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

Tuesday 24 December 2019

Christmas Eve. 24 December.


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

“The Liturgical Year”,
by Abbot Guéranger, O.S.B.
   Volume 1.
   Advent.



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

“At length,” says Saint Peter Damian, in his Sermon for this Holy Eve, “at length we have come from the stormy sea into the tranquil port; 
hitherto, it was the promise, now, it is the prize; 
hitherto, labour, now rest; 
hitherto, despair, now hope; 
hitherto, the way, now our home.

“The heralds of The Divine Promise came to us; but they gave us nothing but rich promises. Hence, our Psalmist himself grew wearied and slept, and, with a seemingly reproachful tone, thus sings his lamentation to God: “But, Thou hast rejected and despised us; Thou hast deferred the coming of Thy Christ.” [Psalm LXXXVIII].

At another time, he assumes a tone of command and thus Prays: “O, Thou, that sittest upon the Cherubim, show Thyself !” [Ibid. LXXIX].


Christmas Midnight Mass,
Cologne Cathedral, Germany,.
Available on YouTube at

Seated on Thy High Throne, with myriads of adoring Angels around Thee, look down upon the children of men, who are victims of that sin, which was committed indeed by Adam, but permitted by Thy Justice. Remember what my substance is; [Ibid. LXXXVIII].

Thou didst make it to the likeness of Thine own; for though every living man is vanity, yet inasmuch as he is made to Thy image, he is not a passing vanity [Ibid. XXXVIII].

Bend Thy Heavens and come down, and turn the eyes of Thy Mercy upon us, Thy miserable supplicants, and forget us not unto the end !


Midnight Mass at Saint Stanislaus Church,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin,United States of America.
Available on YouTube at

“Isaias”, also, in the vehemence of his desire, thus spoke: “For Sion's sake, I will not hold my peace, and, for the sake of Jerusalem, I will not rest, till her Just One come forth as Brightness. Oh !, that Thou wouldst rend The Heavens, and wouldst come down !”.

So, too, all the Prophets, tired of the long delay of the coming, have Prayed to Thee, now with supplication, now with lamentation, and now with cries of impatience. We have listened to these their Prayers; we have made us of them as our own, and, now, nothing can give us joy or gladness, till Our Saviour come to us, and, kissing us with the kiss of His lips, say to us: “I have heard and granted your Prayers.”

“But, what is this that has been said to us: “Sanctify yourselves, O, ye children of Israel, and be ready; for, on the morrow, The Lord will come down” ? We are, then, but one half day and night from the grand visit, the admirable birth of The Infant God !



Hurry on your course, ye fleeting hours, that we may the sooner see The Son of God in His crib, and pay our homage to this world-saving birth. You, brethren, are the children of Israel, that are sanctified and cleansed from every defilement of Soul and body, ready, by your earnest Devotion, for tomorrow's Mysteries.

Such, indeed, your are, if I may judge from the manner in which you have spent these Sacred Days of Preparation for The Coming of your Saviour.

“Bur, if, notwithstanding all your care, some drops of the stream of this life's frailties are still on your hearts, wipe them away and cover them with the Snow-White Robe of Confession. This, I can promise you from the Mercy of The Divine Infant; He that shall confess his sins and be sorry for them, shall have born within him The Light of The World; the darkness that deceived him shall be dispelled; and he shall enjoy the Brightness of The True Light.

For, how can Mercy be denied to the miserable this night, in which the merciful and compassionate Lord is so mercifully born ? Therefore, drive away from you all haughty looks and idle words, and unjust works; let your loins be girt, and your feet walk in the right paths; and then come, and accuse The Lord, if this night He rend not The Heavens, and come down to you, and throw all your sins into the depths of the sea.”



This Holy Eve is, indeed, a Day of Grace and Hope, and we ought to spend it in Spiritual Joy. The Church, contrary to her general practice, prescribes that, if Christmas Eve fall on a Sunday, the Fasting alone shall be Anticipated on The Saturday; but that The Office and Mass of The Vigil should take precedence of The Office and Mass of The Fourth Sunday of Advent.

How Solemn, then, in the eyes of The Church, are these few hours, which separate us from The Great Feast ! On all other Feasts, no matter how great they may be, the Solemnity begins with First Vespers, and, until then, The Church restrains her joy, and Celebrates The Divine Office and Sacrifice according to The Lenten Rite.

Christmas, on the contrary, seems to begin with The Vigil; and one would suppose that this morning's Lauds were the opening of The Feast; for the Solemn Intonation of this portion of The Office is that of a Double, and the Antiphons are sung before and after each Psalm or Canticle.

The Purple Vestments are used at The Mass, but all The Genuflections peculiar to The Advent Ferias are omitted; and only one Collect is said, instead of the three usually said when The Mass is not that of a Solemnity.



Let us enter into the spirit of The Church, and prepare ourselves, in all the joy of our hearts, to meet The Saviour Who is coming to us. Let us observe with strictness the Fast which is prescribed; it will enable our bodies to aid the promptness of our spirit. Let us delight in the thought that, before we again lie down to rest, we shall have seen Him born, in the Solemn Midnight, Who comes to give Light to every creature. For, surely, it is the duty of every Faithful child of The Catholic Church to celebrate with her this Happy Night, when, in spite of all the coldness of Devotion, the whole Universe keeps up its Watch for the arrival of its Saviour.

It is one of the last vestiges of the piety of ancient days, and God forbid it should ever be effaced !

Let us, in a spirit of Prayer, look at the principal portions of The Office of this beautiful Vigil. First, then, The Church makes a mysterious announcement to her children. It serves as the Invitatory of Matins, and as the Introit and Gradual of The Mass.

They are the words which Moses addressed to the people of God when he told them of The Heavenly Manna, which they would receive on the morrow.



We. too, are expecting our Manna, our Jesus, The Bread of Life, Who is to be born in Bethlehem, which name means “The House of Bread”.


“The Liturgical Year”,
by Dom Prosper Guéranger, O.S.B.,
is available from

“Rejoice Greatly . . . Behold, Thy King Cometh Unto Thee”. A Peaceful Christmas Be Thine.





[Editor: There appears to be six Reindeer missing.
There should, of course, be nine Reindeer.
Can you name them all ?
Answers at the foot of this Article.]
Illustration: PINTEREST


Illustration: PINTEREST


*CHRISTMAS PAST".
Susan Beatrice Pearse postcard.
Illustration: PINTEREST


Illustration: PINTEREST


"Away in a Manger"
Sung by Vera Lynn.
Available on YouTube at



Illustration: PINTEREST


ANSWERS TO THE REINDEER NOMENCLATURE:

Dasher and Dancer;

Prancer and Vixen;

Comet and Cupid;

Donner and Blitzen.

Plus, of course, Rudolph,
The Red-Nosed Reindeer.

“Unto Us A Child Is Born . . .”



Illustration: PINTEREST

Christ. The Light Of The World.



"The Light Of The World".
(Manchester Art Gallery, England).
Date: March 1851.
Author: William Holman Hunt (1827–1910).
(Wikimedia Commons)

“My Soul Doth Magnify The Lord”.


This Article was taken (in December 2012) from ENLARGING THE HEART


Madonna Adoring The Child With Five Angels.
Artist: Sandro Botticelli.
Date: 1485 - 1490.
Source: [1]
Author: w:Botticelli
(Wikimedia Commons)

And Mary Said:


“Behold The Handmaid Of The Lord”.
(Luke 1:38) . . .

If a handmaid is she, who, with intent and with complete attention, beholds her Lord, then, again, The Most-Holy Virgin is the first among The Handmaids of The Lord.

[. . .] She did not care to please the World, but only God; nor did she care to justify herself before the World, but only before God. She herself is obedience; she herself is service; she herself is meekness.

The Most-Holy Virgin could in truth say to the Angel of God: "Behold The Handmaid of The Lord".

The greatest perfection, and the greatest honour that a woman can attain on Earth, is to be a handmaid of The Lord. Eve lost this perfection and honour in Paradise without effort, and The Virgin Mary achieved this perfection and this honour outside Paradise with her efforts.


“My Soul Doth Magnify The Lord”.
(Luke 1:46).


Brethren, we have in total only a few words spoken by The Most-Holy Theotokos recorded in the Gospels.

All of her words pertain to The Magnification of God. She was silent before men, but her Soul conversed unceasingly with God. Every day and every hour, she found a new reason and incentive to Magnify God.

If only we were able to know and to record all her Magnifications of God throughout her whole life, oh, how many books would it take !

But, even by this one Magnification, which she spoke before her kinswoman, Elizabeth, the mother of the great Prophet and Forerunner, John, every Christian can evaluate what a fragrant and God-Pleasing Flower was her Most Holy Soul.


This is but one wonderful Canticle of The Soul of The Theotokos, which has come down to us through the Gospel. However, such Canticles were without number in the course of the life of The Most-Blessed One.

Even before she heard the Gospel from the lips of her Son, she knew how to speak with God and to glorify Him in accordance with the teaching of the Gospel.

This knowledge came to her from The Holy Spirit of God, whose Grace constantly poured into her, like clear water into a pure vessel.


Her Soul Magnified God with Canticles throughout her whole life, and therefore God Magnified her above The Cherubim and The Seraphim.

Likewise, small and sinful as we are, the same Lord will Magnify, in His Kingdom, us, who Magnify her, if we exert ourselves to fill this brief life with the Magnification of God in our deeds, words, thoughts, and Prayers.

O Most-Holy, Most-Pure and Most-Blessed Theotokos, cover us with The Wings of Thy Prayers.


Nikolai Velimirovich (1880-1956; Orthodox Church):

Vigil. The Nativity Of Our Lord. 24 December.


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

The Vigil Of The Nativity Of Our Lord.
   24 December.

Indulgence of 15 Years and 15 Quarantines.

Double (from Lauds, onward).

Privilege of The First-Class.

Violet Vestments.


The Angels Announcing Christ's Birth To The Shepherds.
Artist: Govert Flinck (1615–1660).
Date: 1639.
Collection: Louvre Museum, Paris, France.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Vigil of Christmas is impregnated with Holy Cheerfulness, and, if it were not for the Vestments of Penance and Fasting [Editor: Violet Vestments] one would imagine that The Feast had begun.

The Church joyfully awaits the twofold Coming of her Redeemer (Collect), Who "saves His people from their sins" (Gospel) and Who is The Shepherd of Israel (Gradual), that is The Church, of whom all are Members who have Faith in Jesus Christ.

Thus, Isaias foretells that "all flesh shall see The Salvation of God" and Saint Paul adds that he has been chosen to be The Apostle of The Gospel, "for obedience to The Faith in all Nations for His Name."

With the help of today's Mass, we may prepare to Celebrate the anniversary of "The Adorable Birthday" of The Only-Begotten Son of God (Secret and Postcommunion), The Son of David, Whom the spouse of Joseph brought into the World (Gospel) and Who, "born as man" according to the seed of David, has, by His Resurrection, proved, beyond all question, that He was God (Epistle).


Since this Resurrection was, for Christ, the prelude to His Glorious Reign, for us, it is the pledge of our own glorification and resurrection at The End of Time; thus, today's Liturgy prepares us for The Second Coming of Our Lord. "Today", the Introit and the Gradual say, "you shall know that The Lord will come and save us; and, in the morning, you shall see His Glory." "Sanctify yourselves and be ye ready," says The First Response at Matins, "for tomorrow, you shall see The Son of God in your midst."

By these two days, today and tomorrow," explains Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, "are meant that of the present life, which is short and gloomy, and that of Eternity amidst the splendours of The Saints. Our learning here below consists in remembering that The Lord is coming; and it is The First Coming of The Son of God which enlightens us about His Second Coming. It calls forth contrition, blazes forth in correction, shines through our zeal and renews us within and without.

Meditate on the marvels of The Lord's Mercy vouchsafed in His Incarnation, that, when the last morning dawns, we may contemplate those of His Glory.

"Tomorrow", says the Alleluia,"shall the iniquity of the Earth be abolished; and The Saviour of the World shall reign over us." Almighty God, The Creator of all things," adds the Psalmist, "is, indeed, The King of Glory, having snatched man from the power of Satan, receives him into His Heavenly Jerusalem [Editor: Versicle of Intercession, Offertory]. "Then shall The Glory of The Lord be manifested" (Communion).


Let us, therefore, prepare ourselves "with Holy Joy, Celebrating The Coming of The Only-Begotten Son of God, Who comes as Redeemer at Christmas, in order that we may be able to contemplate Him with assurance, when He shall come as Judge at The End of The World" (Collect).

The Introit passage is from Exodus and refers to Moses' promise to the Hebrews, concerning The Manna from Heaven, and The Liturgy applies it to Our Lord, Who is The True Bread from On High.

"The Church," says Saint Bernard of Clairvaux, "inspired by Almighty God, has put these words in today's Office whence they acquire a strength of meaning corresponding to the distance between symbol and reality and between light and shade."

"It was all the more fitting," says Saint Gregory,, "that The Lord should have been born at Bethlehem, since Bethlehem means "House of Bread"; for it was He Who said "I am The Living Bread, Which came down from Heaven"."

"The place, where The Lord was born, was, of old, called "House of Bread", because it was there that He was to appear in the flesh, Who, one day, would interiorly satiate the Souls of His Elect" (Matins),

Mass: Hodie sciétis.
Collect: Deus, qui nos redemptionis. This is the only Collect said, unless The Vigil falls on The Fourth Sunday of Advent: In which case, a Commemoration (Collect) is made of that Sunday.
Creed: Is said if The Vigil falls on a Sunday.
Preface: The Common Preface.
Preface: Of The Most Holy Trinity, if The Vigil falls on a Sunday.

Monday 23 December 2019

"My Favourite Time Of Year". The Florin Street Band.



"My Favourite Time Of Year".
The Florin Street Band.
Available on YouTube at

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
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