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

Thursday 15 December 2016

Octave Day Of The Feast Of The Immaculate Conception. 15 December.



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

Octave Day of The Feast of The Immaculate Conception.
15 December.

Greater-Double.

White Vestments.


The Immaculate Conception.
Artist: Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640).
Date: 1628.
English: Work belonging to the Madrid Prado Museum photographed during
the exhibition 
« Rubens et son Temps » (Rubens and His Times) at the Museum of Louvre-Lens.
Français: Œuvre appartenant au musée du Prado de Madrid photographiée
lors de l’exposition temporaire « Rubens et son Temps » au musée duLouvre-Lens.
Deutsch: Arbeiten gehören in der " Rubens et son Temps "
(Ausstellung Rubens und seine Zeit) im Museum von Louvre-Lens fotografiert.
Español: Trabaja perteneciente a fotografiado durante la exposición de
" Rubens et son Temps " (Rubens y su época) en el Museo de Louvre-Lens.
Current location: Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain.
Source/Photographer: User:Jean-Pol GRANDMONT (2013).
(Wikimedia Commons)

The date of Mary's Nativity on 8 September caused her Conception to be Celebrated during Advent, the Season when The Church awaits "The Emmanuel, Whom a Virgin shall Conceive" (Communion of The Wednesday in Advent Ember Week).

Devotion to The Mother of God holds an important place in The Liturgy of Advent. One may say that the period comprising Advent, Christmas, and Epiphany, constitutes the real Season, or Month, of Mary.

The Church does not yet possess Jesus, but she already has His Mother, "The Beginning of Christ", as Bossuet calls her. This period represents the first phase of the existence of The Saviour on Earth. The Divine Infant rests gently in Mary, a Living Tabernacle, which the pious sculptors of The Middle Ages wished to honour when they made a statue of The Virgin as a Tabernacle, where The Eucharist would be preserved.

During this Season of Advent, let us fix our eyes on The Virgin, who is to give us Christ.

Mass: As on The Feast of The Immaculate Conception.
Second Collect: Of The Feria.
Creed: On account of The Feast of The Immaculate Conception.
Preface: Of The Blessed Virgin Mary.


THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL



THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL

Available (in U.K.) from

Available (in U.S.A.) from

A New Proto-Priest As Blessed Pope Paul VI Has One Cardinal Left.



English: Coat-of-Arms of the Brazilian Cardinal, Paulo Evaristo Arns,
Archbishop Emeritus of São Paulo.
Motto: From Hope To Hope.
Graphic reference: 
www.araldicavaticana.com [1], [2]
Español: Escudo de armas del cardenal brasileño Paulo Evaristo Arns,
Arzobispo Emérito de São Paulo.
Referencia gráfica: 
www.araldicavaticana.com [3], [4]
Português: Brasão de armas do Cardeal brasileiro Paulo Evaristo Arns,
Arcebispo Emérito de São Paulo.
Referência gráfico: 
www.araldicavaticana.com [5], [6]
Date: 7 March 2013.
Source: Own work.
This file is licensed under the
Attribution: I, SajoR
Author
(Wikimedia Commons)


Cardinal Arns.
Photo Credit: AP Photo/Dario Lopez-Mills)
Illustration: DAILY MAIL

The following Text is taken from, and can be read in full at, IN CAELO ET IN TERRA

The death of Cardinal Paulo Evaristo Arns, at the age of 95, leads to an interesting change in The College of Cardinals, albeit a Ceremonial one, with virtually no effect of the day-to-day affairs of that Body.

Cardinal Arns was created a Cardinal by Blessed Pope Paul VI in 1973. His death leaves only one surviving Cardinal, albeit a former Cardinal, created by that Pope. He is the Pope Emeritus, Benedict XVI, created in the four-man Consistory of 1977 (the Blessed Pope’s last one).

Cardinal Arns was also the most senior of The Cardinal-Priests, one of three Classes of Cardinals. This gave him the Office of Proto-Priest, which entailed certain duties following The Election of a new Pope. The Proto-Priest pronounces the formal Prayer for the new Pope after The Proto-Deacon has bestowed The Pallium and before The Dean of The College of Cardinals presents The Ring of The Fisherman. That said, Cardinal Arns never exercised that duty, as he was not present at The Inauguration of Pope Francis, and Cardinal Danneels acted in his stead.

Don't Let Commercialism Dominate Your Preparations For The Nativity Of Our Lord.




"O Come, O Come,
Emmanuel"
(Organum).
Sung by The Robert Shaw Chamber Singers.
Available on YouTube at


Illustration: MIRROR



"O Come, O Come,
Emmanuel".
Sung by
Enya.
Available on YouTube at
YOU TUBE



Illustration: CELEBRITY NEWS UPDATE

Wednesday 14 December 2016

Stand By Your Guns. Enough Prevarication. Put Your Money Where Your Beliefs Are. Saturnos For Clerics !!!



Illustration: FR. Z's BLOG






This Article is taken from, and can be read in full at, FR. Z's BLOG

Wednesday In Ember Week Of Advent.


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

Wednesday In Ember Week Of Advent.

Station at Saint Mary Major.

Indulgence of 10 Years and 10 Quarantines.

Violet Vestments.




The Four Seasons of the Year begin with the Liturgical periods known as Ember Weeks. They are known since the 5th-Century A.D., but they were fixed to their present dates by Pope Saint Gregory VII in the 12th-Century.

The Ember Days are Three Fast Days, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, intended to Consecrate to God the various Seasons in Nature, and to prepare those who are about to be Ordained.

The Gospel recalls Gabriel's mission to Mary to inform her that she was about to become The Mother of God.

No human voice, but an Angel's, must make known the Mystery of such message. Today, for the first time, are heard the words: "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee." They are heard and believed. "Behold," says Mary, "the handmaid of The Lord, be it done to me according to thy word" (Third Lesson). During seven Centuries, now, Isaias had foretold this Virgin Motherhood (Epistle, Communion).



Rogation Days.
Circa 1950: The Vicar and Sunday School Children go out into the fields
to Bless the crops. 
The little boy is carrying a symbolic Tree of Plenty.
Picture Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images.
Illustration: ABOUT RELIGION


Rogation Days.


Rogation Days, like their distant cousins, The Ember Days, are days set aside to observe a change in the Seasons. Rogation Days are tied to the Spring planting. There are Four Rogation Days: The Major Rogation, which falls on 25 April, and Three Minor Rogations, which are Celebrated on the Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday immediately before Ascension Thursday.

For an Abundant Harvest.

As The Catholic Encyclopedia notes, Rogation Days are "Days of Prayer, and formerly,
also of Fasting, instituted by The Church to appease God's anger at man's transgressions,
to ask protection in calamities, and to obtain a good and bountiful harvest."


Illustration: ABOUT RELIGION

Origin of the Word.

Rogation is simply an English form of the Latin "Rogatio", which comes from the verb "Rogare", which means "to ask." The primary purpose of The Rogation Days is to ask God to Bless the fields and the Parish (the geographic area) that they fall in.
The Major Rogation likely replaced the Roman feast of "Robigalia", on which
(The Catholic Encyclopedia notes) "the heathens held processions and supplications to
their gods." While the Romans directed their prayers for good weather and an abundant harvest
to a variety of gods, the Christians made the Tradition their own, by replacing Roman
polytheism with monotheism, and directing their Prayers to God.
By the time of Pope Saint Gregory the Great (540 A.D. - 604 A.D.),
the Christianised Rogation Days were already considered an ancient custom.

The Litany, Procession, and Mass.

The Rogation Days were marked by the recitation of The Litany of The Saints, which would
normally begin in, or at, a Church. After Saint Mary was invoked, the Congregation would
proceed to walk the boundaries of the Parish, while reciting the rest of The Litany (and repeating
it as necessary or supplementing it with some of The Penitential or Gradual Psalms). Thus,
the entire Parish would be Blessed, and the boundaries of the Parish would be marked. The procession would end with a Rogation Mass, in which all in the Parish were expected to take part.


Sunday School Children Celebrate Rogation Day in 1953.
A photo at Market Lavington Museum, Wiltshire, England.

Optional Today.

Like The Ember Days, Rogation Days were removed from The Liturgical Calendar when it was revised in 1969, coinciding with the introduction of The Mass of Paul VI (The Novus Ordo).
Parishes can still Celebrate them, though very few in The United States do; but, in portions of Europe, The Major Rogation is still Celebrated with a Procession. As The Western World has become more industrialised, Rogation Days and Ember Days, focused as they are on agriculture and the changes of the Seasons, have seemed less "relevant." Still, they are good ways to keep us in touch with nature and to remind us that The Church's Liturgical Calendar is tied to the changing Seasons.

Celebrating The Rogation Days.

If your Parish does not celebrate The Rogation Days, there's nothing to stop you from Celebrating them yourself. You can mark the Days by reciting The Litany of The Saints. And, while many
modern Parishes, especially in The United States, have boundaries that are too extensive to walk,
you could learn where those boundaries are and walk a portion of them, getting to know your surroundings, and maybe your neighbours, in the process. Finish it all off by attending
daily Mass and Praying for good weather and a fruitful harvest.


Saint Michael's Church, Bunwell, Norfolk, England, has always been the centre of Village Life. 
In this picture, taken on Rogation Sunday, April 1967, the Rector, Rev. Samuel Collins,
followed by the Choir, Parishioners, and The New Buckenham Silver Band, walk
The Parish Boundaries and pause to Bless the stream.
Illustration: BUNWELL HERITAGE GROUP


References in The Liturgy, connecting The Annunciation with Advent, date back to very early times. Many Churches observed this Feast on 18 December, in preference to 25 March, the latter date often falling in Lent.

Furthermore, this First Joyful Mystery of The Blessed Virgin is in keeping with the spirit of joy, which is so characteristic of the second half of The Season of Advent, when The Lord, Who is nigh, is so eagerly awaited (Second Gradual). Who, having appeared in the humility of His First Coming to save us (Collect), will come again like a King, full of glory (First Gradual), to take vengeance on His enemies and to deliver us forever (Offertory).

The Station is at Saint Mary Major, where the Relics of Our Lord's Crib are preserved.

In Countries where the custom exists, it is allowed to Celebrate this Day at an early hour a Solemn Votive Mass of Our Lady (First Mass. In Advent. Roráte, Caeli). This Mass is commonly called "Golden", from the White (or Golden) Vestments, or "Missus", from the first word of the Gospel of The Annunciation. Travellers and future mothers make a point of attending this Mass.

Mass: Roráte, Caeli.


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

In The Liturgical Calendar of The Western Christian Churches, Ember Days are four separate Sets of Three Days within the same Week  —  specifically, the Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday  —  roughly equidistant in the circuit of the Year, that are set aside for Fasting and Prayer.


These Days set apart for Special Prayer and Fasting were considered especially suitable for The Ordination of Clergy. The Ember Days are known in Latin as the "quattuor anni tempora" (the "Four Seasons of The Year"), or, formerly, as the "jejunia quattuor temporum" ("Fasts of The Four Seasons").

The Four Quarterly Periods, during which The Ember Days fall, are called The Embertides.

Seventh Day Within The Octave Of The Feast Of The Immaculate Conception. 14 December.




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

Seventh Day within The Octave
of The Feast of The Immaculate Conception.
14 December.

Semi-Double.

White Vestments.







"The Immaculate Conception".
Artist: Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640).
Date: 1628.
English: Work belonging to the Madrid Prado Museum
photographed during the exhibition « Rubens et son Temps »
(Rubens and His Times) at the Museum of Louvre-Lens.
Français: Œuvre appartenant au musée du Prado de Madrid
photographiée lors de l’exposition temporaire « Rubens et son Temps »
au musée duLouvre-Lens.
Deutsch: Arbeiten gehören in der " Rubens et son Temps "
(Ausstellung Rubens und seine Zeit) im Museum von Louvre-Lens fotografiert.
Español: Trabaja perteneciente a fotografiado durante la exposición de
" Rubens et son Temps " (Rubens y su época) en el Museo de Louvre-Lens.
Current location: Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain.
Source/Photographer: User:Jean-Pol GRANDMONT (2013).
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Church prolongs during eight days (an Octave) The Feast of Mary's Victory over the devil and repeats The Mass Celebrated on 8 December.

The most important Feasts of The Virgin are The Assumption and The Immaculate Conception, both Feasts of The First-Class and both with an Octave.

That is why each day The Creed is said during The Octave, that Profession of Faith fixed at The First Council of Constantinople (381 A.D.), which was only Chanted when the attendance in Church was very large.

Let us prepare for The Birth of Christ in our hearts by adorning them with a little of His Mother's Purity.

The Ancients said that White was a Divine Colour. Daniel (vii. 9) depicts God as appearing clothed in White. The Evangelists tell us that, at The Transfiguration, the garments of Jesus were of "dazzling Whiteness" (Mark ix. 2).

The Liturgy of The Feast of The Immaculate Conception applies this Text to The Virgin, saying that: "The Garment of Salvation" (Introit), with which God has clothed her, is a "Vesture as White as Snow" (Second Antiphon at Vespers).

Let us, with The Church, ask The Blessed Virgin on her Feast Day, that we may, "by her intercession, be purified from all our sins" (Collect), and let us be in readiness to receive Jesus.

Mass: As on The Feast of The Immaculate Conception.
Second Collect: Of The Feria.
Third Collect: Of The Holy Ghost.
Creed: On account of The Feast of The Immaculate Conception.
Preface: Of The Blessed Virgin Mary.


THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL



THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL

Available (in U.K.) from

Available (in U.S.A.) from

Pews. Chairs. Benches. Advertising Hoardings. Leaflet Stands. Inside The Church, Is It Better With Them, Or Without ? You Decide.



Siena Cathedral,
Italy.
Illustration: THE HISTORY BLOG


The Nave,
York Minster,
England.
Once a year, The Minster removes all Pews, Chairs, Benches, etc,
to permit the renovation, refurbishment, cleaning and repair, of The Minster's beautiful floor area.
Devoid of the usual plethora of Pews, Benches, etc, it suddenly reveals
the magnificent grandeur that the original Mediaeval Masons intended to be seen.
I suspect that this dramatic visual enhancement is what Fr. Z was alluding to in his excellent Post, entitled "Down With Pews ! Away With Them !", which makes fascinating, compulsive, reading on his Blog at FR. Z's BLOG


Saint Mark's Basilica,
Venice, Italy.
Illustration: PINTEREST

Tuesday 13 December 2016

Sixth Day Within The Octave Of The Feast Of The Immaculate Conception. 13 December.




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

Sixth Day within The Octave
of The Feast of The Immaculate Conception.
13 December.

Semi-Double.

White Vestments.







"The Immaculate Conception".
Artist: Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640).
Date: 1628.
English: Work belonging to the Madrid Prado Museum
photographed during the exhibition « Rubens et son Temps »
(Rubens and His Times) at the Museum of Louvre-Lens.
Français: Œuvre appartenant au musée du Prado de Madrid
photographiée lors de l’exposition temporaire « Rubens et son Temps »
au musée duLouvre-Lens.
Deutsch: Arbeiten gehören in der " Rubens et son Temps "
(Ausstellung Rubens und seine Zeit) im Museum von Louvre-Lens fotografiert.
Español: Trabaja perteneciente a fotografiado durante la exposición de
" Rubens et son Temps " (Rubens y su época) en el Museo de Louvre-Lens.
Current location: Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain.
Source/Photographer: User:Jean-Pol GRANDMONT (2013).
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Church prolongs during eight days (an Octave) The Feast of Mary's Victory over the devil and repeats The Mass Celebrated on 8 December.

The most important Feasts of The Virgin are The Assumption and The Immaculate Conception, both Feasts of The First-Class and both with an Octave.

That is why each day The Creed is said during The Octave, that Profession of Faith fixed at The First Council of Constantinople (381 A.D.), which was only Chanted when the attendance in Church was very large.

Let us prepare for The Birth of Christ in our hearts by adorning them with a little of His Mother's Purity.

Mass: As on The Feast of The Immaculate Conception.
Creed: On account of The Feast of The Immaculate Conception.
Preface: Of The Blessed Virgin Mary.
The Sixth Day within The Octave of The Feast of The Immaculate Conception is Commemorated in The Mass of Saint Lucy (13 December).


THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL



THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL

Available (in U.K.) from

Available (in U.S.A.) from

Bring Back Vespers For All Feasts.



Solemn Vespers and Solemn Benediction
at The London Oratory,
Easter 2013.
All London Oratory Illustrations: CHARLES COLE.COM

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

Vespers, also called Evening Prayer, takes place as Dusk begins to fall. Evening Prayer gives thanks for the day just past and makes an evening sacrifice of Praise to God (Psalm 141:1).

The general structure of The Roman Rite Catholic Service of Vespers is as follows:

Vespers opens with the singing or chanting of the words

Deus, in adiutorium meum intende. Domine, ad adiuvandum me festina. Gloria Patri, et Filio, et Spiritui Sancto. Sicut erat in principio, et nunc et semper, et in saecula saeculorum. Amen. Alleluia.

(O God, come to my assistance. O Lord, make haste to help me. Glory to The Father, and to The Son, and to The Holy Ghost. As it was in the beginning, is now, and will be forever. Amen. Alleluia.)

("Alleluia" is omitted during Lent.)


The appointed Hymn (from The Hymnarium) is then sung;

The appointed Psalmody is then sung: In The Liturgy in general use since 1970, there are two Psalms and a New Testament Canticle, while in The Older Tradition, five Psalms are sung. Each Psalm (and Canticle) concludes with a Doxology (Gloria Patri) and is preceded and followed by an Antiphon.

Additionally, most Psalms also have a short caption explaining how the Psalm/Canticle relates to The Church in a Christological or Spiritual way; lastly, English translations often have a Psalm-Prayer said after the Gloria and before the Antiphon.

After the Psalms, there is a Reading from the Bible.


Following The Reading, there is a short Responsory consisting of a Verse, a Response, the first half only of the Gloria Patri, and then the Verse, again.

Then the participants sing The Magnificat — the Canticle of The Blessed Virgin Mary from the Gospel of Luke 1:46-55. The Magnificat is always preceded by an Antiphon, and followed by the Gloria and an Antiphon.

The Preces (Intercessory Prayers) are then said, followed by The Our Father, and then the closing Prayer (Oratio) and final Blessing/Invocation.

The Office is frequently followed by Benediction of The Blessed Sacrament.


Vespers is frequently followed by Benediction of The Blessed Sacrament.

The following Text is from FR HUNWICKE'S MUTUAL ENRICHMENT

Those whose Altar Missal or Breviary dates from before 1962 will be familiar with the curious experience of realising, by seeing it in their books, that (e.g.) yesterday's Feast of Saint Andrew had, until very recently, a Vigil and a First Vespers. Whatever happened to them ? Why are they nowhere to be seen in the 1962 books ?

The tremendously Good News about Summorum Pontificum is that it has given Seminarians and Priests an enormous impulse to learn how to offer Mass according to the immemorially ancient Ordo Missae of The Roman Church.

If you, dear Clerical Reader, have learned how to do that, you don't need me to tell you that you have acquired a Pearl of Great Price. But what is often not realised is that, as far as The Calendar is concerned, "1962" constituted a very considerable break in continuity.


You see, the process which led to the imposition in 1970 of The Novus Ordo did not start after "The Council"; it had begun a couple of decades earlier when Pope Pius XII and his youthful protege, Annibale Bugnini, set out on a two-decade journey to The Novus Ordo.

During that period, Vigils and Octaves galore bit the dust; but perhaps the most questionable "reform" of all was the abolition of First Vespers for all but the highest rank of festivals. This abolished the ancient Christian practice, inherited from the Synagogue, of starting a day on the previous evening.

What I am urging you to purchase, if you are not already familiar with it, is The Saint Lawrence Press ORDO for 2017. OK, you may very well not wish to follow it Liturgically, but simply contemplating, day by day, what the old Roman Rite did before itching and twitching fingers got to work on it, is, believe me, a considerable education.


This ORDO can be sought from ordorecitandi@gmail.com; or from 59 Sandscroft Avenue, Broadway, Worcestershire, WR12 7EJ, United Kingdom.

The Compiler of that ORDO also runs a Blog explaining the pre-Pius XII Roman Rite
THE SAINT LAWRENCE PRESS LTD

If "Tridentine" is to refer to the actual Liturgical Books of Pope Saint Pius V, as I think it probably should, then you can find out about The Tridentine Rite by looking at another Blog by the same erudite author, called THE TRIDENTINE RITE


There you will discover that The Common Preface is (I mean, in The Missal actually issued by Pope Saint Pius V) used on these Green Sundays ! You will also, I suspect, be surprised by some of the rather Puritanical prunings of The Calendar; for example, the elimination of "non-biblical" Feasts, such as Saint Anne and The Presentation of Our Lady. They soon returned, by popular demand; but they had sunk without trace under Pope Saint Pius V.

And The Office Hymns of Pope Saint Pius V, of course, will not be those with which users of The 1962 Breviary are familiar. Those Texts were produced in the 1620s by Pope Urban VIII, a.k.a. Papa Barberini. The Breviary of Pope Saint Pius V had the ancient Texts, sometimes totally different from the Barberini versions, which one will also find in The Sarum and Benedictine Breviaries.

Saint Lucy (Santa Lucia). Virgin And Martyr. Feast Day 13 December.


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

Saint Lucy (Santa Lucia).
Virgin. Martyr.
Feast Day 13 December.

Double.

Red Vestments.




Saint Lucy Before The Judge.
Artist: Lorenzo Lotto (1523–1532).
Source: Scanned from book.
This File: 26 February 2011.
User: Sailko.
(Wikimedia Commons)




Lucia Di Siracusa
(Lucy of Syracuse).
Available on YouTube at




English: Procession of Light,
on The Feast Day of Saint Lucy
(Santa Lucia) in Sweden.
Deutsch: Luciafeier in einer schwedischen Kirche.
Photo: 13 December 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: Claudia Gründer.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Born in Sicily towards the end of the 3rd-Century A.D., of noble origin, Saint Lucy, as the Gospel twice reminds us, gave away all her riches to the Poor and, when she had nothing more, she gave herself to Jesus (Epistle).

Whilst The Foolish Virgins neglected to fill their lamps with the "Oil of Gladness", of which the Introit speaks, Lucy, whose name signifies "Light", waited with her lighted lamp in hand, that is, with her Soul filled with Grace, the coming of her Spouse.



Feast Day of Saint Lucy
(Santa Lucia).
Available on YouTube at




Saint Lucy.
Available on YouTube at

"Pure hearts are the Temples of The Holy Ghost," she declared to her judge. It is this Spirit, also symbolised by the "Oil of Gladness", as we are told in The Ceremonies of Maundy Thursday, an Oil that gave suppleness and strength to her Soul in such a miraculous way, that Saint Lucy resisted her executioners unto death rather than lose the treasure of her Virginity.

Wherefore, her name occurs in The Canon of The Mass (Second List), and is repeated every day by thousands of Priests, who glorify God in her. She died in 303 A.D.

The lighted lamp in hand is the Soul in a state of Grace; let us, in this Season of Advent, wait for the Spouse who will soon come.

Mass: Dilexisti.
Commemoration: Of The Octave.
Gospel:  Simile est.
Preface: Of The Blessed Virgin Mary.



Saint Lucy
(Santa Lucia).
Artist: Francesco del Cossa (1436–1487).
Date: After 1470.
Current location; National Gallery of Art,
Washington D.C., United States of America.
Source/Photographer: Digital photo by User:Postdlf.
(Wikimedia Commons)



The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

Lucia of Syracuse (283 A.D. - 304 A.D.), known as Saint Lucy, or Saint Lucia (Italian : Santa Lucia), was a young Christian Martyr, who died during The Diocletian Persecution . She is Venerated as a Saint by The Roman Catholic, Anglican, Lutheran, and Orthodox Churches.

She is one of eight women, who, along with The Blessed Virgin Mary, are Commemorated by name in The Canon of The Mass . Her Feast Day, known as Saint Lucy's Day, is Celebrated in The West on 13 December. Saint Lucia of Syracuse, was honoured in The Middle Ages and remains a well-known Saint in modern England.



THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL



THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL

Available (in U.K.) from

Available (in U.S.A.) from

Traditional Mass Supporters Are Getting Younger And Younger, Says Recent Report.




Traditional Mass Supporters
are getting younger and younger, says a Report.
Author: Unknown.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...