

| WRITERS |
![]() | Shawn Tribe Founder & Editor |
![]() | Gregor Kollmorgen General |
![]() | Matthew Alderman Sacred Architecture |
![]() | Gregory DiPippo Rome Correspondent |
![]() | David Clayton Sacred Art |
![]() | Nicola De Grandi Ambrosian Rite |
![]() | Fr. Thomas Kocik Reform of the Reform |
![]() | Deborah Morlani Catechetics |
![]() | Arlene Oost-Zinner Sacred Music |
![]() | Fr. Augustine Thompson, O.P. Dominican Rite |
![]() | Bro. Lawrence Lew, O.P. General |
![]() | Philippe Guy General |
| PATRONS |



| FORTHCOMING BOOKS |
The following list is not intended to be comprehensive, but represents a selection of books that the NLM considers particularly significant
English-Latin Breviary (1962)
The Second Vatican Ecumenical Council: A Counterpoint for the History of the Council
Continuity or Rupture? A Study of The Liturgical Reform of the Second Vatican Council
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| CEREMONIAL GUIDES |
The Ceremonies of the Roman Rite Described (Revised in accordance with Summorum Pontificum by Alcuin Reid)
Manual of Episcopal Ceremonies by Aurelius Stehle, OSB
The Celebration of Mass by J.B. O'Connell
The Rubrics of the Roman Breviary and Missal
Learning to Serve (Server's guide, including pronunciation)
Ceremonies of the Modern Roman Rite by Msgr. Peter Elliott |
| RECOMMENDED BOOKS |
LITURGICAL STUDIES
The Liturgies of the Religious Orders by Archdale King
The Liturgies of the Primatial Sees by Archdale King
The Liturgies of the Past by Archdale King
The Liturgy of the Roman Church by Archdale King
The Notes on the Catholic Liturgies by Archdale King
The Sacramentary by Ildefonso Schuster
The Rites of Eastern Christendom by Archdale King
The Mass of the Roman Rite by Josef Jungmann
The Early Liturgy to the Time of Gregory the Great by Josef Jungmann
The Roman Mass: A Study by Adrian Fortescue
The Shape of the Liturgy by Dom Gregory Dix
The Mass of the Western Rites by Dom Fernand Cabrol
Turning Towards the Lord: Orientation in Liturgical Prayer by Fr. Uwe-Michael Lang
The Veneration and Administration of the Eucharist: 1996 CIEL Proceedings
Altar and Sacrifice: 1997 CIEL Proceedings
The Ministerial and Common Priesthood in Eucharistic Celebration: 1998 CIEL Proceedings
Theological and Historical Aspects of the Roman Missal: 1999 CIEL Proceedings
The Presence of Christ in the Eucharist: 2000 CIEL Proceedings
Faith and Liturgy: 2001 CIEL Proceedings
Liturgy and the Sacred: 2002 CIEL Proceedings
Liturgy, Participation and Sacred Music: 2003 CIEL Proceedings
The Byzantine Liturgy by H. Schulz
The Genius of the Roman Rite: Historical, Theological and Pastoral Perspectives, ed. U.M. Lang
CRITIQUE & COMMENTARY
Looking Again at the Question of the Liturgy with Cardinal Ratzinger edited by Alcuin Reid
The Mass and Modernity by Fr. Jonathan Robinson
Cardinal Reflections on Active Participation in the Liturgy by Cardinals Arinze, George, Medina, Pell
Losing the Sacred: Ritual, Modernity and Liturgical Reform by David Torevell
The Reform of the Roman Liturgy by Msgr. Klaus Gamber
After Writing: On the Liturgical Consummation of Philosophy by Catherine Pickstock
A Pope and a Council on the Sacred Liturgy by Fr. Aidan Nichols
Looking at the Liturgy: A Critique of its Contemporary Form by Fr. Aidan Nichols, OP
The Reform of the Reform? A Liturgical Debate by Fr. Thomas Kocik
A Bitter Trial: Evelyn Waugh and John Carmel Cardinal Heenan on the Liturgical Changes
The Bugnini-Liturgy and the Reform of the Reform by Laszlo Dobszay
The Restoration and Organic Development of the Roman Rite by Laszlo Dobszay
Beyond Vatican II: The Church at a Crossroads by Abbe Claude Barthe
The Heresy of Formlessness by Martin Mosebach
The Banished Heart by Geoffrey Hull
Beyond the Prosaic ed. Stratford Caldecott
Sacrosanctum Concilium and the Reform of the Liturgy ed. Kenneth D. Whitehead
MISCELLANEOUS
The Spirit of the Liturgy by Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger
The Sacred Liturgy by a Benedictine Monk
Four Benefits of the Liturgy by a Benedictine Monk
Discovering the Mass by a Benedictine Monk
Thomas Aquinas and the Liturgy by David Berger
Reflections on the Spirituality of Gregorian Chant by Dom Jacques Hourlier
Worship as a Revelation by Dr. Laurence Hemming
The Spirit of the Liturgy by Romano Guardini
Liturgy and Architecture by Louis Bouyer
The Mass: The Presence of the Sacrifice of the Cross by Cardinal Journet
Gregorian Chant: A Guide to the History and Liturgy by Dom Daniel Saulnier, OSB
Catholic Church Architecture and the Spirit of the Liturgy by Denis McNamara
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| LITURGICAL BOOKS |
USUS ANTIQUIOR
1962 Missale Romanum (Reprint of Benziger Bros. Altar edition.)
Missale Romanum Editio iuxta typicam tertiam (Latin Altar edition of modern Roman missal. A Study Edition is also available.)
OTHER
The Monastic Diurnal (St. Michael's Abbey Press)
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| VOCATIONS |
| ORGANIZATIONS & LAY SOCIETIES |
| BOOKS WANTED |
If you have any of the following (or like) for sale, for trade or you would simply like to donate it, please email me. Missale Ambrosianum (1981 Latin edition) Missale Cisterciense (pre-1647) Breviarium Lugdunense Breviarium Gothicum The Dominican Ceremonial for Mass and Benediction, W. Bonniwell The Hereford Breviary, Henry Bradshaw Society The Hereford Missal (English Trans.) The Letters of AWN Pugin (2 vols.) Missale Mixtum / Liturgia Mozarabica, Migne's P.L.
Glossary of Ecclesiastical Ornament, AWN Pugin |


“The pastoral preoccupation with a conscious and active participation on the part of the Christian community” is dominant. The faithful must become “true actors in the celebration .... This was demanded by the faithful, especially those more attuned to the new spirituality.... The Commission was receptive to the aspirations of the people of God.” It remains to be proven whether these aspirations belonged to the faithful or to a group of avant-garde liturgists…
Likewise, in regard to the alteration of the rituals performed during the Exultet, “Thus it happened that one of the most significant moments of the liturgical cycle became a theater-piece of astonishing incoherence.”
The commentary makes it very clear that Don Carusi regards the Holy Week reform as a hastily made-up concession to the fashionable liturgical ideas of the 1950’s, and a gross impoverishment of the Roman Rite. On the other hand, given the circumstances of its implementation, and the fact that so much of it was jettisoned by its own creators in the making of the post-Conciliar liturgy, it is difficult not to share his opinion in a great many respects.
There is one passage in particular which should be noted, not only for its own sake, but for the important shift in the methodology of liturgical scholarship which it represents. It is undeniably the case that at the time the Holy Week reform was introduced, many of the “known facts” of liturgical scholarship were in reality merely assumptions or conjectures. Such a “fact” was the origin of the Good Friday ritual known as the Mass of the Presanctified, in which a consecrated Host was incensed as at Mass, and then the Fraction ritual of Mass performed with It into a chalice of unconsecrated wine. It was the common opinion of liturgical scholars that this rite derived from “a belief in the Middle Ages that the commingling of the consecrated bread… alone in the wine was sufficient to consecrate even the wine… once the Eucharist was studied more profoundly, the lack of foundation for this belief was understood. But the rite remained.”
Don Carusi points out that this opinion was shared by the committee, and provided the basis of the reform, in which the entire rite of the Presanctified was eliminated. (I have here given his citation of it from their notes.) He also points out that this idea is a mere conjecture that rests on no historical foundation. In addition, he correctly notes the resulting impliction that, according to the reformers, “the Roman Church fell into error to the point that she made it (i.e. the error) part of the liturgy with this precise theological view in mind… In this context, one would be affirming that the Roman Church, conscious of the serious error, did not wish to correct it.”
What Don Carusi has written here is not just an argument for or against a particular form of the rite of Good Friday. It is more importantly a statement of the principal that any reform of the liturgy must be based on sound historical research, rather than guesswork, and must take into careful consideration all of the theological implications of what is done. (He is not, of course, the only liturgical scholar to do so, and apply this principal to his work.) I consider that the broader implications of what he writes on this and similar topics are such that even those who may not be particularly interested in the Holy Week reform should read his critique for a good understanding of how liturgical research, and liturgical reform, ought to be accomplished.
While reading Prof. László Dobszay's new book, The Restoration and Organic Development of the Roman Rite [1], the old question, "What's in a name?" came to mind. On page 66 Dobszay writes: "... from now on I do not advocate the expression 'Reform of the Reform'. I do not think that the content of the postconciliar reform liturgy can really be reformed." For Dobszay, the "reform of the reform" obviously means reforming the reform that actually took place following the Second Vatican Council—that is, reforming the liturgical rites promulgated by Pope Paul VI. Yet it needs pointing out that the expression “reform of the reform” originally denoted an alternative implementation of the Vatican II Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, returning to the Missal of 1962 (used immediately before and during the Council) and guided by what Pope Benedict XVI calls the "hermeneutic of continuity in reform," and reviewing in depth the processes and actual achievements of the postconciliar reform. With this agenda are associated Msgr Klaus Gamber (d. 1989), Fr. Brian W. Harrison, and Fr. Aidan Nichols.
To this feast the Slavs also add the celebration of the memory of the Baptism of Rus, as the Chronicles of the sixteenth century record that it was on August 1st that the Great Prince Vladimir of Kiev and All Rus received Baptism and Christianity took root in the Slavic lands. In remembrance of this Baptism the Slavic Churches sanctify water and bless the faithful in re-dedication and healing. When I went to icon painting classes from Orthodox teachers, I was always asked to put a border around the image of the icon I was studying. I was told that this served the purpose of mediating between the image, which portrays the heavenly dimension and the natural world. The border in this case was a flat painted or gilded region raised slightly from the plane of the image. If the composition allowed for it, we designed the icon so that a figure encroached slightly into the boundary region, perhaps the sleeve, a foot or the halo. Aidan, my teacher, told me that this encroachment communicates the idea that nothing can contain God.
Looking generally, at images painted in the iconographic tradition the principle of the boundary represented in some form appears to be the norm. Going around the Museum of Russian Icons in Clinton, Massachusetts this week with my icon-painting class from the Thomas More College summer programme, all had a boundary painted on and most, but not all, had a raised boundary. These were all wooden panel icons. Iconographic images in other media, such as mosaic, fresco and illuminated manuscript will, from what I have observed, generally have a painted border, but the image and frame in the same plane.
In Western iconographic imagery, such as Celtic, Ottonian or Romanesque art, the border is painted as an ornate abstract pattern, often geometric in form. This is consistent with the previously stated idea of the border or frame mediating between the image and the world we occupy. The world of geometry, like that of mathematics, is an idealized domain that sits between the natural and the supernatural. We can think of the ideal shape of a triangle in the abstract, separated from all matter; but at the same time this ideal it can be applied, albeit imperfectly, to matter and we can construct, for example, wooden triangles. Also, the world of geometry and mathematics also obeys the rules of logic that govern the natural and the supernatural realms. This intermediary status makes patterned, geometric or mathematical art perfect for the adornment of a border. (It is also the reason that the study of Euclidean geometry was seen as an important part of the traditional education the ultimate goal of which was the study of the supernatural in theology.)
It has occurred to me that there is a practical reason for having a raised border on wooden panel icons. Unlike frescos and mosaics, they are portable and are meant to be handled, kissed and raised in procession. It is inevitable that they will get chipped and damaged in the rough and tumble of devotional prayer! Raising the border, will help to ensure that it gets damaged rather than the image it frames – just like the idea behind the fender on a car. Aidan always used to joke that an icon hasn’t been serving its purpose if it isn’t bashed about a bit.
So what about the other liturgical traditions of the Church, the gothic and the baroque? They do not portray the heavenly realm in the same way – is there need for a frame there too?
In consideration of this we need to state that a baroque or a gothic painting are both traditions that portray Holy Icons, in the broader sense of the term in which ‘icon’ means ‘image’. This is the sense of the word 'icon' used by the 7th Ecumenical Council and the great Father of the Church who opposed the iconoclasts, Theodore the Studite. Theodore made it plain that an image is distinct from the person depicted – that is, the person is absolutely not present in an icon. There is, however, a profound relationship established with the saint depicted when we look at an image because the icon directs the imagination of the person who regards the image to the real saint in heaven. The icon does this by virtue of the distinctive characteristics of the saint captured in the image; and the writing of the name of the saint on it.
Thinking now about how this applies to the other liturgical art forms: the starting point may be different in each case, but what all three traditions have in common is their goal, the contemplation of heavenly things. To illustrate this point: we can say that ‘iconographic’ tradition, which we have been referring to so far, portrays Eschatological Man; the baroque portrays Historical Man, that is fallen man; and the gothic portrays the transition between the two by degrees – it is the art of pilgrimage. So in the dynamic of prayer Eschatological (‘iconographic’) art, takes directly to heaven, it starts and finishes there, as it were. The baroque on the other hand starts in a fallen world, but from there directs our thoughts to heaven.
Given this common aspect of direct our attention to heaven, any argument about a frame or border that applies to iconographic art, applies as much to the gothic or the baroque. And when we look at the gothic and the baroque, it is no surprise that they are always framed. These borders are not always the hard-edged geometric patterns, but can also be shapes evoking a sense of idealized, ordered vegetation incorporating gracefully flowing lines. All three traditions seem happy to use either form of pattern, or none at all in their borders. However, if there is a trend, one could say that that the baroque frame is most easily identified with idealized form of vegetation. The form is most commonly referred to as a ‘baroque scroll’ portrays, often ornately carved and gilded rather than painted, wonderful flowing lines of leaves and branches, especially incorporating the shallow ‘S’. This is in keeping with the baroque basis of idealization, which focuses on the portrayal of the fallen nature from a heavenly vantage point, and has a more subtle idealization and hence is closer to natural appearances than its sister traditions.
So what about the mundane? Should traditional landscapes or portraits be framed too? The answer is yes, in my opinion. Baroque art is not just sacred imagery. There portraits and landscapes too, which were not intended to be simply naturalistic representations. Reflecting an authentic Christian humanism, the artists sought to reveal the Creator in the beauty of his Creation, and in doing so used the same visual vocabulary of sacred art, namely the variation focus, muted colour and contrast between light and dark that was developed first for baroque liturgical art. I have written a series of articles about this in regard to landscape on my blog, here.
Whether intentional or not, this principle seems to apply in modern art too to some degree. In the secular, atheist materialist world view there is no recognition of the supernatural. If that is the case, there is no need to mediate between the natural and the supernatural if you don’t believe the supernatural exists. Perhaps this is why museums don’t see the need to frame these works. On the other hand it might be just as much a reflection of the general trend of a casual approach in presentation – just as men no longer wear a tie for the opera, the theatre or for church…but this is a different debate.



Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Kirill has urged the clergy to use Internet blogs for missionary work. The head of the Russian Orthodox Church warned against idle talk or passing one’s own thoughts for the postulates of the church. The Patriarch was speaking ahead of his second pastoral visit to Ukraine.
This recent appeal by His Holiness Patriarch Kirill, aimed at enhancing the church’s influence through blogging and networking, made the headlines throughout the Runet. IT-analyst Alexander Mitrofanov believes that the Internet is a good vehicle to carry the live language of the church to the people.
"Many priests and church hierarchs have their own blogs in the global network," he says. "It helps people seeking their paths in life. Jesus Christ taught His apostles to attract people by the word. High technology and the Internet should serve the same purpose."
Patriarch Kirill sees social networking as an opportunity for dialogue and revival of the epistolary genre...

A memorial bust of John Henry Newman in the Church of Our Saviour, New York City, will be dedicated by Archbishop Timothy Dolan at a service of Vespers and Benediction on Thursday, September 23 at 6 PM. The parish is a center of many university scholars, students and converts. This memorial will be a center of prayer and thanksgiving for the beatification of the Cardinal.
The shrine is in the place of one of four confessionals. Many confessions are heard daily in the parish. This fourth confessional, after Vatican II, was enlarged to serve as a Reconciliation Room with chairs and other furnishings. Later, that use was ended and the space served for storage. It visually blocked the St. Jude shrine. The carvings have been preserved and the original woodwork has been restored to its original dimensions.
The architectural design is the work of Joel Pidel. The cartouche and other elements were crafted by Matthew Alderman. Both are parishioners of the Church of Our Saviour and studied at the University of Notre Dame, whose former Dean, Thomas Gordon Smith, studied architecture in Rome while his friend Father Rutler was studying theology there at the same time. They have collaborated on various projects.
The bust is the work of the Arrigihni studios of Pietrasanta in Tuscany. It is of the Carrera marble from the quarries used by Michelangelo, and is the second study done of Newman, an earlier one is now in the libary of Newman's library at Littlemore outside Oxford. Father Rutler consulted on the present sculpture, working from a clay model. and also did the gold leafing and decoration of the shrine.
Gifts received have enabled this project to be completed. Friends of Newman may wish to celebrate his beatification by contributing to the parish's Seminarians' Fund. In recent years, eight young men in the parish have been ordained, are in seminary, or are preparing for seminary.


[The NLM is pleased to present the following guest article by Fr. Anthony Symondson, which gives an accounting of the architectural work which is being undertaken at the three English Oratories in the light of Cardinal Newman's forthcoming beatification.]
In Birmingham, St Philip Neri’s chapel on the south side of the high altar is to be re-dedicated to Newman and contain his relics. These consist of a lock of hair, a drop of blood and secondary relics retrieved from his grave. A new floor is to be laid and the chapel re-decorated by the International Fine Art Conservation Studio, of Bristol. IFACS is experienced in working in historical interiors, sacred and secular. A copy of Walter Ouless’s portrait, hung in the Oratory house, will replace one of St Philip above the altar. The decoration will be in keeping with the church’s Baroque architecture and retain existing with new decoration. The overall ornamental effect will be buff and stone, decorated with stencilling and heraldic cartouches, and the conservation of surviving figurative panels by John Hungerford Pollen, Newman’s friend, fellow-convert, favoured decorative artist and father of ten children.
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East Liberty Presbyterian Church, Pittsburgh, designed by Ralph Adams Cram (source)Stained glass has made surprising progress during the last twenty-five years, while the last five have witnessed the advent of at least three very able sculptors, at least one of which finds no rival during the past three centuries. [...] If the various religions in America will recognize the indispensable nature of good art, the essential wickedness of bad, and will demand the best, accept only the best, then there is no reason why the "Great Recovery" begun just half a century ago, should not go on to its high fruition in another fifty years.Admitted, when one turned on the television in 1979 one saw Bob Newhart ensconced in shag carpeting and plywood and not linenfold paneling, but the fact it might not have been, and was not supposed to be, is electrifying.
THOMAS MORE COLLEGE ESTABLISHES
CATHOLIC MEDIEVAL GUILDS
The Thomas More College of Liberal Arts announced that it has established a series of medieval-style Catholic guilds that will enable its students to gain skills and experience from master craftsmen in areas such as woodworking, sacred art, music, and baking.
Thomas More College’s guilds will take its spirit from the associations of men and women who advanced their trades and responded to the needs of their local communities in the Medieval Age.
“Catholic guilds flourished during medieval Europe, but by the Nineteenth Century they had all but disappeared,” said Thomas More College president William Fahey. “Guilds in its earliest form were developed out of man’s natural spirit of association. The Catholic Church took medieval guilds under its tutelage and infused into them the vivifying spirit of Christian charity.”
Thomas More College’s guilds will operate with the same level of community and charity.
“Not only will students learn skills they can use throughout their lives,” said Fahey, “they will have an opportunity to bake bread for the homeless, produce icons for local churches, create chairs, cribs, and other projects for the poor and needy in our community, and bring music to nursing homes and hospitals.”
Thomas More College also expects that its guilds will enhance religious life on campus. This fall, for example, students in the woodworking guild will build a new altar for the College’s chapel, while students in the sacred art guild will produce religious art that will hang on the chapel walls. Students in the music guild will be trained to chant and produce sacred music for the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
The newly established Catholic guilds at Thomas More College will also play a key role in the development of its students.
“It is important for students to balance the rigors of one of our country’s most challenging curricula with projects that are physical and hands-on,” said Fahey. “In this way, Thomas More College’s guild system will further assist in the formation of the whole person while enhancing our already vibrant community life. We must never forget that even communities based on the intellectual and spiritual life must make visible signs of culture in this world. The ideals of the mind and the richest of the spiritual world can be visibly drawn down into our daily lives.”
“In many ways, our guilds will show students how to live,” added Thomas More College director of admissions Mark Schwerdt. “Students will now have confidence that they can fix their own furniture or make music with their family. They will learn how the common man can create works of art as well as how to balance work, family, and leisure—all while enhancing their ability to be creative.”
“Thomas More College is preparing its students for a life of self-sufficiency,” said Schwerdt.
Each guild will meet weekly and will be taught by a master craftsman who has spent his life perfecting the skills of his trade. Students will be required to meet a series of benchmarks throughout the year so their performance can be measured.
Last fall, the College transformed the third floor of its Eighteenth Century barn into a woodworking classroom. It now boasts a professional woodworking bench, complete with vises for holding the work of up to four students at once.
Master carpenter Frank Jenkins will lead the St. Joseph woodworking guild, exploring with students the properties of the major kinds of wood used in fine woodworking, the use and care of hand tools, the preparation of rough lumber for finish work, joinery, project conception and design, and finishing. The class will culminate in the completion of a small project of the student’s choice, such as a bookcase.
Thomas More College’s artist-in-residence David Clayton will teach the St. Luke sacred art guild. Participants will learn the Catholic traditions in art as well as the theological principles behind them. Students will also learn about the principles of harmony and proportion that are infused in the work of the old Masters.
“Anyone can be an artist,” said Clayton. “All they have to do is practice, and the sacred art guild provides young men and women with the training and time they need to develop their artistic skills. Students will learn the skills of observation and control in drawing. They will also learn the entire iconographic painting process.”
Mark Schwerdt will lead the St. Gregory music guild, teaching students liturgical chant as well as folk music. In addition to vocal lessons, students will be able to learn how to play the banjo, guitar, or piano. The St. Gregory music guild will enable students to play music and add to celebrations on campus.
“I hope that many of our students will advance in their development of these skills over time so they can teach—or apprentice—new incoming students each year,” said Fahey. “I would expect nothing less from our students, all of whom operate with an intense desire to learn and engage others with a spirit of charity and humility.”
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