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

Sunday 24 May 2020

In Festo Beatæ Mariæ Virginis. “Our Lady, Help Of Christians”. Sancta Maria Auxilium Christianorum. Nuestra Señora María Auxiliadora De Los Cristianos. Feast Day 24 May.



The Venerated image of “Mary, Help of Christians”
to which Pope Leo XIII granted a Canonical Coronation on 17 May 1903.
Date: Circa 1867.
Source: Own work.
Author: Tommaso Andrea Lorenzone (1824-1902),
at the request of Don Bosco.
(Wikimedia Commons)



Titulo Auxilium Christianorum.
Our Lady, Help Of Christians.
Feast Day 24 May.
Missale Romanum 1861.
Illustration: ZEPHYRINUS

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

Mary, Help of Christians (Latin: Sancta Maria Auxilium Christianorum; Spanish: Nuestra Señora María Auxiliadora de los Cristianos; is a Roman Catholic Marian Devotion with a Feast Day Celebrated on 24 May.

Saint John Chrysostom was the first person to use this Marian Title (“Mary, Help Of Christians”) in 345 A.D. as a Devotion to The Virgin Mary. Don Bosco also propagated Marian Devotion under this Title. The Title of “Mary, Help of Christians” is associated with the defence of Christian Europe (Latin and Greek), the North of Africa, and The Middle East, from non-Christian peoples during The Middle Ages.

In 1572, during the expansion of The Islamic Ottoman Empire, which intended to invade Christian Europe, Pope Saint Pius V invoked Christian Armies, and its victory achieved was consequently attributed to the Intercession of Mary under this Title.


English: Treviso Cathedral. The Madonna Chapel.
A 19th-Century wooden statue of Mary, Help of Christians,
by Ferdinand Stuflesser, artist of Val Gardena, Italy.
Français : Cathédrale de Trévise - Chapelle de la Vierge - au centre une de l'autel une statue en bois récente du XIXe par Ferdinand Stuflesser, artiste de Val Gardena, Représentant Marie Auxiliatrice.
Italiano : Duomo di Treviso - Capella della Madonna - La statua lignea al centro dell'altare, opera recente (XIXe) di Ferdinand Stuflesser, artista della Val Gardena, rappresenta Maria Ausiliatrice.
Photo: 29 May 2016.
Source: Own work.
This file is copyrighted and has been released under a license which is incompatible with Facebook's licensing terms. It is not permitted to upload this file at Facebook.
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons
(Wikimedia Commons)


Ultimately, Pope Leo XIII granted a Canonical Coronation towards the Marian image bearing the same Title on 17 May 1903, now permanently enshrined within The Basilica of Mary, Help of Christians, Turin, Italy.

There are two inscriptions from the first Centuries of Christianity, in Greek, related to The Virgin Mary: : θεοτοκος (Teotokos, Theotokos, Mother of God) and βοηθεια (Boetheia, The Helper). The Fathers of The Church referred to Mary as "βοηθεια". Saint John Chrysostom used the Title in a Sermon of 345 A.D., Proclus in 476 A.D., and Sebas of Cæsarea in 532 A.D.

After The Patristic Period (5th-Century A.D.), other persons used it, e.g., Romanos The Melodist in 518 A.D., The Patriarch of Jerusalem, Sophronius, in 560 A.D., John of Damascus in 749 A.D., and German of Constantinople in 733 A.D.


Illustration from The Feast Day of Our Lady, Help of Christians.
24 May.
Missale Romanum 1861.
Illustration: ZEPHYRINUS


In the view of Fr. Johann G. Roten, SM, the Invocation of Mary as “Help of Christians” is part of the oldest Prayer addressed directly to Mary, the “Sub Tuum Præsidium”, which was found on a Papyrus dating, at the latest, from the end of the 3rd-Century A.D. “Præsidium” is translated as “an assistance given in time of War by fresh Troops in a strong manner.”[1]

Around 1576, Bernardino Cirillo, Arch-Priest of Loreto, published at Macerata, two Litanies of The Blessed Virgin, which, he contended, were used at Loreto. One is in a form which is entirely different from our present Text. Another form (“Aliæ litaniæ B.M.V.”) is identical to The Litany of Loreto approved by Pope Clement VIII in 1601 and now used throughout the entire Church.

This second form contains the Invocation “Auxilium Christianorum” (“Help of Christians”). Possibly, Soldiers returning from The Battle of Lepanto (7 October 1571) visited The Sanctuary of Loreto, and Saluted The Holy Virgin there for the first time with this new Title. It is more probable, however, that it is only a variation of the older Invocation “Advocata Christianorum”, found in a Litany of 1524.[2]


Our Lady, Help of Christians.
Patroness of Australia.
Available on YouTube at

Torsellini (1597) and The Roman Breviary (24 May, Appendix) say that Pope Saint Pius V inserted the Invocation in The Litany of Loreto after The Battle of Lepanto. But the form of The Litany, in which it is first found, was unknown at Rome at the time of Pope Saint Pius V.[3]

The Feast of Our Lady, Help of Christians, was instituted by Pope Pius VII. By order of Emperor Napoleon I of France, Pope Pius VII was arrested on 5 June 1808, and detained as a prisoner, first at Grenoble, France, and then at Fontainebleau, France.[4]

In January 1814, after The Battle of Leipzig, he was brought back to Savona, Italy, and set free on 17 March 1814, on the eve of The Feast of Our Lady of Mercy, The Patroness of Savona. The journey to Rome was a veritable triumphal march. The Pontiff, attributing the Victory of The Church, after so much agony and distress, to The Blessed Virgin, visited many of her Sanctuaries on the way and Crowned her images (e.g., “The Madonna del Monte” at Cesena, “della Misericordia” at Treja, “della Colonne” and “della Tempestà” at Tolentino).


English: Statue of Madonna and Child
in Siegenfeld (Heiligenkreuz), Lower Austria.
Deutsch: Marienstatue, sog. Bauernmadonna, in der Cholerakapelle
im Helenental, Ortsteil Siegenfeld, Gemeinde Heiligenkreuz, Niederösterreich.
Photo: 24 March 2019.
Source: Own work.
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons
(Wikimedia Commons)

The people crowded the streets to catch a glimpse of the Venerable Pontiff who had so bravely withstood the threats of Napoleon. He entered Rome on 24 May 1814, and was enthusiastically welcomed.[5] To Commemorate his own sufferings and those of The Church during his Exile, Pope Pius VII extended The Feast of The Seven Dolours of Mary to The Universal Church on 18 September 1814.

When Napoleon left Elba and returned to Paris, Murat was about to march through The Papal States from Naples (Joachim-Napoléon Murat, 25 March 1767 – 13 October 1815) was a Marshal of The French Empire and Admiral, during the reign of Emperor Napoleon I. He was also the first Prince Murat, Grand Duke of Berg, from 1806 to 1808, and King of Naples from 1808 to 1815.

Murat received his Titles, in part, by being Napoleon's brother-in-law through marriage to his younger sister, Caroline Bonaparte, as well as personal merit. He was noted as a daring, brave, and charismatic Cavalry Officer, as well as a flamboyant dresser, for which he was known as “The Dandy King”).

Pope Pius VII fled to Savona on 22 March 1815.[2] After The Congress of Vienna and The Battle of Waterloo, The Pope returned to Rome on 7 July 1815. To give thanks to God and Our Lady, on 15 September 1815, he declared 24 May, the Anniversary of his first return, to be henceforth The Feast of Our Lady, Help of Christians. The 1913 Catholic Encyclopaedia Article commented that: “It has spread nearly over the entire Latin Church, but is not contained in The Universal Calendar.”


Turin, Italy.
Founded by Saint John Bosco.
Photo: March 2007.
Source: Own work.
Author: Franco56
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Marian Feast has been Celebrated by The Order of Servites since the 17th-Century. The Veneration to Mary became popular under this Title in Rome, especially, where The Feast was promoted by Saint John Bosco and Saint Vincent Pallotti. [6]

Saint John Bosco was an ardent promoter of Devotion to “Mary, Help of Christians”. He even built a huge Basilica in her honour in 1868 and Founded a Religious Congregation for Women, under the Title of “The Daughters of Mary, Help of Christians”.

Interpreting the painting he had commissioned inside the Basilica, Saint John Bosco referred to it as depicting “Mary, Mother of The Church”. This suggests an identical connection to the way in which Popes have addressed Mary as both Mother and Help of The Church. Recall the two Marian Greek attributions of θεοτοκος (Teotokos, Theotokos, Mother of God) and βοηθεια (Boetheia, The Helper) at the start of this Article. Saint John Bosco, in fact, chose this Devotion because of its affinity to his Devotion to “The Church, The Bearer of Christ”.


English: Stained-Glass Window depicting Our Lady, Help of Christians.
Church of Saint John the Baptist, Ahrem, Germany.
Deutsch: Bleiglasfenster in der katholischen Pfarrkirche St. Johannes der Täufer, Ahrem, Darstellung: Anbetung der Madonna mit Kind.
Photo: 16 April 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Reinhardhauke
(Wikimedia Commons)

Vatican II, in the Constitution on The Church (Sections 61 and 62), cites this Title of Mary, placing it in the context of Mary's Maternal Role. “In an utterly singular way, she co-operated by her Obedience, Faith, Hope and Burning Charity in The Saviour’s Work of restoring Supernatural Life to Souls.

For this reason, she is a Mother to us in The Order of Grace . . . By her Maternal Charity, Mary cares for The Brethren of her Son, who still wander through this World in the midst of dangers and difficulties until they are led to the happiness of their Heavenly Home”.[7]

The Church has Traditionally focused on two aspects of Our Lady’s help on this Feast Day. Firstly, The Church focuses in this Feast on the role of Our Lady's Intercession in the fight against sin in the life of a Believer. Secondly, The Church focuses on Our Lady as one who assists Christians as a community, through her Intercession, in fighting against anti-Christian forces.

Michael Daniel observes that, while this approach may be regarded as outdated, in light of Vatican II, where the World and non-Christians elements therein were seen in a positive rather than a hostile or threatening light, it would seem that it would be naïve on the part of Christians to regard all Movements and all Social Trends as either good or harmless.[7]


The Dioceses of Tuscany adopted it on 12 February 1816. The Hymns of The Office were composed by Brandimarte.[8]

It became The Patronal Feast of Australasia, a “Double of The First-Class“ with an Octave.[9] After the Reforms of The Second Vatican Council, it was designated a Solemnity to be kept on the first available Sunday on or after 24 May.

The Fathers of The Foreign Missions of Paris, in accordance with a Vow (1891), Celebrated this Feast Day with great splendour in their Churches.

It has attained special renown since Don Bosco, Founder of The Salesian Congregation, Dedicated his Foundation to Our Lady, Help of Christians, The Mother Church of his Congregation at Turin, Italy, on 9 June 1868. The Salesians have carried the Devotion to their numerous establishments around the World.

It was established due to the great appreciation of Saint Don Bosco for this Marian Title, and the development of The Salesian Works in many Countries since the second-half of the 19th-Century. Although it is commonly associated with The Roman Catholic Church, The Orthodox Church has also known the Devotion since 1030 in Ukraine, when the Country was defended from a barbarian invasion.


The Salesian National Shrine of Our Lady, Help of Christians, is located in Stony Point, New York. There is also The National Shrine of Mary, Help of Christians, in Parañaque City, Philippines, which is also in the care of The Salesians of Don Bosco. [10]

The Abbey of Mary, Help of Christians, better known as Belmont Abbey, is a small American Monastery of Benedictine Monks in the Town of Belmont, Gaston County, North Carolina, outside of Charlotte, North Carolina. The Minor Basilica of Our Lady, Help of Christians, is listed on The National Register of Historic Places.[11]

There is a Chapel of Our Lady, Help of Christians, at the Basilica of The Immaculate Conception in Washington D.C.[12]

Under this Title, The Virgin Mary is Venerated by many Chinese Catholics, particularly at The Shrine of Our Lady of Sheshan. In May 2007, Pope Benedict XVI designated 24 May her Feast Day for The Roman Catholics in China, who face persecution and restriction from The Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association.

On 17 May 1903, Pope Leo XIII granted a Canonical Coronation to the famed image through his Papal Legate, Cardinal Agostino Richelmy, which is now permanently enshrined within The Basilica of Our Lady, Help of Christians, in Turin, Italy.


The High Altar, Mariahilferkirche
(Our Lady, Help of Christians) Church,
Haydnplatz, Vienna, Austria.
Photo: 27 December 2005.
Source: Own work.
This File: 16 February 2006.
User: Gryffindor
(Wikimedia Commons)

The same Pontiff also instructed The Sacred Congregation of Rites to assign Mary, under this Devotional Title (“Our Lady, Help of Christians), as the Official Patroness of Australia. She is also The Patron Saint of New Zealand, and, since 1924, of China.[13]

On 24 May 2009, Pope Benedict XVI, during his Regina Cæli Papal Address, invoked this Marian Patronage, under The Venerated Title of Our Mother of Sheshan, calling for Chinese Catholics to renew their fidelity to The Pope as the sole successor of Saint Peter.[14]

On 23 March 2018, Pope Francis granted a Papal Bull for the Canonical Coronation of a namesake Seminary in San Fabian, Pangasinan, Philippines. The image is notable for having been gifted to The Philippine Islands by The Apostolic Delegate, Monsignor Guillermo Piani, S.D.B., while the privilege of Blue Coloured Vestments were invoked by The Papal Legate.

Acerbic-ness Rules O.K.



Sir Winston Churchill.
Yousuf Karsh called this picture
Creator: Yousuf Karsh.
Date: 30 December 1941.
Location: Ottawa, Canada.
Credit: Yousuf Karsh. Library and Archives Canada, e010751643 /
Yousuf Karsh. Bibliothèque et Archives e010751643.
(Wikimedia Commons)

“I am enclosing two tickets
to The First Night of my new Play.
Bring a friend.
If you have one.”
(George Bernard Shaw to Winston Churchill).

“Cannot possibly attend The First Night.
Will attend The Second Night.
If there is one.”
(Winston Churchill to George Bernard Shaw).

Saturday 23 May 2020

The Church Of The Sacred Heart, Limerick, Ireland. The Ascension Mass Of Our Lord Jesus Chris. Plus, Benediction. This Church Was Once Slated To Be A Leisure Centre And Bar.



High Mass on The Feast of The Ascension.
Plus, Benediction.
The Church of The Sacred Heart, Limerick, Ireland.
This beautiful Church was once slated to be a Leisure Centre and Bar.
Available on YouTube at
YOU TUBE

This Article is taken from, and can be read in full at,
THE LATIN MASS SOCIETY RC DIOCESE OF MIDDLESBROUGH

The following Text, dated 28 August 2012, is from THE IRISH TIMES

The Sacred Heart Church, located at The Crescent, in Limerick City Centre, which was on the market for more than €4 million, has been sold for €700,000 to a Community of Priests called The Institute of Christ The King Sovereign Priest.

Also known as The Jesuit Church, after The Order that built it and occupied it for many years, The Sacred Heart Church has been vacant for the last six years following its sale to the Late John O’Dolan, a developer from Galway.

Mr O’Dolan, who died in 2009, had planned to convert the building into a leisure centre and bar.

But now the Church, which was in danger of falling into disrepair, is to return to its original function following its sale to the Religious Community, led in Limerick by 38-year-old Frenchman, Canon Wulfran Lebocq, The Institute’s Choirmaster, who has lived in Ballingarry since 2010.

“The Black Watch (Royal Highlanders)”. “Am Freiceadan Dubh”. “The Ladies From Hell”. “The Forty Twa”. “Nemo Me Impune Lacessit”. “No-One Provokes Me With Impunity”.


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



“The Black Watch”.
“Am Freiceadan Dubh”.
“Nemo Me Impune Lacessit”.
“No-One Provokes Me With Impunity”.
Badge and Tartan.
Original page was as follows:
Uploaded by GraemeLeggett on 15 May 2007.
(Wikipedia)


1st Battalion, The Black Watch,
Pipes and Drums.
Available on YouTube at


The Black Watch, 3rd Battalion, Royal Regiment of Scotland (3 SCOTS) is an Infantry Battalion of The Royal Regiment of Scotland.

Prior to 28 March 2006, The Black Watch was an Infantry Regiment – The Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) from 1931 to 2006, and The Black Watch (Royal Highlanders) from 1881 to 1931. Part of The Scottish Division, it was The Senior Regiment of Highlanders.

The source of The Regiment's name is uncertain. In 1725, following The Jacobite Rebellion of 1715, General George Wade was authorised by King George II to form six "Watch" Companies to patrol The Highlands of Scotland, three from Clan Campbell, one from Clan Fraser, one from Clan Munro and one from Clan Grant.


The Royal Highland Regiment (The Black Watch), at Fontenoy, 1745.
Signed and dated "W. Skeoch Cumming/1894".
Author: William Skeoch Cumming (1864-1929).
(Wikimedia Commons)


“The Ladies From Hell".
Available on YouTube at

These were to be "employed in disarming The Highlanders, preventing depredations, bringing criminals to justice, and hindering rebels and attainted persons from inhabiting that part of The Kingdom." The Force was known in Gaelic as "Am Freiceadan Dubh", "The Dark Watch" or "The Black Watch".

The first Battle in which The Black Watch took part was The Battle of Fontenoy, in 1745, where The Regiment distinguished themselves with great bravery.

The Regiment was numbered The 43rd Regiment of Foot, in 1747, changing to The 42nd Regiment of Foot, in 1749. In 1751, The Regiment was titled “42nd (Highland) Regiment” and, in 1758, was permitted the honour to add “Royal” to its title. However, it continued to be known colloquially as “The Black Watch”.


Jimmy Doig, Piper,
The Angus Black Watch Association,
plays The Pipes,
The Old and Saint Andrew's Church,
Montrose, Scotland,14 September 2008.
Photo: Frank G. Proctor, Glengate.

In 1881, when The 42nd Regiment of Foot amalgamated with The 73rd Regiment of Foot, the new Regiment was named “The Black Watch (Royal Highlanders)”.

The Regiment adopted The Royal Motto of Scotland's Stewart Monarchs, “Nemo me impune lacessit” (“No-one provokes me with impunity”).

The Black Watch was formed as part of The Childers Reforms, in 1881, when The 42nd (Royal Highland) Regiment of Foot (The Black Watch) was amalgamated with The 73rd (Perthshire) Regiment of Foot, to form two Battalions of the newly-named Black Watch (Royal Highlanders). The 42nd Regiment of Foot became The 1st Battalion Black Watch (Royal Highlanders), and The 73rd (Perthshire) Regiment of Foot became The 2nd Battalion Black Watch (Royal Highlanders).


"The Black Watch" Homecoming Parade,
Dundee, Scotland. 20 April 2012.
Available on YouTube at

Recipients of The Victoria Cross.

All of The Black Watch Servicemen, listed below, were awarded The Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious Award for Gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth Forces.


Francis Edward Henry Farquharson, Indian Mutiny, Lucknow, 9 March 1858.
John Simpson, Indian Mutiny, Fort Ruhya, 15 April 1858.
Alexander Thompson, Indian Mutiny, Fort Ruhya, 15 April 1858.
James Davis, Indian Mutiny, Fort Ruhya, 15 April 1858.
Edward Spence, Indian Mutiny, Fort Ruhya, 15 April 1858.
William Gardner, Indian Mutiny, Bareilly, 5 May 1858.
Walter Cook, Indian Mutiny, Sissaya Ghat, 15 January 1859.

Duncan Millar, Indian Mutiny, Sissaya Ghat, 15 January 1859.
Samuel McGaw, Ashanti War, Amoaful, 31 January 1874.
Thomas Edwards, Egyptian Campaigns, Tamaai, 13 March 1884.
John Ripley, First World War, Rue du Bois, 9 May 1915.
David Finlay, First World War, Rue du Bois, 9 May 1915.
Charles Melvin, First World War, Istabulat, 21 April 1917.
Lewis Pugh Evans, First World War, Zonnebeke, 4 October 1917.


An 11-foot high Bronze Statue of a Black Watch Soldier, by William Birnie Rhind, Commemorates over 200 Members of The Black Watch Regiment who were killed or wounded in The South African War of 1900-1902.The Black Watch, the oldest Highland Regiment, was formed by General Wade in 1739 to Police The Highlands at a time when many of The Clans harboured Pro-Jacobite Sympathies. Their name derived from the contrast of their Dark Green Tartan against The Regular Red Tunics of The British Army. The unveiling ceremony for The Memorial, planned for 25 May 1910, was cancelled, because The Nation was in Mourning for the death of King Edward VII.
Date: 9 September 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Kim Traynor
(Wikimedia Commons)



A Black Watch (Royal Highlanders) Sentry “At Ease”.
Date: 1892.
Author: Harry Payne (1858–1927).
(Wikimedia Commons)

Notable Members.

Robert Munro, The Original Black Watch Commander, Colonel Sir Robert Munro.
Lachlan Macquarie, Governor of New South Wales, Australia, from 1810 to 1821. An inscription on his tomb in Scotland describes him as "The Father of Australia".
Bernard Fergusson, Baron Ballantrae. Last British-Born Governor-General, New Zealand
Alfred Anderson, Scotland's last surviving World War I Veteran (died 2005).
James Anton, Late-Quartermaster-Sergeant of 42nd Royal Highlanders and Author.
Jim Baxter, Scottish Footballer.


Jim Baxter. Scottish Footballer.
A former Member of The Black Watch.
Illustration: DAILY RECORD

Fergus Bowes-Lyon, Older Brother of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother
Duncan Campbell, Scots Nobleman and British Army Officer.
Harold Davis, Scottish former Professional Football Player.
Henry Davie, Liberal Member of Parliament for Haddington
Adam Ferguson, Scottish Philosopher, Social Scientist and Historian.
Stewart Granger, Actor.
J. B. S. Haldane, British-born Geneticist and Evolutionary Biologist.
Christopher Logue, English Poet.
Fulton Mackay, Scottish Actor.


Fulton Mackay.
Played Prison Officer Mackay in the
TV Programme, "Porridge", to great acclaim.
A former Member of The Black Watch.
Illustration: AVELEYMAN.COM


“Porridge”.
A Tribute to Fulton Mackay (Prison Officer Mackay).
Available on YouTube at


“Porridge”.
Starring Fulton Mackay (Prison Officer Mackay).
Available on YouTube at

Gillean Robert Maclaine, The 25th Hereditary Chief of Clan Maclaine of Lochbuie.
Major Ian Stanhope Murray.
Eric Newby, English Travel Author.
Simon Ramsay, Conservative Politician and Colonial Governor.
Neil Ritchie, British Army Officer during The Second World War.
William Rose, Screenwriter.


Portrait of The Viceroy of India,
Field-Marshal Sir Archibald Wavell.
1943. A former Member of The Black Watch.
Source: IWMCollections IWM Photo No.: TR 841.
Post-Work: User:W.wolny
(Wikimedia Commons)

Frederick Guthrie Tait, Scottish soldier and amateur golfer.
Rory Stewart, Scottish diplomat, Harvard Professor and Conservative MP.
Arthur Wauchope, British soldier and colonial administrator.
Archibald Wavell, British Field-Marshal during The Second World War.


The Black Watch Pipes and Drums.
Available on YouTube at


Piper David Muir, George Glen, Donald McKenzie and Colour-Sergeant William Gardner, 42nd Royal Highlanders (forebears of The Black Watch)
grouped round a drinks table at Aldershot Garrison, England.
Photo: 1854-1856.
Source: This is photograph Q 71646
from the collections of The Imperial War Museums.
Author: Cundall, Joseph and Howlett, Robert.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Friday 22 May 2020

“The Ascension And Heavenly Liturgy”. Presentation By: Rev. Fr. Timothy Finigan.



“The Ascension And Heavenly Liturgy”.
By: Rev. Fr. Timothy Finigan.
Available on YouTube at

Compendium Of The Reforms Of The Roman Breviary, 1568 - 1961.


The Text in this Article, by Gregory DiPippo, is taken from, and can be read in full at, NEW LITURGICAL MOVEMENT

Please NOTE: The Text in this Article is Copyright (c) Gregory DiPippo, 2009.
Reproduced by permission.


A Page from the Psalter of The Aberdeen Breviary of 1509.
From the Copy in The National Library of Scotland.
Photo: 26 February 2008.
Source: The National Library of Scotland.
Author: Andrew Myllar, Walter Chepman.
(Wikimedia Commons)


By Gregory DiPippo,
for publication on the NEW LITURGICAL MOVEMENT

Part 3.1: 1529 versus 1568.

The Breviary, reformed in the wake of The Council of Trent, was promulgated by the authority of Pope Saint Pius V in 1568, and is for this reason often referred to as The Pian Breviary. The history of how and why the Tridentine reform came about is not the subject of this particular Article; those who wish to read about such matters in greater detail should consult the interesting book of Msgr. Pierre Batiffol, The History of The Roman Breviary (Translated from the French by Atwell Baylay; Longmans, Green and Co., London, 1912).

My concern here is simply to compare The Breviary of 1568 with its immediate predecessor, The Breviary of The Roman Curia of 1529, and explain the changes made by The Pian reform.

The 1568 reform is, unsurprisingly, a very conservative reform, indeed, in almost every respect. In comparing the two Breviaries, one sees immediately that nearly the entire body of material which has proper musical notation, namely, the Invitatories, Hymns, Antiphons, and Responsories, has been carried over from the earlier Breviary into The Pian Breviary. The same holds true for most of the Chapters, Versicles and Prayers, parts which have no proper notation.


The exceptions are mostly instances where the entire Office of a particularly Feast Day has been replaced with a different Office. Such is the case on The Feast of The Holy Trinity, where a 13th- Century Office, "Sedenti super solium" (named for its first Antiphon), is replaced with the much earlier Office, "Gloria tibi Trinitas".

In the case of The Visitation, the Proper Office, granted to the whole of The Western Church in 1389 by Pope Urban VI, was suppressed; in its place, the Office of Our Lady’s Nativity was to be said, replacing the word "Nativitas" with "Visitatio", and with Proper Readings at Matins. However, a new Office, with many new Propers, was soon granted for this Feast by Pope Clement VIII (1592-1605).


Mary Stuart's (Mary, Queen of Scots) personal Breviary,
which she took with her to the scaffold, is preserved in
Inscriptions in her own hand may be seen in the margins.
This File: 16 October 2005.
User: Voyager
(Wikimedia Commons)

A number of minor adjustments are made, but few genuinely notable changes. The unusually lengthy Psalmody of Sunday Prime is redistributed though The Days of The Week, the first time The Distribution of The Psalms was changed since the days of Pope Saint Gregory the Great.

In The Preces of Lauds, Psalm 50, which is already said at the beginning of The Hour, is replaced in The Pian Breviary by Psalm 129; The Preces of Terce, Sext, and None are reduced to a new form which retains only the very end of The Preces of Lauds.

The obligation to recite The Little Office of Our Lady, The Office of The Dead, and The Gradual, and Penitential Psalms, is mitigated, although not to the prejudice of Local Customs. The rubrics throughout are made much shorter and infinitely clearer; for example, the bizarrely-complicated rubric of The 1529 Breviary, which governs the end of Advent, and which occupies three-and-a-half pages, is reduced to a mere twenty lines. A new general rubric, succinct and well-organised, is placed at the beginning of the book; in the original Edition of 1568, it occupies only seven pages.


There are a few significant changes made to The Calendar of Saints. Perhaps most noteworthy is the suppression of The Presentation of The Virgin (Feast Day 21 November), and The Feasts of both Saint Anne and Saint Joachim; this was done because the history of The Virgin’s parents and Her early life is not recorded in The Canonical Gospels, but, rather, in the apocryphal Proto-Evangelium of Saint James (Saint Anne was a favourite target of Luther’s scorn).

However, the devotion to them was so strong among Catholics that Saint Anne’s Feast was swiftly restored by Pope Saint Pius V’s successor, Pope Gregory XIII, in 1584, The Presentation of The Virgin was restored by Pope Sixtus V, the following year, and Saint Joachim's Feast Day was restored by Pope Gregory XV in 1622.


A few other Saints whose written lives were known to be at best untrustworthy, such as Saint Juliana of Nicomedia (16 February) and Saint Leonard of Noblac (6 November), were also removed, but the great majority of the popular Saints of The Mediæval Church remain in their Traditional places. One Octave, of The Feast of The Visitation, was suppressed, although it continued to be observed on many Local Calendars.

Many Saints, however, are knocked down a grade or two in The Tridentine Breviary, greatly reducing the number of Saints’ Offices of Nine Readings; certain other Saints of the "unreliable" category, such as Saint Barbara, were reduced to mere Commemorations.

One notable change is made to the Celebration of the lowest grade of Feast, the "Simplex" [Editor: "Simple"]; in The Mediæval Breviaries, the Single Nocturn of such a Feast had the Nine Psalms from the appropriate Common Office of a Saint, but, in The Pian Breviary, the Ferial Nocturn of Twelve Psalms is now said. The Psalmody of "Semi-Duplex" [Editor: "Semi-Double"] and "Duplex" [Editor: "Double"] Feasts is not changed.


14th-Century York Breviary.

A change is made to the manner of keeping Vigils in The Office, conforming The Breviary more closely to The Missal. A Vigil is the day before a Major Feast, on which a Mass of Penitential Character (in Purple Vestments, without "Gloria in excelsis" or "Alleluia") is Celebrated after None, in preparation for The Feast, itself.

In The Roman Use before Trent , most such Vigils, e.g. that of The Assumption, consisted solely of a Mass between None and First Vespers, and had no presence in The Office. In The Pian Breviary, Vigils are given a Full Office, occupying the whole of The Liturgical Day from Matins to None. The Office is mostly that of The Feria; however, a Homily on the Gospel of The Vigil Mass is read in place of The Scripture Lessons at Matins.

The Ferial Preces are said at all Hours, and The Prayer of The Vigil Mass is said at Lauds, Terce, Sext and None. Although rare elsewhere, this was a common custom in Germany, even before Trent.

The one aspect of The Breviary, which is extensively changed in The Pian reform, is the Corpus of Readings at Matins, which is almost completely re-worked from beginning to end.

[To be continued in Part 3.2.]


To read previous instalments in this Series, see: Compendium of the Reforms of the Roman Breviary, 1568-1961.

The Text in this Article, by GREGORY DIPIPPO, is taken from, and can be read in full at, NEW LITURGICAL MOVEMENT

Please NOTE: The Text in this Article is Copyright (c) Gregory DiPippo, 2009.
Reproduced by permission.

Thursday 21 May 2020

A Little Levity To Lighten Your Day.


The Ascension Of Our Lord.


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

The Ascension of Our Lord.

Station at Saint Peter's.
   Plenary Stational Indulgence.

Double of The First-Class.
   Privileged Octave of The Third Order.

White Vestments.

[Editor: The Paschal Candle is extinguished after The Gospel. 
It is
not lighted again except on The Vigil of Pentecost for The Blessing of The Font.]


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


It is in the Basilica of Saint Peter's, Rome, Dedicated to one of the chief witnesses of Our Lord's Ascension, that this Mystery, which marks the end of Our Lord's Earthly Life, is "this day" (Collect) kept.

In the forty days, which followed His Resurrection, Our Redeemer laid the foundations of His Church, to which He was going to send The Holy Ghost.


The Introit at The Ascension Day Latin Mass.
The Institute of Saint Philipp Neri, Berlin, Germany.
Available on YouTube at


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Christi Himmelfahrt in der außerordentlichen Form des römischen Ritus am Institut St. Philipp Neri in Berlin.

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All The Master's teachings are summed up in the Epistle and Gospel for today. Then, He left this Earth and the Introit, Collect, Epistle, Alleluia, Gospel, Offertory, Secret, Preface and Communion, celebrate His Glorious Ascension into Heaven, where the Souls He had freed from Limbo escort Him (Alleluia), and enter in His train into The Heavenly Kingdom, where they share more fully in His Divinity.

The Ascension sets before us the duty of raising our hearts to God. So, in the Collect, we are led to ask that we may dwell with Christ in Spirit in The Heavenly Realms, where we are called one day to dwell in our Risen Bodies.

During The Octave, the Credo is said: "I believe in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only-begotten Son of God . . . Who ascended into Heaven . . . He sitteth at The Right-Hand of The Father". The Gloria speaks in the same sense: "O, Lord Jesus Christ, The Only-Begotten Son . . . Who sittest at The Right-Hand of The Father, have mercy upon us."


The Gloria at The Ascension Day Latin Mass.
The Institute of Saint Philipp Neri, Berlin, Germany.
Available on YouTube at

In the Proper Preface, which is said until Pentecost, we give thanks to God because His Son, The Risen Christ, "after His Resurrection, appeared and showed Himself to all His Disciples; and, while they beheld Him, was lifted up into Heaven".

In the same way, during the whole Octave, a Proper Communicantes of The Feast is said, in which The Church reminds us that she is keeping the day on which The Only-Begotten Son of God set at The Right-Hand of His Glory the substance of our frail human nature, to which He had united Himself in The Mystery of The Incarnation.


The Collect and Epistle at The Ascension Day Latin Mass.
The Institute of Saint Philipp Neri, Berlin, Germany.
Available on YouTube at

We are reminded daily in The Liturgy, at the Offertory Suscipe Sancta Trinitas, and in the Canon Unde et memores, that, at Our Lord's command, The Holy Sacrifice is being offered in memory of "The Blessed Passion of the same Christ, Thy Son, Our Lord," and also His Resurrection from Hell and His Glorious Ascension into Heaven.

The truth is that man is saved only by The Mysteries of The Passion and Resurrection united with that of The Ascension. "Through Thy Death and Burial, through Thy Holy Resurrection, through Thy Admirable Ascension, deliver us, O Lord" (Litany of The Saints).


The Credo at The Ascension Day Latin Mass.
The Institute of Saint Philipp Neri, Berlin, Germany.
Available on YouTube at


Let us offer The Divine Sacrifice to God in memory of The Glorious Ascension of His Son (Suscipe, Unde et memores); while we nourish within our Souls an ardent desire for Heaven, that "delivered from present dangers," we may "attain to Eternal Life" (Secret).

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

Mass: Viri Galilaéi.
Creed: Is said.
Preface: For The Ascension.
Communicantes: For The Ascension.

On Weekdays throughout The Octave of The Ascension, The Mass for Ascension Day is said together with The Additional Collects from The Monday after Low Sunday to The Friday after The Octave of The Ascension (Page 1715, The Saint Andrew Daily Missal).

The Novena, preparatory to Pentecost, prescribed by Pope Leo XIII, for the return of heretics and schismatics to The Roman Unity, begins on The Friday After Ascension.

Wednesday 20 May 2020

The Saint John Houghton Schola Sings At Corpus Christi Church, Maiden Lane, London.



Fr. Gabriel Diaz Patri Celebrates Mass at Maiden Lane, London.
Illustration: JOSEPH SHAW, FLICKR


The Latin Mass Society Chairman, Joseph Shaw,
speaks about the formation of a new Chant Schola for London.


The Latin Mass Society's London Chant Schola, The Schola Cantorum Sancti Ioannis Hougton, has now established itself over the last year or so.

The Masses, 6.30 p.m., on Monday evenings, at Corpus Christi Church, 1, Maiden Lane, London WC2E 7NB, present a problem from the musical point of view, because London-based Singers find it difficult to get there in time for an extended rehearsal before Mass starts, after their work day.

The Schola Cantorum Sancti Ioannis Hougton rehearses on the previous Friday evening, in The Latin Mass Society's Office at 11 - 13 Macklin Street, London WC2B 5NH. E-mail: info@lms.org.uk Telephone: 020 7404 7284.

I attended the first of these rehearsals, as did The Schola's Chaplain, the usual Celebrant at The Maiden Lane Masses, Fr. Gabriel Diaz Patri.

The Schola’s members turned out to have every level of experience, from “lots” to “none”, and it was very interesting to see them develop as a group. The first Mass went extremely well, thanks to the seriousness of the Singers and the preparation and leadership of Matthew Schellhorn, its Director and The Latin Mass Society's Director of Music for London.



A new Schola for London.

Matthew Schellhorn,
The Latin Mass Society Director of Music for London,
writes about The Schola Cantorum Sancti Johannis Houghton.

At the start of last year (2019), The Latin Mass Society established a new Gregorian Chant initiative, designed to help a new generation of Chant enthusiasts be trained for singing in The Sacred Liturgy.

Working with Professional Singers, the new all-male Schola Cantorum began to accompany selected Traditional Catholic Liturgies (Mass and The Divine Office) in the London area, including some of the long-established regular Monday evening Masses in the beautifully-restored Corpus Christi Church, Maiden Lane, Covent Garden, London.

Members of The Schola gave Service at Holy Week in 2019 (and stood ready to do so in 2020 before the Coronavirus pandemic), at Masses for The Catholic Medical Association, and at our Annual Latin Mass Society Pilgrimage to Aylesford, Kent.

For our Patron, we chose a Saint with links to our local area. Essex-born Carthusian, Saint John Houghton, was the Proto-Martyr of The Protestant Revolt in England, being hanged, drawn and quartered at Tyburn in 1535.


As Prior of The London Charterhouse in The City of London, he had refused to take the Oath demanded by The Act of Supremacy. He was Beatified in 1886 and Canonised in 1970. The Logo of The Schola is a double reference to the Chant “neume torculus” and the infamous three-legged Tyburn Tree.

That The Church requires greater capacity to service its Sacred Music with high-quality singing is undeniable. Summorum Pontificum not only led to a widening access to The Traditional Mass, but, in doing so, has also inspired many colleagues of mine to assess their professional output in light of a sense of Vocation.

Such a re-commitment to The Church’s needs is long overdue; those involved in Music in Churches, just after the time of The Reform, including our Late-Patron, Colin Mawby, give testimony to the fact that Sacred Music was a first casualty of Modernistic Trends in the 1950s and 1960s, and, of course, the desultory state of Catholic Liturgical Music in the ensuing decades need not be spoken of.

We are inspired by the perennial Teaching of The Church in relation to the Music specifically endorsed to accompany its Ceremonies. Pope Saint Pius X wrote, in “Tra le Sollicitudine” (1903): “These qualities [holiness, artistic beauty, and universality] are to be found, in the highest degree, in Gregorian Chant, which is consequently the Chant proper to The Roman Church, the only Chant she has inherited from the Ancient Fathers, which she has jealously guarded for Centuries in her Liturgical codices, which she directly proposes to The Faithful as her own, which she prescribes exclusively for some parts of The Liturgy.”


The Schola’s regular schedule of rehearsal and performance opportunities, in Central London, makes it possible for those with no previous experience of singing Gregorian Chant to learn how to do so.

Our new Schola has seen a group of very committed gentlemen give of their time, and not inconsiderable natural abilities, towards refining their musical skills to an extent I have rarely seen in grass-roots initiatives.

And so, six singers, some of whom had never sung solo before, have been trained to “Cantor Standard” and have led the Schola on several occasions, all of which would be unthinkable without regular, gradated, training and support.

On several occasions, I have invited singers from The London Oratory and Westminster Cathedral to give Vocal Training and to lead Workshops.


From the start, I believed we should “plug in” to Spiritual Assistance, not only when “On Duty”, but also while rehearsing. I was delighted that Fr. Gabriel Díaz Patri agreed to be our Advisor, not only on account of his Priestly Ministry, but also his musical skills and insight. He regularly attends rehearsals, giving valuable input and joining us for The Divine Office – having studied the repertoire for our forthcoming duties, we often conclude with sung Compline.

The Schola Cantorum Sancti Johannis Houghton meets on Friday evenings at the start of the month. Those who feel the call to help are welcome to get in touch. There is no charge and all music is provided. An ability to follow direction, to maintain group ethos, and to be organised, is required, and we say that due respect for the Spirituality of The Sacred Chant and the culture of The Church’s Sacred Environment is expected.

Perhaps our musician readers – or indeed our newly-trained Chant Singers – will wish to begin a similar initiative elsewhere ?

Matthew Schellhorn is The Latin Mass Society’s Director of Music for London. He has had a deep love of Sacred Music since his childhood, and continues to campaign for the raising of musical standards in the life of The Catholic Church. He can be contacted at dirmusic@lms.org.uk


Rector: Fr Alan Robinson, KHS,
Corpus Christi Catholic Church,
1-5 Maiden Lane, London WC2E 7NB.

Telephone: 020 7836 4700.
Email: catholicchurchcoventgarden@gmail.com
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