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Juventutem DC hosts First Evening of Recollection on the Feast of St. Joseph

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Juventutem DC continues its monthly apostolate of Days of Recollection in March with a new twist: An evening of recollection on St. Joseph, including Adoration, Benediction and Confession, on Wednesday, March 19 at St. Thomas the Apostle Church in Washington D.C.

Fr. James Bradley, a priest of the Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham in England & Wales, will be giving a spiritual conference on the feast of St. Joseph, Spouse of the Blessed Virgin Mary and Patron of the Universal Church, followed by Adoration, Confessions and Benediction. This is the fifth such monthly Day of Recollection hosted by Juventutem DC, but the first to be held on a weekday evening. This series continues to generate tremendous interest and turnout by area Catholics drawn to traditional Catholic spirituality. This event is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be available at the talk.

The Recollection begins at 7:00pm in the St. Thomas fellowship hall in the basement, followed by Adoration and Benediction in the main church. Priests will be available for Confession during Adoration. St. Thomas is located at 2655 Woodley Road NW, just off the Woodley Park Metro Station on the Red Line, the most convenient means of access to the area. See our Facebook page for more details on this and other upcoming events being planned by Juventutem DC, at www.Facebook.com/JuventutemDC.



Juventutem Lehigh Valley Lenten Speaker Series

The Philology Institute's Summer Greek Intensive

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The Philology Institute is a newly-founded academic institute in central Kentucky that promotes the study and love of language through intensive summer courses as well as private and group tutoring. They will offer an intensive, six-week summer course in ancient Greek that incorporates sentence exercises in New Testament Greek and is well-suited for those interested in reading the New Testament and Greek Fathers.  

The course will be held in Wilmore, KY, from May 19 to June 27, 2014. They anticipate expanding to include an intensive summer Latin course in 2015. The cost of each course is $2500 (for the equivalent of 2 or more semesters of college-level coursework), and there are a limited number of $500 scholarships. Applications are available on their website.


Happy Feast of Saint Thomas Aquinas

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Today is the traditional feastday of St. Thomas Aquinas, Common Doctor of the Catholic Church, Patron of All Catholic Schools. March 7 is the birthday of the Angelic Doctor into eternal life, at the age of 49, en route to the General Council at Lyons. In his honor, it seems fitting to share the story of his death, as told by Bernard Gui in the Vitae Sancti Thomae Aquinatis:
Some days later the holy man had recovered his strength enough to continue the journey to Rome; but, passing near the Cistercian monastery of Fossanova and receiving a warm invitation from the abbot and community to stay there a while until his health should be perfectly restored, Thomas accepted the invitation and turned aside to the abbey. And after saying a prayer before the high altar of the abbey church, as he entered the cloister the hand of the Lord came upon him, and he knew in his spirit that he had now reached the end of his life . . .
          The abbot kindly gave him a room in his own apartments, with all the comforts that could be provided, as was fitting for such a guest; and being now utterly exhausted, he was put to bed and waited on by the monks with all reverence and humility. It was winter and they kept a fire burning in his room, carrying the logs in from the wood on their shoulders. And seeing this, Thomas said, 'Who am I that the servants of God should wait on me like this?' And now with every day that passed his body grew weaker; yet still from his spirit flowed the stream of doctrine. For, being asked by some of the monks to leave them some memorial of his stay with them, he gave a brief exposition of the Canticle of Solomon [the Song of Songs]. And it was indeed appropriate that the great worker in the school of the Church should terminate his teaching on that song of eternal glory; that such a master in that school, when about to pass from the prison of the body to the heavenly wedding-feast, should discourse on the bridal union of the Church with Christ her Spouse.
          Feeling his strength ebbing away, he devoutly asked for the most holy Body of Christ: and when the abbot, accompanied by the monks, brought it to him, he did reverence to it, prostrate on the ground; weak in body, but with his mind, as it were, running strongly to meet the Lord. And being asked, as the Church's discipline requires, whether he believed that this was indeed the body of the Son of God which was born of the Virgin and hung on the cross for our sake and on the third day rose again, Thomas answered with a strong voice and alert devotion and shedding tears:
          "Even were it possible for us wayfarers through life to have some greater knowledge of this truth than sincere faith gives us—faith inexpressibly true—yet now in that faith alone I declare that I truly believe and most certainly know that this is indeed true God and Man, Son of the eternal Father, born of the Virgin Mother, the Lord Jesus Christ. This I sincerely believe and profess."
          Then with tears and devotion he received the life-giving Sacrament. But first, according to report, he said also these words:
          "O price of my redemption and food for my pilgrimage, I receive You! For Your sake I have studied and toiled and kept vigil. I have preached You and taught You. Never consciously have I said a word against You. But if I should have said or written anything amiss on this sacrament or any of the others, I leave it all to the judgment of the holy Roman Church, in obedience to whom I desire to end my life."
          On the following day he asked for and received the Last Anointing. His mind remained clear through the ceremony and he answered the prayers himself. Then, joining his hands, he peacefully gave back his spirit to its Maker.
St. Thomas Aquinas, pray for us: obtain for us the grace to imitate your humility, devotion, and obedience, and some share of your wisdom, that we may live and die as you lived and died, in faithful communion with Christ and His Holy Church. Amen.

A New Our Lady of Czestachova - Slash and No Burn

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Here is another new icon of a familiar image. NLM reader David Woolf from Wales sent this to me and I will let him describe the process by which it was commissioned:

'I wanted a travelling icon, so it is a diptych - it goes with me wherever I travel. I have a great devotion to Our Lady of Czestochowa. Aidan Hart, the artist, asked did I want her painted as the icon is currently at Jasna Gora, like the familiar black Madonna or one based upon the Iveron Theotokos? The icon currently displayed at Jasna Gora was originally of the Iveron form, but alas has been renovated on several occasions - the oil paint [yes oil paint, DC] applied by the restorers has not bonded to the underlying egg tempera, hence the ‘artistic mess’ of the icon today. Therefore I asked Aidan to recreate the original Iveron form, however because the attacks on Our Lady’s right cheek (the slash marks) are part of this archetype’s history I asked that these be added to the commission - an idea to which he was happy to comply. Furthermore the border he has used is as on the current icon at Jasna Gorna but if often hidden under a rizza.'




The Theology of the Offertory - Part 3: A Different Theology?

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As mentioned previously, this series of articles is a reply to the contentions of a pseudonymous blogger “Consolamini” about the sacrifice of the Mass and the Offertory. Fr. Anthony Ruff, the principal author and moderator of PrayTell, recently commended one of Consolamini’s articles to his readers’ attention because, as he states, it “shows why for so many of us there can’t be a going back to the old rite – no way, no how.” In the first article, I examined the claim that the Offertory of the Missal of St Pius V was intended to offer a different sacrifice from that of the Canon of the Mass, and in the second, the idea of the priesthood which Consolamini claims to find within it.

Here I shall deal with the claim that the Missal of Paul VI, by removing the Offertory and replacing it with a “Preparation of the Gifts”, makes a “break with the past,” and that the two forms of the Roman Rite “have very different theologies of Eucharistic Sacrifice.” Consolamini himself clearly believes this to be a good thing, since “it is very clear to (him) that it is the 1570 Missal, not the 1970 Rite, that deviates from the Apostolic (and patristic) Tradition.” (As I have noted previously, he attributes this deviation specifically to the Scholastic theologians of the 13th and following centuries, even though the liturgical texts and ideas of the Offertory all predate the Scholastics by at least a century and half.)
In the liturgical reforms of Paul VI …, the Mass was radically restructured to take away any pretense of this second sacrifice. (purportedly in the Offertory) There is no “offertory” of bread and wine, but rather a “preparation of the gifts” in which the bread and wine are prepared for the Eucharist. The only sacrifice is the sharing in the One Eternal Sacrifice of Calvary as we “proclaim the Death of the Lord until he comes in glory.” … There is a clear break here with the 1962 and earlier Missals that follow the 1570 liturgical revisions of Pius V, and indeed many of the medieval rites that had developed and on which Pius V based his reforms after the Council of Trent. And this is precisely where we see claims to a “hermeneutic of continuity” in the liturgy to be unsupported by fact. I agree with those who claim that the Novus Ordo represents a break with the past:…
As a first principal, I will take it for granted that liturgical texts must be understood according to the sense in which the Church gives them to us. Furthermore, I take this to be true, even when another sense at variance with the Faith may be plausibly found within them. To give an example: the Pentecost hymn Veni, Creator Spiritus at one point calls the Holy Spirit, “digitus paternae dexterae – a finger of the Father’s right hand.” Taken out of context, these words are strongly suggestive of subordinationism, the belief that the Son and Holy Spirit are lesser beings and servants of God the Father. This is, however, clearly not the sense in which the Church has received them and uses them in the liturgy, and it would be absolutely false to say that by them, She professes a subordinationist belief.

It may be objected that the circumstances in which the Veni, Creator Spiritus came into liturgical use are very different from those which gave us the Novus Ordo, and with it the Preparation of the Gifts in place of the Offertory. I shall therefore give another example, one which forms part of the modern liturgical reform.

Several years ago, I read an article by a Protestant clergyman who contended that it was no longer possible, or even desirable, to claim that the whole of the Scriptures are inspired by God, and wished his church to accept that parts of it are merely the words of men. He then cited the practice of various churches in not reading the whole of Scripture in worship as a tacit acknowledgement of this idea. As an example, he noted that during World War I, some English churches began omitting certain verses from the Psalms, such as the end of Psalm 142, “And of thy mercy cut off mine enemies, and destroy all them that afflict my soul”, lest they be seen as an incitement to hatred of the Germans.

In the post-Conciliar Liturgy of the Hours, the Psalter has (for the first time in the history of Catholic liturgy, both East and West) been edited on similar lines. The three so-called Imprecatory Psalms (57, 82 and 108) are omitted entirely, and several psalms and canticles have been “censored”, so to speak, including the line of Psalm 142 cited above.

Now one may certainly debate the advisability of censoring the psalms in this fashion; indeed, one even may do so on the grounds that the practice is suggestive of an heretical idea of Biblical inspiration. But one may not claim that the Pope or the Church has given official sanction to an heretical idea of Biblical inspiration by promulgating a censored Psalter, since no such sanction is anywhere stated or implied in the new Office’s decree of promulgation or its praenotanda. Furthermore, this would still hold true even if the person who did the actual censoring did so to express belief in a new theology of Biblical inspiration, since that belief was not in any way officially taken up by the Church. (I say this in a purely hypothetical manner, since there is in fact reason to believe exactly the contrary.)

In this context, it would serve no purpose to discuss either the persons or the circumstances which created the Preparation of the Gifts as a rite to substitute the traditional Offertory. Even if they had intended by doing so to bring into the Church a different theology of the Eucharistic sacrifice, or bring back an older one, they could not do so. The only thing which counts in this regard is the stated intention of the authority that actually promulgated the post-Conciliar reform of the Missal. Let us therefore do the Pope the courtesy which we owe him as sons of the Catholic Church, and take him at his own words in describing his own actions.

His Holiness Pope Paul VI at the Mass of the Concistory held in February of 1965.
The Missal of Pope Paul VI was officially promulgated with the Apostolic Constitution Missale Romanumon April 3, 1969. Apart from the notes incorporated in the text, and the legal formulae at the end, it comprises 1169 words in the official Latin version. Of these, more than half (just over 600) are dedicated to describing the various changes to the Missal, such as the increased number of prefaces and Eucharistic prayers, the revision of the orations, the expanded lectionary etc. Not a word is dedicated to the new Preparation of the Gifts. It seems reasonable to assume that if the Pope intended to change, or (as Consolamini would have it) change back the theology of the Eucharistic sacrifice to something “very different” by changing the Offertory, this would be the place to say so.

In point of fact, nowhere does the Constitution declare any kind of break with the theology of the Tridentine Missal. Indeed, it begins with the statement, “Everyone acknowledges that the Roman Missal, promulgated by Our Predecessor St Pius V in the year 1570, by a decree of the Council of Trent, must be counted among the many and wonderful useful fruits that flowed forth from that same most holy Synod to the universal Church of Christ.”

In the Missal itself, this Constitution is followed by the “Institutio Generalis” or “General Instruction”, commonly known in English by the unfortunate acronym GIRM. Its second section is entitled “Witness to An Unchanged Faith.” 
The sacrificial nature of the Mass, solemnly asserted by the Council of Trent, in agreement with the universal tradition of the Church, was again declared by the Second Vatican Council. Concerning the Mass it pronounced these important words: “Our Savior at the Last Supper instituted the Eucharistic sacrifice of His Body and Blood, by which He might render perpetual the sacrifice of the Cross unto the ages, until He come, and indeed entrust to His beloved Spouse the Church the memorial of His death and resurrection.” … Thus in the new Missal the Church’s law of praying corresponds to Her perennial law of belief, by which we are reminded that the Sacrifice of the Cross and the sacramental renewal (renovationem) thereof are one and the same, only the manner of offering being different; which (manner) the Lord instituted at the Last Supper Christ, and commanded the Apostles that it be done in His memory; and accordingly, (we are reminded) that the Mass is at once a sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, propitiatory and satisfactory. (i.e., that makes satisfaction for sins.)
These words are essentially a paraphrase of the second chapter of the Council of Trent’s Twenty-Second Session, and the words “only the manner of offering being different” are almost identical in both Trent and the Latin version of the GIRM.

One last note is called for as to the place of the old Offertory and the new Preparation of the Gifts in liturgical history. As Fr. Ruff noted in his article introducing his readers to Consolamini, the latter describes himself as one “…thoroughly committed to the program of the Second Vatican Council as it was promulgated in 1965, as contrasted with how it has been reinterpreted, in some cases almost out of existence by both self-appointed and divinely anointed authorities over the last thirty-some years.” I do not think I am being overly cynical to ask whether this “program” includes the letter and spirit of Sacrosanctum Concilium, which does not even mention the Offertory, much less call for it to be radically overhauled.

A Roman Pilgrim at the Station Churches

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Meet Agnese, a friend of mine and fellow-parishoner at the F.S.S.P.’s Roman church, Trinità dei Pellegrini.
Piazza di Spagna on December 8 a few years ago, hoping to see Pope Benedict. The papal visit to the Piazza on the feast of the Immaculate Conception has become a sort of modern-day stational observance; every year, the Pope blesses a wreath of flowers to adorn the statue of the Virgin Mary on top of the nearby “Colonna dell’Immacolata.” The youngest member of the Roman fire-department is then brought up to the statue on a cherry-picker, removes last year’s wreath, and puts the newly blessed one in its place on the Virgin’s arm. In the end, the Piazza was too full for us to get anywhere near the column, and all we saw was a little bit of the Pope from behind and at a distance.
Agnese is a native of Rome who, like many Romans, is following the Lenten pilgrimage of the Station churches this year. She is happy to share with our readers her photographs of the churches themselves, the Masses and (in many cases) the processions that precede them; I plan on posting these two or three times a week, depending on how many she makes available. Over the years, we have published a large number of articles about the Station churches, which you easily can find by putting the words “Station churches” in the NLM search box on the top right of the page. If you don’t know what Station churches are, you might want to read this great article which Shawn posted in 2010, explaining their origin and significance.

Thursday after Ash Wednesday - San Giorgio in Velabro
Behind the little window under the altar sits a reliquary with a piece of the skull of St George. Because the titular Saint is the Patron of England, this church was given to Bl. John Henry Newman as his cardinalitial title by Pope Leo XIII in 1879; it was held by Cardinal Alfonse Maria Stickler from 1985 until his death in 2007.

Friday after Ash Wednesday - Saints John and Paul

Procession outside the basilica before Mass. The dome is not that of the main church, but of the large side-chapel where St. Paul of the Cross, the founder of the Passionist Order, is buried. St. Paul had a brother named Giovanni Battista (John the Baptist), himself now a Venerable, to whom he was very close, and who was instrumental in helping him found the order. Many years after the latter’s death, Pope Clement XIV (1769-74) gave the Basilica to St Paul to be the first “Retreat”, as the order’s houses are called, in Rome, in remembrance of his beloved brother, since the martyrs John and Paul were also brothers.
The fellow in black is a member of the Passionist Order.

Saturday after Ash Wednesday - Sant’Agostino
In the Roman Missal, the Station is listed at a church called St Trypho, which was in ruins and torn down in 1595. The relics of Ss Trypho and his companions, Respicius and Nympha, were transferred along with the Lenten Station to the nearby church of Saint Augustine.

First Sunday of Lent - Saint John in the Lateran
The Procession before Mass, beginning in the ancient cloister of Rome’s cathedral.  

Lectio Divina: The Agony in the Garden

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Many Catholics who first attempt lectio divina find, perhaps to their surprise, that it can be something of a struggle. We hear it extolled to the heights, only to discover that it takes hard work, at least in the initial phase of growing into a new habit. It is one thing to read Scripture at a comfortable trot, following the story line and feeling moved by the events, much as one might feel reading a short story or a poem; it is quite another thing to walk slowly through half a chapter or to linger over a few verses, asking, seeking, knocking on just a few words. We start to feel impatient; we want to “get on with it”; we think we know what the text is saying already, because we’re heard it (or something like it) countless times at Mass; and worst of all, our mind begins to wander.

For those who know, in faith, that Scripture is God’s very own Word spoken to our hearts—why, otherwise, would we desire to draw so near to this burning bush?—it can be something of an agony to find that we are neither quickly ignited nor easily kept ablaze. And yet, we know that we must keep our place near the Word; we stay at our post, and we ask, we seek, we knock, trusting that the Divine Master will speak to us when we are ready to hear—indeed, that His Word, of which our mind is a far-distant echo, has the power to make us ready to hear what He will say.

Once, when meditating St. Mark’s account of the Agony in the Garden (Mk 14:32–42), I noticed that Jesus issues four sets of commands to his disciples, as indicated by the imperative verbs:
  1. v. 32: “Sit here . . .” (This is addressed to all the disciples.) 
  2. v. 34: “Remain here, and watch [or keep awake].” (This is addressed to Peter, James, and John.)
  3. v. 38: “Watch and pray.” (This is addressed to Peter.)
  4. v. 42: “Rise . . . See.” (This seems to be addressed to Peter, James, and John.)
Those four imperatives struck me as closely bound up with the four steps of lectio divina:
  1. “Sit here.” — Lectio
  2. “Remain/abide here, and keep awake.” — Meditatio
  3. “Keep awake and pray.” — Oratio
  4. “Rise . . . See.” — Contemplatio
The first step is simply to sit down to the banquet of the Word: sit HERE. Do not wander elsewhere looking for wisdom; do not think it is vaguely all around you, like an invisible benign gas floating in the air. No, wisdom will be found in one particular person, Jesus Christ, and at one particular time, this moment of your prayer, and in one particular place, the inspired word He speaks to you. It is an act of faith to accept that this is true and that it will be fruitful for us, just as it was an act of faith for those three apostles to follow Jesus into the heart of the dark garden where he would be handed over for the life of the world.

The second step is a continuation of the first—you were already sitting here, now remain here, do not go away when you get distracted or tired or afraid or bored—and yet goes further: keep awake. Turn your mind actively, questioningly, to the word in front of you. Turn it over and over, bang your head against it and stay awake, alert for what it is trying to tell you.

The third step again continues the prior step (keep awake!—we can’t ever give up our vigilance and just go to sleep), but adds, tellingly: pray. Out of your abiding in the Lord’s word, surely a prayer will begin to rise in your heart. Let it rise, let it swim into your consciousness, into your own words, so that it can be the response you make, from your heart, to the Lord speaking to you. Pray—pray for yourself, for your loved ones, your enemies, your rulers, anyone and anything you have a desire to pray about or pray for. In so doing, you will not only stay awake, you will become an instrument by which the Lord spreads His wakefulness and his peace to others beyond yourself.

The fourth step is a surprise: Rise, the Lord says, and see. Here is where the Lord lifts us up by His own strength, for we cannot raise ourselves to His heights. Yet He commands us to rise, because if we intend to rise by His grace, He will raise us up, for He is gracious and He loves mankind. SEE, see what there is to see in His mysteries: He will begin to show them and share them with us by an unexpected insight, an unmerited immersion into His simple truth. This is the gift of contemplation, and it begins with our willingness to rise up and see.

In the garden, Jesus himself prays three times, using the same words—a model for us, as we wrestle with the angel of God, as we accept the chalice we must drink, as we discover that the Father’s will is our sustenance and our life.

(Part III of a four-part series.  Part I is here; Part II, here.)


New Publication: Sacred Choral Works by Peter Kwasniewski

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I have received some exciting news from Corpus Christi Watershed. Many NLM readers already know the name of Dr. Peter Kwasniewski, one of our regular contributors. Some will know that Dr. Kwasniewski is a professor of theology, philosophy, and music at Wyoming Catholic College and serves as their choirmaster. Few, however, know that he is also a composer of sacred music, a passion he has pursued for almost 25 years. His Masses, motets, carols, antiphons, and acclamations have been performed by a number of choirs around the world from 1990 to the present.

It is therefore gratifying to be able to announce the publication of Dr. Kwasniewski's Sacred Choral Works. This 276-page collection brings together a wide variety of sacred music, in Latin and in English, guided by the highest ideals of the Catholic tradition and ready to be used at celebrations of the Roman Rite in both Forms. The 85 works published here, in styles ranging from Renaissance polyphony to classic English hymnody, include settings of the Ordinary of the Mass, Eucharistic and Marian motets, vernacular hymns, Alleluias and Lenten acclamations, seasonal works for Christmas, the Holy Triduum (with three complete settings of the Reproaches for Good Friday), and Easter. Most of the pieces are scored for SATB choir; some are for SSA/TTB and SAB groupings.

Here is CCW's announcement video, featuring one of Peter's settings of the Kyrie:


Additional information may be found at the composer's page, including the book's Preface and Table of Contents, a sample score, a snapshot of the book, and recordings of five pieces sung by Matthew Curtis of Choral Tracks. As an aid to repertoire selection and choral instruction, Dr. Kwasniewski and Mr. Curtis have collaborated to record nearly all the works contained in the book (available soon on 3 full-length CDs).

Congratulations, Dr. Kwasniewski, on this new publication, the fruit of many years of labor!

Pontifical Mass with Archbishop Sample of Portland, Oregon

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On Quinquagesima Sunday, Archbishop Alexander Sample of Portland, Oregon celebrated a Pontifical Mass at the Throne in the Extraordinary Form during a Gregorian Chant Conference at the Brigittine Monastery of Our Lady of Consolation in Amity, Oregon. The deacon was Fr John Boyle, director of the tribunal. Fr Charles Vreeland, FSSP was the Assistant Priest. Several priests and deacons of the Archdiocese assisted in other liturgical roles and in choir. Our thanks to Mr. Marc Salvatore, the official photographer for the event, who has offered us his photos of the Mass and video to post. And likewise, our thanks to Archbishop Sample for his graceful words of encouragement for the celebration of the usus antiquior.












London Latin Mass Society Video - Silence

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Another great video from the London LMS, this time on silence.

A Roman Pilgrim at the Station Churches - Part 2

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More from Agnese, our pilgrim-on-the scene!

Monday of the First Week of Lent - St. Peter in Chains
The reliquary seen here contains the chain with which St Peter was held prisoner in Rome under Nero, and another chain brought from the prison where he was held by Herod in Jerusalem. Tradition holds that when the two chains were brought together in the mid-5th century, under Pope St Leo the Great, they were miraculously united as a single chain in such fashion that one could not tell where the one began and the other ended. A series of smaller links on the left side is from a chain that was used to hold St Paul. The church of Rome has always honored the two Apostles together as her co-founders; for this reason, one of the antiphons of their office reads, “The glorious princes of the earth; as they loved one another in their life, so also in death they were not separated.”



Tuesday of the First Week of Lent - Sant’Anastasia
The church of Sant’Anastasia is also the station for the second Mass of Christmas day, in honor of the titular martyr who shares the day of her birth into heaven with the day of Christ’s Birth into this world.


Ember Wednesday in the First Week of Lent - Santa Maria Maggiore


Like many station churches, Saint Mary Major also keeps the station day by bringing out a large number of reliquaries and displaying them on the altar.



The traditional Mass readings for the three Ember Days in Lent form a unit which are meant to be taken together, along with those of the Second Sunday; they are also chosen in particular reference to the stations at which they are held. Shawn and I wrote an article about this together in 2010, and I wrote another about these station days in 2012, which you might find interesting. 

Solemn High Mass at St. Paul's, Cambridge

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This invitation comes to readers via Juventutem Boston.

Celebrate with us the Feast of the Annunciation and the third anniversary of the first Extraordinary Form Mass at the Harvard Catholic Center.

7:00 PM: Solemn High Mass celebrated by Fr. Raymond VandeMoortell
After Mass: Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, with a meditation by Fr. Kwang Lee on the Incarnation
9:00 PM: Solemn Benediction

St. Paul's Church
29 Mt. Auburn St.
Cambridge, MA

***Confession will be available before Mass and during adoration***

Young adult social will follow the holy hour.

Questions? Contact juventutemboston@gmail.com


The Virgin of Coromoto - An Image to Inspire us to Pray for Venezuela

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Holy Virgin of Coromoto, pray for faith and freedom for the Venezuelan people. Poor will always be with us and so, it seems, will the oppressed. What was a flourishing modern democracy 15 years ago is descending now into a Cuban nightmare as we speak. My wife is Venezuelan and for two weeks was trapped in her apartment with our daughter and her mother. Making dashes for the local shop where all that was in stock was dried milk, olives and canned tuna. Marauding gangs of motorcyclists, inspired by the government, shot randomly at people in the streets and into houses in middle class suburbs. 

We eventually managed to find flights to get them out of the country praying that on that day she would be able to get to the airport and out of the country. The night before my wife flew out, the National Guard raided the apartment block next to her, battering down the door and firing guns off into the night and dragged three young men off to prison illegally. To our great relief my family made it out safely the next day. Now the reports from those who stayed are that the shops are looted and burnt out.

It is a case study of the effects of ignoring Catholic social teaching - what began as a gradual erosion of freedom and of property rights accelerated in the last year. Throw in gross incompetence and corrupt government officials and the result is a failing state sinking into chaos.

What hope is there for a society in such trouble? The only answer I have at this point is prayer. A spiritual renewal and a deepening of faith. This is a country that needs our prayers so that it might transform. Spiritual and cultural change are needed as much as, perhaps more than, political change.

Hope lies in the Virgin of Coromoto, declared patron of the country by Pius XII in 1947 and I have been praying to her for some time now. In a story similar to Guadelupe, Our Lady appeared to a Coromoto Indian in the town of Guanare in the 16th century, the story is here. The image is very beautiful, and again just like Guadelupe, a revealed image not created by human hands. Coincidentally, like Our Lady of Walsingham the patron of my home country, England, she is seated and facing forward, but in red shawl rather than a blue one.

 Here is her prayer:

Beautiful Lady Mary, Virgin Mother of the Redeemer, with you we praise and glorify the Father in the Holy Spirit through Jesus Christ. We beseech you that, just as in Coromoto you guided the steps of the Indians towards the baptismal grace, you may now capture the heart of the Venezuelans, and bring them to the renewal of their faith.

Virgin of Coromoto, patron of Venezuela, bless the evangelistic action of the Church  so that Venezuela might be fortress and defense of the faith of your children, and beginning of a renewal of the Christian customs. 

This is a beautiful prayer which places Our Lady in the right place relative to us and our worship of God. When we worship God in the sacred liturgy, we praise and glorify the Father, through the Son, in the Spirit. And Our Lady is right there with us a model for our worship.

Our Lady of Coromoto, pray for us and for Venezuela! 

Nostra-Signora-di-Coromoto3

Guest Post: Liber Gradualis or Graduale Novum?

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An NLM reader, Richard Llewellyn, provides us with the guest post below. Thanks to Richard for his post on the various chant editions.

The Belgian « Académie de Chant Grégorien » organised a most interesting workshop with both Mgr Alberto Turco and Franco Ackermans (of the Aiscgre-Arbeitsgruppe), who respectively wrote the Liber Gradualis and the Graduale Novum. These books are the fruits of decades of work of research to restore the Roman Graduale from two independent bodies, though both had links with Dom Cardine and Dom Jean Claire.

If probably 90% of the books have the same text, which shows that the restored text is rather more accurate in general that the present Graduale Romanum, there are some noticeable differences in a few pieces.
It has been an amazing day of dialogue on some of the complex restored pieces. Both authors have also exposed their way of working.

What are these books ? 

Let us first remember that Dom Pothier’s Liber Gradualis was a first shot at reconstituing a sort of supposed historical graduale. St Pius X took its musical text to make the Graduale Romanum, and asked all dioceses to use it with his famous motu proprio. These were to put an end to the use of the simplified Franciscan books of the curia. The benedictine and roman scholars of the time knew that this graduale was a first step : it could therefore not be meant to be a permanentand definitive edition. This is also why Dom Gajard requested a special paragraph to be added in Sacrosanctum Concilium, which became

117. The typical edition of the books of Gregorian chant is to be completed; and a more critical editionis to be prepared of those books already published since the restoration by St. Pius X.

Work progressed in that direction at Solesmes, and also in other academic places. The main step forward probably came with the understanding that Gregorian chant had not been dictated by St Gregory the great,  but that it was a mixture of Gallico-Antiochan and Romano-Alexandrian chant. This resulted in a better comprehension of their structural compositions (modality, phrasing, ornamentation, etc)

The post-conciliar atmosphere did not really favour an immediate publication of new chant books, and it was really with the incentive of Pope Benedict XVI that some books could (at last) come out.

Liber Gradualis juxta ordinem Cantus Missae, ad usum privatum, ex codicibue antiquioribus ac probatis restauratus cura et studio Alberto Turco.



Mgr Alberto Turco is a very established chant specialist. Professor of Chant at the Pontifical Institute of Sacred Music, music director of the Verone cathedral. He has published many books on both Gregorian, Old-Roman and Ambrosian chant.  Mgr Turco has now published his full restoration of propers for Advent, Christmas, Lent, Holyweek, Eastertime, in separate booklets. The first of these came out in 2009. The ordinary time and sanctoral are yet to be published. You can find the chant books in the Vatican bookshop amongst other places, and on the internet. Mgr Turco is also member of the Roman  commission that deals with making mass propers for the Ordinary form (which correspond to the texts of the missal) and for the divine office. So a very Roman church musician.

Graduale Novum

The Aiscgre-Arbeitsgruppe is a group of very well established Dutch chant scholars. They published the Graduale Novum with their own restored text. This book covers the whole of the liturgical year, though you do not always get different chant for both years A, B, C, as you get in the Triplex.  This book has been launched in the Vatican in the presence of Pope Benedict XVI, and has benefited from a rather good promotion campaign.

The good news is probably that about 90% of the musical text is similar in both books.
Nevertheless, some pieces are really different. This stems notably from different liturgical and musical approaches. So, for the church musician, choosing the version to use is sometimes difficult.

Liber Gradualis’ square notation is richer than Graduale Novum’s. In particular you get some grace notes which are very useful to discern more and less important notes. In some places you get small variations like ossia in modern music, which gives more choices coming from different manuscripts. Regarding neumatic notation, Liber Gradualis only gives St Gall’s, whereas Gradual Novum gives both St Gall and Laon. Probably a pity for Turco’s books, since Laon’s notation is perhaps much more precise regarding rhythm.

If Graduale Novum basically uses the square notation of the Vatican typical edition, it gives many more indications of # and b. We must remember that these signs are not mentioned in most medieval manuscript, because it is assumed that the rule of not singing tritones is known (ie you are not allowed to sing FGAH, BCDE and alike). Uses of b and # are there to correct this problem within the hexachord/diatonic system of notation. This is why you find them in square notation books from the late middle-ages onward.
Turco’s notation, on the other hand, is rather more restrictive in the use of b, and does not use # at all. His notation is therefore more traditional, but it supposes that cantors are going to make choices.
Both authors presented their books and the way they worked. Then there was a technical discussion on a few problematic pieces where the versions given were radically different.

 Int. Populus Sion, Judica me, Scapulis suis
 Gr. Qui sedes, Ex Sion,
 All. Pascha nostrum, Domine Deus salutis
Off. In die sollmnitatis
Com. Data est mihi



Graduale Novum
1908 Graduale Romanum
Liber Gradualis

I suppose than many participants made their opinion as to which analysis was more convincing. Some also suggested (after the seminar) that the identified « problematic » pieces should be reanalyzed in order to understand the approach and to arrive to a common text when possible, or to the use of ossiaon some of the phrases. There was also a non strictly musical interesting point : Mgr Turco explained that for some pieces he decided to take into account the necessary continuous evolution with the existing books (ie a hermeneutic of continuity approach), notably regarding some of the intonations. ie, keeping some existing usages  even if they were not necessary the more certain « original » version.

This is indeed an important point. We have seen the disasters of reforms carried out with a hermeneutic of discontinuity. And not everybody is yet inclined to use chromatic and enharmonic scales. So there is still a bit of work to do, but it is clear that both books are after all more satisfactory than the Liberi currently in use.
Now, of course, there is the legal issue. We now have the luxuary to have the choice to use 4 serious Gregorian chant books for parish masses (Graduale Triplex, Graduale Romanum, Graduale Novum, and Liber Gradualis). There is also easy access to orginal medieval / renaissance manuscripts thanks to the internet.

Technically, the St Pius Xth obligation to use his graduale has not yet been abolished, and many priests in traditional institutes feel that they do not have the right to use these unofficial books –   though they very often use the Solesmes/Dom Mocquereau books with their rhythmic indications, which are by no means the official books…

But it seems quite clear that pope Benedict has fostered the development of these new chant books, and so that there was a clearly expressed papal intention for the chant texts to evolve. So, do we really need to wait for an official papal motu proprio to celebrate mass with what we believe is a better score?

A Roman Pilgrim at the Station Churches - Part 3

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As I wrote in an article a few years ago, the Thursdays of Lent were originally aliturgical days in the Roman Rite, on which no Mass was said; the Masses for these days were instituted by Pope St. Gregory II (715-31). It has often been noted that by his time, the chant repertoire fixed by St. Gregory the Great was looked upon as a closed canon, and so the Masses of these Thursdays were compiled from various earlier Masses. On Thursday of the first week of Lent, the station is kept at the church of Saint Lawrence “in Panisperna” (the name of the street), and the traditional introit for the day reads, “Praise and beauty are before him: holiness and majesty in his sanctuary.” Bl. Ildefonse Schuster tells us in The Sacramentary (vol. 2, p. 67) that these words refer to the beauty of both the station church of the day, where St Lawrence was burnt, and that of the church built over his grave, St Lawrence outside-the-Walls.
Procession in the courtyard next to the church.



The faithful venerate a relic of St. Lawrence.

“The place of St. Lawrence’s Martyrdom”, at the entrance to the church’s crypt.
The altar in the crypt.

Back when the Pope himself kept the Lenten stations on a regular basis, there was also kept on the ferial days a “Collecta”. (see article here) At a church not too far from the Station, the faithful would gather (colligere) over the course of the day; the Pope then came to the Collecta in the later afternoon, vested for the Mass, and processed with the clergy and faithful to the Station. The common Roman custom of singing the Litany of the Saints at the Lenten Stations is a remnant of this tradition. The Collectae, however, dropped out of use fairly early; they are not listed in the Missal, and several of them were at churches which no longer exist. Nevertheless, some of the Stations are now kept in Rome in a similar fashion. Yesterday, the Station Mass at the church of the Twelve Apostles was preceded by a procession from the nearby church of the Most Holy Name of Mary at the Forum of Trajan. (Holy Name of Mary is the cardinalitial title of H.E. Darío Castrillón-Hoyos, retired President of the Ecclesia Dei commission.) Likewise, on Ash Wednesday, the Popes have in recent decades traditionally processed from the abbey of St Anselmo to the nearby Station at Santa Sabina.
The interior of the church of the Most Holy Name of Mary.
The procession makes it way through the Piazza Dodici Apostoli (also a popular site for noisy political rallies)

The crypt of the church of the Twelve Apostles, seen from the top of the staircase leading down into it (nice shot, Agnese!)

His Excellency Bishop Matteo Zuppi, the Auxiliary Bishop of Rome responsible for the historical center of the city, in which almost all of the Station churches are located.
The crypt of the Twelve Apostles was completely renovated in the mid-19th century, a period in which a group of Roman archeologists, led by Giovanni Battista de’ Rossi, were busily hunting for and rediscovering the ancient Christian cemeteries known as the catacombs. (De’ Rossi is often called by Italians “the Christopher Columbus of the Catacombs.”) The decorative patterns painted on the walls (now themselves largely in need of renovation), in which colored bars separate the various sections, are all based on designs found in the early Christian burial chambers.
The church of the Twelve Apostles was originally dedicated to only two of them, St Philip and St James the Less, whose relics have reposed in the church since the mid-6th century. This is the origin of the Roman Rite’s tradition of giving them a shared feast on May 1st, just as Saints Simon and Jude are kept with a joint feast on October 28th, since their relics are kept together at St. Peter’s Basilica.

Ash Wednesday Photopost

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As promised, here are the photos from around the world from Ash Wednesday!


Saint Benedict Catholic Church in Richmond, VA



Mass (EF): St. Margaret Mary's (Oakland, CA) and Star of the Sea (San Francisco, CA)


Mass (EF): Chancery Chapel (Bishop O'Connor Center), Madison, WI


Mass (EF): Holy Family Parish in the Diocese of Cubao, Philippines





Solemn Vespers: Ascension Roman Catholic Church in Pittsburgh, PA

Photo Request: St Joseph’s Feast Day

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I hope you are all having a fruitful Lent. On this upcoming feast of St. Joseph in which we take a brief break from our fasting and penance, I encourage you to send me your pictures from Masses and public celebrations of the Divine Office that are held on this upcoming March 19, 2014.
Please send your photos to photopost@newliturgicalmovement.org.

Truth About Communion in the Hand While Standing

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A close friend of mine, Fr. Richard Heilman, brings us our guest post for today on the questionable origins of communion in the hand. This was Father's homily today which he wrote into a post for NLM. He compiled most of this from various articles and sources. Fr. Heilman is a priest of the Diocese of Madison, WI.
In my efforts to restore a sense of the sacred in the liturgy, I have often been accused of being “pre-Vatican II.” I usually correct them by saying I am exactly Vatican II. The Second Vatican Council called for few changes in the liturgy, understanding that there had been a great many changes to the Roman liturgy over the centuries, to be sure, but they had been gradual and organic, and typically imperceptible. However, in all of church history, there was never anything like what happened in the years following this Council, in respect to the liturgy.

This weekend we had our first Masses with the new Communion rail. After one of these Masses I was talking with one of the old guard parishioners (great guy), and he loved the rails. He told me that "years ago" (I love that expression), they had a Parish Council meeting, and Fr. X wanted to remove the side altars (along with many other alterations), in this beautiful church. The old guard parishioner said, "It was a hard fought battle that night, but we wore him down and he did only minor alterations.” I said, "My ... how times have changed ... that priest got criticized for trying to remove sacredness ... now I'm getting criticized for trying to bring it back."

Since we were celebrating our new Communion rails, and the Gospel saw Peter, James and John fall prostrate before the presence of God - I deemed it a perfect time to shed some light on one of those post-Vatican II innovations – Communion in the hand while standing. We began with a little history lesson …

An Indult Born Out of Disobedience

The practice of receiving Holy Communion in the hand first began to spread in Catholic circles during the early 1960s, primarily in Holland. Shortly after Vatican II, due to the escalating abuses in certain non-English speaking countries (Holland, Belgium, France and Germany), Pope Paul VI took a survey of the world's bishops to ascertain their opinions on the subject. On May 28, 1969 the Congregation for Divine Worship issued Memoriale Domini, which concluded: "From the responses received, it is thus clear that by far the greater number of bishops feel that the present discipline [i.e., Holy Communion on the tongue] should not be changed at all, indeed that if it were changed, this would be offensive to the sensibility and spiritual appreciation of these bishops and of most of the faithful." After he had considered the observation and the counsel of the bishops, the Supreme Pontiff judged that the long-received manner of ministering Holy Communion to the faithful should not be changed. The Apostolic See then strongly urged bishops, priests and the laity to zealously observe this law out of concern for the common good of the Church.

Despite the vote, in 1969 Pope Paul VI decided to strike a compromise with his disobedient bishops on the continent. Given “the gravity of the matter,” the pope would not authorize Communion in the hand. He was, however, open to bestowing an indult – an exception to the law – under certain conditions: first, an indult could not be given to a country in which Communion in the hand was not an already established practice; second, the bishops in countries where it was established must approve of the practice “by a secret vote and with a two-thirds majority.” Beyond this, the Holy See set down seven regulations concerning communion in the hand; failure to maintain these regulations could result in the loss of the indult. The first three regulations concerned: 1) respecting the laity who continue the traditional practice (of receiving kneeling and on the tongue), 2) maintaining the laity’s proper respect of the Eucharist, and 3) strengthening the laity’s faith in the real presence.

Bernardin’s Campaign

So how did Communion in the hand come to America?

In 1975 and again in 1976, Archbishop Joseph Bernardin, the president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops (NCCB) attempted in vain to garner two-thirds of the bishops to vote in favor of receiving Communion in the hand. The following year – which coincided with the end of Bernardin’s term as president – brought one final attempt. Bernadin appointed Archbishop Quinn, who became Bernardin’s immediate successor as NCCB president, to be the chief lobbyist for Communion in the hand. During the proceedings a brave bishop requested a survey of the bishops be taken – this survey would ask each bishop whether or not Communion in the hand was widely practiced in his diocese, for without the practice’s current wide-use the first condition of the indult would not be satisfied.

*Of course, everyone knew that Communion in the hand was not a previously established practice in the United States.

Though his request was seconded and supported in writing by five other bishops, Bernardin had the motion dismissed as “out of order.” The bishops then voted ... only to once more fall short of the two-thirds majority. This, however, did not end the matter. Bernardin decided to (unlawfully) begin gathering “absentee votes” from any bishop he could find – including retired bishops who no longer administered any dioceses. Consequently, the number was adjusted to meet the two-thirds majority.

Pope Paul VI’s Regulations – Have they been met?

So, what about Pope Paul VI’s regulations that could result in the loss of the indult?

1) Respecting the laity who continue the traditional practice (of receiving kneeling and on the tongue)
  • Reports are now widespread of priests refusing Communion to those who wish to receive kneeling and on the tongue. Even reports of priests berating people for this. A friend of mine said he was traveling and attended Mass where he proceeded to kneel and indicate that he wished to receive on the tongue. The minister of Holy Communion refused and ended up walking away from him. He remained. Finally, the priest came over and said, “Get up son, we don’t do it that way here.” My friend said, “So, you are refusing me Communion?” The priest said, “Yes I am.” He got up, walked out and reported him to the chancery. It is a severe infraction against canon law for any priest to do this. 

2) Maintaining the laity’s proper respect of the Eucharist
  • While I can relate to many of the following, here is a testimony from a Deacon: 
  • I've watched a mother receive communion, her toddler in tow, then take it back to the pew and share it with him like a cookie. 
  • At least four or five times a year, I have to stop someone who just takes the host and wanders away with it and ask them to consume it on the spot. 
  • Once or twice a month I encounter the droppers. Many are well-intentioned folks who somewhere, somehow drop the host or it slides out of their hands and Jesus tumbles to the floor. 
  • I've found the Eucharist in a hymnal, under a pew, in the bathroom and in the parking lot. 
The Vatican does not allow communion in the hand … one reason is because tourists were taking the Holy Eucharist home as a souvenir of their trip to Rome.

Not too long ago, I was alerted to someone who did not consume the Host. After Mass I confronted the young man, and he pulled it out of his shirt pocket. It seems he wasn’t Catholic and didn’t believe, and so didn’t know what to do. But, I am very worried these days, with the rise of satanic cults who use the Eucharist in their rites. In fact, someone shared this story of his youth, as he admitted these satanic cults are everywhere now …
When I was in junior high I started hanging out and getting high with some of my older brothers’ friends. They would “play around” with ouija boards and tarot cards. They would get dropped off at “youth group” at church – go in the front door and out the back into the woods for sex, drugs, and booze. They would brand each other with pentagram rings and even sacrifice small animals. I never participated in it – cause I was the “little brother” – but they would talk about the Black Mass all the time. There was an older guy – our dealer – in his late twenties who claimed to be a wizard and showed us his pyx (I didn’t know what it was at the time) that he would use, because the priest at the Catholic Church he went to wouldn’t pay much attention, “well, they have a pyx, they must be legit!” He even said he could find hosts after most Masses on the floor or sometimes between hymnal pages, like bookmarks. I remember that, when he opened it to show us, he told us it was Jesus and that we were gonna “have a party” with him … well, I chickened out and went back to “youth” group – a couple nights later…our friend, after the “Jesus party” with the “wizard,” decapitated his sleeping aunt with a samurai sword because he “heard voices” telling him to … she was a regular Mass-attending woman; the only one left in the family. He’s locked up in a mental institution for life. When I started learning about Catholicism, I always remembered that awful time, and couldn’t – can’t – shake the feeling that my friend opened himself up to demonic possession by participating in the Black Mass that night…there were no drugs in his system when they arrested him that night.”

3) Strengthening the laity’s faith in the Real Presence:
  • In 1950, 87% believed in the Real Presence. Today, that number has plummeted to a mere 34%. The abusive and hurried manner in which the practice of Communion in the hand was imposed after Vatican II lead to a widespread lack of reverence for the Eucharist and caused great pain for many in the Church. It disoriented many people, who with real justification — especially in light of the recent and overwhelming loss of faith in the Eucharist as the real presence — feared that the very heart of Catholic belief had been compromised. 
So, we see that Pope Paul VI’s regulations for maintaining the temporary indult are not even close to being realized.

Scholars and Saints Speak

Why Kneel?

Pope Benedict XVI, has noted that kneeling is "an expression of Christian culture, which transforms the existing culture through a new and deeper knowledge and experience of God." He reminds us that "the word proskynein alone occurs fifty-nine times in the New Testament, twenty-four of which are in the Apocalypse, the book of the heavenly liturgy, which is presented to the Church as the standard for her own liturgy."

In his book The Spirit of the Liturgy, Pope Benedict speaks of a "story that comes from the sayings of the Desert Fathers, according to which the devil was compelled by God to show himself to a certain Abba Apollo. He looked black and ugly, with frightening thin limbs, but, most strikingly, he had no knees. The inability to kneel is seen as the very essence of the diabolical."

Why Receive on the tongue?

Despite the widespread practice of Communion in the hand, the universal discipline of receiving Holy Communion on the tongue has not changed. A bishop, for example, may forbid the practice of Communion in the hand but not the practice of Communion on the tongue. The Church strongly encourages the latter but not the former. With respect to Communion in the hand, the Church speaks only in a cautionary tone because of the many abuses that often accompany this practice.

St. Thomas Aquinas reminds us, with respect to Communion in the hand … that reverence demands that only what has been consecrated should touch the Blessed Sacrament. He writes:
The dispensing of Christ's body belongs to the priest for three reasons. First, because . . . he consecrates in the person of Christ . . . Secondly, because the priest is the appointed intermediary between God and the people, hence as it belongs to him to offer the people's gifts to God, so it belongs to him to deliver the consecrated gifts to the people. Thirdly, because out of reverence toward this sacrament nothing touches it but what is consecrated, hence the corporal and the chalice are consecrated, and likewise the priest's hands, for touching this sacrament. Hence it is not lawful for anyone else to touch it, except from necessity — for instance, if it were to fall upon the ground, or else in some other case of urgency.
In his apostolic letter Dominicae Cenae, Pope John Paul II also states: "How eloquent, therefore, even if not of ancient custom, is the rite of the anointing of the hands in our Latin ordination, as though precisely for these hands a special grace and power of the Holy Spirit is necessary. To touch the sacred species, and to distribute them with their own hands, is a privilege of the ordained, one which indicates an active participation in the ministry of the Eucharist."

Mother Teresa reportedly said, "Wherever I go in the whole world, the thing that makes me the saddest is watching people receive Communion in the hand." Even the great Pope John Paul II reportedly said: "There is an apostolic letter on the existence of a special valid permission for this [Communion in the hand]. But I tell you that I am not in favor of this practice, nor do I recommend it.”

Become less so that you can then become more.

Communion on the tongue helps to foster a proper sense of reverence and piety. To step up to a communion rail, and kneel, and receive on the tongue, is an act of utter and unabashed humility. In that posture to receive the Body of Christ, you become less so that you can then become more. It requires a submission of will and clear knowledge of what you are doing, why you are doing it, and what is about to happen to you.

Frankly, we should not only be humbled, but intimidated enough to ask ourselves if we are really spiritually ready to partake of the sacrament. Kneeling means you can't just go up and receive without knowing how it's properly done. It demands not only a sense of focus and purpose, but also something else, something that has eluded our worship for two generations.

It demands a sense of the sacred. Just like Peter, James and John before our Transfigured Lord, it challenges us to kneel before wonder. It insists that we not only fully understand what is happening, but that we fully appreciate the breathtaking generosity behind it. It asks us to be mindful of what "Eucharist" really means: Thanksgiving.

Lectio Divina: Tools of the Workshop

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Kate Edwards, of Saints Shall Arise, has written a thoughtful piece, “Lectio divina: On memory, study and the Rule of Faith,” concerning the dangers of what might be called “raw” or “individualistic” lectio divina—that is, taking up the Bible without preparation, reading it without guidance, trying to figure it out completely on one’s own. This is the kind of thing that has led, in past centuries, to wild new heresies, and, among many people, to confusion.

She starts off by agreeing with the main theme of recent articles and talks on lectio divina:
Every Catholic should know the Bible well, for as St Benedict says in his Rule, "what page or utterance of the divinely inspired books of the Old and New Testament is not a most unerring rule of human life?" And how can we seek to know and imitate Christ if we don't actually really know what he did or taught? The various posts also emphasize that you don't have to have any special knowledge or training to do lectio divina, it is open to everyone.
But then she comes to her difficulty.
All the same, I'm not convinced anyone can or should just open the Bible and read, trusting only to the aid of the Holy Spirit. . . . Most modern advocates of lectio divina point to a twelfth century Carthusian source on the practice, which seems to advocate doing just that.  But can I suggest that a twelfth century Carthusian monk was not exactly operating in the same poorly catechized, theological vacuum that most twenty-first century lay Catholics are?
          St Benedict's monks, when they did their lectio, surely had the model of the Fathers to work from, with their careful probing of issues such as the reasons for differences between the various Gospel accounts of events, and ability to draw in a web of related verses to explain the one under consideration. When a medieval monk pondered a few verses of Scripture, he could draw on a vast volume of memorised knowledge to help him interpret what he was reading in the light of Scripture as a whole. Most monks knew the psalms by heart, and at least large chunks of the Gospels, so could use the common technique of interpreting a verse through others that used the same key words and ideas. They might also have been familiar with the patristic commentaries on the verses, not least from the readings at Matins each day. Above all, the monk would also have been well aware of how to look for the spiritual meaning of verses, looking at Old Testament people and events as 'types' of the New for example.
She turns to the situation today:
Few laypeople people, though, even those relatively well catechized, have much familiarity with the Bible as a whole. Fewer still know it well enough to be able to call to mind related verses. Moreover, for monks and laity alike, more than a century of historico-critical interpretation of Scripture has, as Fr Cassian points out in his talk, rather stripped us of the ability to read Scripture other than in the strictly literal sense, effectively stripping the Old Testament of its Christological content, and the New of its eschatological content. . . . We today, alas, rarely have such knowledge in our mind to draw on. … Accordingly, I really strongly urge readers to consider using in their lectio with something that helps set the verses of Scripture in the light of ‘the rule of faith’.  St Thomas' Catena Aurea, for example, a compilation of Patristic commentaries grouped by Gospel verses, can provide an excellent starting point for study and meditation.
I completely agree with Kate Edwards that taking up the Bible without a strong catechetical foundation and at least some rudimentary theology would be undesirable, and that modern Catholics are often not well situated in this regard. I also agree that there is a place for well-chosen commentaries and reference works in connection with our daily lectio—if not consistently, then at least when we hit a passage that perplexes us or confuses us. My all-time favorite work for this purpose is exactly the one she mentions—St. Thomas’s Catena Aurea, which is always next to me when I’m reading one of the Gospels, whether I happen to use it or not on a particular day. Perhaps it’s become such a familiar companion that I don’t even think to mention it, which is certainly a mistake, and I am glad that Ms. Edwards has prompted me to mention it explicitly.

While we’re at it, let me recommend a few other valuable tools for the Catholic who wishes to do lectio divina. As a true bibliography could go on for pages, I will make this list short, mentioning things that have proved useful to me. Maybe some readers could list their own favorites in the comments?

The Ignatius Catholic Study Bible: New Testament — There is nothing in the Catholic realm that can compare to this one-volume edition of the NT with copious notes, word studies, essays, maps, etc. The use of the RSV translation is not the least of its many strengths, as we should avoid Nabbish as much as possible.

Catholic Bible Dictionary — A comprehensive reference work; good for those occasions when you read a Hebrew place name or person name and wonder: "Who or what is this? Is it significant?" (hint: the answer is always yes), or you want a short account of God's anger as depicted in the Bible, or the nature and work of the angels, or an introduction to one of the OT prophets, etc.

A Textual Concordance of the Holy Scriptures — This unique concordance doesn't merely give you huge lists of individual words but groups verses by theme, under two major divisions--Moral and Doctrinal. In the moral part, when you look up, e.g., "The Poor," you get such entries as "The poor are pleasing to God," "God is the helper of the poor," "We should do justice to the poor," "Against defrauding the poor," "Oppression of the poor," "Punishment of oppressors of the poor," etc. In the doctrinal part, if you look up "angels," you see all the verses in the Bible about the nine choirs, guardian angels, etc.; or if you look up the Mass, or Justification, or Christ, you get comprehensive collections of verses pertaining to those topics.

And just so you have the link — The Catena Aurea of  St. Thomas Aquinas. If you haven't yet experienced the joy of reading this work, you are in for a treat. St. Thomas acts here not as the scholastic theologian but as the lover of the Fathers of the Church (Eastern and Western), patiently gathering their incisive comments on the individual verses of the Gospel and weaving them into a continuous commentary. There are a lot of cheap editions out there, but do yourself the favor of getting the Baronius Press edition. It is not much more expensive and yet it is completely re-typeset, with nice paper and hardcover binding. Look, this is about God's Word, so we might as well splurge a bit.

The Douay-Rheims and Clementina Vulgata — A parallel edition, with the English and Latin side by side, and some useful notes. This is the Bible I use for lectio divina, not because I prefer the Douay to the RSV, but because for a long time I've wanted to familiarize myself with Scripture in the Latin version that shaped the Western liturgy and the entire Catholic tradition. I want to see and hear and internalize the language that the Western Church prayed in and thought in. (It's a delight to me, as a singer of Gregorian chant, to see where the verses of the Propers come from, their original context.) My Latin is far from fluent, but it's reliable enough to read the text with an occasional glance over at the English column, which faithfully translates the Vulgate.

Walking with God: A Journey Through the Bible — There are several good books out there in the "introduction to the Bible" genre, but this one, by Tim Gray and Jeff Cavins, is certainly one of the best: a highly readable, reliable, and insightful tour of Scripture. A friend recently reminded me that a major obstacle to lectio divina can be the frustration good Catholics feel when they try to read a little piece of Scripture without sufficient familiarity with the entire narrative arc and theological "main points" of the Bible. If this is the position you're in, Walking with God is going to set you up for success.

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If I have a slight disagreement with Kate Edwards’ position, it would simply be this: prayer and study, although by no means contradictory, are different kinds of activities. They seem to me (and to many other authors) to go in different directions, each having its own origin, medium, and goal. Study originates in a desire to know something intellectually; its medium is our thoughts about things; its goal is conceptual understanding. Prayer originates in a desire to be united to the beloved; its medium is the things themselves; its goal is to get closer to the reality and to conform oneself to it. When we study, we are taking things into our mind; when we pray, we are being drawn to the thing itself, which, at least at times, forces our mind to be quiet.

These activities absolutely support one another and can even flow freely into each other, but the difference is pronounced enough to make it possible that one might spend a while studying Scripture and never really pray, just as one might spend a while praying over a text, without doing what most people would describe as study. Undoubtedly others have expressed this point more pithily; I’m only noting that we should be careful not to turn our lectio time into a scholarly exercise or a self-catechesis class. This would be, I think, to run the risk of depersonalizing the encounter with the Word of God—which is perhaps the risk contrary to that of reading the Bible in a theological vacuum.

A middle course would be that we continue to consecrate a certain time to the slow, prayerful, personal reading of Scripture (in other words, lectio divina), but that, as we are going along, we flag, with a pencil mark in the margin, something that begs for further study later on. When our time of prayer is through, we can then get the commentary off the shelf and pursue a more intellectual grasp of that particular point. In this way, we gain two great goods, each of which has to remain itself: the good of engaging God's Word as a message spoken directly to me here and now, and the good of an ongoing intellectual formation.

Finally, the only adequate solution to the "Edwards conundrum" (if I may call it so) is to make sure that we are lifelong students of our Catholic faith and that we make time for study as well, which can take many forms: listening to audio books or good lectures while commuting to work, reading a few pages daily from a theological textbook or primary source (recall that Flannery O'Connor used to read an article of the Summa each evening—and no, it wasn't to help her fall asleep), or even reading trustworthy blogs. Everyone would do well to read the classics by Frank Sheed, particularly Theology and Sanity or its little brother, Theology for Beginners.

As many people have pointed out, it seems strange that in our world we expect professionals to be educated through college or graduate school, and yet our knowledge of the Catholic faith usually stops at a grade-school level—if that much. And given that the mysteries of the faith are infinitely knowable and beautiful, why would we stop even at graduate school? We are enrolled in the school of the Faith for our whole life, so we should "redeem the time" by praying well, studying well, and working well.

(Part IV of a series that looks like it will be in five parts or more.  Links to earlier articles: Part IPart II; Part III.)
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