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

Tuesday 2 April 2013

Pilgrimage in Honour of Saint Margaret Clitherow (The Pearl of York). 1330 hrs, Saint Wilfrid's Church, York. Saturday, 4 May 2013.



File:Margaret Clitherow.png


Saint Margaret Clitherow.
"The Pearl of York".
One of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales.
Date: 18 May 2008 (original upload date).
Source: Transferred from en.wikipedia
transferred to Commons by User:Mircalla22 using CommonsHelper.
Author: Original uploader was Yorkshirian at en.wikipedia.
Permission: This image is in the public domain; PD-US; PD-ART.
(Wikimedia Commons)


There will be a National Pilgrimage in honour of Saint Margaret Clitherow on Saturday, 4 May 2013, in York, England, commencing at 1330 hrs in Saint Wilfrid's Church, York.

For more information, please contact: 
The Latin Mass Society, London (Tel: 020 7404 7284 ) www.lms.org.uk
or 
E-Mail info@lms.org.uk


The following Text is taken from the Blog "LET THE WELKIN RING" at http://letthewelkinring.blogspot.co.uk/2011/03/st-margaret-clitherow.html
which carried information on the March 2011 Pigrimage.

Pilgrims are expected to converge on York, on Saturday 4 May 2013, to pay their respects to Saint Margaret Clitherow, a former resident of York, who was crushed to death rather than deny her Catholic faith. The pilgrimage is being organised by the Latin Mass Society, an organisation dedicated to the promotion of the Mass in its more traditional Latin form.

There will be a Solemn High Mass at Saint Wilfrid's Church, York, at 1.30pm. This will be followed at 3pm by a procession which will pass through The Shambles, where Margaret Clitherow lived, over Ouse Bridge, where she was executed, and finish up at the Church of the English Martyrs in Dalton Terrace, York. Benediction will be given there at around 4pm, followed by Veneration of the Relic of Margaret Clitherow, which is normally kept at the Bar Convent.

Margaret Clitherow, who is often referred to as the "Pearl of York", converted to Catholicism at the age of 18. She would also have been familiar with the Latin Mass, in its traditional form, as she harboured Priests at her home in The Shambles, where Mass was regularly said in that form. Indeed, it was for harbouring Priests that she was arrested and put to death in 1586 by crushing under a great weight of stones.

The Mass, on 4 May 2013, will have Liturgical Music provided by the Rudgate Singers www.rudgatesingers.co.uk

The Mass will be open to all, regardless of religious denomination, and no tickets are required. Similarly, it is hoped that the public will join in the Procession and attend Benediction at English Martyrs’ Church at 4p.m.

NOTES FOR EDITORS.

Information about the Latin Mass Society can be found at www.lms.org.uk
It is a Catholic organisation dedicated to the promotion of the Latin Mass in the form used universally by the Church prior to 1970. It is active throughout England and Wales.

Information about Saint Margaret Clitherow can be found on the internet on a Wikipedia site.


Monday 25 March 2013

Mulier Fortis Has Won An Award. Congratulations.


WELL DONE, MAC !!!





Zephyrinus is delighted to see that MAC has won an Award for her Blog "MULIER FORTIS".



A Bit of Comfort in Passiontide. Hymn to Our Lady.




Our Lady of Carmel


Matthaeus has an excellent Post, reference Our Blessed Lady, 
on his Blog "SUB UMBRA ALARUM SUARUM"
It's entitled

May I suggest you pop over and pay a visit ?


Sunday 24 March 2013

Leo the Great.


This Article can be found on the Blog ENLARGING THE HEART
at http://enlargingtheheart.wordpress.com/


Leo the Great: O Wondrous Power of the Cross! O Ineffable Glory of the Passion !




Let our understandings, illumined by the Spirit of Truth, foster with pure and free heart the glory of the Cross which irradiates heaven and earth.

Let us see with the inner sight what the Lord meant when He spoke of His coming Passion: “The hour is come that the Son of man may be glorified.”

He says, “Now is My spirit troubled. And what shall I say? Father, save Me from this hour, but for this cause came I unto this hour. Father, glorify Your Son.”

And when the Father’s voice came from heaven, saying, “I have both glorified it and will glorify it again,” Jesus in reply said to those that stood by:

“This voice came not for Me but for you. Now is the world’s judgment, now shall the prince of this world be cast out. And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all things unto Me.”

O wondrous power of the Cross! O ineffable glory of the Passion, in which is contained the Lord’s tribunal, the world’s judgment, and the power of the Crucified!

For You draw all things unto Yourself, Lord. And, when You had stretched out Your hands all the day long to an unbelieving people that gainsaid You, the whole world at last was brought to confess Your majesty.

You drew all things unto Yourself, Lord…, when the lights of heaven were darkened, and the day turned into night, and the earth also was shaken with unwonted shocks….

You didst draw all things unto Yourself, Lord, for the veil of the temple was rent, and the Holy of Holies existed no more…, so that type was turned into Truth, prophecy into Revelation, law into Gospel.

You drew all things unto Yourself, Lord, so that what before was done in the one temple of the Jews in dark signs, was now to be celebrated everywhere by the piety of all the nations in full and open rite.

For now there is a nobler rank of Levites, there are elders of greater dignity and priests of holier anointing, because Your Cross is the fount of all blessings, the source of all graces, and through it the believers receive strength for weakness, glory for shame, life for death.

Now, too, the variety of fleshly sacrifices has ceased, and the one offering of Your Body and Blood fulfils all those different victims.

For You are the true “Lamb of God, that takes away the sins of the world,” and in Yourself You so accomplish all mysteries, that as there is but one sacrifice instead of many victims, so there is but one kingdom instead of many nations.

Leo the Great (circa 400 A.D. - 461 A.D.): Sermon 59, 6-7.


Thursday 14 March 2013

Argentina. Hand of God. Maradona. Now becomes, Argentina. Hand of God. Madonna.


One of the Readers of this Blog, John Simlett ("Gatepost Pictures)" at http://gatepostpicture.blogspot.co.uk/,
has quoted the Election of Pope Francis in the following, wonderful, terms:

"Argentina. Hand of God. Maradona. Now becomes, Argentina. Hand of God. Madonna."

Thank you, John.

God Bless Our Pope.
Viva il Papa.



File:Emblem of the Papacy SE.svg


Deutsch: Emblem des Pontifikats.
English: Emblem of the Papacy: Triple Tiara and Keys.
Français : emblème pontifical.
Italiano: emblema del Papato.
Português: Emblema papal.
Date: January 2007.
Source: various elements taken from
Author: Cronholm144 created this image using a file by User:Hautala - File:Emblem of Vatican City State.svg, who had created his file using PD art from Open Clip Art Library and uploaded on 13 July 2006. User talk:F l a n k e r uploaded this version on 19 January 2007.
(Wikimedia Commons)


File:Card. Jorge Bergoglio SJ, 2008.jpg


Cardinal Jorge M. Bergoglio SJ, (later to become Pope Francis) celebrating Mass at the XX Exposición del Libro Católico (20th Catholic Book Fair), in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Photo: 2008-09-14.
Source: Own work.
Author: Aibdescalzo.
(Wikimedia Commons)

God Bless Our Pope.
Viva il Papa.

Wednesday 13 March 2013

HABEMUS PAPAM.


HABEMUS PAPAM.

HABEMUS PAPAM.

HABEMUS PAPAM.


Tuesday 12 March 2013

Watch and Pray. Without Ceasing.



During this Conclave (now underway),
let us take heed of this exhortation and
PRAY WITHOUT CEASING
for our Cardinals to Elect 
a Good, Holy and Strong Pope.







The Reefs Avoided.

My child, 
watch with me . . . 

One must Watch and Pray without ceasing.


Monday 11 March 2013

Saint Frances of Rome. Widow. Feast Day 9 March.


Text is taken from The Liturgical Year by Abbot Gueranger. O.S.B.
Translated from the French by Dom Laurence Shepherd, O.S.B.

Originally published in 1949.
Republished by St. Bonaventure Publications, July 2000.
Internet site: www.libers.com




St Frances of Rome, wife, mother, mystic, foundress.  
She founded the Olivetan Oblates of Mary, based at Tor de Specchi in Rome.
Ilustration and Caption taken from the Blog, EX UMBRIS ET IMAGINIBUS,


The period intervening between The Purification of Our Blessed Lady and Ash Wednesday (when it occurs at its latest date), gives us thirty-six days, and these offer us Feasts of every Order of Saint:

The Apostles have given us Saint Mathias, and Saint Peter's Chair at Antioch;

The Martyrs have sent us, from their countless Choir, Simeon, Lucius, Blase, Valentine, Faustinus and Jovita, Perpetua and Felicitas, and the Forty Soldiers of Sebaste, whose feast is kept on 10 March;

The Holy Pontiffs have been represented by Titus, Andrew Corsini, and also by Cyril of Alexandria and Peter Damian, who, like Thomas of Aquin, are Doctors of the Church;

The Confessors have produced Romuald of Camaldoli, John of Matha, John of God, the Seven Founders of the Servites, and the angelic Prince Casimir;


File:FrancesRome.jpg


Saint Frances of Rome with her Guardian Angel
whom she could see as she did her rounds of Charity for the poor of the city.
Photo: November 2006.
User: Skier Dude.
Artist: Unknown.
(Wikipedia)


The Virgins have gladdened us with the presence of Agatha, Dorothy, Apollonia, and Scholastica, three wreathed with the red roses of Martyrdom, and the fourth with the fair lilies of the enclosed garden [Cant. iv. 12.] of her Spouse;

And, lastly, we have had a penitent Saint, Margaret of Cortona.

The State of Christian Marriage is the only one that has not yet deputed a Saint during this Season, which is less rich in Feasts than most of the year. The deficiency is supplied on 9 March by the admirable Frances of Rome (born in 1384).

Having, for forty years, led a most Saintly life in the Married State, upon which she entered when but twelve years of age, Frances retired from the world, where she had endured every sort of tribulation. But she had given her heart to her God long before she withdrew to the Cloister.


File:AntoniazzoRomano.jpg


Saint Frances of Rome, Obl.S.B.
Patroness of Benedictine Oblates.
Part of a series: The Life of St. Frances of Rome.
by Antoniazzo Romano (1468).
Originally uploaded on sv: Wikipedia 26 december 2005 kl.07.13 by sv:User: Torvindus
Fresco by Antoniazzo Romano from 1468.
fresk från 1468.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Her whole life had been spent in the exercise of the highest Christian perfection, and she had ever received from Our Lord the sublimest spiritual favours. Her amiable disposition had won for her the love and admiration of her husband and children. The rich venerated her as their model. The poor respected her as their devoted benefactress and mother.

God recompensed her angelic virtues by these two special graces: The almost uninterrupted sight of her Guardian Angel, and the most sublime revelations.

But there is one trait of her life, which is particularly striking, and reminds us forcibly of Saint Elizabeth of Hungary, and of Saint Jane Frances Chantal: Her austere practices of Penance. Such an innocent life, and yet such a mortified life, is full of instruction for us.

How can we think of murmuring against the obligation of mortification, when we find a Saint like this practising it during her whole life ? True, we are not bound to imitate her in the manner of her Penance; but Penance we must do, if we would confidently approach that God, Who readily pardons the sinner when he repents, but Whose justice requires atonement and satisfaction.


Thursday 7 March 2013

Didn't Hitler have a similar Agenda ?



age10_1.jpg


TO SUPPORT AND HELP the Downs Syndrome Association, 
go to their Web-Site at 



THIS ARTICLE can be found on the Blog, "In Caelo et in Terra"



Twitter_logo_ZGVKudos and admiration for 300 employees of the hospital Gelderse Vallei in Ede, the Netherlands. They are standing up for the right of life for unborn children with Down syndrome, after the hospital management decided to allow these children to be killed if the parents don’t want them.
The hospital claims to be based on Christian values, but decided in favour of aborting children with Down syndrome anyway. Because these children are obviously unfit to live, of course… I find it almost unimaginable how hospitals and other institutions call themselves Christian almost always fails to act in accordance with that moniker. Who are they fooling? In the first place themselves, of course.
I hope the employees, the ones who will be tasked with the actual killing, and who are now standing up against this will be an example for many, and that they will succeed.
The town of Ede is part of the Dutch “Bible belt“, characterised by orthodox Protestant communities. Local churches and civilians have joined the protest.


Wednesday 6 March 2013

Booklet for Vespers and Benediction at Saint Peter's, Rome, today.



File:Vatican City at Large.jpg


English: St. Peter's Basilica, believed to be the burial site of St. Peter, seen from the River Tiber. The iconic dome dominates the skyline of Rome. Christianity became the dominant religion of Western Civilization when the Roman Empire converted to Christianity. 
Magyar: Vatikánváros látképe.
Italiano: Veduta del Vaticano dal Tevere.
한국어: 테베레 강 방향의 성 베드로 대성전. 로마의 지평선을 압도하는 전통적인 돔 양식이다.
Kiswahili: Vatikani ikitazamwa kutoka mto Tiber.
中文: 从台伯河遥望梵蒂冈.
Photo: January 2005.
Source: Flickr
Reviewer: Andre Engels
(Wikimedia Commons)



VESPERS and BENEDICTION from Saint Peter's, Rome

CLICK HERE to view the Booklet for VESPERS and BENEDICTION
at Saint Peter's, Rome, today.


It is also available from the VATICAN WEBSITE 


Tuesday 5 March 2013

Vatican Diary. The "Who's Who" of the new Pope's Electors.





The above Illustration is taken from the Blog, MULIER FORTIS,


The following Article is taken from 
at 
and is reproduced with permission.



Name by name, nation by nation, role by role, all of the cardinals who will enter into conclave. An indispensable guide for the event

by ***





VATICAN CITY, March 5, 2013 – Subtracting the two who have declined to take part in the conclave, the Scottish Keith Michael Patrick O'Brian and the Indonesian Jesuit Julius Darmaatmadja, the cardinals who will enter the Sistine Chapel to elect the successor of Benedict XVI at the moment number 115.

Below they are listed by continent and by nation, with the place of activity of each one, the abbreviation of any religious order of membership, the date of birth and the indication of the pope who conferred the scarlet on them, John Paul II (JP-II) or Benedict XVI (B-XVI).

Followed by further documentation of their roles and backgrounds.

*

EUROPE - 60 cardinals (37 B-XVI and 23 JP-II)

Italy - 28 (20 B-XVI and 8 JP-II)

AMATO Angelo S.D.B, curia, 1938 (B-XVI)
ANTONELLI Ennio, ex curia, 1936 (JP-II)
BAGNASCO Angelo, abp. Genova, 1943 (B-XVI)
BERTELLO Giuseppe, curia, 1942 (B-XVI)
BERTONE Tarcisio S.D.B, curia, 1934 (JP-II)
BETORI Giuseppe, abp. Firenze, 1947 (B-XVI)
CAFFARRA Carlo, abp. Bologna, 1938 (B-XVI)
CALCAGNO Domenico, curia, 1943 (B-XVI)
COCCOPALMERIO Francesco, curia, 1938 (B-XVI)
COMASTRI Angelo, curia, 1943 (B-XVI)
DE PAOLIS Velasio C.S., ex curia, 1935 (B-XVI)
FARINA Raffaele S.D.B, ex curia, 1933 (B-XVI)
FILONI Fernando, curia, 1946 (B-XVI)
LAJOLO Giovanni, ex curia, 1935 (B-XVI)
MONTERISI Francesco, ex curia, 1934 (B-XVI)
NICORA Attilio, curia, 1937 (JP-II)
PIACENZA Mauro, curia, 1944 (B-XVI)
POLETTO Severino, abp. em. Torino, 1933 (JP-II)
RAVASI Gianfranco, curia, 1942 (B-XVI)
RE Giovanni Battista, ex curia, 1934 (JP-II)
ROMEO Paolo, abp. Palermo, 1938 (B-XVI)
SARDI Paolo, ex curia, 1934 (B-XVI)
SCOLA Angelo, abp. Milano, 1941 (JP-II)
SEPE Crescenzio, abp. Napoli, 1943 (JP-II)
TETTAMANZI Dionigi, abp. em. Milano, 1934 (JP-II)
VALLINI Agostino, Rome vicar general, 1940 (B-XVI)
VEGLIO’ Antonio M., curia, 1938 (B-XVI)
VERSALDI Giuseppe, curia, 1943 (B-XVI)

Germany – 6 (3 B-XVI and 3 JP-II)

CORDES Paul Josef, ex curia, 1934 (B-XVI)
KASPER Walter, ex curia, 1933 (JP-II)
LEHMANN Karl, bishop Mainz, 1936 (JP-II)
MARX Reinhard, abp. Munich, 1953 (B-XVI)
MEISNER Joachim, abp. Cologne, 1933 (JP-II)
WOELKI Rainer M., abp. Berlin, 1956 (B-XVI)

Spain – 5 (3 B-XVI and 2 JP-II)

ABRIL Y CASTELLÓ Santos, curia, 1935 (B-XVI)
AMIGO VALLEJO Carlos O.F.M., abp. em. Seville, 1934 (JP-II)
CAÑIZARES LLOVERA Antonio, curia, 1945 (B-XVI)
MARTÍNEZ SISTACH Lluís, abp. Barcelona,1937 (B-XVI)
ROUCO VARELA Antonio María, abp. Madrid, 1936 (JP-II)

France – 4 (2 B-XVI and 2 JP-II)

BARBARIN Philippe, abp. Lyon, 1950 (JP-II)
RICARD Jean-Pierre, abp. Bordeaux, 1944 (B-XVI)
TAURAN Jean-Louis, curia, 1943 (JP-II)
VINGT-TROIS André, abp. Paris, 1942 (B-XVI)

Poland – 4 (3 B-XVI and 1 JP-II)

DZIWISZ Stanislaw, abp. Krakow, 1939 (B-XVI)
GROCHOLEWSKI Zenon, curia, 1939 (JP-II)
NYCZ Kazimierz, abp. Warsaw, 1950 (B-XVI)
RYLKO Stanislaw, curia, 1945 (B-XVI)

Portugal – 2 (1 B-XVI and 1 JP-II)

MONTEIRO DE CASTRO Manuel, curia, 1938 (B-XVI)
POLICARPO José da Cruz, patriarch Lisbon, 1936 (JP-II)

Others – 11 (5 B-XVI and 6 JP-II)

BACKIS Audrys Juozas, abp. Vilnius, Lithuania, 1937 (JP-II)
BOZANIC Josip, abp. Zagabria, Croatia, 1949 (JP-II)
BRADY Sean Baptist, abp, Armagh, Ireland, 1939 (B-XVI)
DANNEELS Godfried, abp. em. Brussels, Belgium, 1933 (JP-II)
DUKA Dominik op, abp. Prague, Czech Republic, 1943 (B-XVI)
EIJK Willem Jacobus, abp. Utrecht, Holland, 1953 (B-XVI)
ERD? Peter, abp. Esztergom, Hungary, 1952 (JP-II)
KOCH Kurt, curia, Switzerland, 1950 (B-XVI)
PULJIC Vinko, abp. Vrhbosna-Sarajevo, Bosnia, 1945 (JP-II)
RODÉ Franc cm, ex curia, Slovenia, 1934 (B-XVI)
SCHÖNBORN Christoph O.P., abp. Vienna, Austria, 1945 (JP-II)


AMERICAS – 33 (17 B-XVI and 16 JP-II)

LATIN AMERICA – 19 (8 B-XVI and 11 JP-II)

Brazil – 5 (3B-XVI and 2 JP-II)

AGNELO Geraldo Majella, abp. em. São Salvador da Bahia, 1933 (JP-II)
BRAZ DE AVIZ Joao, curia, 1947 (B-XVI)
DAMASCENO ASSIS Raymundo, abp. Aparecida, 1937 (B-XVI)
HUMMES Cláudio O.F.M., ex curia, 1934 (JP-II)
SCHERER Odilo Pablo, abp. São Paulo, 1949 (B-XVI)

Mexico – 3 (1 B-XVI and 2 JP-II)

RIVERA CARRERA Norberto, abp. Mexico, 1942 (JP-II)
SANDOVAL IÑIGUEZ Juan, abp. em. Guadalajara, 1933 (JP-II)
ROBLES ORTEGA Francisco, abp Guadalajara, 1949 (B-XVI)

Argentina – 2 (1 B-XVI and 1 JP-II)

BERGOGLIO Jorge Mario S.J., abp. Buenos Aires, 1936 (JP-II)
SANDRI Leonardo, curia, 1943 (B-XVI)

Others – 9 (3 B-XVI and 6 JP-II)

CIPRIANI THORNE Juan Luis, Opus Dei, abp. Lima, Perù, 1943 (JP-II)
ERRAZURIZ OSSA Francisco J., Schönstatt, abp. em. Santiago, Chile, 1933 (JP-II)
LOPEZ-RODRIGUEZ Nicolas de Jesus, abp. Santo Domingo, 1936 (JP-II)
ORTEGA Y ALAMINO Jaime Lucas, abp. Havana, Cuba, 1936 (JP-II)
RODRIGUEZ MARADIAGA Oscar A. S.D.B, abp. Tegucigalpa, Honduras, 1942 (JP-II)
SALAZAR GOMEZ Ruben, abp. Bogotà, Colombia, 1942 (B-XVI)
TERRAZAS SANDOVAL Julio C.Ss.R., abp. Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia, 1936 (JP-II)
UROSA SAVINO Jorge Liberato, abp. Caracas, Venezuela, 1942 (B-XVI)
VELA CHIRIBOGA Raul Eduardo, abp. em. Quito, Ecuador, 1934 (B-XVI)

NORTH AMERICA – 14 (9 B-XVI and 5 JP-II)

United States – 11 (8 B-XVI and 3 JP-II)

BURKE Raymond Leo, curia, 1948 (B-XVI)
DINARDO Daniel Nicholas, abp. Galveston-Houston, 1949 (B-XVI)
DOLAN Timothy Michael, abp. New York, 1950 (B-XVI)
GEORGE Eugene Francis O.M.I., abp. Chicago, 1937 (JP-II)
HARVEY James Michael, curia, 1949 (B-XVI)
LEVADA William Joseph, ex curia, 1936 (B-XVI)
MAHONY Roger Michael, abp. em. Los Angeles, 1936 (JP-II)
O’BRIEN Edwin Frederick, curia, 1939 (B-XVI)
O'MALLEY Sean Patrick O.F.M. Cap., abp. Boston, 1944 (B-XVI)
RIGALI Justin Francis, abp. em. Philadelphia, 1935 (JP-II)
WUERL Donald William, abp. Washington DC, 1940 (B-XVI)

Canada – 3 (1 B-XVI and 2 JP-II)

COLLINS Thomas Christopher, abp. Toronto, 1947 (B-XVI)
OUELLET Marc P.S.S., curia, 1944 (JP-II)
TURCOTTE Jean-Claude, abp. em. Montreal, 1936 (JP-II)


AFRICA – 11 (6 B-XVI and 5 JP-II)

Nigeria – 2 (1 B-XVI and 1 JP-II)

OKOGIE Anthony Olubunmi, abp. Lagos, 1936 (JP-II)
ONAIYEKAN John Olorunfemi, abp. Abuja, 1944 (B-XVI)

Others – 9 (5 B-XVI and 4 JP-II)

MONSENGWO PASINYA Laurent, abp. Kinshasa, RD Congo, 1939 (B-XVI)
NAGUIB Antonios, patriarch em. Alexandria of the Copts, Egypt, 1935 (B-XVI)
NAPIER Wilfrid Fox O.F.M., abp. Durban, South Africa, 1941 (JP-II)
NJUE John, abp. Nairobi, Kenya, 1944 (B-XVI)
PENGO Polycarp, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 1944 (JP-II)
SARAH Robert, curia, Guinea, 1945 (B-XVI)
SARR Theodore-Adrien, abp. Dakar, Senegal, 1936 (B-XVI)
TURKSON Peter Kodwo Appiah, abp. Cape Coast, Ghana, 1948 (JP-II)
ZUBEIR WAKO Gabriel, abp. Khartoum, Sudan, 1941 (JP-II)


ASIA – 10 (7 B-XVI and 3 JP-II)

India – 5 (3 B-XVI and 2 (JP-II)

ALENCHERRY George, maj. abp. Ernakulam of the Malankars, 1945 (B-XVI)
DIAS Ivan, ex curia, 1936 (JP-II)
GRACIAS Oswald, abp. Bombay, 1944 (B-XVI)
THOTTUNKAL Baselios Cleemis, maj. abp. Trivandrum of the Malankars, 1959 (B-XVI)
TOPPO Telesphore Placidus, abp. Ranchi, 1939 (JP-II)

Others – 5 (4 B-XVI and 1 JP-II)

PATABENDIGE DON A. M. Ranjith, abp. Colombo, Sri Lanka, 1947 (B-XVI)
PHAM MINH MAN Jean-Baptiste, abp. Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam, 1934 (JP-II)
RAI Bechara Boutros, patriarch Antioch of the Maronites, Lebanon, 1940 (B-XVI)
TAGLE Luis Antonio, abp. Manila, Philippines, 1957 (B-XVI)
TONG HON John, bishop Hong Kong, China, 1939 (B-XVI)


OCEANIA - 1 (JP-II)

PELL George, abp. Sydney, Australia, 1941 (JP-II)


*


Able to participate not at the conclave but at the general congregations that precede it are the cardinals over the age of eighty. At the beginning of the sede vacante there were 90 of them, 52 of them European (21 Italians), 11 Latin Americans (4 Brazilians), 8 North Americans (all from the United States), 9 Asians, 7 Africans, and 3 from Oceania.

A curiosity: also entering the conclave will be German cardinal Kasper, who turned eighty on March 4. Under the regulations previous to those issued by John Paul II in 1996, he would not have been admitted.

*

There are 19 cardinals belonging to religious orders who will participate in the conclave (15 are over the age of eighty).

The most numerous are the Salesians, with 4 cardinals: Amato, Bertone, Farina, Rodriguez Maradiaga. The Franciscan friars minor follow with 3: Amigo Vallejo, Hummes, Napier. The Dominicans have 2: Schonborn and Duka. With only one cardinal are the Jesuits (Bergoglio), the Vincentians (Rodé), the Redemptorists (Terrazas), the Capuchins (O'Malley), the Oblates (George), the Sulpicians (Ouellet), and the members of the Schönstatt Institute (Errazuriz Ossa).

The college of the pope's electors also includes a member of Opus Dei (Cipriani Thorne), an historic representative of Communion of Liberation (Scola), and at least a pair of friends of the Focolare movement (Antonelli and Braz de Aviz). Strongly sympathetic toward the Neocatecumenals are Filoni, Cordes, and Cañizares. Dias is close to the charismatic movement.

*

There are 40 cardinal electors who are working or have finished their ecclesiastical “cursus honorum” in the curia or in other Roman offices.

The Italians are 19, of whom 13 are active (Amato, Bertello, Bertone, Calcagno, Coccopalmerio, Comastri, Filoni, Nicora, Piacenza, Ravasi, Sardi, Vegliò, and Versaldi) and 6 in retirement (Antonelli, De Paolis, Farina, Lajolo, Monterisi, Re).

The cardinals from the United States are 4 (3 of them active - Burke, Harvey, and O’Brien - and the retired Levada). The Spanish are 2 (Cañizares, Abril y Castelló) and the same for the Polish (Grocholewski and Rylko), all of them active. There are also 2 Germans, but both of them in retirement: Cordes and Kasper.

From Latin America come the Argentine Sandri and the Brazilian Braz de Aviz (active) and the other Brazilian Hummus (retired).

From Europe come the French Tauran, the Portuguese Monteiro, and the Swiss Koch - all of them active - and the retired Rodé, Slovenian.

The African members of the curia, active, are the Ghanaian Turkson and the Guinean Sarah. Also an active member of the curia is the Canadian Ouellet, while the Indian Dias is retired.

Of these 40, half have pastoral experience as bishops: Antonelli, Bertone, Calcagno, Coccopalmerio, Comastri, Nicora, Versaldi, Kasper, Rodé, Canizares Llovera, Koch, Hummes, Braz de Aviz, Burke, Levada, O’Brien, Ouellet, Dias, Turkson, and Sarah.

While among the cardinals now at the head of a diocese who have previously had positions of responsibility in the Vatican are Sepe, Vallini, Dziwisz, Backis, Agnelo, Hummes, Errazuriz Ossa, Rigali, and Patabendige Don. Scherer, Wuerl and DiNardo have also long worked in the curia, but as officials.

*

Finally, here are the 16 cardinal electors who come from pontifical diplomacy. They are: Bertello, Filoni, Lajolo, Monterisi, Re, Romeo, Sepe, Vegliò, Tauran, Abril y Castelló, Monteiro de Castro, Backis, Sandri, Harvey, Rigali, Dias.

Cardinal Sardi moreover, although he did not attend the ecclesiastical pontifical academy, acquired the qualification of apostolic nuncio, with the connected benefits, when as the head of the office of pontifical “ghost writers” he was promoted to archbishop by John Paul II.

__________


English translation by Matthew Sherry, Ballwin, Missouri, U.S.A.

__________

Meetings between Cardinals begin. 103 of the 115 Cardinal Electors are already in Rome.



File:Vatican City at Large.jpg


English: St. Peter's Basilica, believed to be the burial site of St. Peter, seen from the River Tiber. The iconic dome dominates the skyline of Rome. Christianity became the dominant religion of Western Civilization when the Roman Empire converted to Christianity. 
Magyar: Vatikánváros látképe.
Italiano: Veduta del Vaticano dal Tevere.
한국어: 테베레 강 방향의 성 베드로 대성전. 로마의 지평선을 압도하는 전통적인 돔 양식이다.
Kiswahili: Vatikani ikitazamwa kutoka mto Tiber.
中文: 从台伯河遥望梵蒂冈.
Photo: January 2005.
Source: Flickr
Reviewer: Andre Engels
(Wikimedia Commons)

CLICK HERE to watch the Video from ROME REPORTS 
with news of the Cardinals meeting in Rome for the forthcoming Conclave.




Monday 4 March 2013

The Seven Pilgrim Churches Of Rome.


Italic Text, Illustrations and Captions, are taken from Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.




Map of Giacomo Lauro and Antonio Tempesta showing the Seven Pilgrim Churches of Rome, which was used for the first time during the Jubilee in the year 1600. The plate was afterwards reissued as a guide for the pilgrims in 1609, 1621, 1630 and 1636.
Image: April 2011.
Source: [1]
Author: Giacomo Lauro (1561-1645/50).
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Seven Pilgrim Churches of Rome are seven ancient and major Churches in Rome, central to a religious pilgrimage to the City. They are listed in the following order in the guide by Franzini (1595):

San Giovanni Laterano;
St Peter's;
San Paolo fuori le mura;
Santa Maria Maggiore;
San Lorenzo fuori le mura;
Santa Croce in Gerusalemme.


File:SantaMariaMaggiore front.jpg


Santa Maria Maggiore, Rome. 
One of the Seven Pilgrim Churches of Rome.
Photo: 7 January 2006 (original upload date).
Source: Transferred from en.wikipedia
Author: Original uploader was JACurran at en.wikipedia
Permission: Released into the public domain (by the author).
(Wikimedia Commons)


Rome has, for centuries, been a beacon for travellers. As the home of the Pope and the Catholic Curia, as well as the locus of many sites and relics of worship related to Apostles, Saints, and Christian Martyrs, Rome had long been a destination for pilgrims. 

Periodically, some were propelled to travel to Rome for the spiritual benefits, including indulgences accrued through a Papally-sanctioned Jubilee. These indulgences required a visit to specific Churches..

The Churches include the four Patriarchal Basilicas:
Saint Peter's Basilica;
Basilica of Saint John Lateran;
Basilica of Saint Paul-outside-the-Walls;
Santa Maria Maggiore.

They also include three Minor Basilicas:
San Lorenzo fuori-le-mura;
Santa Croce in Gerusalemme;
Santuario della Madonna del Divino Amore.

The last of these was added by Pope John Paul II for the Great Jubilee of 2000, replacing San Sebastiano-fuori-le-mura. However, many pilgrims still prefer the pre-2000 Seven Basilicas and, so, also attend Saint Sebastian's, in addition to the ones required for the indulgence.

During Holy Years, indulgences are granted to those who visit certain Churches. In Rome, there are seven such Churches. This tradition is related to the work of Saint Philip Neri, who devoted much of his time to helping pilgrims and introduced a list of Seven Basilicas.


For The Election Of The Supreme Pontiff. Pro Eligendo Summo Pontifice.



+


This Illustration can be found on 
the Blog of The Transalpine Redemptorists



Sunday 3 March 2013

Our Lady of Ushaw. Pray for us.





Our Lady of Ushaw,
Durham, England.
Pray for us all during the forthcoming Conclave.
May the Church be given a strong Pope to guide us.
Photo: April 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Zephyrinus.


Friday 1 March 2013

New Pope Is Here.



electors


Many thanks to IN CAELO ET IN TERRA  for the above Illustration.


Spiritual Support. Adopt a Cardinal.




MULIER FORTIS has Posted an excellent Article on how we can support our Cardinals, 
currently in Rome preparing for the Conclave.
Why not pop over, click the LINK on ADOPT A CARDINAL, 
and help support the Cardinals with your Prayers ?


Wednesday 27 February 2013

Oremus pro Pontifice nostro Benedicto decimo sexto.


This Illustration can be found on the Blog of The Transalpine Redemptorists 

The Holy Season of Lent.


This Illustration can be found on the Blog of The Transalpine Redemptorists 


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Tuesday 26 February 2013

Monday 25 February 2013

The Spirituality of Serving at the Altar.



File:Franz Stegmann Im Chor des Doms zu Aachen 1890.jpg


Im Chor des Münsters zu Aachen. Signiert. 
Datiert 1890. Rückseite betitelt.
Date: 1890.
Artist: Franz Stegmann (1831–1892).
(Wikimedia Commons)


This Article can be found on the Blog "In Caelo et in Terra", to be found at





An interesting film which reveals the spirituality behind the duties of altar servers., which are not just some tasks which need doing. Like so many elements of our Catholic life, it is based in a well-developed spirituality, and in turn, feeds that spirituality on a very personal level.

This is one of the beautiful things about our faith: holiness is achievable by simply doing it. Physical actions, like the speaker in the film says, can help us achieve an inner disposition on the road to personal holiness.

We live in an age where people appreciate spirituality, the transcending elements that we can strive for. Often, this appreciation is manifested in the popularity of self-help books, paranormal events and elements of the eastern religions. Our own Catholic faith also has spirituality on offer, a spirituality which is mature, deep and continuously challenging, but which is attainable for all of us if we would just devote some time and effort to it.

HT to Fr. Dwight Longenecker.

The vacant Curia. Duties during the Sede Vacante.





Benedict XVI addresses the Curia in the Clementine Hall at the Vatican (Photo: CNS).
This Illustration can be found on the Catholic Herald web-site


The following Article can be found on the Blog "In Caelo et in Terra", to be found at


Here’s a look at the major players in the coming Sede Vacante period.

The Apostolic Penitentiary, concerned with questions of conscience from the Faithful and the pressing matters related to it, will continue to function during the Sede Vacante. Cardinal Manuel Monteiro de Castro, who leads the Office, will remain in Office.




Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone,
(Camerlengo),
will head the management of the goods 
and finances of the Holy See.


Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone (pictured) will remain on as Camerlengo. He will head the management of the goods and finances of the Holy See. He will also be the Chairman of the daily meetings of the College of Cardinals for the daily affairs of the Church. 

Upon the election of the new Pope, he will accompany him to the Papal Apartments and hand him the keys.

Cardinal Bertone will also declare the result of every ballot during the Conclave. Upon his invitation, the Cardinals will meet for discussion and reflection when needed. The Vice-Chamberlain, Archbishop Pier Luigi Celata, will work with him outside the Conclave.

The Cleric Prelates of the Apostolic Chamber will assist the Camerlengo. They are Msgr. Assunto Scotti, Msgr. Luigi Cerchiaro, Msgr. Paolo Luca Braida (Italians all), Msgr. Philip James Whitmore (British), Msgr. Winfried König (German), Msgr. Osvaldo Neves de Almeida (Argentinian) and Msgr. Krzysztof Józef Nykiel (Polish).



Cardinal Agostino Vallini,
(Arch-Priest of the Papal Basilica of Saint John Lateran),
will take over the Pope's Liturgical duties, together with 
the other Arch-Priests of the Papal Basilicas.


During the Sede Vacante, the Arch-Priests of the Papal Basilicas will take over the Pope’s Liturgical duties. They are Cardinal Agostino Vallini (pictured) for St. John Lateran, Cardinal Angelo Comastri for St. Peter’s, Cardinal James Harvey for St. Paul-Outside-the-Walls and Cardinal Santos Abril y Castelló for St. Mary Major.

Also involved in the Papal Liturgies during the Sede Vacante are the Master of Ceremonies, Msgr. Guido Marini, and the Almoner of His Holiness, Archbishop Guido Pozzo.


tauran.jpg


Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, 
(College of Cardinals’ Proto-Deacon),
the most senior Cardinal-Deacon, 
will have the honour to announce “Habemus Papam” 
to the crowds outside on St. Peter’s Square.


The pastoral care of the Diocese of Rome will be the responsibility of the Vicars-General: Cardinal Agostino Vallini, for Rome, and Cardinal Angelo Comastri, for the Vatican City State.

After the Cardinals have entered the Sistine Chapel for the Conclave, and after they have all taken the Oath, Msgr. Guido Marini will call “Extra omnes!”. He will distribute the ballot papers to the Cardinals and then leave the Chapel.

Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, in place of the Cardinal-Dean (Cardinal Sodano is 85 and, therefore, too old to take part in the Conclave), will announce the start of the first ballot after any remaining questions have been answered. Cardinal Re will also ask the newly-elected Pope if he accepts his election. If Cardinal Re himself is elected, that task falls to Cardinal Bertone.



Cardinal James Harvey,
(Junior Cardinal-Deacon),
will lock the doors of the Sistine Chapel 
before the first ballot.


Cardinal James Harvey (pictured), as the Junior Cardinal-Deacon, will lock the doors of the Sistine Chapel before the first ballot. He will be responsible for who enters and leaves during the voting.

Assistants to those Cardinals, who may be too ill to be in the Sistine Chapel, can leave and return to collect those Cardinals’ ballots.

Cardinal Jean-Louis Tauran, as the College of Cardinals’ Proto-Deacon (the most senior Cardinal-Deacon),  will have the honour to announce the“Habemus Papam” to the crowds outside on St. Peter’s Square.

The Curia of the Church will, in many ways, cease to function once the Pope has abdicated. Only some pressing matters may be handled by the College of Cardinals, but she is not allowed to do anything that is normally under a Pope’s authority.


Cardinal Ries, R.I.P.


This Article can be found on the Blog "In Caelo et in Terra", to be found at




Cardinal Ries, R.I.P.


A Cardinal for only one year and five days, Julien Ries did not receive his Red Hat as the result of a successful career in the hierarchy. The Belgian Prelate rather received it for his work in the quiet of his study and the lecture hall. He passed away on 23 February 2013 at the age of 92.

Julien Ries was born near Arlon, Belgium, and ordained a Priest for the Diocese of Namur in 1945. After a few years working as a Parish Priest and history teacher, Father Ries taught history of religion at the Catholic University of Louvain. After that University was split into a Flemish and a Walloon section in 1968, he remained at the latter. He remained there until his retirement in 1990.

A highly productive author, Fr. Ries was created a Cardinal in the Consistory of February 2012. Consecrated a Bishop a week before the Consistory, he held the Titular See of Belcastro, and later became Cardinal-Deacon of Sant’Antonio di Padova a Circonvallazione Appia.

With more than 600 publications to his name, Cardinal Ries was convinced that those were the reason for being made a Cardinal. Pope Benedict XVI studied his work closely and, in 2012, Cardinal Ries said in an interview: “He phoned me more than once to congratulate me, when he had read a book of mine.”

Cardinal Ries’s work was best know for its focus on religious anthropology and humanities. In 2009, he donated his library and all his notes and correspondence to the Catholic University of Milan.

Cardinal Ries was never an Elector. With his passing the total number of Cardinals drops to 208.


Friday 22 February 2013

Tenebrae Factae Sunt. Matins for Good Friday. Gregorian Chant.


Tenebrae Facta Sunt. Matins for Good Friday. Gregorian Chant.
Can be found on YouTube at
and was uploaded by 


File:Cristo crucificado.jpg


Artist: Diego Velázquez (1599–1660).
Title: Christ Crucified.
Date: Circa 1632.
Current location: Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain (see, below).
Source/Photographer: [1]
(Wikimedia Commons)



English: West façade of Prado Museum in Madrid (Spain).
Español: Fachada oeste del Museo del Prado de Madrid (España).
Photo: January 2008.
Source: Flickr
License: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
Attribution: Brian Snelson.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Wednesday 20 February 2013

His Holiness The Pope's Future Residence In The Vatican Gardens.


This Article was taken from the Blog, THE MOYNIHAN LETTERS, which can be found at






February 19, 2013, Tuesday: In the Vatican Gardens. Pope Benedict's Future Residence


The Vatican Gardens are not large -- the entire state is only 108 acres, and the gardens make up only about half of that area, so, about 50 acres of greenery. But it is enough room to take a good half-hour walk.


It is here, in the building just to the right of the centre in the photo above, that Pope Benedict will live after he resigns on February 28. 


The map of Vatican City below has three red circles on it.


You can orient yourself by starting on the right, where you can see part of St. Peter's Square, and looking toward the middle of the photo, where you can see the dome of St. Peter's Basilica. To the left of the dome, that is, behind the basilica, are the Vatican Gardens. The Pope's future residence is a convent on the upper left side of the photo, circled in red.


The Pope's current residence is on the top floor of the Apostolic Palace. His rooms are on the far end, and are circled in red on the upper right of the photo.


He has lived there since shortly after he was elected Pope on April 19, 2005, that is, for nearly eight years now.


The Pope worked from 1982 to 2005, for 23 years, in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, also known by its old Italian name, the Sant'Uffizio, or Holy Office. The Palace of the Holy Office is circled in red on the lower right of the photo.


Not circled on the photo is the Domus Santa Marta -- the building where the cardinals will stay during the papal conclave, which is now expected to start sometime in mid-March, though no official date has yet been set.

The Domus is the building at the very bottom edge of the photo, in the exact centre across a little piazza from the dome of the basilica.




Below, from AFP, is a larger picture of the Pope's future residence inside the gardens, with the dome of St. Peter's Basilica in the background.


This is the building the Pope will be living in starting in May, after spending two months at Castel Gandolfo outside of Rome.




The building is called the Mater Ecclesiae convent -- "Mother of the Church."

So this will be the view the former Pope will see each morning.


The building was once the home of the Vatican’s head gardener and was then used as a retreat for cloistered nuns – the last of whom vacated the property in November. Adjoining the residence is a small chapel.

The Domus Sanctae Marthae, where the cardinals will sleep and eat during the conclave, was built in the 1990s by Pope John Paul II to provide an alternative to the close, cramped quarters cardinals had formerly used inside the Apostolic Palace itself.




“There was only one lavatory for every 10 cardinals in the Apostolic Palace, and no doors on the showers,” said Benedikt Steinschulte (photo), an official from the Pontifical Council for Social Communications, who led a tour of journalists inside the Vatican this morning.


The road behind the basilica will be closed to all pedestrians and traffic to ensure that the electors remain in total seclusion from the outside world.


The Domus and the Sistine Chapel will be swept for bugs and other listening devices before the Conclave begins.

“They can’t talk to anybody, they can’t use their mobile phones – they are totally closed off,” said Steinschulte, a powerfully-built German who is close to Pope Benedict and has worked in the Vatican for nearly 30 years. “After all, the word conclave comes from ‘cum clave’ – "with a key," meaning locked in with a key.”

The Domus has 108 suites and 23 single rooms, all with private bathrooms – a great improvement on the accommodation endured by cardinals during past conclaves.

Vatican City has a permanent population of about 500, including cardinals, bishops and the 150 members of the Swiss Guard.

The Vatican also has said that Benedict will send his last Tweet on February 28, his final day in office, and after that his Twitter handle, @pontifex, will fall silent.


It will be up to the new Pope to decide whether he wishes to revive a papal account.


It is not clear whether the Vatican Gardens will be "off limits" to visitors in the years to come. Up until now, it has been possible for visitors to walk in the gardens after requesting a special pass, which was readily granted.





Our 2013 "Inside the Vatican" Pilgrimages all have openings, although some are filling up fast. For the 2013 schedule click here


Monday 18 February 2013

The Curé d'Ars. Saint John Vianney.


This Article can be found on the Blog, NEST OF THE DOVES, at




IN THE SOUL,
IN A STATE OF GRACE,
IT IS ALWAYS
SPRINGTIME.
---The Cure d'Ars.


Tomás Luis de Victoria. Responsories for Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday.


This Article can be found on YouTube
and was uploaded by Javer2949




Tomás Luis de Victoria (1548 - 1611).

If Ye Love Me by Thomas Tallis.



This Article is can be found on YouTube at http://youtu.be/FeAMHRiQBfo
and was uploaded by catholicpeter

File:Thomas Tallis.jpg

Thomas Tallis (1505 - 1585).




The Denial Of Saint Peter by Caravaggio.




English: The Denial of Saint Peter.
Polski: Zaparcie się św. Piotra.
Date: Circa 1610.
Current location: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, U.S.A.
Source/Photographer: Scan.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Sunday 17 February 2013

Madonna di Loreto by Caravaggio.





English: Madonna di Loreto, by Caravaggio.
Deutsch: Altargemälde der Cavaletti-Kapelle in Sant' Agostino in Rom, 
Szene: Madonna der Pilger.
Date: 1603 - 1605.
Current location: Church of San'Agostino, Rome.
Source/Photographer: The Yorck Project: 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei. DVD-ROM, 2002. 
ISBN 3936122202. Distributed by DIRECTMEDIA Publishing GmbH.
Permission: [1]
(Wikimedia Commons)


Thursday 14 February 2013

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