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

Tuesday 7 March 2017

Weekly Traditional Latin Masses In Kent And Monthly In Essex: Maidstone; Ashford; Tenterden; Headcorn; Ramsgate; Margate; Tunbridge Wells; Chislehurst; Leigh-on-Sea.



Illustration by
FLICKR

Zephyrinus is delighted to publicise
the Traditional Latin Masses,
which are Celebrated in Kent
on a regular Weekly basis on Sundays.
Also, in Essex (Leigh-on-Sea) on
The First Sunday of every Month.

In addition, in Kent, Traditional Latin Masses
are Celebrated during the Week,
on Feast Days and Holy Days of Obligation.



Illustration by
FLICKR

There is a vibrant and happy group
who attend these Masses
and meet, after Mass (in Kent),
for lovely Lunches in various hostelries.

Do come and join us.
You will all be most welcome.



Illustration by
FLICKR

Besides Glorifying God in an Edifying, Holy,
and Traditional manner, you will see the wonderful Kent and Essex countrysides
changing throughout the Seasons,
which, in itself, Glorifies God.



              


MAIDSTONE, KENT.

CHURCH OF SAINT FRANCIS.


Church of Saint Francis,
Maidstone, Kent.
Photo: © Copyright Chris Whippet
and licensed for reuse under this

Traditional Latin Masses are Celebrated

at the

Church of Saint Francis,
126, Week Street,
Maidstone, Kent ME14 1RH,
(next to Maidstone East Railway Station)

at 1230 hrs,

on the FIRST SUNDAY OF EVERY MONTH.


ASHFORD, KENT.

CHURCH OF SAINT SIMON STOCK.


Church of Saint Simon Stock,
Ashford, Kent.
Photo: WIKIMAPI

Traditional Latin Masses are Celebrated

at the

Church of Saint Simon Stock,
Brookfield Road,
Ashford, Kent TN23 4EU,

at 1215 hrs,

on the SECOND SUNDAY OF EVERY MONTH.


TENTERDEN, KENT.

CHURCH OF SAINT ANDREW.



Traditional Latin Masses are Celebrated

at the

Church of Saint Andrew,
47, Ashford Road,
Tenterden, Kent TN30 6LL,

at 1200 hrs,

on the THIRD SUNDAY OF EVERY MONTH.


HEADCORN, KENT.

CHURCH OF SAINT THOMAS OF CANTERBURY.


Church of Saint Thomas of Canterbury,
Headcorn, Kent.
Photo © Copyright David Anstiss
and licensed for reuse

Traditional Latin Masses are Celebrated

at the

Church of Saint Thomas of Canterbury,
Becket Court, 15, Station Road,
Headcorn, Kent TN27 9SB,
(near to Headcorn Railway Station)

at 1200 hrs,

on the FOURTH SUNDAY OF EVERY MONTH.



WHEN THERE IS A FIFTH SUNDAY IN THE MONTH,
THE TRADITIONAL LATIN MASS IS CELEBRATED AT

ASHFORD, KENT.

CHURCH OF SAINT SIMON STOCK.


Saint Simon Stock Church,
Ashford, Kent.
Photo: WIKIMAPIA

Traditional Latin Masses are Celebrated

at the

Church of Saint Simon Stock,
Brookfield Road, Ashford, Kent TN23 4EU,

at 1215 hrs,

on the FIFTH SUNDAY OF EVERY MONTH.



RAMSGATE, KENT.

SAINT AUGUSTINE'S CHURCH,

Zephyrinus is grateful to Tony V at PRAY TELL UNCHAINED
for providing information on Usus Antiquior Masses in Ramsgate, Kent.



Traditional Latin Mass at Saint Augustine's,
Ramsgate, Kent.



Saint Augustine's Shrine,
Ramsgate, Kent.

Times of Latin
Usus Antiquior Masses.

RAMSGATE, KENT.

Saint Augustine’s Church,
Saint Augustine’s Road,
Ramsgate,
Kent CT11 9PA.

Telephone: 01843 592 071.

Traditional Latin Masses at

1200 hrs. Sunday.

and

0930 hrs. Friday.





RAMSGATE, KENT.

SAINT ETHELBERT AND SAINT GERTRUDE CHURCH,


Saint Ethelbert and Saint Gertrude Church,
Ramsgate, Kent.

Saint Ethelbert and Saint Gertrude Church,
72, Hereson Road,
Ramsgate,
Kent CT11 7DS.

Traditional Latin Mass at

0930 hrs.
on Wednesdays.



TUNBRIDGE WELLS, KENT.

SAINT AUGUSTINE'S CHURCH,


Saint Augustine's Church,
Tunbridge Wells, Kent.
Illustration: THE CIVIC SOCIETY

TUNBRIDGE WELLS, KENT.

Saint Augustine’s Church,
Crescent Road,
Royal Tunbridge Wells,
Kent TN1 2LY.

Telephone: 01892 522525.

Traditional Latin Mass at

1900 hrs.
on Wednesdays.



Saint Mary's Church,
Chislehurst, Kent.
Illustration: ARCHDIOCESE OF SOUTHWARK

CHISLEHURST, KENT.

Saint Mary's Church
28 Crown Lane,
Chislehurst,
Kent BR7 5PL.

E-Mail: frcbriggs@stmarysrc.org

Telephone: 020 8467 3215.

Traditional Latin Mass at

1100 hrs.
Every Sunday.

and

1930 hrs.
on Fridays.




Saint Austin and Saint Gregory Church,
Margate, Kent.

MARGATE, KENT.

Saint Austin and Saint Gregory Church,
38 Charlotte Place,
Margate,
Kent CT9 1LP.

Telephone: 01843 220825.

E-Mail: info@margatecatholic.org


Traditional Latin Mass at

1130 hrs.
on Sundays

and

1930 hrs.
on Mondays.


LEIGH-ON-SEA,
ESSEX.

CHURCH OF OUR LADY OF LOURDES AND SAINT JOSEPH.





Our Lady of Lourdes and Saint Joseph Church,


LEIGH-ON-SEA, ESSEX.


Our Lady of Lourdes and Saint Joseph Church,
161, Leigh Road,

Leigh-on-Sea,
Essex SS9 1J.

Telephone: 01702 478078.

E-Mail: leighonsea@dioceseofbrentwood.org


Traditional Latin Mass at

1600 hrs,

on The First Sunday of every Month.

Followed by

Solemn Vespers

and

Benediction.


THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL



THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL

Available (in U.K.) from

Available (in U.S.A.) from

Tuesday Of The First Week In Lent. Lenten Station At The Basilica Of Saint Anastasia.



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

Tuesday Of The First Week In Lent.

   Station at Saint Anastasia's.

Indulgence of 10 Years and 10 Quarantines.

Violet Vestments.



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

The Station is at the old Church, which, in the 4th-Century A.D., was the only Parish in the Centre of Rome and in its wealthy Quarter. Built at the foot of The Palatine Hill, this Church, which owes its name to The Chapel of The Resurrection (Anastasis) at Jerusalem, was also Consecrated to Saint Anastasia.

Saint Anastasia was put to death, under Emperor Diocletian, at Sirmium, in Illyria (now Mitrowitz). Tradition seems to say that this "Title", mentioned in a Synod in 499 A.D., recalls the house of this Holy Martyr in Rome (?). It is more than likely, however, that it concerns but a simple identity of name between the Roman Foundress of this Basilica and the Titular Saint.

Lent is the time when "God is near to us and eager to forgive us, if we put aside our evil thoughts and forsake the way of sin" (Epistle). To do so, we must cast sin out from our hearts, as Jesus cast out the sellers from the Temple (Gospel), and receive the teaching of Christ with the simplicity of Children of God. Then, He will be able to cure our Souls, as He healed the lame and the blind who came nigh unto Him.

Casting out the vainglorious wisdom of the World, let us profit by The Holy Season of Lent, so that, "chastening our bodies by mortification, our Souls may be filled with Holy Desires" (Collect).

Mass: Dómine, refúgium.



The Basilica of Saint Anastasia, Rome.
Photo: June 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Lalupa
(Wikimedia Commons)

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

The Church of Santa Anastasia is a Minor Basilica Church in Rome.

Santa Anastasia Church was built in the Late-3rd-Century A.D. - Early-4th-Century A.D., possibly by a Roman woman named Anastasia. The Church is Listed under the Titulus "Anastasiae" in The Acts of The 499 A.D. Synod. Later, the Church was entitled to The Martyr with the same name, Anastasia of Sirmium.

The Church was restored several times: Pope Damasus I (366 A.D. - 383 A.D.); and Pope Hilarius (461 A.D. - 468 A.D.); Pope John VII (705 A.D. - 707 A.D.); Pope Leo III (795 A.D. - 816 A.D.); Pope Gregory IV (827 A.D. - 844 A.D.). The current Church dates back to the 17th-Century Restoration commissioned by Pope Urban VII.

Traditionally, the Church is connected to the cult of Saint Jerome, who possibly Celebrated Mass here. The Saint is depicted over the Altar, by Domenichino.


Ceiling of The Basilica Sant'Anastasia, Rome.
Photo: July 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: User:Mattes
(Wikimedia Commons)

The current Cardinal Priest of the Titulus S. Anastasiae is Godfried Danneels. Past holders have included John Morton, an Archbishop of Canterbury.

Art and Architecture.

The last Restoration, after the Restoration during the Papacy of Pope Sixtus IV, occurred in 1636, when the facade, with, Lower, Doric, and, Upper, Ionic, order, was reconstructed in 1636, after the cyclone of 1634. The Nave recycles antique Columns. The Ceiling is frescoed with a Martyrdom of The Saints (1722) by Michelangelo Cerruti.


English: Madonna and Child in the Basilica di Sant'Anastasia al Palatino, Rome, Italy.
Česky: Socha v Bazilice sv. Anastázie na Palatinu, Řím, Itálie.
Photo: April 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Karelj
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Chapel, to the Right, has a painting of Saint John the Baptist by Pier Francesco Mola. While the last Chapel on the Right has a fresco of Scenes of the Life of Saints Carlo Borromeo and Filippo Neri by Lazzaro Baldi

The Right Transept has a painting of S. Toribio (1726) by Francesco Trevisani. The High Altar has a Nativity, by Lazzaro Baldi, and, below the Altar, is a statue of Saint Anastasia, by Ercole Ferrata. It clearly shows the influence of Bernini's Beata Ludovica Albertoni. The Left Transept has a Madonna of The Rosary, by Baldi. The last Chapel, to the Left, by Domenichino, depicts Saint Jerome. The other Chapel has Ss.Giorgio e Publio, by Etienne Parrocel.

Monday 6 March 2017

The Patrolman's Fraternity Of Saint Michael.



Solemn High Mass.
"We are an Organisation dedicated to bringing Police Officers
to understand 
the beauty and fullness of The One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic, Faith.


The following Text appeared on 4 March 2015 on the Web-Site of
THE SOCIETY OF ST. HUGH OF CLUNY

"My name is Matthew Reid and I, along with a number of other New York Police Department (NYPD) Officers, recently started a Traditional Catholic Fraternity for the many Catholic Members of our Department.

We have monthly, to bi-monthly, meetings at our home, the great Church of The Holy Innocents, Manhattan, New York City. Father Leonard Villa is working with us, for which we are most honoured and appreciative.

I would like to request that you please let the Readers of your great Site know about our Fraternity, which is named “The Patrolman’s Fraternity of St. Michael.” We are on Facebook under that name and are looking to expand our reach and ability to Evangelise our Fallen-Away Brethren by exposing them to The Majesty and Other-Worldly Awe of The Mass of The Ages.

I would like to end by asking for Prayers, as our job these days is unfortunately a Spiritual Desert, like so much of the rest of Society.

En Christi,

Matthew Reid".



Stained-Glass Window of Saint Michael,
Church of The Holy Innocents,
Manhattan, New York, United States of America.

Monday Of The First Week In Lent. Lenten Station At Saint Peter-Ad-Vincula (Saint Peter's Chains).



Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,

unless stated otherwise.

Monday of The First Week in Lent.
   Station at Saint Peter's Chains.

Indulgence of 10 Years and 10 Quarantines.

Violet Vestments.




English: Church of Saint Peter's Chains, Rome.
Italiano: San Pietro in Vincoli.
Latin: San Pietro ad Vincula.
Photo: December 2005.
Source: Own work.
Author: Lalupa
(Wikimedia Commons)

San Pietro-in-Vincoli (Italian) (Saint Peter-in-Chains) is a Roman Catholic Titular Church and Minor Basilica in Rome. It is also known as the home of Michelangelo's Statue of Moses, part of the tomb of Pope Julius II. Two Popes were elected in this Church: Pope John II (533 A.D.) and Pope Gregory VII (1073).



English: The Chains of Saint Peter,
in the "Basilica di San Pietro-in-Vincoli",
Rome, Italy.
Italiano: Le catene di San Pietro, conservate nella
Basilica di San Pietro in Vincoli a Roma.
Photo: August 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Original photo by Raja Patnaik,
post-processed and uploaded by Alessio Damato
(with permission of the author).
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Station is in one of the most ancient Roman Basilicas, built by the Empress Eudocia, where The Chains worn by The Prince of The Apostles, to whom Jesus confided His Flock, are kept. In the 5th-Century A.D., it was one of the twenty-five Parishes of Rome.



English: San Pietro-in-Vincoli's Apse.
Italiano: Abside di San Pietro-in-Vincoli a Roma.
Photo: March 2010.
Source: Own work.
Author: Goldmund100
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Epistle (of The Day), alluding to the Penitents about to be reconciled at Easter and to the Catechumens preparing for Baptism, says that The Lord is The Shepherd Who comes to seek His Lost Sheep. And the Gospel tells of the separation that this Shepherd will make for ever between the sheep and the goats, or between the good, who repent and give themselves up to Works of Charity, and the sinners (this Prophecy was spoken by Jesus to His Apostles on the Mount of Olives, on the evening of the Tuesday preceding His Death).

Let us ask God to prepare us by “this Lenten Fast” (Collect) “to be loosened from the bonds of our sins” (The Prayer Over The People) by virtue of The Power of Peter, who was delivered from his Chains.

Mass: Sicut óculi.



English: Basilica of Saint Peter's Chains,
Rome, Italy.
Italiano: San Pietro-in-Vincoli,
Roma, Italy.
Photo: 3 April 2013.
Source: Own work.
Author: sailko.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

San Pietro-in-Vincoli (Saint Peter in Chains) is a Roman Catholic Titular Church and Minor Basilica in Rome, Italy, best known for being the home of Michelangelo's statue of Moses, part of the tomb of Pope Julius II.

Also known as the Basilica Eudoxiana, it was first rebuilt on the much older foundations in 432 A.D. – 440 A.D., to house The Relic of The Chains that bound Saint Peter, when he was imprisoned in Jerusalem, the episode called The Liberation of Saint Peter.

The Empress Eudoxia (wife of Emperor Valentinian III), who received them as a gift from her mother, Aelia Eudocia, consort of Valentinian II, presented The Chains to Pope Leo I. Aelia Eudocia had received these Chains as a gift from Iuvenalis, Bishop of Jerusalem.

According to legend, when Pope Leo, while comparing them to The Chains of Saint Peter's final imprisonment in The Mamertine Prison in Rome, the two Chains miraculously fused together. The Chains are kept in a Reliquary under The High Altar in The Basilica.




English: The Interior of San Pietro-in-Vincoli, Rome.
Deutsch: San Pietro in Vincoli, Gesamtansicht des Innenraums.
Photo: 20 May 2012.
Source: This file was derived from: SPIV_small.jpg
Author: SPIV_small.jpg: Philippos. Derivative work: Rabanus Flavus.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Basilica, consecrated in 439 A.D., by Pope Sixtus III, has undergone several restorations, among them a restoration by Pope Adrian I, and further work in the 11th-Century. From 1471 to 1503, in which year he was elected Pope Julius II, Cardinal Della Rovere, the nephew of Pope Sixtus IV, effected notable rebuilding.

The front Portico, attributed to Baccio Pontelli, was added in 1475. The Cloister (1493–1503) has been attributed to Giuliano da Sangallo. Further work was done at the beginning of the 18th-Century, under Francesco Fontana, and there was also a renovation in 1875.




English: The Internal Courtyard of Saint Peter-ad-Vincula
(Saint Peter's Chains),
Rome, Italy.
Italiano: Vista di parte del cortile interno.
Photo: 21 June 2008.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Titulus S. Petri ad vincula was assigned on 20 November 2010, to Donald Wuerl. The previous Cardinal Priest of the Basilica was Pío Laghi, who died on 11 January 2009.

Two Popes were Elected in this Church: Pope John II in 533 A.D., and Pope Gregory VII in 1073.



Basilica of San Pietro-in-Vincoli.
18th-Century Lacunar Ceiling,
frescoed in the centre
portraying The Miracle of The Chains (1706).
Photo: 26 December 2009.
Derivative work: Alberto Fernandez Fernandez.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Interior has a Nave and two Aisles, with three Apses divided by antique Doric Columns. The Aisles are surmounted by Cross-Vaults, while the Nave has an 18th-Century Coffered Ceiling, frescoed in the centre by Giovanni Battista Parodi, portraying The Miracle of The Chains (1706).

Michelangelo's Moses (completed in 1515), while originally intended as part of a massive forty-seven-statue, free-standing funeral monument for Pope Julius II, became the centerpiece of the Pope's funeral monument and tomb in this, the Church of The Della Rovere Family. Moses is depicted with horns, connotating "the radiance of The Lord", due to the similarity in the Hebrew words for "beams of light" and "horns". This kind of iconographic symbolism was common in early sacred art, and, for an artist, horns are easier to sculpt than rays of light.

Other works of art include two canvasses of Saint Augustine and Saint Margaret by Guercino, the monument of Cardinal Girolamo Agucchi, designed by Domenichino, who is also the painter of a Sacristy fresco depicting the Liberation of Saint Peter (1604).

The Altarpiece on the first Chapel to the Left is a Deposition by Cristoforo Roncalli. The tomb of Cardinal Nicholas of Kues (died 1464), with its Relief, Cardinal Nicholas before Saint Peter, is by Andrea Bregno. Painter and sculptor Antonio Pollaiuolo is buried at the Left Side of the entrance. He is the Florentine sculptor who added the figures of Romulus and Remus to the sculpture of The Capitoline Wolf on the Capitol. The tomb of Cardinal Cinzio Passeri Aldobrandini, decorated with imagery of The Grim Reaper, is also in the Church.




Moses.
Artist: Michelangelo Buonarroti (1475–1564).
Date: 1513-1515.
Current location: San Pietro-in-Vincoli, Rome.
Source/Photographer: Prasenberg (transferred from en.wikipedia to
Commons by User:Leoboudv using CommonsHelper).
(Wikimedia Commons)

In 1876, archaeologists discovered the tombs of those once believed to be the Seven Maccabean Martyrs, depicted in 2 Maccabees 7–41. It is highly unlikely that these are, in fact, the Jewish Martyrs that had offered their lives in Jerusalem. They are remembered each year on 1 August, the same day as The Miracle of The Fusing of The Two Chains.

The third Altar, in the Left Aisle, holds a mosaic of Saint Sebastian from the 7th-Century A.D. This mosaic is related to an outbreak of plague in Pavia, in Northern Italy. It would only stop if an Altar was built for Saint Sebastian in The Church of S. Pietro-in-Vincoli in that City. Somehow, this story also became accepted in Rome. Hence the Altar.


THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL



THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL

Available (in U.K.) from

Available (in U.S.A.) from

Sunday 5 March 2017

Saint Birinus, Dorchester-on-Thames, Oxfordshire. Solemn High Mass On Easter Monday, 17 April 2017, 1000 hrs.




In 2017, Easter Monday falls on 17 April.
Solemn High Mass is at 1000 hrs.
Saint Birinus,
1 Bridge End, Dorchester-on-Thames,
Oxfordshire OX10 7JR. Tel: 01865 340417.
The Church is located on Bridge End Street, Dorchester, OX10 7JR Click for a map.

Saint Birinus Church is stunning. One of the very few Catholic Churches with a Rood Screen, lending an extra dimension to Celebrations of The Traditional Mass.

The Church was built in the 1850s by architect William Wardell, a follower of Pugin, and has, in recent years, undergone extensive restoration and embellishment.


Saint Birinus Catholic Church,
1 Bridge End, Dorchester on Thames,
Oxfordshire, England OX10 7JR.
Parish Priest: Fr. John Osman MA STL,
Tel: 01865 340417.

​Welcome to the Web-Site for the Parish Church of
​Saint Birinus, Dorchester-on-Thames, Oxford OX10 7JR.



Saint Birinus Catholic Church,
1 Bridge End, Dorchester-on -Thames,
Oxfordshire, England OX10 7JR.
Parish Priest: Fr. John Osman MA STL,
Tel: 01865 340417.

Fr John Osman and his Parishioners welcome you to our beautiful Church.

​Saint Birinus and its associated Cemetery and Presbytery
have remained largely unaltered since its Founding in 1849.
Saint Birinus was one of the first "new" Catholic Churches
raised since the 1850 Act restored the hierarchy.
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