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

Thursday 18 December 2014

The Great O Antiphons. 18 December.


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


File:Lorenzo Lotto 017.jpg

English: Christ is born.
Deutsch: Christi Geburt.
Artist: Lorenzo Lotto (1480–1556).
Date: 1523.
Current location: National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., U.S.A.
Source/Photographer: The Yorck Project: 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei. DVD-ROM, 2002. 
ISBN 3936122202. Distributed by DIRECTMEDIA Publishing GmbH.
Permission: [1]
(Wikimedia Commons)



O Adonai.
The Great O Antiphon
for 18 December.
Available on YouTube at


18 December: Exodus iii. 2, xx. 1.

O Adonai,
et dux domus Israel,
qui Moysi in igne flammae rubi apparuisti,
et ei in Sina legem dedisti:
veni ad redimentum nos in brachio extento.

O Adonai,
and Leader of the House of Israel,
who didst appear to Moses in the flame of 
      the burning bush,
and didst give unto him the Law on Sinai:
come and with an outstretched arm redeem us.

V. Rorate.

"Rorate caeli desuper, et nubes pluant justium . . ."
"Ye heavens, drop down from above, and let the clouds rain down the Just One."

Wednesday 17 December 2014

Ember Wednesday In Advent.


This excellent summation, of Ember Wednesday in Advent,



Illustration: LUZAR VESTMENTS


Ember Wednesday in Advent

Today is Ember Wednesday in Advent and the first of three Ember Days observed this week. The day is of simple rite and its liturgical colour is violet.

The Office of the Ember Day begins with Mattins. The invitatory is Prope est and the Office hymn Verbum supernum. In the nocturn the antiphons Speciosus forma etc, from the Psalter for Wednesday, are sung with psalms 44i, 44ii, 45, 44, 481, 48ii, 49i, 49ii & 49iii. Psalm 49 is divided into three rather than two divisi as the second scheme of Lauds will be sung later. The lessons are a homily from St. Ambrose on St. Luke's Gospel. Following the third lesson a third responsory, Modo veniet Dominator Dominus, is sung. At Lauds the second schema is sung and so the antiphons appointed for the Wednesday before the Vigil of the Nativity, Prophetae praedicaverunt etc, are sung with psalms 50, 64, 100, Exsultavit cor meum & 145. The Office hymn is En clara vox. After the antiphon on the BenedictusMissus est Gabriel, has been sung in full after the Canticle the choir kneels for the singing of the ferial preces. The same set of antiphons are sung with the Little Hours in the usual order. At Prime Pss. 25, 51, 52 & 96 the chapter is the ferial Pacem et veritatem etc. At the Hours, the ferial preces are sung, the choir kneeling.

Mass is sung after None. The texts are proper, the introit being Rorate, caeli etc. After the Kyrie, there immediately follows the dialogue Oremus sung by the celebrant, Flectamus genua sung by the deacon and Levate sung by the sub-deacon followed by the, Praesta, quaesumus, is sung followed by an additional OT lesson and gradual. After this the celebrant sings Dominus vobiscum and the collect Festina, quaesumus. The second collect is Deus, qui de beatae and the third collect Ecclesiae. The dismissal is Benedicamus Domino sung by the deacon facing the altar. The ministers, of course, wear violet folded chasubles. With the celebration of the Eucharist, the Office of the Ember Day ends.

Vespers is of the Advent ferial day. The Office hymn is Creator alme siderum. The antiphon on the Magnificat is proper to the seventeenth day, O Sapientia, and is sung in full both before and after the Canticle with the choir standing. The choir kneels for the ferialpreces and the collect of the previous Sunday is sung. At Compline the Domincal preces are sung, kneeling.

Cardinal Burke Receives Petition From 30,000 Supporters. Says: "We Must Go Forward, Defending The Truth Of Our Faith, Especially With Regard To Marriage And The Family".


This item is taken from LIFESITENEWS
where the Article can be read in its entirety.



On Thursday, 11 December 2014, LifeSiteNews Editor-in-Chief, John-Henry Westen, had the privilege of meeting with Cardinal Raymond Burke in Wisconsin, where he presented the Cardinal with a beautifully-bound book, with the signatures of nearly 30,000 people who wished to thank him for his Vatican Service, and who pledged to Pray for him.
Illustration: LIFESITENEWS


LifeSiteNews presented Cardinal Raymond Burke with a handsomely-bound book, signed by over 29,000 people who had expressed their thanks for the Cardinal’s Vatican Service, and pledged to Pray for him and to follow his example.

The Cardinal expressed his “deepest gratitude” for the show of “support and, most of all, for your Prayers.”

An Online Petition of Support for Cardinal Burke, one of the most unequivocal Pro-Life and Pro-Family voices in The Catholic Church, was launched in November by LifeSiteNews after the Vatican announced that Pope Francis had removed him from his position as the Prefect of the Vatican’s Apostolic Signatura. Burke was demoted to the position of Patron of The Sovereign Military Order of Malta, a largely ceremonial role.

“We must all now, going forward, remain united in Our Lord Jesus, defending The Truth of our Faith, especially with regard to Marriage and The Family,” said Cardinal Burke, after being presented the Pledges by LifeSiteNews Editor-in-Chief, John-Henry Westen. The exchange took place at The Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, in La Crosse, Wisconsin, United States of America.

“We can be confident, even though things can seem rather dark to us, that if we co-operate with God’s Grace, and are true defenders of The Faith, and promoters of The Truth about Marriage and The Family, that Our Lord will not be lacking in His Grace for us.”

“Of course, the victory is always His, in the end. Let’s remain steadfast, and not give way to discouragement,” the Cardinal said.

The Great O Antiphons. 17 December.


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



English: Madonna and Child.
Deutsch: Sixtinische Madonna, Szene: Maria mit Christuskind, 
Hl. Papst Sixtus II. und Hl. Barbara.
Artist: Raphael (1483 - 1520).
Current location: Gemäldegalerie, Dresden, Germany.
Source/Photographer: The Yorck Project: 10.000 Meisterwerke der Malerei. DVD-ROM, 2002. 
ISBN 3936122202. Distributed by DIRECTMEDIA Publishing GmbH.
Permission: [1]
(Wikimedia Commons)


The Boundless desire for the coming of Christ, which is a feature of the whole of Advent, is expressed in the Liturgy with an impatience which grows greater, the closer we come to Christmas and, so to speak, to the world's end.

"The Lord comes from far" (First Vespers, First Sunday of Advent).
"The Lord will come" (Introit, Second Sunday of Advent).
"The Lord is nigh" (Introit. Third Sunday in Advent).

This gradation will be emphasised throughout the whole Season, ever more and more.

Thus, on 17 December, begin the Greater Antiphons, which, from their initial letters, are called the "O Antiphons", and which form an impassioned appeal to the Messias, whose prerogatives and glorious titles they make known to us.

Dom Guéranger [Editor: He who was the author of "The Liturgical Year"] affirms that those Antiphons contain the "whole marrow" of the Advent Liturgy.

On account of their number, Honorius of Autun connects them with The Seven Gifts of The Holy Ghost, with which Our Lord was filled.






O Sapientia.
The Great O Antiphon
for 17 December.
Available on YouTube at
http://youtu.be/8ngcQDQfhlA.


17 December: Ecclesiasticus xxiv. 5; Wisdom viii. 1

O Sapientia, 
quae ex ore Altissimi prodiisti,
attingens a fine usque ad finem,
fortiter suaviterque disponens omnia:
veni ad docendum nos viam prudentiae.

O Wisdom,
who camest out of the mouth of the Most High,
reaching from end to end and ordering all things
      mightily and sweetly:
come and teach us the way of prudence.

V. Rorate.

"Rorate caeli desuper, et nubes pluant justium . . ."
"Ye heavens, drop down from above, and let the clouds rain down the Just One."

Temptation.



English: Temptation.
Polski: Pokusa.
Artist: William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825–1905).
Date: 1880.
This File: 9 December 2013.
User: Electron.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Tuesday 16 December 2014

Hymns For Advent.


This Article is taken from CATHOLICISM PURE AND SIMPLE


Mary, Did You Know ?


Mary, Did You Know ?
By Pentatonix.
Available on YouTube at


Veni Veni Emmanuel.


Veni Veni Emmanuel.
By L'Accorche-Choeur,
Ensemble Vocal Fribourg.
Veni Veni Emmanuel is a synthesis of the "Great O Antiphons" that are used at Vespers
during the Octave before Christmas (17 December - 23 December). These Antiphons
are of ancient origin and date back to at least the 9th-Century.
Available on YouTube at


The Angel Gabriel.


The Angel Gabriel.
(Old Basque Carol)
- Traditional.
Sung by
The Sixteen.
Available on YouTube at

Christmastide Masses At Saint Mary's, Chislehurst, Kent.







ST MARY’S CATHOLIC CHURCH,
28, CROWN LANE,
CHISLEHURST, KENT BR7 5PL.


CHRISTMAS 2014


SUNDAY, 21 DECEMBER 2014
(FOURTH SUNDAY OF ADVENT)

 MASS at 9.30 A.M.
 and
MASS at 1100 A.M.
(Extraordinary Form Sung Mass).

4.00 P.M. CANDLELIT CAROL SERVICE
and
CHILDREN’S NATIVITY TABLEAU.


WEDNESDAY, 24 DECEMBER
(CHRISTMAS EVE)

6.00 P.M:   VIGIL MASS OF CHRISTMAS
(WITH CAROLS).

11.30 P.M.   CAROLS; BLESSING OF THE CRIB
and
SOLEMN MIDNIGHT MASS.


THURSDAY, 25 DECEMBER
(CHRISTMAS DAY)

9.30 A.M: SUNG MASS
(WITH CAROLS).

11.00 A.M: SOLEMN HIGH MASS
(Extraordinary Form)
(WITH CAROLS).


SUNDAY, 28 DECEMBER
(HOLY FAMILY OF JESUS, MARY AND JOSEPH)

MASS at 9.30 A.M.
and
MASS at 11.00 A.M. (SUNG),


THURSDAY, 1 JANUARY 2015
(OUR BLESSED LADY, MOTHER OF GOD)

10.00 A.M: LOW MASS.


SUNDAY, 4 JANUARY 2015
(THE EPIPHANY)
(Transferred)

MASS at 9.30 A.M.
and
MASS at 11.00 A.M.
(Extraordinary Form Sung Mass).


              


Saint Mary's Catholic Church,
28 Crown Lane,
Chislehurst,
Kent BR7 5PL.
Tel: 020 8467 3215.
Fax: 020 8325 9627.



Monday 15 December 2014

"Ornat Kmity" ("Kmita's Chasuble").


This Article is taken from KRAKOW INFO
unless otherwise stated.



"Ornat Kmity"
("Kmita's Chasuble").
Illustration: KRAKOW INFO


The Wonder of Medieval Needlework.
"Kmita's Chasuble" in Krakow's Cathedral Museum.

Wawel Cathedral’s 500-year-old Chasuble ranks with the world’s top masterpieces of Gothic Needlework. Its relief-like three-dimensional scenes from the life of Saint Stanislav, Krakow’s 11th-Century Bishop-Martyr and Poland’s Patron Saint, embroidered with unbelievable precision and realism, match the best sculpture of the Late-15th-Century.

Naturalistic features of tiny heads and detailed faithfulness of depiction (complete with open wound on the Saint’s skull, where the Sword struck) are truly stunning. The Chasuble was donated in 1503, by Piotr Kmita, then Governor of Krakow Province, to Commemorate the 250th-Anniversary of Saint Stanislav’s Canonisation (the Donor’s Coat-of-Arms take up the bottom picture on the Chasuble). Now the amazing Robe, known as "Ornat Kmity" ("Kmita's Chasuble") is the pride of the Cathedral Museum on the Wawel Hill, displayed permanently alongside its other treasures of Church Art.



English: Wawel Cathedral, Poland.
Sigismund's Chapel (right, with a Gold Dome)
and Vasa Dynasty Chapel (to the left).
Polski: Kraków, katedra p.w. śś. Wacława i
Stanisława Biskupa, XI/XII, XIV, XIX.
Photo: 7 September 2013.
Source: Own work.
Author: Jar.ciurus.
(Wikimedia Commons)


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

The Royal Arch-Cathedral Basilica of Saints Stanislaus and Wenceslaus on the Wawel Hill (Polish:królewska bazylika archikatedralna śś. Stanisława i Wacława na Wawelu), also known as the Wawel Cathedral(Polish: katedra wawelska), is a Roman Catholic Church, located on Wawel Hill, in Kraków, Poland.

More than 900 years old, it is the Polish National Sanctuary and traditionally has served as the Coronation Site of Polish Monarchs, as well as the Cathedral of the Archdiocese of Kraków.

Karol Wojtyla, who, in 1978, became Pope John Paul II, was Ordained to the Priesthood here on All Saints Day, 1 November 1946, and offered his first Mass as a Priest in the Crypt of the Cathedral on 2 November 1946 and was Ordained Kraków's Auxiliary Bishop on 28 September 1958. Both of these pre-Pontificate events were depicted in the first half of the 2005 U.S. TV Mini-Series, Pope John Paul II, in which Cary Elwes played the younger Wojtyla.

The current, Gothic Cathedral, is the third edifice on this site: the first was constructed and destroyed in the 11th-Century; the second one, constructed in the 12th-Century, was destroyed by a fire in 1305. The construction of the current one began in the 14th-Century, on the orders of Bishop Nanker.

A Little Levity To Lighten Your Day.



Modernism.

Sunday 14 December 2014

Christkindelsmärik. Strasbourg's Famous Christmas Market.



English: Strasbourg's Christmas Market.
Français: Portail d’entrée lumineux du marché de Noël de Strasbourg, place de Broglie.
En alsacien, Christkindelmarik / marché de l’enfant Jésus.
Photo: 30 November 2014.
Source: Own work.
Attribution: © Claude Truong-Ngoc / Wikimedia Commons
(Wikimedia Commons)

Christkindelsmärik is a Christmas Market (French: Marché de Noël) held annually in Strasbourg, France, near Strasbourg Cathedral. It draws in approximately two million visitors each year and, since the implementation of the TGV (Train à Grande Vitesse) (High Speed Train) in 2007, the number of visitors has been on the rise.

Hotels are booked a year in advance, and some receive between fifteen-seventeen per cent of their yearly income, thanks to the Christkindelsmärik's visitors. It is considered one of the most famous Christmas Markets throughout Europe. It is thus a considerable source of income for the town of Strasbourg, a small city of approximately 250,000 inhabitants.


English: A Christmas Market Stall in front of Strasbourg Cathedral.
The Cathedral is not for sale.
Français: Façade de la cathédrale de Strasbourg.
Photo: 27 November 2011.
Source: Own work.
Author: Loïc LLH
(Wikimedia Commons)

It is estimated that the city benefits by a sixteen million Euros profit from this thirty-eight-day-long tradition. It is mostly famous for its fragrance of warm wine and spices which travels throughout the cold Winter streets.

Strasbourg has been holding Christkindelsmärik around its Cathedral since 1570, making it one of the oldest Christmas Markets in Europe. The name "Christkindelsmärik" is Alsatian in origin. A Low Alemannic German dialect, which was the mainly-spoken language in Alsace until the 20th-Century. In many parts of South Germany and Austria, Christmas Markets (German: Weihnachtsmärkte) are also called Christkind(e)l(s)markt (the spelling depends on the local dialect).

The Market takes place annually, from 29 November to 31 December. It mainly takes place on Place Kléber, Place Broglie, Place du Marché aux cochons de lait and around the Cathedral.


English: The Portal of Strasbourg's Christmas Market in Place de Broglie, Strasbourg.
In the local language, Christkindelsmärik means "Market of the Jesus Child".
Français: Portail lumineux du marché de Noël de Strasbourg (place de Broglie).
En alsacien, Christkindelsmärik = marché de l'enfant Jésus.
Photo: 6 December 2009.
Source: Own work.
Author: Tangopaso
(Wikimedia Commons)

Third Sunday Of Advent.


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

Illustrations, unless otherwise stated, from UNA VOCE OF ORANGE COUNTY
(from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal, 1952 Edition), who reproduce them 
with the kind permission of ST. BONAVENTURE PRESS

Third Sunday of Advent.
Station at Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome.

Indulgence of 10 years and 10 Quarantines.
Privileged Sunday of the Second-Class.

Semi-Double.

Rose, or Violet, Vestments.



Interior of Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome.
Artist: Giovanni Paolo Panini (1692–1765).
Date: 1731.
Current location: Saint Louis Art Museum,
Saint Louis, Missouri, United States.
Source/Photographer: Saint Louis Art Museum official site.
(Wikimedia Commons)


"The Lord is now at hand, come let us adore Him."

THE FIRST COMING:

It is Mary who gives us Jesus: "Blessed art thou, Mary . . . those things shall be accomplished in thee, which were spoken to thee by The Lord" (Antiphon at the Magnificat).

It is from Bethlehem [Editor: Literally, "the House of Bread"] that the King, the Ruler, shall go forth, Who is to bring Peace to all the Nations (Second Responsory) and Who will deliver His people from the power of their enemies (Fourth Responsory).

In a special way, our Souls will share in this deliverance during the Christmas Celebrations, which mark the Anniversary of the entrance into the world of Christ, the Vanquisher of Satan."Grant, we beseech Thee," The Church Prays, "that the new Birth of Thine only-begotten Son may set us free, whom the old bondage doth hold under the yoke of sin" (Third Mass, Christmas Day).


I am the voice of one crying in the wilderness, make straight the way of The Lord.


In the same way that Saint John the Baptist prepared the Jews for the coming of The Messias, so he prepares us for the union, closer every year, which Our Lord forms with our Souls at Christmas. "Make straight the way of The Lord," cried the forerunner of Christ. So, let us make straight the way into our hearts, that Our Saviour may enter and give us His Graces of Life and Freedom.

THE SECOND COMING:

It is to Our Lord's Coming, at the end of the world, that Saint Gregory alludes in his explanation of the Gospel: "John," he says, "the forerunner of The Redeemer, goes before Our Lord in the spirit and power of Elias, who will be the forerunner of Christ as Judge" (Ninth Lesson).

So also in the Introit and Epistle, taken literally, the allusion is Our Lord's Coming for the Judgement. If we feel great joy at the approach of the Christmas Feast, reminding us once more of the Lowly Infant in The Manger, how much more should the thought of His Coming, in all the splendour of His Power and Majesty, fill us with a Holy Sense of Triumph, since, only then, will our Redemption be fully accomplished.


Receive, O merciful Father, these Holy Sacrifices (Te igitur).


Saint Paul writes to his Christians: "Rejoice in The Lord always: Again, I say, Rejoice . . . The Lord is nigh." As on Mid-Lent Sunday, the Priest may Celebrate in Rose-Coloured Vestments. [Permission for this practice, in use at Rome for the Blessing of the Golden Rose on Laetare Sunday (or Mid-Lent Sunday), is granted to all Priests who desire it for the Celebration of Mass and Office on that day: Whence the custom has extended to Gaudete Sunday, or Mid-Advent Sunday, since, on both days, The Church sings of our deliverance by Christ from the bondage of sin.]

Rose is a paler kind of Violet; it expresses some relaxation in Penance, owing to the Joy of the Heavenly Jerusalem, into which Our Lord will lead us when Time shall be no more.

"Rejoice, O Jerusalem, with great Joy, for there shall come unto thee a Saviour" (Second Antiphon of Vespers). Let us greatly desire this Coming, which the Apostle tells us is near. We should long, with a Holy Impatience, that it may quickly come to pass. "Stir up, O Lord, Thy Might, [the Apocalypse tells us that The Lord will appear, and, with Him, millions of Saints, and on His garment He will bear the words: King of Kings and Lord of Lords (First Responsory). The Lord of Hosts will come with Great Might (Fourth Responsory). His Kingdom will be without end and all Nations shall serve Him (Sixth Responsory)], and come to save us." (Alleluia). "Come, Lord, and tarry not." "Per Adventum tuum, libera nos, Domine."

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

Saturday 13 December 2014

Saint Lucy (Santa Lucia). Virgin And Martyr. Feast Day 13 December.


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

Saint Lucy (Santa Lucia).
Virgin. Martyr.
Feast Day 13 December.

Double.

Red Vestments.



Saint Lucy Before The Judge.
Artist: Lorenzo Lotto (1523–1532).
Source: Scanned from book.
This File: 26 February 2011.
User: Sailko.
(Wikimedia Commons)



Lucia Di Siracusa
(Lucy of Syracuse).
Available on YouTube at




English: Procession of Light,
on the Feast Day of Saint Lucy
(Santa Lucia) in Sweden.
Deutsch: Luciafeier in einer schwedischen Kirche.
Photo: 13 December 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: Claudia Gründer.
(Wikimedia Commons)



Born in Sicily towards the end of the 3rd-Century, of noble origin, Saint Lucy, as the Gospel twice reminds us, gave away all her riches to the poor and, when she had nothing more, she gave herself to Jesus (Epistle).

Whilst the Foolish Virgins neglected to fill their lamps with the "Oil of Gladness", of which the Introit speaks, Lucy, whose name signifies "Light", waited with her lighted lamp in hand, that is with her Soul filled with Grace, the coming of her Spouse.



Feast Day of Saint Lucy
(Santa Lucia).
Available on YouTube at




The Choir of Saint Lucy (Santa Lucia),
at Uppsala, Sweden, sing on Saint Lucy's Feast Day.
Available on YouTube at



"Pure hearts are the temples of The Holy Ghost," she declared to her judge. It is this Spirit, also symbolised by the "Oil of Gladness", as we are told in the Ceremonies of Maundy Thursday, an Oil that gave suppleness and strength to her Soul in such a miraculous way, that Saint Lucy resisted her executioners unto death rather than lose the treasure of her Virginity.

Wherefore, her name occurs in the Canon of The Mass (Second List), and is repeated every day by thousands of Priests, who glorify God in her. She died in 303 A.D.

The lighted lamp in hand is the Soul in a state of Grace; let us, in this Season of Advent, wait for the Spouse who will soon come.

Mass: Dilexisti.


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia.

Lucia of Syracuse (283 A.D. - 304 A.D.), known as Saint Lucy, or Saint Lucia (Italian : Santa Lucia), was a young Christian Martyr, who died during The Diocletian Persecution . She is Venerated as a Saint by the Roman CatholicAnglican, Lutheran, and Orthodox Churches.

She is one of eight women, who, along with The Blessed Virgin Mary, are Commemorated by name in The Canon of The Mass . Her Feast Day, known as Saint Lucy's Day, is Celebrated in the West on 13 December. Saint Lucia of Syracuse, was honoured in The Middle Ages and remains a well-known Saint in modern England.


St Andrew Daily Missal (Traditional Mass)

Available (in U.K.) from

Available (in U.S.A.) from



Do You Ever Get That Feeling That You're Being . . ?



Illustration: ALLPOSTERS.CO.UK

Bénis Le Seigneur Ô Mon Âme. Bless The Lord O My Soul.


This Hymn was sung as the entrance Hymn, to Basilique Sainte-Marie-Madeleine De Vézelay, at The Pilgrimage of The Scouts to Vézelay, France, in 2014.

Watch and Read on Zephyrinus, 11 December 2014, HERE



Bénis Le Seigneur Ô Mon Âme.
Bless The Lord, O My Soul.
Available on YouTube at

Christmastide Masses At Saint Mary's, Chislehurst, Kent.







ST MARY’S CATHOLIC CHURCH,
28, CROWN LANE,
CHISLEHURST, KENT BR7 5PL.


CHRISTMAS 2014


SUNDAY, 21 DECEMBER 2014
(FOURTH SUNDAY OF ADVENT)

 MASS at 9.30 A.M.
 and
MASS at 1100 A.M.
(Extraordinary Form Sung Mass).

4.00 P.M. CANDLELIT CAROL SERVICE
and
CHILDREN’S NATIVITY TABLEAU.


WEDNESDAY, 24 DECEMBER
(CHRISTMAS EVE)

6.00 P.M:   VIGIL MASS OF CHRISTMAS
(WITH CAROLS).

11.30 P.M.   CAROLS; BLESSING OF THE CRIB
and
SOLEMN MIDNIGHT MASS.


THURSDAY, 25 DECEMBER
(CHRISTMAS DAY)

9.30 A.M: SUNG MASS
(WITH CAROLS).

11.00 A.M: SOLEMN HIGH MASS
(Extraordinary Form)
(WITH CAROLS).


SUNDAY, 28 DECEMBER
(HOLY FAMILY OF JESUS, MARY AND JOSEPH)

MASS at 9.30 A.M.
and
MASS at 11.00 A.M. (SUNG),


THURSDAY, 1 JANUARY 2015
(OUR BLESSED LADY, MOTHER OF GOD)

10.00 A.M: LOW MASS.


SUNDAY, 4 JANUARY 2015
(THE EPIPHANY)
(Transferred)

MASS at 9.30 A.M.
and
MASS at 11.00 A.M.
(Extraordinary Form Sung Mass).



              


Saint Mary's Catholic Church,
28 Crown Lane,
Chislehurst,
Kent BR7 5PL.
Tel: 020 8467 3215.
Fax: 020 8325 9627.


Friday 12 December 2014

A Little Levity To Lighten Your Day.



Little Reprobates !!!
What time is Confession ?

"The Ruins Of Holyrood Chapel".



English: The Ruins of Holyrood Chapel,
Edinburgh, Scotland.
Español: Las Ruinas de Holyrood.
Artist: Louis Daguerre (1787–1851).
Date: Circa 1824.
Current location: Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, England.
(Wikimedia Commons)



Photochrom Print of Holyrood Palace, Edinburgh, Scotland, by an unknown photographer.
It could possibly have been taken, from nearby Calton Hill, by James Valentine,
between 1890 and 1900. The Scan was made from a Colour Photochrom.
Holyrood Chapel (see, above) is on the left of the Palace.
This image is available from The United States Library of Congress's
Prints and Photographs division under the digital ID ppmsc.07584.
Author: Unknown, maybe James Valentine.
(Wikimedia Commons)

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...