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In Defense of Bells: Their Use and History in the Roman Liturgy

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Whenever the subject of church bells and bell ringing arises, my mind first turns the Dorothy Sayers novel, The Nine Tailors, followed next by recollections of my own opportunity to play a few notes on the carillon at the University of Toronto nearly 15 years ago by virtue of a chance meeting with the university's carillonneur. It was an enthralling experience to know that those notes were solemnly ringing out over that university campus, heard by countless individuals and casual passers-by. Indeed, anyone who has heard the pealing of the bells or the somber tolling of the bells for the deceased will know of the great power bells can have.

At any rate, back in 2010 I had the pleasure to meet Dr. Steven Ball at a Latin Liturgy Association conference where we both gave presentations. My own presentation was on the nature and character of the new liturgical movement, while Dr. Ball presented on the subject of campagnology -- a subject he clearly has a great passion for.

Recently, Dr. Ball submitted the following paper to the NLM on the very same subject. The paper sets out to explain the origins of bells in the church and "to address fundamental misconceptions about the subject of bells and how they should be rung... to discuss the dangers of automation, to look at the current state of affairs and why the situation is not at all optimal either for the bells themselves or the traditions associated with them ..."

In Defense of Bells: Their Use and History in the Roman Liturgy

Laetare in Madrid

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Before we move beyond this week I wanted to share one final Laetare Sunday set of photos, but not so much because they were from Laetare Sunday as I found the church itself interesting.

The Mass was celebrated by Don Raúl Olazábal, ICRSS in the parish of Santa Cruz in Madrid. In attendance, in addition to the more than 300 faithful estimated to be there, was the Vicar General and the parish priest -- along with other clergy.





Source: Accion Liturgica

Ordinariate News: Former Anglican Bishop Ordained to Catholic Diaconate

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Robert Mercer ordained for Ordinariate

Former Anglican bishop, Robert Mercer, has been ordained to the diaconate by Bishop Alan Hopes, Auxiliary of Westminster, for the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, at Allen Hall seminary in London.

Mercer, who was received into the full communion of the Catholic Church on 7 January 2012, was the fourth Bishop of Matabeleland in the Province of Central Africa, before serving as a bishop of the Anglican Catholic Church of Canada - part of the Traditional Anglican Communion.

Monsignor Keith Newton, Ordinary of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, presented Robert Mercer for ordination, whilst other members of the Ordinariate, together with staff and seminarians from Allen Hall, were present for the celebration.

During his homily, Bishop Hopes said, “Robert, your life has been one of profound commitment and witness. Your formation and ministry within the Anglican tradition have provided you with a solid spiritual bedrock on which your life has been built. [...] You have been a bold witness to Christ and to the truths of Catholic Christianity - often at great cost to yourself".

"Coming into communion with the Catholic Church through the Ordinariate, you bring with you some of the spiritual riches that are to be found in the Anglican church. You take on a new mission in your ministry of bridge building – that of building bridges between the Catholic Church and the ecclesial communities of the Anglican tradition".

Mgr Newton, speaking after the ordination, said, "It is a great joy to be here today to celebrate Robert's ordination. We hope and pray that it will be an encouragement to members of the Traditional Anglican Communion - an assurance of the respect and warmth of welcome, which the Ordinariate offers to them and to all Anglicans who are faithful to the vision of Christian Unity".

The Reverend Robert Mercer will be ordained to the Sacred Priesthood on 26 March in Portsmouth Cathedral.

A Shared Patrimony: Please Share and Spread

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I am not entirely certainly why, let me be clear about that, but I feel compelled at this moment to republish this banner again and encourage you to spread it, publish it on your own sites, on Facebook and other social media sites, etc.


The Mass Portrayed in Raphael's Crucifixion

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This article about the 'Mond' crucifixion, which is in the National Gallery in London, is another by Dr Caroline Farey of the Maryvale Institute. She and I worked together to design the Institute's degree level diploma (6US credits): Art, Inspiration and Beauty in a Catholic Perspective. A distance learning course requiring one residential weekend. This can be taken either by application to the Institute in Birmingham, England, or in the US through their centre based at the Diocese of Kansas City, Kansas, (email for details). In addition to these courses by the Institute, Thomas More College of Liberal Arts in New Hampshire has a summer programme run by myself. This programme includes an icon painting class and weekend retreats for artists, details here.
* * *

Time and eternity, death and life, heaven and earth are represented here as contrasts or paradoxes and yet Raphael also presents them as in harmony.

Contrasts. Look now for as many contrasting elements as you can. Perhaps the most obvious is that of the sun and the moon both appearing together.

Look for life and death contrasts. Do you notice that the most animated parts of the picture are the ribbons and dresses of the flying, dancing angels. These, the most alive are positioned closest to the dead figure of Christ. It is as though whatever is touched by the blood of Christ is given abundant life.

Look for time and eternity contrasts. Can you see that the people of the earth seem caught in a seemingly eternal stillness while the eternal beings, the angels, seem to be part of that moment in real time at the actual crucifixion catching Christ’s outpouring blood for every future Mass.

Look at the background contrasts of colour and content. The dark cross rises out of the dark, bare earth, passing barren but golden hills behind, passing on and up through water, always symbolic of Baptism, past a great city and on up into the skies where there is the sun and the moon are attending the great cosmic event of the death of their Creator.

How does the painter hold the picture together and illustrate the harmony achieved by Christ through such an ignoble death? The heavy dark cross is the strong uniting feature. This is so theologically and so it is particularly appropriately pictorially as well. Christ’s death on the cross is the great act of love which purifies the created world in order to unite heaven and earth. It is this same act of unity that takes place at every Mass. In the painting it stretches from the top to the bottom of the picture.

The colour red has particularly strong significance. Every figure has a touch of red, every figure in the picture is pictorially touched and redeemed by the blood of Christ.

Other colours also link the elements of the picture. What are the colours in the top half of the picture that are repeated in the bottom half?The blue of the sky is picked up in St Jerome’s clothes; the green of one of the angels is also in St John’s garments; the gold of the second angel is in the sun and the hills and lights up the clo ak of St Mary Magdalene who is radiating light reflected from the sun but also the Son whose love changed her life; the colour of the flesh of all the figures binds them to the body of Christ whose flesh dominates the centre of the picture.

The painting is an altarpiece. It is designed for the Mass.

In a painting, people’s looks are often messages. In this painting the direction of each person’s gaze speaks a language of engagement for the sake of the congregation at Mass inviting them to join the scene at the cross.Let us begin with Jesus. He has his eyes closed so he is not looking at anything on this earth. His concentration we know is on his Father in Heaven. Now look at some of the others.What is the angel in green looking at? The angel in green turns our attention to Jesus’ blood.

Who is the angel in gold looking at? The angel in gold is looking at St John the gospel writer who is looking straight at us.

The two kneeling figures are St Jerome and St. Mary Magdalene. Who are they looking at? St Jerome and Mary Magdalene turn our attention to Jesus’ body on the cross.

The two standing figures are Our Lady and St John. Who are they looking at? When someone looks out at you from a painting he or she is trying to draw or invite you into the scene. Our Lady and St John are painted in a way that suggests that they are quietly hoping that we too will kneel or stand, and beg forgiveness like St. Jerome or adore and give thanks like St Mary Magdalene.

Almost everything in this painting is about the Mass: we gather together at Mass around the sacrifice of Christ on the cross; Mass brings us salvation through the cross; we kneel and worship at Mass like Mary Magdalene kneeling at the foot of the cross;we pray at Mass in different ways, such as asking forgiveness like St Jerome, adoring or thanking God, like Our Lady; we receive the blood of Christ in a chalice at Mass like the cups carried by the angels and, of course, angels are present at Mass.

* * *


I would add this one additional reference to the Mass in the comspositional design of the painting. If you trace a line through the four heads of the observers below to the outer feet of each angel and then to their heads, it traces the shape of a regular octagon. This is a visual reference to the 'eighth day' of creation - in which the birth, passion, death and resurrection of Our Lord ushers in the new age. My sense is that this is not intended by Raphael as a symbol to be read, so much as a design feature that he feels is appropriate to the subject and so enhance its beauty will naturally aid the communication of its message at an intuitive level. (DC)

Scholarly Liturgical Articles, Antiphon, 2010

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The Society for Catholic Liturgy recently published some of their 2010 articles from their journal, Antiphon, online and I am certain some of them will be of interest to NLM readers.

For example:

The Culture and Heritage of the Classical Roman Rite”, Abbot Michael Zielinski, OSB Oliv.

Renewal of the Liturgy in the Spirit of Tradition: Perspectives with a View Towards the Liturgical Development of the West”, Sven Conrad, F.S.S.P.

Foreword to Manfred Hauke’s Shed for Many, Archbishop Malcolm Ranjith

Shed for Many: An Accurate Rendering of the Pro Multis in the Formula of Consecration”, Manfred Hauke

Friendship with the Fairest of the Children of Men: Relating the Ars celebrandi to Actuosa participatio", Owen Vyner

Brackets and Footnotes: A Way toward Mutual Enrichment”, Paul A. McGavin

Looking Again at Looking Eastward: Ad orientem Worship and Liturgical Renewal”, Madeleine Grace, C.V.I.

See here for more articles from 2010.

5th Sunday of Lent, Simple English Propers

Passiontide


The ICRSS and the Shrine Church of Ss Peter & Paul and Philomena

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A reader sent in notice of the following photos of the opening of the Shrine Church of Ss Peter & Paul and Philomena in the UK by Bishop Mark Davies, bishop of Shrewsbury this past March 24th. The shrine has been entrusted to the care of the Institute of Christ the King.

The church, until now, has been closed since 2008 and becomes the first for the ICRSS in the U.K.

All of the photos are by (and copyright) Philip Chidell. A full photo set is also available. Here are a few liturgical highlights.











Passion Sunday - The Veil of St. Veronica and the Stational Liturgy at St. Peter's

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On Passion Sunday, the Lenten station is kept at the Basilica of St. Peter in the Vatican. Each year on this day, Vespers is celebrated with particular solemnity, and one of the most beloved rituals of Rome's liturgical year is done, the exposition to the faithful of the Veil of St. Veronica. The altar is decorated with relics in a special arrangement, as also on the Ember Saturday of Lent.
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Some Passiontide Photos

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With yesterday being Passion Sunday, we enter the time when it is traditional for crosses and images to be veiled. A couple of our readers sent in some photos of the veiling as manifest in their parishes.


Parish of St. Leonard of Port Maurice, Madison, Nebraska


Parrocchia della SS Annunciazione in Tavole, Italy

New Provost at the London Oratory

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Word spread today that a new provost was elected for the London Oratory: Fr. Julian Large. I was able to confirm the accuracy of these reports.

Fr. Julian succeeds Fr. Ignatius Harrison as provost of the London Oratory.

The Catholic Herald also published the following earlier today:

Former Telegraph columnist is elected provost of Brompton Oratory

By Ed West on Monday, 26 March 2012

Fr Julian Large has been elected provost of the Brompton Oratory.

The traditionalist priest replaces Fr Ignatius Harrison in the role, with Fr George Bowen elected vice-provost.

Elections at the Kensington church, which was built in the 1870s and run by the Oratory of Saint Philip Neri community, take place every three years and the results are announced on the Feast of the Annunciation.

Fr Julian, 43, is a former gossip columnist for the Daily Telegraph, and a convert from Anglicanism.

Raised in Merseyside, Fr Julian studied at Mansfield College, Oxford, where he ran the university architectural society.


Fr. Julian Large, cong.Orat. Provost of the London Oratory

Oremus

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I am sure by now you all know about this bit of news. I am sure most of you have read the letter.

May I encourage you to pray. Pray for good will and good faith to triumph everywhere. It seems to me that now is not the time for focusing on the division, but instead the time to fight for unity and brotherhood.

The regularization of the Society's situation would be good for everyone. That is my firm belief.

Let us not concern ourselves then in this moment with the debates of what was or what might have been in the past. Nor let us be discouraged by the naysayers or the polemicists. Instead, let us persist in our desire for unity and re-double our efforts toward this goal.

President of Filipino Catholic Bishops Conference Celebrates Solemn Pontifical Mass in EF

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The President of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines and Archbishop of Cebu, Jose S. Palma, celebrated a Solemn Pontifical Mass according to the usus antiquior this past March 26th for the Feast of the Annunciation.

As seems to be so often the case, the Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate lent their valuable assistance for the liturgy.

Here are a few photographs of the event which were sent into the NLM.

We begin with the vesting of the archbishop. (And on this point, a brief comment. I've been fortunate to have been in a number of different sacristies in various parts of Europe as this occurs, and I must say that these rites, their associated prayers, and the symbolism which goes with the particular vestural elements, not to mention the symbolism of it all as it relates to the office of the bishop, are extraordinarily moving and very theologically rich. Certainly these and its associated elements are something worthy of reclamation in our pursuit of 'mutual enrichment'.)

The arrival and vesting of the archbishop






The Mass








Congratulations to all who helped effect this event. May it be the beginning of many more like it.

Vicar General of Albenga-Imperia, Feast of the Annunciation in Tavole

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Continuing on with some quick coverage of the feast of the Annunciation, I wanted to share a few photos from the diocese of Albenga-Imperia in Italy. This particular Mass was celebrated in the parish church of Annunciazione di Maria Santissima in Tavole, and was celebrated by the Vicar General of the diocese, Monsignor Giorgio Brancaleoni.

One will note some pontifical elements here, such as the use of the Canon Missae on the altar, amongst some other elements. Further, one will no doubt note the use of what are evidently an antique set of blue vestments -- and a beautiful set it is indeed.

Invariably the question will arise, 'is this permitted?' given that this Mass in occurring in Italy and not in places like Spain where permissions for blue do exist. Whether there is a special indult for this particular location I know not, but from what I'm given to understand, the use of blue in parts of Italy for Marian feasts was a strong custom in some parts, whatever else the liturgical law formally was.

I only address the topic since it is otherwise bound to arise anyway.






Exposition and Procession



Ordinariate News: Former Anglican Bishop Ordained Catholic Priest

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Former Anglican bishop now Catholic priest

PORTSMOUTH UK - A sixth Anglican bishop has been ordained as a Catholic priest at a ceremony in Portsmouth today.

Fr Robert Mercer, who served as the Anglican bishop of Matabeleland and as a bishop within the Traditional Anglican Communion, was ordained to the Priesthood by the Right Reverend Alan Hopes in St John’s Cathedral in Portsmouth.

Fr Mercer will serve in the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, in England and Wales. This is the first structure, set up in 2011, following the provision of Pope Benedict XVI to allow Anglicans, including members of the Church of England and the Traditional Anglican Communion, to become Catholics whilst retaining much of own traditions and heritage.

Serving within the Isle of Wight & Portsmouth Ordinariate Group, Fr Mercer will minister especially to those worshipping at the historic Portsmouth church of St Agatha’s, Landport, who hope to be received into the full communion of the Catholic Church this Easter.

Monsignor Keith Newton, the Ordinary (leader) of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, commented on Fr Mercer’s ordination, saying, “Fr Robert’s witness to the truth of the Catholic faith, and his commitment to the unity of all Christians, has led to this very happy day when we can welcome him as a brother Priest in the Catholic Church. His ministry in Africa, in Canada and here in Portsmouth, has been exemplary, and we look forward to his renewed ministry now - bringing many rich gifts from the Anglican tradition into the Catholic Church”.

Fr Jonathan Redvers Harris, who bears overall responsibility for the Isle of Wight & Portsmouth Ordinariate Group, said “As the Ordinariate continues to grow in Portsmouth, it will be good to have Fr Robert’s expertise and great wealth of experience. I welcome him warmly as a colleague and a friend”.

The Cincinnati Oratorians

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The following article appeared yesterday in The Catholic Beat about the Oratorian community in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Their photos below the article.)

Oratorians Receive Habits

Early Friday evening, Archbishop Dennis Schnurr conferred the habits of the Oratory of St. Philip Neri to the thee members of the Community-in-Formation in Cincinnati. Two seminarians and a priest active in Over-the-Rhine, the future Oratorians mean to bring the distinctive Oratory spirituality to that historic Cincinnati neighborhood, where they will live and work.

“Our hope for the future is the proclamation of the Gospel to the culture, around Over-the-Rhine, and Cincinnati in general,” says transitional deacon and future Oratorian Jon-Paul Bevak, who will be ordained in May. “We hope to do this through a great devotion to the Sacred Liturgy, Education, and simply living the life of Christ through the Oratorian Spirit.”

Established in the 16th century by an Italian priest now known as the “third Apostle of Rome” (after St. Peter and St. Paul), the Oratory is halfway between a religious order and the life of a typical secular priest. Like monks, Oratorians take a vow of stability (to live in a certain area), which means they cannot leave for or be transferred to a different Oratory. In most matters, they are under the direction of their Ordinary rather than the local bishop. Like a monastery, an Oratory has a more structured day of work and communal prayer than a typical priest’s residence. But unlike monks, Oratorians can have a variety of apostolates, and can change them at will (under the guidance of the Ordinary). They often work in schools, hospitals, prisons, and other areas where priests are needed.

The spirituality of the Oratory is centered on voluntary, joyful service and bonds of friendship. Oratorians do not take vows of poverty, obedience, and chastity; but they offer these things freely in a spirit of love and charity rather than compulsion. Communal life and, especially, communal prayer foster this vocation to service and love.

Permission to form an Oratory comes directly from the Pope, and follows recognition from the Confederation of the Oratory in Rome, and the permission of the bishop. There are seven Oratories in the United States, and last March Archbishop Schnurr established the Oratory here. Fr. Lawrence Juarez, Parochial Vicar of Old St. Mary’s, will be the Superior. Seminarians Rev. Br. Jon-Paul Bevak and Br. Adrian Hilton make up the remaining members of the congregation. Until the Oratory is approved it will be called a “Community-in-Formation” and will live together for one or two years, according to Bevak, much like a novitiate. The men are currently renovating two houses on Clay Street to use as their “Pious House” residence.

Nearly all Cincinnati’s seminarians, as well as several seminary professors bolstered the large crowd of family, friends, and area residents at Friday’s ceremony. Dominican Fr. Paul Keller, Seminary Rector Fr. Benedict O’Cinnsealaigh, Msgr. Frank Lane, and others joined the future Oratorians and Archbishop Dennis Schnurr for the ceremony. The choir of Old St. Mary’s sang ancient hymns, the Litany of Loreto, and prayers in between short prayers by the Archbishop and exchanges with the Community-in-Formation.

“Most Reverend Fathe we ask that you receive us to wear the habit of our holy father, St. Philip, that we may begin community life with you among the clerics according to the constitutions,” the three men asked the Archbishop, in the words of the centuries-old ceremony.

“Freely and with affection of hear in the Lord do we receive you to take this step,” Archbishop Schnurr answered. After blessing the habits (black cassocks with white collars, fastened on one shoulder with five buttons) and sprinkling them with holy water, he presented them to each man in turn, saying, “Receive, dearest son, this blessed Habit, praying almighty Godd that you may wear it without stain, and may the Divine Mercy grantt o you all those virtues which befit the sons of our holy Father.”

Later in the ceremony Archbishop Schnurr blessed chalices and pattens for use in the Community, and blessed everyone assembled with a relic of St. Philip Neri that they were invited to come forward and venerate.

“The step represents for the three of us a deepening of the Spirituality of St. Philip within us,” Bevak says. “This is is taken in a visible way, and it helps to form an identity around us.”

See the Community-in-Formation’s just-launched website here. See a slideshow of Friday’s liturgy at our Facebook Page.

Portrait photo courtesy Donna Franer.



Improperia: Popule Meus for Good Friday

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Every year for Good Friday, authentic liturgical choirs face the great decision of whether to sing the Improperia according to its amazing chant version or to vary that tradition with the introduction of polyphony. It is not easy because the chant edition is impossibly beautiful. It seems a tragedy to ever let the opportunity pass and not sing it.

Here it is, and you will see that it doesn't sound like any of the chants throughout the year (though its melody is foreshadowed in this coming Sunday's offertory).



And another edition:



On the other hand, some of the most beautiful polyphony sets the same text. This setting is the most famous one by Victoria.



The Vatican last year used this polyphonic setting:



And here is a more contemporary setting by Polish composer Marian Sawa:



If you are drawn more to the English edition, the best version I've seen is by Fr. Samuel Weber, and it can be found among the chants of his new Gradual, which is being posted week by week in his wonderful archive of chant.

Of Bees, the Exsultet, a Paschal Candle (and Pius XII)

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Recently one of our priests sent in some photos with a brief note about a Paschal candle that he, himself, undertook to design for his parish. He commented to me that "in honor of the return of the bees to the Exsultet" he incorporated them into the design.

What he is referring to, of course, is the absence of the references to the bees in the former English translation of the Exsultet in the previous English edition of the OF Missal. They are back -- though they never left the Latin text itself of course. Here are the relevant parts of the newly revised and corrected English translation:

This is the night of which it is written:
The night shall be as bright as day, dazzling is the night for me,
and full of gladness.
The sanctifying power of this night dispels all wickedness,
washes faults away, restores innocence to the fallen, and joy to mourners,
drives out hatred, fosters concord, and brings down the mighty.
On this, your night of grace, O holy Father,
accept this candle, a solemn offering,
the work of bees and of your servants’ hands,
an evening sacrifice of praise, this gift from your most holy Church.

But now we know the praises of this pillar,
which glowing fire ignites for God’s honour,
a fire into many flames divided,
yet never dimmed by sharing of its light,
for it is fed by melting wax,
drawn out by mother bees to build a torch so precious.

These same references are, of course, to be found in the Exsultet within the usus antiquior.

At any rate, here is the design our parish priest has been working on:



* * *

With apologies to Urban VIII and the Barberini, some might be asking themselves what all the fuss is about? There are a few angles from which this question could be addressed, but instead, I thought it would be fitting to share this address of November 27th, 1948, made by Pius XII to beekeepers on the lessons of bees for mankind. (I will give credit where it is due; this address was brought to mind when someone referenced it online recently; as it meshed nicely with the purposes of this particular post and so I could not resist quoting it in full.)

Your presence in such large numbers, your desire to assemble before Us, beloved sons, is a real comfort: and so We express our heartfelt gratitude for your homage and your gifts, both particularly pleasing to Us. Beyond its material and technical importance, the work which you represent, by its nature and significance has a psychological, moral, social, and even religious interest of no small value. Have not bees been sung almost universally in the poetry, sacred no less than profane, of all times?

Impelled and guided by instinct, a visible trace and testimony of the unseen wisdom of the Creator, what lessons do not bees give to men, who are, or should be, guided by reason, the living reflection of the divine intellect!

Bees are models of social life and activity, in which each class has its duty to perform and performs it exactly—one is almost tempted to say conscientiously—without envy, without rivalry, in the order and position assigned to each, with care and love. Even the most inexperienced observer of bee culture admires the delicacy and perfection of this work. Unlike the butterfly which flits from flower to flower out of pure caprice; unlike the wasp and the hornet, brutal aggressors, who seem intent on doing only harm with no benefit for anyone, the bee pierces to the very depths of the flower's calix diligently, adroitly, and so delicately, that once its precious treasure has been gathered, it gently leaves the flowers without having injured in the least the light texture of their garments or caused a single one of their petals the loss of its immaculate freshness.

Then, loaded down with sweet-scented nectar, pollen, and propolis, without capricious gyrations, without lazy delays, swift as an arrow, with precise, unerring, certain flight, it returns to the hive, where valorous work goes on intensely to process the riches so carefully garnered, to produce the wax and the honey. . (Virgil, , 4, 169.)

Ah, if men could and would listen to the lesson of the bees: if each one knew how to do his daily duty with order and love at the post assigned to him by Providence; if everyone knew how to enjoy, love, and use in the intimate harmony of the domestic hearth the little treasures accumulated away from home during his working day: if men, with delicacy, and to speak humanly, with elegance, and also, to speak as a Christian, with charity in their dealings with their fellow men, would only profit from the truth and the beauty conceived in their minds, from the nobility and goodness carried about in the intimate depths of their hearts, without offending by indiscretion and stupidity, without soiling the purity of their thought and their love, if they only knew how to assimilate without jealousy and pride the riches acquired by contact with their brothers and to develop them in their turn by reflection and the work of their own minds and hearts; if, in a word, they learned to do by intelligence and wisdom what bees do by instinct—how much better the world would be!

Working like bees with order and peace, men would learn to enjoy and have others enjoy the fruit of their labors, the honey and the was, the sweetness and the light in this life here below.

Instead, how often, alas, they spoil the better and more beautiful things by their harshness, violence, and malice: how often they seek and find in every thing only imperfection and evil, and misinterpreting even the most honest intentions, turn goodness into bitterness!

Let them learn therefore to enter with respect, trust, and charity into the minds and hearts of their fellow men discreetly but deeply; then they like the bees will know how to discover in the humblest souls the perfume of nobility and of eminent virtue, sometimes unknown even to those who possess it. They will learn to discern in the depths of the most obtuse intelligence, of the most uneducated persons, in the depths even of the minds of their enemies, at least some trace of healthy judgment, some glimmer of truth and goodness.

As for you, beloved sons, who while bending over your beehives perform with all care the most varied and delicate work for your bees, let your spirits rise in mystic flight to experience the kindness of God, to taste the sweetness of His word and His law (Ps. 18:11; 118: 103), to contemplate the divine light symbolized by the burning flame of the candle, product of the mother bee, as the Church sings in her admirable liturgy of Holy Saturday: . (For it is nourished by the melting wax, which the mother bee produced for the substance of this precious light.)

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The Arms of the Barberini Pope, Urban VIII

Classical Tradition: Not What Some Might Imagine

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I don’t remember how I happened upon it while surfing the Web, but it was a pleasant diversion. It’s an essay, published in 1890, written by Dr J. Wickham Legg, a vice president of the St Paul’s Ecclesiological Society (as in St Paul’s, London).  Though the author and his intended audience were Anglicans, now long deceased, his commentary is not without relevance to Catholic liturgical renewal, past and present.

The variations in the ceremonies practiced in the celebration of the Eucharist make a division into two heads easy: missa solemnis and missa privata.  The missa solemnis is the public, or High Mass, and gives us the rule for the celebration of the Eucharist.  The priest is assisted by a deacon and sub-deacon.... The private, or Low Mass, on the other hand, must be regarded as the exception, and in this the priest is assisted by a server only.  It is the presence of the deacon and sub-deacon which makes the difference between High Mass and Private Mass, and not whether any part of the service be sung.  Now, it cannot be too often repeated that it is only High Mass which gives us the ancient, typical ceremonies of the celebration of the Eucharist, and from which we may learn the true idea of the Eucharistic rites.  Low Mass only gives us the rite in a maimed and imperfect, not to say corrupt and irregular way.  Private, or Low Mass, that is, a celebration of the Eucharist without deacon or sub-deacon, was as little known to the Church at large for the first 800 years, as it is to this day to the Eastern Church.  It seems to have come in when Latin ceased to be understood by the people, who betook themselves, therefore, to their private prayers.  Low Mass robbed the medieval church of the idea of common prayer, which it is the glory of our Prayer Book to have brought back.  The celebration of the Eucharist in private (I am only using the word still used by the Roman Missal) shows but small respect to the Christian mysteries.  It may be borne with in country parishes where there is no one in holy orders but the curate himself, but to see in a church with a large staff the altar served by some boy taken out of the street, who probably does not know his Catechism, and has not been confirmed, while men in holy orders are doing nothing in the stalls of the choir, or only come into church to distribute the Communion, shows that there is little or no zeal for the solemnity of the Eucharist.  It shows a contempt for the practices of antiquity, to which in all questions of ceremonial, as well as in faith and morals, the Church of England appeals....  Even the more learned Roman Catholic authorities dislike the boy server, and tell us that it is the deacon who is the proper minister of the altar.

—“On Some Ancient Liturgical Customs Now Falling Into Disuse,”  in Transactions of the St Paul’s Ecclesiological Society, vol. 2 (London, 1890), 123-24.

I would contest only one point (apart from Anglicanism’s claim to apostolicity and catholicity), based on my reading of Fortescue and Jungmann: the evolution and spread of Low Mass had less to do with Latin than with the fact that more monks were becoming priests and needed to say Mass daily—concelebration not being an option at the time.  Obviously the full complement of liturgical ministers could not be provided for each celebration, so the celebrant himself supplied the parts of the absent ministers, while the people’s parts were divided between the celebrant and server.  Low Mass grew out of those “private” Masses and in time became the most common form of celebration, even when the faithful were present.

The Liturgical Movement dating back to the early 20th-century had as its principal goal the recovery of a corporate sense of worship: the liturgy is the public prayer of the whole Church, hierarchically ordered.  This agenda, as one might expect, involved a renewed emphasis on Solemn Mass—indeed, Mass celebrated by a bishop, with all the orders of clergy and laity present and performing their proper liturgical roles—as the norm of eucharistic celebration.  In the liturgical reform initiated by the Second Vatican Council, elements from the solemn form of Mass, when the celebrant was not restricted to the altar, entered the new rite of Mass authorized by Pope Paul VI in 1969.  That, I am inclined to think, was a good thing—in fact, one among many good things that are easy to lose sight of when rightly denouncing revolution posing as reform.
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