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

Sunday 30 May 2021

Saint Felix I. Pope And Martyr. Who Reigned From 269 A.D. - 274 A.D. Feast Day 30 May.


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

Saint Felix I.
   Pope and Martyr.
   Feast Day 30 May.

Simple.

Red Vestments.



Saint Felix I. Pope and Martyr.
Fresco in Sistine Chapel, Vatican.
Papacy 269 A,D, - 274 A.D.
(Wikipedia)


In 269 A.D., Saint Felix ascended the Throne of Peter, to whom Jesus, before His Ascension, had committed His Church.

Saint Felix commanded that Masses be celebrated over the tombs of Martyrs, and it is in remembrance of this prescription that the Relics of Martyrs are placed in a small cavity of the Altar Stone, called "Tomb".

The Altar, nowadays, has indeed often the shape of a tomb, this being a relic of the "Confession", or underground tomb, which is found under The High Altar in Roman Basilicas, and is reached by stairs.

The custom of uniting the remembrance of Martyrs to The Sacrifice of The Mass, or of Calvary, shows that these Martyrs, having entered into the bosom of Jesus (Gospel), have found there the strength to confess their Faith before their enemies and the Grace of being Children of The Father (Epistle).

Saint Felix bore witness to Christ in 274 A.D., under the persecution of Emperor Aurelian.

Mass: In Paschaltide: Protexísti.
Collects: Of Mass: Státuit.
Mass: Out of Paschaltide: Státuit.



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

Roman by birth, Felix was chosen as Pope on 5 January 269 A.D., in succession to Pope Dionysius, who had died on 26 December 268 A.D.

Felix was the author of an important Dogmatic Letter on the Unity of Christ's Person. He received the Emperor Aurelian's aid in settling a theological dispute between the anti-TrinitarianPaul of Samosata, who had been deprived of the Bishopric of Antioch, by a Council of Bishops for heresy, and the Orthodox, Domnus, Paul's successor.

Paul refused to give way, and, in 272 A.D., the Emperor Aurelian was asked to decide between the rivals. He ordered the Church building to be given to the Bishop, who was "recognised by the Bishops of Italy and of the City of Rome" (Felix). See Eusebius, Hist. Ecc. vii. 30.


The Text of that Letter was later interpolated by a follower of Apollinaris in the interests of his Sect.

The notice about Felix, in The Liber Pontificalis, ascribes to him a Decree that Masses should be Celebrated on the tombs of Martyrs ("Hic constituit supra memorias martyrum missas celebrare"). The author of this entry was evidently alluding to the custom of Celebrating Mass privately at the Altars near, or over, the tombs of The Martyrs in the Crypts of the Catacombs (missa ad corpus), while The Solemn Celebration always took place in the Basilicas built over the Catacombs.

This practice, still in force at the end of the 4th-Century A.D., dates apparently from the period when the great Cemeterial Basilicas were built in Rome, and owes its origin to The Solemn Commemoration Services of Martyrs, held at their tombs on the Anniversary of their burial, as early as the 3rd-Century A.D.. Felix probably issued no such Decree, but the compiler of The Liber Pontificalis attributed it to him, because he made no departure from the custom in force in his time.

“Cor Jesu Sacratissimum”. Benediction Hymn.



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)


“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.

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:

Today Is Trinity Sunday. The Marian Anthem “Salve Regina” Returns. As Does The Antiphon “Asperges Me” At The Start Of Mass.



“Salve Regina”.
Available on YouTube at


“Salve Regina”.
Available on YouTube at


“Asperges Me”.
Available on YouTube at

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

“Asperges Me” is a Latin Antiphon said or sung at a Roman Catholic High Mass in all seasons except the Easter (Paschal) Season and Palm Sunday.

It traditionally accompanies The Asperges, the ritual sprinkling of the Congregation by the Celebrant with Holy Water, as part of an Entrance Ritual, symbolising the cleansing of the people. Its words are taken from Psalm 50, “The Miserere”.

Asperges me, Domine, hyssopo et mundabor,
Lavabis me, et super nivem dealbabor.
Miserere mei, Deus, secundum magnam misericordiam tuam. 

Thou wilt sprinkle me, O Lord, with hyssop and I shall be cleansed
Thou wilt wash me, and I shall be washed whiter than snow.
Pity me, O God, according to Thy great mercy.

The Holy Ghost And The Meaning Of Divinely-Given Peace. A Short Talk On The Holy Ghost. By: Reverend Fr. Timothy Finigan. A Hermeneutic Of Continuity Production.



The Holy Ghost And The Meaning Of Divinely-Given Peace.
A Short Talk on The Holy Ghost. An astounding moment in The Temple
and The Gift of The Holy Ghost – Who is a Person and not a Force. What Peace really means in The Mass. The Refreshing Peace, and “Refrigerium”.
Our presence at The Mass is essential.
You can read the full Text of The Talk
at my Blog "The Hermeneutic of Continuity":
Music credit: Vivaldi. La Cetra, Op 9. Concerto 1 in C Major. Carl Pini, John Tunnell, Anthony Pini and Harold Lester. Source: Baroque Music Library. www.baroquemusic.org (Public domain).
Picture credit: Descent of The Holy Spirit. 12th-Century.
Cloisonne enamel on gold.
Art Museum of Georgia. Source: Sanikidze, Tamaz (1985), Art Museum of Georgia. Aurora Art Publishers, Leningrad. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
Available on YouTube at

Trinity Sunday.


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

Trinity Sunday.

Double of The First-Class.

White Vestments.


The Most Holy Trinity
supported by The Thrones.
Artist: René de Cramer.
"Copyright Brunelmar/Ghent/Belgium".
Used with Permission.


In the second part of the year, the six months from Trinity to Advent, The Holy Ghost, Whose Reign begins at Pentecost, comes to repeat to us what Our Lord, Himself, has taught us in the first part, the six months from Advent to Trinity Sunday.

The fundamental Truth, on which everything in The Christian Religion rests, is The Dogma of The Holy Trinity, from Whom all comes (Epistle), and to Whom, all Baptised in His Name must return (Gospel). In the course of The Cycle, having called to our minds, in order, God The Father, Author of Creation, God The Son, Author of Redemption, and God The Holy Ghost, Author of our Sanctification, The Church, today, before all else, recapitulates The Great Mystery by which we acknowledge and adore The Unity of Nature and Trinity of Persons in Almighty God (Collect).

"As soon as we have Celebrated The Coming of The Holy Ghost," says Abbot Rupert, in the 12th-Century, "we hail in song The Feast of The Holy Trinity, the following Sunday, a place in The Calendar well chosen, for immediately after The Descent of The Holy Ghost, Preaching and Conversion began, and Faith through Baptism and Confession, in the Name of The Father and of The Son and of The Holy Ghost."



The Dogma of The Holy Trinity is affirmed, in The Liturgy, on every hand. It is in The Name of The Father and of The Son and of The Holy Ghost that we begin and end The Mass and The Divine Office, and that we confer The Sacraments. All The Psalms end with the Gloria, the Hymns with The Doxology, and the Prayers by a Conclusion, in honour of The Three Divine Persons. Twice during The Mass, we are reminded that it is to The Holy Trinity that The Mass is being offered.

The Dogma of The Trinity is expressed in the very fabric of our Churches. Our fathers delighted to find a symbol of it in the admirably-proportioned height, breadth, and length of these buildings, in their primary and secondary divisions; the Sanctuary, the Choir and the Nave; the Ground-Floor, the Triforium and the Clerestory; the three Entrances, three Doors, three Bays, three Gables, and, often, three Towers.

On every hand, even to the smallest detail of decoration, the number three, repeated frequently, denotes a well-conceived Plan and a profound Faith in The Blessed Trinity.



The same thought is expressed in Christian iconography, in various ways. Up to the 12th-Century, God The Father is represented by a hand, emerging from the clouds, in Blessing, and often surrounded by a Nimbus [Editor: Halo] containing a Cross. By this hand, is symbolised Divine Omnipotence. In 13th- and 14th-Century work, one sees The Face and, then, The Figure of The Father. From the 15th-Century, The Father is represented as an old man in the garb of a Pontiff.

Up to the 12th-Century, God The Son was at first represented by a Cross, by a Lamb, or, again, by a gracious youth, in the same way that Apollo was represented in the pagan world. From the 11th- to the 16th-Century, Christ appears bearded and in the prime of life. From the 13th-Century, He is seen carrying The Cross and often He is depicted as The Lamb.

The Holy Ghost was, at first, represented under the form of a dove, whose outspread wings often touched the mouths of both Father and Son to show that He proceeds from both. For the same reason, from the 11th-Century He is depicted as a little child. In the 13th-Century, He is a youth, in the 15th-Century, He is a man of ripe age, like The Father and The Son, but with a dove above His head, or in His hand, to distinguish Him from the other Two Persons.



Since the 16th-Century, the dove and the fiery tongues are the only representations of The Holy Ghost. Quite recently, it was expressly forbidden to represent Him under a human form. Since 1628, was also forbidden the monstrous picture of three faces on one body.

As a symbol of The Trinity, the triangle has been borrowed from geometry, depicting by its form The Divine Unity in which are inscribed three angles, expressing The Three Persons in God. Trefoil plants, as Shamrock and Clover, serve to represent this Great Mystery, as also do three circles interwoven, with the word "Unity" inscribed in the central space belonging to all three.

A Miniature of the 16th-Century represents The Father and Son as like each other, with the same Nimbus, the same Triple Crown, the hair worn in the same way and a single cloak drawing them close together. Further, they are united by the same Book of Divine Wisdom as well as by The Holy Ghost, Who joins one to the other by the ends of His wings. But The Father is older than The Son, and the beard of the one is pointed, while that of the other is round.



The Father wears a Robe, without a Girdle, and carries the globe of the Earth in His hand, while The Son, as a Priest, wears an Alb, with Cincture and Stole.

The Feast of The Holy Trinity owes its origin to the fact that the Ordinations of The Ember Saturday, which took place in the evening, were prolonged to the next day, which was Sunday, and which had no Proper Liturgy.

As this day is Consecrated throughout the year to The Most Holy Trinity, The Votive Mass, composed in the 7th-Century A.D., to Celebrate this Mystery, was said on The First Sunday after Pentecost; and, since it occupied a fixed place in The Liturgical Calendar, this Mass was considered as establishing this Sunday as a special Feast of The Blessed Trinity.



Stephen, Bishop of Liége, who was born about 850 A.D., composed, in the 10th-Century, its Office, which was revised later on by The Franciscans.

The Feast was, in 1334, extended to The Universal Church by Pope John XXII and made a Double of The First-Class by Pope Saint Pius X.

That we may ever be armed against all adversity, let us, today, with The Liturgy, make our Solemn Profession of Faith in The Holy and Eternal Trinity and His indivisible Unity.

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

Mass: Benedícta sit sancta.
Commemoration: The First Sunday After Pentecost.
Creed.
Preface: Of The Holy Trinity.
Last Gospel: The Gospel of The Sunday After Pentecost.


Saturday 29 May 2021

Why Are Bishops Ignoring The Instructions Of Vatican II And Four Popes To Ensure That Latin Is Taught In Seminaries ? No Doubt, Bishops Will Shortly Give A Reason. Won't Be Long, Now. We're Waiting. Shouldn't Be Long, Now. Still Waiting . . .



The Introit for The Mass for Saint Margaret, Virgin and Martyr,
on 20 July, from Zephyrinus's Missale Romanum (dated 1861),
which was kindly given by a Priest friend.
Readers have to decide whether this Liturgical presentation has more Sanctity, Profundity, and Worth, than what is often on offer in today's, so-called, "Missalettes". A piece of flimsy paper that is thoughtlessly left lying around on the ground in Churches at the end of Masses. Leaving somebody to go around and pick them all up and throw them away, as they all are carrying a particular date and, therefore, will not be able to be used the following year.
Mass: Me exspectavérunt.
Illustration: ZEPHYRINUS


This Article, dated 2020, is taken from, and can be read in full at,

Variis linguis loquebantur Apostoli . . .

. . . but among the many tongues The Church speaks nowadays, Latin, the proper language of The Latin Church, apparently is not to feature. We are preparing for The Liturgical Celebration of Pentecost, the bestowing upon The Church of “The Gifts of Tongues”.

Yet, the language most securely fixed into place by Tradition, and by the enactments of Popes and Councils, Latin, has had a gag rudely thrust into its mouth by The Enemy and by those whom he has corrupted. It is difficult to avoid a conclusion that The Bishops, as a body, are largely the guilty men.

I have noticed, over the years, three or four occasions when a Bishop, perhaps when asked to provide a Celebrant for The Extraordinary Form, has cheerfully informed the World that not many Clergy know Latin. nowadays, so that it’s hard for him to find someone who can Celebrate The Extraordinary Form.



I am amazed by the nonchalant and shame-free way that Bishops make this revelation, without any apparent awareness that Canon Law (249) requires The Clergy to be proficient in Latin.

If a Diocesan Bishop were rebuking a cheeky young Curate for ignoring Canon Law, what would be his reaction if The Junior Cleric cheerfully (and nonchalantly) said: “Come off it, “Bish, dear”, nobody takes any notice of all that old Canonical C**p any more, nowadays !!! Crawl out from under your poncy Mitre and try to get real !!!”

But, apparently, there are Bishops who feel exactly this same disdainful contempt with regard to Canon Law. Is chirpy insouciance, combined with dereliction of duty, any less reprehensible when expressed in po-faced management-talk by self-important Bishops than it would be among lowly and racy Presbyters ?

I am moved to repeat the actual Teaching of The Conciliar and Post-Conciliar Popes on this highly-important matter.


POPE SAINT JOHN XXIII and Latin.

Roman Pontiffs do not commonly sign their Magisterial documents on The High Altar of Saint Peter's in the presence of The Body of Cardinals. But Pope Saint John XXIII thus promulgated his Apostolic Constitution “Veterum Sapientia”, 1962, in which he insisted that the Latin language must remain central to the culture of Western Christianity. What on Earth could the good old gentleman have done in order to make his point more emphatically ?

That Letter was praised by Pope Saint Paul VI (“Studia Latinitatis, 1964", . . . principem obtinere locum dicenda sane est”), who was anxious that Seminarians “magna cum cura et diligentia ad antiquas et humanas litteras informentur”; and Pope Saint John Paul II (“Sapientia Christiana”) emphasised the requirement for knowledge of Latin “for the faculties of The Sacred Sciences, so that Students can understand and use the sources and documents of The Church”.

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI (“Latina Lingua, 2012”), praised “Veterum Sapientia” as having been issued “Iure Meritoque”: It is to be taken seriously both because of its legal force and because of the intrinsic merit of its arguments; and, in his Encyclical “Sacramentum Caritatis”, wrote specifically about the need for Seminarians to be taught Latin.


We have, in other words, a coherent and continuous expectation in the teaching of Pope Saint John XXIII, Pope Saint Paul VI, Pope Saint John Paul II, and Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, that all Seminarians should become proficient in Latin, the Language of The Church. [So let nobody argue that the provisions of Canon 249 have fallen into desuetude because the legislator has failed within living memory to continue to insist upon them.]

And the attitude of the Popes, to the promotion of Latin studies in even broader contexts than that of the formation of the Clergy, is demonstrated in the establishment by Pope Saint Paul VI of a Latin Academy; a Foundation re-established and strengthened by Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI.

This Papal Teaching by no means relates solely to the language of Worship; it desires Latin to remain a living vernacular for the Clergy and not least for their formation; and it is explicitly based upon the belief that, by being Latinate, a Clerisy [Editor: a learned group] will have access to a continuity of culture. My Post would have to be very long indeed if it quoted fully all the words of all four Popes to this effect.

Coming as I do from the Anglican Patrimony, I will instead share the witness of C. S. Lewis's Devil, “Screwtape”, who confessed: “Since we cannot deceive the whole human race all the time, it is most important thus to cut every generation off from all others; for, where learning makes a free commerce between the ages, there is always the danger that the characteristic errors of one may be corrected by the characteristic truths of another”.

And, in his “Pilgrim's Regress”, Lewis suggests that the growing disuse of Classical Languages is a Diabolical trick to isolate the educated classes from the wisdom of the Past. Both in secular culture and within The Church, there is a risk that the educated class will be cut off and imprisoned in the narrow confines of a particular culture - victims of its particular Zeitgeist.

A literate Clerisy [Editor: See, above] is one that reads what other ages wrote, which means that it will at least be able to read Latin; and an obvious sign of such a Clerisy, in practical terms, will be that it can with ease say its Divine Office in Latin.



VATICAN II and Latin.

It is in this context that we must see the requirement of Vatican II (Sacrosanctum Concilium 101): “In accordance with the Centuries-old Tradition (Sæcularis Traditio) of The Latin Rite, the Latin language is to be retained by Clerics in reciting The Divine Office”.

And it is highly significant that it goes on to make any use of the vernacular an (apparently very rare) exception, which Bishops can grant “only on an individual basis”.

One might plausibly surmise that this exception may have been envisaged as useful in areas where resources for Clerical formation were limited, like the remoter parts of the 1960s’ Third World.

I wonder how The Council Fathers - or a significant proportion of them - might have reacted to the information that in less than a decade the Bishops of Western, Old, Europe (whose culture, both religious and secular, had been based upon Latin for nearly two millennia, the Continent of the great universities in which the civilisation of The Greek and Roman Worlds had been transmitted) would regard both this Conciliar mandate, reinforced by the directions of the Conciliar Decree “Optatam Totius” on Seminary Training, as an irrelevant Dead Letter.

As early as 1966, Pope Saint Paul VI was deploring (“Sacrificium Laudis”) the habit of requesting dispensations for a Vernacular Office.


Readers of this Blog [Editor: FR HUNWICKE'S MUTUAL ENRICHMENT] are probably familiar * with the other prescriptions of Vatican II for the retention of Latin, particularly in The Liturgy, and I will not labour the point.

I emphasise that I am not basing an argument for the retention of a living Latin culture simply and nakedly upon the words of The Council. The “Auctoritas” for that retention is very much more broadly-based, as The Council Fathers themselves emphasised by calling it and invoking it as a “Sæcularis Traditio”.

The Conciliar mandate is merely a dutiful affirmation, proper to an Ecumenical Council of The Church, of the continuity and abiding prescriptiveness of The Church's Tradition; the guarantee making explicit that in an age of revolutions the old assumptions are still in place. Without these words of The Council, it might have been plausibly argued by ill-disposed persons that a radical cultural and intellectual shift had invalidated previous assumptions.

In view of the plain language of The Council, such a thesis can only be advanced as a deliberate repudiation of the explicit words of an Ecumenical Council . . . as well as of the Centuries preceding it and of the Teaching of subsequent Popes.


CANON LAW and Latin.

But, not long ago, I met a bright and recently-Ordained young Priest who had been taught “a little Greek, but not a word of Latin”. So, despite Canon 249 (in the Post-Conciliar Code of Canon Law), the Clergy have not all learned, and are not now all being taught, Latin as part of their Seminary formation.

Well, of course, they all haven't so learnt, and are not all being so taught. Everybody knows that. A Priest of my acquaintance once wrote to me: “When I was a Seminarian in the 1980s, the very fact of having done a course in Latin at University was considered tantamount to a declaration in favour of Archbishop Lefebvre.

“A Priest who gave a Retreat (a prominent moral theologian of those days) searched our places “in Choir” [Editor: “in Choro”] and denounced those who possessed Latin Breviaries as certainly having no vocation”.



One can hardly blame the present generation of English Bishops for a problem which looks as though it arose more than half a Century ago (in any case, blame is not my purpose). Indeed, I have heard that matters may now be a little less bad. But not, I believe, everywhere, and certainly not for all Seminarians.

Surely, Catholic Bishops have some say about the syllabuses taught in Seminaries ? Surely, they have some responsibility for the formation of their own Clergy ? Are they happy that Seminaries are run in a way which pays only very selective regard to the Magisterium of Pope Saint John XXIII ? And to The Second Vatican Council, which (vide “Optatam totius 13”) laid emphasis on the role of Latin in Seminary education; or is that particular Conciliar document now to be consigned to oblivion ?

Pope Saint Paul VI, as the first in his list of academic priorities for Seminarians, wrote: “The cultural formation of the young Priest must certainly include an adequate knowledge of languages and especially of Latin (particularly for those of The Latin Rite). (“Summi Dei verbum”.)”


There has long been a tacit assumption among some that the Magisterium of the “pre-Conciliar Popes” is to be quietly forgotten. Blessed Pope Pius IX ? Venerable Pope Pius XII ? Who on Earth were they ? But now one might be forgiven for wondering whether the Magisterium of The Council, itself, and the Teaching of the “post-Conciliar Popes”, are now also (when it suits) being treated with similar contempt by these grand men.

Are those more recent Pontiffs to be elaborately honoured with questionable Beatifications and break-neck-speed Canonisations and facile rhetorical praise, while their actual Teaching, emphatically and insistently given, is tossed aside as irrelevant or impractical ?

“There just isn't room on the syllabus for any of that”. Really ? When Seminary syllabuses are composed, shouldn’t it be the first aim to ensure that the insistent mandates of Roman Pontiffs are not to be ignored ?

Since entering into Full Communion in 2011, I have met significant numbers of Clergy who have deplored the fact that, at Seminary, they were robbed of what The Catholic Church regards as the first building block of a Priestly formation.

They have seemed to have in mind quite a number of useless topics which could profitably have been omitted so as to liberate syllabus time.


Cardinal Basil Hume, back in the 1990s, rather impertinently reminded Anglican enquirers that “Catholicism is “table d’hote”, not “à la carte” ”. Surely, that gives an ex-Anglican some Right to wonder whether this principle also applies as much to those who run, or who Episcopally supervise, Seminaries as it does to Anglican enquirers ?

A final quotation from Pope Saint John XXIII: “The Teachers . . . in universities or Seminaries are required to speak Latin (“latine loqui tenentur”) and to make use of textbooks written in Latin.

Those whose ignorance of Latin makes it difficult for them to obey these instructions shall gradually be replaced by Teachers who are suited to this task (“in eorum locum doctores ad hoc idonei gradatim sufficiantur”).

Any difficulties that may be advanced by students or professors must be overcome (“vincantur necesse est”) either by the patient insistence of the Bishops or Religious Superiors, or by the good will of the Teachers.”

And a final question: How many of those currently Teaching in English Seminaries are (in the sense of Pope Saint John XXIII’s precise use of the word) “idonei”, “fit for the job” ? Indeed, are there any ?

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* You sometimes find claims made to the effect that “Vatican II mandated more extensive use of vernacular languages in The Liturgy. Sacrosanctum Concilium, Para 54, says “Linguæ vernaculæ in Missis cum populo celebratis congruus locus tribui possit”.

Doesn't sound to me much like a “mandate”. It doesn't even say “potest” !!! Somebody must have decided to put the verb into the subjunctive !!! It goes on to say '“præsertim” and mentions the Readings. Then, much more cautiously, it raises the possibility of the vernacular “even” (“etiam”) “in partibus quæ ad populum spectant” linking this with a specific requirement that The Laity should also be able to sing and say those self-same parts in Latin.

Hardly a “mandate” for the vernacular !!!

Rather, a nervously tentative partial permission.

Ember Saturday After Pentecost.



Illustration: FR. Z's BLOG


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

Ember Saturday After Pentecost.

Station at Saint Peter's.

Indulgence of 30 Years and 30 Quarantines.

Semi-Double.

Red Vestments.


Rogation Day.
Circa 1950.
The Vicar and Sunday School Children go out into the fields to Bless The Crops. The little boy is carrying a symbolic Tree of Plenty.
Picture Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images.
Illustration: ABOUT RELIGION

FEAR OF GOD.

“The Gift of Holy Fear, or, The Fear of God, is actually the foundation of all other gifts. It drives sin from the heart, because it fills us with reverence, either for The Justice of God, or, for The Divine Majesty.”

Rev. M. Meschler.

After swelling the ranks of her children during the night of Pentecost, The Holy Ghost today is about to supply The Church with the Priests who are to be her Ministers of Grace all over the World, for He will pour out His Spirit upon her servants, as Joel prophesied He would upon The Apostles (First Lesson).

Very appropriately, therefore, The Church appointed for The Station this day the Basilica of Saint Peter, the Pastor of the Fold, and the Gospel tells us of a cure worked by Jesus in the house of Simon.

The Priest, as the Minister of Christ, devotes himself to the healing of Souls consumed by the fever of sinful passions.

As it has already been pointed out, The Mass on The Saturday in Ember Week has five Lessons, with Collect and Tract between the Introit and the Epistle. The fifth Lesson never varies: It is the record of the miraculous preservation of the three young Hebrew men in the furnace, followed by an extract from their Canticle of Praise and Thanksgiving.


The Collect of The Mass is based upon this Lesson, and beseeches The Divine Goodness that we may not be consumed by the flame of vice.

In The Sacrament of Holy Orders, the Priest receives a large outpouring of The Divine Spirit (Epistle) that will enable him to Preach The Kingdom of God (Gospel).

The Second, Third, and Fourth Lessons, refer to The Harvest, and to the offerings of the first-fruits of the Earth, for Ember Weeks were instituted with the object of obtaining The Divine Blessing on each of the Seasons as they occurred.

Having entered The Promised Land, the Isrælites offered its first-fruits to God.


Let us, having entered The Church by Baptism, offer to Almighty God the first-fruits of all that we do, through the supernatural influx of The Holy Ghost into our Souls.

Let us Pray to God that He may increase our Faith in Christ (Epistle and Gospel), and fill our hearts with His Holy Love (Epistle).

Mass: Cáritas Dei.
   After the Kyrie Eleison, the Tonsure is conferred.
   After The First Lesson, is the Ordination of Door-Keepers.
   After The Second Lesson, is the Ordination of Lectors.
   After The Third Lesson is, the Ordination of Exorcists.
   After The Fourth Lesson, is the Ordination of Acolytes.
   After The Fifth Lesson, is the Ordination of Sub-Deacons.
   After the Epistle, is the Ordination of Deacons.
Sequence: Veni, Sancte Spiritus.
   After the penultimate Verse of The Sequence, is the Ordination of Priests.
Creed.
Preface: For Pentecost.
Communicantes: For Pentecost.
Hanc igitur: For Pentecost.

With the end of this Mass, Paschaltide comes to an end.




Illustration: MATER DEI LATIN MASS PARISH



Ember Day Service.
1950.
Illustration: ABOUT RELIGION



Sunday School Children Celebrate Rogation Day in 1953.
A photo at Market Lavington Museum, Wiltshire, England.
Illustration: MARKET LAVINGTON MUSEUM



Saint Michael's Church, Bunwell, Norfolk, England, has always been the centre of Village Life. In this picture, taken on Rogation Sunday, April 1967, the Rector, Rev. Samuel Collins, followed by the Choir, Parishioners, and The New Buckenham Silver Band, walk The Parish Boundaries and Bless the Stream.
Illustration: BUNWELL HERITAGE GROUP

Saint Mary Magdalen Dei Pazzi. Virgin. Feast Day, Today, 29 May.


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

Saint Mary Magdalen dei Pazzi.
   Virgin.
   Feast Day 29 May.

Semi-Double.

White Vestments.


Saint Mary Magdalen dei Pazzi.
Date: 1878.
Source: Scanned by uploader from page 296 of
"Little Pictorial Lives Of The Saints", (Benzinger Brothers).
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)


Born at Florence, Italy, in 1566, of the illustrious Pazzi family, Saint Mary Magdalen dei Pazzi, at the age of ten, Consecrated her Virginity to Christ, Whom she chose as her Spouse (Epistle, Gospel, Communion). Wherefore, God loved her with a love of preference (Introit), and made her one of the Virgins who form His Court of Honour (Offertory).

She took The Carmelite Habit in 1584 and subjected herself to frightful mortifications. The Holy Ghost, Who, from Heaven, sent Jesus Risen Again to her, inflamed her with such love that she had to pour fresh water on her burning breast.

She would bitterly deplore that the infidels and sinners were in the way to perdition and offered to endure any torments for their salvation.

Her motto was: "Suffer and not die." She died in 1607 and her body, which she mortified in every way, has remained incorrupt to our day.

Mass: Dilexísti.


Vision of Saint Maria Magdalen dei Pazzi.
Artist: Pedro de Moya (1610–1674).
Date: Early-17th-Century.
Source/Photographer: Web Gallery of Art
(Wikimedia Commons)


The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

Mary Magdalene de' Pazzi, O.Carm. (Italian: Maria Maddalena de' Pazzi),
2 April 1566 – 25 May 1607, was an Italian Carmelite Nun and Mystic. She has been declared a Saint by The Roman Catholic Church.

In 1580, at age fourteen, Pazzi was sent by her father to be educated at a Monastery of Nuns of The Order of Malta, but she was soon recalled to wed a young nobleman. She advised her father of her vow, and he eventually relented and allowed her to enter Monastic Life. She chose The Carmelite Monastery of Saint Mary of The Angels, in Florence, Italy, because The Rule there allowed her to receive Holy Communion daily. In 1583, she was accepted as a Novice by that Community, and given the Religious Name of Sister Mary Magdalen.

Numerous Miracles allegedly followed Pazzi's death, and the process for her Beatification was begun in 1610 under Pope Paul V, and completed under Pope Urban VIII in 1626. She was not, however, Canonised until sixty-two years after her death, when Pope Clement X raised her to The Altars on 28 April 1669. The Church of The Monastery of Pažaislis, commissioned in 1662 in Lithuania, was one of the first to be Consecrated in her honour.

The Saint is little known outside Italy, but her cult is very strong, especially in Florence. Paulist Press issued a selection of her writings in English translation in their series of Classics of Western Spirituality.


The following Text is from “The Liturgical Year”,
by Abbot Guéranger, O.S.B.

Volume 8.
Paschal Time.
Book II.


SAINT MARY MAGDALEN DE PAZZI.

Our Paschal Calendar gives us three illustrious Virgins of beautiful Italy. We have already kept The Feast of the valiant Saint Catharine of Siena; in a few days, we shall be honouring the memory of Saint Angela dei Merici, surrounded by her school-children; today, it is The Fair Lily of Florence, Saint Magdalen de Pazzi, who embalms the whole Church with the fragrance of her name and intercession.

She devoted herself to the loving imitation of Our Crucified Jesus; was it not just, that she should have some share in the joy of His Resurrection ?

Magdalen de Pazzi was one of the brightest ornaments of The Order of Carmel, by her Angelic Purity, and by the ardour of her love for God. Like Saint Philip Neri, she was one of the grandest manifestations of The Divine Charity that is found in The True Church.

Saint Magdalen, in her peaceful Cloister, and Saint Philip, in his active labours for the salvation of Souls, both made it their ambition to satisfy that desire, expressed by Our Jesus, when He said: " I am come to cast fire on the Earth; and what will I, but that it be kindled ? "

The life of this Spouse of Christ was one continued Miracle. Her Ecstasies and Raptures were almost of daily occurrence. The lights given to her regarding the Mysteries were extraordinary; and, in order to prepare her for those sublime communications, God would have her go through the severest trials of The Spiritual Life.
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