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

Sunday 11 June 2017

Trinity Sunday.


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

Trinity Sunday.

Double of The First-Class.

White Vestments.




The Most Holy Trinity supported by The Thrones.
Artist: Rene de Cramer.
"Copyright Brunelmar/Ghent/Belgium".
Used with Permission.



In the second part of the year, the six months from Trinity to Advent, The Holy Ghost, Whose Reign begins at Pentecost, comes to repeat to us what Our Lord, Himself, has taught us in the first part, the six months from Advent to Trinity Sunday.

The fundamental Truth, on which everything in The Christian Religion rests, is The Dogma of The Holy Trinity, from Whom all comes (Epistle), and to Whom, all Baptised in His Name must return (Gospel). In the course of The Cycle, having called to our minds, in order, God The Father, Author of Creation, God The Son, Author of Redemption, and God The Holy Ghost, Author of our Sanctification, The Church, today, before all else, recapitulates The Great Mystery by which we acknowledge and adore The Unity of Nature and Trinity of Persons in Almighty God (Collect).

"As soon as we have Celebrated The Coming of The Holy Ghost," says Abbot Rupert, in the 12th-Century, "we hail in song The Feast of The Holy Trinity, the following Sunday, a place in The Calendar well chosen, for immediately after The Descent of The Holy Ghost, Preaching and Conversion began, and Faith through Baptism and Confession, in the Name of The Father and of The Son and of The Holy Ghost."



The Dogma of The Holy Trinity is affirmed, in The Liturgy, on every hand. It is in The Name of The Father and of The Son and of The Holy Ghost that we begin and end The Mass and The Divine Office, and that we confer The Sacraments. All The Psalms end with the Gloria, the Hymns with The Doxology, and the Prayers by a Conclusion, in honour of The Three Divine Persons. Twice during The Mass, we are reminded that it is to The Holy Trinity that The Mass is being offered.

The Dogma of The Trinity is expressed in the very fabric of our Churches. Our fathers delighted to find a symbol of it in the admirably-proportioned height, breadth, and length of these buildings, in their primary and secondary divisions; the Sanctuary, the Choir and the Nave; the Ground-Floor, the Triforium and the Clerestory; the three Entrances, three Doors, three Bays, three Gables, and, often, three Towers.

On every hand, even to the smallest detail of decoration, the number three, repeated frequently, denotes a well-conceived Plan and a profound Faith in The Blessed Trinity.



The same thought is expressed in Christian iconography, in various ways. Up to the 12th-Century, God The Father is represented by a hand, emerging from the clouds, in Blessing, and often surrounded by a Nimbus [Editor: Halo] containing a Cross. By this hand, is symbolised Divine Omnipotence. In 13th- and 14th-Century work, one sees The Face and, then, The Figure of The Father. From the 15th-Century, The Father is represented as an old man in the garb of a Pontiff.

Up to the 12th-Century, God The Son was at first represented by a Cross, by a Lamb, or, again, by a gracious youth, in the same way that Apollo was represented in the pagan world. From the 11th- to the 16th-Century, Christ appears bearded and in the prime of life. From the 13th-Century, He is seen carrying The Cross and often He is depicted as The Lamb.

The Holy Ghost was, at first, represented under the form of a dove, whose outspread wings often touched the mouths of both Father and Son to show that He proceeds from both. For the same reason, from the 11th-Century He is depicted as a little child. In the 13th-Century, He is a youth, in the 15th-Century,  He is a man of ripe age, like The Father and The Son, but with a dove above His head, or in His hand, to distinguish Him from the other Two Persons.



Since the 16th-Century, the dove and the fiery tongues are the only representations of The Holy Ghost. Quite recently, it was expressly forbidden to represent Him under a human form. Since 1628, was also forbidden the monstrous picture of three faces on one body.

As a symbol of The Trinity, the triangle has been borrowed from geometry, depicting by its form The Divine Unity in which are inscribed three angles, expressing The Three Persons in God. Trefoil plants, as Shamrock and Clover, serve to represent this Great Mystery, as also do three circles interwoven, with the word "Unity" inscribed in the central space belonging to all three.

A Miniature of the 16th-Century represents The Father and Son as like each other, with the same Nimbus, the same Triple Crown, the hair worn in the same way and a single cloak drawing them close together. Further, they are united by the same Book of Divine Wisdom as well as by The Holy Ghost, Who joins one to the other by the ends of His wings. But The Father is older than The Son, and the beard of the one is pointed, while that of the other is round.



The Father wears a Robe, without a Girdle, and carries the globe of the Earth in His hand, while The Son, as a Priest, wears an Alb, with Cincture and Stole.

The Feast of The Holy Trinity owes its origin to the fact that the Ordinations of The Ember Saturday, which took place in the evening, were prolonged to the next day, which was Sunday, and which had no Proper Liturgy.

As this day is Consecrated throughout the year to The Most Holy Trinity, The Votive Mass, composed in the 7th-Century A.D., to Celebrate this Mystery, was said on The First Sunday after Pentecost; and, since it occupied a fixed place in The Liturgical Calendar, this Mass was considered as establishing this Sunday as a special Feast of The Blessed Trinity.



Stephen, Bishop of Liége, who was born about 850 A.D., composed, in the 10th-Century, its Office, which was revised later on by The Franciscans.

The Feast was, in 1334, extended to The Universal Church by Pope John XXII and made a Double of The First-Class by Pope Saint Pius X.

That we may ever be armed against all adversity, let us, today, with The Liturgy, make our Solemn Profession of Faith in The Holy and Eternal Trinity and His indivisible Unity.

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

Mass: Trinity Sunday. Benedicta sit sancta.
Commemoration: The First Sunday After Pentecost.
Preface: Of The Holy Trinity.
Last Gospel: The Gospel of The Sunday After Pentecost.



Saturday 10 June 2017

Ember Saturday After Pentecost.


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

Ember Saturday After Pentecost.

Station at Saint Peter's.

Indulgence of 30 Years and 30 Quarantines

Semi-Double.

Red Vestments.
.

Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome.
Photo: 19 September 2015.
Source: Own work.
Author: Alvesgaspar.
(Wikimedia Commons)


"The gift of Holy Fear, or The Fear of God, is actually the foundation of all other gifts. It drives sin from the heart, because it fills us with reverence, either for The Justice of God, of, for The Divine Mercy."

After swelling the ranks of her children during the night of Pentecost, The Holy Ghost today is about to supply The Church with the Priests who are to be her Ministers of Grace all over the World, for He will pour out His Spirit upon her servants, as Joel prophesied He would upon The Apostles (First Lesson). Very appropriately, therefore, The Church appointed for The Station this day is the Basilica of Saint Peter, The Pastor of The Fold, and the Gospel tells us of a cure worked by Jesus in the house of Simon.

The Priest, as the Minister of Christ, devotes himself to the healing of Souls consumed by the fever of sinful passions.

As it has already been pointed out, The Mass on The Saturday in Ember Weeks has Five Lessons, with Collect and Tract between the Introit and the Epistle. The Fifth Lesson never varies: It is the record of the miraculous preservation of the three young Hebrew men in the furnace, followed by an extract from their Canticle of Praise and Thanksgiving.


The Collect of The Mass is based upon this Lesson, and beseeches The Divine Goodness that we may not be consumed by The Flame of Vice.

In The Sacrament of Holy Orders, the Priest receives a large outpouring of The Divine Spirit (Epistle) that will enable him to Preach The Kingdom of God (Gospel).

The Second, Third, and Fourth, Lessons, refer to The Harvest, and to the offerings of The First-Fruits of the Earth, for Ember Weeks were instituted with the object of obtaining The Divine Blessing on each of the several Seasons, as they came in.

Having entered The Promised Land, the Israelites offered its First-Fruits to God.

Let us, having entered The Church by Baptism, offer to Almighty God The First-Fruits of all that we do, through the supernatural influx of The Holy Ghost into our Souls. Let us Pray to God that He may increase our Faith in Christ (Epistle and Gospel), and fill our hearts with His Holy Love (Epistle).

Mass: Cáritas Dei.
Sequence: Veni Sancte Spiritus (without the Alleluia at the end).
Creed.
Preface: For Pentecost.
Communicantes: For Pentecost.
Hanc igitur: For Pentecost.

With the end of The Mass, Paschaltide comes to an end.

Oh, Be Still My Heart . . . I Mean The Car !!!



The San Clementes pose with their Best in Show
American-winning 
1935 Packard Twelve Dual-Cowl Phaeton.
Photos by Bryan McCarthy and Bearded Mug Media, courtesy Greenwich Concours d’Elegance.
Text and Illustration: HEMMINGS DAILY

1935 Packard Twelve

Dual-Cowl Phaeton

takes Best-in-Show

at Greenwich Concours d’Elegance.

Friday 9 June 2017

Solemn High Mass. 25th Year Of Ordination. Fr. Jay Anthony Finelli. Church Of The Holy Ghost. Tiverton. Rhode Island. 11 June 2017.



Illustration: NEW LITURGICAL MOVEMENT


Ember Friday After Pentecost.


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

Ember Friday After Pentecost.

Station at The Church of The Twelve Apostles.

Indulgence of 30 Years and 30 Quarantines.

Semi-Double.

Red Vestments.


The Apse in the Church of The Twelve Apostles, 
Rome, Italy.
Photo: August 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: Luc.
(Wikimedia Commons)

"The Gift of Piety awakens in our Souls an inclination and readiness to glorify God as our Father and to have a filial confidence in Him".

The Station takes place in the Church of The Twelve Apostles, who were the embodiment of The Early Church, of which The Holy Ghost was the Soul.

The bountiful harvest of the fruits of the Earth, which The Church now asks of God at the beginning of Summer, is emblematic of the wealth of Spiritual Blessings which The Holy Ghost lavishes on our Souls in these days (Epistle). And it was for this reason that The Liturgy filled the mouths of the children newly-born into The Church by Baptism with Hymns in praise of God (Introit, Offertory) and of The Spirit of The Lord "so good and sweet within us" (Alleluia).

The Gospel recounts the wonders that Jesus worked by the power of The Holy Ghost in healing the sick, and, more particularly, the man with the palsy, whose sins He remitted at the same time that He restored him to health.

The Church, built up by The Holy Ghost (Collect), follows in a very special way the example of The Divine Master at this Season, for, at Pentecost, she receives in abundance Him, Who is the remission of all sins (Postcommunion for Tuesday), and she exercises the power given her by Our Lord, when He said to her in the person of The Apostles: "Receive ye The Holy Ghost. Whose sins you shall forgive, they are forgiven them."

Let us beseech The Holy Ghost to help us in our weakness (Postcommunion) by protecting us against the attacks of our enemies (Collect).

Mass: Repleátur.
Sequence: Veni Sancte Spiritus.
Credo.
Preface:  For Pentecost.
Communicantes: For Pentecost.
Hanc igitur: For Pentecost.

Celebrating The 10th Anniversary Of Summorum Pontificum: See The Full Programme Of Summorum Pontificum Rome Pilgrimage, September 2017.



Text and Illustration: RORATE CAELI

SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM 2017:
GENERAL PROGRAMME.
14 September 2017 - 17 September 2017.


Thursday, 14 September 2017.

09:00 - 18:00. Fifth Annual Colloquium on Summorum Pontificum: “A Renewed Youthfulness for The Whole Church” (see detailed programme below), Angelicum University.

18:30. Vespers for The Exaltation of The Holy Cross. Celebrated by His Excellency, Archbishop Georg Gänswein, Basilica di San Marco Evangelista al Campidoglio (Piazza Venezia).




Friday, 15 September 2017.

Free morning for Personal Devotions and Private Visits.

16:00. Way of The Cross (Colosseum area) led by The Institute of The Good Shepherd.

19:00. Solemn Mass. Celebrated by Rev. Mons. Gilles Wach, Superior General of The Institute of Christ The King Sovereign Priest, Basilica di Santa Maria Sopra Minerva.




Saturday, 16 September 2017.

09:00. Eucharistic Adoration, Chiesa di Santa Maria in Vallicella (Chiesa Nuova).

09:45. Solemn Procession through the streets of Rome,
led by His Excellency, Archbishop Guido Pozzo.

11:00. Pontifical Mass. Celebrated by His Eminence, Carlo Cardinal Caffara, Saint Peter’s Basilica, with Choir directed by Maestro Aurelio Porfiri.

13:30. Buffet Lunch for Clergy, sponsored by Paix Liturgique and The FIUV (registration required).

Free afternoon for Personal Devotions and Private Visits.




Sunday, 17 September 2017.

11:00. Solemn Mass according to The Dominican Rite. Celebrated by Fr. Dominique Marie de Saint-Laumer, Prior of The Fraternity of Saint Vincent Ferrer, Chiesa di Santissima Trinità dei Pellegrini.




Please do note that detailed information
(registration, accommodation, etc.) can be found
from the programme page on our official Web-Site: 

Thursday 8 June 2017

Institute Of Christ The King Sovereign Priest Opens A New School In Preston. Deo Gratias.



Illustration: LMS CHAIRMAN

Saint Peter Julian Eymard. Founder Of The Congregation Of The Blessed Sacrament.



Illustration: PINTEREST

"Live on The Divine Eucharist, like the Hebrews did
on the Manna. Your Soul can be entirely Dedicated
to The Divine Eucharist and very Holy in the midst
of your work and contacts with the World."
(To Isabelle Spazzier, 5 Nov 1859).

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

Saint Peter Julian Eymard SSS (La Mure, Grenoble, France, 1811 – La Mure, August 1868), was a French Catholic Priest, Founder of two Religious Institutes, The Congregation of The Blessed Sacrament Fathers and Brothers, and The Servants of The Blessed Sacrament.

On 20 August 1837, he entered The Society of Mary Seminary at Lyon, France, and made his Profession in February 1840. He worked with Lay Organisations, promoting Devotion to The Blessed Virgin Mary and to The Eucharist, particularly in The Forty Hours Devotion. He rose to the position of Provincial of The Society at Lyon in 1844. His new responsibilities included charge of The Third Order of Mary, a Lay Group Dedicated to Marist spirituality and to promotion of The Christian Family. Saint John Vianney was a member.


His Eucharistic spirituality did not spring full-grown from some mystical experience, but progressively. As Visitor-General, Eymard travelled throughout France to inspect the various Marist Communities. He became familiar with the practice of sustained Eucharistic Worship during a visit to Paris in 1849, when he met with members of The Association of Nocturnal Adorers, who had established Exposition and Perpetual Adoration of The Blessed Sacrament at the Basilica of Our Lady of Victories.

After Praying at The Shrine of Our Lady of Fourviere, on 21 January 1851, Eymard moved to establish a Marist Community Dedicated to Eucharistic Adoration. However, his desire to establish a separate Fraternity promoting Adoration of The Blessed Sacrament was not seen as part of the Charism of The Marists.

His Superiors disapproved, Transferring him to The Marist College at La Seyne-sur-Mer. Eventually, Eymard resolved to leave The Society of Mary, to begin his new Religious Congregation with the Diocesan Priest, Raymond de Cuers.



Logo of The Congregation of The Blessed Sacrament
(Societas Sanctissimi Sacramenti).
Motto: Adveniat Regnum Tuum Eucharisticum
(May Your Eucharistic Kingdom Come).
Formation: 13 May 1856.
Date: 1 March 2016.
Source: Own work.
Author: Bendi07.
(Wikimedia Commons)


On 13 May 1856, the Paris Bishops consented to Eymard's Plans for a ‘Society of The Blessed Sacrament’. After many trials, Eymard and Father de Cuers established Public Exposition of The Blessed Sacrament in Paris on 6 January 1857 in a run-down building at 114 rue d’Enfer (which, literally, meant ‘Street of Hell’).

The Congregation of The Blessed Sacrament began working with children in Paris to prepare them to receive their First Communion. It also reached out to non-practicing Catholics, inviting them to repent and begin receiving Communion again. Father Eymard established a Common Rule for the members of The Society and worked toward Papal Approval.

A second Community was established in Marseilles, in 1859, and a third, in Angers, in 1862. Blessed Pope Pius IX granted a Decree of Approbation in June 1863. Eymard was a tireless proponent of frequent Holy Communion, an idea given more authoritative backing by Pope Saint Pius X in 1905. [Editor: Prior to the beginning of the 20th-Century, Holy Communion was normally only received by Catholics a few times a year, especially at Eastertide. Pope Saint Pius X promoted daily reception of Holy Communion, given that one was in a State of Grace in order to receive it.]


On 10 January 1969, Blessed Pope Paul VI issued a Letter to The Superior General, Father Roland Huot, S.S.S., of The Congregation of The Blessed Sacrament, lauding the most excellent function of Adoration of The Blessed Sacrament Outside Mass, declaring all those who do so make their Eucharistic Adoration "in the name of The Church" https://www.ewtn.com/library/PAPALDOC/P6ADORE.HTM This concession is included in the revised Roman Ritual, Holy Communion and The Worship of The Eucharist Outside Mass, No. 90 in The Editio Typica.

By DECREE of The Congregation for The Sacraments and Divine Worship, dated 9 December 1995, SAINT PETER JULIAN EYMARD, PRIEST, was inserted in The General Roman Calendar with the Rank of Optional Memoria.

Font and fullness of all Evangelisation and striking expression of The Infinite Love of Our Divine Redeemer for mankind, The Holy Eucharist clearly marked the life and pastoral activity of Peter Julian Eymard. He truly deserves to be called an outstanding Apostle of The Eucharist. In fact, his mission in The Church consisted in promoting the centrality of The Eucharistic Mystery in the whole life of The Christian Community.

The French sculptor Auguste Rodin received counsel from Eymard when Rodin entered The Congregation as a Lay Brother in 1862, having given up art after the death of his sister. Eymard recognised Rodin's talent and advised him to return to his vocation. Rodin later produced a bust of Eymard.



used in Adoration of The Blessed Sacrament,
at the Hermitage Church of Warfhuizen, Netherlands.
Date: 18 October 2004 (original upload date).
Source: Own work.
Originally from nl.wikipedia; description page is/was here.
(Wikimedia Commons)


English: Bronze Bust of Fr Eymard, 
by Rodin, 1863.
Français: Musée Rodin - Bronze - Le Père Eymard 1863.
Date: 27 May 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: Lomita.
(Wikimedia Commons)



In 1858, together with Marguerite Guillot, he Founded The Servants of The Blessed Sacrament, a Contemplative Congregation for women. He is quoted as saying, "You take Communion to become Holy, not because you already are."

Eymard was a friend and contemporary of Saints Peter Chanel, Marcellin Champagnat, and Blessed Basil Moreau. He died at the age of fifty-seven in La Mure, France, on 1 August 1868, of complications from a stroke.

He was declared Venerable in 1908, Beatified by Pope Pius XI on 12 July 1925, and Canonised by Pope Saint John XXIII on 9 December 1962. (Also Canonised with Saint Eymard were Servite Priest Anthony Mary Pucci (1819–1892) and the Capuchin Lay Brother Francis Mary of Camporosso (1804–1866)). Saint Peter Julian Eymard's Feast Day is Celebrated in The Roman Catholic Church on 2 August. Pope Saint John Paul II named Saint Eymard "Apostle of The Eucharist".

Saint Peter Julian Eymard is a Patron Saint of Saint Jean Baptiste Catholic Church in New York City. A Shrine to the Saint in the Church contains a Reliquary of the Saint. He is recognised as a major contributor to 19th-Century French spirituality.

Wednesday 7 June 2017

Ember Wednesday After Pentecost.


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

Ember Wednesday after Pentecost.
   Station at Saint Mary Major.

Indulgence of 30 Years and 30 Quarantines.

Semi-Double.

Red Vestments.



THEY WERE ALL FILLED WITH THE HOLY GHOST.

Artist: Rene de Cramer.
"Copyright Brunelmar/Ghent/Belgium".
Used with Permission.



Basilica of Saint Mary Major (Santa Maria Maggiore), Rome, Italy.
[Editor: The Stational Church for Ember Wednesday after Pentecost Tuesday.]
Date: 7 January 2006 (original upload date).
Source: Transferred from en.wikipedia
Author: Original uploader was JACurran at en.wikipedia
(Wikimedia Commons)


English: Interior of the Basilica of Saint Mary Major (Santa Maria Maggiore), Rome, Italy.
[Editor: The Stational Church for Ember Wednesday after Pentecost Tuesday.]
Deutsch: Rom, Basilika Santa Maria Maggiore, Innenansicht.
Photo: 13 May 2003.
Source: Own work.
Permission: (CC-BY-SA 3.0).
Author: Dnalor 01.
(Wikimedia Commons)

"The Gift of Fortitude is a permanent power, which The Holy Ghost communicates to our will, to assist us in overcoming the difficulties which might deter us in the practice of what is right." [Reverend M. Meschler, S.J.]

The Ember Days always fall during The Octave of Pentecost. The Church then offers up to God The First-Fruits of The New Season, and Prays for the Priests, who, on the coming Saturday, are about to receive The Holy Ghost in The Sacrament of Holy Orders.


The Station on Ember Wednesday was always held at Saint Mary Major. It was at the feet of The Blessed Virgin, whom The Holy Ghost filled with His Grace in The Cenacle, that the newly-Baptised gathered together.

The Liturgy reminded them of The Miracle of Pentecost (Lesson) and the marvels wrought by The Apostles, as a result of which the number of those who believed in The Lord was greatly increased (Epistle).


Moved by The Holy Ghost, The Catechumens also believed in Jesus; they turned to Him, and Jesus gave them to eat of The Bread that would make them Live For Ever (Gospel).

Let us implore The Divine Consoler to enlighten us always, more and more, and to place us in full possession of The Truth (Collect).

Mass: Deus, dum egrederéris.
Sequence: Veni Sancte Spiritus.
Credo:
Preface: For Pentecost.
Communicantes: For Pentecost.
Hanc igitur: For Pentecost.

First-Holy Communion. Receiving The True Body, Blood, Soul, And Divinity, Of Jesus In The Holy Eucharist.



Illustration: PINTEREST

Tuesday 6 June 2017

Saint Norbert (1080-1134). Bishop And Confessor. Founder Of The Norbertines. Feast Day, Today, 6 June.


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

Saint Norbert.
   Bishop And Confessor.
   Feast Day 6 June.

Double.

White Vestments.


Saint Norbert.
Artist: Rene de Cramer.
"Copyright Brunelmar/Ghent/Belgium".
Used with Permission.



Norbert, born in 1080 at Xanten, near Cologne, Germany, was educated at The Holy Roman Emperor's Court. One day, when he was riding, accompanied by a servant, he was surprised by a hurricane. Like Saint Paul, on the way to Damascus, he heard a voice calling him to the service of The Church. At that moment, a crash of thunder threw him to the ground. He got up again, determined to Consecrate himself to God.

Having been admitted to Holy Orders, he devoted himself entirely to Preaching The Word of God (Collect).

Later on, guided by The Holy Ghost, Who continually Sanctifies The Church through the Centuries, he chose a Retreat in a deserted spot, called Prémontré, not far from Soissons, and Founded there The Order of Premonstratensians (Collect).

At the death of this Holy Founder, this new family numbered, at this place alone, over one thousand Canons Regular. Saint Norbert shared the full Priesthood of Christ, being Anointed Archbishop of Magdeburg, Germany (Introit, Epistle, Gradual, Offertory). He helped Pope Innocent II to triumph over the Anti-Pope, Anacletus, and was the friend of Saint Bernard of Clairvaux. In The Netherlands, he defended Eucharistic Worship against The Heresy of Tanchelmus (see Illustration, above).


Engraving of Prémontré Abbey, Département Aisne, France.
Founded by Saint Norbert in 1120.
Artist: Tavernier de Jonquières.
Date: 1780s.
Source/Photographer: BNF Richelieu Estampes et photographie Rés.
Ve-26j - Fol. Destailleur Province, t. 5 , n. 1200; Bibliothèque nationale de France
(Wikimedia Commons)

After having put to full profit the talents with which God had entrusted him for the government of his Religious Family and Diocese (Gospel, Communion), "This Man of God," says The Breviary, "full of The Holy Ghost and laden with merits, fell asleep in The Lord, 1134 A.D."

Let us ask of God "to practise what Saint Norbert taught by word and by example" (Collect).

Mass: Státuit.


English: Painting of the triumph of Saint Norbert over the Heretic, Tanchelmus, in 1124.
Deutsch: Der Triumph des hl. Nobert über den Irrlehrer Tanchelm im Jahre 1124.
Artist: Joseph Appiani (1706–1785).
Date of painting: 1750.
Current location: Bavarian National Museum.
Source/Photographer: Self-photographed, User:FA2010, 2009.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Monday 5 June 2017

Saint Boniface. Bishop And Martyr. Feast Day, Today, 5 June.


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

Saint Boniface.
   Bishop and Martyr.
   Feast Day 5 June.

Double.

Red Vestments.




Saint Boniface,
by Cornelis Bloemaert, circa 1630.
Date: 26 April 2013.
Author: Cornelis Bloemaert (1603-1684).
(Wikimedia Commons)


Saint Boniface was born in England at the end of the 7th-Century. He is one of the great glories of The Order of Saint Benedict. Pope Gregory II sent him to Germany, where, with a chosen band of Monks, he announced The Good News, as Jesus Risen had commanded His Apostles to do, to the people of Hesse, Saxony, and Thuringia (Collect).

Made a Legate of The Apostolic See, by Pope Gregory II, he called together several Synods, among which was the famous Council of Leptines, in the Diocese of Cambrai, Appointed Archbishop of Mainz, by Pope Zachary, he, by his order, anointed Pepin, King of The Franks.

After the death of Saint Willibrord, the Church of Utrecht, in Frisia, was committed to his care. The Frisians massacred him at Dokkum, with thirty of his Monks, in June 755 A.D. His body was buried in the celebrated Abbey of Fulda, which he had Founded.

Mass: Exsultábo.



English: The Imperial Abbey (Prince-Bishopric) of Fulda, 
Hesse, Germany. Now, Fulda Cathedral.
Deutsch: Reichskloster (Fürstbistum) Fulda. 
Aufnahme des de:Fuldaer Dom.
Español: Catedral de Fulda.
Photo: 6 April 2004 (original upload date).
Source: Originally from de.wikipedia; description page is/was here.
Author: Author and original uploader was ThomasSD at de.wikipedia.
(Wikimedia Commons)




English: Coat-of-Arms of the Bishops of Fulda.
Deutsch: Wappen des Bistums bzw. des ehemaligen
Fürstbistums und Hochstiftes Fulda.
Date: 29 December 2010.
Source: Own work.
Author: David Liuzzo.
(Wikimedia Commons)




Statue of Saint Boniface, 
by Werner Henschel, (1830), 
at Fulda, Hesse, 
Germany.
Photo: 30 July 2005.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

The Monastery of Fulda was a Benedictine Abbey, in Fulda, in the present-day German State of Hesse. It was Founded in 744 A.D. by Saint Sturm, a Disciple of Saint Boniface. Through the 8th- and 9th-Centuries A.D., the Fulda Monastery became a prominent centre of learning and culture in Germany, and a site of religious significance and Pilgrimage following the burial of Saint Boniface. The growth in population around Fulda would result in its elevation to a Diocese in the 18th -Century.




English: Boniface chops down a cult tree in Hessen, Germany.
Engraving by Bernhard Rode, 1781.
Deutsch: Bonifacius haut in Hessen einen Opferbaum um.
Radierung von Bernhard Rode1781.
Date: artwork: 1781; file: 2009.01.17.
Source: Eigene Fotografie (own photography).
Author: Artwork: Bernhard Rode (1725–1797). File: James Steakley.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Saint Boniface (Latin: Bonifatius) (Circa 675 A.D. – 5 June 754 A.D.), born Winfrid, Wynfrith, or Wynfryth, in the Kingdom of Wessex in Anglo-Saxon England, was a leading figure in the Anglo-Saxon mission to the Germanic parts of The Frankish Empire during the 8th-Century A.D.

He established the first organised Christianity in many parts of Germany. He is the Patron Saint of Germany, the first Archbishop of Mainz and the "Apostle of the Germans". He was killed in Frisia in 754 A.D., along with fifty-two others. His remains were returned to Fulda, where they rest in a sarcophagus, which became a site of Pilgrimage. Facts about Boniface's life and death as well as his work became widely known, since there is a wealth of material available — a number of "Vitae", especially the near-contemporary "Vita Bonifatii auctore Willibaldi", and legal documents, possibly some Sermons, and, above all, his correspondence.

According to the "Vitae", Boniface felled the Donar Oak, Latinised by Willibald, the "Apostle of the Frisians", as "Jupiter's Oak,", near the present-day Town of Fritzlar, in northern Hesse. According to his early biographer, Willibald, Boniface started to chop the Oak down, when suddenly a great wind, as if by a Miracle, blew the ancient Oak over.




Saint Boniface Altar, 
Fulda Cathedral, 
Fulda, Germany.
Photo: 21 October 2006 (original upload date).
Source:Transferred from nl.wikipedia to Commons.
Originally from en.wikipedia; description page is/was here.
Author: AJW at Dutch Wikipedia.
(Wikimedia Commons)

When the God ("Jupiter") did not strike him down, the people were amazed and converted to Christianity. He built a Chapel, Dedicated to Saint Peter, from its wood at the site — the Chapel was the beginning of the Monastery in Fritzlar.

Through his efforts to reorganise and regulate The Church of The Franks, he helped shape Western Christianity, and many of the Dioceses, that he proposed, remain today. After his Martyrdom, he was quickly hailed as a Saint, in Fulda, and other areas in Germany and England. His cult is still notably strong today. Boniface is celebrated (and criticised) as a Missionary; he is regarded as a Unifier of Europe, and he is seen (mainly by Catholics) as a Germanic national figure.

Bishop Schneider: Consecration Will Bring Russia ‘To The Fullness Of Conversion’.



Text and Illustration: LIFE SITE NEWS




ROME, May 30, 2017 (LifeSiteNews) –
As Cardinal Raymond Burke made his historic call for The Consecration of Russia to
The Immaculate Heart of Mary at the Rome Life Forum last week, one of his most enthusiastic supporters was Bishop Athanasius Schneider, who was also present at the Forum.

Bishop Schneider was one of the first signatories to the appeal for the Consecration, and explained to LifeSite his thoughts on the matter.

Bishop Schneider says he considers Cardinal Burke’s initiative to ask The Holy Father to “explicitly” Consecrate Russia to The Immaculate Heart of Mary “very important.”



It will, he said, “fulfill more completely and perfectly the desire of Our Lady of Fatima.”

Solemn Mass Of Corpus Christi. At The Cathedral-Basilica Of Saints Peter And Paul, Philadelphia.



Illustration: MODERN MEDIEVALISM



18th Street and Benjamin Franklin Parkway,
Philadelphia, PA 19103.

Mailing address:
1723 Race Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103.

Telephone: 215-561-1313.

Sunday 4 June 2017

Saint Francis Caracciolo (1563-1608). Confessor. Feast Day 4 June.


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

Saint Francis Caracciolo.
   Confessor.
   Feast Day 4 June.

Double.

White Vestments.


Saint Francis Caracciolo (1563-1608).
Date of Illustration: 1894.
Source: Little Pictorial Lives of the Saints.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Francis, of the noble family of Caracciolo, in The Abruzzi, Southern Italy, determined, during a severe illness, to devote himself to the Service of God, so as to be ready when The Master should come to take him away (Gospel).

A Letter, delivered to him by mistake, apprised him of a Project of two pious men to Found a new Religious Institute. In this, he saw a providential sign and he became one of the Founders of The Order of Minor Clerks Regular.

At his Profession, he took the name of Francis, on account of his Devotion to Saint Francis of Assisi. To the love of Penance, he added a great zeal for Prayer (Collect). Burning with love for The Blessed Sacrament, his heart melted like wax when he was in the presence of The Tabernacle (Introit), for there he felt the overflowing sweetness prepared by God for those who fear Him (Communion).

He died at the age of forty-four, in 1608, on The Vigil of Corpus Christi, and, "although his life was short, he completed a long course, for a spotless life is equivalent to protracted years" (Epistle).

Following Saint Francis Caracciolo's example, let us Pray and reduce our bodies to subjection (Collect), so that, burning like him with the fire of Charity, we may worthily kneel at The Communion Table (Secret).

Mass: Factum est.
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