Notre Dame de Rouen. The façade of the Gothic Church in France. Photographer: Hippo1947. Licence: SHUTTERSTOCK.

01 May, 2026

The Crowning Of The Virgin Mary In Heaven By The Holy Trinity. Artist: Diego Velázquez.



English: The Crowning of The Virgin Mary
in Heaven by The Holy Trinity.
Español: Coronación de la Virgen.
Deutsch: Die Krönung Marias.
Artist: Diego Velázquez (1599–1660).
Date: Circa 1645.
Current location: Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain.
Source/Photographer: https://www.museodelprado.
(Wikimedia Commons)

“Young Hearts Run Free”. Sung By: Candi Staton. “Islands In The Stream”. Sung By: Dolly Parton and Kenny Rogers.



“Young Hearts Run Free”.
Sung By: 
Candi Staton.
Available On YouTube


“Islands In The Stream”.
Sung By: 
Dolly Parton and Kenny Rogers.
Available On YouTube

“Ave Maria”.



“Ave Maria”.
Available on YouTube

Happy May Day !!! The Choir Of Magdalen College, Oxford.



May Morning 2024.
Magdalen College, Oxford.
Happy May Day !!!
Available on YouTube

Complete Gregorian Chant Rosary. To Assist You In Saying The Rosary During The Month Of May (Mary’s Month).



Complete Gregorian Chant Rosary.
To assist you in saying The Rosary 
during The Month of May (Mary's Month).
Available on YouTube

“The Most High Has Sanctified His Tabernacle” (Psalm 45). The Month Of May Is Dedicated To Our Lady.



Illustration: HOLY CARD HEAVEN

“THE MOST HIGH HAS SANCTIFIED HIS TABERNACLE”.
“LE TRÈS-HAUT A SANCTIFIÉ SON TABERNACLE”.
(Psalm 45).


“She is a garden enclosed and a fountain sealed”.
“C’est ici le Jardin fermé et la fontaine seellée”.
(Song of Songs).


“Open to me your Immaculate Heart, O Mary”. 
“Ouvrez moi votre Cœur Immaculé, Ô Marie”.


“I have chosen it as home”.
“Je l’ai choisi pour demeure”.


Souvenir of 8 December 1854.


The Blessed Virgin Mary
is Crowned in Heaven by her Beloved Son.
Illustration: AD MOIOREM DEI GLORIAM


The following Text from Wikipedia.

Pope Pius IX on 8 December 1854 issued the 

“The Most Blessed Virgin Mary, in the first instant 
of her conception, by a singular grace and privilege granted by Almighty God, in view of the merits of Jesus Christ, 
the Saviour of the human race, was preserved free 
from all stain of Original Sin”.[13]

May Is The Month Of Our Lady, The Blessed Virgin Mary, The Mother Of God. Pray The Holy Rosary. Pray The Litany Of Loreto.



The Blessed Virgin Mary
is Crowned in Heaven by her Beloved Son.
Illustration: AD MOIOREM DEI GLORIAM



The complete Gregorian Chant Rosary.
Here are the Latin/English translations of the Prayers.
Available on YouTube


English: The Crowning of The Virgin Mary
in Heaven by The Holy Trinity.
Español: Coronación de la Virgen.
Deutsch: Die Krönung Marias.
Artist: Diego Velázquez (1599–1660).
Date: Circa 1645.
Current location: Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain.
Source/Photographer: https://www.museodelprado.
(Wikimedia Commons)



The complete Gregorian Chant Rosary.
Here are the Latin/English translations of the Prayers.
Available on YouTube





The complete Gregorian Chant Rosary.
Here are the Latin/English translations of the Prayers.
Available on YouTube



“The Litany of Loreto”.
Available on YouTube


The following Text is from PRECES-LATINAE.ORG

“Litaniæ Lauretanæ”.
“Litany of Loreto”.

The Litany of Loreto is used to honour Mary, The Mother of God. The Litany recalls Mary’s unique role in our salvation history as The Mother of Our Saviour and invokes various Titles for her as a way of honouring her and reminding us of the role she has played.

The Litany owes many of its Praises to the Greek Akathist Hymn, which was first translated into Latin in Venice around 800 A.D. 

The other Titles and Praises addressed to Mary are found extensively in the writings of the Early-Church Fathers of the first six Centuries A.D.


Over time, a number of Titles for Our Lady were removed and added to the Litany. Originally, the Litany had fifteen additional Titles, such as Our Lady of Humility, Mother of Mercy, Temple of The Spirit, Gate of Redemption, and Queen of Disciples.

Recent history has seen the addition of five Titles. The last four Titles of the Litany, which refer to The Immaculate Conception, The Assumption, The Rosary, and Mary as The Queen of Peace, are of recent origin. The latest addition, Mother of The Church, was added by His Holiness Pope Saint John Paul II.

Most likely, the Litany was composed in or around Paris between the years 1150 and 1200. It gets its name [Editor: “The Litany of Loreto”] from the Italian shrine (Loreto) where it was adopted in 1558. Pope Sixtus V approved its use in public Worship in 1587.

The Litany is used especially during May Services, the month Traditionally dedicated to The Blessed Virgin Mary. It is also used at Benediction, and some Congregations use it in the Divine Office. The Litany is approved for public use and carries a Partial Indulgence.

Our Lady’s Month Of May. O, Mon Fils ! O, Mon Dieu ! Quel Mystère ! O, My Son ! O, My God ! What Mystery !



O, My Son !
O, My God !
What Mystery !

O, Mon Fils !
O, Mon Dieu !
Quel Mystère !

Illustration: HOLY CARD HEAVEN

May Is The Month Of The Blessed Virgin Mary. In Praise Of The Creator’s Masterpiece. The Perfection Of His Grace. “Our Tainted Nature’s Solitary Boast” (William Wordsworth).



The Blessed Virgin Mary
is Crowned in Heaven by her Beloved Son.
Illustration: AD MOIOREM DEI GLORIAM



“Litaniæ Beatæ Virgin Mariæ”.
“Litany of The Blessed Virgin Mary”.
Available on YouTube

This Litany of The Blessed Virgin Mary (also called The Litany of Loreto) originated during the Middle Ages, but in a form that was still in the process of development. It was definitely approved for public use by Pope Sixtus V in 1587.

Like the Rosary, it is primarily an Act of Praise and Devotion to The Blessed Virgin. Its Titles and Invocations set before us Mary’s exalted privileges, her Holiness of life, her amiability and power, her motherly care for her children for whom she continually intercedes.



The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia,
unless otherwise stated.


The month of May Devotions to The Blessed Virgin Mary refer to special Marian Devotions held in The Catholic Church, during the month of May, honouring The Virgin Mary as “The Queen of May”. 

These Services may take place inside or outside of a Church. A “May Crowning” is a Traditional Roman Catholic ritual that occurs in the month of May.

A number of Traditions link the month of May to The Blessed Virgin Mary. King Alfonso X of Castile, in the 13th-Century, wrote in his Cantigas de Santa Maria about the special honouring of The Blessed Virgin Mary during specific dates in May. Eventually, the entire month was filled with Special Observances and Devotions to The Blessed Virgin Mary.


“Queen Of The Angels,
Queen Of The May”.
Available on YouTube

The origin of the conventional May devotion is still relatively unknown. Herbert Thurston identifies the 17th-Century as the earliest instance of the adoption of the custom of Consecrating the month of May to The Blessed Virgin by Special Observances. 

It is certain that this form of Marian devotion began in Italy. Around 1739, witnesses speak of a particular form of Marian devotion in May in Grezzano, near Verona. In 1747, the Archbishop of Genoa recommended the May devotion as a devotion for the home. Specific Prayers for them were promulgated in Rome in 1838.



According to Frederick Holweck, the May devotion, in its present form, originated at Rome, where Father Latomia of The Roman College of the Society of Jesus, to counteract infidelity and immorality among the students, made a Vow at the end of the 18th-Century to devote the month of May to Our Blessed Virgin Mary.

From Rome, the practice spread to the other Jesuit Colleges and thence to nearly every Catholic Church of The Latin Rite. In Rome by 1813 the May devotions were held in as many as twenty Churches. From Italy, the May devotions soon spread to France. In Belgium, the May devotions, at least as a Private devotion, were already known by 1803. The Tradition of honouring The Blessed Virgin Mary, in a month-long May devotion, spread eventually around the Roman Catholic World in the 19th-Century, together with a month-long devotion to Jesus in June and the Rosary in October.


“As I Kneel Before You”.
Available on YouTube



English: The Crowning of The Virgin Mary
in Heaven by The Holy Trinity.
Español: Coronación de la Virgen.
Deutsch: Die Krönung Marias.
Artist: Diego Velázquez (1599–1660).
Date: Circa 1645.
Current location: Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain.
Source/Photographer: https://www.museodelprado.es/
(Wikimedia Commons)


“The Litany of Loreto”.
Available on YouTube



The Litany of Loreto is used to honour Mary, The Mother of God. The Litany recalls Mary’s unique role in our salvation history as The Mother of Our Saviour and invokes various Titles for her as a way of honouring her and reminding us of the role she has played.

The Litany owes many of its Praises to the Greek Akathist Hymn, which was first translated into Latin in Venice around 800 A.D. 

The other Titles and Praises addressed to Mary are found extensively in the writings of the Early-Church Fathers of the first six Centuries A.D.


Over time, a number of Titles for Our Lady were removed and added to the Litany. Originally, the Litany had fifteen additional Titles, such as Our Lady of Humility, Mother of Mercy, Temple of The Spirit, Gate of Redemption, and Queen of Disciples.

Recent history has seen the addition of five Titles. The last four Titles of the Litany, which refer to The Immaculate Conception, The Assumption, The Rosary, and Mary as The Queen of Peace, are of recent origin. The latest addition, Mother of The Church, was added by Pope Saint John Paul II.

Most likely, the Litany was composed in or around Paris between the years 1150 and 1200. It gets its name [Editor: “Litany of Loreto”] from the Italian shrine (Loreto) where it was adopted in 1558. Pope Sixtus V approved its use in public Worship in 1587.

The Litany is used especially during May Services, the month Traditionally dedicated to The Blessed Virgin Mary. It is also used at Benediction, and some Congregations use it in The Divine Office. The Litany is approved for public use and carries a Partial Indulgence.

THE VIRGIN.


Mother ! whose Virgin bosom was uncrost

With the least shade of thought to sin allied.

Woman ! above all women glorified,

Our tainted nature's solitary boast;

Purer than foam on central ocean tost;

Brighter than Eastern skies at daybreak strewn

With fancied roses, than the unblemished moon

Before her wane begins on Heaven's blue coast;

Thy image falls to Earth. Yet some, I ween,

Not unforgiven the suppliant knee might bend,

As to a visible Power, in which did blend

All that was mixed and reconciled in thee

Of Mother's love with maiden purity,

Of high with low, celestial with terrene !

May Morning 2021. Sung By: Choir Of Magdalen College, Oxford. “The Winter Is Over And Gone. The Time Of The Singing Of Birds Has Come”. Happy May Day.



May Morning 2021.
Sung by:
Choir Of Magdalen College, Oxford.
Available on YouTube

Saint Philip And Saint James-The-Less. Apostles. Feast Day 1 May. Red Vestments.


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless stated otherwise.

Saint Philip And Saint James-The-Less.
   Apostles.
   Feast Day 1 May.

Double of The Second-Class.

Red Vestments.


Saint Philip and Saint James-the-Less.
Artist: René de Cramer.
"Copyright Brunelmar/Ghent/Belgium".
Used with Permission.


Saint Philip.
Artist: Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640).
From Rubens’ famous “Apostle Series”.
Date: Circa 1611.
Current location: Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain.
Source/Photographer: Museo del Prado.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The following two paragraphs are from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

In The Roman Catholic Church, the Feast Day of Saint Philip, with that of Saint James-The-Less, was Traditionally observed on 1 May, the Anniversary of the Dedication of the Church Dedicated to them in Rome (now called the Church of The Twelve Apostles).

The Eastern Orthodox Church Celebrates Philip's Feast Day on 14 November. One of the Gnostic Codices, discovered in the Nag Hammadi Library in 1945, bears Philip's name in its Title, on the bottom line.


Saint James-The-Less, Apostle, is so called because he was younger than the other Apostle by the same name, James-The-Great. James-The-Less was related in some way to Jesus, and, after Jesus’ Ascension into Heaven, he became The Head of The Church in Jerusalem. He was Martyred in 62 A.D.
Illustration: PINTEREST

The Feasts of the Apostles, Celebrated in the course of the year, used to be Feasts of Obligation. The Feast of Saint Philip and Saint James-the-Less, at this date, recalls the Translation of their Relics at Rome, where the Church of The Holy Apostles, Consecrated on 1 May (the date of Saint Philip's Feast), was Dedicated to them and received their Relics. There is held The Station on all Fridays in Ember Week and on Easter Thursday.

Saint Philip, like Saint Peter and Saint Andrew, was of Bethsaida, in Galilee. He died at Hierapolis, in Phrygia, on The Cross, like them. It is he whom Jesus addresses at the multiplication of the loaves and it is through him, as intermediary, that the Gentiles seek to address The Saviour.

To him, also, we owe what The Master said in His discourse at The Last Supper: "Philip, who seeth Me, seeth my Father" (Gospel). To go to Christ, is to go to God, for the works of The Messias have proved His Divinity (Ibid.).


Stained-Glass Window, depicting Saint James-The-Lessin Saints Peter and Paul Church, Bow Valley,
Nebraska, United States of America.
Photo: 25 November 2010.
Source: Own work.
Author: Ammodramus
(Wikimedia Commons)

It is in virtue of His Divine Nature that He rose again, and the two Apostles, whose Feast coincides with the Easter Feasts, by their Martyrdom (Introit, Epistle) confirm the truth of which they have been witness.

Saint James-the-Less, called "The Minor", was of Cana, in Galilee. A cousin of Our Lord, he had for brother the Apostle Jude, and was made, by Saint Peter, Bishop of Jerusalem. It is for him that Saint Paul speaks when he says: "I did not see any Apostle, except James, the brother of The Lord." Called upon by the High Priest to deny Jesus, he was thrown down from the terrace of the Temple and his head was broken by the blow of a club.

Their names are inscribed in The Canon of The Mass (First List).

Following the example of the Holy Apostles Philip and James-The-Less (Collect), let us confess by a generous life The Divinity of The Risen Christ.

Every Parish Priest Celebrates Mass for the people of his Parish.

Mass: Clamavérunt.
Credo: Is said.
Preface: Of the Apostles.

Saint Philip And Saint James-The-Less. Apostles. Two Of The Favoured Witnesses Of Our Beloved Jesus’s Resurrection. Feast Day 1 May. Red Vestments.



Saint Philip.
Artist: Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640).
Collection: Museo del Prado, Madrid.
Source/Photographer: Museo del Prado, Madrid.
(Wikimedia Commons)





Saint James The Less.
Artist: Pompeo Batoni (1708–1787).
Collection: National Trust.
Source: Art U.K.
(Wikimedia Commons)




Text from “The Liturgical Year”.
   By: Dom Guéranger, O.S.B.
      Volume 8.
      Paschal Time.
      Book II.


Two of the favoured witnesses of our Beloved Jesus’s Resurrection come before us on this first day of May.

Philip and James are here, bearing testimony to us that their Master is truly risen from the dead, that they have seen Him, that they have touched Him, that they have conversed with Him, during these forty days.

And, that we may have no doubt as to the truth of their testimony, they hold in their hands the instruments of the Martyrdom they underwent for asserting that Jesus, after having suffered death, came to life again and rose from the grave.




Philip is leaning upon the Cross to which he was fastened, as Jesus had been; James is holding the club wherewith he was struck dead.

Philip preached the Gospel in the two Phrygias, and his Martyrdom took place in Hierapolis. He was married when he was called by our Saviour; and we learn from writers, of the 2nd-Century A.D., that he had three daughters, remarkable for their great pity, one of whom lived at Ephesus, where she was justly revered as one of the glories of that early Church.

James is better known than Philip. He is called, in the Sacred Scripture, “Brother of The Lord”, on account of the close relationship that existed between his own mother and the Blessed Mother of Jesus.



He claims our Veneration during Paschal Time, inasmuch as he was favoured with a special visit from our Risen Lord, as we learn from Saint Paul. There can be no doubt but that he had done something to deserve this mark of Jesus’ predilection.

Saint Jerome and Saint Epiphanius tell us that our Saviour, when ascending into Heaven, recommended to Saint James’s care the Church of Jerusalem, and that he was accordingly appointed the first Bishop of that City.

The Christians of Jerusalem, in the 4th-Century A.D., had possession of the Chair on which Saint James used to sit when he assisted at the assemblies of the Faithful. Saint Epiphanius also tells us that the holy Apostle used to wear a lamina of Gold upon his forehead as the badge of his dignity. His garment was a tunic made of linen.




He was held in such high repute for virtue that the people of Jerusalem call him “The Just”; and when the time of the siege came, instead of attributing the frightful punishment they then endured to the Deicide they or their fathers had committed, they would have it to be a consequence of the murder of James, who, when dying, Prayed for his people.

The admirable Epistle he has left bears testimony to the gentleness and uprightness of his character. He there teaches us, with the eloquence of an inspired writer, that “works” must accompany our “Faith” if we would be just with that justice which makes us like our Risen Lord.

The bodies of Saint Philip and Saint James repose in the Basilica of The Holy Apostles at Rome. These relics are counted as one of the richest treasures of the Holy City, and there is reason to believe that this first of May is the real anniversary of their translation.



For a long period, the Church of Rome kept special Feasts in honour of four only of the Apostles: Saint Peter and Saint Paul; Saint John the Evangelist; Saint Andrew (Saint Peter’s brother); the rest of the Apostles were united in the Solemnity of 29 June, and a vestige of this is still to be found in the Office of that day, as we shall see later on.

The reception of the bodies of Saint Philip and Saint James, which were brought from the East somewhere about the 6th-Century A.D., gave rise to the institution of today’s Feast, and this led gradually to the insertion into the Calendar of Special Feasts for the other Apostles and Evangelists.

The Greek Church celebrates the memory of these two Apostles on distinct days, which are the anniversaries of their Martyrdom.
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