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Arlene Oost-Zinner: Teaching Chant Online

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Arlene Oost-Zinner is doing great work for the cause of spreading chant literacy. She has taught classes far and wide, including at the CMAA's annual Colloquium, an international gathering of musicians dedicated to learning more about the Church's music. Here is one class that she taught singing for a Mass at the Colloquium.


Now, she has seemingly found her perfect niche in between workshops: teaching chant online. Just a few comments that she has received:
I just took this class and it was great! Thank you for offering these courses in this platform. I'm very excited to take your next class.

Thank you for all you do to help bring about the Liturgical reform and for saying 'yes' to God. We are truly blessed to have you as our professor and learning Gregorian chant is so exciting! (who knew?)

If you have an interest in learning more about why chant sounds different, or if you just want to get down to the nitty gritty of things and want to learn what those squiggly lines and boxes actually mean, you need to register for one of her classes. From what she tells me, they are set up sequentially. If you start with Gregorian Notation I, you can have four classes under your belt within two weeks. Then the cycle begins again.


Compendium of the 1961 Revision of the Pontificale Romanum - Part 14.1: The Blessing of a Bell (1595)

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When a church-bell is to be blessed according to the Pontifical of Clement VIII, the bell must be suspended in such a way that it can easily be touched on both the inside and outside, and so that the bishop can walk around it. The bishop wears a white cope and simple miter. A faldstool is place near the bell, at which the bishop sits for the beginning of the ceremony, and recites with the sacred ministers a group of seven psalms: Psalm 50 Miserere mei, Deus, Psalm 53 Deus, in nomine tuo, Psalm 56 Miserere mei, Deus, miserere mei, Psalm 66 Deus misereatur, Psalm 69 Deus, in adjutorium meum intende, Psalm 85 Inclina, Domine, aurem tuam, and Psalm 129 De profundis. (These are said without an antiphon.)

The bishop then makes holy water with the normal blessing found in the Ritual and in the Missal, which is also used elsewhere in the ceremonies of the Pontifical. However, before the mingling of the water and salt, he adds the following prayer, which is unique to this blessing.
Bless, O Lord, this water with a heavenly benediction, and may the power of the Holy Ghost come upon it, so that when this vessel, prepared to call together the children of the Holy Church, has been washed with it, there may be kept far away from wheresoever this bell may sound, the power of those lying in wait, the shadow of spectres, the ravages of whirlwinds, the stroke of lightning, the damage of thunder, the disaster of tempests, and every breath of storm; and when the sons of Christians shall hear its ringing, may their devotion increase, so that hastening to the bosom of their loving mother the Church, they may sing to Thee, in the Church of the Saints, a new canticle, bringing therein to play the proud sounding of the trumpet, the melody of the harp, the sweetness of the organ, the joyous exultation of the drum, and the rejoicing of the cymbal; and so, in the holy temple of Thy glory by their service and their prayers, may they bid come the multitude of the angelic hosts. (long conclusion)
The blessing of the holy water concludes as usual. The bishop then begins the washing of the bell with the holy water, taking an aspergil and sprinkling it along the edge both inside and out. The washing is completed by the sacred ministers with sponges; the bell is washed inside and out, from top to bottom, and then dried. While this is done, the bishop sits at the faldstool, and with the other clergy present recites the final six psalms of the Psalter, without an antiphon; the last three, psalms 148, 149 and 150, are recited as a single psalm with a single doxology, as they are at Lauds.

The psalms being finished, the bishop rises, and makes a single cross on the outside of the bell with the Oil of the Sick. He then says the following prayer, making the sign of the cross over it at the place marked.
O God, who through the blessed Moses, the law giver, Thy servant, didst command that silver trumpets should be made, through which when sounded by the priests at the time of sacrifice, the people, reminded by their sweet strains, would make ready to worship Thee, and assemble to offer sacrifices, and encouraged to battle by their sounding, would overcome the onslaughts of their enemies; grant, we beseech Thee, that this vessel, prepared for Thy Holy Church, may be sancti+fied by the Holy Spirit, so that, through its touch, the faithful may be invited to their reward. And when its melody shall sound in the ears of the peoples, may the devotion of their faith increase; may all the snares of the enemy, the crash of hail-storms and hurricanes, the violence of tempests be driven far away; may the deadly thunder be weakened, may the winds become salubrious, and be kept in check; may the right hand of Thy strength lay low the powers of the air, so that hearing this bell they may tremble and flee before the standard of the holy cross of Thy Son depicted upon it, to Whom every knee bows of those that are in Heaven, on earth, and under the earth, and every tongue confesses that the same our Lord Jesus Christ, swallowing up death upon the gibbet of the cross, reigneth in the glory of God the Father, (Philippians 2, 10), with the same Father and the Holy Spirit, world without end. R. Amen.
He wipes the cross off with a towel, and then intones the following antiphon, which is completed by choir, and sung with Psalm 28 Afferte Domino, from which it is taken.
Ant. The voice of the Lord is upon the waters; the God of majesty hath thundered, The Lord is upon many waters.
While this is sung,the bishop makes with the Oil of the Sick seven crosses on the outside of the bell, and four on the inside. As he makes each cross, he says:
May this bell be sancti+fied and conse+crated, o Lord. In the name of the Fa+ther, and of the + Son, and of the Holy + Spirit. Unto the honor of Saint N. Peace to thee.
At each place he anoints the bell twice, at the words “sanctified” and “consecrated”, and then makes the sign of the cross with his right hand over the same place three times at the words “In the name of the Father etc.” (This is similar to the practice by which various anointings are done during the consecration of a church.) He also names a saint to in whose honor the bell is dedicated.

The anointings being done, the bishop says the following prayer:
Let us pray. Almighty, Eternal God, Who, by the sounding of trumpets before the Ark of the Covenant, didst cause to tumble down the stone walls within which the army of the enemy was entrenched, do Thou pour out upon this bell a heavenly bene+diction, so that at its sound, the fiery darts of the enemy, the stroke of lightning, the hail-storm and the damage of tempests may be driven far away; and to the prophet’s question, “What ailed thee, O sea, that thou didst flee?” (Psalm 113, 5) being driven back in their movements as was the river Jordan, they may give answer, “At the presence of the Lord, the earth was moved, at the presence of the God of Jacob, Who turned the rock into pools of water, and the stony hill into fountains of waters. Wherefore, not to us, O Lord, not to us, but to Thy name give glory, for Thy mercy’s sake.” (Ps. 113, 7-10) And thus when this vessel here present, like the other vessels of the altar, is touched with Holy Chrism, anointed with Holy Oil, may all those who assemble at its call be free from all the temptations of the enemy, and always follow the teachings of Catholic faith. (long conclusion)
The bishop washes his hands, and then imposes in a thurible or brazier a mixture of different kinds of incense and myrrh, called thymiama in the rubrics. This is then placed under the bell, in such a way that all of the smoke rises into the bell.
The placing of the thurible under the bell; illustration from a 1595 edition of the Roman Pontifical. (Permission to use this image has been very kindly granted by the Pitts Theological Library, Candler School of Theology at Emory University.)

Meanwhile, the choir sings the following antiphon, and the last five verses of Psalm 76, from which it is taken, with the doxology and the repetition of the antiphon.
Ant. Thy way, O God, is in the holy place: who is the great God like our God?
The bishop then says the following prayer:
Let us pray. Almighty Ruler, Christ, Who in the flesh, which Thou didst assume, were asleep in the boat, when the rising tempest disturbed the sea, which directly at Thy awakening and command did fall silent, come kindly to aid Thy people in their needs; pour out upon this bell the dew of Thy Holy Spirit, so that at its sound the enemy of the good may always flee, the Christian people may be invited to faith, the hostile army may be struck with terror; Thy people summoned together be comforted by it in the Lord, and, as if delighted with David’s harp, may the Holy Spirit come down from above. And even while Samuel was sacrificing the suckling lamb as a holocaust to the King of the Eternal Empire, the noise of the rushing winds drove away the multitude of his adversaries: so in like manner, when the sound of this vessel pierces the clouds, may angelic hands preserve the assembly of Thy Church; may everlasting protection save the fruits of those who believe, their souls and their bodies. Through Thee, O Christ Jesus, Who with God the Father livest and reignest in the unity of the same Holy Spirit, God, world without end. R. Amen.
The deacon then sings the following Gospel, St. Luke 10, 38-42, accompanied by the subdeacon and other ministers, with all of the usual ceremonies of a solemn Pontifical Mass. (St. Mary Magdalene is traditionally understood to represent the contemplative life in religion, and St. Martha the active life; this Gospel is sung here to signify that the church bell rings to call the faithful to all the different activities that take place within the church.)
At that time, Jesus entered into a certain town: and a certain woman named Martha, received him into her house. And she had a sister called Mary, who sitting also at the Lord' s feet, heard his word. But Martha was busy about much serving. Who stood and said: Lord, hast thou no care that my sister hath left me alone to serve? speak to her therefore, that she help me. And the Lord answering, said to her: Martha, Martha, thou art careful, and art troubled about many things: But one thing is necessary. Mary hath chosen the best part, which shall not be taken away from her.
The bishop makes the sign of the cross a final time over the bell, and then departs.

Solemnity of the Assumption Mass Schedule at Mt. Calvary, Baltimore

Music from the Rite of Braga

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Braga has been one of the most significant centres of religion in Portugal for over 1600 years. During the Council of Trent, a special dispensation was granted to the Archdiocese of Braga which allowed the continued use of their own version of the Roman rite: the 'Rito Bracarense'.

Capella Duriensis is a professional Portuguese vocal ensemble based in Porto directed by Jonathan Ayerst. It is a vocal ensemble which specialises in training young Portuguese singers to a professional level. Maintaining a working schedule of rehearsals, concerts and recordings throughout the year, the choir prepares repertoire from the earliest medieval manuscripts to music of the present day. Since 2011 Capella Duriensis has been ensemble-in-residence at the Escola das Artes, Universidade Católica Portuguesa.

The Choir has recently released a CD of newly unearthed musical treasures from the Portuguese Rite of Braga, an early medieval rite such as the Ambrosian and Sarum rites. Entitled 'Música Sacra de Portugal Vol.1 - O Rito Bracarense', the project brings to fruition many years of research by musicologists Manuel Pedro Ferreira and João Pedrod'Alvarenga who have transcribed music from the archives of the Sé de Braga including Chant from the Braga Gradual, an early 16th century collection which contains music dating back to the 11th century. The recording includes the Infesta S Petri Ratensis and Missa Quinque Plagarum as well as works based on Chant of the Braga Rite by 16th century Mestres de Capela such as Lourenço Ribeiro, Pero de Gamboa and Miguel da Fonseca.

You can buy the CD from the Choir's website and it is also available for download in the USA here. A preview is available in the YouTube clip below. Next year the choir will be involved in a series of concerts each of which will be devoted to a different medieval rite: Sarum, Byzantine, Ambrosian, Gallican and Roman.

The Holy Belt of the Virgin, a Relic of the Assumption

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It has often been adduced as proof of the early Church’s belief in the Assumption that no one has ever claimed to have a relic of the Virgin Mary’s body. However, the cathedral of the Italian city of Prato, less than 12 miles from Florence, preserves to this day a famous relic associated with the Assumption, a belt venerated as that of the Virgin Mary, given by Her to the Apostle Thomas.
The Belt seen in its reliquary with the cover removed.

According to a very ancient legend, (attested e.g. by St. John Damascene in the 8th century, among others,) when it came time for the Virgin Mary’s earthly life to end, all of the Apostles were miraculously brought to Jerusalem to be present for Her death; St. Thomas, however, was late (again!). When She had died, they laid Her body to rest in a tomb in the garden of Gethsemani, outside the city; three days later, St. Thomas arrived in Jerusalem, and wished to venerate the body. On opening the tomb, the Apostles discovered that it was nowhere to be found, and a sweet odor came forth, confirming that “Whom once it pleased to take the flesh from the Virgin Mary, and become a man, and be born (of Her)… and who after birth preserved Her virginity incorrupt, it also pleased, after Her passing, to honor Her immaculate body … by translating (it to Heaven) before the common and universal resurrection.”

There are variations to this legend, as is often the case. According to one version, the other eleven Apostles believed in the Assumption because angelic music played in the air over the tomb on the day of the burial, and for three days after; St. Thomas, arriving after the music had ceased, refused to believe them until the tomb was opened and the absence of the body confirmed. According to another version, Thomas already knew and believed in the Assumption before coming to Jerusalem, and brought the others to the tomb to show them that the body of the Virgin was gone; after which, they heard all the music together. A further addition to the story says that flowers were growing out of the stone sarcophagus in which She had been laid, and were the source of the sweet odor coming out of the tomb.
The Madona of the Belt, by Franesco d'Antonio di Bartolommeo, early 15th century.

There are likewise variations in the legend of the belt which the Virgin then gave to St. Thomas. One says that She Herself, knowing well of Thomas’ propensity to doubt, appeared above the empty tomb as the Apostles stood around it, and then removed Her belt and gave it to him as an enduring proof of the Assumption, just as Her Son had allowed him to place his finger in the wound in His side. But another version, following the story that Thomas had believed in the Assumption before going to the tomb, appeared to him and gave him the belt as a reward for his faith.
The altar of the chapel where the Holy Belt is now kept in Prato Cathedral. On the wall behind it can be seen the tabernacle where it kept.
The legend goes on to say that it remained in the Holy Land until the 12th century, when a merchant from Prato, while visiting the Holy Land, married the daughter of the priest who held it in custody. The merchant and his new wife brought the relic back with them to Italy; on the death of the former, it was given to the city’s cathedral. After a canon from Prato’s historical rival, nearby Pistoia, attempted to steal the relic in 1312, a new chapel was built in the Duomo to keep it safe, where it remains to this day. It is exposed for the veneration of the faithful five times a year, on Easter, on May 1st, on the Assumption and Nativity of the Virgin, and on Christmas Day. A special pulpit was built on the outside of Prato cathedral for these occasions by Donatello in the 1430s, since the crowds of pilgrims who came to see it were frequently too large to fit within the cathedral itself.
The Donatello Pulpit on the outside of Prato Cathedral
Bishop Gastone Simoni of Prato (now retired) brings the Holy Belt out onto the pulpit to be venerated by the faithful.

In the year 1351, the city of Prato became part of the territory of the Republic of Florence. From that point, representations of St. Thomas with the belt become a common feature of Florentine paintings of the Assumption, and on the strength of Florentine influence on the Renaissance generally, the motif passed first to the rest of Italy, and thence to other parts of Europe.

Several references to the various traditions described appear in one of the most beautiful examples of this motif, the Oddi Altarpiece by the great Raphael Sanzio; it was painted in 1502-3, when the artist was only 19 years old, and is now kept in the Painting Gallery of the Vatican Museums.

In the upper part of the image, the Virgin is crowned by Christ, and surrounded by angels, four of whom are playing musical instruments. In the lower part, the Apostles are gathered around the tomb, and some of them are looking up and listening to the music. St. Thomas’ importance to the story is emphasized by fact that he is standing in the middle of the group, with his tilted back in a perspective that is difficult for any artist to capture properly well, and spatially isolated from the other eleven Apostles. The tomb of the Virgin is filled with flowers growing out of the stone. Standing in as the model for one of the Apostles on the far right is Raphael himself, wearing black and looking straight out at the viewer.

Assumption Pictures - Madison, WI

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The Most Rev. Bishop Robert Morlino of the Diocese of Madison celebrated his only public Mass for the Solemnity today as an EF low Mass with a sizable congregation present. Seminarians of the diocese sat in choir, served, as well as other priests, including one Fr. John Zuhlsdorf. Hail Holy Queen and Salve Regina were sung at the beginning and end of Mass, respectively.

Below, a reader sends pictures of the Mass. Feel free to send in your own to me as well. You can find my email in the sidebar.






Copying with Understanding - Modern Work in the Style of the 13th Century School of St Albans

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This summer we held a painting course in Kansas City, Kansas at the Savior Pastoral Center Kansas. This was an unusual class in that it was not icon painting, but painting gothic style images. The originals are in illuminated manuscripts done by artists from the 13th century School of St Albans. Of those who came to the class, some were quite experienced, even to the level of teaching others, and some were completely beginners. It was hosted by the Diocese of Kansas City, Kansas which runs the center and I am grateful for all the work that their staff did in organising and supporting this class. 
I thought I would show some of the work done by students that will help explain the process by which these are painted. This one is a St Christopher painted by a master of the school called Matthew Paris.
What was particularly exciting for me is the ease with which people took the style. I mentioned last week that the method by which you transmit style in a tradition is to copy with understanding. It is also that way that you can re-establish a tradition that is no longer living. This is what the masters of the High Renaissance did when they created a new style by copying Greek and Roman sculpture; and what Russian expatriates in Paris did in the mid-20th century when they re-established the iconographic tradition in its earlier authentic form so successfully. I am interested in seeing the same happen for the gothic tradition so this is why I have been experimenting in teaching this style. 
The 'understanding' referred to can be an intellectual understanding of the symbolism of the content, or how the stylistic elements relate to the Christian understanding of man, for example. One can also understand in a more intuitive way and this when there is a natural feel for the style - then you have a sense of how to introduce differences without compromising what is essential to it. What was apparent to me is that students had a much greater intuitive feel for this style than beginners do generally when teaching Byzantine style icons. I first noticed this natural affinity for gothic images when teaching younger students at Thomas More College, New Hampshire, where I work. I cannot prove it, but my feeling is that this is because the gothic belongs to the Roman rite and so Catholics of the Western Church relate more readily to what they seeing, even if they don't know why.
As a result of this I could give students a little more freedom in choice of colour and design (in for example the ornate borders) than would normally be given at such an early stage. Initially some, particularly those who had been taught in classes taught by Orthodox were sceptical about their validity as sacred images. This is because the Orthodox generally not recognise the Western liturgical traditions of the gothic and the baroque, as authentic. Once they got going they found they took to it very easily and enjoyed the freedom I gave them in the class. 
These images are good for teaching for another reason: they have such strongly articulated lines to describe form. Generally, people find it easier to start with lines than trying to modelled shapes, which requires high skill in blending.  I would encourage anybody who is learning (or teaching) sacred art to think about copying this period.
We worked on high quality watercolour paper and painted in egg tempera. The work featured here is by students, Paul Jentz and his mother Christi (who kindly took and sent me the photographs) and they worked from the image shown top left. First they constructed a grid as a help but drew the design by hand; then gradually they added thin washes of tempera paint to build up the colours.
Next week I will show some more finished images of a Visitation, again based on one from the School of St Albans.
We have already booked up to do two more courses next summer, so those who are interested might even contact the center now. This year the places went quickly and we could have filled the class more than twice over. The center website is here.

Ave Verum Corpus, Josquin

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My choir is working up this piece for Sunday. I'm posting just because it is so astonishing.


EF at WYD

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As many know, there have been reports of questionable liturgical practices at WYD, which is truly unfortunate. However, as with any major gathering of Catholics, those attached to the Extraordinary Form were able to gather.

One such gathering was in the church of Nossa Senhora do Carmo in Rio, which was devoted to Extraordinary Form events during the WYD. Fr. Isidro of the Friars of the Immaculate celebrated the Mass. I can't get over the beauty of the church they were able to use. Beautiful.





Solemn High Mass for the Feast of the Assumption in New York City

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Here are photographs of Solemn High Mass on the Feast of the Assumption at the Church of the Holy Innocents, NYC. The Celebrant was the Rev. Fr. George W. Rutler S.T.D, who has recently been made the Pastor of St. Michael's Church and Administrator of Church of the Holy Innocents from the Church of Our Saviour. The Church was full for Mass and the setting used was Missa de Angelis. (Photos: Arrys Ortanez)









Compendium of the 1961 Revision of the Pontificale Romanum - Part 14.2: The Blessing of a Bell (1961)

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In the 1961 revision of the blessing of a church-bell, there are several major changes to the rubrics at the beginning. The bell is still suspended in such a way that it can easily be touched, and so that the bishop can walk around it, but it is no longer specified that he must be able to reach it “inside and out”. The bishop wears the mitre called “auriphrygiata” in Latin, the less ornate kind used in Advent and Lent, rather than the simple mitre with no ornamentation. The particular mixture of incense and myrrh, called “thymiama” in the rubrics of the 1595 Pontifical, is no longer used.

The seven psalms said at the beginning of the blessing are suppressed. Holy water is blessed ahead of time, rather than within the ceremony; the proper prayer added to the blessing of holy water used within this ceremony is suppressed. The washing of the bell inside and out is suppressed. The six psalms that accompany it (145, 146, 147 and the Laudate Psalms (148-149-150) are suppressed, but two of them (147 and 150) are used later in the ceremony.

The ceremony begins with “Deus in adjutorium” and “Gloria Patri”, like the hours of the Divine Office, but without Alleluia. In place of the washing of the bell, the bishop takes the aspergil and sprinkles holy water on the outside of the bell only, saying nothing.

As he does this, the choir sings the antiphon “The voice of the Lord is upon the waters; the God of majesty hath thundered, The Lord is upon many waters,” and repeats it after every two verses of Psalm 28 Afferte Domino, from which it is taken; at the end, Gloria Patri is not said. The antiphon is no longer intoned by the bishop; the psalm is interrupted when he finishes. (This was formerly sung while the bishop anointed the bell on the inside and outside.)

When this is done, the bishop sings “The Lord be with you”, and the following prayer. He no longer makes the sign of the cross over the bell at the word “sancti+fied”. The words in italics are omitted from the previous version. The single cross of oil formerly made on the bell right before saying this prayer is suppressed.
Let us pray. O God, who through the blessed Moses, the law giver, Thy servant, didst command that silver trumpets should be made, through which when sounded by the priests at the time of sacrifice, the people, reminded by their sweet strains, would make ready to worship Thee, and assemble to offer sacrifices, and encouraged to battle by their sounding, would overcome the onslaughts of their enemies; grant, we beseech Thee, that this vessel, prepared for Thy Holy Church, may be sanctified by the Holy Spirit, so that, through its touch, the faithful may be invited to their reward. And when its melody shall sound in the ears of the peoples, may the devotion of their faith increase; may all the snares of the enemy, the crash of hail-storms and hurricanes, the violence of tempests be driven far away; may the deadly thunder be weakened, may the winds become salubrious, and be kept in check; may the right hand of Thy strength lay low the powers of the air, so that hearing this bell they may tremble and flee before the standard of the holy cross of Thy Son depicted upon it, to Whom every knee bows of those that are in Heaven, on earth, and under the earth, and every tongue confesses that the same our Lord Jesus Christ, swallowing up death upon the gibbet of the cross, reigneth in the glory of God the Father, with the same Father and the Holy Spirit, world without end. Through Christ our Lord. R. Amen.
The bishop then anoints the bell in four places (formerly seven) on the outside, evenly spaced from each other. The four anointings on the inside are suppressed. At each anointing he says “May this bell be sanctified and consecrated, o Lord. In the name of the Father, and of the Son, + and of the Holy Spirit. Unto the honor of Saint N.Peace to thee.” The words in italics are no longer said. Only one cross is made with oil, at the place marked above with a cross. (Formerly, two were made, at the words “sanctified and consecrated.” The bishop no longer makes the sign of the Cross three times over the place of the anointing at the words “In the name of the Father etc.”)

As he does this, the choir sings the antiphon “Praise the Lord, O Jerusalem,” and repeats it after every two or three verses of Psalm 147 Lauda, Jerusalem, Dominum, from which it is taken; at the end, Gloria Patri is not said. The psalm is interrupted when he finishes. (This was formerly one of the six psalms sung without an antiphon while the bell was washed on the inside and outside.)
When this is done, the bishop sings “The Lord be with you”, and the following prayer. The parts in italics are omitted from the previous version; the words in bold are added. He no longer makes the sign of the Cross over the bell at the words “heavenly + benediction.”
Let us pray. Almighty, Eternal God, Who, by the sounding of trumpets before the Ark of the Covenant, didst cause to tumble down the stone walls within which the army of the enemy was entrenched, do Thou pour out upon this bell a heavenly benediction, so that at its sound, the fiery darts of the enemy, the stroke of lightning, the hail-storm and the damage of tempests may be driven far away; and to the prophet’s question: “What ailed thee, O thou sea, that thou didst flee?” being driven back in their movements as was the river Jordan, they may give answer: At the presence of the Lord, the earth was moved, at the presence of the God of Jacob: Who turned the rock into pools of water, and the stony hill into fountains of waters. Wherefore, not to us, O Lord, not to us, but to Thy name give glory, for Thy mercy. And thus when this vessel here present, like the other vessels of the altar, is touched with Holy Chrism, anointed with Holy Oil,so that those who assemble at its call may be free from all the temptations of the enemy, and always follow the teachings of the Catholic faith. Through our Christ our Lord. R. Amen.
The bishop then imposes incense in a thurible, blesses it, and incenses the bell by walking around it, saying nothing.

As he does this, the choir sings the antiphon “Praise the Lord according to the multitude of his greatness,” and repeats it after every two or three verses of Psalm 150 Laudate Dominum in sanctis ejus, from which it is taken; at the end, Gloria Patri is not said. The psalm is interrupted when he finishes. (This was formerly one of the six psalms sung without an antiphon while the bell was washed on the inside and outside.)

When this is done, the bishop sings “The Lord be with you”, and the following prayer. The parts in italics are omitted from the previous version.
Let us pray. Almighty Ruler, Christ, Who in the flesh, which Thou didst assume, were asleep in the boat, when the rising tempest disturbed the sea, which directly at Thy awakening and command did fall silent, come kindly to aid Thy people in their needs; pour out upon this bell the dew of Thy Holy Spirit, so that at its sound the enemy of the good may always flee, the Christian people may be invited to faith, the hostile army may be struck with terror; Thy people summoned together be comforted by it in the Lord, and, as if delighted with David’s harp, may the Holy Spirit come down from above. And even while Samuel was sacrificing the suckling lamb as a holocaust to the King of the Eternal Empire, the noise of the rushing winds drove away the multitude of his adversaries: and so in like manner, when its sound of this vessel pierces the clouds, may angelic hands preserve the assembly of Thy Church; may everlasting protection save the fruits of those who believe, their souls and their bodies. Who livest and reignest world without end. R. Amen. (changed from longer conclusion)
The ritual of burning incense in a thurible or brazier under the bell is suppressed. The antiphon and psalm that accompanied it is suppressed. The Gospel sung at the end of the ceremony (St. Luke 10, 38-42) is suppressed.

The ceremony concludes with “The Lord be with you” and “Let us bless the Lord,” like the Hours of the Divine Office. The bishop then imparts a blessing and grants an indulgence.
A bell from the Dominican church of San Marco in Florence.

The Tradition of Chant in the Roman Rite - Louisville, KY

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On August 18th, Dr. Paul Weber, formerly of Franciscan University of Steubenville, will be giving a talk "The Tradition of Chant in the Roman Rite". The talk will be at 1:30pm in the Parish Hall of St Martin of Tours parish Church (639 So. Shelby St, Louisville, KY 40202). Co-sponsored by Una Voce and WLCR Catholic Radio 1040.

A Thriving Church

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Images such as this recall the past, a long lost era of strong Mass attendance and thriving parishes from the pre-1950s. We sometimes encounter photographs like this, generally grainy and in sepia tones or black and white, when looking through old parish journals, or perhaps an elderly relative's picture album. We look back nostalgically at the beauty of the churches, filled with throngs of the faithful. We see the youthful optimism in the faces of the young and we envy the strong sense of Catholic identity. We see a vibrant church from days gone by in which there is a place for everyone, vocations are bountiful and there is an air of hope and certainty. We rue what we have lost, we scratch our heads and we ask ourselves, Why?

Actually, this photo was taken two days ago in New Jersey: Mater Ecclesiae's Solemn High Mass of the Assumption took place at St Peter's Church, Merchantville, NJ. Fr. Robert C Pasley, KCHS, Rector of Mater Ecclesiae Roman Catholic Church, Berlin, NJ, who is also Chaplain to the CMAA, was the celebrant for their 13th Annual Assumption Mass. This photograph is witness to a thriving church and testament to the inspirational example being set here in the 21st century. Here it is in glorious colour:


The Annual Assumption High Choral Mass began thirteen years ago to thank and honour Our Lady for the establishment of Mater Ecclesiae and always features some of the greatest works of orchestral/choral music ever written for the Sacred Liturgy. This year the setting of the Ordinary of the Mass was "Mass No.1 in B-flat” by Johan Nepomuk Hummel. Other music included the motets "Venite Populi" by Mozart, “Ave Virgo Gloriosa” by Frescobaldi, “Assumpta est Maria” by Rathberger, and the “Concerto for two trumpets” along with the “Concerto for two oboes in D minor” by Vivaldi.

Music from past Masses includes: 2001 - “Missa in Angustiis (Lord Nelson Mass)” by F.J. Haydn, 2002 – “Messe Solennelle” by L. Vierne, 2003 - the “Missa Brevis in C (Orgelsolo-messe)” by Mozart, 2005 – “Missa Assumpta est Maria in Caelum” by Palestrina, 2006 – “Missa Dolorosa” by Caldara, 2007 – “Mass in B Flat” by F. Schubert, 2008 – “Missa della Capella (1641)” by C. Monteverdi, 2009 – “Missa Sancti Nicolai (1772)” by F.J. Haydn, 2010 – the “Missa Brevis” by Carl H Biber, 2011 – “Missa Papa Marcelli” by Palestrina, and in 2012 – the “Mass in E Minor” by A Bruckner.

Hábitos Eclesiásticos na Roma do Século XIX

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In 2010 NLM featured a guest article written by Maurizio Bettoja on the subject of Clerical Dress in the City of Rome in the 19th Century. The article appeared in two posts, Part 1 and Part 2. We are now able to post this translation by Rafael Martins, a Seminarian from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, for the benefit of Portuguese-speaking readers.

Hábitos Eclesiásticos na Roma do Século XIX

Pic of the Day

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Sunday Mass (18 Aug) at St. Barnabas Church, Omaha, Nebraska. In July, the parish converted from Anglicanism to Catholicism. Last Saturday (10 Aug) their pastor was ordained a Catholic priest. This is a pictures of today’s Sunday Mass, with Father reading the Last Gospel at the conclusion of Mass.


The Art of the Beautiful

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The Catholic Artists Society and the Thomistic Institute present a 6-part lecture series delving into the heart of questions on Beauty, artistic creation and the artist’s work. The series begins Saturday, September 14, Greenwich Village.

The monthly, Saturday-night series will feature talks by six renowned philosophers, theologians and artists. Directed to professional artists in all disciplines, students and patrons of the arts, the series is open to all those who take in interest in culture and artistic endeavor. Each lecture will be followed by a reception and the liturgy of sung Compline.

The opening event - Art: For Whose Sake? – will feature Gregory Wolfe, the founder and editor of Image, a Seattle-based journal devoted to the study of the intersection of art, religion and culture.

Start date: Saturday, September 14, 2013

Time: Lecture at 7.30pm; reception at 8.30; Liturgy of Compline 9.30pm

Location: The Catholic Center at NYU, 238 Thompson Street, NYC

Attendance is free but space will be limited.

More information

Photopost: Assumption 2013

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Below, you can find a selection of photos from around the globe of the recent feast. Enjoy!

Letterkenny, County Donegal, Ireland - EF






 Saint Thomas Aquinas Parish, Rio Rancho, New Mexico - OF


Union County, Arkansas - EF

"Don't Let the Best Be the Enemy of the Good"

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How often have we heard this saying? When it conveys the value of patience in implementing change and the value of incrementalism as a prudent method, it expresses ageless wisdom. When used to justify stasis or stagnation, as it too often is, one might wonder if it functions rather as an excuse.

A case in point would be the reaction of many to those who advocate a serious return to the plainchant tradition, whether in its original Gregorian form or in vernacular adaptations that mirror the modes and rhythms of their model. “Are you serious?,” they say. “You don’t know what it’s like on the ground; your head must be in the clouds. The Catholic faithful have no idea what chant is, they’ve never heard it, they can’t sing it, and the music ministers don’t know how to navigate it, either. And besides, it’s hopelessly out of date. Sure, you can point to popes who recommend it, but that was then, and this is now. We have a new style of music that suits the contemporary Church, and who are you to say that it’s bad or harmful? Maybe, just maybe, chant’s artistically superior, but you’re in danger of judging by art, not by pastoral needs. And besides—don’t let the best be the enemy of the good.”

You see, all of this is an elaborate dodge or feint. It skirts around the real questions by taking refuge in that infinitely malleable concept “pastoral.” The real questions are, however, as follows:

(1) Is there a type of music that the Church teaches should have pride of place in the Roman Rite? Yes, of course, and we know that Vatican II and subsequent popes have said it quite clearly—not at all limiting themselves to liturgies in Latin (as some minimalists have attempted to argue on the basis of isolated texts that do not match the general pattern of magisterial documents). Here is not the place to argue why chant is the optimal sacred music for the liturgy; one can read about that in many places (such as, for starters, here, here, here, and here). The point is that chant is put forward as a baseline to start from and an ideal to work towards. One can see this from the very layout of the current English Roman Missal and the revised General Instruction, not to mention a host of other documents.

(2) Given that this is so, is there a Roman Rite liturgy on the face of the earth where it would not be most fitting to use chant? Leaving to one side the necessity or desirability of a quiet “low Mass,” where there is no intention of having any music at all, the answer is a resounding No: there could not be such a sung liturgy in principle, although due to poor formation there are too many such liturgies in practice.

Young men singing the antiphons at Tenebrae
(3) Can everyone learn to sing chant, or is it very difficult to do? This is, in many ways, the strangest question of all, and deserves a fuller response. Over the span of a thousand years, thousands of chants were passed down by oral tradition, long before musical notation was invented. That shows the “sticking” power of this marvelously melodious, infectiously singable, and truly popular music. As a music teacher, I have taught highschool students with no prior musical background to read, sing, and enjoy chant in the course of a few days. Its simpler pieces are vastly easier to sing than most Western art music or the contemporary schlock employed at many a Mass today. As a College professor, I have seen students graduate familiar with dozens of chants, not because they made a study of them, but because they regularly attended Mass in our chapel, where we sing a lot. And as a parent, I have heard my children, well before they could read or write, singing with gusto the Kyrie of Mass XI, the Gloria of Mass VIII, Credo III, the seasonal Marian antiphons (Salve Regina, Alma redemptoris mater, Ave regina caelorum, Regina caeli), Ave verum corpus, and still other chants, which they learned by hearing them sung at Mass or at Compline.

Okay, you might say, but you are a musician yourself! It may come as a surprise that I was not born equipped with musical knowledge, but had to acquire it, often by difficult and circuitous routes. In high school, I stumbled on an old copy of a Graduale Romanum in the library (it was a school run by Benedictine monks who, alas, no longer sang the chant) and found it interesting and wanted to be able to read it. No one could explain it to me, and the internet was hardly functional at that time. My solution was to go to the local record store and buy a CD of monks singing chant, then locate the chants in the book using the index, and then listen over and over until I could see how what they were singing matched the squiggles on the pages. It was a rough and ready approach, but it got me going, and helped me fall in love with these achingly beautiful melodies.

Our situation today is vastly better than mine was in the mid-1980’s. There are now simple chant tutorials you can download for free, crash courses offered around the country for those who like a more personal approach, and now live online classes. There are workshops for clergy and for music ministers. There are bestselling CDs of chant all over the market. It has never been easier for everyone involved, from top to bottom, to get effective and inexpensive training. And did I mention that the music itself is either available for free or, in the case of vernacular chant, not especially pricey? We are living now in a veritable chant renaissance—a moment when it is possible, perhaps for the first time ever, to implement the teaching of Vatican II across the entire globe, from the rising of the sun even to its setting: “The Church acknowledges Gregorian chant as characteristically belonging to the Roman liturgy, with the result that, therefore, other things being equal, in liturgical actions it takes possession of the first place” (a more literal rendering of Sacrosanctum Concilium 116).

The whole Church together should sing with one voice!
If in our liturgies chant really does “take possession of the first place,” we are being faithful to the clarion call of Popes Pius X, Pius XI, Pius XII, John XXIII, Paul VI, John Paul II, and Benedict XVI. That’s what it means to live out the “hermeneutic of reform in continuity.

Recently, a former teacher of mine, an admirable philosopher and musician, contacted me to ask if I was advocating that Latin chant replace all other music being used today in the church. He was concerned that I might be endorsing too extreme a position. I replied that it was certainly not my position that Latin chant should replace everything else; that I love polyphony, English chant, classic English hymnody, and noble instrumental music; and that all of these can and should have their places in the worship of the Church today, in both forms of the Roman Rite. Indeed, I even think that a certain limited pluralism is a good thing: some parishes or chapels ought to become known for the quality of their chant, others for their blend of chant and polyphony, others for their addition of hymnody to chant—and still others for their quiet and contemplative Masses. There is abundant room for ancient and modern sacred music that has the requisite qualities of holiness, artistic quality, and universality; there is room for extensive silence, too, always provided that chant, which is part of the very fabric of the Roman Rite, is not marginalized or omitted altogether. (Here I have in mind the Ordinary of the Mass, the orations, dialogues, and preface, and the responses and acclamations of the people.)

The point I would emphasize is that—if I could turn the initial saying on its head—we must not let the good be the enemy of the best. The chanted Roman liturgy is our birthright as Roman Catholics; it is a privilege to be able to sing this great music; and it is an injustice and a travesty when the chant is not generously shared with choirs and congregations. The music that grew up intertwined with the texts and ceremonies of the Roman Rite, the music in which this Rite is enshrined and through which it is most profoundly expressed, is the music that Holy Mother Church reasonably expects to be the clothing of our public worship, whatever ornamentation or decoration we may borrow from other traditions or other periods.
The traditional music of the liturgy
is part of its divinely originated essence 
It simply does not help to run away from this fact of our identity, our tradition, our inheritance, and our vocation. Like all other historic rites in the Catholic Church, the Roman Rite is a well-articulated set of prayers, chants, ceremonies, and implements, structured as a sequence of chanted texts accompanied by symbolic gestures. The sacred liturgy is an organic whole, a body-soul composite, that Our Lord Jesus Christ established in its germinal form and that the Holy Spirit has brought to maturity over the course of centuries in diverse ritual traditions. Thus, as Pope Benedict frequently reminded us, the liturgy belongs to the Church precisely as a gift inherited, not as a construct to be manipulated, a container for whatever “relevant content” we may want to inject. So, too, with the music of the liturgy, which, as Vatican II reminded us, is intimately connected with the liturgical action: this music must in itself clearly and consistently bear that history, that tradition, that gift, and impress it upon the souls of the faithful so that all of us may be shaped and formed by its beauty.

So, to return to our point of departure: Advocates of the widespread restoration of Gregorian chant—or, for that matter, of any traditional element or aspect of liturgy—are not suggesting that only the best is good enough and that everything lesser must be abandoned. Rather, they are striving to implement the teaching of Holy Mother Church by correcting the bad, enriching the good, and crowning it all with the best, in accord with the given nature of the liturgical rite. And why? Because this is what Catholics do, and this is who Catholics are.

Solemn Evensong and Benediction at the Ordinariate Church in London

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Solemn Evensong was sung and Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament was given yesterday at Our Lady of the Assumption and St Gregory's Church, Warwick Street (London). It was the first time the Feast of the Assumption had been celebrated at Our Lady of the Assumption and St Gregory’s since the church was dedicated to the life of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham earlier this year.

Evensong was led by Fr Mark Elliott Smith, Parish Priest at Warwick Street. Benediction was given by Mgr Keith Newton, Ordinary of the Ordinariate. The guest preacher was Fr Allen Brent, a priest of the Ordinariate and Professor of Early Church History and Iconography at King's College, London. More photographs here.





Basilica of the Sacred Heart at the University of Notre Dame

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In celebration of the 125th Anniversary of the Dedication of the Basilica of the Sacred Heart at the University of Notre Dame, Bishop Daniel R. Jenky, CSC, (Diocese of Peoria) returned to the Basilica which he had previously served as Rector and which he had restored. In a special 4pm Mass which he presided at, and Bp Rhodes (Diocese of Ft. Wayne-South Bend) concelebrated at, Bishop Jenky gave a spectacular homily affirming the affirming beautiful churches, describing the some of the artistic works on the Basilica, and reflecting on the Rite of Dedication of the Church.

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