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

Sunday 19 July 2020

Crusader Liturgy: The Feast Of The Liberation Of Jerusalem. Feast Day 15 July.



Taking of Jerusalem 1099.
In the background The Passio Christi (Source).
Illustration: CANTICUM SALOMONIS


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

When, on The Ides of July of The Year of the most fructiferous Incarnation of Our Lord 1099, after nearly four years of bellicose Pilgrimage and a month-long exhausting siege, The Crusaders finally broke through the inner ramparts of Jerusalem and poured into The Holy City, freeing it from Centuries-long occupation by the Mohammedan horde, their surpassing joy could only find Liturgical expression in The Office of Easter Day, which was Celebrated, however out of Season, in The Church of The Holy Sepulchre.

“Hæc dies quam fecit Dominus, exsultemus et lætemur in ea” — the words of the Gradual resounded in that venerable Basilica, as Raymond of Aguilers, Chaplain of The Lord Raymond of Saint-Gilles, Count of Toulouse and, later, Count of Tripoli, recounts in his “Historia Francorum qui ceperunt Iherusalem”.

The Mediæval mind easily understood the deliverance of Jerusalem from the infidels as a type of the deliverance of mankind in Our Lord’s Glorious Resurrection; a new day, demanding a “Canticum Novum”. Raymond’s fond memories of the event wax exuberant in his Chronicle:
A new day, a new joy, and new and perpetual delight ! The fulfilment of labour and devotion: new words, new songs, were sounded forth by all. This day, I say, which shall be Celebrated for Centuries to come, transformed our pains and travails into joy and exultation. This day, I say, was the harrowing of all heathendom, the consolation of Christendom, the renewal of our Faith. “This is the day which The Lord hath made: let us be glad and rejoice therein”, for therein The Lord illumined and Blessed His people. […] This day, The Ides of July, shall be Celebrated to The Praise and Glory of God’s Name […] In this day, we sang The Office of The Resurrection, for, on this day, He, Who arose from The Dead by His Power, uplifted us by His Grace.1


In the ensuing Octave, the triumphant Knights roamed around The Holy Places of the City, Venerating the Relics, singing Psalms, Hymns, and Spiritual Canticles, and they Solemnly Celebrated The Octave Day on 22 July, choosing the worthy Godfrey of Bouillon as their Ruler. They thenceforth established 15 July as a Liturgical Feast Day to Commemorate The Liberation of The Holy City, as the Chroniclers attest, among them William of Tyre, e.g.:
In order that the memory of this great deed might be better preserved, a General Decree was issued which met with the approval and sanction of all. It was ordained that this day be held Sacred and set apart from all others, as the time when, for the glory and praise of the Christian name, there should be recounted all that had been foretold by the Prophets concerning this event.
On this day, intercession should always be made to The Lord for the Souls of those by whose commendable and successful labours the City beloved of God had been restored to the ancient freedom of The Christian Faith.2


Early in Godfrey’s reign, a Canonical Chapter was established in The Church of The Holy Sepulchre, and a Proper Liturgical Use slowly developed, especially after that body was reformed and placed under The Augustinian Rule in 1114.

The use of The Holy Sepulchre was based, as one would expect given the origin of its immigrant Churchmen, mostly on Northern French Uses, especially those of Chartres, Bayeux, Évreux, and Séez. This Use would, in turn, form the basis of those of The Religious Orders that emanated from The Holy Land, including The Carmelites and The Knights Templar and The Knights Hospitaller.


The Liturgical sources variously dub The Feast of 15 July as the “Festivitas sancte hierusalem”, or, “Festivitas hierusalem quando capta fuit a Christianis” (or a Francis), or “In liberatione sancte civitatis Ierusalem” (de manibus turchorum).

The admirable Victory of The First Crusade was thus fixed into the framework of The History of Salvation, being both the fulfilment of Prophecies, as William of Tyre states in the aforesaid excerpt, and the anagogical harbinger of the ultimate Victory: The Christians’ entry into The Heavenly Jerusalem.


John of Patmos watches the descent of New Jerusalem from God
in a 14th-Century tapestry (Source)

The Mass opens with the famous Introit borrowed from The Fourth Sunday of Lent: “Lætare Iherusalem et conventum facite omnes qui diligitis eam, gaudete cum leticia, qui in tristicia fuistis, ut exultetis, et saciemini ab uberibus consolacionis vestre”, with the Verse from the eminently apposite Psalm 121.

Preaching on this Feast Day shortly after the re-conquest, Fulcher of Chartres repeated these Verses from Isaias, and gave the continuation of the Prophecy, concluding with the declaration that The Crusader triumph was its fulfilment: “Hec omnia oculis nostris vidimus”. Ekkehard of Aura agreed that the Prophecy applied to the epic of The Crusaders, writing (rather abstrusely):

These, and a thousand other prognostics of the sort, albeit that they refer through anagogy to what is above — our mother Jerusalem — encourage the weaker members, who have drunk from the breasts of the consolation of those things written and to be written, to undergo dangers even historically by an actual journey because of such a contemplation or partaking in joy.

William of Tyre, too, claimed the re-conquest of Jerusalem was the literal fulfilment of Isaias’ oracle: Ita ut illud prophete impletum ad litteram videretur oraculum «letamini cum Ierusalem et exultate in ea omnes qui diligitis eam».


But, by fulfilling the ancient Prophecy, The Victory of 15 July, itself, became the type of a more lasting kind of Victory. The very use of an Advent Introit points to The Second Coming, and the Collect, Secret, and Post-Communion, emphasise this eschatological theme:

Collect: Almighty God, Who, by Thy marvellous strength, hast torn Thy City Jerusalem from the hands of The Paynims and restored it to the Christians, help us in Thy Mercy, we beseech Thee, and grant that we, who, with Yearly Devotion, Celebrate this Solemnity, may deserve to attain the joys of The Heavenly Jerusalem. Through our Lord, etc. (Omnipotens Deus, qui virtute tua mirabili Ierusalem civitatem tuam de manu paganorum eruisti et Christianis reddidisti, adesto, quesumus, nobis propitius, et concede ut qui hanc sollennitatem annua recolimus devotione, ad superne Ierusalem gaudia pervenire mereamur. Per Dominum.)


Secret: Mercifully accept, O, Lord, we beseech thee, this Host, which we humbly offer Thee, and make us worthy of its Mystery, that we, who Celebrate this day when the City of Jerusalem was freed from the hands of The Paynim, may at last deserve to become fellow-citizens of The Heavenly Jerusalem. Through our Lord, etc. (Hanc, Domine, quesumus, hostiam quam tibi supplices offerimus dignanter suscipe, et eius misterio nos dignos effice, ut qui de Ierusalem civitate de manu paganorum eruta hunc diem agimus celebrem, celestis Ierusalem concives fieri tandem mereamur. Per Dominum.)

Postcommunion: May The Sacrifice we have received, O, Lord, profit to the salvation of our body and Soul, so that we who rejoice in the liberty of thy City, Jerusalem, may deserve to be counted heirs of The Heavenly Jerusalem. Through our Lord, etc. (Quod sumpsimus, Domine, sacrificium ad corporis et anime nobis proficiat salutem, ut qui de civitatis tue Ierusalem libertate gaudemus, in celesti Ierusalem hereditari mereamur. Per Dominum.)


The Orations for The “Missa de Jerusalem” in a Sacramentary of The Holy Sepulchre, written in The Second Quarter of the 12th-Century.


The Epistle Pericope is Isaias 60, 1-6 (“Arise, be enlightened, O, Jerusalem; for thy light is come, and the glory of The Lord is risen upon thee” etc.), the first line whereof forms the Verse of the Gradual, “Omnes de Saba”, taken from The Feast of The Epiphany.

Ekkehard mentions this Passage, together with that of the Introit, as one of Prophecies that The Crusaders’ feat had made “visible history”4. The Alleluia Responsory, which seems to have fluctuated between “Te decet hymnus” and “Qui confidunt”, both lifted from Sundays after Pentecost, are taken from Psalm Verses germane to The Liberation of Jerusalem. This was followed by a brash Sequence “Manu plaudant”, which will have to be discussed in a future Post.

The Gospel Lesson comes from Matthew 21, 1-9: Our Lord’s glorious entry into Jerusalem before His Passion, acclaimed as The Son of David by the Hebrew Children. The pugnacious Offertory of The Third Sunday after Epiphany “Dextera Domini fecit virtutem”, was Chanted thereafter and, during Communion, the Antiphon from The Second Sunday in Advent: “Arise, O, Jerusalem, and stand On High; and behold the joy that cometh to thee from God.”

As The Church of The Holy Sepulchre grew too small for the needs of the new Crusader Kingdom, and, as it merited embellishment in any case, a considerable rebuilding was undertaken, which concluded with the re-Dedication of the Church on 15 July 1149, The Quinquagenary of The Liberation, by The Lord Fulcher of Angoulême, Patriarch of Jerusalem.


This Prelate seems to have undertaken some revision of The Latin Jerusalemite Liturgy, which especially affected the 15 July, now the Bi-Cephalous Celebration of both The Liberation and The Dedication of The Church of The Holy Sepulchre — “Liberatio sancti civitatis Iherusalem de manibus Turchorum et Dedicatio ecclesie domnici sepulcri” — with two Masses and Offices.

In the Basilica, itself, The Dedication seems to have been Celebrated exclusively, except for The Morrow-Mass, which was that of The Liberation. The Collect of The Liberation, however, was changed: “Almighty and Everlasting God, builder and guardian of The Heavenly City of Jerusalem, protect from On High this place with its inhabitants, that it might be in itself an abode of safety and peace”4; this was borrowed from a pre-existing Collect.

The change of focus of this new Collect is also evinced by the introduction of Antiphons into The Office, borrowed from The Office of The Dedication, that tended to refer to the dignity of The Church of The Holy Sepulchre, rather than the glorious Liberation of the City.

The Ordinals indicate that, in the Basilica, a Festive Procession took place after The Morrow-Mass of The Liberation; whether this was introduced with the 1149 Revisions, or was a continuation of an earlier practice, is unknown.


The Procession set out from The Church of The Holy Sepulchre to The Temple, and, upon arriving at its entrance, they sang Prayers taken from The Office of The Dedication. They then set forth to the “place where the City was captured”, i.e. the place where the Wall was breached on 15 July 1099, and held another Station, a Sermon was Preached, and a Blessing given; perhaps the Sermon by Fulcher of Chartres, mentioned above, was delivered in these circumstances.

Thus, the Procession connected The Old Testament (The Temple) with The New Testament (The Holy Sepulchre) and with The Crusader victory (The City Wall). Finally, The Canons and The Faithful returned to The Holy Sepulchre for Tierce.

The rest of The Office in the Basilica was composed mainly from elements taken from The Office of The Dedication, according to The Use of Chartres. One presumes, however, that, in the other Churches of The Diocese of Jerusalem, The Mass and Office of The Liberation were Celebrated, instead.


The Entry of The Lord into Jerusalem.
Fresco by Saint Theophan of Crete.
Meteora, Church of Saint Nicholas (Source)

Alas, Christian rule of Jerusalem did not last the Century. In 1187, the City fell to Saladin, and, although The Liturgical Use of The Holy Sepulchre survived in the remainder of the Crusader States and within certain Religious Orders, the Celebration of The Feasts of The Liberation of Jerusalem and The Dedication of The Holy Sepulchre seem to have been mostly abandoned.

It only reappears in one Manuscript after 1187, which dates from the odd episode when Jerusalem briefly returned to Christian hands, thanks to the machinations of the excommunicate Emperor Frederick II.

In this Manuscript, The Mass is entitled “Missa pro libertate ierusalem de manu paganorum”, and the Gospel Pericope from Matthew 21 has been replaced with the Verses in Luke 19, wherein Our Lord weeps for Jerusalem.

It has therefore been argued, with undeniable verisimilitude, that the old Liberation Mass was transformed into a Mass to ask for the recapture of Jerusalem. But, in any case, even this proved short-lived.



Although notices marking The Liberation of Jerusalem on 15 July appear in the Kalendars of several Western Liturgical Books, few Western Churches adopted The Feast as it was Celebrated in Jerusalem. It does appear in a 14th-Century Missal from The Hospitaller Priory in Autun, under the Title “In festo deliberacionis Iherusalem”.

Liturgical Books from Tours, Nantes, and the Abbeys of Saint Mesmin (near Orléans) and Beaulieu (near Loches) feature a Feast of The Holy Sepulchre on 15 July, although it does not make explicit reference to The Liberation, and its Propers antedated The First Crusade.

A Feast for “The Liberatio Iherusalem” appears with a Mass and Office in Liturgical Books from the Cathedral of Saint Étienne of Bourges, dating from the 13th-Century to the 15th-Century. Its Propers are composed of elements from The Office of The Dedication and also from The Easter Liturgy: A fascinating reminder of The Paschal Joy that seized The Crusaders on those happy Ides of July 1099.

Our hearty acknowledgements to the Reader who provided us with some of the necessary bibliographic material for this Post.


Notes.

1. Nova dies, novum gaudium, nova et perpetua leticia; laboris atque devotionis consummatio, nova verba nova cantica, ab universis exigebat. Hęc, inquam, dies celebris in omni seculo venturo, omnes dolores atque labores gaudium et exultationem fecit. Dies hęc, inquam, tocius paganitatis exinanicio, christianitatis confirmatio, et fidei nostrae renovatio. Hęc dies quam fecit Dominus, exultemus et letemur in ea, quia in hac illuxit et benedixit Dominus populo suo […] Hęc dies celebratur Idus Iulii, ad laudem et gloriam nominis Christi. […] In hac die cantavimus officium de resurrectione, quia in hac die ille qui sua virtute a mortuis resurrexit, per gratiam suam nos resuscitavit.

2. Ad maiorem autem tanti facti memoriam ex communi decreto sancitum omnium voto susceptum et approbatum est, ut hic dies apud omnes solemnis et inter celebres celebrior perpetuo haberetur, in qua, ad laudem et gloriam nominis christiani, quicquid in prophetis de hoc facto quasi vaticinium predictum fuerat, referatur: et pro eorum animabus fiat ad Dominum intercessio, quorum labore commendabili et favorabili apud omnes predicta Deo amabilis civitas et fidei christiane et pristine restituta est libertati.


3. Hec et huiusmodi mille pesagia licet per anagogen ad illam quę sursum est matrem nostram Hierusalem referantur, tamen infirmioribus membris ab uberibus consolationis prescriptę vel scribende potatis pro tanti contemplatione vel participatione gaudii periculis se tradere etiam hystorialiter practica discursione cohortantur.

4. Versis in hystorias visibiles eatenus mysticis prophetiis.

5. Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, edificator et custos Iherusalem civitatis superne, custodi locum istum cum habitatoribus suis: ut sit in eo domicilium incolumitatis et pacis. Per Dominum.

Saint Vincent De Paul. Confessor. Feast Day, Today, 19 July.


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

Saint Vincent De Paul.
   Confessor.
   Feast Day 19 July.

Double.

White Vestments.



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

Providence, ever watching over men with maternal solicitude, in the 17th-Century raised up Saint Vincent de Paul. He was filled with The Holy Spirit, Which had strengthened The Apostles, and he contributed abundantly to the evangelisation of The Poor and to the development of the Priestly virtues which are the glory of The Clergy (Collect).

He was born near Dax, France. When still a young Priest, he fell into the hands of Turkish pirates, who carried him to Africa. Having returned to France, he became, successively, a Parish Priest, and Grand Almoner of The Galley Slaves. Saint Francis de Sales entrusted to him later the Spiritual Direction of The Nuns of The Visitation.

Preaching especially to country people, he bound The Members of The Congregation he had Founded, under the Title of Priests of The Mission, or “Lazarists”, to undertake this Apostolic Work by a special Vow.

Teaching them to leave everything to follow Christ (Communion), he sent them to work in The Vineyard of God (Gospel) and to establish everywhere Seminaries in order to give good Priests to The People.


In order to help Poor People, Foundlings, Young Girls, whose virtue was exposed to danger, and others insane, invalided or sick, he Founded, in conjunction with Saint Louise de Marillac, The Congregation of The Sisters of Charity, which is now the most numerous and the most diffused throughout the World.

After a life which recalls the Apostolate of Saint Paul (Epistle), and which caused Pope Leo XIII to proclaim him The Special Patron of all Charitable Associations, Saint Vincent died in 1660, in Paris, France, at Saint Lazarus's, which was The Mother-House of his Congregation.

Let us beseech God that, following the example of Saint Vincent, whose pious merits we Venerate on this day (Collect), our hearts, like his, may be filled with Divine Charity.

Mass: Justus.

Saturday 18 July 2020

Saint Symphorosa And Her Seven Sons. Martyrs. Feast Day 18 July.


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

Saint Symphorosa And Her Seven Sons.
   Martyrs.
   Feast Day 18 July.

Simple.

Red Vestments.



English: The Church of Saint Symphorosa,
Tivoli, Italy.
Français: L'église San Sinforosa de Tivoli Terme
Photo: 16 May 2010.
Source: Own work.
Permission: LPLT / Wikimedia Commons.
Author: LPLT
(Wikimedia Commons)

Saint Symphorosa of Tivoli, wife of the Martyr, Saint Getulus, was the mother of seven sons to whom she taught The Faith. Arrested at Tivoli, by order of The Emperor Adrian, she was hung up by the hair and then thrown into The River Teverone, with a stone tied to her neck.

All her children, stretched on stakes by means of pulleys, imitated her constancy and were Martyred about 125 A.D.

Mass: Clamavérunt justi.




THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL



THE SAINT ANDREW DAILY MISSAL

Available (in U.K.) from

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Saint Camillus de Lellis. Confessor. Patron Saint Of Hospitals, Patients, And Nurses. Feast Day 18 July.


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

Saint Camillus de Lellis.
   Confessor.
   Patron Saint of Hospitals, Patients,
      and Nurses.
   Feast Day 18 July.

Double.

White Vestments.



Our Lady of La Paz Parish Church, Bolivia.
(Saint Camillus de Lellis, Archimedes-Flordeliz Streets, Makati City).
Barangay La Paz, Makati City.
Photo: 24 July 2016.
Source: Own work.
Author: Judgefloro
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Holy Ghost, Who has manifested Himself in all manner of ways in the Souls of The Saints, whose names have appeared in The Cycle since The Feast of Pentecost, proposes to our admiration on this day Saint Camillus, whose Charity towards his neighbour had especially Jesus in view (Communion).

Born in 1550, in The Kingdom of Naples, of the noble Family of Lellis, Saint Camillus entered The Capuchin Order, but twice he had to leave it on account of a sore on his leg. For God intended him to be The Founder of a Congregation of Regular Clerks, Consecrating themselves to the service of the sick.

He obtained from The Apostolic See approbation for his Order. Inspired by the example of Jesus, Who died for us (Epistle) and Who has declared that there is no greater proof of love than to give one's life for others (Introit, Gospel), these Religious promise to tend the sick, even those stricken with the Plague.


Saint Camillus, as well as his Institute, received from God a special Grace to help Souls to emerge victoriously from the death-struggle (Collect, Secret), wherefore the name of this Saint has been included in The Litany for The Agonising,

Saint Camillus died at Rome on 14 July 1614. Pope Leo XIII proclaimed him the Patron Saint of Hospitals and Patients, and Pope Pius XI added “and of all those who nurse them”.

Mass: Majórem hac.
Commemoration: Saint Symphorosa and her Seven Sons. Martyrs.

Friday 17 July 2020

Zephyrinus Supports The Trappist Monks At Scourmont Abbey in Belgium. He Quaffs Their Wonderful “Chimay Beer”. A Heavenly Brew.



English: Trappist Beer.
Brewed at The Trappist Monastery of Scourmont Abbey in Belgium.
“Chimay Triple”, one of the most common Trappist Beers.
Svenska: Chimay Triple, en av de vanligaste trappistölen.
Photo: 6 June 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Ogräs
(Wikimedia Commons)


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

SCOURMONT ABBEY (Abbaye Notre-Dame de Scourmont) is a Trappist Monastery on The Scourmont Plateau, in the Village of Forges, which is part of Chimay, in the Province of Hainaut, Belgium.

The Abbey is famous for its Spiritual Life and for running THE CHIMAY BREWERY, one of the few producers of Trappist Beer.


LE POTEAUPRÉ CHEESE.
Its round shape, its flowery rind, its creamy and melting texture,
its pronounced, frank and clean taste,
make this Cheese the cream of Trappist Cheeses.


Treat yourself .
“La Poteauflette” will delight your taste buds,
accompanied by a very fresh “Chimay Dorée” (“Chimay Gold Beer”).

Life in the Abbey is characterised by Prayer, Reading and Manual Work, the three basic elements of Trappist life.

Zephyrinus acquires his Heavenly “Chimay Beer” from AMAZON. Delivered straight to the door.


“Chimay Trappist Beer” Gift Set.
“Chimay White” is a very rewarding Trappist Triple Beer.
“Chimay Red” is an attractive Copper Beer.
“Chimay Blue” is a Deep Brown in colour.
A High Quality Brew for keen drinkers.
All natural ingredients and suitable for Vegans.
Includes “The Chimay Glass”.
The Scourmont Abbey Brewery states: “The Chimay Glass” is essential:
Only this Chalice-shaped glass will allow you to fully experience
the aromas and flavour of “Chimay Beer”.
Available from AMAZON


In 1844, Jean-Baptiste Jourdain, the Parish Priest of Virelles, suggested that the wild Plateau of Scourmont was a suitable place for a Monastery. However, all previous attempts to cultivate the barren Plateau had failed. Fr. Jourdain obtained support for the proposed Foundation from Prince Joseph II de Chimay, the Abbot of Westmalle Abbey and Westvleteren Abbey. Six years later, on 25 July 1850, a small group of Monks from Westvleteren Abbey settled on Scourmont and Founded a Priory.

A lot of hard work was required to transform the barren soil of Scourmont into fertile farmland. A Farm was created around the Monastery, as well as a Cheese Dairy and a Brewery. On 24 February 1871, Blessed Pope Pius IX granted the Priory the status of Abbey and it was inaugurated on 7 July 1871.

Since then, other Monasteries have been Founded by Scourmont Abbey, such as Caldey Abbey[4] on Caldey Island in Pembrokeshire, Wales, which was taken over from The Benedictines, who moved to Prinknash Abbey (December 1928) and Notre-Dame de Mokotoin, near Goma (Kivu), former Belgian Congo), now Zaire, (February 1954).


The present Abbey Church dates from 1950.

The famous Beers and Cheeses of Scourmont Abbey are marketed under the Trade Name of “Chimay”, after the Village where the Abbey is located.

Joseph-Marie Canivez, who joined the Community in 1899 and made his Final Vows in 1905, would go on to become a noted Monastic Historian.

The Web-Site of Scourmont Abbey (Notre-Dame de Scourmont Abbey) can be found HERE

Why not do the same as Zephyrinus and support The Trappist Monks at Scourmont Abbey by purchasing their magnificent Beers and Cheeses. See their Web-Site HERE and, also, order from AMAZON

Saint Alexius. Confessor. Feast Day 17 July.


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

Saint Alexius.
   Confessor.
   Feast Day 17 July.

Semi-Double.

White Vestments.



English: Saint Alexius.
Polski: św. Aleksy, Człowiek Boży (XVII w.).
Date: 17th-Century.
Source: http://days.pravoslavie.ru/Images/ii134&393.htm
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Saint Alexius was born at Rome, towards 350 A.D., of a wealthy family; his father being the Senator Euphemian. Guided by The Holy Ghost, he renounced his patrimony and piously visited, as a Pilgrim, the Sanctuaries of The East. He died in the 5th-Century A.D., under the Pontificate of Pope Innocent I.

His body was buried in the Church which bears his name on Mount Aventine, Rome. He is honoured there with Saint Boniface (Feast Day 14 May), to whom the Church had originally been Dedicated.

Mass: Os justi.


English: The Minor Basilica of Saint Boniface and Saint Alexius, Rome.
Italiano: Santi Bonifacio ed Alessio all'Aventino.
Photo: 1 September 2013.
Source: Own work.
(Wikimedia Commons)

The following Text is taken from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

Saint Alexius, or Alexis of Rome, or Alexis of Edessa, was an Eastern Saint, whose Veneration was later transplanted to Rome. The relocation of the cult, to Rome, was facilitated by the belief that the Saint was a native of Rome and had died there.

This Roman connection stemmed from an earlier Syriac legend, which recounted that, during the Episcopate of Bishop Rabbula (412 A.D. - 435 A.D.), a "Man of God", who lived in Edessa, Mesopotamia as a beggar, and who shared the alms he received with other poor people, was found to be a native of Rome after his death.

The Greek version of his legend made Alexius the only son of Euphemianus, a wealthy Christian Roman of the Senatorial class. Alexius fled his arranged marriage to follow his Holy Vocation. Disguised as a beggar, he lived near Edessa, in Syria, accepting alms even from his own household slaves, who had been sent to look for him, but did not recognise him, until a miraculous vision of The Blessed Virgin Mary singled him out as a "Man of God."


English: Chapel of Saint Alexius,
Minor Basilica of Saint Boniface and Saint Alexius, Rome.
Italiano: Chiesa dei santi Bonifacio e Alessio all'Aventino:
cappella di sant'Alessio nel sottoscala.
Photo: 9 January 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Lalupa
(Wikimedia Commons)

Fleeing the resultant notoriety, he returned to Rome, so changed that his parents did not recognise him, but, as good Christians, took him in and sheltered him for seventeen years, which he spent in a dark cubby-hole beneath the stairs, Praying and teaching Catechism to children.

After his death, his family found writings on his body, which told them whom he was and how he had lived his life of Penance from the day of his wedding, for the love of God.

Saint Alexius' cult developed in Syria and spread throughout The Eastern Roman Empire by the 9th-Century A.D. Only from the end of the 10th-Century, did his name begin to appear in any Liturgical Books in The West.


English: Minor Basilica of Saint Alexius and Saint Boniface, Rome.
Italiano: Santi Alessio e Bonifacio, Rome. Italia.
Photo: 11 July 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: Panarjedde (FlagUploader).
(Wikimedia Commons)

Since before the 8th-Century, there was, on the Aventine, in Rome, a Church that was dedicated to Saint Boniface. In 972 A.D., Pope Benedict VII transferred this almost-abandoned Church to the exiled Greek Metropolitan, Sergius of Damascus. The latter erected, beside the Church, a Monastery for Greek and Latin Monks, soon made famous for the austere life of its inmates. To the name of Saint Boniface, was now added that of Saint Alexius, as Titular Saint of the Church and Monastery, now known as Santi Bonifacio e Alessio.

It is evidently Sergius and his Monks who brought to Rome the Veneration of Saint Alexius. The Eastern Saint, according to his legend a native of Rome, was soon very popular with the folk of that City, and this Church, being associated with the legend, was considered to be built on the site of the home that Alexius returned to from Edessa.

Saint Alexius is mentioned in the Roman Martyrology, under 17 July, in the following terms: "At Rome, in a Church on the Aventine Hill, a man of God is celebrated under the name of Alexius, who, as reported by tradition, abandoned his wealthy home, for the sake of becoming poor, and to beg for alms unrecognised."


English: Minor Basilica of Saint Boniface and Saint Alexius, Rome.
Italiano: Roma - Chiesa dei Ss. Bonifacio e Alessio.
Photo: October 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: MarkusMark
(Wikimedia Commons)

While the Roman Catholic Church continues to recognise Saint Alexius as a Saint, his Feast Day was removed from The General Roman Calendar in 1969. The reason given was the legendary character of the written life of the Saint. The Catholic Encyclopedia article, regarding Saint Alexius, remarked: "Perhaps the only basis for the story is the fact that a certain pious ascetic, at Edessa, lived the life of a beggar and was later Venerated as a Saint."

The Tridentine Calendar gave his Feast Day the Rank of "Simple", but, by 1862, it had become a "Semi-Double" and, in Rome itself, a "Double". It was reduced again to the Rank of "Simple", in 1955, and, in 1960, became a "Commemoration".


English: A 1674 theatre programme for Saint Alexis, The Man of God, presented in Kiev and dedicated to Tsar Alexis of Russia.
Русский: Театральная программка спектакля "Алексей, человек Божий", поставленного в Киеве в 1674 году в посвящение царю Алексею Михайловичу.
Source: Scanned from И. Л. Бусева-Давыдова. Культура и искусство в эпоху перемен. - М., Индрик, 2008, ISBN 978-5-85759-439-1 p.109.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)

According to the Rules in the present-day Roman Missal, The Saint may now be Celebrated everywhere on his Feast Day, with a “Memorial”, unless in some locality an obligatory Celebration is assigned to that day.

The Eastern Orthodox Church Venerates Saint Alexius on 17 March. Five Byzantine Emperors, four Emperors of Trebizond, and numerous other Eastern European and Russian personalities, have borne his name; see Alexius.

Thursday 16 July 2020

“Missa Papæ Marcelli”. Composer: Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina. Sung By: The Tallis Scholars. Musical Director: Peter Phillips.



“Missa Papæ Marcelli”.
Composer: Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina.
Sung by: The Tallis Scholars.
Musical Director: Peter Phillips.
Available on YouTube at


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (1525 – 2 February 1594)[1] was an Italian Renaissance Composer of Sacred Music and the best-known 16th-Century representative of The Roman School of Musical Composition.[2]

He had a long-lasting influence on the development of Church Music and Secular Music in Europe, especially on the development of Counterpoint, and his work is considered the culmination of Renaissance polyphony.[2]

Palestrina was born in the Town of Palestrina,[3] near Rome, then part of The Papal States, to Santo and Palma Pierluigi, in 1525. Documents suggest that he first visited Rome in 1537, when he is listed as a Chorister at the Santa Maria Maggiore Basilica, Cathedral of the Diocese of Rome. He studied with Robin Mallapert and Firmin Lebel. He spent most of his career in the City.


“The Kyrie”.
First bars of Palestrina’s “Missa Papæ Marcelli”.
CPDL Licensed, which is based on GPL.
From http://www.cpdl.org.
This File: 23 November 2005.
User: Joonasl
(Wikimedia Commons)


Palestrina came of age as a Musician under the influence of the Northern European style of Polyphony, which owed its dominance in Italy primarily to two influential Netherlandish Composers, Guillaume Dufay and Josquin des Prez, who had spent significant portions of their careers there. Italy itself had yet to produce anyone of comparable fame or skill in Polyphony.[2]

From 1544 to 1551, Palestrina was the Organist of the Cathedral of Saint Agapito, the principal Church of his native City. In 1551, Pope Julius III (previously the Bishop of Palestrina) appointed Palestrina as “Mæstro di Cappella”, or, Musical Director of The Cappella Giulia,[4], the Choir of The Chapter of Canons at Saint Peter's Basilica.

Palestrina dedicated to Pope Julius III his first published compositions (1554), a Book of Masses. It was the first Book of Masses by a native Composer, since, in The Italian States of Palestrina's day, most Composers of Sacred Music were from The Low Countries, France, or Spain. In fact, the Book was modelled on one by Cristóbal de Morales: The woodcut in the front is almost an exact copy of the one from the Book by the Spanish Composer.


Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina.
Medium: Painting.
Source/Photographer:
This File: 8 February 2009.
User: Sémhur
(Wikimedia Commons)


During the next decade, Palestrina held positions, similar to his Julian Chapel Appointment, at other Chapels and Churches in Rome, notably Saint John Lateran (1555–1560, a post previously held by Lassus), and Santa Maria Maggiore (1561–1566). In 1571, he returned to The Julian Chapel and remained at Saint Peter’s for the rest of his life.

The decade of the 1570s was difficult for him personally; he lost his brother, two of his sons, and his wife, in three separate outbreaks of The Plague (1572, 1575, and 1580, respectively). He seems to have considered becoming a Priest at this time, but, instead, he remarried, this time to a wealthy widow. This finally gave him financial independence (he was not well paid as Choirmaster) and he was able to Compose prolifically until his death.

He died in Rome of Pleurisy on 2 February 1594. As was usual, Palestrina was buried on the same day he died, in a plain Coffin with a lead plate on which was inscribed “Libera me Domine”. A Five-Part Psalm for Three Choirs was sung at the funeral.[5]

Palestrina's funeral was held at Saint Peter’s Basilica, and he was buried beneath the floor of the Basilica. His tomb was later covered by new construction and attempts to locate the site have been unsuccessful.

Commemoration Of The Blessed Virgin Mary Of Mount Carmel. Feast Day 16 July.


Text and Illustration, unless stated otherwise, from
CATHOLICISM PURE AND SIMPLE


Prayer To Our Lady Of Mount Carmel.

Thou, who, with special mercy,
look upon those clothed in thy beloved Habit,

cast a glance of pity upon me.
Fortify my weakness with thy strength;

enlighten the darkness
of my mind with thy wisdom;
increase my Faith, Hope and Charity.

Assist me during life,
console me by thy presence at my death,

and present me to The August Trinity
as thy devoted child,

that I may Bless thee
for all Eternity in Paradise.

Amen.

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

Commemoration Of The Blessed Virgin Mary Of Mount Carmel.
   Feast Day 16 July.

Greater-Double.

White Vestments.


Our Lady of Mount Carmel and Saints
(Simon Stock, Angelus of Jerusalem, Mary Magdalene de’Pazzi,
Teresa of Avila).
Date: 1641.
Source/Photographer:
http://santiebeati.it/immagini/?mode=view&album=51875&pic=51875B.JPG&dispsize=Original&start=0
(Wikimedia Commons)

According to a pious Tradition authorised by The Liturgy, on The Day of Pentecost a number of men who walked in the footsteps of The Holy Prophets, Elias and Eliseus, and whom John the Baptist had prepared for The Advent of Jesus, embraced The Christian Faith, and erected the first Church to The Blessed Virgin on Mount Carmel, at the very spot where Elias had seen a cloud rise, a figure of the fecundity of The Mother of God (Lesson of Second Nocturn at Matins).

They were called: Brethren of Blessed Mary of Mount Carmel (Collect). These Religious came to Europe in the 13th-Century and, in 1245, Pope Innocent IV gave his approbation to their Rule under the Generalship of Simon Stock, an English Saint.


On 16 July 1251, Mary appeared to this fervent servant [Simon Stock] and placed in his hands the Habit which was to be their distinctive sign. Pope Innocent IV blessed this Habit and attached to it many privileges, not only for The Members of The Order, but also for those who entered The Confraternity of Our Lady of Mount Carmel.

By wearing the Scapular, which is in smaller form than that of The Carmelite Fathers, they participate in all their merits and may hope to obtain through The Virgin a prompt delivery from Purgatory, if they have Faithfully observed Abstinence, Chastity (according to their state), and said the Prayers prescribed by Pope John XXII, in The Sabbatine Bull, published on 3 March 1322.

The Feast of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, at first Celebrated only in the Churches of The Order, was extended to all Christendom by Pope Benedict XIII in 1726.

Mass: Gaudeámus omnes.
Creed: Is said.
Preface: Of The Blessed Virgin Mary. “Et te in Commemoratióne”.

Wednesday 15 July 2020

Benediction Of The Blessed Sacrament.



Monstrance.
Photo: 18 October 2004 (original upload date).
Source: Own work.
Originally from nl.wikipedia; description page is/was HERE
Author: Original uploader was Broederhugo at nl.wikipedia
(Wikimedia Commons)


Illustration: PINTEREST

The following three Paragraphs are taken from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.

In his Motu Proprio of 1903, Pope Saint Pius X insists on “the importance of the Solemn Chanting of Vespers, to which may be added with advantage a suitable Sermon and Benediction of The Blessed Sacrament”.

Compline, chanted in the evening, may also be followed by Benediction,
this latter Devotion is thus brought into association with the
official Worship of The Church.

If Benediction is to follow Vespers, see Page 1909
of The Saint Andrew Daily Missal.




“Cor Jesu Sacratissimum”.
“Sacred Heart of Jesus”.
Benediction Hymn.
Available on YouTube at

Cor Jesu Sacratissimum
advéniat regnum tuum
regnum veritátis et vitæ
regnum caritatis et grátiæ
regnum justitiæ, amóris et pacis.


Catholic Holy Card depicting The Sacred Heart of Jesus, circa 1880.
Auguste Martin collection, University of Dayton Libraries.
Source: Turgis.
Author: Turgis.
(Wikimedia Commons)


English: The Carillon-Sacré-Coeur:
Flag waved by French Canadian Roman Catholics until the 1950s.
Français: Le Carillon-Sacré-Cœur est un drapeau
qui fut arboré par les Canadiens-français, et adopté par
la Société Saint-Jean-Baptiste au Québec.
Date: 27 September 2007.
Author: uploaded by C.P. Champion
(Wikimedia Commons)

Este vídeo ha sido grabado en la Santa Misa Cantada celebrada en la Iglesia del Salvador de Toledo por los Hermanos de la Fraternidad de Cristo Sacerdote y Santa María Reina, asociación pública clerical con aprobación eclesiástica en la Archidiócesis primada de Toledo (España). Este Instituto Religioso en formación tiene como uso propio en el Oficio y la Santa Misa la Forma Extraordinaria del Rito Romano, como establecen sus Reglas y Constituciones. Para más información pueden visitar nuestro site y blogs:



The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

The Devotion to The Sacred Heart (also known as The Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, “Sacratissimum Cor Iesu”, in Latin) is one of the most widely-practised and well-known Catholic Devotions, wherein The Sacred Heart of Jesus is viewed as a symbol of “God's boundless and passionate love for mankind”.[1]

This Devotion is predominantly used in The Catholic Church, followed by High-Church AnglicansLutherans, and some Western Rite Orthodox. In The Latin Church, the Liturgical Solemnities of The Most Sacred Heart of Jesus are Celebrated on The First Friday after Corpus Christi, or nineteen days after Pentecost Sunday.[2] The twelve Promises of The Most Sacred Heart of Jesus are also devoutly remembered and followed.

The Devotion is especially concerned with what The Church teaches
to be the long-suffering love and compassion of The Most Sacred Heart of Christ towards humanity.


The popularisation of this Devotion, in its modern form, is
derived from a Roman Catholic Nun from France, Saint Margaret Mary Alacoque, who said she learned the Devotion from Jesus during a series of Apparitions between 1673 and 1675,[3] and, later, in the 19th-Century, from the mystical revelations of another Catholic Nun, in Portugal, Blessed Mary of The Divine Heart Droste zu Vischering, a Religious of The Good Shepherd, who requested, In The Name Of Christ, that Pope Leo XIII Consecrate the entire World to The Sacred Heart of Jesus.

Predecessors to the modern Devotion arose unmistakably in
The Middle Ages in various facets of Catholic mysticism, particularly
with Saint Gertrude the Great.[4]

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