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

Friday, 25 May 2018

Saint Urban I. Pope (222 A.D. - 230 A.D.) And Martyr. Feast Day 25 May.


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

Saint Urban I.
   Pope and Martyr.
   Feast Day 25 May.

Simple.

Red Vestments.





English: Pope Saint Urban I 
(Papacy 222 A.D. - 230 A.D.), 
wearing The Papal Tiara.
Polski: Pomnik świętego Urbana w Cieszowej.
Photo: 12 July 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: User:Pleple2000.
(Wikimedia Commons)




Coat-of-Arms of The Holy See 
with Gold Key in bend, as described in Donald Lindsay Galbreath,

Bruno Bernhard Heim, Heraldry in The Catholic Church:

Its Origin, Customs and Laws (Van Duren 1978
Date: 12 December 2007.
(W. Heffer and Sons, 1930), p. 9; Bruno Bernhard Heim, Heraldry in the Catholic Church:
Its Origin, Customs and Laws (Van Duren 1978 ISBN 9780391008731), p. 54;
Author: F l a n k e r.
(Wikimedia Commons)


This Holy Pope is believed to have been the same Urban who Baptised Valerian (husband of Saint Cecilia), Tiburtius (brother of Valerian), and Maximus (their gaoler (jailer)), whom we honoured on 14 April.

Pope Saint Urban I was Martyred in 230 A.D.

Mass: Protexísti.




A 12th-Century fresco of Pope Saint Urban I
in a window embrasure 
in the Church of Chalivoy-Milon, France (see, below).
Image: Julianna Lees.
(Google Images)




English: The Church in Chalivoy-Milon, France,
which contains a fresco of Pope Saint Urban I (see, above).
Français: Église de Chalivoy-Milon, France.
Photo: 25 August 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: ManiacParisien.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Saint Urban I. Pope and Martyr.
Available on YouTube at



The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

Pope Urban I (Latin: Urbanus I) was Bishop of Rome, or Pope, from 222 A.D. to 23 May 230 A.D. He was born in Rome and succeeded Pope Callixtus I, who had been Martyred.

Much of Urban's life is shrouded in mystery, leading to many myths and misconceptions. Despite the lack of sources, he is the first Pope whose Reign can be definitely dated. Two prominent sources do exist for Urban's Pontificate: Eusebius' History of The Early Church and also an inscription, in the Coemeterium Callisti, which names the Pope.

Urban ascended to The Chair of Saint Peter in the year of The Roman Emperor Elagabalus' assassination and served during the Reign of Alexander Severus. It is believed that Urban's Pontificate was during a peaceful time for Christians in The Empire, as Severus did not promote the persecution of Christianity.

Urban is a Canonised Saint of The Roman Catholic Church and The Eastern Orthodox Church.

Saint Gregory VII (1073-1085). Pope And Confessor. Feast Day 25 May.


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

Saint Gregory VII.
   Pope and Confessor.
   Feast Day 25 May.

Double.

White Vestments.




Pope Saint Gregory VII saying Mass (inspired by The Holy Ghost).
Date: 1878.
Source: Scanned by Uploader. Page 292 of Little Pictorial Lives Of The Saints. Benzinger Brothers.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Born at Soana, Tuscany, Italy, Hildebrand became a Monk in the famous Benedictine Monastery of Cluny, on which, at the time, depended two thousand Monasteries. He soon became Prior, and was later Elected Abbot of the Monastery of Saint Paul-Without-the-Walls, Rome, and made a Cardinal of The Roman Church.

At the death of Pope Alexander II, in 1073, he was Elected Pope and took the name of Gregory VII. Thus, entrusted with the government of The House of God (Gospel, Communion), he participated in the full Priesthood of Jesus (Introit, Epistle).

At a time when the Bishops, mostly Simoniacal, were the dependents of Lay Princes, he strove with such constancy to defend the liberty of The Church (Collect) that, as we are assured, no Pontiff, since the time of The Apostles, undertook more labours for her (The Church) or fought more courageously for her independence.

While he was saying Mass, a Dove was seen to come down on him: The Holy Ghost thereby bore witness of the Supernatural views that guided him in the government of The Church. Forced to leave Rome, he died at Salerno in 1085, saying those words, the first of which are from Psalm XLIV: "I have loved justice and hated iniquity: That is why I die in exile."

Following the example of Saint Gregory, let us overcome with courage all adversities (Collect).

Mass: Státuit.
Commemoration: Of Saint Urban I.

Wednesday, 23 May 2018

" A Licence To Kill ? " Vote " NO " To Abortion On Demand In The Referendum On 25 May.



Main Text and Illustration: LIFE INSTITUTE

"Save The 8th"
Erects First Posters Of Campaign.

4,000 copies of “1 in 5” poster going up nationwide
in first phase of poster campaign

"Save The 8th", the campaign against
the repeal of The 8th Amendment, has begun.
The first in a series of nationwide poster campaigns ahead of the referendum on 25 May 2018.


With the polling order signed on Wednesday night
(4 April 2018), it became legal to erect campaign posters from 5 April 2018.

Save The 8th’s first poster reads:
“In England, 1 in 5 babies are aborted.
Don’t bring this to Ireland. Vote No”.
4,000 of these posters will be erected nationwide,
with further posters to follow.


Commenting, Save The 8th’s Niamh UiBhriain said:
“In 1967, the British Abortion Act promised a restrictive regime of abortion, just like the Irish Government is proposing today. In England, this restrictive regime sees virtually no abortion refused, and one in five pregnancies ending with an abortion.

"In 2010, Leo Varadkar warned that any attempt
to introduce a restrictive abortion law would 
end with abortion on demand. Today, he is trying
to take the Country down the very path he warned against very recently.

"Our poster campaign seeks to raise awareness
of what happens when abortion is legalised. It gives politicians a licence to kill. We hope that Irish voters will not copy England’s mistake”.






Maternity of Mary
from The Liturgical Year, 1910.





Zephyrinus says:
"If We Do Not Save The Little Ones,
Who Will ? "





Zephyrinus is also of the opinion that:
"Abortion Is The Greatest Evil
The World Has Ever Seen".




Tuesday, 22 May 2018

The " Super Chief ". Train Of The Stars, The Rich, The Famous. Passengers Didn't Wear Tank Tops, Camouflage Shorts, Or Jeans. Just Hats, Ties, Couturier, And Chanel. If They Wanted Châteauneuf-Du-Pape, They Got It.



The Super Chief.
Illustration: PINTEREST



The "Super Chief", in "War-Bonnet" colours, calls at Pasadena, just before heading into
Los Angeles Union Station. To the right of the palm trees, above the engine, we can see
the seventh floor of "The Castle Green". The Moorish Colonial and Spanish Hotel was across
the street from Pasadena's Santa Fe Railroad Station. Pasadena was the "gateway" to
The San Fernando Valley, Hollywood and Beverly Hills.
Illustration: NEW YORK SOCIAL DIARY


" The Super Chief ".
The Santa Fe Railroad.
1950s Passenger Trains In The USA.
Available on YouTube at


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

The Super Chief was one of the Named Passenger Trains and the Flagship of The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway. It claimed to be "The Train of the Stars" because of the celebrities it carried between Chicago, Illinois, and Los Angeles, California.

The Super Chief (Nos. 17 and 18) was the first Diesel-powered, all-Pullman sleeping car train in America, and it eclipsed the Chief as Santa Fe's standard bearer. The extra-fare ($10) Super Chief left Dearborn Station in Chicago for its first trip on May 12, 1936. Before starting scheduled service in May 1937, the lightweight version of the Super Chief ran 2,227 miles (3,584 km) from Los Angeles over recently upgraded tracks in 36 hours and 49 minutes, averaging 60 mph (97 km/h) overall and reaching 100 mph (160 km/h).

With one set of equipment, the train initially operated once a week from both Chicago and Los Angeles. After more cars had been delivered the Super Chief ran twice weekly beginning in 1938 and daily after 1948. Adding to the train's mystique were its gourmet meals and Hollywood clientele.


Competitors to the Super Chief were the City of Los Angeles on the Chicago and North Western Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad, and (to a lesser extent) the Golden State on the Rock Island and Southern Pacific. The Santa Fe Super Chief was one of the last passenger trains in the United States to carry an all-Pullman consist; only the Pennsylvania Railroad's Broadway Limited and the Illinois Central's Panama Limited survived longer. The train maintained its high level of service until the end of Santa Fe passenger operations on May 1, 1971.

When Amtrak took over operation of the nation's passenger service on May 1, 1971, the 35-year run of the Super Chief on the Santa Fe ended, though Amtrak used the name on the same route for three years. In 1974 the Santa Fe withdrew permission to use the name due to a perceived decline in service, so Amtrak renamed it Southwest Limited. Following the delivery of new Superliner equipment, the Santa Fe allowed Amtrak to call it the Southwest Chief in 1984.

Monday, 21 May 2018

How Lovely !!!



Little boy talking to the Locomotive crew, Waterloo Station, 1924.
From Southern Railway’s advertising.
Illustration: PINTEREST

Sunday, 20 May 2018

Missa Cantata. On Corpus Christi. At Saint Thomas Of Canterbury Church, Headcorn, Kent. Thursday, 31 May 2018. 1200 Noon.



Missa Cantata
on
Corpus Christi.

Saint Thomas Of Canterbury Church,
Becket Court, Station Road,
Headcorn, Kent TN27 9SB.
Thursday, 31 May 2018.
1200 Noon.




SCHOLA: CANTORES MISSAE.
DIRECTOR: CHARLES FINCH.
WILL BE SINGING THE MASS.



SUPPORTED BY

Latin Mass Society


Saint Thomas of Canterbury Church,
Becket Court, Station Road,
Headcorn, Kent TN27 9SB.

Pentecost. Whit Sunday.


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

Pentecost. Whit Sunday.

Station at Saint Peter's Basilica.

Indulgence of 30 Years and 30 Quarantines.

Double of The First-Class
   with Privileged Octave.

Red Vestments.




THEY WERE ALL FILLED WITH THE HOLY GHOST.
Artist: René de Cramer.
"Copyright Brunelmar/Ghent/Belgium".
Used with Permission.





Interior of Saint Peter's, Rome.
[Editor: The Station for Pentecost is Saint Peter's.]
Artist: Giovanni Paolo Panini (1692–1765).
Date: 1731.
Current location: Saint Louis Art Museum, Missouri, United States of America.
Source/Photographer: Saint Louis Art Museum Official Site.
(Wikimedia Commons)

"The Gift of Wisdom is an illumination of The Holy Ghost, thanks to which our Intellect is able to look at Revealed Truths in their more sublime light, to the greater joy of our Souls." [Reverend M. Meschler, S.J.: "The Gift of Pentecost: Meditations on The Holy Ghost," translated by Lady Amabel Kerr.]

Our Lord laid the Foundations of His Church during His Public Life, and after His Resurrection He gave it the powers necessary for its mission. It was by The Holy Ghost that The Apostles were to be trained and endued with strength from On High (Gospel).

"At Pentecost, we celebrate the first manifestation of The Holy Ghost among Our Lord's Disciples and the Foundation of The Church, itself." Hence, the choice of the Basilica, Dedicated to Saint Peter, for today's Station.



We read, in the Gospel, that Our Lord foretold the coming of The Paraclete to His Disciples, and the Epistle shows us the realisation of that promise.

It was at the third hour of the day (Terce, nine o'clock A.M.) that The Spirit of God descended upon the Cenacle, and a mighty wind which blew suddenly upon the house, together with the appearance of tongues of fire within, were the wonderful tokens of His coming.

Taught by The Light of Thy Holy Spirit (Collect), and filled by The Gifts of The Same Spirit poured out upon them (Sequence), The Apostles become new men, to go forth and renew The Whole World (Introit).





"Veni, Sancte Spiritus.
The Sequence for Pentecost.
Sung by The Benedictine Monks of Santo Domingo de Silos.
Available on YouTube at

It is at High Mass, at The Third Hour, that we also receive The Holy Spirit, Whom Our Lord "going up above all The Heavens, on this day sent down . . . on the children of adoption" (Preface); for each of The Mysteries of The Liturgical Cycle brings forth its Fruits of Grace in our Souls on the day which The Church keeps as its Anniversary.

During Advent, we raised to The Incarnate Word the cry: "Come, Lord, and purge the sins of Thy people"; at this Season, let us, with The Church, say to The Holy Ghost: "Come, O Holy Spirit, and fill the hearts of Thy Faithful, and kindle in them the fire of Thy love" (Alleluia).

Of all ejaculatory Prayers, this is the most beautiful and necessary, for, from The Holy Ghost, that "Sweet Guest of our Soul", flows all our Supernatural Life.

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

Mass: Spiritus Domini.
Sequence: Veni, Sancte Spiritus.
Preface: For Pentecost.
Communicantes: For Pentecost.
Hanc Igitur: For Pentecost.





The Introit for Whit Sunday (Pentecost Sunday).
Available on YouTube at

Saturday, 19 May 2018

Vigil Of Pentecost.


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

Vigil of Pentecost.

Station at Saint John Lateran.

Indulgence of 10 Years and 10 Quarantines.

Privileged Vigil of The First-Class.

Violet and Red Vestments.


THEY WERE ALL FILLED WITH THE HOLY GHOST.
Artist: René de Cramer.
"Copyright Brunelmar/Ghent/Belgium".
Used with Permission.

The First Mass for Pentecost, formerly Celebrated during the night, has, like that of Easter, ever since been an Anticipated Mass.

This Great and Solemn Festival, therefore, begins with The Vigil.

In early days, the Catechumens, whom it had not been possible to Baptise at Easter, received this Sacrament at Pentecost, which explains the similarities between The Mass for The Vigil of Pentecost and The Mass for Holy Saturday.

The Mass is preceded by the Reading of Six Prophecies and The Blessing of The Water in The Baptismal Font.

It is also Celebrated at the Basilica of Saint John Lateran.


THE PROPHECIES.

The Celebrant and Assistant Ministers are robed in Violet Vestments, and the Candles on the Altar are not lighted until the beginning of Mass, as on Holy Saturday.

At the end of The Prophecies, the Collect is read, but Flectamus genua is omitted.


THE BLESSING OF THE FONT.

At the end of The Prophecies, the Celebrant puts on a Violet Cope, and, while the Procession moves towards the Font, the Tract, "Sicut cervus", is sung.

Mindful of the fact that, in The Beginning, The Spirit of God moved over The Waters and made them fruitful, The Liturgy asks God to Bless the Water in the Baptismal Font, out of which will arise a purely Heavenly Race.

The officiating Priest then plunges the Paschal Candle into the Water three times, for it is by Christ, Whom the Candle typifies, that The Power of The Holy Ghost, by which our Souls are enlightened, is infused into them.


THE LITANY OF THE SAINTS.


The Liturgy, as affecting The Litany of The Saints, is the same as on Holy Saturday. Where there is no Font, The Litany begins after The Prophecies and Collects. At "Peccatores, Te rogamus audi nos", the Priest and his Assistants go to the Sacristy and put on Red Vestments, and the Candles are lit on the Altar.

At the end of The Litany, the Kyrie Eleison is Solemnly Sung, without Introit, like on Holy Saturday. At the Gloria, the Bells are also rung and the Organ begins being played.

MASS FOR THE VIGIL OF PENTECOST.

After having been Baptised "in Water and in The Holy Ghost", the Neophytes were Confirmed. All through The Mass, there are references to these two Sacraments, showing how The Holy Ghost enters into our Souls the effect He produces in them.

Mass: Cum sanctificatus.
No Lights are carried at The Gospel, only Incense.
The Creed: Is not said.
Preface: For Pentecost.
Communicantes and Hanc Igitur: Used until the following Saturday, inclusive.
Postcommunion: As on Pentecost.

Friday, 18 May 2018

Friday. After The Octave Of The Ascension.


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

Friday. After The Octave of The Ascension.

Semi-Double.

White Vestments.


"While they looked on, He was raised up".
Artist: René de Cramer.
"Copyright Brunelmar/Ghent/Belgium".
Used with Permission.

As Sunday governs the whole Week, today is Celebrated The Mass of the previous Sunday, with The Collects and The Preface of The Ascension. But neither The Creed nor the Proper Communicantes is said.

This Mass tells of the Virtue of Charity, for The Holy Ghost, Whom Christ is about to send us, is a Spirit of Love.

As a Spirit of Charity, He dispenses His gifts for the benefit of all (Epistle); as Spirit of Truth, He makes us understand The Teaching of Jesus.

The Holy Ghost will also console us in the midst of our tribulations (Gospel), and "will keep us from evil" (Communion).

Thursday, 17 May 2018

Thursday. The Octave Day Of The Ascension. 17 May 2018.


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

Thursday. The Octave Day Of The Ascension.

Greater-Double.

White Vestments.


"While they looked on, He was raised up".
Artist: René de Cramer.
"Copyright Brunelmar/Ghent/Belgium".
Used with Permission.

Jesus ascended into Heaven, there to prepare a place for us, for His Ascension is but a type of our own. Also, He will come again to take us to Himself (Gospel) and introduce us into His Father's Kingdom.

He went up to Heaven to proclaim The Dogma we sing every day of this Octave in The Credo; "I believe in The Holy Ghost, Who proceedeth from The Father and The Son." And it is from Heaven above that He, with The Father, is about to send us The Holy Ghost. He went up to Heaven because Glorified Human Nature requires such a Place of Glory as Heaven.

["Heaven," says Saint Thomas, "is that immensity of space which lies beyond the stellar system. It is a place free from change and wholly luminous, as will be all material creatures after the resurrection. It is the most noble of bodies, which, made glorious from the inception of the World, was set apart by God for The Angels that remained Faithful."]

Finally, He went up to Heaven because, after having been brought to a belief in His Divinity, The Apostles and The Disciples of Our Lord must also be led to believe in His Humanity, henceforth invisible here below.

Other Gospels For The Ascension.



A Folio of The Echternach Sacramentary, 895 A.D., with the last two Prayers
of The Mass of Saint Paul, those of Saints Processus and Martinian, on 2 July,
and the first two Prayers of The Octave of Saints Peter and Paul.
Illustration: NEW LITURGICAL MOVEMENT

This Article is taken from, and can be read in full at, NEW LITURGICAL MOVEMENT

Other Gospels For The Ascension.
By: GREGORY DIPIPPO.

The Roman Rite has various ways of arranging The Masses during an Octave. That of Easter, for example, has a completely Proper Mass for every day, that of Pentecost for every day but Thursday, which was originally an “ Aliturgical ” day; when its Mass was instituted later, it was given Proper Readings, but everything else is repeated from The Sunday.

The Feast of Saints Peter and Paul is continued with one Mass for The Days Within The Octave, and another for The Octave Day, itself, plus the special Commemoration of Saint Paul on 30 June. Some others, however, especially the relatively late ones, like Corpus Christi and "All Saints", simply repeat The Mass Of The Day throughout The Octave.

The Feast of The Ascension falls into the last category, although The Mass Of The Sunday Within The Octave, which is older than The Octave, itself, is different. Octaves are for the contemplation of Mysteries that are too great for a single day, and it is certainly true that “repetita juvant”, a proverb which The Roman Rite, with its habitual conservatism, historically took very much to heart.

One might argue, however, that there was some room for expanding the repertoire of Readings within this Octave in particular, in a way that would have been fully consonant with the Tradition of The Rite, and expanded the scope of such contemplation.


Two Leaves of The Parisian Missal of 1736, with part of The Propers for The Mass For
The Friday After The Octave Of The Ascension, and the beginning of The Vigil Of Pentecost.
Illustration: NEW LITURGICAL MOVEMENT

The very oldest Lectionary of The Roman Rite, the "Comes (the Latin word for “Companion”) of Wurzburg", attests to the Roman system of Readings as it was in the middle of the 7th-Century A.D. (The Manuscript, itself, was copied out in roughly 700-750.) Although there are some notable differences, it is unmistakably the same system as that of The Missals of Pope Saint Pius V and Pope Saint John XXIII. Its Gospels for the entire Easter Season are almost entirely the same, while those of the second oldest "Comes", that of Murbach, Alsace, France, are exactly the same.

Both of them also attest to a feature which was not included in the Late-Mediaeval Missal of The Roman Curia, the immediate predecessor of that of Pope Saint Pius V, namely, a series of Ferial Readings for The Wednesdays and Fridays Throughout The Year.

In Wurzburg, Bavaria, Germany, this feature is very irregular; some Weeks have Readings for both days (Wednesdays and Fridays), some have one for Saturday, as well, but others have them only for one day, and others have none. In Murbach, Alsace, France, which is from roughly a Century later, it has been completely regularised, and every Wednesday and Friday has Readings assigned to it.

On The Wednesday After The Ascension, the Gospel is the very end of Saint Luke’s Gospel, Chapter 24, 49-53. (Saints Matthew and John do not describe The Ascension, although Christ, Himself, refers to it in the Gospel of Saint John, 20, 17, in the words that form the Antiphon for The Benedictus:
“I go up to My Father and yours, My God and yours, Alleluia.”)


Precious Gold Script against a Red background
indicates the worth of The Echternach Sacramentary.
Illustration: ZIEREIS FACSIMILES

The Roman Rite tends to choose shorter Passages than both The Ambrosian and Byzantine Rites, which have a longer selection from this Passage, verses 36-53, (everything after "The Supper at Emmaus") as the main Gospel of The Feast; the Byzantines read the Roman Gospel at "Orthros". [Editor: From Wikipedia: In The Byzantine Rite of The Eastern Orthodox Church and The Eastern Catholic Churches, "Orthros" (Greek (ὄρθρος, meaning "early dawn" or "daybreak") or Oútrenya (Slavonic Оўтреня) is the last of the four Night Offices, which also include Vespers, Compline, and Midnight Office.]

In The Neo-Gallican Use of Paris, which expanded the Roman corpus of Scriptural Readings considerably, while keeping to the Traditional structure of The Lectionary, verses 44-53 were assigned to The Octave Day of The Ascension.

Another Passage which is connected to The Feast is one of the most beautiful in Saint John’s Gospel, Chapter 17, which Biblical scholars now often call the “Priestly Prayer.”

On The Vigil of The Ascension, The Missal of Pope Saint Pius V has only the first 10 ½ verses, breaking off at vs. 11 “ . . . and I come to Thee.” The rest of the Chapter is not read in either The Temporal or The Sanctoral Cycles, but verses 11-23 are The Gospel of The Votive Mass To Remove A Schism.


A benefactor in a Monk’s Habit kneels at The Feet of Christ.
Illustration: ZIEREIS FACSIMILES

In the Murbach Lectionary, the rest of the Passage is read on The Wednesday Following The Fourth Sunday After Easter; on The Sunday After The Ascension, The Ambrosian Rite reads the full Chapter, while The Byzantine Rite reads the first 13 verses.

The Revised Parisian Use kept the Traditional Roman Gospel for The Vigil, then very cleverly divided the rest into two parts. Verses 11b-19, in which Christ Prays for The Apostles, is read on The Friday Within The Octave Of The Ascension; the rest of the Chapter, in which He Prays “also for those who shall believe in Me though Thy Word”, is assigned to Tuesday.

The Parisian Use is in many respects inspired by Tradition, as in the examples given above, but did not shy away from innovations, which vary in quality. One of its better innovations, which has no precedent in the ancient Roman Lectionaries, is the Gospel chosen for The Friday Between The Octave Day and The Vigil Of Pentecost, which is Traditionally Celebrated as a kind of extension of The Octave. (The Roman Missal repeats The Gospel Of The Sunday).

The Liturgy of The Ascension often looks forward to The Coming of The Holy Ghost at Pentecost, which, as we noted yesterday, Durandus describes as "The consolation of Christ the Bridegroom to His Bride The Church. An example is the Responsory: “If I do not go, The Holy Ghost, The Paraclete, will not come.”


The Lamb of God in an almost modern composition.
Illustration: ZIEREIS FACSIMILES

With The Coming of The Holy Ghost, The Apostles will go out into the World to Preach the Gospel, for which they, and many others after them, will receive The Crown of Martyrdom. The Parisian Use therefore moves away from Saint John, who dominates The Easter Season, and takes this Passage from Saint Luke, (12, 8-12), which looks forward to the ongoing witness to The Life And Teachings Of Christ in The Mission Of His Church.

“At that time, Jesus said to His Disciples: Whosoever shall confess Me before men, him shall The Son of Man also confess before The Angels of God. But he that shall deny Me before men, shall be denied before The Angels of God. And whosoever speaketh a word against The Son of Man, it shall be forgiven him: but to him that shall blaspheme against The Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven.

And when they shall bring you into the Synagogues, and to Magistrates and Powers, be not solicitous how or what you shall answer, or what you shall say; For The Holy Ghost shall teach you in the same hour what you must say.”

The Dignity Of The Office. And The Humility Of The Man. His Eminence Cardinal Burke.



His Eminence Cardinal Burke.
Illustration: RORATE CAELI

Wednesday, 16 May 2018

" A Licence To Kill ? " Vote " NO " To Abortion On Demand In The Referendum On 25 May.



Main Text and Illustration: LIFE INSTITUTE

"Save The 8th"
Erects First Posters Of Campaign.

4,000 copies of “1 in 5” poster going up nationwide
in first phase of poster campaign

"Save The 8th", the campaign against
the repeal of The 8th Amendment, has begun.
The first in a series of nationwide poster campaigns ahead of the referendum on 25 May 2018.


With the polling order signed on Wednesday night
(4 April 2018), it became legal to erect campaign posters from 5 April 2018.

Save The 8th’s first poster reads:
“In England, 1 in 5 babies are aborted.
Don’t bring this to Ireland. Vote No”.
4,000 of these posters will be erected nationwide,
with further posters to follow.


Commenting, Save The 8th’s Niamh UiBhriain said:
“In 1967, the British Abortion Act promised a restrictive regime of abortion, just like the Irish Government is proposing today. In England, this restrictive regime sees virtually no abortion refused, and one in five pregnancies ending with an abortion.

"In 2010, Leo Varadkar warned that any attempt
to introduce a restrictive abortion law would 
end with abortion on demand. Today, he is trying
to take the Country down the very path he warned against very recently.

"Our poster campaign seeks to raise awareness
of what happens when abortion is legalised. It gives politicians a licence to kill. We hope that Irish voters will not copy England’s mistake”.






Maternity of Mary
from The Liturgical Year, 1910.






Zephyrinus says:
"If We Do Not Save The Little Ones,
Who Will ? "







Zephyrinus is also of the opinion that:
"Abortion Is The Greatest Evil
The World Has Ever Seen".




The First Solemn High Mass At Saint Agnes, Brooklyn, New York, In Nearly Sixty Years.




Posted by Stuart Chessman.

The SOCIETY OF SAINT HUGH OF CLUNY will be sponsoring a Solemn High Mass at the Church of  Saint Agnes, Brooklyn, New York, for the Feast of Saint Joan of Arc, on Wednesday,
30 May 2018, at 7 pm.

A historic Church, lovingly called the “Cathedral of Brooklyn,” by locals, Saint Agnes is located at 433 Sackett Street, in Carroll Gardens. This will be the first Traditional Mass in this Church since The Second Vatican Council.

The F and G trains and the B57 Buses are a short walk from the Church.

Tuesday, 15 May 2018

God Bless, Alfie (R.I.P.).



Alfie Evan (R.I.P.).

This Article is taken from, and can be read in full at,
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