 9:30 a.m. For more information click here.

And don't forget the Dominican Rite Solemn High Mass of St. Thomas Aquinas to be celebrated at St. Albert the Great Priory in Oakland CA. It was previously announced here.

Dom Alcuin Reid on the 50th Anniversary of Mass in the Vernacular

$
0
0
Once again, we are very grateful indeed to Dom Alcuin Reid for sharing his work with our readers. He writes here about the 50th anniversary of the first Mass celebrated by a Pope in the vernacular, and the “implementation” of Sacrosanctum Concilium, the Second Vatican Council’s Constitution on the Sacred liturgy.
March 7th, 1965—‘An extraordinary way of celebrating the Holy Mass’
“On March 7, 1965, Blessed Paul VI...celebrated the first Mass in Italian in history in the parish of Ognissanti (All Saints), Rome,” Vatican Information Services tells us. To mark 50 years since this event a Congress on Pastoral Liturgy has been held this week—speakers included Archbishop Piero Marini—and on the anniversary itself Pope Francis will celebrate the evening Mass in the same parish.

This anniversary, and the celebration of it, may seem a little anomalous—after all, the ‘new’ Mass came into force on the first Sunday of Advent in 1969. Why the celebrations now?

March 7th, 1965, was in fact the date on which the Instruction Inter Oecumenici“On the Proper Implementation of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy,” dated September 26, 1964, came into force. It was the first significant implementation of the liturgical reform. Hence Paul VI’s words at the beginning of his homily at Oggnisanti: “Today we inaugurate the new form of liturgy in all the parishes and churches of the world.”

Inter Oecumenici is well worth reading, particularly articles 11-19 (on liturgical formation) which precede any discussion of ritual changes. As in Sacrosanctum Concilium itself, sound and thorough liturgical formation at every level is regarded as an essential prerequisite for full, conscious and actual participation in the Sacred Liturgy.

The Instruction certainly effects changes though, simplifying ritual salutations, omitting psalm 42 from the beginning of Mass, introducing the prayer of the faithful, abolishing the subdeacon holding the paten, removing the last Gospel, saying that the main altar in a church should be constructed so that Mass “may” be celebrated facing the people, etc. The Ordo Missae published in January 1965 incorporated the changes made by Inter Oecumenici and added more. This is not the occasion to evaluate them, though it is worth noting that no less than Klaus Gamber judged the 1965 Ordo Missae (there was no 1965 Missale Romanum) to be the last form of the traditional Roman rite, appropriately reformed according to the provisions of the Council.

Inter Oecumenici also extended the place which may be granted to the vernacular language in the celebration of the liturgy. The competent territorial ecclesiastical authority, with the approval of the Holy See, was to decide how extensive this was to be. At the beginning of 1965 the preface and Roman canon (there were no other “Eucharistic prayers”) remained in Latin—though the Instruction notes that “it pertains solely to the Apostolic See to concede the vernacular in other parts of the Mass which are chanted or recited by the celebrant alone” (§ 58).

Let us return to the church of Ognissanti on the Via Appia Nuova in Rome’s Appio-Latino quarter, and “the first Mass in Italian in history” celebrated by Paul VI (well, given the canon &c., mostly in Italian). To arrive at an extensive use of the vernacular merely 459 days after the promulgation of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy on December 4, 1963, was quite an accomplishment—a direct fruit of the requests submitted by the Italian bishops to the Consilium and of the prompt and positive responses it increasingly gave to such requests.

The leadership of the Consilium and, seemingly, most Italian bishops, regarded the maximum use of the vernacular as being of great importance, if not as indispensable, in achieving a participatory and truly pastoral liturgy. “The fundamental norm from today and in the future is to pray understanding every phrase and word, to complete [them] with our personal feelings, and to make them one with the soul of the community that sings with us in unison,” Paul VI said in his homily.

Indeed, reading the memoirs of the Consilium’s Secretary, Annibale Bugnini CM, it becomes clear that the question of arriving at a liturgy that was completely in the vernacular was a burning quest which left the clearly nuanced provisions of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy far behind (“In Masses which are celebrated with the people, a suitable place may be allotted to their mother tongue” § 54; see also § 36). Bugnini himself had to admit that “it cannot be denied that the principle, approved by the Council, of using the vernaculars was given a broad interpretation.” Indeed, he held—somewhat arrogantly—that since its introduction “millions and hundreds of millions of the faithful...have at last achieved worship in spirit and truth” and “can at last pray to God in their own languages and not in meaningless sounds.” Paul VI himself asserted that March 7th, 1965, was “a great event, that shall be remembered as the beginning of a flourishing spiritual life, as a new effort to participate in the great dialogue between God and man.”

There is no denying that some use of the vernacular can aid liturgical participation, particularly with readings from Sacred Scripture, or that the Council desired this. Even Archbishop Lefebvre, who signed the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, could see a real pastoral advantage to its use in the Mass of Catechumens (what would later be known as the “Liturgy of the Word”). However, to require that the Sacred Liturgy be celebrated in the vernacular is an error condemned by a general council of the Church and by Pius VI’s bull of 1794 Auctorem Fidei (Denzinger 1759, 2666).

Indeed, as the Christian East has never forgotten, the Sacred Liturgy is not in the first place a comprehension exercise. It is the ritual worship of Almighty God employing multivalent symbols which thus become privileged sacramentals—sacred language included. Certainly, penetrating the meaning of the rites and prayers is fundamental, but this is facilitated by the work of liturgical formation (or more effectively, by liturgical habituation over a lifetime)—no short cuts, such as the quick rendering of the liturgy in the vernacular, are viable here. Even the liturgical proclamation of the texts of Sacred Scripture is not simply a didactic exercise, although certainly, the vernacular can be of immense help with participation, as indeed in some other parts of the liturgy (such as the prayers of the faithful). The Second Vatican Council knew this. But the wholesale removal of Latin from the liturgy and liturgical celebrations completely in the vernacular are contrary to what the Second Vatican Council desired and approved.

Not eighteen months after promulgating Sacrosanctum Concilium, Paul VI regarded this day as marking “the beginning of a flourishing spiritual life.” It would appear in retrospect that he was, by and large, wrong. Neither the introduction of the vernacular or the ritual reforms that this date saw (or their successors) has led to a “flourishing” ecclesial life in the decades since. There are many causes for the decline we have suffered, and there are generations of Catholics who love and hold the vernacular liturgy dear, but it remains a fact that the modern liturgy has not filled our churches. Indeed, apart from the committed and well-formed laity (who are few), there are numerous mute, extraneous spectators in our churches today who are just as disengaged from the vernacular liturgy as their forebears were from the liturgy when it was in Latin.

The issue is not fundamentally one of language—which is why, perhaps, the celebration of 50 years since the first Italian Mass in history is a little disingenuous. Rather, the issue is the nature of Catholic liturgy, and of the formation in it which is necessary to enable widespread fruitful participation in and connection with the action of Christ in the liturgy.

Fifty years ago, instead of prompting and processing requests for more and more vernacular, and pushing the pope for their extension, the Consilium might have spent its time and energy more profitably had it turned its attention to the a priori condition for fruitful participation in the Sacred Liturgy, namely liturgical formation. Today we may do well to turn ourselves to the same work—while not forgetting the enormous question of the effect not only of the vernacularization of the liturgy, but also of its radical ritual de- and re-construction at the Consilium’s hands.

The opening words of Blessed Paul VI’s homily at Ognissanti declared: “Today’s new way of prayer, of celebrating the Holy Mass, is extraordinary.” Indeed it was. Perhaps, though, it is now time to look to recover the manner of Catholic liturgical prayer and life that is truly ordinary in respect of our tradition and that is in accordance with the wishes of the Council.

Dom Alcuin Reid is a monk of the Monastère Saint-Benoît in the Diocese of Fréjus-Toulon, France. A well known lecturer and writer on liturgical topics, Dom Alcuin coordinates the Sacra Liturgia initiatives which began with the Sacra Liturgia 2013 conference in Rome. His latest work, the T&T Clark Companion to Liturgy: The Western Catholic Tradition, is due for publication by Bloomsbury towards the end of 2015.

Two Different Treasure Chests

$
0
0
The response to my earlier article, “How the Traditional Latin Mass Fosters More Active Participation than the Ordinary Form,” was overwhelming, in a way that took me by surprise. It was viewed by a record number of readers and received dozens of comments to the effect of: “This article has exactly expressed what I’ve experienced.” The central claim, namely, that the TLM offers greater opportunity for active participation, interiorly and externally, was clearly one that resonated with many Catholics.

At root, I was striving to articulate something I’ve seen after 25 years of frequently attending both forms and doing my best to participate in each—namely, that I can yield myself more completely to, and derive more fruit from, the traditional Mass. I think the reasons for this are many and varied, but it isn’t merely a set of subjective reasons. There is more in the liturgy itself to connect to and be enriched by. As Cardinal Burke put it rather bluntly in an interview with Una Voce Austria this past summer: “[T]he difference between the two forms is very stark. The rich articulation of the Extraordinary Form, all of which is always pointing to the theocentric nature of the liturgy, is practically diminished to the lowest possible degree in the Ordinary Form.”

The tiara of Pope Pius IX
One might compare it to two different treasure chests. If both forms of the Mass, containing the Blessed Sacrament within their confines, can be compared to the ark of the covenant, nevertheless the OF is like a sleeker, more modern, smaller treasure chest that is less ornamented and offers a less jewel-encrusted setting for the Sacrament, while the OF is a capacious old treasure chest with the riches of many centuries deposited in it. At first acquaintance, some may even find it oppressively and randomly adorned, but this reaction tends to go away as one understands better the meaning and beauty of the contents. I am reminded of the difference between the old papal tiaras and the space-age tiara gifted to Paul VI. The contrast between them is quite like the contrast between the forms.

To this extent, therefore, the classical Roman Rite, as such, offers more to actively participate in—and the main reason it doesn’t strike people this way is that they haven’t yet been able to access those riches. This could be the result of many factors: simple lack of opportunity; poor catechesis; misconceptions of the “preconciliar Mass”; a lack of general intellectual culture; being turned off by cranky traditionalists. Nor can we exclude indifference to the unknown, hesitation before the unfamiliar, and laziness before the demanding. Conversely, when people who are striving to be devout Catholics and to plumb the depths of the Church’s liturgy discover in the usus antiquior a liberating, exciting, even revelatory experience of worship, we couldn’t really say that this is very surprising; after all, this is the liturgy that nourished saints, theologians, and mystics for many centuries.

The tiara of Pope Paul VI
This being said, the ex opere operantis dimension enters in, of course: a faithful and prayerful Catholic who gives everything he’s got to the Mass can subjectively derive more fruits from a Novus Ordo Mass than a distracted person who’s attending a traditional Mass but daydreaming about baseball or politics at the office. A person’s holiness can make up for any number of external defects or deficiencies. We know about the saints who celebrated Mass in prison cells with a thimble of wine and a crust of bread. We also know about corrupt princes and prelates who celebrated Solemn High Masses with great majesty.

This correctly subjective consideration does not, however, cancel out the consideration of liturgical form as such and what it objectively offers to the participating subjects, nor does it entirely relativize the question of how the forms themselves, with their content, rubrics, and overall Gestalt, habituate the subjects—in a sense, how they are training the vines to grow. Thanks be to God that grace can so often surpass nature and culture, supplying for their absence; but thanks be to God as well for providing so many supports of nature and culture, smoothing the path to grace!

Through its inherent riches and through the attitudes of reverence and adoration it so strongly develops, the traditional liturgy makes available a superabundance of graces and disposes us to receive them more profoundly. In this sense, as good theologians have explained with customary carefulness, all Masses are not equal in every respect. It is not a matter of indifference which Mass we attend, how reverently it is celebrated, or what form it is; people can be better or worse off in regard to taking hold of the fruits of the Mass, and its impetratory power varies with the holiness of the clergy and, indeed, the holiness of the Church on earth at a given time.

Someone who is ignorant of a better way, liturgically speaking, can work out his salvation in fear and trembling, and so avoid serious sin. But that is a minimalist way of putting it. If the question is: Will this person's mind and heart be as deeply formed in the mysteries of Christ and the Church by an inferior liturgy as by a superior one, assuming equal attentiveness to both, there's no doubt that the answer is no. So there is good news and bad news. The good news is that salvation and some degree of holiness are still possible. The bad news is that poor liturgy means poor formation of the inner man, which clips the wings of the spirit and limits the height and breadth of the Church's mission.

Naturally, all such answers are said relatively. A priest stuck in a prison cell reciting the Our Father can reach far greater holiness than a person in a beautiful church with a beautiful liturgy, but we wouldn't want to say that, just for that reason, everyone should be thrown in jail and have Mass with stale bread crumbs and drops of dirty wine. Rather, the beautiful church and liturgy are there for a reason, to speak to our senses, our minds, our hearts—and you can be sure that the priest in jail, although submissive to God's holy will, would be grateful to be delivered from captivity and restored to a more fitting house of worship.

In an age of such great confusion as ours, characterized by an astonishing ignorance of tradition, a self-destructive contempt for the past, a modern theology of accommodationism at every level, and an unbounded hubris that dares to lay hands on what is most sacred and change it at whim, it can be extremely difficult to maintain one's interior peace and remain a peacemaker, with a charitable attitude at all times towards all men, especially those of the household of the Faith. We who dearly love the sacred liturgy, a most special gift of the Heart of Christ, will have to struggle with this challenge all our lives, but it is our way of participating in His Passion, and there is a Resurrection at the end of it—both in time, as our Lord mercifully restores His Church here and there, and in eternity, where the Church in her heavenly perfection is altogether holy, without spot or wrinkle or blemish.

Meanwhile, in this vale of tears, ignorance is not bliss; ignorance will prevent a lot of souls from seeking or achieving perfection (of any degree). Rather, we need to pray for wisdom to know what is best, that we may see everything else in its light, and for charity, that our knowledge—as well as our sufferings—may be infused with love, especially for those who, through no fault of their own, are skimming the surface of the Christian mystery rather than being immersed in it. Miserere nostri, Domine, quia peccavimus tibi.

The Feast of the Forty Martyrs

$
0
0
The Forty Martyrs were a group of soldiers from the Roman Twelfth Legion, who died for the Faith at Sebaste in Armenia in the year 320. This is seven years after the Edict of Milan and the Peace of the Church under Constantine, whose brother-in-law Licinius at that point ruled in the East, and after a period of tolerance, renewed the persecution of Christians. When the Forty had been called to renounce the Faith and refused, they were sentenced first to various tortures, and then condemned to die a particularly horrible death, stripped naked and left on the ice of a frozen lake. The governor who supervised this execution ordered that a hot bath be prepared at the edge of the lake, by which any one of them who would apostatize might save himself from freezing to death.

A 10-century ivory relief icon of the Forty Martyrs, made in Constantinople, now in the Bodemuseum in Berlin. (Image from wikipedia.)
The Breviary of St Pius V represents the martyrs praying as their sufferings began, “Forty we have entered into the stadium, let us receive forty crowns, o Lord, lest even one be lacking from this number. This number is held in honor. You adorned it with a fast of forty days; through it the divine Law entered into the world. Elijah, seeking God, obtained the vision of Him by a fast of forty days.” This is a very ancient motif, by which the fast of forty days observed in the Law (Moses) and the Prophets (Elijah) is associated with that observed in the Gospel in Christ. For this reason, on the first Sunday of Lent the Church reads the story of Christ’s fast, and on the second, the Gospel of the Transfiguration, at which the Moses and Elijah appear as witnesses to the divinity of Christ.

One of their number, however, did abandon the company and enter the hot bath; in some accounts it is said that he died immediately from the shock. In the meantime, one of their guards had a vision of Angels descending upon the martyrs, bearing thirty-nine crowns; he was inspired by this to become a Christian, take the place of the one who had left, and so fulfill the mystical number of forty. Seeing the martyrs’ constancy, those who were in charge of their execution decided to finish them off by breaking their legs, as was done to the thieves crucified alongside the Lord. Only one of them did not die from this, a young man named Melito, but he was mortally wounded and could not live. His own mother then carried him to the place where the rest of them were taken to be cremated, walking behind the wagon; during the journey he died in her arms, and was laid by her on the pyre among the bodies of his comrades.

Their ashes were scattered to prevent the veneration of their relics, but the Christians were able to recover some of them. St Basil the Great tells of the presence of the relics at Caesarea; his brother, St Gregory of Nyssa, says that their parents, Ss Basil the Elder and Emmelia, were buried in a church at a place called Annesis, which they themselves had built, and for which they had obtained some relics of the Forty. Portions of them were later taken to Constantinople and elsewhere, and devotion to them was brought to the West by St Gaudentius of Brescia, who received a part of the relics from St Basil’s nieces while passing through Caesarea on his way to Jerusalem.

The iconostasis of the Chapel of the Forty Martyrs in the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. (Photo from wikipedia by Deror Avi.)
Their feast is kept on March 9 in the Byzantine Rite, and was originally on the same day in the West. St Frances of Rome died on the feast in 1440; when she was canonized in 1608 (alongside St Charles Borromeo), she was assigned to that day, and the martyrs moved forward to the 10th. In the rubrical reform of 1961, ferias of Lent were given precedence over the majority of feasts, and the Forty were permanently reduced to a commemoration, since March 10th cannot occur outside Lent; notwithstanding the great veneration in which they are held in the East, and the antiquity of the feast, it was abolished from the calendar of Novus Ordo.

In the Byzantine tradition, the Eucharist is celebrated only on the Sundays and Saturdays of Lent, but not on the weekdays, with an exception made for the Annunciation. On the Wednesdays and Fridays of Lent, a special form of Vespers is held, called “the Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts”, at which Holy Communion is distributed from what was consecrated the previous Sunday. The Scriptural readings at these Vespers are taken from the Books of Genesis and Proverbs; however, if a very important feast should fall on one of those days, an Epistle and Gospel are added to the rite, sung as they would be at the Divine Liturgy, and the Forty Martyrs are counted among such feasts. In addition, the very strict Lenten fast is relaxed on March 9th, so that wine and oil may be consumed.

In the annals of Christian hagiography, there are many stories of people who were spontaneously converted to the Faith by seeing the constancy of martyrs in the midst of their torments; it is not rare for such persons to become martyrs themselves, even joining the suffering Christians of their own will right on the spot, as did the guard mentioned among the Forty. This phenomenon was realized again quite recently, in the person of one Matthew Ayariga, a Chadian who was seized in Libya by Islamic fanatics, along with a group of 20 Egyptian Copts. Although he was not a member of the Coptic Church, he refused to embrace Islam, even at the threat of being beheaded; seeing how the others prayed and called upon the Holy Name of Jesus as they died, he said of them, “Their God is my God,” and was slain in their company. As I recently mentioned, all twenty-one of them have been canonized as martyrs by the Coptic Pope Tawadros II.

An icon of the New Martyrs of Libya, written by Tony Rezk. Matthew Ayariga is represented in the middle of the group. 

Laetare Sunday Solemn Vespers (Extraordinary Form) in Virginia

$
0
0
Join the Institute of Catholic Culture for Laetare Sunday Solemn Vespers!

For their annual Laetare Sunday Vespers, they welcome newly ordained Rev. Daniel Heenan, FSSP and the choir Chorus Sine Nomine. Vespers will be held at Saint John the Apostle Catholic Church in Leesburg, Virginia at 7 pm. For more information, please visit their site, www.instituteofcatholicculture.org

Following Vespers in the Church, there will be a special reception in the Church hall and talk by Fr. Heenan on Cult, Culture and Conversion: How Catholicism Converted the World and How We Can Do It Again. All are welcome. No registration required. Free admission.




A Roman Pilgrim at the Station Churches 2015 (Part 5)

$
0
0
I apologize for the delay in posting these, but I thought it was important to give Dom Alcuin’s recent piece some extra time as our top story. We’ll get caught up with Agnese’s visits to the Station Churches by the end of this week. It is edifying to see how much more effort has generally been put into these celebrations in recent years, but the church of San Vitale (Friday of the Second Week of Lent) deserves special notice this year, as you can see by clicking the “Continue reading...” link ans scrolling down.

Wednesday of the Second Week of Lent - Saint Cecilia in Trastevere


The church is the home of a community of cloistered Benedictine nuns. 

The famous statue of Saint Cecilia by Stefano Maderno showing her body as it was seen when her tomb was opened in 1599.
Thursday of the Second Week of Lent - Santa Maria in Trastevere



The atrium of Santa Maria in Trastevere houses a large number of funerary inscriptions from a variety of Roman catacombs, brought there by one of the canons of the church, Marcantonio Boldetti (1663-1749). One of the most useful books on the churches of Rome, Le Chiese di Rome by Mariano Armellini, calls Boldetti “il pio saccheggatore - the pious plunderer” of the Roman cemeteries. Originally displayed within the church itself, and in the buildings attached to it, the stones were all removed to the portico during a major restoration of the entire complex done in the reign of Bl. Pius IX.
His Excellency Matteo Zuppi, the auxiliary bishop for the historical center of  Rome, carries a relic of the Cross in procession; Bishop Zuppi was formerlly the parish priest of Santa Maria in Trastevere.

Friday of the Second Week of Lent - San Vitale

Like more than one of the ancient churches of Rome, San Vitale is now well below the level of the street and the modern buildings that have risen around it.






Saturday of the Second Week of Lent - Saints Peter and Marcellinus

This church is dedicated to an exorcist and priest martyred in the persecution of Diocletian, and was originally built on a level much lower than that of the current mid-18th century building. Even within the last 250 years, however, so many new things have been built around it that it is now also below street level, although much less dramatically so than San Vitale.

The procession in the small courtyard before the church.

Event Notice: Feast of St Joseph in the Cathedral of Worcester, Mass.

$
0
0
On the Solemnity of St. Joseph, Thursday, March 19, a Pontifical Mass in the Ordinary Form will be celebrated in Latin, ad orientem, by the Most Rev. Robert McManus, Bishop of Worcester, Massachusetts. The Mass will be celebrated at the Cathedral of Saint Paul (located at 38 High St. in Worcester; click link for parking information) at 7:00 p.m, with music (mostly plainchant) by the men of the Cathedral Choir.


Viewing all 8572 articles
Browse latest View live


Latest Images