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

Thursday 19 March 2020

Thursday Of The Third Week In Lent. Lenten Station At The Basilica Of The Holy Martyrs Cosmas And Damian.




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

Thursday of The Third Week in Lent.

Station at The Holy Martyrs, Cosmas and Damian.

Indulgence of 10 Years and 10 Quarantines.

Violet Vestments.



The High Altar and Apse
Photo: June 2002.
Source: flickr.com
Author: iessi
(Wikimedia Commons)


This Thursday takes the name of "Mid-Lent Thursday", because it is the twentieth day in the middle of The Holy Forty Days. The Church brings to the following Sunday the sentiments of joy [on Laetare Sunday, Rose Vestments can be worn instead of the Violet Vestments] which she wishes to fill our hearts. The Feast of Easter approaches, and we must courageously continue The Lenten Fast, already half completed.

It is in a Church, made of two Pagan Temples (of The Holy City and of Romulus), where rest the bodies of The Holy Martyrs, Cosmas and Damian, who were put to death during The Diocletian Persecution, that this Station is made.

The sick came in crowds to visit the tomb of these two brothers, doctors by profession, imploring them to restore their health. It was thus fitting to say this Gospel, relating to the cure of the mother-in-law of Simon Peter and of the sick of Capharnaum. It is also a Mass of Dedication, as the words of the Epistle show: Templum Domini est.

The Jews, who possessed the magnificent Temple of Jerusalem, began to believe that respect for The House of God sufficed to Sanctify them, and they considered themselves dispensed from observing The Spirit of The Law. Wherefore, The Church warns us that our Lent should not only consist of Prayers and Fasts, but should be accompanied by Exercises of Charity and Justice towards our neighbour.


Theodoric The Great,
King of The Ostrogoths.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)


We must imitate the example of Jesus, and during the whole of Lent follow Him, with The Holy Liturgy, in His Ministry of Redemption, Preaching The Kingdom of God, healing the sick, and casting out devils (Gospel). Let us love to listen to The Word of God: It will cure our Souls and banish from them the devil, who seeks to reign therein.

The Catechumens, who were preparing for Baptism, listened especially at this Season of the Year to The Word of God. They also received The Imposition of Hands, so as to be delivered from evil spirits and to obtain the cure of their Souls.

Through the Intercession of The Holy Doctors, Cosmas and Damian, in whose Church today's Solemnities are Celebrated, let us ask The Divine Physician that the severe Abstinence of The Lenten Fast may cool the fever of our passions and assure our Salvation (Collect, Epistle, Postcommunion).

Mass: Salus pópuli.
Preface: Of Lent.


Basilica of Saints Cosmas and Damian, Rome.
Photo: September 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: Riccardov
(Wikimedia Commons)


The following Text is from Wikipedia -the free encyclopædia.

The Basilica of Santi Cosma e Damiano is a Church in Rome, located in The Roman Forum. It is one of the ancient Churches called Tituli, of which Cardinals are Patrons as Deacons. The Cardinal Deacon of the Titulus Ss. Cosmae et Damiani is Giovanni Cheli. The Basilica, devoted to the two Greek brothers, doctors, Martyrs and Saints, Cosmas and Damian, is located in The Forum of Vespasian, also known as The Forum of Peace.

The Temple of Romulus was dedicated by Emperor Maxentius to his son, Valerius Romulus, who died in 309 A.D., and was rendered divine honours. It is possible that the temple was, in origin, the temple of "Iovis Stator" or the one dedicated to Penates, and that Maxentius restored it before the re-Dedication.


Pope Felix IV presents Saints Cosmas and Damian
with the Basilica that he re-Dedicated to them.
Painting from SS Cosma e Damiano. Early-1600s, Tuscan School.
(Wikimedia Commons)


The ancient Roman fabric was Christianised and Dedicated to Sancti Cosma et Damiano in 527 A.D., when Theodoric the Great, King of the Ostrogoths, and his daughter, Amalasuntha, donated The Library of The Forum of Peace (Bibliotheca Pacis), and a portion of the Temple of Romulus, to Pope Felix IV (526 A.D. - 530 A.D.).

The Pope united the two buildings to create a Basilica devoted to two Greek brothers and Saints, Cosmas and Damian, in contrast with the ancient pagan cult of the two brothers, Castor and Pollux, who had been worshipped in the nearby Temple of Castor and Pollux.


Not really a Temple,
but a Vestibule opening into a Hall of Vespasian's Forum of Peace,
which now houses the Church of SS. Cosma e Damiano.
Photo: May 2005.
Source: Flickr
Reviewer: KenWalker
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Apse was decorated with a Roman-Byzantine mosaic, representing a parousia, The Second Coming of Christ at the End of Time. The bodies of Saints Mark and Marcellian were Translated, perhaps in the 9th-Century A.D., to this Church, where they were re-discovered in 1583 during the Reign of Pope Gregory XIII.

In 1632, Pope Urban VIII ordered the Restoration of the Basilica. The works, projected by Orazio Torriani and directed by Luigi Arrigucci, raised the floor level seven metres, bringing it equal with the Campo Vaccino, thus avoiding the infiltration of water. Also, a Cloister was added. The old Floor of the Basilica is still visible in the lower Church, which is actually the lower part of the first Church.

In 1947, the Restorations of The Imperial Forums gave a new structure to the Church. The old entrance, through the Temple of Romulus, was closed, and the temple restored to its original forms; with the Pantheon, the Temple of Romulus is the best preserved pagan temple in Rome. A new entrance was opened on the opposite side (on Via dei Fori Imperiali), whose Arch gives access to the Cloister, and through this to the side of the Basilica.


Pope Urban VIII (1623 - 1644)
ordered the Restoration of the Basilica in 1632.
Artist: Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598–1680).
Date: 1632.
Current location: Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica, Rome.
Source/Photographer: Web Gallery of Art
(Wikimedia Commons)


Next to the new entrance to the complex, there are rooms with the original Marble Paving of The Forum of Peace, and the wall, where the 150 Marble Slabs of the Forma Urbis Romae were hung. Through the Cloister, the entrance to the Church opens on the side of the single Nave. The Plan of the Basilica followed the norms of the Counter-Reformation: a single Nave, with three Chapels per side, and the big Apse, which now looks quite over-sized because of the reduction in height of the 17th-Century Restoration, framed by the Triumphal Arch, also mutilated by that Restoration.

The mosaics are masterpieces of 6th and 7th-Century A.D. art. In the middle is Christ, with Saint Peter presenting Saint Cosmas and Saint Theodorus (Right), and Saint Paul presenting Saint Damian and Pope Felix IV; the latter holds a model of the Church.

The importance of this Basilica, for the history of medicine, is not only related to the fact that the two brothers were physicians, and soon became Patrons of physicians, surgeons, pharmacists and veterinarians, but also to the Tradition, according to which, Claudius Galen himself lectured in the Library of the Temple of Peace (“Bibliotheca Pacis”). Furthermore, for Centuries, in this “medical area” Roman physicians had their meetings.

Wednesday 18 March 2020

Every Home Should Have Its Own Chapel.



The Castle Chapel,
Alnwick Castle, Northumberland, England.
Photo: 24 July 2014.
Source: Own work.
Author: EoRdE6
(Wikimedia Commons)


Alnwick Castle.
Photo: 11 August 2010.
Author: Tim Felce (Airwolfhound)
(Wikimedia Commons)

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

Alnwick Castle is a Castle and Country House, in Alnwick, in the English County of Northumberland. It is The Seat of The 12th Duke of Northumberland, and was built following The Norman Conquest.

It has been renovated and remodelled a number of times. It is a Grade I Listed Building and, as of 2012, received over 800,000 visitors per year, when combined with the adjacent attraction of The Alnwick Garden.


The Chapel,
Mapledurham House.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopædia,
unless stated otherwise.

Mapledurham House is an Elizabethan Stately Home located in the Civil Parish of Mapledurham in the English County of Oxfordshire. It is a Grade I Listed Building, first Listed on 24 October 1951.

The Manor of Mapledurham was bought in 1490 by Richard Blount of Iver, however, the current house was started by Sir Michael Blount (1530-1610) and has remained in the Blount-Eyston Family to this day.

Building was started around 1585, at the time of The Spanish Armada, in the Classic Elizabethan
E-Shape. It includes a Late-18th-Century Chapel, built in The Strawberry Hill Gothic Style, for the Recusant Roman Catholic owners of the house.

Prior to The Catholic Emancipation, the owners would hide Priests in its Priest Holes, some of which were only discovered in the 21st-Century, and the Priests would secretly Celebrate Mass with a makeshift Altar hidden inside a Writing Desk. The Estate covers much of the Village, including Mapledurham Watermill, and part of the Church.


Pencil-Sketch of Zephyrinus's proposed personal Chapel in Zephyrinus Castle.
Aficionados will, undoubtedly, notice the historical connection with
The Saint Laurence Chapel, Basilica of Saint Paul-outside-the-Walls, Rome.
Inspiration was drawn from the 18 September 2010 photos of
Tango7174, published in Wikimedia Commons.
Chauffeur Perkins is already balking at the notion of polishing
the Choir Stalls with Bees-Wax Polish on a weekly basis.
Staff can be so difficult, don't you know.

Saint Cyril Of Jerusalem. Bishop. Confessor. Doctor Of The Church. Feast Day 18 March.


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

Saint Cyril Of Jerusalem.
   Bishop. Confessor.
   Doctor of The Church.
   Feast Day 18 March.

Double.

White Vestments.


Saint Cyril of Jerusalem.
Fresco at a Greek Orthodox Church.
Date: 14th-Century.
Author: Anonymous.
(Wikimedia Commons)


During the Season of Lent, the Catechumens were committed to the care of a Priest who had to instruct them. Like Saint John Chrysostom, at Antioch, and Saint Augustine, at Hippo, Saint Cyril discharged this duty at Jerusalem.

We still possess most of the admirable Sermons, so pious and full of Divine Wisdom (Epistle), which he Preached every day for seven weeks before Easter, between Prime and Terce. Prime is The Office which is recited at the first hour (about 0600 hrs) and Terce at the third hour (about 0900 hrs).

He there explained The Holy Scriptures, and, during the sixth and seventh weeks, The Creed, article by article. Wherefore, The Church counts him among her Doctors of The Church (Introit).

Having become Bishop of Jerusalem (Communion), he was, like Our Lord in the course of His Public Life (Gospel), the butt of injustice and persecution. Thrice exiled by The Arians, who denied The Divinity of Christ, he always affirmed this great Dogma (Collect), and was honourably returned to his throne by The Emperor, Theodosius.


He then governed his Church in peace, predicted that Julian the Apostate's efforts to restore the Temple of Jerusalem would be in vain, and took part in The Council of Constantinople, which again condemned the heresy of Arius, and the heresy of Macedonius, who denied The Divinity of The Holy Ghost.

Saint Cyril died in 386 A.D.

Let us sanctify our minds and hearts by Penance, that we may deserve at Easter to be numbered for ever among the redeemed (Collect).

Mass: In médio.
Commemoration: Of The Feria.
Last Gospel: Of The Feria.

Wednesday Of The Third Week In Lent. The Lenten Station Is At The Basilica Of Saint Sixtus.




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

Wednesday of The Third Week in Lent.

Station at Saint Sixtus's.

Indulgence of 10 Years and 10 Quarantines.

Violet Vestments.



English: Basilica of Saint Sixtus, Rome.
Italiano: San Sisto (Santi Nereo e Achilleo) (Terme di Caracalla).
Photo: June 2006.
Uploaded by Kurpfalzbilder.de
(Wikimedia Commons)



The Candidates from among the heathen, after a period of waiting, became Catechumens at The Station this day. Their Sponsors presented them by testifying to their purity of intention and conduct. Their names were written on Tablets of Ivory covered in Leather, which were read at The Commemoration of The Living.

After The Collect, and before The Lessons, they proceeded to The Rites of Exsufflation, of The Sign of The Cross, of The Imposition of Hands, and of that of The Salt, which are still to be found in the first part of The Ceremonies of Baptism.

The Station is at Saint Sixtus's, on The Appian Way, a Parish Church of Rome in the 5th-Century A.D. It was of this Holy Pontiff, and, according to several authors, in this very place, that Saint Laurence begged to be permitted to accompany him as his Minister in the sacrifice of himself which he was about to make. Saint Sixtus is buried in this Church.

God, on Sinai, had commanded men, the Epistle and Gospel tell us, to honour their parents and to love their neighbours. The Pharisees added to these Commandments human traditions, which consisted of formalities wholly external, to which they attached more importance than they did to the Law of Moses.


The Basilica of Saint Sixtus, Rome.
Photo: November 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: LPLT
(Wikimedia Commons)



The Church, therefore, seeks to put us on our guard against the observance of exterior practices of Worship or Fasts, which are not united to Acts of Charity. For, in order to obtain the approval of Heaven, our Penance must come from a heart overflowing with Love of God and our neighbour, for it is from the heart that the holiness and malice of man proceeds.

To bodily mortifications, let us take great care to add the practice of Virtues: Sincerity; Justice; Patience; Charity; or, as The Collect expresses it, let us impose upon ourselves Fasting of Soul and body.

Mass: Ego autem.
Preface: Of Lent.


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

Insufflation and Exsufflation.

In Religious and magical practice, Insufflation and Exsufflation are ritual acts of blowing, breathing, hissing, or puffing, that signify, variously, expulsion or renunciation of evil or of the Devil (the Evil One), or infilling or Blessing with good (especially, in Religious use, with The Spirit or Grace of God).


Pope Leo III (795 A.D. - 816 A.D.) rebuilt the old "Titulus" in 814 A.D.
Mosaics in the Hall (Triclinium) of Pope Leo III
of The Lateran Palace (798 A.D. - 799 A.D.).
(Wikimedia Commons)



In historical Christian practice, such blowing appears most prominently in The Liturgy, and is connected almost exclusively with Baptism and other Ceremonies of Christian Initiation, achieving its greatest popularity during periods in which such Ceremonies were given a prophylactic or Exorcistic significance, and were viewed as essential to the defeat of the Devil or to the removal of the taint of Original Sin.

Ritual blowing occurs in The Liturgies of Catechumenate and Baptism from a very Early Period and survives into the modern Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Maronite, and Coptic Rites.

Catholic Liturgy, post-Vatican II (the so-called Novus Ordo 1969), has largely done away with Insufflation, except in a Special Rite for the Consecration of Chrism on Maundy Thursday. Protestant liturgies typically abandoned it very early on. Muslims include the practice to a certain degree, following the Biblical Rites to a lesser extent. The Tridentine Catholic Liturgy retained both an Insufflation of The Baptismal Water and (like the present-day Orthodox and Maronite Rites) an Exsufflation of The Candidate for Baptism, right up to the 1960s.

THE INSUFFLATION. He breathes thrice upon the waters in the form of a Cross, saying: "Do You with Your mouth Bless these pure waters: that besides their natural virtue of cleansing the body, they may also be effectual for purifying the Soul".

THE EXSUFFLATION. The Priest breathes three times on The Child in the form of a Cross, saying: "Go out of him . . . you unclean spirit and give place to The Holy Spirit, The Paraclete".


Pope Sixtus IV (1414-1484).
Date: Circa 1473.
Current location: Louvre Museum, Paris, France.
Source/Photographer: cartelen.louvre.fr
[Pope Sixtus IV restored the Basilica in 1475].
(Wikimedia Commons)



Santi Nereo e Achilleo is a 4th-Century A.D. Basilica Church in Rome, located in via delle Termi di Caracalla, in the rione Celio, facing the main entrance to The Baths of Caracalla. The current Cardinal Priest of the Titulus Ss. Nerei et Achillei is Theodore Edgar McCarrick.

A 337 A.D., epitaph inscription in the Basilica di San Paolo fuori le Mura celebrates the Late Cinnamius Opas, Lector of a Church known as Titulus Fasciolae; the name has traditionally been explained as the place where St. Peter lost the foot bandage (fasciola) that wrapped the wounds caused by his chains, on his way to escape the Mamertine Prison.

In The Acts of The Synod of Pope Symmachus, 499 A.D., the Titulus Fasciolae is recorded as served by five Priests. This same building is recorded as Titulus Sanctorum Nerei et Achillei in 595 A.D; therefore, the Dedications to Sts. Nereus and Achilleus, two Soldiers and Martyrs of the 4th-Century A.D., must date to the 6th-Century A.D.


Basilica of Saint Sixtus (San Sisto)
(Santi Nereo e Achilleo), Rome.
Photo: June 2006.
Source: DSCN0317
Uploaded by Kurpfalzbilder.de
(Wikimedia Commons)



In 814 A.D., Pope Leo III rebuilt the old Titulus. In the 13th-Century, the Relics of the two Martyrs (Santi Nereo e Achilleo) were Transferred from The Catacomb of Domitilla to the Sant'Adriano, whence they were Transferred to this Church by Cardinal Baronius.

The Church degraded with time, and, in 1320, according to the Catalogue of Turin, it was a Presbyterial Title with no Priest serving. So, Pope Sixtus IV Restored the Church on occasion of The Jubilee of 1475, while The Jubilee of 1600 was the occasion for the last major Restoration, funded by the scholarly antiquarian, Cardinal Cesare Baronio, who commissioned the frescoes.


Saint Domitilla, with Saints Nereus and Achilleus.
Date: 1598 -1599.
Current location: Chiesa dei Santi Nereo e Achilleo, Rome.
(Wikimedia Commons)



Behind its unassuming facade, the Church is built according to the typical Basilica Plan, with a single Nave and two Side Aisles. The original Columns were replaced in the 15th-Century by Octagonal Pillars, and the Nave is characterised by the large fresco decorations commissioned by Cardinal Baronio.

The Cardinal, in his iconographic scheme timed for the 1600 Jubilee, emphasised the role of The Roman Martyrs during the Early Centuries of Christianity. The execution of the frescoes was entrusted to a minor painter, generally thought to be Niccolò Circignani, called "Pomarancio". There are a lot of gruesome details and blood all over the walls, but the pastel colours soften somewhat a fearsome effect of the pictures.


The Ciborium and High Altar,
Basilica of Saint Sixtus (San Sisto) (Santi Nereo e Achilleo), Rome.
Photo: June 2006.
Source: DSCN0316
Uploaded by Kurpfalzbilder.de
(Wikimedia Commons)



The Mediæval Ambo is set on a large, porphyry Urn taken from the nearby Baths of Caracalla. The low Screen, separating The Choir, is faced with 13th-Century Cosmatesque-Style inlays. A White Marble Candelabra was brought here from San Paolo fuori-le-Mura. The Ciborium, dating from the 16th-Century, is raised on African Marble Columns.

The Spandrels of the Arch, at the end of the Nave, retain some of the former mosaics of the time of Pope Leo III, with a central Transfiguration in a Mandorla. The High Altar, made of three Cosmatesque panels, houses the Relics of Nereus, Achilleus, and Saint Flavia Domitilla; all three of whom were brought here from the Catacomb of Domitilla. Next to The Altar, there are two pagan stones, depicting two winged spirits, taken from a nearby temple.

In the Apse, behind The Altar, is the Episcopal Throne, assembled under the direction of the Antiquary, Cardinal Baronius, re-using Lions in the Cosmatesque Style, that is associated with The Vassalletto School, which support the arm-rests; on the back-rest, is inscribed the opening and closing words of the twenty-eighth Homily of Saint Gregory The Great, inscribed under the mistaken Tradition that he preached them here, in front of the Relics of Saints Nereus and Achilleus on their Feast Day.

When Cardinal Baronio ordered the inscription, he did not know that the Relics were originally buried in the underground Basilica of the Catacomb of Domitilla, so thought that this was the place where Saint Gregory Preached.

The Arch of the Apse has mosaics of the 9th-Century A.D., with The Annunciation, The Transfiguration, and The Theotokos (Mother of God).

Tuesday 17 March 2020

Saint Patrick. Bishop And Confessor. Whose Feast Day It Is, Today, 17 March.


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

Saint Patrick.
   Bishop And Confessor.
   Feast Day 17 March.

Double.

White Vestments.


Stained-Glass Window depicting Saint Patrick.
Saint Patrick Catholic Church, Junction City,
Ohio, United States of America.
Photo: 21 March 2015.
Source: Own work.
Author: Nheyob
(Wikimedia Commons)



Saint Patrick.
The Irish Legend.
Available on YouTube at

Whilst in the 5th-Century A.D., The Franks, Germans, and other Northern peoples had not yet received The Light of The Gospel, God raised up “the Confessor and Bishop, Saint Patrick, to announce His Glory to the pagans” of Ireland (Collect).

This Holy Bishop (Introit) put to such profit the talents he had received from God (Gospel) that he became the father of all this people (Communion), and that Ireland has preserved for him, after thirteen Centuries, an ardent and tender Devotion which nothing has been able to weaken.


Saint Patrick's Cathedral,
Dublin, Ireland.
Photo: 21 July 2015.
Source: Own work.
Attribution: "Photo by DAVID ILIFF. License: CC BY-SA 3.0"
Author: Diliff
(Wikimedia Commons)


“Hail, Glorious Saint Patrick”.
Available on YouTube at

Strengthened by help from above (Offertory), he was great before Kings and Princes (Epistle). At first hostile, they ended by listening to him and helped him, during his thirty-three years' Apostleship, to cover, with Churches, Monasteries, and Schools, the island which was soon to deserve the appellation of Isle of The Saints.

Saint Patrick died in 461 A.D.

17 March is a National Day and a Day of Obligation in Ireland.

Through the merits of this Saint, whose austerities have remained celebrated, let us ask of God the Grace to accomplish the Penances commanded by Him (Collect).

Mass: Státuit.
Commemoration: Of The Feria.
Last Gospel: Of The Feria.


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