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

Monday 23 December 2019

Missa Cantata In Honour Of The Holy Abbots.



Illustration: A CHAPLAIN ABROAD

Missa Cantata In Honour Of The Holy Abbots.

This Feast is particularly Benedictine.
The Texts of The Mass, and The Musical Setting,
exist only for this Mass.

We do not know the last time that this Mass was Sung.

But, it is our privilege to be able to Celebrate it again.

Saturday, 7 December 2019, saw the Celebration
of a very particular Mass in The Shrine at Glastonbury.

It was in honour of The Benedictine Abbots,
Richard Whiting, Hugh Faringdon, John Beche,
together with the four Benedictine Martyrs, 
including two from our own Monastery at Glastonbury,
Richard James and John Thorne.

You can see pictures and a longer account of this Holy Mass
on The Community Web-Site, HERE.

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

The Seventh Great O Antiphon. 23 December.


Text from "The Liturgical Year",
by Abbot Guéranger, O.S.B.



"The Annunciation".
Artist: Francesco Albani (1578–1660).
Date: First half of the 17th-Century.
Source/Photographer: Web Gallery of Art
Current location: Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg, Russia.
Author: Francesco Albani (1578–1660).
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Church sings this Antiphon
in today's Office of Lauds:

Ecce completa sunt omnia quæ dicta
sunt per angelum, de Virgine Maria.

Lo !, all things are accomplished
that were said by the Angel,
of The Virgin Mary.


SEVENTH GREAT O ANTIPHON.

O Emmanuel,
Rex et legifer noster,
exspectatio Gentium,
et Salvator earum:
veni ad salvandum nos,
Domine Deus noster.

O Emmanuel,
Our King and Lawgiver,
The Expected of the Nations
and their Saviour,
come to save us,
O Lord our God.


O Emmanuel !, King of Peace !, Thou enterest today the City of Thy predilection, the City in which Thou hast placed Thy temple - Jerusalem.

A few years hence, the same City will give Thee Thy Cross and Thy Sepulchre: Nay, the day will come on which Thou wilt set up Thy Judgement-Seat within sight of her walls. But, today, Thou enterest the City of David and Solomon unnoticed and unknown.

It lies on Thy road to Bethlehem [Editor: In Hebrew, Bethlehem means "House of Bread"]. The Blessed Mother and Joseph, her spouse, would not lose the opportunity of visiting the temple, there to offer to The Lord their Prayers and Adoration.


They enter; and then, for the first time, is accomplished the Prophecy of Aggeus, that great shall be the glory of this last house more than of the first; for this second temple has now standing within it an Ark of The Covenant more precious than was that which Moses built; and within this Ark, which is Mary, is contained the God whose presence makes her the holiest of Sanctuaries.

The Lawgiver, Himself, is in this Blessed Ark, and not merely, as in that of old, the tablet of stone on which The Law was graven. The visit paid, our living Ark descends the steps of the temple, and sets out once more for Bethlehem, where other Prophecies are to be fulfilled.

We Adore Thee, O Emmanuel !, in this Thy journey, and we reverence the fidelity wherewith Thou fulfillest all that the Prophets have written of Thee; for Thou wouldst give to Thy people the certainty of Thy being The Messias, by showing them that all the marks, whereby He was to be known, are to be found in Thee.

And now; the hour is near; all is ready for Thy birth; come, then, and save us; come, that Thou mayst not only be called our Emmanuel, but our Jesus, that is, He that saves us.


THE GREAT ANTIPHON TO JERUSALEM.

O Hierusalem !,
civitas Dei sumi,
leva in circuitu oculos tuos;
et vide Dominum tuum,
quia jam veniet solvere
te a vinculis.

O Jerusalem !,
City of The Great God:
Lift up thine eyes round about,
and see thy Lord,
for He is coming to loose
thee from thy chains.

Lo ! All Things Are Accomplished That Were Said By The Angel Of The Virgin Mary. The Antiphon At Lauds.



Text is from "The Liturgical Year",
by Dom Guéranger, O.S.B.
   Volume 1;
   Advent.
   23 December.

O Emmanuel ! King of Peace ! Thou enterest today The City of Thy predilection, the City in which Thou hast placed Thy Temple - Jerusalem. A few years hence, the same City will give Thee Thy Cross and Thy Sepulchre; nay, the day will come on which Thou wilt set up Thy Judgement-Seat within sight of her walls.

But today Thou enterest The City of David and Solomon unnoticed and unknown. It lies on Thy road to Bethlehem. Thy Blessed Mother and Joseph, her spouse, would not lose the opportunity of visiting the Temple, there to offer to The Lord their Prayers and Adoration.


They enter; and then, for the first time, is accomplished the Prophecy of Aggeus, that great shall be the glory of this last House more than of the first; for this second Temple has now, standing within it, an Ark of The Covenant more precious than was that which Moses built; and within this Ark, which is Mary, is contained the God Whose presence makes her The Holiest of Sanctuaries.

The Lawgiver, Himself, is in this Blessed Ark, and not merely, as in that of Old, the Tablet of Stone on which The Law was graven. The visit paid, our Living Ark descends the steps of the Temple, and sets out once more for Bethlehem, where other Prophecies are to be fulfilled.


We adore Thee, O Emmanuel ! in this Thy journey, and we reverence the fidelity wherewith Thou fulfillest all that the Prophets have written of Thee; for Thou wouldst give to Thy people the certainty of Thy being the Messias, by showing them that all the marks, whereby He was to be known, are to be found in Thee.

And, now, the hour is near; all is ready for Thy Birth; come, then, and save us; come, that Thou mayst not only be called our Emmanuel, but Our Jesus, that is, He that saves us.

Ero cras !

" Tomorrow, I Will Be ! "

The Great O Antiphons. 23 December.


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




"The Adoration of The Shepherds".
Artist: Gerard van Honthorst (1590–1656).
Date: 25 December 1622.
Current location: Wallraf-Richartz-Museum, Cologne, Germany.
Source/Photographer: The Yorck Project: 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei.
DVD-ROM, 2002. ISBN 3936122202. Distributed by DIRECTMEDIA Publishing GmbH.
Permission: http://mail.wikipedia.org/pipermail/wikide-l/2005-April/012195.html.
(Wikimedia Commons)






"O Emmanuel".
The Great O Antiphon
for 23 December.
Available on YouTube at
YOU TUBE


23 December: Isaias vii. 14, xxxiii. 22

O Emmanuel,
Rex et legifer noster,
exspectatio Gentium,
et Salvator earum:
veni ad salvandum nos,
Domine Deus noster.

O Emmanuel,
our King and Lawgiver,
The Expected of the Nations
and their Saviour,
come to save us,
O Lord our God.

Versicle. Rorate.

“Rorate cæli desuper, et nubes pluant justium . . .”

“Ye Heavens, drop down from above,
and let the clouds rain down The Just One”.


"Rorate Cæli".
Available on YouTube at

Roráte caéli désuper, et núbes plúant jústum. Peccávimus, et fácti súmus tamquam immúndus nos, et cecídimus quasi fólium univérsi: et iniquitátes nóstræ quasi véntus abstulérunt nos: 
abscondísti faciem túam a nóbis,
et allisísti nos in mánu iniquitátis nóstræ.

Víde Dómine afflictiónem pópuli túi,
et mítte quem missúrus es:
emítte Agnum dominatórem térræ,
de Pétra desérti ad móntem fíliæ Síon:
ut áuferat ípse júgum captivitátis nóstræ.

Consolámini, consolámini, pópule méus:
cito véniet sálus túa:
quare mæróre consúmeris,
quia innovávit te dólor?
Salvábo te, nóli timére,
égo enim sum Dóminus Déus túus,
Sánctus Israël, Redémptor túus.


Drop down ye Heavens, from above,
and let the skies pour down righteousness:

We have sinned, and are as an unclean thing,
and we all do fade as a leaf:
and our iniquities, like the wind, have taken us away;
Thou hast hid Thy face from us:
and hast consumed us, because of our iniquities.

Behold, O Lord, the affliction of Thy people
and send forth Him Who is to come
send forth The Lamb, The Ruler of the Earth,
from Petra of the desert
to the mount of the daughter of Sion
that He may take away the yoke of our captivity.


Ye are my witnesses, saith The Lord,
and My servant whom I have chosen;
that ye may know Me and believe Me:
I, even I, am The Lord, and beside Me there is no Saviour: 
and there is none that can deliver out of My hand.

Comfort ye, comfort ye, My people,
My Salvation shall not tarry:
why wilt thou waste away in sadness ?
why hath sorrow seized thee ?
Fear not, for I will save thee:
for I am The Lord thy God
The Holy One of Israel, thy Redeemer.

Sunday 22 December 2019

Christmas Services 2019 At Durham Cathedral.



Illustration: DURHAM CATHEDRAL

Christmas Services
at Durham Cathedral
can be found HERE.

Zephyrinus Has Been Invited To Spend Christmas With Friends In Scotland. He's Travelling On The Caledonian Railway.



Illustration: PINTEREST

Zephyrinus's New Fridge Has Arrived !!! Perkins (Chauffeur) And Jeeves (Butler) Are Threatening To Leave.



Illustration: PINTEREST

“Ad Maiorem Dei Gloriam¨ (A.M.D.G.). “To The Greater Glory Of God”. Beautiful Vestments From Gammarelli Of Rome.



A Recently-Commissioned Green Vestment Set
from Gammarelli of Rome.
Photo: OC-Travel.

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


By: John Paul Sonnen

Recently, while attending an FSSP Confirmation, I was impressed to see this new Green Set of Roman Vestments at The Church of Saint Anthony, in Calgary, Canada.

In an age when many Ecclesiastical Vestments have ceased to reflect the Intense Mystery, August Splendour, and Important Quality, of “Other Worldliness” in The Church's Liturgy, it is a breath of fresh air to see this and other such interesting new Vestment Projects that are springing up here and there.

This specific project was initiated by the much-loved Pastor, Fr. Antony Sumich, FSSP, when he was posted to Saint Anthony's “Latin Mass” Community.


Illustration: GAMMARELLI

Fundraising was arranged by devoted Parishioners, spearheaded by Sir Henry Kutarna, a “Knight Of The Most Noble Equestrian Order Of The Holy Sepulchre Of Jerusalem”. The aim was to provide the highest quality new, complete, matching Sets of Vestments, in all The Liturgical Colours.

Donors gave for whole Sets, or parts of Sets. The Pope's own Tailor, “Gammarelli”, was Commissioned and the Custom Vestments were designed and made at the storied Gammarelli Studio, in Rome.

Gammarelli also provided the impressive Baroque Coat-of-Arms, stitched by way of a computerised sewing machine, a service they also provide. Further, embroidered inscriptions were included in the Inner Lining of the Vestments, discreetly displaying the names of the Donors as a simple reminder for the Vesting Priest to offer a brief “Memento” Prayer for them.

The Gammarelli Motto is an important one: “Nobilitas in Traditione”.
I encourage Readers to take a look at Signor Gammarelli's NEW WEB-SITE that was recently launched and to consider a similar project for your Parish Church.

Saint Anthony Parishioners believe these Vestments will last 150 years.

The Gammarelli Web-Site can be found HERE

For Anybody Who Is Even Thinking About Drinking And Driving Over Christmas: Please Read This Article. AND DON'T.


This Article is taken from, and can be read in full at,
KENT FIRE AND RESCUE SERVICE


Chloe’s Road To Recovery

After A Head-On Drink Driver Crash.




All Illustrations: KENT FIRE AND RESCUE SERVICE


Kent Fire And Rescue Service.
Available on YouTube at

Broken legs, a shattered elbow, multiple breaks to the pelvis, a broken sternum, arm, jaw, cheek bone and eye socket, and internal damage to the spleen, kidneys and heart.


Despite these horrific injuries sustained from a Head-On Crash, caused by a Drink Driver, Chloe Dean from Ashford, Kent, does not let what was an almost life ending experience define her.

She’s learning to live again, to walk, and be able to play with her young children – striving to be the person she was before the accident.

And while others would feel anger, her wishes for the man who is now serving time for causing her ordeal, are that of learning, rehabilitation and positivity.


The remarkable 29-year-old mother of three continues to rebuild her life 18-months on, and is now sharing her story in the hope of preventing further accidents caused by Drink Drivers - providing a wake-up call to anyone who’s considering Drinking and Driving this Christmas.

The Great O Antiphons. 22 December.


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



English: Adoration Of The Shepherds (Detail).
Deutsch: Anbetung der Hirten, Detail.
Artist: Guido Reni (1575–1642).
Date: 1630 - 1642.
Current location: Certosa di San Martino, Naples, Italy.
(Wikimedia Commons)


"O Rex Gentium".
The Great O Antiphon for 22 December.
Available on YouTube at

22 December: Aggeus ii. 8; Ephesians ii. 14, 20

O Rex Gentium,
et desideratus earum,
lapisque angularis,
qui facis utraque unum:
veni, et salva hominem,
quem de limo formasti.

O King of the Gentiles,
and The Desired of them,
Thou cornerstone that makest both one,
come and deliver man,
whom Thou didst form out of
the dust of the Earth.

Versicle. Rorate.

“Rorate cæli desuper, et nubes pluant justium . . .”

“Ye Heavens, drop down from above,
and let the clouds rain down The Just One”.


"Rorate Caeli".
Available on YouTube at

Saturday 21 December 2019

Knights And Holy Roman Emperors In Mediæval Papal Matins Of Christmas. And The Hour Before The First Mass Of Christmas. By Abbot Guéranger, O.S.B.


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


Midnight Mass of The Nativity, at the Church of Santissima Trinita dei Pellegrini, Rome.
Photo courtesy of Selina Fang, Juventutem London.


In “The Liturgical Year”, written by Dom Prosper Guéranger, O.S.B., he recounts what must have been one of the most sublime Ceremonies in Christendom: Papal Matins. The Ceremonial calls for a Knight to read The Fifth Lesson and for The Holy Roman Emperor to read The Seventh Lesson, bearing witness to the organic whole that was Mediæval Society.

The Divine Infant, Who is born amongst us, is The Mighty God, The Prince of Peace, Whose government is upon His shoulders (Isaiah ix, 6). We sing these words on Christmas Day, with the whole Church. We have already seen how The God of Hosts has honoured this power of “Emmanuel” [Editor: “God with us”], by leading powerful nations to The Crib of Bethlehem, of The Lord, Whom they Adore.

The same recognition of that Babe, as “The Mighty God”, is made by the Ceremony to which we allude.

The Sovereign Pontiff, The Vicar of Our Emmanuel, Blesses, in His Name, a Sword and Helmet, which are to be sent to a Catholic Warrior who has deserved well of The Christian World.


In a Letter addressed to Queen Mary of England, and Philip, her husband, Cardinal Pope gives an explanation of this Solemn Rite. The Sword is sent to some Prince, whom The Vicar of Christ wishes to honour in The Name of Jesus, Who is King: For the Angel said to Mary: "The Lord will give unto Him The Throne of David, His father (Saint Luke i, 32). It is from Him, alone, that The Power of The Sword comes (Saint Luke xiii 3, 4); for God said to Cyrus: I have girded thee (with The Sword) (Isaiah xiv 1, 5); and The Psalmist thus speaks to The Christ of God: Gird Thy Sword upon Thy thigh, O Thou Most Mighty ! (Ps. xliv, 4).

And because the Sword should not be drawn in the cause of justice, it is for that reason that it is Blessed on this night, in the midst of which rises, born unto us, The Divine Sun of Justice. On the Helmet, which is both the ornament and protection of the head, there is worked, in Pearls, the Dove, which is the Emblem of The Holy Ghost; It is not a question of love or ambition, but it is not only of The Spirit of The Spirit, but of the motive of spreading The Kingdom of Christ.

[ . . . .During The Second Night, after The Psalms have been sung] The Book of The Sermons of The Holy Fathers is opened, and one of the most beautiful speeches of Pope Saint Leo the Great, which enraptured the people of Rome in the 5th-Century A.D., is sung.

At Rome, if there be in The Holy City, the Knight, who has received The Helmet and Sword, Blessed, we have described, by The Sovereign Pontiff, The Fifth Lesson is given to him to sing, because it speaks of The Great Battle between Christ and Satan in The Glorious Mystery of The Incarnation.


Whilst the Choir is singing “The Great O Response” “Magnum Mysterium”, the Knight is taken by the Master of Ceremonies to the Pope. Standing before the Holy Father, he draws his Sword, thrice sets its point on the ground, thrice brandishes it in the air, and then wipes the blade on his Left-Arm.

He is then taken to the Ambo, or Reading-Desk, takes off his Helmet, and, having Vested the Cope over his armour, he sings The Lesson. These Ceremonies, of Our Holy Mother, The Church of Rome, were drawn up in days when Might was not Right , and brute force was made subservient to moral power and principle. The Christian Warrior, cased in his steel armour, was resolved, as indeed he was bound, never to draw his Sword save in The Cause of Christ, The Conqueror of Satan: Was there anything strange in his expressing this by a Sacred Ceremony ?

[ . . . After The Third Nocturn] are read the beginnings of the three Gospels which are said in The Three Masses of Christmas Day. To each portion of these Gospels is appended a passage from a Sermon by one of The Holy Fathers.

The first of the three is that of Saint Luke, and the Sermon given is that of Saint Gregory the Great. It relates to the publishing of The Emperor Augustus's Edict, commanding a census of the whole World. This Seventh Lesson, according to The Ceremonial of The Roman Church, is to be sung by The Holy Roman Emperor, if he happen to be in Rome at the time; and this is done in order to honour The Imperial Power, whose decrees were the occasion of Mary and Joseph going to Bethlehem, and so fulfilling the designs of God, which He had revealed to the ancient Prophets.


The Holy Roman Emperor is led to the Pope, in the same manner as the Knight, who had to sing The Fifth Lesson; he puts on the Cope; two Cardinal-Deacons gird him with the Sword, and go with him to the Ambo. The Lesson being concluded, The Holy Roman Emperor again goes before the Pope, and kisses his foot, as being The Vicar of The Christ Whom he has just announced. This Ceremony was observed in 1468 by The Holy Roman Emperor Frederic III, before the then Pope, Paul II.

(Translation from the original French, of Abbot Guéranger, by Dom Laurence Shepherd, O.S.B.).


[Note; This Text refers to The Hour Before The Midnight Service on Christmas Eve, just prior to The First Mass of Christmas. Please also Note that this Text was written Circa 1875.]


The following Text is taken from “The Liturgical Year”,
by Abbot Guéranger, O.S.B.
Volume 2.
Christmas - Book 1.

And now we will leave The House of God, and attend to the duties of our state of life at home, until the hour of Matins summons us to return and Celebrate The Midnight Birth of Our Saviour.

In order to prepare ourselves for that most imposing Service, we shall do well to resume the reflections upon The Liturgy of our Feast, which we interrupted in order to assist at Vespers.

How few would keep from The Service of Christmas Night, and how still fewer would complain that they never seem to derive that benefit from it, which they are told is so great, if they would but take the pains to ask themselves why is it that The Church attaches such importance to her children's joining her in The Celebration of this gay Winter Midnight !

To assist the Devotion of The Faithful, we offer them these simple instructions for

THE HOUR BEFORE
THE MIDNIGHT SERVICE.


We will begin by telling them that, in the early ages of The Church, every great Feast was prepared for by long Vigils; during which, the people deprived themselves of their usual rest, and spent the hours in the Church, fervently joining in The Psalms and Lessons which made up The Office, which we now call “Matins”

The Night was divided into three parts called “Nocturns”.

At Dawn of Day, they resumed their Chants in an Office which was even more Solemn than Matins: It was one of Praise, and, from this characteristic, was called by the name of "Lauds". This Service, which occupied a very considerable portion of the Night, is still kept up, though at a time less trying to nature; Matins and Lauds are publicly recited every day in Cathedrals and Monastic Churches, and privately by everyone in Holy Orders. They are by far the longest portion of The Divine Office.

The want of the old spirit of devoted appreciation of The Liturgy has made the Laity indifferent to being present at The Celebration of Matins, and this even in Countries where Protestantism has not rendered their presence almost an impossibility.


Thus, there are very few places where the people assist at Matins, excepting four times in the Year; namely, on the three last Days of Holy Week, and on Christmas Night. It is only on the last named that The Office is said at the same hour as anciently; for, with regard to Tenebræ, they are recited on the afternoons respectively preceding each of the three days.


The Office of Christmas Night has always been Said or Sung with extraordinary Solemnity. Firstly, it was so Just, that the moments immediately preceding The Hour when The Holy Mother gave birth to her Jesus, should be spent in the most fervent Prayers and Watchings before The Altar !

But, Secondly, The Church is not satisfied tonight with saying her Matins - she does so every night, and The Faithful may come and assist at them as often as they wish; she follows them by the Celebration of The Holy Sacrifice of The Mass, that so she may the better Solemnise The Divine Birth; and she begins her Mass at Midnight, for it was at that silent hour that The Virgin Mother gave us The Blessed Fruit of her Womb. We cannot be surprised that The Faithful, in many parts of Christendom, used to spend the whole Night in the Church.

In Rome, for many Centuries - at least from the 7th-Century A.D. to the 11th-Century, two Matins were sung, the first in the Basilica of Saint Mary Major (Santa Maria Maggiore). They commenced immediately after Sunset. There was no Invitatory. As soon as they were ended, the Pope Celebrated The First, or Midnight, Mass. No sooner was it finished, than the people accompanied him to The Church of Saint Anastasia, and there he sung The Second Mass of Christmas, or, as it was called, The Aurora Mass.


Again, the Pontiff and people formed a Procession - this time it was to Saint Peter's Basilica - and, having entered the Basilica, The Second Matins were begun. They had an Invitatory, and were followed by Lauds. The other Hours having been sung, the Pope said The Third Mass of Christmas, (and the last Mass of Christmas) at the hour of Terce, which is our 0900 hrs.

We are indebted for these details to Amalarius and to the ancient Liturgist of the 13th-Century, published under the name of Alcuin.

[Editor: Amalarius (Circa 775 A.D. – Circa.850 A.D.) was a Frankish Prelate and Courtier, temporary Bishop of Trier (811 A.D. – 813 A.D.) and Bishop of Lyon (865 A.D. – 868 A.D.) and an accomplished Liturgist. He was close to Charlemagne and a partisan of his successor, Louis the Pious, throughout the latter's tumultuous reign.

He was appointed The Third Archbishop of Trier in 811 A.D. by Charlemagne. In 813 A.D., he was sent as the chief Frankish Ambassador to The Court of Michael I Rhangabes at Constantinople. On Charlemagne's death in 814 A.D., Amalarius resigned his See.


In 831 A.D., Amalarius travelled to Rome to meet Pope Gregory IV and arrange a new Frankish Liturgy. In 835 A.D., he replaced Agobard at The Synod of Diedenhofen. During Agobard's exile (Circa 834 A.D.), he was responsible for administering The Diocese of Lyon. He implemented Liturgical Reforms.

He wrote extensively on The Mass, including The Liber Officialis, and was involved in the great Mediæval debates regarding “Predestination”.

We must rely on his enemy, Florus of Lyon, for an account of Amalarius' condemnation on the accusation of heresy, at Quierzy, 838 A.D., which banned some of his Works. Nevertheless, his writings form a good portion of our current documentation of the 9th-Century A.D. Liturgies of The Western Church.


While the exact date of his death is not known, it is believed that it happened around 850 A.D. in Metz, France.]

We also find the details, of these Early-Church Celebrations of The Hour Before The Midnight Service of Christmas, clearly indicated by the Text of the old Antiphonaries of The Roman Church, which were published by The Blessed Joseph Maria Tommasi, and by Gallicioli.

How lively was The Faith of those olden times ! To people who lived unceasingly amidst The Mysteries of Religion, Prayer was a tie which knit them closely together, and made them pass hours in the Church without weariness.

They understood the value of The Prayers of The Church; and The Ceremonies of The Liturgy, which complete the tribute of man's inward Worship of his Creator, were not looked upon as, unfortunately, they now so often are, as a dumb show, or, at best, an unmeaning poetry introduced for effect.. What, in our days, are found only in individuals, were then in the mass of the people - Faith, and a keen sense of the Supernatural.

“THE LITURGICAL YEAR”, by Abbot Guéranger, O.S.B., is available from
LORETO PUBLICATIONS

Saturday In Ember Week Of Advent.


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

Saturday in Ember Week Of Advent.

Station at Saint Peter's.

Indulgence of 10 Years and 10 Quarantines.

Violet Vestments.





Saturday is the most solemn of The Ember Days, because that was the day on which The Church Ordained her Priests in the great Basilica of Saint Peter. This Ordination in the tenth month of the Roman year (called, for that reason, December) was the only one formerly known in Rome. Hence, it was an important date.

Everything in The Mass, moreover, bears the character of a very ancient Liturgy. It calls to mind, with its numerous Lessons, intermingled with Responses and Prayers, the earliest form of the introductory part of The Mass.

The Soul that is penetrated with it finds itself filled with a Holy Impatience, and, with The Church, it aspires to the New Birth of The Only Begotten Son of God, Who comes to deliver us from the yoke of sin (Second Collect).


"While, with confidence, she awaits The Lord Jesus, Who shall deliver us from our enemies, destroying Anti-Christ with the brightness of His Coming" (Epistle).

The Gospel brings before us the image of Saint John the Baptist, The Precursor, who prepares our Souls each year for The Coming of The Saviour. The same Gospel is again found in The Mass of the following day, because, formerly, the Ordination, taking place in the evening, lasted well into the night, thus encroaching on the Sunday, provided it with its Liturgy.

Mass: Veni, et osténde.

After The Kyrie eleison, the Bishop confers The Tonsure.

After The First Lesson, the Bishop Ordains The Door-Keepers.

After The Second Lesson, the Bishop Ordains The Readers.

After The Third Lesson, the Bishop Ordains The Exorcists.

After The Fourth Lesson, the Bishop Ordains The Acolytes.

After The Fifth Lesson, the Bishop Ordains The Sub-Deacons.

After The Epistle, the Bishop Ordains The Deacons.

After The Tract, the Bishop Ordains The Priests.


The Four Seasons of the Year begin with the Liturgical periods known as Ember Weeks. They are known since the 5th-Century A.D., but they were fixed to their present dates by Pope Saint Gregory VII in the 12th-Century.

The Ember Days are Three Fast Days, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, intended to Consecrate to God the various Seasons in Nature, and to prepare those who are about to be Ordained.

The Gospel recalls Gabriel's mission to Mary to inform her that she was about to become The Mother of God.

No human voice, but an Angel's, must make known the Mystery of such message. Today, for the first time, are heard the words: "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee." They are heard and believed. "Behold," says Mary, "the handmaid of The Lord, be it done to me according to thy word" (Third Lesson). During seven Centuries, now, Isaias had foretold this Virgin Motherhood (Epistle, Communion).


Circa 1950: The Vicar and Sunday School Children go out into the fields
to Bless the crops. The little boy is carrying a symbolic Tree of Plenty.
Picture Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images.
Illustration: ABOUT RELIGION

Rogation Days.

Rogation Days, like their distant cousins, The Ember Days, are days set aside to observe a change in the Seasons. Rogation Days are tied to the Spring planting. There are Four Rogation Days: The Major Rogation, which falls on 25 April, and Three Minor Rogations, which are Celebrated on the Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday immediately before Ascension Thursday.

For An Abundant Harvest.

As The Catholic Encyclopedia notes, Rogation Days are "Days of Prayer, and formerly, also of Fasting, instituted by The Church to appease God's anger at man's transgressions, to ask protection in calamities, and to obtain a good and bountiful harvest."


Illustration: ABOUT RELIGION

Origin Of The Word.

Rogation is simply an English form of the Latin "Rogatio", which comes from the verb "Rogare", which means "to ask." The primary purpose of The Rogation Days is to ask God to Bless the fields and the Parish (the geographic area) that they fall in.

The Major Rogation likely replaced the Roman feast of "Robigalia", on which (The Catholic Encyclopedia notes) "the heathens held processions and supplications to their gods." While the Romans directed their prayers for good weather and an abundant harvest to a variety of gods, the Christians made the Tradition their own, by replacing Roman polytheism with monotheism, and directing their Prayers to God.

By the time of Pope Saint Gregory the Great (540 A.D. - 604 A.D.), the Christianised Rogation Days were already considered an ancient custom.

The Litany, Procession, And Mass.

The Rogation Days were marked by the recitation of The Litany of The Saints, which would normally begin in, or at, a Church. After Saint Mary was invoked, the Congregation would proceed to walk the boundaries of the Parish, while reciting the rest of The Litany (and repeating it as necessary or supplementing it with some of The Penitential or Gradual Psalms). Thus, the entire Parish would be Blessed, and the boundaries of the Parish would be marked. The procession would end with a Rogation Mass, in which all in the Parish were expected to take part.


Sunday School Children Celebrate Rogation Day in 1953.
A photo at Market Lavington Museum, Wiltshire, England.

Optional Today.

Like The Ember Days, Rogation Days were removed from The Liturgical Calendar when it was revised in 1969, coinciding with the introduction of The Mass of Paul VI (The Novus Ordo).

Parishes can still Celebrate them, though very few in The United States do; but, in portions of Europe, The Major Rogation is still Celebrated with a Procession. As The Western World has become more industrialised, Rogation Days and Ember Days, focused as they are on agriculture and the changes of the Seasons, have seemed less "relevant." Still, they are good ways to keep us in touch with nature and to remind us that The Church's Liturgical Calendar is tied to the changing Seasons.

Celebrating The Rogation Days.

If your Parish does not celebrate The Rogation Days, there's nothing to stop you from Celebrating them yourself. You can mark the Days by reciting The Litany of The Saints. And, while many modern Parishes, especially in The United States, have boundaries that are too extensive to walk, you could learn where those boundaries are and walk a portion of them, getting to know your surroundings, and maybe your neighbours, in the process. Finish it all off by attending daily Mass and Praying for good weather and a fruitful harvest.


Saint Michael's Church, Bunwell, Norfolk, England, has always been
the centre of Village Life. In this picture, taken on Rogation Sunday,
April 1967, the Rector, Rev. Samuel Collins, followed by the Choir,
Parishioners, and The New Buckenham Silver Band, walk
The Parish Boundaries and pause to Bless the stream.
Illustration: BUNWELL HERITAGE GROUP

References in The Liturgy, connecting The Annunciation with Advent, date back to very early times. Many Churches observed this Feast on 18 December, in preference to 25 March, the latter date often falling in Lent.

Furthermore, this First Joyful Mystery of The Blessed Virgin is in keeping with the spirit of joy, which is so characteristic of the second half of The Season of Advent, when The Lord, Who is nigh, is so eagerly awaited (Second Gradual). Who, having appeared in the humility of His First Coming to save us (Collect), will come again like a King, full of glory (First Gradual), to take vengeance on His enemies and to deliver us forever (Offertory).


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

In The Liturgical Calendar of The Western Christian Churches, Ember Days are four separate Sets of Three Days within the same Week — specifically, the Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday — roughly equidistant in the circuit of the Year, that are set aside for Fasting and Prayer.

These Days set apart for Special Prayer and Fasting were considered especially suitable for The Ordination of Clergy. The Ember Days are known in Latin as the "quattuor anni tempora" (the "Four Seasons of The Year"), or, formerly, as the "jejunia quattuor temporum" ("Fasts of The Four Seasons").

The Four Quarterly Periods, during which The Ember Days fall, are called The Embertides.

The Great O Antiphons. 21 December.


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



English: "Madonna And Child With Two Angels".
Deutsch: Madonna und zwei Engel.
Italiano: Madonna con due angeli.
Date: 1468 - 1469.
Source/Photographer: The Yorck Project: 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei.
DVD-ROM, 2002. ISBN 3936122202.
Distributed by DIRECTMEDIA Publishing GmbH.
Permission: [1]
(Wikimedia Commons)


"O Oriens".
The Great O Antiphon for 21 December.
Available on YouTube at

21 December: Psalm cvi. 10

O Oriens,
splendor lucis æternæ,
et sol justitiæ;
veni et illumina sedentes in tenebris,
et umbra mortis.

O Dawn of The East,
brightness of The Light Eternal,
and Sun of Justice;
come and enlighten them that sit in darkness,
and in the shadow of death.

Versicle. Rorate.

“Rorate caeli desuper, et nubes pluant justium . . .”

“Ye Heavens, drop down from above,
and let the clouds rain down The Just One”.


" Rorate Caeli ".
Available on YouTube at

Friday 20 December 2019

For Anybody Who Is Even Thinking About Drinking And Driving Over Christmas: Please Read This Article. AND DON'T.


This Article is taken from, and can be read in full at,
KENT FIRE AND RESCUE SERVICE


Chloe’s Road To Recovery

After A Head-On Drink Driver Crash.




All Illustrations: KENT FIRE AND RESCUE SERVICE


Kent Fire And Rescue Service.
Available on YouTube at

Broken legs, a shattered elbow, multiple breaks to the pelvis, a broken sternum, arm, jaw, cheek bone and eye socket, and internal damage to the spleen, kidneys and heart.


Despite these horrific injuries sustained from a Head-On Crash, caused by a Drink Driver, Chloe Dean from Ashford, Kent, does not let what was an almost life ending experience define her.

She’s learning to live again, to walk, and be able to play with her young children – striving to be the person she was before the accident.

And while others would feel anger, her wishes for the man who is now serving time for causing her ordeal, are that of learning, rehabilitation and positivity.


The remarkable 29-year-old mother of three continues to rebuild her life 18-months on, and is now sharing her story in the hope of preventing further accidents caused by Drink Drivers - providing a wake-up call to anyone who’s considering Drinking and Driving this Christmas.
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