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

Thursday 26 September 2019

Reclaim Halloween From The Secular Abuses Used Nowadays. Herewith, All Hallows' Eve In The Traditional Pre-1955 Liturgy.



A Jack o' Lantern made for the Holywell Manor Halloween celebrations.

Photo: 31 October 2003.
Source: Own work.
Illustration: Toby Ord
(Wikipedia)



“Halloween has always belonged properly to The Church, and, as such, it should be made a key strategic objective in a cultural “Reconquista”.”


This Article is taken from LITURGICAL ARTS JOURNAL

By: Claudio Salvucci.

Halloween is a Liturgical holiday. Anyone would be forgiven for not knowing that, because almost nobody keeps it that way anymore—to such a degree that some Catholics are of the opinion that we should wash our hands of the whole business. But Halloween has always belonged properly to The Church, and, as such, it should be made a key strategic objective in a cultural “Reconquista”.

To help illustrate why, I’d like to walk through the day of 31 October, not as the World celebrates it, now, but as The Latin Church Celebrated it for Centuries, listed in The Martyrology as “Vigilia Omnium Sanctorum”.



The Morning Offices.

31 October would Traditionally have begun with The Office of Matins before Sun-Rise. Traditionally, Week-Days in October Matins featured Readings from The Book of Maccabees. But, on 31 October, the Readings switch to Luke 6 and Ambrose’s Homily (Sermon) on The Beatitudes.

These Lessons, appointed for Halloween, come from The Common Of Many Martyrs, and we will see this theme of The Beatitudes re-appear, not only later in The Vigil Day, but also in The Feast of All Saints, to follow.


from the translation of The Roman Breviary by John, The Marquess of Bute, 1890.

The other unique element of The Office for Halloween is The Collect, taken from The Mass, and referring to the joy of all The Saints and the “Glorious and Solemn Commemoration” of the next day. We will return to this Collect, later, but suffice it to say that we can already see, even before the Sun rises on 31 October, and really back to The Martyrology entry read at Prime on 30 October, that The Sacred Liturgy had set this day aside as something special.



The Mass.

As a Vigil, The Mass of Halloween saw the Altar and Priest Vested in Penitential Violet. It had its own dedicated set of Propers and Readings. Overall, they anticipate the joy of the subsequent Feast [Editor: All Saints], though often with a slightly different twist.

The beginning of the Halloween Introit, “Judicant sancti gentes, et dominantur populis” (The Saints judge Nations, and rule over people), strikes a more stern, Last-Judgement, tone than the purely jubilant All Saints Introit “Gaudeamus omnes in Domino” (Let us rejoice in The Lord), even though they both end on the same Psalm: “Exsultate, justi, in Domino” (Rejoice in The Lord, ye Just).




Beginning of The Mass of The Vigil, from The New Roman Missal of Fr. Lasance (1938).



In the Halloween Gradual and Offertory, note the grammatical tense in “exsultabunt and laetabuntur”: “The Saints shall rejoice in glory, they shall be joyful in their beds”. The future tense, here, seems to pull double duty, not only helping to point forward to the next day’s Feast (Editor: All Saints], but also inviting a comparison between what the Canonised Saints enjoy now and what the Christian Faithful and the Souls in Purgatory will one day attain.

The Halloween Mass marks the dramatic appearance of The Apocalypse (Revelations) in The Liturgical Readings. Instead of a Pauline Epistle, we are suddenly confronted with Saint John’s spectacular and cryptic imagery: A Lamb with seven Horns and seven Eyes, Harps and Choirs, Angels circling the Throne. It is a startling vision—and it will continue to unfold through the rest of Hallowtide.

But only here, in The Vigil, do we see the Doctrine of Intercessory Prayer take such picturesque form as the “Golden Vials, full of odours, which are the Prayers of The Saints.” The Lesson also presents us with a first taste of universality, or Catholicity, of The Saints—Christ has “redeemed us to God, in Thy blood, out of every tribe, and tongue, and people, and Nation,” a theme we will come back to at Vespers.


The Gospel of The Day, as at Matins, is drawn from Christ’s Sermon on The Plain, in Luke 6. It, therefore, nicely parallels the Gospel of All Saints’ Day, which presents The Sermon on The Mount from Matthew 5.

Both Texts give us The Beatitudes and point us toward The Path to Sainthood. But, intriguingly, Luke’s Sermon on The Plain also features an Exorcism: “And they that were troubled with unclean spirits were cured.” It is not a major theme of The Halloween Mass, to be sure, but its presence here is a well-timed reminder of our enemies in The Spiritual Battle—then, as now.

Another subtle hint can be found in The Communion Verse “Justorum animæ”, which reminds us that “the torment of malice” shall not touch The Just.



“Black Vespers”.

This strangely-named Office is really The Vespers of The Dead—“Black”, here, referring to the colour of The Vestments. These Vespers are not actually found on Halloween Day in any of The Church’s official Liturgical Books.

Their true Liturgical place is after Second Vespers of All Saints on 1 November. But I have included this Office, here, since there was a Breton Tradition of saying it on the afternoon of Vigil—apparently Devotionally (for historical references, see HERE and HERE). It may well have flourished in other places, as well, since Brittany was said to be particularly conservative in its retention of old Mediæval customs.


“Black Vespers” begins with the Antiphon “I will walk before The Lord in The Land of The Living”—and perhaps here we can see the origin of the idea that, on Halloween, The Departed Souls returned to Earth. Neo-pagans have made much of this Folk Belief, often claiming it to be a lingering vestige of the “old ways”—on slender evidence and over-optimistic assumptions of pagan survival. This Antiphon seems to offer a much more plausible source, and a better explanation, for the presence of this belief in disparate Countries.

In places where it was said, “Black Vespers” infused Halloween with the solemn spirit of All Souls’ Day—and reminded Catholics, looking toward Heaven, of their dear Departed still suffering in Purgatory. We can very much use this reminder, today, particularly as Catholic funerals have too often become deformed into pseudo-canonisations, with the Deceased rashly, and improperly, assumed to be enjoying Heaven, with no need of our Prayers.



First Vespers of All Saints.

Finally, we come to the actual appointed Vespers for 31 October: The First Vespers of All Saints’ Day. In the dimming light of Sunset, The Church officially begins its Celebration of that great Feast, having put aside the Penitential Violet Vestments and the Mournful Black Vestments, and Vesting in the exultant glory of White and Gold Vestments.

Re-echoing The Mass Lesson, its Antiphons boldly sweep up all history and all geography into The Heavenly Ranks: “I beheld, and, lo, a great multitude, which no man could number, of all Nations, and kindreds, and people, and tongues, stood before the Throne.”; “Thou, O, Lord God, hast redeemed us by Thy Blood, out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and Nation, and hast made us a Kingdom unto our God.”

The Vespers of All Saints is presenting us with a cast of historical and other-Worldly characters of every type, arrayed before us in a great colourful pageant.


The Sequence, “Placare Christi”, addresses, in each Verse, The Angels, The Apostles, The Purpled Martyrs, The Choir of Virgins and Confessors. The Antiphon at The Magnificat barely names a class of Saints before it runs to the next class in sheer delight—“O ye Angels, ye Archangels….O ye Patriarchs and Prophets, ye Holy Teachers of The Law,—O ye Apostles,—O all ye Martyrs of Christ, ye holy Confessors, ye Virgins of The Lord, ye Hermits,—O all ye holy children of God”.

As Vespers came to a close, the Lay Catholic of bygone ages retired with all these great themes and concepts, fresh in his mind, preparing himself for the Festivities of the next day. He would have seen Priestly Vestments change through the day from Penitential Violet, to Sombre Black, to White or Gold.

And what, today, forms the Halloween colour palette ? Purple, Black, White and Orange—matching The Church’s Liturgy almost perfectly, save for the characteristic hue of The North American Autumn.




This is Halloween as Traditionally envisioned by The Church: A colourful pageant, where all the Nations, and even The Living, and The Dead, join together to give glory to God.

Regrettably, despite its long history and rich Tradition, The Eve of All Saints was one of The Vigils completely abolished in 1955. As a result, even Traditional Latin Mass Parishes, which generally use The 1962 Liturgical Books, do not offer The Liturgy that I have described above.

The First Vespers of All Saints still remains, of course, even in The 1970 Missal, but the abolition of The Vigil has turned the first part of The Day into simply another generic “Mass of The Season.”

The Triduum, and its subsequent Octave, are no more. Gone, too, are the Liturgical parallels between Halloween, All Saints, and All Souls, with their subtle variations and interwoven themes.



They are vestigially remembered though. Across the globe, the Liturgies of Hallowtide had long been imaginatively amplified by Folk Traditions and customs: “Souling” in The British Isles; “Pão-por-Deus”, in Portugal; “Dia de Muertos”, in Mexico; and “Pangangaluwa”, in The Philippines.

Praying for The Deceased of the family, and of neighbours, was a widespread phenomenon. In some areas, like Scotland and Ireland, children went “Guising”, or, “Masquerading”, after dark, carrying turnip lanterns, and singing, or reciting, Verses for “treats”.

But the original anchor for all of these customs was The Church’s Liturgy. Many of these customs were already seriously compromised after The Reformation—and, in England, Halloween customs had even been abolished by Law. But, when The Church, herself, pulled up the anchor, nothing could stop the various Folk Traditions in even Catholic Countries from drifting aimlessly.

What can we do ? Let us set a good example in our homes, first, restoring The Liturgical Halloween to our hearts and our hearths.



The Texts of this wonderful Vigil, from both The Mass and The Office, give us some excellent Devotions for the day. If you have a Pre-1955 Missal and Breviary, handy [Editor: Which I have, of course], the Prayers are readily available there for you to use.

Alternatively, you can access them On-Line using the Links, above. For convenience, I have also compiled them, and other Devotions, in a Small Booklet, soon to be available from Ancilla Press.

If, nothing else, we would do immense good by taking a few seconds that day, while we prepare for any Festivities, to Devoutly Pray The Collect of All Hallows Eve (Editor: As opposed to “Trick or Treating”).

“Oh, Lord, our God, multiply Thy Graces upon us, and grant that joy may follow in The Holy Praise of those whose glorious Festival we anticipate. Through Our Lord Jesus Christ, Thy Son, Who liveth and reigneth with Thee, in The unity of The Holy Ghost, one God, World Without End.

Amen.




Wednesday 25 September 2019

Fifth Latin Missa Cantata In This Mediæval Church Since 1538. Sung Votive Mass Of The Blessed Virgin Mary.



Saint Augustine's Church, Snave, Ashford, Kent.
A Latin Missa Cantata will be Celebrated here on Saturday, 28 September 2019, 1200 hrs.
Travel Directions are given, below.
It is possible that a small private Chapel stood on this site before the present building was commenced in the Late-13th-Century. The East End is unusual in that The Lady Chapel
(more recently used as a School Room) vies for importance with The Chancel.
Declared redundant in 1983, Saint Augustine's Church is now entirely maintained by
The Romney Marsh Historic Churches Trust.
Text: © 2014 Joan Campbell.
Photograph: © 2014 John Hendy.


Missa Cantata at Saint Augustine's, Snave (near Ashford, Kent), September 2015.
The first time in 477 years that a Latin Sung Mass (Missa Cantata) had been Celebrated
in this beautiful Mediæval Church on Romney Marsh, Kent, England.
On Saturday, 28 September 2019, 1200 hrs, there will be Celebrated
another Missa Cantata in this lovely Church.
Illustration: LATIN MASS SOCIETY

The Latin Mass Society returns to Snave
for a Missa Cantata, at 12 Noon,
Saturday, 28 September 2019.
The Celebrant is Fr. Diaz.
Music will be supplied by The Victoria Consort.
For those unfamiliar with the
superb quality of their singing, a CD,
is available to purchase from
The Latin Mass Society
at LMS SHOP.




Saint Augustine's Church is one of
the Mediæval Churches now in the care of
The Romney Marsh Historic Churches Trust, who have kindly given permission for us to Celebrate The Mass.
Light refreshments will be served after Mass.



Missa Cantata.
Saint Augustine's Church,
Snave, Ashford, Kent TN26 2QJ.
Saturday, 28 September 2019,
1200 hrs.
Celebrant: Fr. Diaz.
Music: The Victoria Consort.
Director: Ben Bevan.


Further Details: Mrs. Marygold Turner.
Telephone: 01580 291372.


Travel Directions to Saint Augustine's Church,
Snave (near Ashford), Kent TN26 2QJ.

By Road.
Leave the M20 at Junction 10.
Follow the A2070 towards Hastings.
After, approx, 9.3 miles, take the Slip Road
to the LEFT (signposted "SNAVE").
At the Post-Box (on your LEFT),
TURN LEFT,
and you have arrived at the Church.
(N.B. Google Maps mark the destination
as "Manor Farm")




By Rail.
Frequent Trains from
Saint Pancras International Railway Station, London, going to
ASHFORD INTERNATIONAL.
Then take a Taxi to SNAVE.


Permission for this Mass at Saint Augustine's Church, Snave, Ashford, Kent,
has been kindly given by




Missa Cantata,
in Saint Augustine's Church,
Snave (near Ashford), Kent TN26 2QJ.
Saturday, 28 September 2019,
1200 hrs.

Snave is one of a group of Mediæval Churches built to serve very small communities on Romney Marsh, in Kent. Now redundant, they are in the care of The Romney Marsh Historic Churches Trust, who have kindly given permission for us to Celebrate Mass on Saturday, 28 September 2019, at 12 noon.

2018 was the fourth time that a Latin Mass had been Celebrated in this beautiful Church since Reformation times. We are delighted to be able to return this year.


Missa Cantata.
Saint Augustine's Church,
Snave, Ashford, Kent TN26 2QJ.
Saturday, 28 September 2019, 1200 hrs.
Celebrant: Fr. Diaz.
Schola: The Victoria Consort.
Director: Ben Bevan.
Further Details:
Mrs. Marygold Turner 01580 291372.


Permission for this Mass at Saint Augustine's Church,
Snave, Ashford, Kent, has been kindly given by

Christkindelsmärik. Strasbourg's Famous Christmas Market.



English: Strasbourg's Christmas Market.
Français: Portail d’entrée lumineux du marché de Noël de Strasbourgplace de Broglie.
En alsacien, Christkindelmarik / marché de l’enfant Jésus.
Photo: 30 November 2014.
Source: Own work.
Attribution: © Claude Truong-Ngoc / Wikimedia Commons
(Wikimedia Commons)

Christkindelsmärik is a Christmas Market (French: Marché de Noël) held annually in StrasbourgFrance, near Strasbourg Cathedral. It draws in approximately two million visitors each year and, since the implementation of the TGV (Train à Grande Vitesse) (High Speed Train) in 2007, the number of visitors has been on the rise.

Hotels are booked a year in advance, and some receive between fifteen-seventeen per cent of their yearly income, thanks to the Christkindelsmärik's visitors. It is considered one of the most famous Christmas Markets throughout Europe. It is thus a considerable source of income for the town of Strasbourg, a small city of approximately 250,000 inhabitants.


English: A Christmas Market Stall in front of Strasbourg Cathedral.
The Cathedral is not for sale.
Français: Façade de la cathédrale de Strasbourg.
Photo: 27 November 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Loïc LLH
(Wikimedia Commons)

It is estimated that the city benefits by a sixteen million Euros profit from this thirty-eight-day-long tradition. It is mostly famous for its fragrance of warm wine and spices which travels throughout the cold Winter streets.

Strasbourg has been holding Christkindelsmärik around its Cathedral since 1570, making it one of the oldest Christmas Markets in Europe. The name "Christkindelsmärik" is Alsatian in origin. A Low Alemannic German dialect, which was the mainly-spoken language in Alsace until the 20th-Century. In many parts of South Germany and Austria, Christmas Markets (German: Weihnachtsmärkte) are also called Christkind(e)l(s)markt (the spelling depends on the local dialect).

The Market takes place annually, from 29 November to 31 December. It mainly takes place on Place Kléber, Place Broglie, Place du Marché aux cochons de lait and around the Cathedral.


English: The Portal of Strasbourg's Christmas Market in Place de Broglie, Strasbourg.
In the local language, Christkindelsmärik means "Market of the Jesus Child".
Français: Portail lumineux du marché de Noël de Strasbourg (place de Broglie).
En alsacien, Christkindelsmärik = marché de l'enfant Jésus.
Photo: 6 December 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: Tangopaso
(Wikimedia Commons)

Tuesday 24 September 2019

Our Lady Of Ransom, Whose Feast Day Is Today, 24 September.


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

Our Lady of Ransom.
   Feast Day 24 September.

Greater-Double.

White Vestments.




Our Blessed Lady of Mercy.
Illustration: TRANSALPINE REDEMPTORISTS
The Web-Site of The Mercedarian Friars is at
THE ORDER OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY OF MERCY



The Blessed Virgin appeared in the 13th-Century to Saint Peter Nolasco (Feast Day 28 January), to Saint Raymund of Pennafort (Feast Day 23 January), and to James, King of Aragon, requesting them to found a Religious Institute with the object of delivering Christian captives from the barbarous Saracens (Collect), who then held a great part of Spain.

In consequence of this, on 10 August 1218, King James of Aragon established The Royal, Military and Religious Order of Our Lady of Ransom (Editor: The Mercedarian Friars), and granted to its Members the privilege of bearing on their breasts his own Coat-of-Arms.

Most of them were Knights, and while the Clerics recited The Divine Office in The Commanderies, they guarded the coasts and delivered prisoners. This pious work spread everywhere and produced heroes of Sanctity and men of incomparable Charity and Piety, who devoted themselves to the collection of Alms for The Ransom of Christians, and who often gave themselves up as prisoners to deliver captives.

This Feast, originally kept only by The Order, was extended to the whole Church by Pope Innocent XII in the 17th-Century.

Mass: Salve, Sancta Parens.
Creed.
Preface: Of The Blessed Virgin Mary: "Et te in Festivitáte".


Royal, Celestial and Military Order of
Our Lady of Mercy and The Redemption
of Captives. Ordo Beatae Mariae de Mercede redemptionis captivorum.



English: Coat-of-Arms of The Mercedarians
Català: Escut de la Orde de la Mercè
Español: Escudo de la Orden de la Merced
Date: 6 April 2011.
Source: [1]
Author: Heralder
(Wikimedia Commons)



The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

The Feast of Our Lady of Ransom is a Roman Catholic Liturgical Marian Feast on 24 September, a Double Major Ranking of Liturgical Days in The Roman Rite, commemorating The Foundation of The Mercedarians.

On 10 August 1223, The Mercedarian Order was legally constituted at Barcelona, Spain, by King James of Aragon, and was approved by Pope Gregory IX on 17 January 1235. The Mercedarians Celebrated their Institution on the Sunday nearest to 1 August (on which date, in the year 1233, The Blessed Virgin was believed to have shown Saint Peter Nolasco The White Habit of The Order), and this custom was approved by The Congregation of Rites on 4 April 1615 (Anal. Juris Pont., VII, 136).

But The Calendar of The Spanish Mercedarians of 1644 has it on 1 August as a Double. Proper Lessons were approved on 30 April 1616. The Feast was granted to Spain (The Sunday which was nearest to 1 August) on 15 February 1680; to France, 4 December 1690. On 22 February 1696, it was extended to the entire Latin Church, and the date changed to 24 September.



The Mercedarians keep this Feast as a Double of The First-Class, with a Vigil, Privileged Octave, and Proper Office, under the Title: "Solemnitas Descensionis B. Mariæ V. de Mercede".

Our Lady of Ransom is The Principal Patron of Barcelona: The Proper Office was extended to Barcelona (1868) and to all Spain (Double of The Second-Class, 1883).

Sicily, which had suffered so much from the Saracens, took up the old date of The Feast (Sunday nearest to 1 August) by permission of The Congregation of Rites, since 31 August 1805 (Double Major), Apparition of Our Lady to Saint Peter Nolasco in The Choir of Barcelona, on The Sunday after 24 September.

In England, The Devotion to Our Lady of Ransom was revived in modern times to obtain the rescue of England as Our Lady's Dowry.

Gloucester Cathedral (Cathedral Church Of Saint Peter And The Holy And Indivisible Trinity). Construction Began In 1089. (Part Five).


Text from Wikipedia - the free encyclopedia,
unless stated otherwise.

Photos from Gloucester Cathedral Web-Site at http://www.gloucestercathedral.org.uk
(Unless otherwise accredited, Photos of Gloucester Cathedral are taken by
Angelo Hornak, Richard Cann, Chris Smith, Esther Platten, Gloucester Cathedral and Gilmere Ltd)


The Cloisters, with their Fan-Vaulted Ceiling,
were used as a location in the Harry Potter films.
Photo: 17 January 2018.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)



Gloucester Cathedral's Lady Chapel.
From Wikimedia Commons.
Photo taken by Mattana, January 2008.


ARCHITECTURE.

Although all periods of Mediæval Church Architecture are represented at Gloucester Cathedral, its two main building phases – Romanesque and Perpendicular, are of outstanding interest and importance.


Gloucester Cathedral.
Available on YouTube at


The Choir, Gloucester Cathedral.
Photo: 9 July 2014.
Source: Own work.
Attribution: "Photo by DAVID ILIFF. License: CC BY-SA 3.0".
Author: Diliff
(Wikimedia Commons)

THE ROMANESQUE ABBEY.

The Romanesque East End is not just the earliest surviving of any great English Church, but also has the oldest extant Chancel, with Ambulatory, in either Normandy or England - "Alan Brooks".

Built by Abbot Serlo, The Foundation Stone was laid in 1089. The Eastern Arm was ready for Dedication in 1100, and The Nave was probably completed about 1130. A very great deal of this Romanesque Church survives, including the entire Crypt, much of The East End above it, the great Nave Piers and most of The North Aisle. The Norman Chapter House also mostly survives.


King Edward II's Tomb, Gloucester Cathedral.
From Wikimedia Commons.
Taken by Auximines, March 2001.


The Early-English Style is represented by The Nave Vault of 1242 and The Screen at The North End of The North Transept. Window Tracery in The South Aisle is typical of The Decorated Style, as are the thousands of Carved Ball-Flowers and the elaborate Stonework of the tomb of Edward II.

THE BIRTH OF PERPENDICULAR.

The remodelling of The East End at Gloucester was carried out between 1331 and about 1355 and arose from the burial in The Abbey of King Edward II. The Courtiers, who surrounded the young Edward III, and the Pilgrims, who came to the Shrine-like tomb, provided the funds to make it possible.

The French “Rayonnant” Style had graduations of tracery which followed a vertical line through window and gallery openings. It seems likely that this came to London through Kentish masons and was tried at St Stephen’s Chapel, Westminster, and in the Chapter House of Old St Paul’s (neither building still surviving).

These design experiments developed into “full-blown Perpendicular” at Gloucester, where The South Window of The South Transept can be seen as the oldest surviving Perpendicular Window anywhere. The first Four-Centred Arch (which later became so popular as “The Tudor Arch”) is also found here. The magnificent Quire and Presbytery were then remodelled in what became the standard English Style of Architecture for more than 200 years.

Gloucester’s other great contribution to English Architecture is Fan-Vaulting, which is now believed to have been invented here in the 1350s. The Fan-Vaulted Cloisters, built for the Monks to live and study in, are now open every day for all to enjoy.



King Edward II's Coat-of-Arms.
He is buried in Gloucester Cathedral.

Edward II (25 April 1284 – 21 September 1327), called Edward of Cærnarfon, was King of England from 1307 until he was deposed by his wife, Isabella, in January 1327. He was the sixth Plantagenet King, in a line that began with the Reign of Henry II.

Between the strong Reigns of his father, Edward I, and son, Edward III, the Reign of Edward II was considered by some to be disastrous for England, marked by alleged incompetence, political squabbling and military defeats.

Widely rumoured to have been either homosexual or bi-sexual, Edward also fathered at least five children by two women. His inability to deny even the most grandiose favours to his male favourites (first a Gascon Knight, named Piers Gaveston, later, a young English Lord, named Hugh Despenser) led to constant political unrest and his eventual deposition.

Edward I had pacified Gwynedd and some other parts of Wales and the Scottish Lowlands, but never exerted a comprehensive conquest. However, the Army of Edward II was devastatingly defeated at Bannockburn, freeing Scotland from English control and allowing Scottish forces to raid unchecked throughout The North of England.

In addition to these disasters, Edward II is remembered for his probable death in Berkeley Castle, allegedly by murder, and for being the first Monarch to establish Colleges at Oxford and Cambridge: Oriel College at Oxford and King's Hall, a predecessor of Trinity College, at Cambridge.


Gloucester Cathedral's Cloister Garth.


THIS CONCLUDES THE ARTICLE ON GLOUCESTER CATHEDRAL.

Monday 23 September 2019

Saint Thecla. Virgin And Martyr. Feast Day, Today, 23 September.


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

Saint Thecla.
   Virgin and Martyr.
   Feast Day 23 September.

Simple.

Red Vestments.



Saint Thecla.

Virgin and Martyr.


"In Lycaonia," says The Roman Martyrology, "Saint Thecla, Virgin and Martyr, who, brought to The Faith by The Holy Apostle Paul, at Iconium (Asia Minor), victoriously underwent the torments of flames and wild beasts, under the Emperor Nero". Having recovered, she died in peace at Seleucia.

Mass: Loquébar.


English: Saint Thecla (Mar Takla) Monastery, Ma'loula, Syria.

Français: Vue du monastère de Sainte-Thècle (Mar Takla), Maaloula, Syrie.
Photo: 1 April 2010.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)



The following Text is from Wikipedia.

Thecla, or Tecla (Ancient Greek: Θέκλα, Thékla), was a Saint of The Early Christian Church, and a reported follower of Paul The Apostle. The earliest record of her life comes from the ancient apocryphal Acts of Paul and Thecla.

The Acts of Paul and Thecla is a 1st- or 2nd-Century A.D. Text, which forms part of The Acts of Paul, but also circulated separately. According to the Text, Thecla was a young noble Virgin from Iconium, who listened to Paul's "discourse on Virginity", espoused the teachings and became estranged to her fiancé, Thamyris, and her mother. They became concerned Thecla would follow Paul's demand, "one must fear only one God and live in Chastity", and turned to the authorities to punish both Paul and Thecla.

Thecla was miraculously saved from burning at the stake by the onset of a storm and travelled with Paul to Antioch of Pisidia. There, a nobleman named Alexander desired Thecla and attempted to take her by force. Thecla fought him off, assaulting him in the process, and was put on trial for assaulting a nobleman. She was sentenced to be eaten by wild beasts, but was again saved by a series of Miracles when the female beasts protected her against her male aggressors. While in the arena, she Baptised herself.

She rejoined Paul in Myra, and travelled to preach The Word of God and became an icon encouraging women to also live a life of Chastity and follow The Word of The Lord. She went to live in Seleucia, Cilicia. According to some versions of The Acts, she lived in a cave there for seventy-two years. Becoming a healer, the Hellenistic physicians in the City lost their livelihood and solicited young men to attack her. As they were about to take her, a new passage was opened in the cave and the stones closed behind her. She was able to go to Rome.


THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL



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