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

Friday 6 October 2017

The Holy Rosary Encyclicals Of Pope Leo XIII.




Portrait of His Holiness Pope Leo XIII,
who wrote twelve Papal Encyclicals on The Holy Rosary.
Date: Circa 1898.
This File: 26 August 2007.
User: Dantadd.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)



The Text for this Article is taken from, and can be read in full at, CATHOLIC CULTURE

The Rosary Encyclicals
by Thomas A. Thompson, S.M.


Over 100 years ago, as The Church entered the 20th-Century, The Virgin Mary played a significant part in the Programme of Renewal and Reunion proposed by the Pope. In 1898, Pope Leo XIII was in the twentieth year of his Pontificate. In that year, Pope Leo XIII issued what would be the last of twelve Encyclicals on The Holy Rosary, a Project which he had begun fifteen years earlier.

During his years as Pope (1878-1903), Pope Leo XIII wrote many significant Encyclicals. His 1891 Encyclical Rerum Novarum (on The Condition of Labour), initiated The Church's modern Social Teachings. He also wrote on the Teaching of the Philosophy of Saint Thomas Aquinas in Schools and Seminaries, on the Study of The Bible, on The Holy Ghost and on Saint Joseph.

At the turn of the 19th-Century, he wrote two Encyclicals on Christ (on Consecration to The Sacred Heart and on Jesus The Redeemer). He also addressed specific political situations in which The Church's liberties were threatened. But the theme to which he returned most frequently in the final years of the 19th-Century was The Rosary.



Devotion to The Most Holy Rosary
(Sermon).
Available on YouTube at

The Rosary was the subject of twelve Encyclicals and five Apostolic Letters. Beginning in 1883, and concluding in 1898, an Encyclical on The Rosary appeared almost every year, usually in preparation for the month of October (Pope Saint John XXIII's Encyclical Grata Recordatio [1961] spoke of the "pleasant memory" of hearing those Encyclicals read every October).

The Rosary Encyclicals can be divided into two main groups: 1883-1885 and 1891-1898. The first group established The Rosary as a Public Devotion. The first Encyclical (1883) prescribed the Public Recitation of The Rosary and The Litany of Loreto in Catholic Churches and Chapels as a Special Observance "for the month of October of this year."

Encouraged by the reception of the Observance for 1883, the Encyclicals of 1884 and 1885 directed that October Devotions be continued. The Feast of The Most Holy Rosary was given a higher Liturgical Standing. The invocation "Queen of The Holy Rosary" was added to The Litany of Loreto. This encouragement of the Public Recitation of The Rosary in Churches, conferred a new status on The Rosary. "No longer," said Ave Maria Magazine, "was The Rosary a Devotion best suited to the illiterate." It now was officially encouraged as Public Devotion.


Beginning in 1891, the Encyclicals dwelt on The Value of The Rosary and on its role within The Life of The Church and of Society. In these Encyclicals, there was frequent reference to the perilous situation in which The Church found itself: Anti-Clerical Governments, and forces opposed to Religion, threatened its existence.

Diplomatic Relations between Italy and The Holy See were non-existent, and the Pope was "The Prisoner" within The Vatican walls. The Kulturkampf [Editor: Culture Struggle] limited The Church in Germany and Switzerland, and The Governments of France and Belgium wished to obtain control of The Religious Schools and expel The Religious Teaching Congregations.

Freemasonry, addressed by the Pope in an Encyclical, was openly hostile to The Church, and the findings of science seemed to refute long-held Religious Teachings.

In response to these trying times, Pope Leo XIII followed the example of previous Popes by proposing The Rosary as a "weapon" that Saint Dominic, eight Centuries earlier, had confided to The Church. It was through The Rosary that Saint Dominic had overcome The Albigensian heresy, whose adherents lived in the South-West of France (not far removed from Lourdes).



The Power and Promises of The Rosary
Available on YouTube at

And it was The Rosary that was responsible for the Victory of The Christians at The Battle of Lepanto against Turkish forces in 1571. The Rosary would continue to be "balm for The Wounds of Society" as it had been in the time of Saint Dominic, and it would make possible the two great goals of Pope Leo's Papacy: The Renovation of Christian Life and The Reunion of Christendom.

Nowhere in the dozen Encyclicals were there specific indications on how The Rosary was to be Prayed, nor was it presented as a Devotion exclusively directed to The Virgin Mary. Rather, The Rosary was broadly defined, just as it had been described four Centuries earlier when approved in 1571 by Pope Pius V.

The essence of The Rosary was "to recall The Mysteries of Salvation in succession, [while] the subject of Meditation is mingled and interlaced with The Angelic Salutation and Prayer to God The Father" (1883). Meditation on The Mysteries of Salvation was a short and easy method to nourish Faith and to preserve it from ignorance and error (1895). The Mysteries of Salvation were not Abstract Truths, but Events in The Lives of Jesus and Mary.


The Rosary was presented both as a "School of Faith" and a "School of Charity." Meditation on The Mysteries of Salvation was to lead to Conversion of Heart and Change of Conduct. Contemplation of The Mysteries was essentially a Loving Act of Gratitude (1894), through which the heart was "filled with love . . . hope enlarged, and the desire increased for those things which Christ has prepared for such as have united themselves to Him in imitation of His example and in participation in His sufferings" (1891).

Attentive consideration of the "Precious Memorials" of Our Redeemer led to "a Heart on Fire with Gratitude to Him" (1892). The Rosary was an Expression of Faith in God, The Future Life, The Forgiveness of Sins, "The Mysteries of The August Trinity, The Incarnation of The Word, The Divine Maternity and others" (1896).

The Rosary, the Pope believed, also would influence Society as a whole. The 1893 Encyclical spoke of the Social Consequences, or the effects on Society, that Meditation on The Mysteries of The Rosary could produce. The three Sets of Mysteries were an antidote for the errors afflicting Society.



Pope Leo XIII on a Photogram of the 1896 film "Sua Santitá papa Leone XIII",
the first time a Pope appeared on film.
Date: 1898.
This File: 16 March 2006.
User: Crux.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Joyful Mysteries, centred on "The Hidden Life" of Christ and The Holy Family at Nazareth, stood in contrast to the contemporary disdain for poverty and simplicity of life. The Sorrowful Mysteries, depicting Christ's acceptance of The Cross, stood opposed to the attitude of fleeing from any hardship and suffering. Finally, The Glorious Mysteries — which include The Resurrection, The Ascension, The Descent of The Spirit and The Assumption of The Virgin Mary — were a reminder that this life is a prelude to a future life with God.

Even when Prayed privately, The Rosary had a Social and Ecclesial dimension. Similar to The Divine Office, The Psalter of Our Lady was part of The Church's "Public, Constant and Universal Prayer" (1897). The Encyclicals frequently encouraged the Sodalities, or Confraternities, whose purpose was to promote The Rosary through Meetings, Religious Services and Processions.

The last Encyclical (1898) was followed by an Apostolic Letter, with a Charter for the Sodalities and Confraternities of The Rosary. (Recent outgrowths from Confraternities are "The Rosary Teams," in which groups of Lay People establish Centres of Prayer, Hospitality and Evangelisation.)

The 1897 Encyclical encouraged the development of "The Living Rosary," a Movement started earlier in the Century by Pauline Jaricot (the Founder of The Society for The Propagation of The Faith). Jaricot's "Living Rosary" was a group of fifteen individuals, each pledged to say one Decade of The Rosary a day.


"The Prayers and Praises, rising incessantly from the lips and hearts of so great a multitude, will be most efficacious" (1897).

In all the Encyclicals, The Rosary is not so much presented as a Devotion directed to Mary. Instead, it is Christ, in all the facets of His Life — Hidden, Public, Final Suffering and Resurrection — Who "Stands Forth" in this Prayer (1896). The Rosary is principally an instrument "to expand The Kingdom of Christ." It is a Prayer that has been "wonderfully developed at the close of the Century, for the purpose of stimulating the lagging Piety of The Faithful" (1897).

The Rosary Encyclicals show a great confidence in Mary's Power and her Intercession for The Church (1892). As "Guardian of The Faith," The Virgin Mary is able to "ward off the errors of the times" (1895). Mary is a powerful Intercessor before God, a "worthy and acceptable Mediatrix to The Mediator" (1896).



The Encyclicals of Pope Leo XIII are the first Papal Documents to speak of Mary's Universal Motherhood; she is The Mother of All Peoples — "Our Mother" — and the one who could bring about the unity of The Church (1895). Through the Intercession of Mary, the zeal of The Christian People would be renewed and a deeper unity produced.

None of Pope Leo XIII's biographers have investigated the origins of his great confidence in the power of The Rosary, nor have the few commentaries on The Rosary Encyclicals sought for the source of his inspiration. Although never referred to in the Encyclicals, the great événement [Editor: Event] of Lourdes, to use the Pope's term, appears to have had a major influence on The Rosary Encyclicals. The land of Saint Dominic was also the land of Lourdes.

Our Lady's identification of herself at Lourdes (1858) as The Immaculate Conception confirmed The Dogma that Pope Leo's predecessor, Blessed Pope Pius IX, had Proclaimed in 1854, and initiated a close bond between Rome and Lourdes. The Rosary — along with Penance — was central to the message of Lourdes. The Lady of Lourdes was pictured with a Rosary. Following the example of Mary in the first apparition, Saint Bernadette prepared for each of the following seventeen apparitions by Praying The Rosary. Lourdes was termed "The Town of The Rosary," and, in the 19th-Century, The Rosary Procession was the identifying Devotion of Lourdes.


Pope Leo's interest and concern in Lourdes is recorded in the Annales de Notre Dame de Lourdes (in The Marian Library's Clugnet Collection). At the beginning of his Pontificate, Pope Leo XIII urged the Bishop of Tarbes to build a larger Church to accommodate Pilgrims who were already coming in great numbers, and to ensure that a critical history of the apparitions be written and a record of the hearings be kept.

The year 1883, the Silver Anniversary of the apparitions at Lourdes, was observed as a Jubilee Year, both at Lourdes and at Rome. In the Silver Anniversary Year, work began on The Church of The Rosary, which would extend The Basilica of The Immaculate Conception. (Based on the number of extra trains in service that year between Paris and Lourdes, the Annales estimated that 500,000 Pilgrims travelled to Lourdes by train that year).

It was in 1883 that the first of The Rosary Encyclicals was issued calling for special Observance, "for this year", of October as The Month of The Rosary. The Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes (11 February) was not established until 1892, so October — with its Feast of The Holy Rosary — was an appropriate time to recall the events at Lourdes.



John Henry Newman was raised into
The College of Cardinals by Pope Leo XIII.
Date: December 1879.
Source: 1880 book on Pope Leo XIII.
Author: Karl Benzinger.
(Wikipedia)

The lofty and impersonal style of Pope Leo's Encyclicals usually did not include all the reasons motivating an announcement. For example, in 1885, an Encyclical announced an Extraordinary Jubilee Year. However, the reason for the Jubilee — the 50th Anniversary of the Pope's Ordination — is not mentioned in the Encyclical.

At Lourdes, the new Church, with its fifteen Altars, and Murals depicting The Mysteries of The Rosary, was Dedicated in 1901. Pope Leo XIII sent an Apostolic Letter in the opening year of the Century noting the significance of the Consecration of The Church of The Rosary. The content of the Letter was a summary of previous Encyclicals on The Rosary. The Church of The Rosary, at Lourdes, with its fifteen Altars and Murals, was a summary of the Gospel — summa evangelicae doctrinae. The Rosary itself was like a great Basilica in which all the Truths of The Faith were presented.



In 1901, the Annales announced that the bonds between The Vatican and Lourdes would be even more apparent. As The Vatican was already present at Lourdes through a sculpture of Pope Leo XIII, so, now, Lourdes would go to The Vatican. Through the efforts of the Bishop of Tarbes and other French Bishops, a replica of the Grotto of Massabielle would be constructed in The Vatican Gardens. (This Grotto still stands in The Vatican Gardens.)

The legacy of Pope Leo's Encyclicals was that The Rosary was established as a Central Devotion in Western Catholicism. Before Vatican II's encouragement of "active participation" in The Liturgy, The Rosary served as a vehicle for entering into, and focusing on, The Mysteries of Salvation as depicted in The Life of Christ and The Virgin Mary.


Vatican II influenced The Rosary and all other Devotions. All Devotions were to be renewed in "The Spirit of The Liturgy", to be "extensions of The Liturgical Life of The Church" (Catechism of The Catholic Church, no. 1674). The Rosary complements and extends The Liturgy.

The Church's Public Liturgical Worship presents a panoramic view of the whole history of Salvation. The Rosary, and Rosary-like Prayer, focuses on The Events of Christ's Life — The Incarnation, Our Redemption and The Promise of Eternal Life — and on The Virgin Mary's participation in The Mystery of Christ. A person Praying must be the agent who actively enters into The Mysteries, and not simply one before whom the Celebration unfolds.

The Rosary is an accessible reminder of The Constant Prayer of The Church, The Incessant Prayer of God's People throughout the ages. The Psalter of Mary, as The Rosary is sometimes called, is a remembrance of The Church's deepest nature as a Community of Continual Prayer (1896).

FATHER THOMPSON writes from The Marian Library and The International Marian Research Institute of The University of Dayton, Ohio.
© The Priest, Our Sunday Visitor Publishing, 200 Noll Plaza, Huntington, IN 46750.
This Item 558 digitally provided courtesy of CatholicCulture.org.



Saint Bruno. Confessor. Feast Day 6 October.


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

Saint Bruno.
   Confessor.
   Feast Day 6 October.

Double.

White Vestments.



Saint Bruno.
Artist: Girolamo Marchesi.
Date: Circa 1525.
Current location: Walters Art Museum,
Baltimore, Maryland, 
United States of America.
Credit line: Acquired by Henry Walters with the Massarenti Collection, 1902.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Saint Bruno was born at Cologne, Germany, in the 11th-Century. With six of his friends, he retired to one of the desert heights of Dauphiny, France, called "Chartreuse", which had been conceded to them by the Bishop of Grenoble (Gospel).

There, he Founded the first Monastery of The Order of Carthusians, which is held in so high esteem by The Church that, by the prescriptions of Canon Law, The Religious of any other Order may enter it so as to lead a more perfect life. [The Order of Carthusians has given to The Church several Saints, two Cardinals, seventy Archbishops and Bishops, and several famous writers, one of the most distinguished being Dionysius The Carthusian.]

Saint Bruno died, pressing The Crucifix to his lips, on 6 October 1101.

Mass: Os justi.



English: Saint Bruno refuses the Archbishopric of Reggio di Calabria.
Español: San Bruno renuncia ante el papa Urbano II al arzobispado de Reggio Calabria.
Date: 4 November 2011.
Current location: Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain.
Author: Vicente Carducho (1576-1638).
(Wikimedia Commons)

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

Bruno of Cologne (1030 – 1101) was the Founder of The Carthusian Order and personally Founded The Order's first two Communities. He was a celebrated Teacher at Reims, and a close advisor of his former pupil, Pope Urban II.

On the verge of being made Bishop, Bruno instead followed a Vow he had made to renounce Secular Concerns and withdrew, along with two of his friends, Raoul and Fulcius, also Canons of Reims.

Bruno's first thought on leaving Reims seems to have been to place himself and his companions under the direction of an eminent Solitary, Saint Robert, who had recently (1075) settled at Sèche-Fontaine, near Molesme, in the Diocese of Langres, France, together with a band of other Hermits, who were later on (in 1098) to form The Cistercian Order.

But he soon found that this was not his Vocation. After a short stay, he went with six of his companions to Saint Hugh of Châteauneuf, Bishop of Grenoble. The Bishop, according to the pious legend, had recently had a vision of these men, under a Chaplet of Seven Stars, and he installed them in 1084 in a mountainous and uninhabited spot in The Lower Alps of The Dauphiné, France, in a place named Chartreuse, not far from Grenoble. With Saint Bruno, were Landuin, Stephen of Bourg, and Stephen of Die, Canons of Saint Rufus, and Hugh the Chaplain, and two Laymen, Andrew and Guerin, who afterwards became the first Lay Brothers.

They built a an Oratory, with small individual Cells, at a distance from each other, where they lived isolated and in poverty, entirely occupied in Prayer and Study; for these men had a reputation for Learning, and were frequently honoured by the visits of Saint Hugh, who became like one of themselves.

Autumn Has Arrived In England.




English: Maple tree with red leaves in the morning mist. Western Estonia.
Eesti: Udusse mattuv harilik vaher, punaste sügislehtedega. Läänemaa.
Русский: Клен с красными листьями в утреннем тумане. Западная Эстония.
Photo: 3 October 2016.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)




"Autumn".
Composer: Vivaldi.
Available on YouTube at


SEASON of mists and mellow fruitfulness ! 
Close bosom-friend of the maturing Sun; 
Conspiring with him how to load and Bless 
With fruit the vines that round the thatch-eaves run;

To bend with apples the moss'd cottage-trees,
And fill all fruit with ripeness to the core; 
To swell the gourd, and plump the hazel shells 
With a sweet kernel; to set budding more, 
And still more, later flowers for the bees, 
Until they think warm days will never cease,
For Summer has o'er-brimm'd their clammy cells. 

Who hath not seen thee oft amid thy store ? 
Sometimes whoever seeks abroad may find 
Thee sitting careless on a granary floor, 
Thy hair soft-lifted by the winnowing wind;



"Autumn Gold".
Illustration: JOHN ATKINSON GRIMSHAW


Or on a half-reap'd furrow sound asleep, 
Drowsed with the fume of Poppies, while thy hook 
Spares the next swath and all its twinèd flowers; 
And sometimes like a gleaner thou dost keep 
Steady thy laden head across a brook;
Or by a cider-press, with patient look, 
Thou watchest the last oozings hours by hours. 

Where are the songs of Spring? Aye, where are they ? 
Think not of them, thou hast thy music too, — 
While barrèd clouds bloom the soft-dying day,
And touch the stubble-plains with rosy hue;

Then, in a wailful choir, the small gnats mourn 
Among the river sallows, borne aloft 
Or, sinking as the light wind, lives or dies; 
And full-grown lambs loud bleat from hilly bourn;

Hedge-crickets sing; and now with treble soft 
The Redbreast whistles from a garden-croft;
And gathering Swallows twitter in the skies.

"To Autumn".
John Keats.
1795-1821.
Arthur Quiller-Couch, ed. 1919. The Oxford Book of English Verse: 1250–1900.




English: Wildpark, Dülmen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.
Deutsch: Wildpark, Dülmen, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Deutschland.
Photo: 19 October 2014.
Source: This file was derived from: Dülmen, Wildpark -- 2014 -- 3808.jpg
Attribution: Dietmar Rabich (edited by Sting) / Wikimedia Commons
Author: Dietmar Rabich (edited by Sting)
(Wikimedia Commons)



Autumn has now arrived in England.
Illustration; PINTEREST

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

Autumn, also known as "The Fall" in American and Canadian English, is one of the four Temperate Seasons

Autumn marks the transition from Summer to Winter, in September (Northern Hemisphere) or March (Southern Hemisphere), when the duration of daylight becomes noticeably shorter and the temperature cools down considerably. One of its main features is the shedding of leaves from deciduous trees.

Thursday 5 October 2017

When Modernism Infiltrates Insidiously: Bring Back The Sacred; And Pray The Holy Rosary.



Illustration: IGNATIUS HIS CONCLAVE



The Descent Of The Modernists.
Illustration: RORATE CAELI

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless stated otherwise.

The Sedia Gestatoria (C
hair for Carrying) was a Ceremonial Throne on which Popes were carried on shoulders until 1978, and later replaced with the Popemobile.

It consists of a richly-adorned, silk-covered armchair, fastened on a Suppedaneum, on each side of which are two gilded rings; through these rings pass the long rods with which twelve footmen (Palafrenieri), in red uniforms, carry the Throne on their shoulders. On prior occasions, as in the case of Pope Stephen III, Popes were carried on the shoulders of men.

The Sedia Gestatoria is an elaborate variation on the Sedan Chair. Two large fans (Flabella), made of white Ostrich feathers —a relic of the ancient Liturgical use of the Flabellum, mentioned in the Constitutiones Apostolicae— were carried at either side of the Sedia Gestatoria.



Pope Pius XII is carried through Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome, on the Sedia Gestatoria.

Date: Unknown.
This File: 26 February 2008.

User: Melesse
(Wikimedia Commons)




English: The Sedia Gestatoria of Pope Pius VII (1800-1823).
Exhibition of various Thrones in Galerie des Glaces of Château de Versailles, France.
Français: La Sedia Gestatoria (Chaise à porteurs) du Pape Pie VII (1800-1823).
Bois sculpté et doré, velours de soie cramoisi sur âme de bois, passementerie
en fils d'or, bronze doré. Exposition "le Trône en Majesté", Château de Versailles.
Italiano: La sedia gestatoria di Papa Pio VII.
Photo: 20 March 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Jebulon.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Illustration: NEW LITURGICAL MOVEMENT



Illustration: NEW LITURGICAL MOVEMENT

Zephyrinus heartily commends the following Article to all Readers.
The Article, dated 8 February 2013, from RORATE CAELI, can be read in full HERE

Obedience And The Power Of The Modernists: Understanding The Resurgence Of Modernism In The Past 50 years.

by Fr. Giovanni Cavalcoli, O.P.



The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless stated otherwise.

Pope Saint Pius X's Papacy featured vigorous condemnation of what he termed 'Modernists' and 'Relativists'.

Pope Leo XIII had sought to revive the inheritance of Thomas Aquinas, 'the marriage of Reason and Revelation', as a response to Secular 'Enlightenment'. 

Under the Pontificate of Pope Saint Pius X, Neo-Thomism became the blueprint for an approach to Theology. Pius X's Papacy featured vigorous condemnation of what he termed 'Modernists' and 'Relativists', whom he regarded as dangers to The Catholic Faith (see, for example, his Oath Against Modernism).


This is perhaps the most controversial aspect of his Papacy. He also encouraged the formation and efforts of Sodalitium Pianum (or League of Pius V), an Anti-Modernist network of informants, which was seen negatively by many people due to its accusations of Heresy against people on the flimsiest evidence.

This campaign against Modernism was run by Umberto Benigni in The Department of Extraordinary Affairs in The Secretariat of State, distributing Anti-Modernist propaganda and gathering information on "culprits". Benigni had his own secret code—Pope Pius X was known as "Mama".



English: Pope Saint Pius X. Official portrait taken shortly after his enthronement in August 1903.
Deutsch: Papst Pius X. Offizielles Porträt, aufgenommen kurz 
nach Inthronisation (August 1903).
Español: El papa Pío X. Retrato oficial, hecho pocos días
después de 
su entronización como papa el 9 de agosto de 1903.
Français: Le pape Pie X. Portrait officiel du 14 août 1903, après son inthronisation.
Photo: 14 August 1903.
Source: Web.
Author: Giuseppe Felici (1839-1923).
(Wikimedia Commons)



Pope Saint Pius X's attitude toward The Modernists was uncompromising. Speaking of those who counselled compassion to the "culprits", he said: "They want them to be treated with oil, soap and caresses. But they should be beaten with fists. In a duel, you don't count or measure the blows, you strike as you can."

The Modernist Movement was linked especially with certain Catholic French scholars, such as Louis Duchesne, who questioned the belief that God acts in a direct way in the affairs of Humanity, and Alfred Loisy, who denied that some parts of Scripture were literally, rather than perhaps metaphorically, true.

Pius X's signature

Signature of Pope Saint Pius X.

Date: 1906.


Author: Pope Pius X.
Created in Vector format by Scewing

(Wikimedia Commons)

In contradiction to Thomas Aquinas, they argued that there was an unbridgeable gap between natural and supernatural knowledge. Its unwanted effects, from the Traditional viewpoint, were Relativism and Scepticism. Modernism and Relativism, in terms of their presence in The Church, were Theological trends that tried to assimilate modern philosophers, like Kant, as well as Rationalism into Catholic Theology.

Modernists argued that beliefs of The Church have evolved throughout its history and continue to evolve. Anti-Modernists viewed these notions as contrary to the Dogmas and Traditions of The Catholic Church.



"Habemus Papam".
Cardinal Luigi Macchi announces the Election of Cardinal Sarto as the new Pope.
As Proto-Deacon since 1899, Cardinal Macchi announced the Election of Cardinal Giuseppe Sarto at the end of the Conclave of 1903 and Crowned him on 9 August 1903.
Four years later, Cardinal Macchi died after an illness at the age of seventy-five.
Photo: 9 August 1903.
Source: Originally from hu.wikipedia; description page is/was here.
Author: Unknown, original uploader was User:Czinitz at hu.wikipedia.
(Wikimedia Commons)

In a Decree, entitled Lamentabili Sane Exitu ("A Lamentable Departure Indeed"), issued 3 July 1907, Pope Saint Pius X formally condemned sixty-five Modernist or Relativist Propositions concerning The Nature of The Church, Revelation, Biblical Exegesis, The Sacraments, and The Divinity of Christ.

This was followed by the Encyclical Pascendi dominici gregis ("Feeding The Lord's Flock"), which characterised Modernism as the "Synthesis of all Heresies." Following these, Pope Pius X ordered that all Clerics take The Sacrorum Antistitum, an Oath against Modernism. Pope Pius X's aggressive stance against Modernism caused some disruption within The Church. Although only about forty Clerics refused to take the Oath, Catholic scholarship with Modernistic tendencies was substantially discouraged. Theologians who wished to pursue lines of inquiry in line with Secularism, Modernism, or Relativism, had to stop, or face conflict with the Papacy, and possibly even Excommunication.


Saint Placid And His Companions. Martyrs. Feast Day 5 October.


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

Saint Placid And His Companions. 
   Martyrs. 
   Feast Day 5 October.

Simple.

Red Vestments.


English: Church of Saint Placid, France.
Français: Église Saint-Plaçide sous le soleil.
Photo: 26 May 2012.
Source: Own work.
Author: Léo Camus.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Holiness of Saint Benedict in his grotto at Subiaco soon drew around him many Disciples, among whom the two greatest were Saint Maurus, Apostle of The Benedictine Order in France, and Saint Placid. Both were committed to the care of The Holy Patriarch, the former at twelve years of age and the latter when a child of four years old, by their parents, who belonged to the most illustrious Patrician Families of Rome; under the guidance of such a Master, they made rapid progress in Holiness.

Saint Benedict had a special predilection for young Placid, and, just as The Saviour chose certain of his Disciples to be witness of His Miracles, so he liked to be accompanied by the pious child  when God gave him Miracles to work.



English: Church of Saint Placid, Catania, Italy.
Italiano: Catania - Chiesa di San Placido.
Photo: 27 September 2014.
Author: giggel
(Wikimedia Commons)


One one occasion, while drawing water from the lake of Subiaco, Placid fell in, and the waves carried him far from the shore. The Man of God sent Saint Maurus, who, walking miraculously on the water, saved him.

Placid and Maurus followed Saint Benedict to Monte Cassino.

Today's Office and Mass Celebrated the memory of several Christians who were put to death in Sicily about 541 A.D., by Saracenic Pirates. According to a pious Tradition, these Martyrs were Saint Placid, his sister, and the Monks which Saint Benedict had sent to Sicily with him.

Mass: Salus autem.
Collects: From The Mass: Sapiéntam.

Wednesday 4 October 2017

Saint Francis Of Assisi. Confessor. Feast Day, Today, 4 October.


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

Saint Francis Of Assisi.
   Confessor.
   Feast Day 4 October.

Greater-Double.

White Vestments.




"Saint Francis in Meditation".
Artist: Francisco de Zurbarán (1598–1664).
Date: 1635-1639.
Current location: National Gallery, London, England.
(Wikimedia Commons)




Saint Francis of Assist.

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


Born at Assisi, in Umbria, Italy, Saint Francis was raised up by God to work at the same time as Saint Dominic for the moral regeneration of the World at a most troublous period.

[Francis, says Dante, was a true Seraph by the love which devoured his Soul; Dominic, by his enlightened knowledge, ranks with The Cherubim. The former lived 1182-1225, the latter 1170-1221. It is related that Saint Louis, King of France, used to say that, if he could divide himself, he would give half of himself to Saint Dominic and half to Saint Francis].

He had been Christened "John", but was called "Francis", by his father, to celebrate his return from a successful business journey in France.

"The more the sublime enthusiast," says Montalembert, "hid himself and depreciated himself to make himself worthy by humility and men's contempt to be the vessel of Divine Love, the more, by a wonderful effort of of Grace, men rushed to follow him."



Saint Francis of Assisi.
Illustration: PINTEREST


Francis soon had disciples (Communion) who reduced themselves to the same poverty as himself and shared his ardour for the conversion of the people. "My Brothers," he would say, "let us Preach Penance, by example, rather than by word."

He gave them a Rule, which was approved by Pope Innocent III in 1210. In the following year, he obtained from The Benedictines the little Church of Our Lady of The Angels, called "Portiuncula", which was the cradle of his Order [The property of The Benedictines of Mount Subasio was thus called because it was made up of small portions of land. After having restored The Church of Our Lady of The Angels, Saint Francis obtained from the Pope the grant of a Plenary Indulgence for all The Faithful who visited it on 2 August, the Anniversary of its Consecration. For the last few years, all Parish Churches enjoy the same privilege (Note: This Text was written in 1945)].

The new Religious Family, with which he enriched The Church (Collect), multiplied so rapidly that, at The General Chapter held at Assisi about ten years after its birth, there were five thousand Brothers.



Church of Saint Francis of Assisi, Aleppo, Syria.
Photo: 8 January 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Preacher lad.
(Wikimedia Commons)

[In 1264, The Franciscans possessed already 8,000 Houses. The Friars-Minor have given to The Church twenty-nine Saints, sixty Blesseds, five Popes, and many Cardinals, Bishops, and Learned Men, such as Saint Bonaventure, Alexander of Hales, Roger Bacon, Duns Scotus. The Capuchins six Saints and eleven Blesseds. The Conventuals one Saint and one Blessed. In 1936, The Friars-Minor numbered about 24,500 Members, The Capuchins 13,500, and The Conventuals 3,000, not to mention the 83,000 Regular Tertiaries and the 1,904,000 Secular Tertiaries.]

Wishing to consider themselves the least among Religious, Saint Francis gave them the name of Friars-Minor, and he himself remained a Deacon all his life. After this first Order, he Founded another Order, "The Order of Poor Clares", thus called after Saint Clare, the illustrious Virgin of Assisi (Feast Day 12 August).

Lastly, in 1221, he Founded a third Order, called "The Order of Penance", on which the Popes, and especially Pope Leo XIII, who considered it an honour to belong to it, lavished the greatest encouragement and the richest favours.

Saint Francis sent his disciples to France, Germany, Spain, Africa; he himself wanted to go to Palestine and Morocco, but Divine Providence stopped him on the way. The Divine Love which burned in him caused him to be surnamed "Seraphic".

On 4 October 1226, he gave up his Soul to God while finishing the last Verse of Psalm 141: "Bring my Soul out of prison, O Lord, that I may praise Thy Name."

Mass: Mihi autem.

Tuesday 3 October 2017

Saint Teresa Of The Child Jesus (Saint Thérèse Of Lisieux) ("The Little Flower") 1873 - 1897. Feast Day 3 October. "After My Death, I Will Let Fall A Shower Of Roses From Heaven".


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

Saint Teresa of The Child Jesus
   (Saint Thérèse Of Lisieux).
   "The Little Flower".
   Virgin.
   Feast Day 3 October.

Double.

White Vestments.

                                




Saint Teresa of The Child Jesus
(Saint Thérèse Of Lisieux)
(The Little Flower)


            
                                 


English: Amber Flush Rose - Bagatelle Rose Garden (Paris, France).
Français : Rose Amber Flush - Roseraie de Bagatelle (Paris, France).
Photo: 1 June 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Georges Seguin (Okki).
(Wikimedia Commons)


Saint Thérèse Of Lisieux)
("The Little Flower").
Available on YouTube at



Mary-Frances-Teresa Martin was born at Alençon, France, on 2 January 1873. She was brought up in a most-Christian family, and educated by The Benedictine Nuns at Lisieux. Whilst still a child, she felt drawn towards The Cloister, and, at the age of fifteen, after much petition, was allowed to enter The Carmelite Convent in that Town. At the age of twenty-four, she slept peacefully in The Peace of The Lord.

The life of this young Saint is not distinguished by any heroic or very great deed. She simply served God with a constant and assiduous fidelity in little things.

To her, The Words of Our Lord are applied by The Church: "Unless you become as little children, you shall not enter The Kingdom of Heaven."



Saint Teresa of The Child Jesus,
(Saint Thérèse Of Lisieux),
("The Little Flower")
(Wikipedia Commons)


"I do not intend to remain inactive in Heaven," this Saint said on her death-bed. "I wish to go on working for The Church and for Souls." "After my death, I will let fall a Shower of Roses." "It is Our Lord Who is calling me to Heaven and the hope of being able to love Him as I have so much desired to do, and the thought that I shall be able to make Him loved by a number of Souls, who will praise Him eternally."

Apostolic Virgin ! Such is the Title which seems best to characterise Saint Teresa of The Child Jesus. Like her Seraphic Patron and Mother, she desired to make The Salvation of Souls the object of her life in The Cloister, and, thus, her whole life was a "sacrifice of love, a holocaust to merciful love".

When she left Carmel for Heaven, she repeated her intention of continuing to be an Apostle in Eternity, as she had been here on Earth."I feel that my Mission is soon to begin," she said."My Mission to make others love The Good God as I love Him . . . to teach my Little Way to Souls.



English: The Birthplace and family home of Sainte Thérèse.
Français: Maison natale de Sainte Thérèse et des
bienheureux Louis et Zélie Martin, ses parents.
Photo: 25 June 2009.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)


"I wish to spend my Heaven in doing good upon Earth. Nor is this impossible, since, from the very heart of The Beatific Vision, The Angels keep watch over us. No, there can be no rest for me until The End of The World. But when The Angel shall have said: "Time is no more ! ", then I shall rest, then I shall be able to rejoice, because The Number of The Elect will be complete". (Autobiography).

The humble "Little Flower" was: Beatified by Pope Pius XI in 1923, twenty-six years after her death; Canonised in 1925; and, in 1927, proclaimed Patroness of All Catholic Missions.

Let us offer The Holy Sacrifice, in Thanksgiving, for all The Graces bestowed on this Saint, and let us receive Our Lord in Holy Communion in order to partake, through Him, in The Virtues which adorned her life.



Marie-Azélie "Zélie" Martin née Guérin (1831-1877), 
Beatified. Wife of Blessed Louis Martin,
Mother of Saint Thérèse de Lisieux.
Date: Circa 1875.
Author: Unknown Photographer.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

Saint Thérèse of Lisieux (Born Marie-Françoise-Thérèse Martin, 2 January 1873 – 30 September 1897), or Saint Thérèse of The Child Jesus and The Holy Face, O.C.D., was a French Discalced Carmelite Nun. She is popularly known as "The Little Flower of Jesus" or simply, "The Little Flower."

Thérèse has been a highly influential model of Sanctity for Roman Catholics, and for others, because of the "simplicity and practicality of her approach to The Spiritual Life." Together with Saint Francis of Assisi, she is one of the most popular Saints in the history of The Church. Pope Saint Pius X called her "the greatest Saint of modern times."

Thérèse felt an early call to Religious Life, and, overcoming various obstacles, in 1888, at the early age of fifteen, she became a Nun and joined two of her elder sisters in The Cloistered Carmelite Community of Lisieux, Normandy. After nine years as a Carmelite Religious, having fulfilled various Offices, such as Sacristan and Assistant to The Novice Mistress, and having spent her last eighteen months in Carmel in a Night of Faith, she died of tuberculosis at the age of twenty-four.


Louis Martin (1823-1894).
Beatified. Husband of Blessed Zélie Martin.
Father of Saint Thérèse of Lisieux.
Photo: Circa 1875.
Source: http://www.devinrose.heroicvirtuecreations.com/blog/
2008/07/04/blessed-louis-and-zelie-martin-and-saint-damien/
Author: Unknown Photographer.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The impact of The Story of a Soul, a collection of her autobiographical Manuscripts, printed and distributed a year after her death to an initially very limited audience, was great, and she rapidly became one of the most popular Saints of the 20th-Century.

Pope Pius XI made her the "Star of his Pontificate". She was Beatified in 1923, and Canonised in 1925. Thérèse was declared Co-Patron of The Missions, with Saint Francis Xavier, in 1927, and named Co-Patron of France, with Joan of Arc, in 1944. On 19 October 1997, Pope Saint John Paul II declared her the thirty-third Doctor of The Church, the youngest person, and at that time only the third woman, to be so honoured. Devotion to Thérèse has developed around the World.

Saint Thérèse lived a hidden life and "wanted to be unknown," yet became popular after her death through her Spiritual autobiography. She also left Letters, poems, Religious plays, Prayers, and her last conversations were recorded by her sisters. Paintings and photographs – mostly the work of her sister, Céline, – further led to her being recognised by millions of men and women.


English: Les Buissonnets. 
The Martin family house in Lisieux, to which they moved in
November 1877, following the death of Madame Martin. Thérèse lived here from
16 November 1877 to 9 April 1888, the day she entered Carmel.
Français: Maison familiale des Martin (Lisieux) où Sainte Thérèse passa son enfance.
Photo: August 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Grentidez.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Thérèse said on her death-bed, "I only love simplicity. I have a horror of pretence", and she spoke out against some of the claims made concerning The Lives of Saints, written in her day, "We should not say improbable things, or things we do not know. We must see their real, and not their imagined, lives."

The depth of her Spirituality, of which she said, "My Way is all Confidence and Love," has inspired many Believers. In the face of her littleness, she trusted in God to be her Sanctity. She wanted to go to Heaven by an entirely new "little way". "I wanted to find an elevator that would raise me to Jesus." The elevator, she wrote, would be The Arms of Jesus lifting her in all her littleness.

Thérèse is well-known throughout the World, with The Basilica of Lisieux being the second-largest place of Pilgrimage in France, after Lourdes.




English: The Monastery that Saint Thérèse entered was not an old-established House 
with a great tradition. In 1838, two Nuns from The Poitiers Carmel were sent out to 
Found the House of Lisieux.
One of them, Mother Geneviève of Saint Teresa, was living 
when Saint Thérèse entered. The Second Wing, containing Cells and Rooms in which 
she was to live and die, had been standing only ten years.
"What she found was a Community of very aged Nuns, some odd and cranky, some sick and troubled, some lukewarm and complacent. Almost all of The Sisters came from The Petty Bourgeois and Artisan Class. The Prioress and Novice Mistress were of Old Norman Nobility.
Probably, The Martin sisters, alone, represented the new Class of The Rising Bourgeoisie."
The Hidden Facep.193-195, Ida Gorres.
Français: Carmel de Lisieux.
Date: Circa 1900.
Source: Carte postale.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)


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