Diocesan Calendar for East Anglia 2021
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Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2018
Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2018 Conforming to General Convention 2018 1 Preface Christians have since ancient times honored men and women whose lives represent heroic commitment to Christ and who have borne witness to their faith even at the cost of their lives. Such witnesses, by the grace of God, live in every age. The criteria used in the selection of those to be commemorated in the Episcopal Church are set out below and represent a growing consensus among provinces of the Anglican Communion also engaged in enriching their calendars. What we celebrate in the lives of the saints is the presence of Christ expressing itself in and through particular lives lived in the midst of specific historical circumstances. In the saints we are not dealing primarily with absolutes of perfection but human lives, in all their diversity, open to the motions of the Holy Spirit. Many a holy life, when carefully examined, will reveal flaws or the bias of a particular moment in history or ecclesial perspective. It should encourage us to realize that the saints, like us, are first and foremost redeemed sinners in whom the risen Christ’s words to St. Paul come to fulfillment, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” The “lesser feasts” provide opportunities for optional observance. They are not intended to replace the fundamental celebration of Sunday and major Holy Days. As the Standing Liturgical Commission and the General Convention add or delete names from the calendar, successive editions of this volume will be published, each edition bearing in the title the date of the General Convention to which it is a response. -
The Society of Mary by Rev
The Society of Mary By Rev. Theron R. Hugh O.M. OML TIMH AGO I was asked to provide ;in article of iiiosl K,.in.Hi ( .iiholic1, i, ih..1 iii ii .; il !. I.K I. n, tor 1MMACULATA pertaining to ihc history of the concept ui ( atholic leaching: tin n n i .I.IIKV in Ni.ni n S Society of Mary. Inquiries into the subject provided tlieoloL'y ,m<! devotion. True, in,nr\i Aiiiihcaiis. only some sketchy material, but resulting from its con- and peihaps the average Anglic.in ( l-.piscopalian) encoun- temporary activities within the past two decades we shall tered by his Roman Catholic neighbor could in some way discover that while its beginnings are somewhat dim, to- lit this generali/ed description, But happily this image is in duy it is very much alive and well. a continuous state of flux -- for the belter. Through the The rule of the society states, "The Society is dedi- agency of the Society of Mary, as well as other Catholic cated to the glory of God, and in honor of the Holy In- societies within Anglicanism, Marian theology and de- carnation, under the invocation of Our Lady Help of votion are spreading so as to help bring into focus a true Christians." The medal of the society has on its back side Incarnational theology which antedates either conciliar or these words, "Auxjlium Christianorum, Ora Pro Nobis." Papal definitions of the place of Mary in the scheme of The rule reads as follows: Redemption. 1. Members shall keep a Rule of Life which will in- "Catholics Are Also United with Anglicans" clude special devotions as the Angelus, the Ro- sary, the Litany and Anthems of our Lady. -
The Latin Mass Society
Ordo 2010 Compiled by Gordon Dimon Principal Master of Ceremonies assisted by William Tomlinson for the Latin Mass Society © The Latin Mass Society The Latin Mass Society 11–13 Macklin Street, London WC2B 5NH Tel: 020 7404 7284 Fax: 020 7831 5585 Email: [email protected] www.latin-mass-society.org INTRODUCTION +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Omnia autem honeste et secundum ordinem fiant. 1 Cor. 14, 40. This liturgical calendar, together with these introductory notes, has been compiled in accordance with the Motu Proprio Rubricarum Instructum issued by Pope B John XXIII on 25th July 1960, the Roman Breviary of 1961 and the Roman Missal of 1962. For the universal calendar that to be found at the beginning of the Roman Breviary and Missal has been used. For the diocesan calendars no such straightforward procedure is possible. The decree of the Sacred Congregation of Rites of 26th July 1960 at paragraph (6) required all diocesan calendars to conform with the new rubrics and be approved by that Congregation. The diocesan calendars in use on 1st January 1961 (the date set for the new rubrics to come into force) were substantially those previously in use but with varying adjustments and presumably as yet to re-approved. Indeed those calendars in use immediately prior to that date were by no means identical to those previously approved by the Congregation, since there had been various changes to the rubrics made by Pope Pius XII. Hence it is not a simple matter to ascertain in complete and exact detail the classifications and dates of all diocesan feasts as they were, or should have been, observed at 1st January 1961. -
L I T U R G I C a L C a L E N D a R LIT U R G IC a L C a LEN D
Liturgical Calendar DECEMBER 2017 LECTIONARY FOR SUNDAYS: YEAR B ADVENT Advent has a twofold character: as a season to prepare for Christmas, when Christ’s first coming to us is remembered; and as a season when that remembrance directs the mind and heart to await Christ’s Second Coming at the end of time. Advent is thus a period for devout and joyful expectation. The playing of the organ and other musical instruments, and the decoration of the altar with flowers should be done in a moderate manner, as is consonant with the character of the season, without anticipating the full joy of the Nativity of the Lord. The same moderation should be observed in the celebration of Matrimony. Eucharistic Prayer 4 is not used in this Season. DECEMBER 2017 evening P First Vespers (Divine Office Volume I) 3 Sun P + Ist SUNDAY OF ADVENT Ps Week 1 Creed, Advent Preface I (and on following days) Mass & Office of the day § Migrants’ Day 4 Mon P Advent feria, First Week of Advent: Mass & Office of the day or W St John Damascene, Priest & Doctor: Mass & Office of the Memorial 5 Tue P Advent feria: Mass & Office of the day 6 Wed P Advent feria: Mass & Office of the day or W St Nicholas, Bishop: Mass & Office of the Memorial 7 Thu W St Ambrose, Bishop & Doctor: Mass & Office of the Memorial R A evening W First Vespers D N E 8 Fri W L THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION OF THE BLESSED A No Friday C VIRGIN MARY, Patron of the Diocese Gloria, Creed, Proper Preface abstinence L A Mass & Office of the Solemnity C I G R 9 Sat P Advent feria: Mass & Office of the day or U T -
CWL Margaret Clitherow.Pdf
The life story of Margaret Clitherow, is at once ordinary and extraordinary. She was born in Middleton, England, in 1555, of protestant parents. Possessed of good looks and full of wit and merriment, she was a charming personality. In 1571, she married (arranged) John Clitherow, a well-to-do grazier and butcher (to whom she bore two children). They lived in ‘The Shambles’. Shortly after her marriage, Margaret converted to Catholicism. Her husband remained a Protestant, but was not hostile to his wife's religion. He paid her fines for not attending Protestant church services and looked the other way when she sheltered priests in their home and educated their children in Catholicism. The Clitherow home soon became one of the main places of refuge for fugitive priests in England. Margaret had a secret cupboard with vestments, wine and bread for Mass, as well as a "priest's hole" to hide the cleric himself. In 1586, there was a crackdown on remnants of Catholicism in the North. John Clitherow was summoned and asked about the whereabouts of his son, who was studying abroad to become a Catholic priest. He angrily refused to give any information. The Clitherow home was searched, but, as usual, the priest had left through a window and the authorities found only a small group of children at ordinary lessons. Unfortunately, however, among the group was a Flemish child whose fear of the authorities showed on his face. They seized him and threatened him with a flogging; he immediately told them everything he knew about Mrs. Clitherow's Catholic activities and even showed them the secret cupboard. -
The Shrine and Parish Church of the Holy Innocents
Founded 1866 The Shrine and Parish Church of the Holy Innocents “The Little Catholic Church Around the Corner” at the crossroads of the world 128 West 37th St. (Just West of Broadway) New York City 10018 Schedule Rev. Fr. James L. P. Miara, M. Div., Pastor Perpetual Novenas Rev. Fr. Louis Van Thanh, Senior Priest Weekdays following the 7:30 a.m. and 12:15 & 1:15 p.m. Rev. Fr. Oliver Chanama, In Residence Masses and at 5:50 p.m. and on Saturday following the 12 Rev. Fr. Daniel Sabatos, Visiting Celebrant noon and 1:00 p.m. Masses. Tel: (212) 279-5861/5862 Monday: Miraculous Medal Tuesday: St. Anthony and St. Anne www.shrineofholyinnocents.org Wednesday: Our Lady of Perpetual Help and St. Joseph Thursday: Infant of Prague, St. Rita and St. Therese Friday: “The Return Crucifix” and the Passion Holy Sacrifice of the Mass Saturday: Our Lady of Lourdes and Our Lady of Fatima Weekdays: 7:00 & 7:30 a.m.; Sunday: Holy Innocents (at Vespers) 8:00 a.m. (Tridentine Latin only during Lent) 12:15 & 1:15 p.m. Devotions and 6:00 p.m. (Tridentine Latin) Vespers and Benediction: Saturday: 12 noon and 1:00 p.m. (Tridentine Latin) Sunday at 2:30 p.m. (Tridentine Latin) and 4:00 p.m. Vigil/Shopper’s Mass Holy Rosary: Weekdays at 11:55 a.m. and 5:20 p.m. Saturday at 12:35 p.m. Sunday: 9:00 a.m. (Tridentine Low Mass), Sunday at 2:00 p.m. 10:30 a.m. -
An Erasmian Pilgrimage to Walsingham
Peregrinations: Journal of Medieval Art and Architecture Volume 2 Issue 2 1-16 2007 An Erasmian Pilgrimage to Walsingham Gary Waller State University of New York, Purchase College Follow this and additional works at: https://digital.kenyon.edu/perejournal Part of the Ancient, Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque Art and Architecture Commons Recommended Citation Waller, Gary. "An Erasmian Pilgrimage to Walsingham." Peregrinations: Journal of Medieval Art and Architecture 2, 2 (2007): 1-16. https://digital.kenyon.edu/perejournal/vol2/iss2/4 This Feature Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Art History at Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in Peregrinations: Journal of Medieval Art and Architecture by an authorized editor of Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Waller 1 An Erasmian Pilgrimage to Walsingham By Gary Waller Professor of Literature, Cultural Studies and Drama Studies Purchase College, State University of New York In the summer of 2006, I undertook what I will explain was an ‘Erasmian’ pilgrimage to the Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham, in remote northern Norfolk. I did so partly for scholarly purposes, partly from nostalgia for peregrinations there in student days. What I discovered--as in the case of so many folk who longen “to goon on pilgrimages”--was an unexpected measure of the uncanny and I think that fellow peregrinators, scholars and travelers alike, might be amused by sharing my discoveries. Erasmus, who made pilgrimages to Walsingham in 1512 and 1524, traveling (as I did) from Cambridge, gave a detailed, though fictionalized, description in one of the dialogues of his Colloquies.1 He went to Walsingham when it was England’s most important medieval Marian pilgrimage site, surpassed only by the shrine of St Thomas a Becket in Canterbury as the most popular place of pilgrimage in England,. -
St Henry Morse SJ
St Henry Morse SJ: ‘A saviour of life unto life’ Michael Holman SJ Of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales canonised on 25 October 1970, ten were Jesuits. Among them were saints such as Edmund Campion, Nicholas Owen and Robert Southwell, whose stories are well known. Yet on the fiftieth anniversary of the martyrs’ canonisation, occurring as it does amid a pand- emic, Michael Holman SJ invites us to study the life of a lesser known Jesuit martyr, St Henry Morse, ‘priest of the plague’. On 25 October 2020, the encouraged to think of Church in England and them as our heroes. Stories Wales will celebrate a signif- of their lives and especially icant anniversary. On that their bloody, violent deaths, day fifty years ago, in St were often told in assem- Peter’s Basilica in Rome, blies and during religious Pope Paul VI canonised education lessons. Their forty men and women all of portraits hung on the walls whom were martyred in of the corridors and class- England and Wales during rooms. There was one the Reformation and the painting which featured all years that followed, bet- forty of them, standing in ween 1535 and 1679. their lay or religious dress St Henry Morse SJ (1595-1645) around an altar underneath In his homily, the pope, while praising the a gallows with the Tower of London, where martyrs’ ‘fearless faith and marvellous many were imprisoned, looming in the constancy’, noted that in so many other respects background. Two of the four houses to which they were so different: ‘In age and sex, in we belonged were named after two of these culture and education, in social status and martyrs, Edmund Campion and Robert occupation, in character and temperament, in Southwell, and the others after St Thomas More qualities natural and supernatural and in the and St John Fisher, martyrs who had been external circumstances of their lives’. -
EPA-04 Psalterium Feria Secunda
THE SARUM RITE Sarum Breviary Noted. Performing Edition. VOLUME A. Part . Pages []-[]. Psalter. Monday. Matins — Lauds. Edited by William Renwick. HAMILTON ONTARIO . THE GREGORIAN INSTITUTE OF CANADA . MMXI. The Sarum Rite is published by The Gregorian Institute of Canada/L’Institut grégorien de Canada, Mercer Street, Dundas, Ontario, Canada LH N. The Gregorian Institute of Canada is affiliated with the School of the Arts, McMaster University. The Sarum Rite is distributed over the internet through .pdf files located at: www.sarum-chant.ca This document first published January , . Revised October , April , June , September , November , July . All rights reserved. This publication may be downloaded and stored on personal computers, and may be printed for purposes of research, study, education, and performance. No part of this publication may be uploaded, printed for sale or distribution, or otherwise transmitted or sold, without the prior permission in writing of the Gregorian Institute of Canada. The Gregorian Institute of Canada/L’Institut grégorien du Canada is a charitable organization registered by the Federal Government of Canada. www.gregorian.ca © The Gregorian Institute of Canada, . Monday. Monday at Matins. Venite exultemus. Invit. IV.iv. O come. †Let us sing un to the Lord. Ps. Let us heart i- ly re- joice. (./xciv. : . b. ) *. From the Sunday after the Octave of the Epiphany until Quadragesima when the service is of the Monday, the following Hymn is sung at Matins. Somno refectis artubus. Hymn. IV. W Ith limbs re freshed by rest a- gain * We rise to thee, and sleep dis dain : Vouch safe, O Fa ther, gra cious ly To A-4. -
Easter Sunday of the Resurrection of the Lord
The Church of Saint Boniface April 4, 2021 Easter Sunday of the Resurrection of the Lord You seek Jesus of Nazareth, the crucified. He has been raised; he is not here. (Gospel) Diocese of Worcester Office of the Bishop 49 Elm street Worcester, Massachusetts 01609 Easter 2021 My dear brothers and sisters in Christ, Imagine the joy of Christ’s grieving followers gathered in the Upper Room when on Easter the Risen Lord suddenly appeared and said, “Peace be with you.” Their joy and peace at Christ’s Victory must have been unbounded as they recognized Him in their presence. But not all of Christ’s followers shared that joy. Saint Thomas, who was absent, experienced not joy but doubt. Two other disciples after hearing of Christ’s Resurrection, instead of immediately joining the others, departed Jerusalem and were downcast. Even when Jesus drew near and spoke to them of the Scriptures, they did not recognize Him. Only in the breaking of the bread (the Eucharist) did they recognize Him. Only then did they return to Jerusalem to join the disciples assembled in the Upper Room and share in the joy of Easter. On this Easter Sunday, after a year of COVID isolation, when we seek peace and joy amidst doubts and losses we can profitably reflect on the importance of gathering at the Eucharist. As Jesus came to the disciples gathered together in Jerusalem so, too, He is most present to us, not in our individual reflections upon the Scriptures, but when the Scriptures and Eucharist are celebrated at Mass. -
College Martyrs
TUTOR GROUP MARTYRS Class A – Ashley Blessed Ralph Ashley Ralph Ashley served as a cook at Douai College France. He went to Spain in 1590 and became a Jesuit Lay Brother. He returned to England in 1598 and served with Father Edward Oldcorne. He was captured in 1604 and was terribly tortured and executed. Class C – Clitherow Saint Margaret Clitherow Margaret Clitherow was a butcher’s wife in York. In 1574 Margaret became a Catholic and an active helper of the Douai priests. She also ran a Catholic school for her children and neighbours. Officers found vestments worn by priests in her house and so on 25th March 1586 she was crushed to death. She took a quarter of an hour to die. Her two sons became priests. Class J – Jones Saint John Jones John Jones was a Welshman. He appears in 1587 as a priest working among the Catholics in a Prison. This work was cut short when his disguise was discovered, and he was arrested and imprisoned at Wisbech Castle. However he did escape and made his way to the continent. He returned to England in 1592, and two years later was a prisoner once more at Wisbech. He was martyred on 12th July 1598. There was an hour’s delay in his execution because the hangman had forgotten his rope. Father Jones made use of time in prayer and addressing the crowd. Class L – Line Saint Anne Line Anne Line and her husband were both converts and though both were disinherited because of their faith they managed to live quite comfortably until 1586 when a priest was arrested whilst saying Mass in their house. -
Our Lady of Ipswich: Devotion, Dissonance, and the Agitation of Memory at a Forgotten Pilgrimage Site As Accepted for Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by St Andrews Research Repository Our Lady of Ipswich: devotion, dissonance, and the agitation of memory at a forgotten pilgrimage site As accepted for Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute Richard D.G. Irvine Abstract: This article traces the social life of Our Lady of Ipswich, a statue taken to be destroyed during the English Reformation, and the possibility of pilgrimage in the context of dramatic urban change and loss of place memory. Arguing that iconoclasm is not an end-point, we see that the life of the image is not extinguished on the pyre, but is set into motion by conflict surrounding its significance, efficacy, and survival. Indeed, it is not simply the act of iconoclasm that animates the statue; rather, such agonistic animation is an ongoing process which involves both those who reject and those who are devoted to the image. My argument is that the potency of contemporary images of Our Lady of Ipswich relies on an active cultivation of dissonance: the consciousness of religious schism; the disjuncture between Ipswich’s historic importance and the perceived failures of twentieth-century development; and the juxtaposition between devotional pilgrimage destination and disenchanted shopping space. 0 Our Lady of Ipswich: devotion, dissonance, and the agitation of memory at a forgotten pilgrimage site Lady Lane In the county of Suffolk in the East of England, down a narrow passage at the end of one of Ipswich’s pedestrianised zones, stuck above head height on the brown brick wall of a former supermarket, is a bronze statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary cradling the infant Jesus on her knee.1 The statue marks the location of a shrine to Our Lady of Grace, closed in 1538 when church reformers took the statue of Mary from there to London to be burned.