Zephyrinus’s use of A.D. in these Articles is his direct response, and a challenge, to all the Modernistic, Woke, Apologists, who try to instil into the English language new, farcical, terms of
BCE (Before The Common Era) and CE (Common Era) !!!
Part of the Catholic Diocese of Arundel & Brighton, The Shrine of Our Lady of Consolation, in West Grinstead, Sussex, is the first Shrine in honour of Our Blessed Lady to be established in England since before the Reformation.
Please use our Web-Site to discover more about the Shrine history and for information on Pilgrimages to the Shrine.
For all the latest Parish news and Mass times, please see
our joint Web-Site with Saint Gabriel’s Church, Billingshurst.
Donations.
To make a donation, please go to the Diocese “Just Giving” page HERE and specify that your donation is for The Shrine Church of Our Lady of Consolation, West Grinstead.
Or better still please consider setting up a Standing Order,
or increasing an existing one (for any amount, no matter how small). Please contact our Shrine Administrator, Kate Goddard, via westgrinstead@abdiocese.org.uk or phone
01403 710273.
Thank you.
Shrine Prayer.
O God, who through The Virgin Mary has willed to give to
your people The True Consolation, Jesus Christ; grant to us who Venerate her, under the Title of Our Lady of Consolation, the Grace to co-operate with her in the work of Redemption, we ask this through Christ Our Lord.
It is particularly pleasing for our Pilgrimage to be on this Feast of Our Lady of Walsingham, 2013. (Those of us who are older Catholics, will remember it as the Feast of Our Lady of Ransom, and the work of the Guild of Our Lady of Ransom).
This day marks the anniversary of the installation
of Bishop Philip Egan, eighth Bishop of Portsmouth.
West Grinstead was an important centre for The Church during Penal Times. The Faith was never lost, thanks largely to the Caryll family, who were a wealthy land-owning Sussex family who built the “Priest’s House”, (now the Presbytery)
in the Mid-Sixteenth-Century.
During Penal Times, most Priests who secretly returned to England from abroad, headed for this West Grinstead House, ideally situated deep in the wooded area of West Sussex.
Our own two Island [Editor: Isle of Wight] Martyrs,
Blessed Robert Anderton and Blessed William Marsden,
were probably heading for West Grinstead when they
thanksgiving for the preservation of The Faith in Penal
Times, was the first such Crowning since the Reformation.
A School and Orphanage were also opened.
In 1889, Mgr. Denis’ Curate, Fr. Francis Bourne (later to
be Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster), started the first Diocesan Seminary for Priests here, in the place where, 300 years earlier, the facilities at West Grinstead were not large enough for a Seminary, and, after a few years, it moved to a purpose-built new Seminary at Wonersh, near Guildford.
The present Shrine of Our Lady was erected in 1882 in thanksgiving for the preservation of The Faith and the important role that West Grinstead played in Penal Times.
The Church, Sanctuary, and The High Altar, were Consecrated to The Glory of God and Honour of Our Lady, on 16 July 1896.
The Shrine painting of Our Lady can be seen
to the Left of The High Altar, with its Stone Canopy.
The painting is based on the “Consolata” painting in Turin.
As you look at the Sanctuary, you will see that the
Reredos depicts scenes from the Life of Mary: The Presentation; Assumption; Coronation of Our Lady;
The wedding of Mary and Joseph.
The four statues at the top of the Reredos show Saint
Bruno, Saint Thomas, Saint Aloysius, Saint Francis of Assisi.
Outside in the graveyard are buried: The novelist,
Antonia White; the portrait painter, James Gunn; the
famous writer and poet, Hilaire Belloc. This year (2013)
marks the sixtieth anniversary of his death.
The Parish Priest [Editor: In 2013] is Fr. David Goddard,
(a former Anglican Priest, and a contemporary of
Fr. John Catlin), and is well-known to those of us in Ryde.
About ten years ago, he visited Ryde twice to talk
about the history of the Shrine and, on another occasion, about the Extraordinary Form of The Mass. He also advised Saint Mary’s Parish on the purchase of the new Organ in 2007.
In 2009, his son, Fr. Matthew Goddard FSSP,
came to Ryde shortly after his Ordination in 2009
for a Solemn High Mass at Saint Mary’s; and, again, in October 2013, for a Year of Faith Day of Recollection.
Most Pilgrims took the opportunity to visit the Secret Chapel and Priest’s Hiding Hole in the attic above the Presbytery (once the hay loft).
Saint Eleutherius governed The Church during the period that followed the persecution of the Emperor Commodus.
Faith, at the time, made great progress in the whole World. After a Pontificate lasting fifteen years, he died in 189 A.D., and was buried on The Vatican Hill, near the body of Saint Peter.
Mass: In Paschaltide: Protexisti. Mass: Out of Paschaltide: Státuit.
Saint Philip, born at Florence in the 16th-Century, left everything to serve The Divine Master (Gospel), and Founded the Congregation of the Oratory.
The Holy Ghost had inflamed him with such love for God (Introit, Alleluia, Secret), that the palpitations of his heart bent two of his ribs (Communion).
He would spend whole nights in the contemplation of Heavenly things, and the Spirit of Truth “taught him true Wisdom” (Epistle). His conversations with Jesus filled him with such joy that he exclaimed: “Enough, Love, enough !”
He loved young men: “Amuse yourselves,” he said to them, “but do not offend God.”
He died in 1595 on the Feast of Corpus Christi.
Like Saint Philip, with our hearts full of a holy and loving joy, let us run in the way of the commandments of God (Collect).
Mass: Cáritas Dei. Commemoration: Saint Eleutherius.
What with the new Cricket Season underway, Zephyrinus thought it prudent to offer a respectful explanation of the Laws of Cricket to our North American Cousins, who, possibly, get confused about the strange regulations.
Basically, Cricket is nothing like Baseball.
Hence, the following . . .
You have two sides . . .
one out in the field . . .
and one in.
Michael Hussey takes on a delivery from Shaun Pollock