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

Friday, 8 February 2013

"The scandal and anxiety of the Devout and Orthodox, among the Faithful, were considered with derision and superciliousness by the Modernists . . . "


This Article, which is full of merit in Zephyrinus's view, can be found on RORATE CAELI 




Obedience and the Power of the Modernists: Understanding the resurgence of Modernism in the past 50 years.


Fr. Giovanni Cavalcoli, O.P.

The return of Modernism that has characterized these 50 years since the end of the Second Vatican Council can be divided into two periods which reveal the tenacity, the strength and power of persuasion that this plot against the Church, has produced operating within Her and accomplishing the “work of auto-demolition”, that Paul the VI had spoken about.

The first period is characterized by the famous chaotic and disordered contestations of 1968 and, at that same time, the wild, uncontrolled spreading of heretical doctrines in dogma and morals among seminarians, youth, priests, religious and theologians. The bishops, taken by surprise, and not wanting to be labeled “prophets of doom” or pre-conciliar conservatives, more or less allowed them free rein, at times with the formula ad experimentum (“Let’s see how it goes.”); as if the truth of a doctrine depended on the success it meets.

Since there was some ‘success’ in numerous cases, “Let’s see if it works”, which was before - was adopted, taken for granted and not to be questioned. Those who tried to question it, whatever authority they had, perhaps in the name of the precedent Magisterium or Tradition, were subjected to public derision as “anti-conciliarists.”

The disobedience to the Magisterium and to the Pope himself, either openly or covertly in the name of an unspecified “spirit of the Council” began to be a habit which spread among the faithful, intellectuals and people, the clergy, theologians and moralists. [Thus] the so-called “Catholic dissent” was born, and Paul VI spoke about “a parallel Magisterium”.




Heretical and modernist ideas, especially those along Protestant lines, started to be taught freely, tranquilly and with impunity in Catholic schools and were also found in the publications and press of many so-called “Catholic” publishers. The scandal and anxiety of the devout and orthodox among the faithful, were considered with derision and superciliousness by the modernists – those so-called “progressives” increasingly sure of themselves and convinced they were the new Church of the future and modernity: “in the heart of the world”, in “the Church of the poor” in “the Church of dialogue”, guided directly by the Spirit, truly evangelical, attentive to the “Word of God” and the “signs of the times” and so on.

Throughout this first period, the modernists had the opportunity of becoming more and more dominant in social communications, thus infiltrating into families, in culture - schools, universities, workplaces, parishes, movements, academic environments and Catholic education, seminaries and religious institutes, thus forming an entire generation of new priests, new religious, new leaders, new bishops and even new cardinals. All of this in the face of extremely weak resistance on the part of good pastors and the Holy See, itself weakened and contaminated through ultra-recommended infiltrators by ambitious prelates of dubious orthodoxy.

What was the catastrophic outcome of all this? We see it today before our eyes, growing in proportions, and it could have been but figured out - as it had indeed been figured out and foreseen by those many clear-sighted “prophets of doom”. (We should better say: the “unheeded sentinels”). Or let us say more simply, it was foreseen by those endowed with common sense: that gradually from the modernists and false teachers, free to spread their errors, there would have risen (as indeed it has) a generation or a category holding ecclesiastical power at various levels, more or less ruthless or convinced, more or less oscillating and double-crossing, imbued with their own ideas and therefore, not only able to spread modernist ideas, but order their implementation, subject to disciplinary sanctions, in the name of “obedience” or even, persecution against those that wanted to remain faithful to the Church’s Magisterium.




Even more severe penalties have been inflicted against scholars and theologians who not only remain faithful to sound doctrine, but reveal and denounce the errors and misdeeds of the modernists with names and facts, as well as proof and precise accusations. The modernists are most able at hiding under the appearance of what is true, and are irritated by those who warn the faithful of the hidden dangers and use tones of rebuke against the inventors and diffusers of error.

As far as possible, they strive to ignore these protesters  above all if they have no followers. But when they become aware that the eyes of the faithful have been opened, they resort to threats and violence. Thus, a kind of “reverse” inquisition has come about: today the heretics, are not only seen in a good light, but they even have the audacity (as happened in the 16th century in the Catholic countries overrun by Protestants) due to the nefarious power they have achieved, to obstruct or block those who defend sound doctrine and who want to shield the people of God from the epidemic of lies and falsehoods that are the origins of every kind of moral disorder. Pastors, frequently, because of insufficient theological formation, even if they are good and conscientious, limit themselves to condemning moral errors, but without realizing it, in fact, sometimes they are hostile, in good faith or in fear, towards those theologians who bring to light the theoretical roots of error.




But, the tragic-comic thing that reveals the refined hypocrisy of these modernist Pharisees – is the “scandal” – pure pharisaical scandal – when their snow-white souls are disturbed in seeing or knowing about courageous Catholics who dare to resist or oppose prelates, teachers, educators, superiors or bishops who would like to shut them up or convince them that they are mistaken; they then give orders, or impart invalid prohibitions thus making them inapplicable, forgetting that peremptory order of Scripture: “Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth out thy corn on the floor.”, similar to criminal health-care officials who would want to impede doctors in taking care of the sick.

They are the first to disobey the truth and directives of the Gospel as well as the Supreme Pontiff, and they dare to dish out orders which clash with the sound doctrine or moral and judicial principles of the Church. These are the same ones that in 1968 or in its wake, who wailed against “the barons” and “authoritarianism”; they felt authorized to contest the Pope and bishops, and to enlighten them with expressions of such dogmatic rigor as: “the Church of the rich” of despotism and medieval theocracy from the “age of Constantine”, “Baroque triumphalism “, pharisaical legalism, the inquisition, sex phobia, and so forth. Now, instead, they ask for absolute obedience and whoever contradicts them is compared to one that disobeys a divine precept. That is, if they still believe in the true God and do not make a god of themselves, along the lines of the sublime intuition of a certain Gnostic pantheist.




So we have entered the second period, in which we witness more and more frequently, disconcerting and scandalous deeds, where bishops and superiors are especially involved: some forbid the celebration of the Tridentine Mass, others run seminaries in which St. Thomas is substituted for Rahner. Some block the entrance of well-intentioned young men into the seminary or oblige them to adapt if they want to further themselves, while they open wide the door to aspiring modernists, encouraging them in their ambitions. Some are open sustainers of heresies and promote those who agree with them while, in various ways, others persecute Catholics who want nothing other than to be Catholic. Some protect modernist teachers and repress the orthodox ones. We have arrived at the point of favouring the cause of beatification from some absolutely improbable prospects, such as Monsignor Tonino Bello, merely because he reflects a model for the modernist, but other causes are disgracefully obstructed merely because they vex the modernists.

What happens to obedience in these situations? Has not perhaps the meaning been perverted? What good is it to obey superiors who, in their turn, disobey the Church and the Pope? Is it possible that nothing ever happens to the one who disobeys the Pope, while disobeying a modernist superior is [considered] such a terrible thing? Since Modernism is so widespread and prestigious, the seminarian, the priest, the theologian who resist the abuses of the modernist superior end up looking like the disobedient ones.

The power of the modernists today is so strong and the seduction that they exercise is so insidious, that a large dose of courage is needed to resist their arrogance and [one must have] very refined discernment in order to recognize the dangers.




In any case, before deciding whether to continue or not fulfilling one’s duty in fidelity to the Church, against the will or the abuse of power by some superior, it is necessary, above all, to evaluate with prudence and certainty the entity and the quality of the said abuse, and to calculate in advance, with a margin of probability, if the resistance to the unjust measures might cause greater or lesser damage with respect to the sufferings that the faithful might experience.

Resistance to the tyrant is justified from the standpoint of protecting or safeguarding the common good even at the risk of great personal loss. St. Thomas More and St. Thomas Becket accepted death when they realized that their obedience to the king would have caused greater damage to the English Church compared to what would have happened to them in renouncing their own lives.

The salvation of souls, especially if they are many, is a greater good than one’s own personal interests, even if life itself is at risk. It is not possible, nonetheless, to establish a rule that fits every case or situation. In principle, for example, an esteemed and noted theologian, victim of the abuse of power on the part of superiors, can give a good example adapting himself, rather than refusing to submit; it all depends on the circumstances which must be evaluated well.




We have examples in the saints of both these cases. Some suffer patiently, accepting all of the humiliations and even arrive at martyrdom; others availing themselves of their rights, conscious of their innocence and proud in their service to the Church, repulse the unjust treatment with firmness. We have in this regard the example of St. John of the Cross, who escaped from the prison of his superiors, rebels against the Pope.

If on the other hand we are talking about minor penalties, such as exile or defamation or the loss of one’s personal goods, isolation or prison and things of that sort, it might be convenient to accept them, in the hope, that in time, one might be rehabilitated and take up one’s mission once again in freedom. We have many examples of this in the lives of the saints, heroic pastors and other witnesses for Christ.




There could be, in fact, situations that are not so dramatic or because obeying would not cause great harm to the faithful or to the one who is a witness to the faith. In certain cases it is prudent and not cowardly to resign oneself to violence, if this would not cause too much scandal to good people and not too much prejudice to the one persecuted.

Indeed, it might happen, in the case of resistance regarding a successful exercise of his apostolate, that the persecuted may find himself in worse conditions compared to that which he might have conserved by obeying his superior. For this, as we see from history, saintly theologians, bishops and preachers adapted themselves without rebelling against unjust measures, not for the sake of obedience, but for reasons of convenience and in the end to avoid greater vexations.




So, it happens that the truly obedient, i.e. the one who first obeys God and the Church ends up looking like the disobedient one in this climate of such confusion, where it is difficult to distinguish who belongs and does not belong to the Church, since the modernists have diffused such a false concept of Church on account of what they have been able to do by deceit and cunning in imposing their power, giving the impression that they themselves are the renovators of Christianity and the avant-garde in the Church.

Their present arrogance and the impious audacity which guides them in their contempt for true obedience to the Church, under the illusion that they are the winners, will be instead, the weakening factors of their power, because Divine Providence, yes tolerates the wicked, but not beyond a certain limit. God tolerates them because they generate saints: “If there were no persecutors, says St. Thomas, there would be no martyrs.”

But, since God wants to save everyone, while the modernists seriously risk damning themselves, God will certainly not permit this state of affairs to continue much longer and His mighty power of justice and mercy will act in a way that the future of the Church will be brighter, so that She, without being exempt from the cross, may nonetheless walk less afflicted along the path of history.

[Source: Riscossa Cristiana, January 21, 2013. Text and translation: Contributor Francesca Romana.]


God Bless Our Queen.


This Article can be found on "ONCE I WAS A CLEVER BOY" 

Wednesday, 6 February, 2013,

the Sixty-First Anniversary 

of Accession Day.




Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.
(Image:wondrouspics)


Wednesday, 6 February 2013, was the Sixty-First Anniversary of Her Majesty The Queen's 
accession to the throne in 1952. 

An opportunity to express my loyal good wishes and gratitude to Her Majesty for her life and reign, and for providing for all her peoples a very personal and individual centre of stability and continuity.


Long May She Reign !



Minor Basilica of Santa Sabina, Rome. (Part One).


Italic Text, Illustrations and Captions, are taken from Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.




File:RomaSSabinaEsterno.JPG 


Exterior of Santa Sabina, Rome.
Roma, chiesa di Santa Sabina, esterno (fianco destro e abside), dal giardino degli Aranci.
Photo: 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: MM
Permission: PD
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Basilica of Saint Sabina, on the Aventine Hill, in Rome, Italy (Latin: Basilica Sanctae Sabinae, Italian: Basilica di Santa Sabina all'Aventino) is a Titular Minor Basilica and Mother Church of the Roman Catholic Order of Preachers, better known as the Dominicans. Santa Sabina is perched high above the Tiber river, to the North, and the Circus Maximus to the East. It is a short distance to the headquarters of the Knights of Malta.

Santa Sabina is the oldest extant Roman Basilica, in the eternal city, that preserves its original colonnaded rectangular plan and architectural style. Its decorations have been restored to their original restrained design. Together with the light pouring in from the windows, this makes Santa Sabina an airy and roomy place. Other Basilicas, such as Santa Maria Maggiore, are often heavily and gaudily decorated. Because of its simplicity, Santa Sabina represents the crossover from a roofed Roman forum to the Churches of Christendom. Its Cardinal Priest is Jozef Tomko. It is the Lenten Stational Church for Ash Wednesday.




File:S Sabina - portico 1000013.JPG


The entrance doorway to Santa Sabina.
Photo: November 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: Lalupa
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Church of Santa Sabina was built by Peter of Illyria, a Dalmatian Priest, between 422 A.D. and 432 A.D., near a temple of Juno, on the Aventine Hill in Rome. The Church was built on the site of the 4th-Century house of Sabina, a Roman matron, originally from Avezzano in the Abruzzo region of Italy. Sabina was beheaded under Emperor Vespasian, or perhaps Hadrian, because she had been converted to Christianity by her servant, Seraphia, who was stoned to death. Sabina was later declared a Christian Saint.

Pope Honorius III approved, in 1216, the Order of Preachers, now commonly known as the Dominicans, which was "the first Order instituted by the Church with an academic mission,". Honorius III invited Saint Dominic, the founder of the Order of Preachers, to take up residence at the Church of Santa Sabina in 1220. The official foundation of the Dominican Convent at Santa Sabina, with its Studium Conventuale, the first Dominican Studium in Rome, occurred with the legal transfer of property from Honorius III to the Order of Preachers on 5 June, 1222, though the brethren had taken up residence there in 1220.


Some scholars have written that Honorius III was a member of the Savelli family and that the Church and associated buildings formed part of the holdings of the Savelli, thereby explaining why Honorius III donated Santa Sabina to the Dominicans. In fact, Honorius III was not a Savelli. These scholars may have confused the later Pope Honorius IV, who was a Savelli, and Honorius III. In any case, the Church was given over to the Dominicans and it has since then served as their headquarters in Rome.


File:S Sabina portone 1000012.JPG


Italiano: Roma, Santa Sabina all'Aventino: il portone intagliato del VI sec.
English: Rome, Basilica of Santa Sabina all'Aventino. The carved Portal, dating back to the 6th-Century.
Photo: November 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: Lalupa
(Wikimedia Commons)


In 1265, in accordance with the injunction of the Chapter of the Roman province of the Order of Preachers at Anagni, Thomas Aquinas was assigned as Regent Master at the Studium Conventuale at Santa Sabina: “Fr. Thome de Aquino iniungimus in remissionem peccatorum quod teneat studium Rome, et volumus quod fratribus qui stant secum ad studendum provideatur in necessariis vestimentis a conventibus de quorum predicatione traxerunt originem. Si autem illi studentes inventi fuerint negligentes in studio, damus potestatem fr. Thome quod ad conventus suos possit eos remittere”.

At this time, the existing Studium Conventuale at Santa Sabina was transformed into the Order's first Studium Provinciale, an Intermediate School between the Studium Conventuale and the Studium Generale. "Prior to this time, the Roman Province had offered no specialised education of any sort;  no arts, no philosophy; only simple Convent Schools, with their basic courses in Theology for resident Friars, were functioning in Tuscany and the meridionale during the first several decades of the Order's life. 

But the new Studium at Santa Sabina was to be a School for the Province," a Studium Provinciale. Tolomeo da Lucca, an associate and early biographer of Aquinas, tells us that, at the Santa Sabina Studium, Aquinas taught the full range of philosophical subjects, both moral and natural.


PART TWO FOLLOWS.


Wednesday, 6 February 2013

Virtual Reconstruction of Cluny Abbey.






From YouTube: http://youtu.be/XhZG7SjX1Lg

Music by Emmanuel Bonnardot "Venite a Laudare".



Tuesday, 5 February 2013

Beauvais Cathedral (Part Two).



Text and Illustrations from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.



File:Picardie Beauvais4 tango7174.jpg


Français : Cathédrale Saint-Pierre de Beauvais, Oise, Picardie, France. Horloge astronomique.
English: Beauvais Cathedral, Oise, Picardie, France. Astronomical clock.
Photo: September 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Tango7174
(Wikimedia Commons)


In the race to build the tallest Cathedral in the 13th-Century, the builders of Saint-Pierre de Beauvais pushed the technology to the limits. Even though the structure was to be taller, the buttresses were made thinner in order to pass maximum light into the Cathedral. In 1284, only twelve years after completion, part of the Choir Vault collapsed, along with a few Flying Buttresses. It is now believed that the collapse was caused by resonant vibrations caused by high winds.

The accompanying photograph shows lateral iron supports between the Flying Buttresses; it is not known when these external tie rods were installed. The technology would have been available at the time of the initial construction, but the extra support might not have been considered necessary until after the collapse in 1284, or even later.


File:Picardie Beauvais3 tango7174.jpg


Français : Cathédrale Saint-Pierre de Beauvais, Oise, Picardie, France. 
Horloge à carillon du XIVè siècle.
English: Beauvais Cathedral, Oise, Picardie, France. 
14th-Century chiming clock.
Photo: September 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Tango7174
(Wikimedia Commons)


In the 1960s, the tie rods were removed; the thinking was that they were disgraceful and unnecessary. However, the oscillations created by the wind became amplified, and the Choir partially disassociated itself from the Transept. Subsequently, the tie rods were re-installed  but this time with rods made of steel. Since steel is less ductile than iron, the structure became more rigid, possibly causing additional fissures.





Lateral Supports of Flying Buttresses.
Photo: March 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Tvbanfield
(Wikimedia Commons)


The floor plan shows that the original design included a Nave that was never built. Thus, the absence of shouldering support, that would have been contributed by the Nave, contributes to the structural weakness of the Cathedral.

With the passage of time, other problems surfaced, some requiring more drastic remedies. The North Transept now has four large wood-and-steel lateral trusses at different heights, installed during the 1990s, to keep the Transept from collapsing. In addition, the main floor of the Transept is interrupted by a much larger brace that rises out of the floor at a 45-degree angle. This brace was installed as an emergency measure to give additional support to the Pillars that, until now, have held up the tallest Vault in the world.


File:Beauv kated vitraze DSCN4397.JPG


English: Beauvais Cathedral. Stained-Glass.
Česky: Katwedrála v Beauvais, vitráže
Photo: August 2010.
Source: Own work.
Author: Sokoljan
(Wikimedia Commons)


These temporary measures will remain in place until more permanent solutions can be determined. Various studies are under way to determine with more assurance what can be done to preserve the structure. Columbia University is performing a study on a three-dimensional model, constructed using laser scans of the building, in an attempt to determine the weaknesses in the building and remedies.

Several of the Chapels contain Mediaeval stained glass windows, made during the 13th- through to the 15th-Centuries. In a Chapel close to the Northern Entrance, there is a Mediaeval clock (14th-15th-Century), probably the oldest fully-preserved and functioning mechanical clock in Europe. In its vicinity, a highly complicated astronomical clock with moving figures was installed in 1866.


THIS CONCLUDES THE ARTICLE ON BEAUVAIS CATHEDRAL.


Monday, 4 February 2013

Sunday, 3 February 2013

Suitable Preparation For Lent.


This Article can be found on "CATHOLICISM PURE & SIMPLE"


The Composer of "When David Heard" is Eric Whitacre.
The Painting is "David Mourning Absalom"! by Gustave Dore.
The Choir is the Croatian Radiotelevision Choir.
The Conductor is Tionči Bilić.




When David heard that Absalom was slain,
he went up into his chamber over the gate and wept,
and thus he said:

My son, my son,
O Absalom my son,
would God I had died for thee! 

Beauvais Cathedral (Part One).


Text and Illustrations from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.




File:Beauvais Cathedral SE exterior.jpg


Beauvais Cathedral from the South-East.
Photo: July 2005.
Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 2.0
(Wikimedia Commons)



The Cathedral of Saint Peter of Beauvais (French: Cathédrale Saint-Pierre de Beauvais) is an incomplete Roman Catholic Cathedral located in Beauvais, Northern France. It is the seat of the Bishop of Beauvais, Noyon and Senlis. It is, in some respects, the most daring achievement of Gothic architecture and consists only of a Transept (16th-Century) and Choir, with Apse and seven polygonal Apsidal Chapels (13th-Century), which are reached by an Ambulatory.

The small Romanesque Church of the 10th-Century, known as the Basse Œuvre, much restored, still occupies the site destined for the Nave.


History

Work was begun in 1225, under Count-Bishop Miles de Nanteuil, immediately after the third in a series of fires in the old wooden-roofed Basilica, which had reconsecrated its Altar only three years before the fire; the Choir was completed in 1272, in two campaigns, with an interval (1232–38) owing to a funding crisis provoked by a struggle with Louis IX. The two campaigns are distinguishable by a slight shift in the axis of the work and by what Stephen Murray characterises as "changes in stylistic handwriting." 

Under Bishop Guillaume de Grez, an extra 4.9 m was added to the height, to make it the highest-vaulted Cathedral in Europe. The vaulting, in the interior of the Choir, reaches 48 m in height, far surpassing the concurrently-constructed Cathedral of Notre-Dame in Amiens, with its 42 m (138 ft) Nave.

The work was interrupted in 1284 by the collapse of some of the vaulting of the recently-completed Choir. This collapse is often seen as a disaster that produced a failure of nerve among the French masons working in Gothic style; modern historians have reservations about this deterministic view. Stephen Murray notes that the collapse also "ushers in the age of smaller structures associated with demographic decline, the Hundred Years War, and of the 13th-Century."




English: Cathedral of Saint Peter of Beauvais, France.
Français : Cathédrale Saint-Pierre de Beauvais, Oise, Picardie, France.
Photo: September 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Tango7174
(Wikimedia Commons)


However, large-scale Gothic design continued, and the Choir was rebuilt at the same height, albeit with more Columns in the Chevet and Choir, converting the vaulting from quadripartite vaulting to sexpartite vaulting. The Transept was built from 1500 to 1548. In 1573, the fall of a too-ambitious 153-m (502 feet) Central Tower stopped work again. The Tower would have made the Church the second-highest-structure in the world at the time (after St. Olaf's Church, Tallinn). Afterwards, little structural addition was made.

The Choir has always been wholeheartedly admired: Eugène Viollet-le-Duc called the Beauvais Choir "the Parthenon of French Gothic."



File:Beauvais, Cathédrale F 204.jpg


Beauvais Cathedral, France.
This building is classé au titre des Monuments Historiques
It is indexed in the Base Mérimée, a database of architectural heritage maintained by the French Ministry of Culture, under the reference PA00114502.
Photo: September 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: PMRMaeyaert
(Wikimedia Commons)


Its façades, especially that on the South, exhibit all the richness of the Late-Gothic style. The carved wooden doors of both the North and South Portals are masterpieces, respectively, of Gothic and Renaissance workmanship. The Church possesses an elaborate astronomical clock in Neo-Gothic taste (1866) and tapestries of the 15th- and 17th-Centuries, but its chief artistic treasures are stained-glass windows of the 13th-, 14th-, and 16th-Centuries, the most beautiful of them from the hand of Renaissance artist, Engrand Le Prince, a native of Beauvais. To him, also, is due some of the stained-glass in St-Etienne, the second Church of the town, and an interesting example of the transition stage between the Gothic and the Renaissance styles.

During the Middle Ages, on 14 January, the Feast of Asses was annually celebrated in Beauvais Cathedral, in commemoration of the Flight into Egypt.


PART TWO FOLLOWS.


Friday, 1 February 2013

Canterbury Cathedral (Part Seven).


Text and Illustrations from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.




File:Canterbury, Canterbury cathedral-Cloister 07.JPG


Cloister ceiling, Canterbury Cathedral.
Photo: April 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Mattana
(Wikimedia Commons)


The oldest bell in the Cathedral is "Bell Harry", which hangs in a cage, atop the Central Tower, to which the bell lends its name. This bell was cast in 1635, and is struck at 8 a.m. and 9 p.m. every day to announce the opening and closing of the Cathedral, and also, occasionally, for Services, as a Sanctus bell.

The Cathedral library has a collection of about 30,000 books and pamphlets printed before the 20th-Century and about 20,000 later books and serials. Many of the earlier books were acquired as part of donated collections. It is rich in Church history, older theology, British history (including local history), travel, science and medicine, and the anti-slavery movement. The library's holdings are included in the online catalogue of the library of the University of Kent.

In 2006, a new fundraising appeal to raise £50 million was launched to much media attention under the dramatic banner "Save Canterbury Cathedral".



File:Approach to Canterbury Cathedral - geograph.org.uk - 1336.jpg


Approach to Canterbury Cathedral. 11.00 a.m, Palm Sunday. 2005.
 Photograph taken from gardens just inside city walls.
Photo: March 2005.
Source: From geograph.org.uk
Author: Elaine Morgan
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Canterbury Cathedral Appeal was launched to protect and enhance Canterbury Cathedral's future as a religious, heritage and cultural centre. Every five years, the Cathedral carries out a major structural review. The last so-called Quinquennial made it very clear that a combination of centuries of weathering, pollution and constant use had taken its toll on the building and there were some serious problems at Canterbury Cathedral that needed urgent action.

Much of the Cathedral's stonework is damaged and crumbling, the roofs are leaking and much of the stained glass is badly corroded. It is thought that, if action is not taken now, the rate of decay and damage being inflicted on the building will increase dramatically with potentially disastrous results, including closure of large sections of the Cathedral in order to guarantee the safety of the million-plus worshippers, pilgrims and tourists who visit the Cathedral every year.



File:Canterbury Cathedral at dusk.JPG


Canterbury Cathedral at dusk. Seen from the Cathedral Gate hotel.
Photo: April 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: Adam Bishop
(Wikimedia Commons)


As well as restoring much of the historic fabric of the Cathedral, the appeal aims to fund enhancements to visitor facilities and investment to build on the Cathedral's musical tradition. By November 2008, the appeal had raised more than £9 million. Previous major appeals were run in the 1950s and 1970s.

In the Summer of 2009, stones in the South-West Transept were discovered to have cracked around several iron braces surrounding the Great South Window. The cracks are presumed to be the result of the metal expanding and contracting in hot and cold weather, and have severely compromised the structure of the window. The Transept was closed while scaffolding was erected, and the area immediately in front of the inside of the window was closed off and covered, to maintain access, via the South Door, beneath it. This area was given restoration priority immediately after the structural damage was discovered.


THIS CONCLUDES THE ARTICLE ON CANTERBURY CATHEDRAL.


Thursday, 31 January 2013

Broken Promises: Cameron Said He Had "No Plans" To Redefine Marriage.



This article was received from the coalition for marriage. their web-site can be found at http://c4m.org.uk/



Broken promises:
Cameron said he had
‘no plans’ to redefine marriage




Dear marriage supporter,
As the big vote in the House of Commons approaches (Tue. 5 Feb), it’s easy to forget that on 3 May 2010 – just three days before the last general election – David Cameron said on TV that he was “not planning” to change the definition of marriage.
He was being interviewed by Adam Boulton on Sky News, and was asked a direct question about whether he would introduce gay marriage. He said: “I am not planning that.” Gay marriage campaigners were furious, as this article shows.
It is outrageous that Mr Cameron went on TV just three days before a general election and told voters one thing, but did the exact opposite once inside Downing Street. His manifesto at the election was silent, so he has no mandate to redefine marriage. His only mandate is to defend traditional marriage.
Please read our latest briefing on the issue, and please share it with all your family and friends.
The Coalition for Marriage is doing all it can ahead of the Second Reading vote on Tuesday.
Yours sincerely,
Colin Hart
Colin Hart
Campaign Director
Coalition for Marriage
Coalition for Marriage
8 Marshalsea Road
London
SE1 1HL
You received this email because you chose to be 'kept informed' when you signed the Petition for Marriage at c4m.org.uk or on paper. If you no longer wish to receive information from Coalition for Marriage, click 'Unsubscribe' below, or for other enquiries, contact us here.
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© 2012
Coalition for Marriage Ltd is a Not-for-Profit Company registered in England. Company No. 07880604.


Wednesday, 30 January 2013

Three Lives Saved.


This Article can be found on The Transalpine Redemptorists' Blog at



TUESDAY, JANUARY 29, 2013


Three Lives Saved

 Today at the abortion clinic here in Lincoln, Nebraska, we had the great joy of saving three lives!  That’s right, three women, after seeing people praying outside the abortuary, decided not to kill their child, but to let it live!  This is the result not only of prayer, but also of having a visible presence outside the abortion clinic.  All these women and children need our prayers and certainly the graces they received were obtained by prayers in one form or another, but if our counsellors had not been there to talk to the ladies and offer them support, if Our Lady’s Army had not been there praying and giving visible encouragement, who knows but that those three precious lives might by now have been snuffed-out.

If you are in the Lincoln area and can make it to the Lincoln abortuary on a Tuesday, please do come out and join us in praying for an end to abortion and for the women and children who are harmed by abortion.  Who knows how many babies God will save from death if only there are enough people out there praying for it.  Our Lady said at Fatima “Many souls go to hell because they have no one to pray for them.”  Clearly we are not talking about hell for these innocent little babies, but could it not also be said: many babies are slaughtered each day by abortion BECAUSE THERE IS NO ONE TO PRAY FOR THEM?  If you are not in the Lincoln area or cannot make it but know people who could please share this with your friends so that we can get an many people out there praying for mothers and their children as possible.

5631 S. 48th Street
Suite 100
Lincoln, NE 68516

There is parking available.


What The Liberal Media Fears The Most: 500,000 March For Life, Washington D.C., 2013.






Amazing March for Life video: Over 500,000 press on to victory for the unborn.


CLICK ON THE LINK, BELOW, AND WATCH OVER 500,000 STAND UP FOR THE LITTLE ONES.

Amazing March for Life video: Over 500,000 press on to victory for the unborn

Monday, 28 January 2013

Sebastián de Vivanco. "O Rex Gloriae".


This Article can be found on the Atrium Musicologicum Blog
at http://musicologicus.blogspot.co.uk

Illustration from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia




The Nave, Salamanca Old Cathedral, Spain.
 Photo: May 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: Antoine Taveneaux





Canterbury Cathedral (Part Six).


Text and Illustrations from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.




File:Canterbury, Canterbury cathedral 07.JPG


Bosses, underneath the South Porch, Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, England.
Photo: 17 April 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Mattana
(Wikimedia Commons)


Dissolution of the Monastery.

The Cathedral ceased to be an Abbey during the Dissolution of the Monasteries, when all religious houses were suppressed. Canterbury surrendered in March 1539 and reverted to its previous status of  'a college of Secular Canons'. The New Foundation came into being on 8 April 1541.

18th-Century to the present.

The original Norman North-West Tower, which had a lead Spire until 1705, was demolished in 1834, due to structural concerns. It was replaced with a Perpendicular-style twin of the South-West Tower, now known as the "Arundel Tower"'. This was the last major structural alteration to the Cathedral.The Cathedral is the Regimental Church of the Princess of Wales's Royal Regiment.

Furnishings.

In 1688, the joiner, Roger Davis, citizen of London, removed the 13th-Century misericords and replaced them with two rows of his own work on each side of the Choir. Some of Davis's misericords have a distinctly mediaeval flavour and he may have copied some of the original designs. When Sir George Gilbert Scott carried out renovations in the 19th-Century, he replaced the front row of Davis' misericords, with new ones of his own design, which seem to include many copies of those at Gloucester Cathedral, Worcester Cathedral and New College, Oxford.





Stained glass windows in the Chapter House, Canterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, England.
Photo: 18 April 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Mattana
(Wikimedia Commons)


Foundation.

The Foundation is the authorised staffing establishment of the Cathedral, few of whom are Clergy. The Head of the Cathedral is the Dean, currently the Very Reverend Robert Willis, who is assisted by a Chapter of twenty-four Canons, four of whom are residentiary, the others being honorary appointments of senior Clergy in the Diocese. There are also a number of Lay Canons, who altogether form the Greater Chapter, which has the legal responsibility both for the Cathedral and also for the formal election of an Archbishop, when there is a Vacancy-in-See. By English law and custom, they may only elect the person who has been nominated by the Monarch on the advice of the Prime Minister. The Foundation also includes the Choristers, Lay Clerks, Organists, King's Scholars, the Six Preachers and a range of other Officers; some of these Posts are moribund, such as that of the Cathedral Barber. The Cathedral has a full-time Workforce of 300 and, approximately, 800 volunteers.

Bells.

The Cathedral has a total of twenty-one bells in the three Towers:

The South-West Tower (Oxford Tower) contains the Cathedral’s main ring of bells, hung for change ringing in the English style. There are fourteen bells – a ring of twelve with two semi-tones, which allow for ringing on ten, eight or six bells while still remaining in tune. All of the bells were cast in 1981 by the Whitechapel Bell Foundry from seven bells of the old peal of twelve with new metal added, and re-hung in a new frame. The length (draught) of the ropes was increased by lowering the floor of the ringing chamber to the level of the South Aisle Vault at the same time. The heaviest bell of this ring weighs 34 cwt (1.72 tonnes). The Ringers practice on Thursday at 7.30 p.m.




"Great Dunstan".
Photo: 1 April 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Poe123
(Wikimedia Commons)


The North-West Tower (Arundel Tower) contains the Cathedral’s clock chime. The five quarter chimes were taken from the old peal of twelve in the Oxford Tower (where the clock was originally), and hung from beams in the Arundel Tower. The chimes are stuck on the eighth Gregorian tone, which is also used at Merton College, Oxford. The hour is struck on "Great Dunstan", the largest bell in Kent (63 cwt (3.2 tonnes)), which is also swung on Sunday mornings for Matins.

In 1316, Prior Henry of Eastry gave a large bell, dedicated to St Thomas, which weighed 71½ cwt (3.63 tonnes). Later, in 1343, Prior Hathbrand gave bells dedicated to Jesus and Saint Dunstan. At this time the bells in campanile were rehung and their names recorded as “Jesus”, “Dunstan”, “Mary”, “Crundale”, “Elphy” (Alphege) and Thomas”. In the great earthquake of 1382, the campanile fell, destroying the first three-named-bells. Following its reconstruction, the other three bells were rehung, together with two others, of whose casting no record remains.


PART SEVEN FOLLOWS


First Traditional Forty Hours' Devotion in the Archdiocese of New York since the Second Vatican Council. The Church of the Holy Innocents, Manhattan, New York. Friday, 1 February 2013 - Sunday, 3 February 2013.



Roman Text is from the Article on Fr Z's Blog,
WHAT DOES THE PRAYER REALLY SAY, at
http://wdtprs.com/blog/

Italic Text is from Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia.





Church of The Holy Innocents, Manhattan, New York.


The Church of the Holy Innocents, in Manhattan, will celebrate the restoration of its monumental Mural of the Crucifixion by Constantino Brumidi with the first Traditional Forty Hours’ Devotion in the Archdiocese of New York since the Second Vatican Council.

The Forty Hours' Devotion will take place over the first weekend of February and conclude with a Pontifical Mass at the Faldstool on Sunday, February 3rd at 10 AM coram sanctissimo (in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament).

There will be sign-up sheets at the back of the Church of the Holy Innocents for those who would like to commit to adoring the Blessed Sacrament in the Church during the periods of Exposition.

The Forty Hours' Devotion begins on the First Friday of February, February 1st, at 6:00 PM with a Solemn Votive Mass of the Blessed Sacrament (in the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite). This Mass concludes with the Exposition and Procession of the Blessed Sacrament. The First Friday All Night Vigil begins after this Mass and will continue until 4:00 AM.




Church of The Holy Innocents, Manhattan, New York.
Photo: 3 June 2012.
Source: Own work.
Artist: Jim.henderson
(Wikimedia Commons)



The Forty Hours continues on the First Saturday of February, February 2nd, at 1:00 PM with a Solemn Mass for the Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Candlemas, (in the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite). This Mass will include the blessing of candles and procession.

At 4 PM, there will also be a Pontifical Mass (in the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite, versus populum and in English) for the Solemnity of the Dedication of the Church, celebrated by His Excellency Dominick Lagonegro, Auxiliary Bishop of New York, at which he will bless the restored Mural.

The Forty Hours' Devotion concludes on the First Sunday of February, February 3rd, at 10:00 AM with a Solemn Pontifical Mass at the Faldstool coram sanctissimo for the Feast of the Dedication of the Church, celebrated by His Excellency, James C. Timlin, Bishop Emeritus of Scranton. This Mass concludes with the Procession of the Blessed Sacrament and Reposition.


The Church of the Holy Innocents is a Roman Catholic parish church in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, located at 126 West 37th Street at Broadway, Manhattan, New York City.


History

The parish was established in 1868. The present edifice was completed in 1870, using the Gothic Revival style of architecture. The first pastor engaged Constantino Brumidi to create a monumental fresco over the main altar. He later decorated the Great Rotunda of the U. S. Capitol Building. 

In the early years, cows roamed the streets and open pastures around Holy Innocents. As the city rapidly expanded northward, the community, known as the "Tenderloin", teemed with immigrants from Europe. 

By the early 1900s, the area was known for newspaper publishing (The New York Herald) and theatres (The Metropolitan Opera House (39th St)). Holy Innocents was called the "actors' church". Eugene O'Neill, the playwright, was baptised in the Church in 1888. Archbishop Patrick J. Hayes had the Church build a twenty-storey storage and loft building at 135-9 West 36th Street in 1924, to designs by the eminent Emery Roth, 19 West 40th Street for $600,000.

Pastor Rev. Dr. Richard Brennan transferred here in 1890 from being pastor since 1875 of St. Rose of Lima's Old Church (New York City), after the death of the former pastor, Rev. Larkin.


Thursday, 24 January 2013

24 January. Feast Day of Saint Timothy. Bishop and Martyr.


Italic Text taken from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.
Roman Text and Illustrations taken from Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia,
      unless otherwise stated.

Double.
Red Vestments.



Saint Timothy (17 A.D. - 97 A.D.)
(orthodox icon).
Bishop and Martyr.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Timothy (Greek: Τιμόθεος; Timótheos, meaning "honouring God" or "honoured by God") was a 1st - Century Christian Bishop, who died around 97 A.D. The New Testament indicates that Timothy travelled with Saint Paul, who was also his mentor. He is addressed as the recipient of the Epistles to Timothy.

Saint Timothy is mentioned in the Bible at the time of Paul's second visit to Lystra, in Anatolia, where Timothy is mentioned as a "disciple". Paul calls Timothy his "own son in the faith". Timothy often travelled with Paul. Timothy's mother was Jewish and his father was Greek, but he had not been circumcised, and Paul now ensured that this was done, according to the text, to ensure Timothy’s acceptability to the Jews.

According to McGarvey, Paul performed the operation "with his own hand", but others claim this is unlikely and nowhere attested. He was ordained and went with Paul on his journeys through Phrygia, Galatia, Mysia,Troas, Philippi, Veria, and Corinth. His mother, Eunice, and his grandmother, Lois, are noted as eminent for their piety and faith, which indicates that they may have also been Christians. Timothy is praised by Paul for his knowledge of the Scriptures (in the 1st-Century, mostly the Septuagint; see Development of the New Testament canon - Clement of Rome), and is said to have been acquainted with the Scriptures since childhood.




Rembrandt's Timothy and his grandmother, 1648.
Deutsch: Timotheus und seine Großmutter.
Current location: Deutsch: Sammlung Earl of Ellesmere, London.
Sourece/Photographer: The Yorck Project: 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei. DVD-ROM, 2002. 
ISBN 3936122202. Distributed by DIRECTMEDIA Publishing GmbH.
Permission: [1]
(Wikimedia Commons)


That Timothy was jailed at least once during the period of the writing of the New Testament is implied by the writer of Hebrews mentioning Timothy's release at the end of the epistle. It is also apparent that Timothy had some type of stomach malady, owing to Paul's advice in 1 Timothy 5:23, counseling Timothy to "No longer drink water exclusively, but use a little wine for the sake of your stomach and your frequent ailments."

Paul commanded Timothy to remain in Ephesus (1 Timothy 1), "I command you to stay there in Ephesus", to prevent heresy from infecting the church in Ephesus. Paul also gave Timothy instructions for establishing Elders and Deacons there. These very guidelines have become the commonly-used guidelines among churches across the world to this day. 

According to later tradition, Paul consecrated Timothy as Bishop of Ephesus in the year 65 A.D., where he served for 15 years. In 97 A.D., (with Timothy dying at age 80), Timothy tried to halt a pagan procession of idols, ceremonies, and songs. In response to his preaching of the gospel, the angry pagans beat him, dragged him through the streets, and stoned him to death. In the 4th-Century, his relics were transferred to the Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople.

Timothy is venerated as an Apostle, Saint and Martyr by the Eastern Orthodox Church, with his Feast Day on 22 January. The Roman Catholic Calendar of Saints venerates Timothy, together with Titus, with a Memorial on 26 January. In the General Roman Calendar of 1962, his Feast, a Third Class Feast, is kept on 24 January. Along with Titus and Silas, he is commemorated by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the Episcopal Church on 26 January. Timothy's Feast is kept by the Lutheran Church – Missouri Synod on 24 January.

Saint Timothy, born at Lystra (Asia Minor), of a pagan father and a Jewish mother, was already a Christian when Saint Paul came to that town. Saint Paul, whose conversion we celebrate tomorrow, was struck by Timothy's holiness and took him as a companion on his travels.. Saint Timothy thereupon gave up everything and became his disciple (Gospel).

Saint Paul conferred on him full sacerdotal powers (Introit) and committed to his care the government of the Church of Ephesus. We read in the Epistle a passage of one of the two admirable Letters which his master wrote to him. Saint Timothy was stoned to death in his episcopal city (+ 97 A.D.).

Let us, with Timothy, confess the Divinity of Christ in this Season after Epiphany, which is its Liturgical manifestation.

Mass: "Statuit". Of a Martyr Bishop, p. 1615, except the Proper Epistle.


Monday, 21 January 2013

Canterbury Cathedral (Part Five).


Text and Illustrations from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.



File:Canterbury, Canterbury cathedral 17.JPG


Canterbury Cathedral, England.
Photo: 17 April 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Mattana
(Wikimedia Commons)


The buildings, devoted to hospitality, were divided into three groups. The Prior's group were "entered at the South-East angle of the Green Court, placed near the most sacred part of the Cathedral, as befitting the distinguished ecclesiastics or nobility who were assigned to him." The Cellarer's buildings, where middle-class visitors were entertained, stood near the West End of the Nave. The inferior pilgrims and paupers were relegated to the North Hall or Almonry, just within the Gate.

Priors of Christ Church Priory included John of Sittingbourne (elected 1222, previously a Monk of the Priory) and William Chillenden, (elected 1264, previously Monk and Treasurer of the Priory). The Monastery was granted the right to elect their own Prior, if the Seat was vacant, by the Pope, and, from Pope Gregory IX, onwards, the right to a free election (though with the Archbishop overseeing their choice). 

Monks of the Priory have included Æthelric I, Æthelric II, Walter d'Eynsham, Reginald fitz-Jocelin (admitted as a Confrater, shortly before his death), Nigel de Longchamps and Ernulf. The Monks often put forward candidates for Archbishop of Canterbury, either from among their number or outside, since the Archbishop was nominally their Abbot, but this could lead to clashes with the King and/or Pope, should they put forward a different man, examples are the elections of Baldwin of Forde and Thomas Cobham.


File:Canterbury, Canterbury cathedral 11.JPG


Canterbury Cathedral, England.
Photo: 17 April 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Mattana
(Wikimedia Commons)


Early in the 14th-Century, Prior Eastry erected a stone Choir Screen, and his successor, Prior Oxenden, inserted a large Five-Light Window into St Anselm's Chapel. The Cathedral was seriously damaged by an earthquake in 1382, losing its bells and Campanile.

From the Late-14th-Century, the Nave and Transepts were rebuilt, on the Norman foundations in the Perpendicular style. In contrast to the contemporary rebuilding of the Nave at Winchester, where much of the existing fabric was retained and re-modelled, the Piers were entirely removed, and replaced with less bulky Gothic ones, and the old Aisle walls completely taken down, except for a low "Plinth" left on the South Side.

More Norman fabric was retained in the Transepts, especially in the East Walls, and the old Apsidal Chapels were not replaced until the Mid-15th-Century. The Arches of the new Nave Arcade were exceptionally high in proportion to the Clerestory. The new Transepts, Aisles and Nave were roofed with Lierne Vaults, enriched with Bosses. Most of the work was done during the Priorate of Thomas Chillenden (1391–1411): Chillenden also built a new Choir Screen at the East End of the Nave, into which Eastry's existing Screen was incorporated. The Norman stone floor of the Nave, however, survived until its replacement in 1786.


File:Canterbury, Canterbury cathedral-Cloister 11.JPG



Bosses on the Vault of the Cloisters, 
Canterbury Cathedral, England.

Photo: 17 April 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Mattana
(Wikimedia Commons)


A shortage of money, and the priority given to the rebuilding of the Cloisters and Chapter-House, meant that the rebuilding of the West Towers was neglected. The South-West Tower was not replaced until 1458, and the Norman North-West Tower survived until 1834, when it was replaced by a replica of its Perpendicular companion.

In about 1430, the South Transept Apse was removed to make way for a Chapel, founded by Lady Margaret Holland and dedicated to St Michael and All Angels. The North Transept Apse was replaced by a Lady Chapel, built in 1448 - 1455.


File:Canterbury, Canterbury cathedral-stained glass 26.JPG


Stained Glass Window in the Chapter House, 

Canterbury Cathedral, England.
Photo: 18 April 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Mattana
(Wikimedia Commons)


The 235-foot Crossing Tower was begun in 1433, although preparations had already been made during Chillenden's Priorate, when the Piers had been reinforced. Further strengthening was found necessary around the beginning of the 16th-Century, when Buttressing Arches were added under the Southern and Western Tower Arches. The Tower is often known as the "Angel Steeple", after a gilded angel that once stood on one of its Pinnacles.


PART SIX FOLLOWS


As a mother caresses her child, so I comfort you.


This Article can be found on the Holy Card Heaven blog at


As a mother caresses her child, so I comfort you.
Bouasse Lebel 782B




Comme une Mère caresse son enfant, ainsi je vous consolerai.


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