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

Sunday 8 December 2019

“Tota Pulchra Es, Maria, Et Macula Originalis Non Est In Te”. “Thou Art All Fair, O, Mary, There Is No Spot Of Original Sin In Thee”.



Miniature (Illuminated Manuscript) from: Liber choralis parvus
continens missas vesperas et alia officia par S. Leonardi confes.
Date: 6 January 2015.
Source: Liber choralis parvus continens missas
vesperas et alia officia par S. Leonardi confes.
Author: Unknown.
This File: 16 July 2016.
User: Fulvio314
(Wikimedia Commons)



“Tota Pulchra Es, Maria”.
Composed by: Bruckner.
Sung by: Lincoln Cathedral Choir.
Available on YouTube at


Text is taken from, and can be read in full at, VULTUS CHRISTI
unless stated otherwise.

The Immaculate Conception.

Year after year, I open my Antiphonal, to prepare The Office of The Immaculate Conception of The Blessed Virgin Mary, and I am stunned by the beauty of the Antiphons that The Church places in our mouths to sing of this Mystery. These Antiphons diffuse a certain Luminous Whiteness, a fragrance of Divine Purity, a Penetrating Grace.

All Lovely.

The Divine Office gives me the very words that The Holy Ghost would have us pronounce, and the very melody that best carries them. I have only to take a breath, and sing what The Church wants me to sing. Her words, not mine: Words crafted by The Church under the overshadowing of The Holy Ghost; words for all of Eve’s hapless children who know not how to Pray as they ought.

“Tota pulchra es, Maria, et macula originalis non est in te”. “Thou art all fair, O, Mary, there is no spot of original sin in thee” (Ct 4, 7). Tota pulchra: All fair, all lovely, all beautiful or, to use the words of The Angel Gabriel: “Gratia plena”, “Full of Grace”.


In Dostoevsky’s “The Idiot,” one of his characters comments on the portrait of a woman, named Nastassya Filippovna, saying: “One could turn the World upside down with beauty like that.”

The beauty of The Immaculate Conception does not turn the World upside down; it is more radical than that. It is the beginning of a new World. It is the beauty of a new genesis, of Paradise re-invented in a little girl, conceived, as Bernanos put it, “younger than sin.”

The Heartbeat Of Hope.

Immaculate Beauty crushes the head of the ancient serpent. Read Genesis 3: 9-15, 20. The Human Race receives in the person of The Immaculate Conception a new “Mother Of All The Living.” The Heartbeat Of Hope begins its rhythm in the womb of Saint Anne. Nothing will ever again be the same.

The second Antiphon describes Mary as she appeared to Bernadette in 1858, in the grotto overlooking The Gave River: “Vestimentum tuum candidum quasi nix, et facies tua sicut sol”. “Thy raiment is White as Snow, and thy countenance as The Sun” (Ct 1:3, 4).


It was 155 years ago that the young woman, robed in White, with her countenance indescribably radiant, said to Bernadette: “I am The Immaculate Conception.” The Virgin revealed to Bernadette the Mystery of her identity, hidden in God from before The Creation of The World, and unspoiled in time, untouched by the ravages of sin.

This Antiphon is a key to understanding what The Apostle wrote to The Ephesians 1:4: He (The Father) chose us in Him (Christ Jesus) that we should be holy and unspotted (that is, immaculate) in His sight in Charity, (that is, in The Holy Ghost, The Living Flame of Love).

Look at Mary, and discover what The Father wants for you in Christ. Look at Mary, and marvel at what The Father will do for you, by The Blood of Christ, in The Power of The Holy Ghost. If you would advance steadily — however slowly, and notwithstanding the occasional fall — toward holiness, keep your eyes fixed on Mary.


Jubilancy In The 8th Mode.

The third Antiphon begins, not as most 8th Mode pieces do, on Fa, or Sol, or La, or Re, but, rather, in the heights of The Church’s jubilancy, on Do. The Church not only gives us words in her Liturgy; she interprets them for us. She communicates their mystic secrets by means of the melodies with which she clothes them. “Tu gloria, Jerusalem, tu lætitia Israel, tu honorificentia populi nostri”. “Thou art the exaltation of Jerusalem, thou art the great glory of Israel, thou art the great rejoicing of our Nation.”

This Antiphon is The Church’s response to The Introit of The Mass of The Immaculate Conception in which Mary sings her joy: “I will greatly rejoice in The Lord, and my Soul shall be joyful in my God” (Is 61:10).

The Church, having listened to Mary, sing her joy, holds that joy in her heart, and, then, turning to Mary, honours her with a triple Title:

— Exaltation of Jerusalem: High point of The Church, the pinnacle of the new creation;
— Glory of Israel: Everything, and everyone in salvation, history, looks to The Immaculate Conception and, in her, is gloriously lifted up;
— Great rejoicing of our Nation: Where Mary is present, there will always be joy. Where Mary is absent, there cannot but be sadness and gloom.


We Will Run After Thee.

The fourth Antiphon catches hold of my heart and does not let it ago. It is a Prayer of Petition, a pleading addressed to Mary. It is the expression of the Soul’s deepest longings, the perfect complement to The Gospel of the Annuciation (Lk 1:26-2 :38). “Trahe nos, Virgo immaculate, post te curremus, in odorem unguentorum tuorum”. “Draw us, Maiden undefiled, we will run after thee in the odour of thy perfumes.”

True devotion to The Blessed Virgin Mary is not static and sedentary. It is dynamic. It obliges us to get up and run. What is more elusive than the scent of a sweet fragrance borne on the wind ? It is the fragrance of Mary, sweet beyond all imagining; pure, and purifying; irresistible, drawing Souls after her, even Souls once sunk in the putrefaction and stench of habitual sin.

Mary is, for all of us sinners, the way upward and forward; the way out of sin, and into holiness; the way into a whole new order of things in which an Angel says: “No word (no thing) shall be impossible with God” (Lk 1:37), and in which each of us is called to say: “Behold the handmaid of The Lord; be it done to me according to thy word (Lk 1:38).


Consecration To The Immaculata.

How can we go about appropriating for ourselves The Graces of The Feast of The Immaculate Conception ? The Saints teach us the inestimable value of making an Act of Consecration to The Immaculata, to Mary, The “Tota Pulchra”, and of renewing it, frequently.

It is a way of saying: “Everything that I see in thy eyes, O, Mary, everything that thy Immaculate Heart desires for me, I too desire, and so that the will of The Father and of The Son and of The Holy Spirit may be realised in me, I hand myself over to thee. I give thee my past, my present, and my future, holding nothing back, reserving no times, or places, or things for myself.

All is thine.”


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

“Tota pulchra es” is an ancient Catholic Prayer, written in the 4th-Century A.D. It is one of the five Antiphons for The Psalms of Second Vespers for The Feast of The Immaculate Conception.

The Title means: “You are completely beautiful” (referring to The Virgin Mary). It speaks of her Immaculate Conception. It takes some Text from The Book Of Judith, and other Text from Song of Songs, specifically 4:7.

Composers to set the Prayer to music, include: Robert SchumannAnton BrucknerPablo CasalsMaurice DurufléGuillaume du FayGrzegorz Gerwazy GorczyckiHeinrich IsaacJames MacMillanOla Gjeilo.

Souvenir From 8 December 1854. “Open To Me Your Immaculate Heart, Oh, Mary. I Have Chosen It As Home”.



Text and Illustration from HOLY CARD HEAVEN
unless otherwise stated.


THE MOST HIGH HAS SANCTIFIED HIS TABERNACLE.

LE TRÉS HAUT A SANCTIFIÉ SON TABERNACLE.

~ Psalm 45.

She is a garden enclosed and a sealed fountain.

C'est ici, le Jardin fermé et la fontaine scellée.

~ Song of Songs.

Open to me your Immaculate Heart, Oh, Mary.

I have chosen it as home.

Ouvrez-moi votre Coeur Immaculé, Oh, Marie.

Je l'ai choisi pour demeure.


English: Stained-Glass Window, from 1887, showing The Immaculate Conception. 
South Chapel, Church of Campagne, Dordogne, France.
Français: Vitrail de 1887 représentant l'Immaculée Conception,
chapelle sud de l'église de Campagne, Dordogne, France.
Photo: 28 September 2014.
Source: Own work.
Author: Père Igor.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

During the Reign of Pope Gregory XVI, 1831-1846, the Bishops in various Countries began to press for a definition as Dogma of the Teaching of Mary's Immaculate Conception.

In 1839, Mariano Spada (1796 - 1872), Professor of Theology at The Roman College of Saint Thomas, published Esame Critico sulla dottrina dell’ Angelico Dottore S. Tommaso di Aquino circa il Peccato originale, relativamente alla Beatissima Vergine Maria

[A critical examination of the Doctrine of Saint Thomas Aquinas, The Angelic Doctor, regarding Original Sin, with respect to The Most Blessed Virgin Mary], in which Aquinas is interpreted, not as treating the question of The Immaculate Conception, later formulated in The Papal Bull Ineffabilis Deus, but, rather, The Sanctification of The Fœtus within Mary's womb.

Spada furnished an interpretation, whereby Blessed Pope Pius IX was relieved of the problem of seeming to foster a Doctrine not in agreement with the Aquinas' Teaching. Blessed Pope Pius IX would later appoint Spada as Master of The Sacred Palace in 1867.

Blessed Pope Pius IX, at the beginning of his Pontificate, and again after 1851, appointed Commissions to investigate the whole subject, and he was advised that the Doctrine was one which could be Defined and that the time for a Definition was opportune.



English: Detail of Stained-Glass Window, showing Mary Immaculate,
Church of Saint Thomas, Excideuil, Dordogne, France.
Français: Détail d'un vitrail représentant sainte Marie,
église Saint-Thomas, Excideuil, Dordogne, France.
Photo: 2 March 2010.
Source: Own work.
Author: Père Igor.
(Wikimedia Commons)

It was not until 1854 that Blessed Pope Pius IX, with the support of the overwhelming majority of Roman Catholic Bishops, whom he had consulted between 1851–1853, promulgated The Papal Bull “Ineffabilis Deus” (“Ineffable God”), which defined, “Ex Cathedra”, The Dogma of The Immaculate Conception:

We declare, pronounce, and define, that The Doctrine which holds that The Blessed Virgin Mary, at the first instant of her conception, by a singular privilege and Grace of The Omnipotent God, in virtue of The Merits of Jesus Christ, The Saviour of Mankind, was preserved Immaculate from all stain of Original Sin, has been revealed by God, and therefore should firmly and constantly be believed by all The Faithful.

— Blessed Pope Pius IX, “Ineffabilis Deus”, 8 December 1854.



Proclamation of The Dogma of The Immaculate Conception,
by Blessed Pope Pius IX, on 8 December 1854.
Stained-Glass Window, Church of Bécherel, France.
Also depicted is Godefroy Brossay-Saint-Marc,
Archbishop of Rennes.
Photo: 8 August 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: GO69.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Godefroy Brossay-Saint-Marc, first Archbishop of Rennes (see illustration, above),
made a Cardinal (Titulus Santa Maria della Vittoria) in the Consistory
of 17 September 1875, received the Galero of Blessed Pope Pius IX.
Detail of Stained-Glass Window in the Church of
Saint Peter and Saint Paul, Pire-sur-Seiche, France.
Photo: 8 August 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: GO69.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Dogma was defined in accordance with the conditions of Papal Infallibility, which would be Defined in 1870 by The First Vatican Council.

The Papal Definition of The Dogma declares, with absolute certainty and authority, that Mary possessed Sanctifying Grace from the first instant of her existence, and was free from the lack of Grace, caused by the Original Sin, at the beginning of human history. Mary's Salvation was won by her Son, Jesus Christ, through His PassionDeath, and Resurrection, and was not due to her own merits.

The Immaculate Conception Of The Blessed Virgin Mary. Feast Day 8 December.


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



Image: SHUTTERSTOCK

The Immaculate Conception of The Blessed Virgin Mary.
   Feast Day 8 December.

Double of The First-Class
   with an Octave.

White Vestments.




The Immaculate Conception.
Artist: René de Cramer.
“Copyright Brunelmar/Ghent/Belgium”.
Used with Permission.


Having decided, from all Eternity, to make Mary The Mother of The Incarnate Word (Epistle), God willed that she should crush the head of the serpent from the moment of her Conception.

He covered her "with a Mantle of Holiness" (Introit) and, "preserving her Soul from all stain, He made her a worthy dwelling place for His Son" (Collect).

The Feast of The "Conception" of The Virgin was: From the 8th-Century A.D., Celebrated in The East on 9 December; from the 9th-Century A.D., in Ireland, on 3 May; and, in the 11th-Century, in England, on 8 December.

The Benedictines, with Saint Anselm, and The Franciscans, with Duns Scotus (1308), favoured The Feast of The "Immaculate Conception," which, in 1128, was kept in Anglo-Saxon Monasteries.


In the 15th-Century, Pope Sixtus IV, a Franciscan, erected, at The Vatican, The Sixtine (Sistine) Chapel in honour of The Conception of The Virgin. And, on 8 December 1854, Pope Pius IX officially proclaimed this great Dogma, making himself the mouthpiece of all the Christian Tradition summed up in the words of the Angel: "Hail Mary, full of Grace, The Lord is with thee, Blessed art thou among women" (Gospel). "Thou art all beautiful, O Mary, and the original stain is not in thee" says in truth the Alleluia Verse.

Like the Dawn, which announces the day, Mary precedes The Sun of Justice, which will soon illumine The World of Souls. Bringing to us her Son, it is she who first appears in The Liturgical Cycle.

Let us ask God "to heal us and to deliver us from all our sins" (Secret, Postcommunion)
in order that, by the Graces which specially belong to The Feast of The "Immaculate", we may become more worthy of receiving Jesus in our hearts when He comes into them
on 25 December.

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

Mass: Gaudens gaudébo.
Commemoration: Of The Feria.
Creed: Is said.
Preface: Of The Blessed Virgin: Et te in Conceptióne Immaculáta, which is said during
The Octave.





THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL







THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL

Available (in U.K.) from

Available (in U.S.A.) from





Fröhliche Unbefleckte Empfängnis. A Very Happy Feast Day Of The Immaculate Conception To All Readers.



The Immaculate Conception.
Artist: Anonymous.
Date: 17th-Century.
Current location: Museo Carmen Thyssen, Malaga, Spain.
Source: http://www.carmenthyssenmalaga.org/
Author: Anonymous.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Immaculate Conception Of The Blessed Virgin Mary. Feast Day 8 December.


The Immaculate Conception of The Blessed Virgin Mary.
   Feast Day 8 December.

Double of The First-Class
   with an Octave.

White Vestments.



Illustration: THOMPSON AND MORGAN


WHAT A WONDERFUL FEAST DAY

FOR THE MOTHER OF GOD.






Illustration from HOLY CARD HEAVEN

Saturday 7 December 2019

The Moment A Baby Daughter's New Hearing Aids Are Turned On. See How She Reacts To Her Mother's Voice. Deo Gratias. God Bless Georgina !!!



Video: BBC NEWS
The moment a baby daughter's new hearing aids are turned on.
A father has shared the moment he turns his daughter's hearing aids on in the morning. Paul Addison, from Harrogate, Yorkshire, tweeted a video of his four-month-old daughter, Georgina, reacting to her mother's voice. Georgina was diagnosed as severely deaf in September 2019 and wears a hearing aid in each ear. Mr Addison said: "You use these hearing aids and it's like the lights have been switched on." Deo Gratias, indeed.
God Bless Georgina !!!

The Vigil Of The Immaculate Conception Of The Blessed Virgin Mary. 7 December.


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

The Vigil of The Immaculate Conception of The Blessed Virgin Mary.

7 December.

Violet Vestments.





"I Am The Immaculate Conception".
"Ego Sum Immaculata Conceptio".
Author: Lawrence OP on FLICKR
Illustration: PINTEREST



The following Text is from Lawrence OP on FLICKR

Our Lady of Lourdes.

In 1858, The Immaculate Virgin Mary appeared to Bernadette Soubirous, near Lourdes, in France, in the cavern called “de Massabielle.” When asked to describe The Lady of The Vision, Bernadette said:

"She has the appearance of a young girl of sixteen or seventeen. She is dressed in a White Robe, girdled at the waist with a Blue Ribbon, which flows down all along Her Robe. She wears upon Her head a Veil, which is also White; this Veil gives just a glimpse of Her hair and then falls down at the back below Her waist. Her feet are bare, but covered by the last folds of Her Robe, except at the point where a Yellow Rose shines upon each of them. She holds on Her right arm a Rosary of White Beads with a Chain of Gold, shining like the two Roses on Her feet."

This Stained-Glass Window of Our Lady of Lourdes (see, below) is in Llandudno Catholic Church, Wales.



The following Text is from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.

This Vigil was, in 1879, extended by Pope Leo XIII to the whole Church.

Let us, on this day, ask The Immaculate Virgin to purify our hearts still more for tomorrow's Solemnity (Collect).

Mass: Veníte audíte.
The Gloria in Excélsis is not said.
Second Collect: Of The Feria.
Third Collect: Of The Holy Ghost.
Preface: Common Preface.

Saint Ambrose. Bishop. Confessor. Doctor Of The Church. Feast Day 7 December.


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

Saint Ambrose.
   Bishop, Confessor, Doctor of The Church.
   Feast Day 7 December.

Double.

White Vestments.



Saint Ambrose barring Emperor Theodosius I from Milan Cathedral.
Date: 1619.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Saint Ambrose, born at Treves (Trier, Germany) towards 335 A.D., was one of The Four Great Doctors of The Latin Church [Editor: The Four Great Doctors of The Latin Church are: Saint Ambrose; Saint Gregory the Great; Saint Augustine; Saint Jerome]. When he was still in his cradle, some bees settled in his mouth, as if to make honey there, presaging his future great eloquence.

While he was Governor of Milan, Ambrose was providently chosen as Bishop by the voice of a child, and he became the indefatigable Preacher mentioned in the Epistle and Gospel.

He opposed the heretics, humbled the Emperor Theodosius, and brought into The Church Saint Augustine, whose Conversion was worth that of entire Kingdoms. He enriched The Divine Office with Sacred Hymns, to be Chanted by the whole Congregation. The Milanese Liturgy is still known as The Ambrosian Rite.

This great Bishop died in 397 A.D., during the night of Saturday in Holy Week, after having received The Adorable Body of Jesus, Who received him into Eternal Beatitude.

Like Ambrose, let us always, with gentle firmness, maintain God's Rights.

Mass: In médio.
Commemoration: Of The Feria.
Commemoration: Of The Vigil of The Immaculate Conception of The Blessed Virgin Mary.
Last Gospel: Of The Vigil.

Friday 6 December 2019

First Mass For The Institute Of Christ The King Sovereign Priest, Fortwilliam And Macrory Church, Antrim Road, Belfast.



Fortwilliam and Macrory Church, Antrim Road, Belfast,
the new home for The Institute of Christ The King Sovereign Priest, in Belfast.
First Mass on Wednesday, 11 December 2019, 1800 hrs.
Illustration: CATHOLIC IRELAND.NET


This Article is taken from, and can be read in full at,
THE LATIN MASS SOCIETY RC DIOCESE OF MIDDLESBROUGH


The first Mass at The Institute's newly-acquired Church in Belfast
will take place at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, 11 December 2019.

It will be a Solemn High Mass Celebrated by Mgr Wach, Prior General
of The Institute Of Christ The King Sovereign Priest, and in the presence of
His Lordship Noel Treanor, Bishop of Down and Connor.


Saint Nicholas. Bishop And Confessor. Feast Day, Today, 6 December.


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

Saint Nicholas. 
   Bishop And Confessor. 
   Feast Day 6 December.

Double.

White Vestments.


Cymraeg: Llyfr Llyfr Oriau 'De Grey'.
English: Saint Nicholas, depicted in a Mediæval Book of Hours,
probably written for The De Grey family, of Ruthin, Wales, circa.1390.
Source/Photographer:
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Having become Archbishop of Myra, the wants of his flock were the first object of his Pastoral care. He took part in The Council of Nicea, which condemned Arianism.

Putting to profit the talents of which the Gospel speaks, he practiced both Spiritual and Temporal Works of Mercy, as when he discreetly threw Alms in at a window to save the honour of three young girls, an act still commemorated, nowadays, in Santa Claus, when the children thank Saint Nicholas for presents found on the hearth.

He died in 324 A.D. His Relics are preserved at Bari, Italy.

Let us help our neighbour in his Spiritual and Temporal needs.

Mass: Státuit.
Commemoration: Of The Feria.
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