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Triduum in Melbourne, Australia


Easter Vigil, Ad Orientem in Rhode Island

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At Fr. Jay Finelli's parish (Church of the Holy Ghost, Tiverton, Rhode Island) the Easter Vigil Mass was celebrated ad orientem.








You can see the rest of their photo gallery here.

Compendium of the 1961 Revision of the Pontificale Romanum - Part 3: The Blessing of Altar Cloths and Ornaments

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The blessing of the altar cloths, vessels and other ornaments for the altar of a church may be done either as part of the church’s dedication ceremony, or as part of the consecration of an altar when the latter is done separately. (It was in fact a common custom to consecrate only the principal altar of a church during its dedication, and the other altars later.) In either case, the blessing may also be done before the actual dedication or consecration, in which case, the blessed objects are simply put in their place towards the end of the dedication or consecration, while the chants noted below are sung. There are two versions of the main prayer of the blessing, one to be said when it is done as part of the dedication of a church, another to be said with the consecration of an altar alone. The bishop says “Adjutorium nostrum” and “Dominus vobiscum”, followed by this prayer:
Almighty and merciful God, who from the beginning created all things useful and necessary for man, and willed that temples made by the hand of man be dedicated to Thy holy name, and be called the places of Thy habitation, and Who through Thy servant Moses decreed that pontifical, priestly and levitical vestments and all other ornaments of divers kinds be made for the splendor and beauty of Thy tabernacle and altar; mercifully hear our prayer, and through our humble service, deign Thou to purify, bless +, sancti + fy and conse + crate all these ornaments of various kinds, prepared for the use of this Thy church, to Thy honor and glory; that they may be suitable for divine worship and the sacred mysteries, and serve these Thy worthy servants for the confection of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ, Thy Son our Lord, who with Thee etc.
If the blessing is given as part of the consecration of an altar, apart from the dedication of a church, the following version of the prayer is used instead:
Almighty and merciful God, Who from the beginning created all things useful and necessary for man, and Who for forty days [through Thy servant Moses] taught Thy servant Moses to make pontifical, priestly and Levitical vestments for priests and levites, and ornaments and linen cloths, and likewise appointed things which Mary (i.e. Miriam, the sister of Moses and Aaron) wove and made to be used in service to the tabernacle of the covenant; mercifully hear our prayer, and through our humble service, deign Thou to purify, bless +, sancti + fy and conse + crate all these ornaments and linen cloths for the use of Thy altar; that they may be suitable for divine worship and the sacred mysteries, and serve these Thy worthy servants for the confection of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ, Thy Son our Lord, who with Thee etc.
The words given above in brackets, “through Thy servant Moses”, are carried over into this version of the prayer from the other, even though they make no sense at all in the context. They are not removed in the 1961 revision, although a similar mistake in the blessing of the Gregorian water was corrected. At the words “bless, sanctify and consecrate”, the bishop makes the sign of the Cross with his hand over the altar cloths etc.; he then sprinkles all the blessed objects with holy water.

Whether the blessing be done as part of the dedication of a church or as part of the separate consecration of an altar, the ministers then spread over the altar the “chrismale”, a linen cloth the same size as the altar, and waxed on one side. The chrismale is placed with the wax side down, followed by the altar cloths and other decorations. As they begin, the bishop intones the first of the following antiphons, which is completed by the schola, who then continue with the second antiphon, a responsory, and the third antiphon with its psalm.
Ant. Surround ye, o Levites, * the altar of the Lord God, cloth it in white garments, and sing ye also a new hymn, saying ‘Alleluia’. V. God is wonderful in His Saints, and holy in all His works.Glory be. As it was. (The antiphon is not repeated.)

Ant.
Surround Sion, * and encompass her: tell ye in her towers. (psalm 47, 13)V. Great is the Lord, and exceedingly to be praised in the city of our God, in his holy mountain. (The antiphon is not repeated.)

Resp.
The Lord hath clothed thee in the tunic of rejoicing, and placed a crown upon thee, * and adorned thee with holy ornaments.
V. Thou shalt shine with splendid light, and all the ends of the earth with worship before thee. And He hath adorned thee with holy ornaments.
V. Nations shall come to thee from afar, and bearing gifts they shall worship the Lord; and shall esteem thy land as holy, and shall call upon Thy great name. And He hath adorned thee with holy ornaments.
V. Blessed shall they be that shall build thee up. But thou shalt rejoice in thy children, because they shall all be blessed, and shall be gathered together to the Lord. And He hath adorned thee with holy ornaments. (verses from Tobias 13, 13-17)

Ant.
In the shadow of Thy wings protect us, o Lord, and let us glory in Thy praise. (Psalm 62 Deus, Deus meus, from which this antiphon is taken, is said after it, with Gloria Patri at the end, but the antiphon is not repeated at the end.)
The dedication or consecration then resumes with a the triple incensation of the altar, noted at the end of part 2.14 in this series.
The blessing of altar cloths and ornaments, in an illustration from a 1595 edition of the Pontificale Romanum. (Permission to use this image has been very kindly given by the Pitts Theological Library, Candler School of Theology at Emory University.)

In the 1961 revision, the prayers are altered by the removal of the words “purify”, and “sanctify and consecrate”, and end with the short conclusion, rather than the long one. The altar is then decorated, while the bishop retires to the sacristy to vest for Mass; no mention is made in the rubrics of the chrismale. The choir sings an antiphon, Confirm, o God, and repeats it after every two or three verses of Psalm 95, although the antiphon itself is taken from psalm 67. (This antiphon from Matins of Pentecost is sung in the 1595 version while the bishop anoints the front of the altar.) As in the 1595 Pontifical, the blessing may also be done before the dedication of the church or consecration of the altar. All of the proper chants for the dressing of the altar noted here are suppressed.

Holy Week with the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham

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Guest post by a priest of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham

This year was the first time since the foundation of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham in January 2011, that the full Holy Week ceremonies have been celebrated by the Ordinary in a church dedicated to the life of the Personal Ordinariate.


In January 2013, the historic church of Our Lady of the Assumption and Saint Gregory, Warwick Street, was generously given to the care of the Personal Ordinariate by the Archbishop of Westminster, the Most Reverend Vincent Nichols. The church, which once served as the chapel of the Portuguese and then Bavarian embassies in London, was damaged in the anti-Catholic Gordon Riots of 1780, as well as being the venue for the marriage of Evelyn and Laura Waugh in 1937, and the site of a Marian shrine given special privileges by Pope Pius IX.


Blessed John Henry Newman, the patron of the Personal Ordinariate in the UK, visited the church, and mentions this in his Apologia pro vita sua. More significantly, writing to A. J. Hammer in 1845, Newman spoke about the authenticity and continuity of the Catholic Church compared to Anglicanism, saying “To my mind the overbearingly convincing proof is this - that were S. Athanasius or S. Ambrose in London now, they would go to worship, not at S. Paul’s Cathedral, but to Warwick Street...”. This point was alluded to by the Ordinary, the Right Reverend Monsignor Keith Newton, in his Chrism Mass homily in the church on Fig Monday.


Warwick Street remains a parish of the Archdiocese of Westminster, serving the faithful of the Archdiocese as well as being a church ‘dedicated to the life of the Personal Ordinariate’. This is important to remember, and was the principal reason for the use of the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite in these first days, rather than the distinctive ‘Anglican Use’. That said, a number of elements of the Anglican liturgical patrimony were employed, and it is hoped that this summary might show how and where these were used.


On Palm Sunday, as at each of the major liturgies of Holy Week, the Ordinary presided. The procession from Golden Square, where Cardinal Manning once lived, round to the west door of the church, was met by Orlando Gibbons’ Hosanna to the Son of David, performed by musicians hired specially for the week through the generosity of the Friends of the Ordinariate.


The Ordinary, assisted by a deacon and concelebrating priests, began the rite and then led the procession during the singing of the hymn All glory, laud, and honour, translated by the Anglican cleric John Mason Neale in 1854. During the entrance to the church and the incensation of the altar, the Introit was sung, using music of the Anglican Use Gradual. The Ordinary of the Mass was sung to the Missa Aeterna Christi Munera by Palestrina, a piece of undoubtable Catholic musical patrimony, but nonetheless well-known in the repertory of English Cathedrals, Anglican and Catholic.


The readings for the Mass (and indeed all ceremonies in the week) came from the Revised Standard Version, Catholic Second Edition, as the lectionary authorised for use in the Personal Ordinariates. As yet, no sung passion according to Saint Matthew is available and so this was read by the deacon and two priests. Following this, Fr Mark Elliot Smith gave the homily. Fr Elliot Smith was, at the end of the Mass, nominated as the administrator of the parish by Mgr Newton.


The Creed was sung in Latin to Credo I, and the offertory chant was sung from the Anglican Use Gradual, followed by the hymn My song is love unknown. Throughout the week, certain elements of the Mass were sung in Latin. These included the Creed (where needed) and the Lord’s Prayer and embolism. It is hoped that these signify, in a liturgical way, the universal nature of the Catholic Church, and the place of the Personal Ordinariates within it. Equally, throughout the week, the Roman Canon was the only Eucharistic Prayer used in the building.

During Holy Communion the hymn, Glory be to Jesus was sung, and the Mass was concluded with the singing of the Angelus, to a tune known well to many converts from Anglicanism.


On Monday of Holy Week, traditionally known as Fig Monday, almost 80 priests of the Personal Ordinariate attended the Chrism Mass at Warwick Street. Held on Monday because of distance (some came from the highlands of Scotland, others from south Cornwall), this was celebrated by the Apostolic Nuncio to the Court of Saint James, the Most Reverend Antonio Mennini. The liturgy was enriched by the Mass in G of Franz Schubert and Thomas Tallis’s setting of If ye love me. The well-known Watts & Co. of London generously loaned a white/gold High Mass set for this occasion. The vestments were in the so-called Borromean style, which at first might seem incongruous considering the occasion, until one recalls that S. Charles Borromeo defended the faith in his conversations with the Anglican high church luminary, Lancelot Andrewes. This is perhaps a small and somewhat niche point, but one that perhaps points to the mutual enrichment that restored full ecclesial communion allows.

During the Mass, Mgr Newton preached and received the renewal of priestly promises. Hymns during the Mass included Newman’s Praise to the Holiest to the tune Billing, complete with a fanfare and descant by the Director of Music of the Catholic Cathedral in Brentwood, as used at the beatification of Cardinal Newman in Cofton Park, Birmingham, during the visit of Pope Benedict XVI in 2010.


Each evening of Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, a simple said Mass was celebrated at the Lady Chapel altar in the church. This was preceded by an hour of adoration of the Blessed Sacrament and the opportunity for confessions with priests of the Personal Ordinariate. Each evening Mass was celebrated ad orientem, using the fine vestments in the parish sacristy and the Roman Canon. A brief address was given at each Mass and, on Tuesday evening, a former Anglican clergyman was received into the full communion of the Catholic Church. As an aside, it worth noting that at all celebrations from Palm Sunday onwards, Holy Communion was distributed to kneeling communicants using the beautiful communion rails - given to the parish by the Duke of Norfolk and designed by the architect of the sanctuary (and Westminster Cathedral), Bentley - and communion plates. Holy Communion was offered in both kinds when possible, using the Anglican method of the minister retaining the chalice (rather than the communicant taking it) as a way of ensuring reverence and dignity in the practice.


The evening Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Maundy Thursday was celebrated at 7.30pm and was concelebrated by priests of the Personal Ordinariate and a Geze Rite priest resident in the parish. The Mass for Four Voices of William Byrd was sung, together with the offertory motet Ubi Caritas by Maurice Durufle. The propers were sung from the Anglican Use Gradual (as noted before), and the hymn O thou, who at thy Eucharist didst pray was sung during Holy Communion. This hymn, written by the 19th century lyricist W. H. Turton, has a particular poignancy for those who have entered the Church through the provision of Personal Ordinariates, containing as it does these words:

For all thy Church, O Lord, we intercede;
make thou our sad divisions soon to cease;
draw us the nearer each to each, we plead,
by drawing all to thee, O Prince of Peace;
thus may we all one Bread, one Body be,
through this blest Sacrament of unity.

We pray thee too for wanderers from thy fold;
O bring them back, good Shepherd of the sheep,
back to the faith which saints believed of old,
back to the Church which still that faith doth keep;
soon may we all one Bread, one Body be,
through this blest Sacrament of unity.


Mgr Newton celebrated the Mandatum rite during the Mass, and during the transfer of the Most Blessed Sacrament to the place of repose, the Pange Lingua was sung to the English Hymnal setting Of the glorious body telling. The solemn watch was kept, mainly by young people from amongst the serving team assembled from the week, until midnight.


On Good Friday the solemn Celebration of the Lord’s Passion took place at 3.00pm. Due to illness, two priests acted as assistant clergy for the liturgy - between them assisting with the singing of the passion and the veneration of the cross, in place of a deacon. They were assisted in choir by a third priest.


The Respond was sung to plainchant from the Anglican Use Gradual, and the Gradual itself was sung to the exquisite setting of Christus factus est by Anton Bruckner. The Passion according to Saint John was sung, including the ancient lament tone for the final paragraphs. The Solemn Intercessions were sung, including the flectamus genua, by the celebrant and an assistant priest. During the Veneration of the Holy Cross by the faithful, the hymn Crux Fidelis was sung to a traditional English translation, making use of the chant of the Roman Liturgy. During Holy Communion the hymn O sacred head, sore wounded was sung to music by J. S. Bach. Stations of the Cross and the veneration of a relic of the True Cross were celebrated at 6.00pm.


On Holy Saturday evening the Sacred Triduum culminated in a moving and beautiful celebration of the Easter Vigil. To attend this rite, with the full set of readings, celebrated pontifically, is a genuinely profound encounter with the Lord. The liturgy began outside the church with the blessing of the new fire, the marking of the Paschal Candle, and the blessing of incense, before entering the church in complete darkness, lit only by the light of the Easter fire atop a beautiful, hand-decorated Paschal Candle.


After the solemn proclamation of the Praeconium, the readings were punctuated by the appropriate psalmody, sung to simple plainchant tones common to the Anglican and Catholic musical traditions. At the Gloria in Excelsis, an organ fanfare led the choir into the setting by Haydn (Missa S. Nicolai), which was followed by the Collect and Epistle of the Mass. After the singing of the Gospel, the homily was given.


This was followed by the blessing of the baptismal font, accompanied first by the Litany of the Saints, and followed by the singing of the Vidi Aquam to a setting from the English Missal tradition, found in the publications of the Plainsong and Medieval Music Society - a 19th century Anglican foundation that adopted much Sarum chant for use in the vernacular Anglican liturgy. The blessing of the water was sung to the chant in the Roman Missal.


After the proper chant, the offertory was accompanied by the singing of the hymn At the Lamb’s high feast. The Eucharistic Prayer followed - the Roman Canon - with the Communion Rite and the distribution of Holy Communion following the now established patterns outlined above. During Holy Communion the choir sang the motet Dum Transisset Sabbatum by the pre-Reformation English composer, John Taverner (1490-1545), who wrote extensively for the indigenous local liturgy, the Sarum and other Uses of the Roman Rite.


After the distribution of Holy Communion, the Prayer after Communion was sung, the Solemn Blessing was given, and the hymn Jesus Christ is risen today was sung as the altar party lined-up before singing, to the same tune, these words - known well to high church Anglicans as a metrical Regina Coeli:

Joy to thee, O Queen of Heaven, alleluia!
he whom thou wast meet to bear, alleluia!
as he promised, hath aris’n, alleluia! pour for us to God thy prayer, alleluia!

After the singing of the Versicle, Response, and Collect, the celebrant was led out during the voluntary. After Mass, members of the Personal Ordinariate, the parish, and a number of guests, enjoyed a celebratory glass of Prosecco in the small hall under the church.


On Easter Sunday, after the glories of the Triduum, a pontifical solemn Mass was sung by the Ordinary. The music included the Mass in D of Mozart, and the setting of the Te Deum Laudamus in B flat by Charles Villiers Stanford - an Irish Anglican whose name is synonymous with the excellent and bountiful Anglican musical repertory of the nineteenth century.


After the solemn proclamation of the Gospel, the Ordinary preached the sermon and, during the renewal of baptismal promises, the Vidi Aquam was again sung. The Mass then continued in the usual way, with the Te Deum being sung during the ablution and purification of the sacred vessels.


Again, at the end of Mass, it was Our Lady to which the faithful turned. This time, however, a short procession formed to visit the shrine - erected by the decree of Pope Pius IX - where the image was honoured with incense and the Regina Coeli sung. After this, again, drinks were served in the undercroft, which many visitors attended.


To begin this new chapter in the life of the Personal Ordinariate during this most holy season was not only a challenge, but a real privilege. During the week the altar was served by three current seminarians of the Personal Ordinariate, candidates for the diaconate, at least one potential vocation-discerner, as well as members of the diocesan parish who have maintained an excellent standard of celebration for a number of years. Musicians came to assist - both professionally, and professionals who wanted to be involved - and members of the parish and the Personal Ordinariate began to work together to produce a wonderful celebration of these central events of the Christian life. May these strong foundations see the Personal Ordinariate grow abundantly as we take seriously the call the evangelisation and mission, as a full and flourishing part of the Catholic Church in the United Kingdom.


To view more photographs, click here. Otherwise, please join us for the Solemn Mass on Sundays at 10.30am!


Photos Copyright Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham

Introducing a New Liturgical Resource: "Simple English Psalm Tones"

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NLM guest post by Jeffrey Ostrowski

The following video gives a brief description of a forthcoming publication called Simple English Psalm Tones. The book is approximately 400 pages long and is scheduled to be released on 11 April 2013. It contains extremely simple versions in English of the entire Graduale Romanum (Introit, Gradual, Alleluia, Offertory, Communion). The translation matches word-for-word the translation used in the Gregorian Missal (Solesmes, 1990), the Simple English Propers (CMAA, 2011), and the Vatican II Hymnal.


The author believes that restoration of the Propers in the Ordinary Form can only be achieved by absolute consistency of use. Many versions of the Propers are needed to facilitate this noble goal. Our new publication is presented as a type of "missing link" for Sundays or Holy days when no other version of the Propers can be sung (due to sickness of the music director, lack of adequate practice time, or any other reason).


It probably would be accurate to think of this book "the Ordinary Form Rossini Propers."

Update on Vespers at the Hospital in Manchester, NH

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Readers may remember my writing about a small group of us making the commitment to sing Vespers and Compline at the Veterans hospital in Manchester, NH. We have been singing there fortnightly now since September last year. One of the things that I stress to those students from Thomas More College who go with me is that all are benefiting from this even if no one is able to come. Sometimes it has been down to Fr Boucher, myself and Dr Tom Larson and just a couple of others with no one else from the hospital in attendance. Most patients are so ill and incapacitated that they cannot make it without help and sometimes for very good reasons that help just isn't there at that time in the evening. Undaunted we had kept the commitment going; and we always take care to sing well. The prayers on these occasions are often directed towards the souls of those who had died that day and for their families.

Slowly things have begun to develop. Gene, who heads the team of chaplains (and who is not Catholic) has been very supportive and has moved the times around slightly so that a regular prayer group that visits, does so when we sing Vespers. Because this is, for the most part, just singing the psalms and canticles from scripture, this is a genuinely ecumenical form of prayer. This dedicated group of visitors are then able to bring a small number, in wheelchairs, into the chapel and this has happened the last couple of times. Also, a nurse who had heard about what is happening has taken it upon herself to bring some patients to the Vespers.  She came for the first time a month ago.  Each time we hand out printed copy so that people could sing along with us.

We heard from Fr Boucher that she was so moved by the 4-part arrangements of the Our Father and the St Michael Prayer (by Paul Jernberg) that she brought these patients back. This time he asked if he could keep a copy of the music, and especially the St Michael Prayer (his name was Michael).

When we had finished the Office, we were asked if we could go down to the floor below and into the room of a man who was with his wife and close to dying, so about eight of us walked into his room and sang the Our Father and the St Michael Prayer. This is an honour for us to considered worthy of doing this at all, and if we needed convincing that what we were doing had value, then this experience alone has provided it.

There are a number of things that make this a good thing to do at different levels. I am convinced that what is contributing to the fact that it does seem to be connecting this is a harmony of substance and presentation. The substance is scripture; and in our presentation I think it is that we are singing the psalms in the vernacular and in such a way that just about anyone can join in with the singing of the unison parts at least. The four part harmonies  arranged by Paul for the gospel canticles, the St Michael Prayer and the Our Father (which he also composed) are easy to perform. This means that we don't need expert choristers in order to offer something that is accessible and beautiful which allows for moments of quiet meditation from the congregation. And as a reminder here are recordings of two of the four-part harmonisations, first the Our Father, and then the St Michael Prayer.



Article: "Can Theology and Liturgy be Divorced?"

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Over on the Corpus Christi Watershed blog, there is a blog post by Dr. Peter Kwasniewski where he asks the question, Can Theology and Liturgy be Divorced?. Here is an excerpt from his piece:

The fundamental truth to which all of these churchmen are drawing our attention is that we not only pray as we believe (in the sense that the content of our faith informs our public worship), but we also believe as, and what, we pray. And this is rather more frightening if we consider that significantly changing the music, the art forms and architecture, the liturgical texts and rituals and ceremonies, the ethos and atmosphere of worship, the complex amalgamation of word and sign and silence, cannot but have the effect, over time, of changing the very content of the faith—or at very least, changing our understanding of its parts and their relative balance in the whole of the revealed mystery.

Put simply, the liturgy is the embodiment and expression of our theology. If our Catholic theology is sound and profound, the liturgy will be sacred and utterly consistent with the Word of God—and in turn, our practice of the liturgy will confirm and enrich and elevate our theology, our prayerful understanding and surrender to God. If our theology is weak, fragmented, or compromised, the liturgical expression of it will be similarly weak in its power to evangelize, fragmented in its message, compromised in its power to create a culture of divine life and undermine the culture of death.

What we need above all in our liturgies is an image of eternity.

You can read the entire piece there.

Easter Vigil, Institut St. Philipp Neri, Berlin, Germany


The Sacred Liturgy and the Apostolate

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There has been a great deal of discussion in recent weeks about the matter of the sacred liturgy in relation to good works like the service of the poor and so on. I mention this because I was rather interested to be pointed to an article by Roland Millare on the HLI Truth and Charity Forum, The Forgotten Eucharist Vision of Virgil Michel.

Here are a few excerpts:

Father Paul Marx O.S.B., the founder of Human Life International, wrote his dissertation on the life and work of Virgil Michel O.S.B. (1888-1938), who was one of the leaders of the liturgical movement in the United States. Michel is famous in some circles for a syllogism that summarizes the focus of the papacies of the early 20th century:

"Pius X tells us that the liturgy is the indispensable source of the true Christian spirit; Pius XI says that the true Christian spirit is indispensable for social regeneration. Hence the conclusion: The liturgy is the indispensable basis of social regeneration."

For Michel and many of the leaders of the liturgical movement, the foundation for the renewal of Christian culture is the celebration of the liturgy. The liturgy helps individual members of the Church realize their call to be a part of Mystical Body of Christ.

According to Benedict XVI in Deus Caritas Est, the “Eucharist draws us into Jesus’ act of self-oblation. More than just statically receiving the incarnate Logos, we enter into the very dynamic of self-giving” (no. 13). Each communicant enters into a union with Christ and “all those [to] whom He gives Himself” (no. 14). The liturgy unites the love of God and love of neighbor, which forms the greatest commandment given unto us (cf. Matthew 22:38-40).

[...]

...social action or social justice need the liturgy in the same way that nature needs the gift of supernatural grace. Social justice divorced from the liturgy easily becomes ideology. Liturgy, which does not pass over into social action, can become narrowly focused on ritualism...

You can read the entire article here.

Details: Sofiyskiy Sobor, Kyiv

Ordinations at Cistercian Abbey of Heiligenkreuz, Austria

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The blog Sancrucensis, written by one of the monks of Heiligenkreuz Abbey, posts some news and photos on April 7th of ordinations in their abbey church.









A Thought for Vestment Makers

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I am not one who believes that baroque vestments or any other form of ornate vestment is contrary to the sobriety and relative simplicity of "Romanitas" but that caveat aside I also recognize that some would prefer something less ornate -- fair enough.

It seems to me that just as there has been a call in present times for liturgical artisans to rise up and create vestments in more ornate, historically influenced styles, likewise is there also a need -- and an opportunity -- here for gifted liturgical artisans to rise to the challenge at the other end of the spectrum and also produce options which are less ornate but still undeniably noble and beautiful.

For this purpose, I might recommend looking into some of the work from the early liturgical movement for inspiration, particularly within its monastic context (see below). Through a mixture of qualitative materials, good cuts, simple but striking designs and patterns, and perhaps a few well chosen and well placed bits of ornament, I think there could be some definite potential that could thereby also broaden the scope and reach of the new liturgical movement.





More from Wyoming Catholic College

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I know that many of you are rather interested in what is going on in the college/university scene liturgically, so I thought I would share the following photos taken yesterday, showing a Missa Cantata in the usus antiquior at Wyoming Catholic College.

The choir sang Palestrina's Missa Aeterna Christi Munera along with motets by Hassler and Victoria, while the schola chanted the propers of the Mass.

It is reported that nearly the whole student body of Wyoming Catholic College was in attendance.





Book Notice: "Sacred Stitches: Ecclesiastical Textiles in the Rothschild Collection"

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Sacred Stitches: Ecclesiastical Textiles in the Rothschild Collection

80 pages, paperback, 240 x 197 mm, 80 colour illus.
PRICE: £15.00


by Rachel Boak

"Sacred Stitches accompanies an exhibition that will assemble together for the first time fragments of opulent and unique ecclesiastical textiles drawn from the stored collections at Waddesdon Manor, the astonishing Renaissance-style château that is one of the rare survivors of the splendour of the ‘goût Rothschild’. Dating from c. 1400 to the late 1700s, the textiles were acquired by several members of the Rothschild family, the greatest collectors of the 19th century, who sought the highest quality of workmanship with a keen sense of historical importance..."

For more information: Paul Holberton Publishing

First EF Solemn Masses at Franciscan Friary in Griswold, Connecticut

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For the most part, barring anything particularly unique or noteworthy, we have concluded our coverage of Holy Week here as of last week -- as has always been our custom.

In that vein of noteworthy events, I was recently sent some photos from the Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate in Griswold, Connecticut (which friary, readers may recall, switched over to the usus antiquior as their primary liturgical form beginning this past Lent as was reported here in early February) which I think fits the bill.

The photos in question, taken during Holy Week, were, to quote, "the first Solemn Masses ever to be celebrated" at this friary and thus certainly mark an important milestone for that community.










Fr. Santos from Holy Name Church in Providence, Rhode Island and Fr. Murphy from St Anthony of Padua in New Bedford, Mass. assisted in this by lending the friars many of the vestments used for this purpose.

Theories of Why Liturgical Music Died

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The archives contain images of thousands of young Catholic school children in the 1920s learning chant. It is a beautiful thing to see. But what happened to these people and why weren’t they around to protect the liturgy against what happened after the Second Vatican Council? This question touches on the great mystery I’ve been thinking about for some 20 years and I’ve yet to come up with a satisfactory answer. Perhaps that’s because there isn’t one answer.

One thing that is clear: it is absolutely not the case that Gregorian chant was in full flourish before Vatican II and then suddenly disappeared after. Many contemporary accounts of music in the 1950s document that the modal liturgical experience was Low Mass with English and Latin hymnody. High Mass typically used Psalm tones propers accompanied by organ, while the ordinary of the Mass used popular settings that are long forgotten.

Many puzzle about why folk music took over in the 1960s. A more interesting question is how and why authentic Gregorian chant didn’t have much of a presence in the liturgy before the 1960s. How could this have happened? After all, the long-awaited Motu Proprio of Pius X came out in 1903. The new Graduals from Solesmes and the Vatican -- the culmination of a half century of research -- came out in 1907. The push throughout the first half of the 20th century was intense, from what I can tell. There were schools, classes, instruction manuals, and even clear mandates in place.

And yet by the 1950s, all evidence suggests that the chant was barely living. I’ve always been spooked by a book called Chants for Church published by the Gregorian Institute of America in 1954. There was nothing in particular wrong with the book as such. It was just that it was so minimalist. It had only popular chant hymns. I’ve always wondered if this book represented a last ditch effort.

Then of course the whole structure of Catholic music unraveled immediately following the Council. It’s a strange thing to read what the Council said about the first place of chant in the Mass and then to read the accounts of how secular folk music swept the liturgy in America from 1965 all the way through to the promulgation of the new ritual in 1969 and 1970. By the time the music of the St. Louis Jesuits came along, many saw it as a sacralizing influence and a welcome relief.

Among the theories I’ve toyed with for why all this happened or what was going on. I’ve considered the possibility that chant was actually still making progress in the 1950s but was still not ubiquitous; had that progress continued, we would have seen it really take hold. I’ve also wondered if World War II devastated American parish choirs by sending the men out to war and the women to work, and everyone else was just too focussed on the war on the home front to bother with difficult things like chant. That disruption was never repaired. Or perhaps real chant was just too hard and Catholics are lazy and like English.

Maybe all of those are factors. Regardless, the center couldn’t hold after the Council. The language was changed, the calendar was scheduled to be changed, and Gregorian chant seemed inapplicable. Or maybe it was the culture itself that proved too hard to resist. Or maybe it was purely a demographically driven change. The teens outnumbered the adults in the parishes of the 1960s -- and entirely unprecedented situation -- and they therefore had their way.

All of these are factors, and there are probably more too, such as the loss of a real sense of what liturgy is and does and why it matters. How many people in mid century truly understood that the music of the Mass is just as embedded as part of its history as the text? How many people really understand the destination of the liturgy is not to remain in time with the community but to transcend time and touch eternity?

I obsessed about these topics not because I want to keep stirring the pot from the past but because I’m seeking lessons for the future. What can we do today that the generation of musicians in Pope Pius X’s day did not do? What can we learn from the mistakes of the past? How can we prepare the way for a singing Church in which Gregorian chant truly does serve as the ideal?

There are many answers to these questions. We’ve worked on putting out English chant, holding elaborate national conferences, running forums and blogs, publishing serious books on the topic, speaking on the radio and making videos, and much more. Every bit helps the cause of chant evangelism.

Of all the methods we used, there is one that rises above everything else in my mind, one approach that I feel very confident has made the most substantive contribution to giving chant a real future in Catholic liturgy. That step is that we’ve all worked very hard to put as many chant editions online as possible, and made these editions as part of the commons of humanity. Anyone can download them. Anyone can sing them. Anyone can print them. Anyone can do all these things without asking permission, without paying fees, and without facing any legal reprisal at all.

This approach represents a recreation of the status that chant held in a pre-technology age from the early centuries. The music was owned by everyone. It had no one author. It was composed to evoke the stories in the text. Anyone who believed in it could share it. It was mainly transmitted through oral culture but the printed editions, once they came along, were also common property. In other words, chant was part of what is today called “free culture” -- artistic expression that is not held as the intellectual property of anyone.

Did you know that Pope Pius X wanted this status to pertain to the chants he asked to be published in 1908? I just discovered this for myself, as part of a paper that I’m delivered in Rome at the Sacra Liturgia conference in July. In the course of my research I found the following statements from the Pope:

On March 9, 1904, Msgr. Giovanni Bressan, the private secretary to Pope Pius X, sent a letter to the Solesmes monastery in France that had long been at work on reconstructing the melodies of Gregorian chant. It was sent in the care of Dom Paul Delatte and read as follows:

His Holiness has arrived at the decision to publish at the Vatican Press the edition of liturgical books containing the chant of the Roman Church. This edition, produced under the auspices of the Holy See, will not have restricted copyright but any publisher will be permitted to reprint it as may please him best.

The Solesmes Abbey complied, and ratified a donation of its rights to the chant books on April 6 of that same year. Msgr. Bressan wrote of

the marvelous promptness with which Your Reverence accepted the invitation of His Holiness to collaborate in the preparation of a a Vatican Edition containing the melodies of the Church and intended for the free use of all the churches throughout the world.

When the announcement came of the coming Vatican Gradual, the following wording was approved by Pius X:

His Holiness does not wish to establish a privilege of monopoly for any publisher... As the pages are issued by the Vatican Press, they will be placed at the disposed of the publishers who will have the right to reproduce them but without change.

And yet what happened? When the Graduals finally appeared in 1908, both the Solesmes and Vatican editions were held in copyright that was covered under the Berne Convention of 1886. This switch came about largely because of a dispute over rhythm. The sides in the debate went to their corners and came out fighting. Copyright was one of their weapons.

That meant that their status as part of “free culture” came to an end. After 1913, Solesmes became the only authorized publisher. Everyone has had to ask and then pay, or face legal reprisals.

This proprietary culture of the chant began to spread. Publishers and authors held tightly to their manuscripts. There was even an event in 1929 when a chant school was forced to destroy all its books because a powerful person claimed that they infringed on copyright. Most singers and composers all through the second half of the 19th century were certain that they would face terrible consequences if they so much as put an episema on a punctum, much less made a mimeograph of a chant (but they did it anyway).

So guess what kind of music took hold after the Second Vatican Council? The choice was for free culture music then called folk. As Ken Canedo said of this music:

The folk song, like the Bible, grew from an oral tradition, pre-dating radio and recording technology. A singer observed a slice of life, turned the observation into a song and, with guitar or banjo, presented it to anyone who would hear, perhaps on a front porch, at the town square, or down in the mine. If people liked it they would sing along and bring the new song home to share with a new audience.... Sometimes the lyrics would change, sometimes the tune was modified, and no thought was ever given to composer credits or copyright protection. A song was a song, something free and sweet for the entire world to sing. And a good song was very sweet indeed.

How much does this have to do with the switch. I cannot say for sure but I do know several things: 1) The Pope never intended for chant to be copyright protected, 2) Copyright protected music cannot ever have the same social impact as free culture, 3) What won the day after Vatican II came from the free culture, 4) the successor music to folk is today as locked down as chant was in the 20th century, and 5) chant is now restored to its openness and availability as never before thanks to the Internet.

These are the themes my paper explores. To me, this thesis points to a very bright future for chant.

Compendium of the 1961 Revision of the Pontificale Romanum - Part 4.1: The Blessing of a Cemetery (1595)

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When a cemetery is to be blessed, five wooden crosses are set up in it: one in the middle, taller than the others, and the other four at the four extremities of the grounds. At the foot of each cross is set a flat piece of wood, mounted on a small stake fixed in the ground; these pieces are made in such a way that they can each hold three candles which are placed on them before the ceremony. A faldstool is placed near the central cross for the blessing; the bishop wears a white cope and simple miter, and carries his crook. Before the ceremony begins, he sits on the faldstool and briefly speaks to the people on the sanctity of the cemetery.

The lighting of the candles at the foot of the first cross, in an illustration from a 1595 edition of the Pontifical. (This and the following image are used with the kind permission of the Pitts Theological Library, Candler School of Theology at Emory University.)

Three candles are now fixed and lit at the foot of each of the five crosses, following which the bishop stands before the central cross and says the following prayer.
Let us pray. Almighty God, Who art the keeper of our souls, the defense of our salvation, and the faith of believers, look with mercy upon the work of our service; so that at our entrance, this cemetery may be cleansed, blessed + , sancti + fied, and conse + crated, that the mortal bodies resting here after the course of their lives, on the great day of judgment, together with their happy souls, may merit to obtain the joys of eternal life. Through Christ our Lord. R. Amen.
The bishop kneels before the cross at the faldstool, and the cantors begin the Litany of the Saints. After the invocation, “That Thou may deign to grant eternal rest to all the faithful departed”, the bishop rises, and sings the following additional invocations, making the sign of the Cross over the cemetery at the places marked.
That Thou may deign to cleanse and bless + this cemetery. R. We ask Thee, hear us.
That Thou may deign to cleanse, bless + and sancti + fy this cemetery. R. We ask Thee, hear us.
That Thou may deign to cleanse, bless +, sancti + fy and conse + crate this cemetery. R. We ask Thee, hear us.
The cantors finish the Litany, after which the bishop blesses holy water with the same blessing found in the Rituale. Standing before the cross, he intones the antiphon, “Thou shalt sprinkle me, o Lord, with hyssop, and I shall be cleansed: thou shalt wash me, and I shall be made whiter than snow.” The choir continues it, and then sings Psalm 50 Miserere, from which it is taken, with Gloria Patri at the end, and repeats the antiphon.

Meanwhile, the bishop goes about the entire cemetery, starting to his right, and making a complete circuit, sprinkling the holy water throughout. Returning then to the cross which stands in front of the central cross, he says the following prayer.
Let us pray. God, Who art the creator of the whole world, and redeemer of the human race, and perfectly arrayest all creatures visible and invisible, we entreat Thee with humble voice and pure heart, that Thou may deign to cleanse +, bless +, and sancti + fy, this cemetery or tomb; in which the bodies of Thy servants and handmaids must rest after the passing courses of this life; and who through Thy great mercy didst grant remission of all sins to them that trust in Thee, impart Thou in abundance perpetual consolation also to the bodies of them that rest in this cemetery, and here await the trumpet of the first Archangel. Through Christ our Lord. R. Amen.
He incenses the cross, and then takes the three candles from the bracket at the foot of it and sets them on top, one in the middle on the upright, and one on each end of the crossbar.

The bishop incenses the cross. This illustration and those of other editions of the Clementine Pontifical show him incensing the cross with the candles already on it, although the rubric clearly states that he incenses first, and then sets the candles in place. A similar illustration is found in a pre-Clementine Pontifical printed at Venice in 1556, but an edition of 1520, also printed at Venice, shows the cross without the candles as it is incensed.

He now moves across the cemetery to the cross behind the central one, sprinkling water as he goes and saying with the assistants Psalms 6 Domine ne in furore tuo and 31 Beati quorum remissae, without Gloria Patri at the end. These are the first two of the seven Penitential Psalms; over the course of the ceremony, the bishop will recite all seven of them. Before this cross he says the following prayer.
Let us pray. Lord, holy Father, almighty and eternal God, threefold Majesty, and one Godhead, Father, and Son, and Holy Spirit, author of justice, bestower of forgiveness, giver of all good things, origin of holiness, dispenser of graces, that in Thy kindness receivest all that come to Thee: grant in Thy mercy that this cemetery, laid out to the honor of Thy name, be blessed + and sancti + fied; who for the holy Patriarch Abraham, Thy servant, didst bless the land provided for burial by the sons of Hebron; and to the people of Israel gavest the promised land to last forever; of Thy great kindness grant a place of rest to the bodies of Thy servants and handmaids that enter into this cemetery, and defense from every incursion of wicked spirits; so that after the resurrection of the reunited body and soul, they may merit to receive eternal blessedness, of Thy gift and bestowing; Who in the perfect Trinity livest and reignest, God, for ever and ever. R. Amen.
He incenses the cross and fixes the candles upon it as before, and then proceeds to the cross on the right side of the cemetery, again, sprinkling holy water as he goes, and saying the third penitential Psalm 37 Domine ne in furore tuo, without Gloria Patri at the end. Before this cross he says the following prayer.
Let us pray. Lord God, shepherd of eternal glory, light and honor of wisdom, keeper and force of prudence, health of the sick, strength of the mighty, consolation of the sorrowful, life of the just, glory of the humble; we humbly and earnestly entreat Thee, that Thou may deign to keep, purify and bless + this cemetery of Thy servants from every sort of filth, and the snares of unclean spirits, and cease not to grant to the human bodies that come into this place everlasting purity; so that all who have received the Sacrament of Baptism, and have persevered in the Catholic Faith to the end of their lives, having passed their time in this present age, have given their bodies to rest in this cemetery, as the Angelic trumpets sound, in their souls and bodies together, may receive the eternal rewards of joy in heaven. Through Christ our Lord. R. Amen.
He incenses the cross and fixes the candles upon it as before, and then moves across the cemetery to the cross on the left side of it, again, sprinkling holy water as he goes, and saying the fifth penitential Psalm 101 Domine exaudi, without Gloria Patri at the end. (The fourth Penitential Psalm Miserere has already been said.) Before this cross he says the following prayer.
Let us pray. Lord Jesus Christ, Who formed the human body from the earth for angelic reparation, and took it upon Thee for our redemption, Who release it into the earth in accordance with the condition of the flesh, and will raise it again from the earth for immortality: deign Thou, we ask, to conse + crate this earth for use in burial, with the blessing of Thy buried body; and grant that those who, being buried with Thee in Baptism, shall be buried here in the nature of flesh, may rest in the hope of Thy resurrection, in the mercy of Thy redemption. Who shalt come to judge the living and the dead, and the world in fire. R. Amen.
He incenses the cross and fixes the candles upon it as before, and then returns to the cross in the middle of the cemetery, again, sprinkling holy water as he goes, and saying the sixth and seventh penitential Psalms, 129 De profundis and 142 Domine exaudi, without Gloria Patri at the end. Before the central cross he says the following prayer.
Let us pray. Be present, we ask Thee, Lord God, to our service, as we visit this place in Thy name, and to the ministry of our weakness; and just as Thou didst bless land by the hands of Thy servants Abraham, Isaac and Jacob for burial in their wanderings, so do ask Thee, Lord, deign to bless + , sancti + fy, and conse + crate this cemetery, purchased (figuratively) at the price of the blood of Thy only begotten Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, for the rest of the bodies of our wandering (or ‘pilgrimage’), until through the same our Lord Jesus Christ Thou shalt grant them to rise from the dust unto glory. Who with Thee liveth and reigneth in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God.
This prayer now segues into the Preface Dialogue and the following Preface.
Truly it is fitting and just … through Christ our Lord. Who is the eternal day, the light unfailing, brightness everlasting. Who commanded His followers so to walk in the light, that they might escape from the darkness of eternal night, and happily come to the fatherland of light. Who in His assumed humanity, wept over Lazarus, by the power of His divinity restored him to life, and brought the human race, that was overwhelmed by the four-fold mass of sins, back to life. And through Him, o Lord, we humbly beseech Thee, that those who shall be buried in this tomb, on the last day, when the trumpets of the Angels shall sound, released from the bonds of sin, and restored to eternal happiness, and numbered in the companies of the Saints, may find Thee, who art eternal life, kindly and merciful, that they may praise Thee, the author of life, exulting with all the Saints.
The long conclusion is said in a low voice, as it the normal custom with these sorts of blessings. The bishop then incenses the cross and fixes the candles upon it as before. Standing before the cross, he then says with the ministers, “Let us pray. Let us kneel. Arise.” and the following final prayer.
Lord, holy Father, almighty and eternal God, that sanctifiest all places, and remakest them for the better, from Whom and through Whom every blessing descendeth from heaven to the earth; deign Thou to bless + this place, that it may be a tomb or cemetery, a sweet rest and sleep of the dead; and may the souls of those who bodies are or shall here be buried, obtain the sweetness of Thy delight; and in the meanwhile, rejoicing and exulting in the heavenly Jerusalem, until on the great day of judgment, they receive their bodies back from the sepulchers, and so come forth to meet the Lord as He comes to judge, with the fruit of their good works. Through Our Lord.
The bishop then imparts a solemn blessing to the people, and if he wishes, prepares to say Mass; otherwise, he may have another priest say it for him. In either case, the following prayers are added to the Mass of the day, under a single conclusion.
Collect O God, by whose mercy rest the souls of the faithful departed, we ask, o Lord, send here Thy holy guardian Angel, and release the souls of all those men and women whose bodies are buried here from every bond of their sins, that in Thee they may endlessly rejoice with Thy Saints.
Secret Sanctify, o Lord, the gifts offered, and Thou who willed to be laid in the sepulcher Thyself, and deigned to grant Thy faithful the example of the resurrection, grant, we pray, forgiveness of their sins to the souls of Thy faithful who here rest in Thee, that this saving Victim may be the remedy and rest of their souls and bodies.
Post-Communion Filled by the sacred gifts, we pray, o Lord our God, that Thy people, who we believe will rise in the future from the death of the body, may merit of Thy mercy to rise from the death of the soul.

Sunday Masses in Ratisbon

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On a Sunday earlier this year, I visited one of the most historic and ecclesiastically important cities in Germany: Ratisbon. Here are pictures from a few Masses I attended that Sunday which might be of interest to readers.



Holy Mass at the Collegiate Church of St. John. One of the concelebrants (you can see him sitting with his crutches) is Msgr. Georg Ratzinger. Little did I know that only a week later his brother would announce his renunciation of the papacy.



Mass at the collegiate church of the Old Chapel, one of the most exquisite churches of the Bavarian late baroque. Pope Benedict blessed the organ there at his visit to Ratisbon in 2006.



Pontifical Mass at Ratisbon Cathedral. It happened to be the first Pontifical Mass of the new bishop, who had only been consecrated a week before. The famous Ratisbon Cathedral Choir, which Msgr. Ratzinger directed for 30 years, sang as it does every Sunday.





Solemn Mass in the usus antiquior in the church of St. Emmeram, a former Benedictine abbey and burial place of Saint Wolfgang and Saint Emmeram, as well as Saint Aurelia and five Blessed (three bishops of Ratisbon, an abbot of St Emmeram, and a German Queen).



A picture of St. Emmeram earlier in the day, to give you a better idea.

To finish, two items from the diocesan museum, where, incidentally, I was pleased to notice that several items had been removed for the use of the new bishop.



The so-called chasuble of St. Wolfgang, 12th c., made from Byzantine silk with pearl embroidery.



A rationale, a particular liturgical vestment, which today is only worn by the bishops of Paderborn, Eichstätt, Cracow and Toul. Early 14th c.

I apologise for the poor quality of the pictures; inadvertently, I had chosen the lowest resolution of my camera.

New Mosaic, Old Technique

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Mosaic-Christ-Cardiff-small1

Here are some photo's of a new mosaic just installed in Wales, designed and made by Aidan Hart.  (H/t David Woolf) I have taken the them from his website, here. Aidan's photos give us a sense of how it was produced as well as the what the final product looks like. The church, St Martins is an Anglican church in Cardiff on a town street and the mosaic is on the exterior. I like this - we must not underestimate the power of beauty and the face of Christ especially to draw people in to God. I found a photo of the church before the mosaic was placed there on the internet, see below. I hope the congregation will not think it is undignified that it includes in the pawn shop next door. I personally think that the juxtaposition of the mosaic and shop emphases how we must think about beauty reaching out and touching people in the everyday activities of life and competing with all the advertising and other imagery that is out there.

The method that Aidan used, if I have understood him correctly, is the 'Ravenna' or 'double reverse' method that involves putting tracing the design onto a temporary wet 'putty 'base (a slow drying mortar or plaster) and then placing the tesserae into the putty so that the artist can see the design developing as it would be seen eventually. Then a piece of glued linen is stuck to what is now the open face. The mosaic is turned over (carefully) and the putty is removed. This leaves a reverse image stuck to the linen. So far, all of this work is done in the studio. Now the mosaic, is placed into the mortar in situ or onto a panel which is then placed in situ. This means that the linen is facing outwards and the tesserae are pushed into plaster again, but this time it will set hard. Once this has set, then the linen is removed and the side of the tesserae that is open to the air is cleaned and you have the final image.

I remember that when I was in Aidan's classes he always used to stress how valuable it was for painters to study mosaics if they wanted to discern what colours contributed to particular effects, for example, flesh colours. Sometimes when you study paintings it is difficult to discern exactly what combinations have produced the final colour because with paint one wash is placed over another and you only see the combination, but can't see what is below the surface and has contributed to that effect. With mosaic, however, tesserae of pure colour are used to created a pixelated image and the combined effect is created in the mind's eye. So for example, a green effect might be created by having no green tesserae at all, but rather by having alternately pure blue and pure yellow tesserae sitting next to each other. When I gain a general impression I will 'see' green, but when I examine particular areas closely enough to resolve individual tesserae, I will see only blue and yellow. As painter, I can look at this  and create that particular green in my icon by using a the same blue and yellow  but in alternate transparent washes.

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Above: work in progress - putting the tesserae into the base putty

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The reversed image stuck to the linen, with the base putty removed and before being placed into its final position on the church

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Chora Church, Istanbul

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One of our readers sent in the following photos from the historical Chora Church in Istanbul.













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