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Liturgical Notes on the Apparition of St Michael

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In addition to the universal feasts of the Mother of God, from the Immaculate Conception to the Assumption, the Church also keeps local feasts connected with the major centers of Marian devotion, such as Loreto in Italy, Walsingham in England, Guadalupe in Mexico etc. A similar custom holds in regard to the Archangel Michael, and in one sense, may be called a universal custom of the Western Church. His principal feast on September 29th originated with the dedication of a church built in his honor a few miles outside Rome off the via Salaria; this feast’s title remained “The Dedication of St Michael” for centuries after the church itself fell into ruins and was abandoned. The Ambrosian liturgy received the feast from Rome, and kept it with the same title, using several of the Mass chants, as well as the Epistle and Gospel, from the common Mass for the dedication of a church.

St Michael, by Fra Filippo Lippi
The Roman Breviary states in the lessons for May 8th that Pope Boniface II (530-32) built a church in honor of St Michael “in the great circus”; this statement seems to confuse the Circus Maximus with the smaller Circus Flaminius, which no longer exists, but was opposite the Tiber Island, in the area of the modern Jewish quarter. Next to its former location stands a Roman portico, built by the Emperor Augustus in honor of his sister Octavia, and within the portico, a small church dedicated to St Michael. This was the traditional location of Rome’s fish-market, well into the 19th century, in fact, and the church is therefore called “Sant’ Angelo in Pescheria – The Holy Angel in the Fish-Market.”

However, the Roman Martyrology refers the September feast to neither of these churches, but rather to the shrine of St Michael on Mount Gargano in the Puglia region of Italy, generally honored as the first church dedicated to him in the West. Today’s feast is called the “Apparition of St Michael’ from a story which takes places at the end of the 5th century, and is not reported consistently in ancient sources. The version given in the Breviary is that a bull belonging to a fellow named Garganus wandered into and got stuck in a cave on the side of the mountain. When someone launched an arrow at it, it flew back at him; the inhabitants of the area then asked their bishop what to do about this portent. After the bishop had declared three days of prayer and fasting, St Michael appeared to him and told him that the place was under his protection, and a church should be built there in his honor.

The apparition of St Michael on Mt Gargano, by Cesare Nebbia and students, from the Gallery of the Maps in the Vatican Museums, 1580-84.
The Martyrology describes this church as “vili quidem facta schemate, sed caelesti praestans virtute – made in a mean fashion, but outstanding in heavenly might.” In point of fact, much of the church is not “made” at all, at least not by human hands. Mt Gargano is a large massif, rather more like a mesa than a hill, very steep on the northern side where the sanctuary is, with the town of Monte Sant’Angelo located on top. One enters the shrine through a forecourt in the town, and after passing the doors, descends to the church by a considerable number of steps. The church itself is one half natural cave, and one half a set of rooms, including a choir and a relic chapel, built in front of the cave’s opening, and supported from beneath by enormous buttresses that reach quite far down the massif.

In northern Europe, Mont-Saint-Michel holds the same place that Monte Gargano holds in Italy, and the feast of St Michael’s apparition there is kept on October 16th. In the Sarum Breviary, the Matins lessons for this feast begin with an acknowledgement that the devotion to him on Gargano was older. “After the Frankish nation, marked by the grace of Christ, far and wide throughout the provinces on all sides had subdue the necks of the proud, the Archangel Michael, who is set in charge of Paradise, who had formerly shown that he wished to be venerated on Mount Gargano, by many signs showed that how he ought to be honored in the place which is called by the inhabitants ‘Tumba.’ ” (Mons Tumba is the Latin name for the Mont-Saint Michel.) The story continues that in the early 8th century, St Michael appeared three times to the local bishop, St Aubert, and ordered him to build not just a sanctuary, but a replica of the one on Gargano.


The Byzantine Rite keeps a feast on a similar line, related to a shrine in Phrygia, in west-central Asia Minor. At Chonai, near the city of Colossae, (the Christians of which received a letter from St Paul), St Michael appeared to the father of a mute girl, directing him to bring his daughter to a nearby spring, where she miraculously gained her speech. A church was then built over the spring, which attracted many Christians and led to many conversions. The local pagans thought to destroy the church by diverting two nearby rivers towards it, but St Michael came to defend his shrine personally; as he struck a rock nearby, a fissure opened in it which swallowed the rush of water. The feast of “the Miracle of St Michael the Archangel at Chonai” is kept on September 6th; the Chudov Monastery in Moscow, formerly an important center of learning, but now destroyed, was named for this miracle. There were several churches in Constantinople itself dedicated to St Michael; the dedication feast of one of these became the general commemoration “of All the Bodiless Powers”, celebrated on November 8th, just as the Roman feast on September 29th also became the feast of All Angels.

A 15th-century Russian icon of the Miracle of St Michael defending the church of the springs at Chonai.
The two hymns of St Michael were among the most drastically altered in the revision of Pope Urban VIII; here is a nice recording of the original text of the Vesper hymn, retained by the Benedictines and the religious orders with proper Uses, in alternating Gregorian chant and polyphony.


Tibi, Christe, splendor Patris, vita, virtus cordium, / in conspectu Angelorum votis, voce psallimus: / Alternantes concrepando melos damus vocibus. (To Thee, o Christ, splendor of the Father, life and strength of our hearts, in the sight of the angels, we sing with prayer and voice. Our choirs resounding give forth the song.)

Collaudamus venerantes omnes cæli milites, / Sed præcipue Primatem cælestis exercitus, / Michaelem, in virtute conterentem zabulum. (In veneration we praise all the soldiers of heaven, but especially the Leader of the heavenly army, Michael, as in might he destroys the devil.)

Quo custode procul pelle, Rex Christe piissime, / omne nefas inimici: Mundo corde et corpore, / Paradiso redde tuo nos sola clementia. (With him as our guardian, drive far away, Christ, most holy king, every wickedness of the enemy; with pure heart and body, bring us back to Paradise by Thy clemency alone.)

Gloriam Patri melódis personemus vocibus, / Gloriam Christo canamus, Gloriam Paraclito, / Qui trinus et unus Deus exstat ante sæcula. Amen. (Let us sound forth glory with melodious voices to the Father, let us sing glory to Christ, glory to the Paraclete, who is God one and three before the ages. Amen.)

Sacred Music Workshops in Latrobe, PA & Jasper, GA

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In addition to the CMAA's forthcoming Colloquium in Pittsburgh (register now!) and the Annual Gregorian Chant Conference in Florida later this month, here is some information about two other Sacred Music Workshops shortly to take place in the USA.

Saint Vincent Archabbey and College in Latrobe, PA will offer Gregorian Chant Workshops on June 15-19 and June 22-26. The first week is an Introduction to Historical Performance Practice of Gregorian Chant, and the second is an introduction to Gregorian Semiology and the new Science of Gregorian Modality. The Workshops, which have been offered every summer since 2011, are taught by Fr. Stephen Concordia, O.S.B., a member of the Saint Vincent College music faculty.

Fr. Stephen studied chant with Nino Albarosa and Alberto Turco at the Pontifical Institute of Sacred Music, Rome. For more information and to download the brochure, click here or contact Fr. Stephen here.

A Summer Sacred Music Workshop will be held on Saturday, August 15 at Our Lady of the Mountains Roman Catholic Church in Jasper, Georgia. The faculty will include Rev. David Carter, Rev. Charles Byrd, Andrew Leung and Bridget Scott. Details are on the poster below, and more information is available here.

May Decorations

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The church of St. Catharine of Alexandria, in Újkér, Hungary, decorated for Marian devotions in the month of May. (Sent in by a reader; click here to see more images at the church’s facebook page.)



The Institution of the Rogation Days

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Today is the first day of the penitential observance known as the Lesser Rogations, and also, by coincidence, the feast of St Mamertus, bishop of Vienne in France, who first instituted them around the year 470 A.D. His successor but one, St Avitus, has left us a sermon on the Rogations, in which he describes the reason why they were instituted, in the wake of a series of public calamities.

St Avitus is described by the Catholic Encyclopedia as “one of the last masters of the art of rhetoric as taught in the schools of Gaul in the fourth and fifth centuries.” His style is florid and prolix in a way that would make a literal translation in English almost unreadable, and much longer than his almost 1500 words in Latin. I have therefore chosen just a few extracts pertinent to the history of the observance. (The complete Latin text is in the Patrologia Latina, volume 59, columns 289C-294C.)

Two points call for special note. One is that St Avitus acknowledges that the Rogations were not originally celebrated by everyone on the same days, but later agreed upon the triduum before the Ascension. Rome itself at first only celebrated the Greater Rogations on April 25, but received the Lesser ones from Gaul in the Carolingian period, and as part of the Roman Rite they were then extended to the whole of the Western church. The one exception is the Ambrosian Rite, in which they are celebrated on the Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday after Ascension, and with greater austerity as far as the liturgy is concerned than in the Roman Rite. The vestments are black, the standard Milanese color for the ferias of Lent, and in the Divine Office, all of the proper characteristics of the Paschal season (e.g., antiphons consisting only of the word “Hallelujah”) are suspended.

The other concerns the term Major and Minor Litanies, by which these days are called in the Roman liturgical books. St Avitus nowhere uses the term “litanies”, but refers in one place to “psalms and prayers” and in another to the “offices of psalms,” indicating that these were the substance of the rite, and that the singing of the Litany of the Saints was a later addition. (See the notes attached to the notice of St Mamertus given on May 11 in the revised Butler’s Lives of the Saints, quoting Edmund Bishop’s Liturgica Historia.)

Two leaves of the Farnese Hours, showing a penitential procession and part of the Litany of the Saints. Painted by Giulio Clovio for Card. Alessandro Farnese, in 1546; now in the Morgan Library in New York City.  
The mighty river of the Rogation observance flows in its life-giving stream, not through Gaul alone, but nearly the whole world, and cleanses the land stained with vices with the rich flow of this satisfaction made every year. But for us (the church of Vienne) there is a more particular cause for both joy and the fulfillment of duty in this institution, since that which now flows forth from here to the good of all, came first from us … and certainly I know that many of us recall the reasons for the terrors of that time. For indeed, frequent fires, constant earthquakes, sounds in the night, portended and threatened, as it were, to make a pyre for the funeral of the whole world. (There follows a lengthy description of the calamities and portents, culminating with the destruction by fire of a large public building on the very night of the Easter vigil.)

My predecessor, and spiritual father in baptism, the bishop Mamertus, who many years ago was succeeded by my own father, as God saw fit, conceived of the whole idea of the Rogations in his holy spirit on that very night of the vigil of Easter which we have mentioned above, and together with God, silently determined all that which the world cries out today in Psalms and prayers. (St Mamertus then explains his plans to the leading citizens of Vienne.)

Therefore, as God inspired the hearts of the repentant, (his plan) is heard by all, confirmed and praised. These three days are chosen, which occur between Sunday and the feast of the holy Ascension, … (and) declares the prayer of the first procession at the basilica which was closer to the city’s walls. The procession goes with the fervor of a great multitude, and the greatest compunction, … But when the holy priest from the accomplishment of these lesser things the signs of greater things to come, on the following day, the custom which we about to do for the first time, tomorrow, if the Lord will it, was established. In the days thereafter, some of the churches of Gaul followed this worthy example; but it was not celebrated by them all on the same days as it was established among us. Nor was it very important that a period of three days be chosen, provided that the services of Psalms be completed with annual functions of penance. Nevertheless, as harmony among the bishops grew, together with love for the Rogation, their concern for a universal observance brought them to one time, that is, these present days.

How Can We Elevate the Quality of the “Prayer of the Faithful”?

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In “Imbuing the Ordinary Form with Extraordinary Form Spirituality,” I suggested that if the Universal Prayer (also known as Prayer of the Faithful or General Intercessions) is going to be retained, the very first thing that needs to be addressed is the literary, theological, and spiritual quality of the petitions.[1] It is surely no exaggeration to say that throughout the world the quality of these intercessions has tended to be deplorable, ranging from trite and saccharine sentiments to political propaganda, from progressivist daydreams to downright heretical propositions to which no one could assent without offending God.[2] Even when the content is doctrinally unobjectionable, all too often the literary style is dull, flaccid, rambling, or vague. Put together problematic content, poor writing, and the monotonous manner of delivery of most lectors, and you have on your hands, to put it mildly, a lame duck.

Two things, therefore, are urgently needed, and one more thing is strongly recommended.

First, we need strong, solid, Catholic content in the intercessions. They need to be unmistakably, unambiguously the prayers of Catholic Christians, praying in accordance with our tradition for serious intentions that are manifestly worth praying for. The General Instruction of the Roman Missal says that we should offer petitions “for holy Church, for those who govern with authority over us, for those weighed down by various needs, for all humanity, and for the salvation of the whole world” (GIRM 69), and then specifies a little more: “The series of intentions is usually to be: a) for the needs of the Church; b) for public authorities and the salvation of the whole world; c) for those burdened by any kind of difficulty; d) for the local community” (GIRM 70).

Second, we need well-written intercessions. Rising above the gabby or pedestrian, the literary style should have a dignity, forcefulness, and sacral register that match the style of the revised Roman Missal.[3] As an illustration of these first two desiderata, consider the following:

Celebrant: Let us raise our minds and voices to the Lord as we present our petitions.
  • Cantor: Let us pray for the holy Church of God: that the Lord may grant her peace, unity, and good governance.
  • Let us pray for missionaries and for persecuted Christians everywhere: that the trials they endure may increase their faith and their glory.
  • Let us pray for Jews, Moslems, and all who do not believe in Christ: that by God’s mercy they may renounce their errors and cling to Him.
  • Let us pray for our nation, our state, and our city: that good laws and good morals may prevail over sin and corruption.
  • Let us pray for the members of this community: that we may seek holiness at all times and in every place.
  • Let us pray for our friends and benefactors: that this Oblation offered for their needs may bring them salvation.
  • Let us bring to the Lord in silence the intentions of our hearts.
Celebrant: O God, from whom all good things come, grant to Your suppliants that, by Your inspiration, we may think that which is right, and, by Your Providence, accomplish the same. Through Christ, Our Lord.

Finally, it makes a tremendous amount of difference to sing the intercessions. This can be done by a cantor either recto tono (on a single note) or with a psalm tone. The response, when it comes, has a great deal more punch to it, because a simple sung response involves the people far more. Possible responses include “Lord, hear our prayer”; “Kyrie eleison”; “We beseech you, hear our prayer”; “Te rogamus, audi nos.” At our chaplaincy's Sunday Mass in the Ordinary Form, the cantor chants at the end of each petition: “We pray to the Lord:” and the congregation sings: “Lord, hear our prayer.” When sung, the intercessions are elevated to a new plane; the entire prayer is more solemn and meaningful, and one really listens to the individual petitions. Wyoming Catholic College has been doing this for eight years, and my impression is that it has worked very well. Visitors often favorably remark on the practice.

Here is a downloadable document with 22 sets of intercessions for Ordinary Time or Tempus per annum(including the example given above). The content is available for free and unrestricted use. If anyone would like to have this in Word format, just send me an email.

Here is another document with intercessions for Seasons and Feasts, namely, Christ the King, the Sundays of Advent, the Baptism of the Lord, the Sundays of Lent, Passion (Palm) Sunday, Holy Thursday, Easter Sunday, the Sundays of Easter, Ascension, Pentecost, Trinity, Exaltation of the Holy Cross, All Saints, All Souls, Dedication of the Lateran, Conversion of St. Paul, St. Joseph, Annunciation, and other Marian feasts.

Lastly, here is a document with suggested chant tones to use at the end of each petition.


NOTES

[1] As to the abstract question of whether the Universal Prayer is a feature that belongs in the Roman liturgy as a regular feature, I have some doubts (see here). Nevertheless, as always, we should have the attitude that if something is to be done, it ought to be done well.

[2] See the hilarious spoof at Eccles. Warning: British humour.

[3] I had high hopes for the book Prayers of the Faithful, edited by Msgr. Peter J. Elliott, but a closer examination showed that the collection was quite uneven, suffering from some of the flaws noted at the start of this post.

The U.S. Bishops’ Interventions on the Liturgy at Vatican II

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Since the promulgation of Sacrosanctum Concilium, much ink (both real and virtual) has been spilt over what Vatican II said about the liturgy. Considerably less, however, has been used in examining what was said about the liturgy at Vatican II. This is perhaps due to the Acta Synodalia - the record of all the spoken and written interventions made at the Council - being quite difficult to get access to. Unless one has access to an excellent library that has the Acta, or is prepared to shell out quite a bit of money to purchase all 26 volumes, the chances of being able to personally consult them is small. [1] As well as this, the Acta is, as one might expect, almost entirely in Latin, which is an obvious barrier for those who do not know the language well.
The Council Fathers - but what did they all say?
However, there are a few English-language resources out there for those who want to begin to find out what exactly was said at Vatican II by the Council Fathers. [2] One of those is a book edited by Mgr Vincent Yzermans, entitled American Participation in the Second Vatican Council (New York: Sheed & Ward, 1967). Yzermans was a priest of the Diocese of St Cloud who served as both a press advisor and the official representative of Bishop Peter Bartholome during the Council. American Participation is a compilation of the spoken and written interventions made by the American Bishops at Vatican II - or, at least, those he could get access to, for it seems that some bishops were not the best at record-keeping! [3]

Chapter 3 of American Participation will be of special interest to NLM readers, as it is that chapter that collects the interventions of the U.S. Bishops on Sacrosanctum Concilium. A PDF scan of this chapter can be downloaded here!

The interventions certainly make for interesting reading - on some things the U.S. Bishops are in broad agreement (e.g. the use of the vernacular for private recitation of the breviary), on other things there is considerable diversity of thought. Some extracts to whet your appetite:
There are, indeed, many among the clergy and laity who, imbued with historicism, rather than with true pastoral sense, look for great changes without sufficiently considering their usefulness to the faithful. (Francis Cardinal Spellman, 22 Oct 1962)
[T]he psychological and mental dispositions of our contemporary men should be the normative and determining element of any liturgical decree. The difference between modern man and sixteenth-century man is such that there is a strong indication of the need for liturgical reform. (Joseph Cardinal Ritter, 23 Oct 1962)
Recalling both the history of early centuries and contemporary necessities, where is the justification of the opinion which wants to change the venerable language of the sacred liturgy at will? An attack on Latin in the liturgy is indirectly but truly an attack upon the stability of sacred doctrines because the liturgy necessarily involves dogma. (James Cardinal McIntyre, 5 Nov 1962)
The faith of our people is not going to be enhanced by making its practice easy. Spiritual muscles, as well as physical ones, are developed by exercise, not by indulgence. Look about and see where the faith is strong, and you will find a deeply rooted conviction of the need for penance. Conversely, where luxury and ease are cultivated the faith is moribund. The kind of devil that besets our world today can be driven out only by prayers and fasting. (Bishop Russell McVinney, 12 Nov 1962)

NOTES

[1] However, with regard to the Acta, please keep an eye out over the next few weeks for news regarding an exciting project!

[2] For instance, Fr Joseph Komonchak has translated into English some of the preparatory schemas drafted before the Council: the draft De Ecclesiacan be found here, four other draft schemas can be found here, and a pretty good essay examining the suggestions (votum) submitted during 1959-1960 by the U.S. Bishops for what the Council should discuss can be found here. Also, though they do not contain any full texts of speeches, it is worth mentioning that the diaries of Yves Cardinal Congar, O.P. and Henri Cardinal de Lubac, S.J. have recently received English translations: Y. Congar, My Journal of the Council (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2012); H. de Lubac, Vatican Council Notebooks: Volume One (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2015). Diaries and journals are, however, very personal (and often very frank!), so, as interesting as they can be, if one is looking for a more objective account of Vatican II then they are perhaps not the best resources to begin with!

[3] Yzermans recounts that, in reply to his request for copies of spoken and written interventions, Bishops Alexander Zaleski (Lansing), Lambert Hoch (Sioux Falls), Ignatius Strecker (at that time of Springfield-Cape Girardeau) and Floyd Begin (Oakland) said that they had not kept any copies! Indeed, Bishop Begin said that the same was likely true of many other bishops (cf. American Participation, pp. 5-6).

Orchestral Mass for Ascension Thursday in Charlotte, North Carolina

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From the blog Liturgy Guy comes the following news about an orchestral Mass to be celebrated on Ascension Thursday in Charlotte, North Carolina.

On Ascension Thursday, May 14, the Carolina Catholic Chorale will conclude their 2014/2015 season singing the Missa Octo Vocum for double choir by Renaissance master Hans Leo Hassler (1564-1612) at St. Ann Catholic Church in Charlotte. (3635 Park Road; phone: 704-523-4641) The High Mass will be offered by St. Ann’s pastor, Father Timothy Reid, who has been offering both forms of the Roman Rite since 2008. Thursday’s liturgy will be the second orchestral Mass offered in the Diocese of Charlotte this month, and the fifth in the past 18 months. The Chorale will be accompanied at Thursday’s Mass by the CPCC Early Music Consort.

Mr. Thomas Savoy, music director of St. Thomas Aquinas Church in Charlotte and director of the Carolina Catholic Chorale, explained to the Catholic News Herald the importance of rediscovering the Church’s musical heritage: “The Roman Catholic Church lays claim to indisputably the finest tradition of sacred music in the Western world. It is an immense source of Catholic witness in our culture and is a gateway to evangelization. This living tradition of authentic Catholic music, particularly choral music, needs to be made manifest to our people, our talented musicians and passed on to our youth.”

In the nineteenth century Fyodor Dostoevsky declared that “beauty will save the world”. In the twenty-first century the Diocese of Charlotte is bringing beauty back to the faithful in part through orchestral masses offered in the Extraordinary Form. Returning these classical pieces to their original settings is helping to foster a cultural and liturgical renaissance in Charlotte. Pray that other dioceses may demonstrate the wisdom and initiative to follow suit.

The Ascension of the Lord 2015

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The Ascension of Christ, by Andrea Mantegna, 1460-64  
Truly it was a great and unspeakable cause for rejoicing, when in the sight of the holy multitude, the nature of the human race ascended above the dignity of all heavenly creatures to surpass the ranks of the Angels, and be lifted up beyond the heights of the Archangels, and have no limit to its advancement in any heights, until it was received at seat of the Eternal Father, and share a throne with the glory of Him, to whose nature it was united in the Son. Therefore, because the ascension of Christ is our advancement, and the hope of the bodily is called to that place where the glory of head has preceded, let us also rejoice, dearly beloved, with worthy joys, give glad thanks. For today, we are confirmed not only in the possession of Paradise, but in Christ, we have also penetrated the heights of heaven. Through the ineffable grace of Christ, we have gained greater things than those which we had lost through the envy of the devil. For those whom the poisonous enemy cast down from the happiness of our first home, the Son of God, having united them in body to Himself, has placed at the right hand of the Father, with Whom He liveth and reigneth, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, world without end. Amen. (Pope St Leo the Great, First Sermon on the Ascension - from the Breviary of St Pius V.)

Dominican Rite Solemn Mass for Year of Consecrated Life, May 16, 2015

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The Dominican Nuns of Menlo Park, California, have asked me to announce:
 
Dominican Life in the 21st Century:
Solemn High Mass According to the Dominican Rite 
and Reflections on Dominican Life Today

Corpus Christi Monastery
In honor of the Year for Consecrated Life, the Dominican nuns of Corpus Christi Monastery, the friars of the Western Dominican Province, and the Corpus Christi chapter of Dominican Laity joyfully invites you to Dominican Life in the 21st Century, at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday, May 16, 2015, at Corpus Christi Monastery, 215 Oak Grove Avenue, Menlo Park, California.

The morning will begin with a Solemn High Mass according to the Dominican Rite; the celebrant will be Fr. Ambrose Sigman, O.P. Following Mass, the Dominican friars, nuns, and laity will present three short talks on Dominican life. A light reception will follow.

Founded by St. Dominic 800 years ago, the Order of Friars Preachers was commissioned to contemplate God and share with others the fruit of that contemplation, preaching the Gospel for the salvation of souls. Today, the sons and daughters of St. Dominic continue to embrace and live out that charism as religious friars and nuns, sisters and laity. 

For more information, please contact Sr. Joseph Marie, O.P. at DominicanNuns@nunsmenlo.org or (650) 322-1801

Una Voce Tallahassee - New Regular TLM

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This announcement comes from a Floridian reader:
With the encouragement of Bishop Gregory Parkes of Pensacola-Tallahassee, an additional Mass utilizing the Missale Romanum – editio typica 1962 (often referred to at the “Tridentine” Latin Mass) will be celebrated at St. Louis Church, located at 3640 Fred George Road, Tallahassee, FL 32303, on Wednesdays at 6:00 PM beginning on the 27th of May 2015, Pentecost Wednesday. For additional information, please visit "Una Voce Tallahassee" on Facebook.

Pictures from Ascension Mass in Charlotte, North Carolina

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Our thanks to Mr John Cosmas for sharing with us his photographs of this Mass celebrated for the feast of the Ascension at St Ann’s Church in Charlotte, North Carolina. The very large complete photoset can be viewed by clicking here. The Mass was accompanied by the Carolina Catholic Chorale singing the Missa Octo Vocum for double choir by Hans Leo Hassler (1564-1612). The celebrant, Fr Jason Christian, the deacon, Fr Jason Barone, and subdeacon, Fr Patrick Winslow, are all diocesan priests of Chralotte; the homily was delivered by Fr Timothy Reid, the pastor of St Ann’s. Our congratulations to all of those who participated in this ceremony, clergy, servers, choir and musicians, for their efforts to preserve the Church’s musical patrimony, and pass it on to those even younger than themselves; hope for the future!






 













Becoming a Better Confessor - A Conference for Priests Offered by the Thomistic Institute

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From July 7-9, the Thomistic Institute (an apostolate of the Dominicans’ Eastern province) will be holding its fourth annual Conference for Priests at Baltimore’s historic Basilica of the Assumption. The conference is titled “Becoming a Better Confessor: Using the Virtues and Vices in the Confessional”; Mass, Lauds and Vespers will be celebrated each day, and there will be opportunities for private Masses celebrated by priest attendees. Further information is available at the conference website, www.thomisticinstitute.org/priest, and in the flyer below.


St Vitus’ Cathedral in Prague

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For the feast of St John Nepomucene, which I wrote about last year, here are some photographs of the cathedral of St Vitus in Prague, in which he is buried.

The chapel of St Sigismund, one of the Patron Saints of the city of Prague, designed by František Kanka in 1720

An altarpiece depicting the Visitation at the very back of the church. Prague was one of the very first places to celebrate the feast of the Visitation, at the behest of Archbishop Jan Jenstein in the 1390s.  
In many medieval cathedrals, the noble families who had paid for the building of various parts of a church would have their donation commemorated by the addition of their crest to some part of it.
The tomb of St John in the right side of the ambulatory.
The balcony of the royal oratory, where the King of Bohemia would stay while attend services.
The high altar





The principal Patrons of Prague, depicted in mosaic in the outside of the church, over the main door on the south side of the cathedral. Prague used to keep a special votive office of its patron Saints, in which the following prayer was said: “Be merciful, we ask Thee, o Lord, to us Thy servants, through the glorious merits of Thy martyrs and our Patrons Vitus and Wenceslaus, Adalbert, Sigismund, Procopius, Benedict with his brothers, and Ludmilla; that by their holy intercession, we may always be protected from all adversities.”

A gargoyle made especially creepy by the weathering and blackening of the stone work.

“Singing through the Liturgical Year” VII: Marian hymns and polyphony

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The Church’s hymns are a priceless source of catechesis and spiritual edification. If you live in or near New York City, you may want to take part in “Singing through the Liturgical Year,” a series to learn about sacred music and to sing (even if you don’t think you have a good singing voice). Father Peter Stravinskas, Ph.D., S.T.D., guides participants through the various liturgical seasons by presenting some of the most popular hymns and polyphony, in Latin and English, analyzing their theological content and seeking to apply those insights to a life in Christ attuned to the Church’s feasts and fasts. Each session culminates in singing the selected hymns.

The seventh session of this series concerns Marian hymns and polyphony. It will take place this Thursday, May 21st, at 7:00 pm, at the Basilica of St. Patrick’s Old Cathedral, Parish House, 263 Mulberry Street, Manhattan. This is a free event.
‟Qui cantat bene, bis orat” (He who sings well, prays twice) — St Augustine

Prophets of Truth in a Decadent Age

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We are so accustomed to hearing praise heaped upon the liturgical reform that we can too quickly forget the many clear-sighted men and women — and not just Ratzinger, even if he came to be the most famous — who spoke out against the Church’s marginalization and destruction of her own heritage at the very moment it was happening. What follows is but a beginning, a sampling; readers should feel free to add their favorite quotations in the comments below.

Monsignor Celada wrote in Lo Specchio of July 29, 1969:
I regret having voted in favor of the Council constitution in whose name (but in what a manner!) this heretical pseudo-reform has been carried out, a triumph of arrogance and ignorance. If it were possible, I would take back my vote, and attest before a magistrate that my assent had been obtained through trickery.[1]
Archbishop Dwyer (1908-1976)
Perhaps my favorite prophet from the Church’s hierarchy is Archbishop R. J. Dwyer, who very early on spoke with a Jeremiah-like fierceness. For example, in the newspaper Catholic Twin Circle, he wrote on July 9, 1971:
The great mistake of the Council Fathers was to allow the implementation of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy to fall into the hands of men who were either unscrupulous or incompetent. This is the so-called “Liturgical Establishment,” a Sacred Cow which acts more like a White Elephant as it tramples the shards of a shattered liturgy with ponderous abandon.
Again, in the issue of October 26, 1973:
Who dreamed on that day [when we voted for Sacrosanctum Concilium] that within a few years, far less than a decade, the Latin past of the Church would be all but expunged . . . ? The thought would have horrified us, but it seemed so far beyond the realm of the possible as to be ridiculous.
Council Father Ignatius Doggett, an Australian-born Friar Minor and bishop emeritus of Aitape, New Guinea, opined in 1996 that the conciliar debate on the liturgy was
horrible, if we judge the debate on the liturgy as we have it today. Very few bishops would be proud to say they had a hand in it. Communion in the hand was never mentioned in the debate, neither was the word table (mensa) to take the place of altar, the place of sacrifice… In my opinion the debate on the liturgy has been hijacked. The Council was to reform, not to change completely.[2]
Bishop Paschang (1895-1999)
Bishop John L. Paschang, the veteran emeritus of Grand Island, Nebraska, observed:
In my opinion the innovations were a mistake. We should have retained the substance of the former Mass. “By their fruits you shall know them.” Church attendance has declined. Few people … go to the sacrament of Reconciliation. People are losing their faith. Almost 50 percent of the faithful no longer believe in the Real Presence, etc. etc.[3]
The Divine Word Missionary and emeritus of the Indian diocese of Indore, Bishop Frans Simons, noted, in a similar vein:
Progressives expected a great deal for the effect and attractiveness of the Church from the use of the vernacular and the simplification and what they considered the adaptation of the liturgy. Nothing of the kind has happened. Since the introduction of these features, within 30 years, church attendance dropped to 10-20% of what it was before in several western countries.[4]
John Senior (1923-1999)
Some of the sharpest observations outside the hierarchy came from John Senior, the great teacher and founder of the Integrated Humanities Program at Kansas University, who saw the 1970s without rose-colored glasses and criticized, without sentimentality, the ecclesiastical anti-culture: “Anyone can see the Church is steering straight into the looming ice of unbelief.”[5]
Once embarked safe and sound on the boat of the Church, I was desolated to see it go straight towards the shipwreck from which I had just escaped. A worldly Church and a world without the Church were on the edges of the abyss.
There is little comfort in the visible Church now. The liturgy, set upon by thieves, is lying in the ditch; contemplatives are mouthing political slogans in the streets; nuns have lost their habits along with their virtues, virgins their virginity, confessors their consciences, theologians their minds.
A well instructed man can shut his eyes and ears at a Novus Ordo mass and teach himself from memory that this action is the selfsame sacrifice at Calvary offered under the unbloody appearances of bread and wine, but it is not possible for ordinary people and especially children who have no memory of such things to keep the faith in the face of an assault on the senses, emotions and intelligence.
Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966)
And, of course, there are the famous letters of Evelyn Waugh and John Cardinal Heenan, collected by Dom Alcuin Reid under the title A Bitter Trial, and well worth reading for their mordant commentary on the unraveling of the liturgy during the 1960s, a time when it still retained some kind of organic connection with the past. Waugh was spared the trial of seeing the new Missal—a shock that might have killed him if he had still been alive.

I have often said that the countless Catholics who either fell away from the faith due to the liturgical reform or who drifted into schism are the “unremembered dead,” the nameless casualties of a triumphal march of progress that did not care about its victims, who were deemed (if we may borrow Benedict XVI’s words in another context) a necessary if unfortunate sacrifice to the Moloch of the Future.[6] These people deserve our sympathetic remembrance and prayers, and our hard work today to reverse something of the damage that traumatized and alienated them. In particular, we should be assiduous in collecting and publishing whatever prophetic judgments and critical recollections survive from that conciliar generation, so that the whitewashing official propaganda can be challenged every step of the way.

Fittingly, let us give the final word to Jeremiah:
     And they healed the breach of the daughter of my people disgracefully, saying: Peace, peace: and there was no peace.
     They were confounded, because they committed abomination: yea, rather they were not confounded with confusion, and they knew not how to blush: wherefore they shall fall among them that fall: in the time of their visitation they shall fall down, saith the Lord.
     Thus saith the Lord: Stand ye on the ways, and see and ask for the old paths which is the good way, and walk ye in it: and you shall find refreshment for your souls. And they said: we will not walk.
     And I appointed watchmen over you, saying: Hearken ye to the sound of the trumpet. And they said: We will not hearken.
     Therefore hear, ye nations, and know, O congregation, what great things I will do to them.
     Hear, O earth: Behold I will bring evils upon this people, the fruits of their own thoughts: because they have not heard my words, and they have cast away my law. (Jer 6:14-19)

NOTES
[1] I am grateful to Hannah Graves for this and the two subsequent quotations.
[2] From Alcuin Reid, “The Fathers of Vatican II and the Revised Mass: Results of a Survey,” Antiphon 10 (2006): 170–90, at 175. 
[3] Ibid., 183. 
[4] Ibid., 185. 
[5] This and the following quotations drawn from Dom Francis Bethel, O.S.B., “A Dark Night: John Senior and the Society of Pius X,” available here.
[6] In the original context, Pope Benedict XVI was writing about Marxism's demand for social revolution: "What we have here, though, is really an inhuman philosophy. People of the present are sacrificed to the moloch of the future—a future whose effective realization is at best doubtful. One does not make the world more human by refusing to act humanely here and now" (Deus Caritas Est, 31b).

Ember Saturday in DC

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The Ember Saturday in the Octave of Pentecost will be marked by a Solemn High Mass in the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite at the church of Holy Comforter-Saint Cyprian in Washington, D.C. The parish, which is under the title of the Holy Spirit, will host the Mass on Saturday 30 May 2015 at 9.00 a.m. The music will be taken from the Gregorian Propers and Ordinary. More details are available here.


Pentecost TLM at St. Paul's, Cambridge

Card. George’s Galero Suspended from Rafters of Chicago Cathedral

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Click here to see a brief report from WGN in Chicago, which shows a galero belonging to the late Francis Cardinal George being lifted to the rafters of the Cathedral of the Holy Name in Chicago. The galero was received as a gift, but not used by His Eminence. It is an old custom, which has fortunately not entirely disappeared, that at the month-mind Mass for a deceased cardinal, his galero be suspended from the roof of the cathedral; there are a few in the cathedral of Boston, for example. If anyone would like to share photos of galeros in their local cathedral, please send to me at my email address noted next to my picture, with the name and location of the church.

Cardinal Burke to Visit Oxford Next Week (May 26 and 27)

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His Eminence Raymond Cardinal Burke, Patron of the Order of Malta, will visit Oxford next week, on the 26th and 27th May. During his two day visit, His Eminence will:
- celebrate Solemn Mass in the Ordinary Form and preach at the Oxford Oratory for the patronal feast of St Philip, at 6 p.m. next Tuesday evening, May 26th.
- celebrate Low Mass in the Extraordinary Form at Ss Gregory and Augustine parish church at 8 a.m. on Wednesday morning, May 27th.
- attend Solemn Vespers in the Extraordinary Form for the Octave of Pentecost, and celebrate Benediction for the Order of Malta, with music provided by the Ordinariate’s Newman Consort, also at the Oxford Oratory, at 4 p.m. on Wednesday afternoon; and finally
- deliever a lecture on the intellectual legacy of the reign of Benedict XVI to the Oxford University Newman Society at 6 p.m. on Wednesday evening.

He will also be visiting some of the Order’s activities in Oxford with the poor and the marginalised, which are carried out under the auspices of the Companions of the Order of Malta, a group of students and academic staff from the University.

Marriage: God's Design for Life and Love

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From St Anthony Communications comes a new DVD entitled Marriage: God’s Design for Life and Love. Produced in association with The British Province of the Confraternity of Catholic Clergy, it includes interviews with Cardinal Burke, Bishop Mark Davies of Shrewsbury, Fr Marcus Holden and Fr Andrew Pinsent. As with other DVDs from St Anthony Communications, it is very beautifully produced and articulates Catholic teaching in the area of Marriage and Natural Law unambiguously and with great clarity, making this a valuable resource for parishes and schools alike.

Cardinal Burke:

“There is no question that we are living in very difficult and challenging times, but we can’t permit ourselves to be discouraged because we know that Christ is always at work in the lives of those who have entered marriage with sincerity.”


Bishop Mark Davies:

“Christ himself raised marriage to become a sacrament so that marriage, the living out of married life, becomes a means and a way to holiness for the couple and indeed for their children.

And the Church now has a responsibility to give the clarity of her teaching, her vision of life and love, of marriage and the family, not only in words, but also in the witness of our lives, for the sake of the future of civilization, for the sake of the future generations who are still to come.”

You can find more information at the Saint Anthony Communications website.

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