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Monday, December 14, 2009

Fr. Phillips Reports on the Anglicanorum Coetibus Information Day at Our Lady of the Atonement

The venerable flagship parish of the Anglican Use of the Roman Rite, Our Lady of the Atonement in San Antonio, Texas, hosted an information day this last Saturday, the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, on the nature and future of the Anglican Ordinariates within the Catholic Church. Shawn has already mentioned this event before, as well as the webcasts Fr. Phillips was kind enough to post, but just in case you missed them, here they are again:

Solemn High Mass for the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe according to the Book of Divine Worship

Session I: Fr. Phillips, Ralph Johnston and Mike Dunnigan.
Session II: Duane Galles
Session III: Questions and Answers

Fr. Phillips has this comment:

Our meeting this past Saturday provided an opportunity for new friendships to be forged. In fact, with several Anglican clergy there, it was as though we were able to reestablish contact with our extended family. And this is important. As members of various Anglican groups move closer to being part of the future Ordinariate, we'll be living in the same house. For a whole generation it's just been the parishes and communities of the Pastoral Provision who've been holding up the flag within the Catholic Church, and it was easy to think we were on our own. But the steady progress of other groups, like the Traditional Anglican Communion, is bearing fruit.

I'm excited that we'll be moving in together, to take up residence in this wonderful new structure being given to us by our Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI. I'm glad I had the opportunity to make new friends, and to rediscover spiritual brothers, and I'm looking forward to strengthening family ties. (Source).
It is important to recall that not only are the Anglican Ordinariates are of considerable significance both for the unity of all orthodox Christians, but it also represents the return of a valuable and significant fragment of English-speaking culture to the Church, which is certainly of interest to Catholics in the United States, Canada, Australia and other nations with a cultural link to Great Britain. Please pray for these good people.

A Great News Source for the Anglican Ordinariates

There have been numerous important items I have been wanting to write about in the past month or so, but unfortunately I have been distracted by other things--though nearly all of them have been very welcome distractions. This last weekend was the first time in around a month when I was not on the road giving lectures on things architectural and liturgical (to laity, diocesan clergy, monks, nuns, and even one bishop), or preparing myself for making such a presentation. In the last six months, I have doubled the number of ecclesiatical presentations and lectures on my curriculum vitae, which has been exiting and exhausting at the same time. Not that it hasn't been fun: I have gone off-roading with a monastic novice in an all-terrain vehicle, eaten tacos prepared by Cistercian sisters, and kept one very small monastery up chatting well past their bedtime.

During this time, when I have had a moment to spare, I have started following an excellent new weblog, The Anglo-Catholic, a group enterprise helmed by Mr. Christian Campbell, the senior warden of the Cathedral of the Incarnation in Orlando, Florida and a member of the standing committee of the Anglican Church in America (ACA), the American province of the Traditional Anglican Communion, who have been much in the news of late. Mr. Campbell's website has proven to be both a well-informed font of information about Anglicanorum Coetibus, intelligent commentary on its manifold ramifications, and also many meditations and thoughts that will be of interest to all our readers. I strongly encourage our readers to have a look round the site, and I hope in the next few weeks to digest and discuss some of the more important stories they have broken, as well as the relevance of the Anglican Ordinariates to the re-enchantment of our liturgy so desired by Pope Benedict.

Guadete Sunday and a Rorate Mass

Gaudete Sunday from the Conventual Church of St. John of Jerusalem in London.



As well, the NLM was sent photos from a Rorate Mass celebrated this past Saturday morning at St. Peter's in Merchantville, New Jersey.



More photos are available here.

Aspiciens a longe: Today's Discovery

A great aspect of Gregorian music is that you can't possible ever discovery it all. What this means is that there are as many treasures to explore as you have time for.

My newest discovery was sent to me by Jeffrey Morse, director at St Stephan's in Sacramento. He has been using the Responsory Aspiciens a longe for Advent during the procession before the Asperges. He sent in this stunning recording. Note the way the schola blows through the longer notes to give them energy, and settles in so nicely at the end of phrases. I just love the long lines here. This is why the chant never sounds static. It is not fast but it is still full of dynamic energy, a slow burning fire.

Here is the text:

I look from afar:
and lo, I see the pow’r of God coming,
and a cloud cov’ring the whole earth.
Go ye out to meet him and say:
Tell us, art thou he that should come
to rule over thy people Israel?
High and low, rich and poor, one with another.
Go ye out to meet him and say:
Tell us, art thou he that should come
to rule o’er thy people Israel?
O come.
Hear, O thou Shepherd of Israel,
thou that leadest Joseph like a sheep.
Tell us, art thou he that should come?
Stir up thy strength, O Lord, and come.
Come to reign o’er thy people Israel.
Glory be to the Father, and to the Son,
and lo, I see the pow’r of God coming,
and to the Holy Ghost.
and a cloud covering the whole earth.
Go ye out to meet him and say:
Tell us, art thou he that should come
to reign o’er they people Israel?

Sunday, December 13, 2009

A Short Reflection on the O antiphons

I was very pleased to take part in the singing of five O antiphons this morning in my OF parish, so first some provisos to forestall correction (but please don't think me defensive; this is NLM and mistakes hardly ever go uncorrected). First, I'm aware that the O Antiphons are not part of Mass but rather part of Vespers. We don't have a Vespers service, so the choice is for Catholics to hear them in Mass or never. Second, I know that it makes no liturgical sense to hear them one after another when they are supposed to be sung one per day (and yet we all sing Come O Come Emmanuel as a hymn with no wild objections from people, and this follows the same structure). Third, I have a problem with idea that just any song can be sung at Mass so in principle I object to the idea of importing a snippets and compilations and sticking them in Mass, and yet: the O Antiphons have such a huge role in liturgical history that it strikes me as a tragic loss to just throw them out of Catholic experience simple because we can't make them fit perfectly within the modern stew.

All that said, I just adore the O Antiphons. They are far more difficult than I imagined. They don't sound difficult. But I pulled them out only a few days ago with the intention of singing them and I was amazed at how easy it is to make mistakes. I ended up spending far more time practicing them than I expected. The words are unfamiliar and each has the same structure but with different variations for each unmetered text. The edition I was singing from (Liber Usualis) has many subtleties with surprising expressive notes and tricks throughout. The text itself is preeminent and must be proclaimed as a real announcement, so there is no room for slurring around or being vague about what you are doing. The melody is so completely structured around the need to proclaim that precise text.

I was also struck by how this must have originated in an improvisation within a broad structure, and yet here I was being super fussy about every marking. The editions of this piece across many orders of monks are very different, and I have no idea how Solesmes came up with the edition that is printed. But what choice do we have but to sing it exactly as it is printed. Hardly anyone has time to figure out what is essential and what is just a flourish.

Here are two editions of O Radix Jesse:



Should Catholics Copy the Megachurches?

The pastor of this parish in Coachella, California, has an article in the new issue of America. In here he argues as follows. Forty percentage of the members of megachurches are refugees from Catholicism. We need to look to them to see what they are doing to attract and hold Catholics.

He believes it is more than just the coffee bars and health clubs. It is the sense of community and friendliness that draws them, a sense of life and fun at Mass, together with extraliturgical ministries such as mini-retreats, that sense that they are serving the whole person and a whole community rather than just individuals in their religious lives.

To deal with this problem, he instituted many changes in the parish. Here is what he reports that he does for liturgy on Sunday:

Sunday Mass is the doorway through which most Catholics pass regularly to experience God and the church. Consequently, the quality of Sunday worship is of utmost importance. The parish emphasizes hospitality: everyone receives a greeting at the door, and before Mass worshippers are invited to offer a handshake or a hug to those nearby. Members learn that their first ministry is to be friendly and welcoming. After the announcements the presider welcomes visitors, recognizes wedding anniversaries and birthdays and blesses newborn babies.

The Jesuit Refugee Service affirms to accompany, serve and defend the rights of vulnerable and often forgotten people.

To encourage congregational singing, the parish uses PowerPoint to project the words of songs onto a big screen. Songs sometimes involve clapping or movement. PowerPoint is also used to integrate photos, videos and music into the preaching. Our Mexican-American congregation responds well to visual aids, so this strategy is especially effective. Upon entering the church, the parishioners receive a homily outline, which they are encouraged to take home as a message reminder or to share with someone else.

The parish encourages inclusion and participation, especially of children and youth. At some Masses, the children’s Liturgy of the Word includes skits, games, puppets and music. At Communion time, those children who have not yet received the sacrament form a separate line and both receive and give a blessing. The priest makes a sign of the cross on the forehead of the child, and the child reciprocates by tracing a sign of the cross on the priest’s forehead. If there is a deacon, he sometimes takes on this role. Teens serve as ministers of hospitality, run the computer for the music and homily, help in the children’s program, sing in the choirs and more. The staff and parishioners also take special care to accommodate seniors and persons with disabilities.

Now, I've written widely that substituting community for Catholicism is not the way to go. As Shawn frequently reminds us, we are engaged in divine worship, not just gathering together to admire our togetherness.

But let us engage this a bit more closely. The article itself is very interesting and contains much that is true - and certainly the motivation to keep Catholics at the Catholic Church is a good one. I'm not really in a position to comment further on the sociological dimension here, and the pastor apparently has a real record of success.

My primary sense in reading this is simply that the pastor here has too quickly passed over another solution: letting the glory of the Roman Rite in its fullest and most authentic form speak for itself and draw people in through mystery and truth.

The authentic Roman Rite includes drama far more profound than a puppet show or displays of friendliness, sights and sounds far more enticing than any power point presentation, and music more emotional affecting than anything that asks for clapping hands and swaying bodies. I doubt very seriously that this pastor sees a viable path forward through tradition here, and I can understand why. It is doubtful that he has ever been presented that option in a way that he believes can be instituted in this parish.

It is true that the model of music in liturgical convention in the United States right now is causing people to leave, but this is after decades of the conventions themselves running away from the Church's own traditional treasures. There is another way to deal with the drain from parishes: provide the fullness of the Roman Rite and nothing short of that.

The Commanding Heights of Sacred Music

The phrase "commanding heights" was popularized some years by a PBS special on the world economy. The idea is to track the dominate ideas that foreshadow the real-world change, beginning in a small but intense way and eventually coming to rest in revolutionary centers of influence and power that shape the operations of the world. The ideas grow until there is a tipping point and deference to a once-radical idea becomes the norm.

By "commanding," we are not talking about troops or force or external dictate as such. We are talking about something more compelling: the cultural power of an idea whose time has come.

This is precisely what is happening in the world of Catholic music. Two decades ago, the notion that the music heard in Catholic liturgy should be native to that liturgy was held by only a handful of people. Most everyone else went on their merry way treating liturgy like a tree that they would adorn with their own homemade ornaments. The industry boomed, folk artists proliferated, and every hotel-bar reject found a happy home and an audience to listen at the local Catholic parish.

But the wiser ones persisted and taught others and their students continued their work. Their journals were read by few but they were influential. Steadily their influence grew as the prevailing paradigm no longer provided satisfaction for people who were serious about their liturgy and serious about music. The intellectual case has been made and largely won: as far as one looks, one no longer finds strong arguments against sacred music. What remains is the universal implementation, and this is a matter of time and hard work.

Within the last five years, the ground has shifted dramatically. A number of books and institutions provided the catalyst: the Sacred Music Colloquium (CMAA), the Parish Book of Chant (Richard Rice), Summorum Pontificum (Benedict XVI), the continuing efforts of parishes such as St. Agnes in Minnesota, St. John Cantius in Chicago, and the work of the Byrd Festival in Portland.

These outposts were once considered a kind safety valve for a dying breed. Today, their status is rising higher and higher. Only ten years ago, to favor Gregorian chant in Masses as the prevailing musical paradigm was to attach oneself to a cause that seemed to be lost. Today, it is different. Pastors are asking for chant. Singers wish to sing it and are signing up to attend seminars on learning how. Every single teaching course offered by the Church Music Association of America has sold out months in advance.

The change has been difficult to discern Sunday to Sunday but if you back up just a bit from the sequence of time, you see huge change in process. Among the most impressive pieces of evidence comes from the tremendous progress made at the Vatican (Fr. Pierre Paul), the North American seminary in Rome (Parish Book of Chant), and, in the United States, the sleeper case of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception (Peter Latona).

Earlier this year, the Basilica cooperated with the John Paul II Center and the CMAA to sponsor a teaching pilgrimage on chant. At the final Mass, in the extraordinary form, the Shrine Choir sang the most beautiful motet by William Byrd. It was remarkably well done – a choir as seasoned and effective as any in the world. This repertoire was clearly not unfamiliar to this group, not something put on for the occasion and otherwise dropped. This is a specialized choir – specialized in liturgical music.

After that event, I listened to the live recording of this choir singing Vespers during the Pope's visit. It remains of the most inspiring CDs I own. I recall that at the time, many observers pointed out that this Vespers service was the single greatest liturgy of his visit, the one in which he felt most comfortable at truly at home.

It has to make any American proud of what "we" demonstrated at this occasion. America is not only about huge stadiums and goofy attempts at "diversity in music" with competitions to see how many different styles of music we can stuff into one Mass. On that contrary, this Vespers service had a signal voice, the voice of Catholic sacred music. It was integrated, coherent, prayerful, and absolutely beautiful.

It turns out that this was not just a one-time event. The Shrine choir is working to build up an ever larger repertoire of music, and record it for distribution as a paradigm for choirs around the world. The newest effort is a gem called "Mosaic" that features polyphonic music for the entire liturgical year. This isn't a clichéd mix of "old and new." This is 100% great music, mostly from the golden age of polyphony, but also including innovative and striking improvisations by the director himself, Peter Latona.

The National Shrine, then, is now setting a national standard. If the news is not yet permeated to all parishes, it is increasingly obvious where the direction of change is taking us. The National Shrine has embraced sacred music. The Vatican's choir at St. Peter's is training in singing all the Gregorian propers for the ordinary form. More and more cathedrals are turning in the right direction. Seminaries are changing and training in chant.

I have a special interest in the professional status of Catholic musicians, of course, and here there are very good trends afoot. A friend of mine was recently enticed away from the Northeast to the Midwest to direct music at a parish. He has found a diocese desperately hungry for his singing and teaching skills. He can hardly keep up with all the requests to come and sing and teach – and these requests reach to the highest levels. There is an intense desire to upgrade and improve.

To be sure, in this same diocese, the average parish features music not much different from that which could be heard on any Sunday in the last 20 years, the same tired blend of ornamental music drawn from popular culture. What's important here is that the dissatisfaction is obvious and the desire for change is being expressed. My friend's professional fortunes are secure in ways they never would have been 15 or 20 years ago. The same story can be told of many young organists and chanters. Their skills are in demand now for the first time in many years.

I've left out of the list many hundreds of parishes where new scholas are working their way toward a Gregorian ordinary and the proper chants of the Mass, as well as many colleges with young choirs working on chant. It is an exciting time to be a Catholic music. We can all make a huge difference right where we are, helping to transition from a grim period in which secular music controlled the commanding heights to a time of restoration and true progress. These are times when to sing Gregorian chant is to be part of history in the making.

Gaudete Sunday: Rejoice!

Today, the 3rd Sunday of Advent, we observe Gaudete Sunday. Rose vestments may be worn in place of violet; the penitential flavour of the season is lessened as we rejoice in the nearness of the coming of Our Lord.

The Introit from the usus antiquior Romanus (ancient Roman use):

Rejoice in the Lord always: again I say rejoice. Let your modesty be known to all men: for the Lord is nigh. Be nothing solicitous: but in everything by prayer let your petitions be made known to God. Ps. 84:2 Lord, Thou has blessed Thy Land: Thou hast turned away the captivity of Jacob.Gaudete in Domino semper: iterum dico, gaudete. Modestia vestra nota sit omnibus hominibus: Dominus enim prope est. Nihil solliciti sitis: sed in omni oratione petitiones vestrae innotescant apud Deum. Ps. 84:2 Benedixisti, Domini, terram tuam: avertisti captivitatem Jacob.


The Introit from the usus recentior Romanus (modern Roman use):

Rejoice in the Lord always: again I say rejoice! The Lord is near.Gaudete in Domino semper: iterum dico, gaudete. Dominus enim prope est.


[NOTE: As one of our sharp readers noted, while the above is what is found within the modern Roman missal, the modern edition of the Graduale Romanum actually lists the chants identically.]


Gaudete Sunday 2007, Institute of Christ the King, Cathedral of Fiesole


Gaudete Sunday 2007, Institute of Christ the King, Cathedral of Fiesole


REMINDER: Send in your Gaudete Sunday photos from either form of the Roman liturgy.

Cause of Beatification of Empress Zita Opened


Many readers will rejoice - fittingly on this Gaudete Sunday - to learn that last Thursday, 10 December 2009, the Cause of Beatification of the Servant of God Zita, last Empress of Austria and wife of Blessed Emperor Charles, was solemnly opened by His Excellency Msgr. Yves Le Saux, Bishop of Le Mans, France. The process was opened in Le Mans, and not in the Swiss diocese of Chur, where the Empress died 20 years ago in 1989 in Zizers, with the consent of Msgr. Huonder, the Bishop of Chur, and the permission of the Congregation for the Causes of the Saints, because within the diocese of Le Mans is situated the Abbey of Solesmes, well known to NLM readers for its leading rôle in the early liturgical movement in the 19th century, especially regarding Gregorian chant, and which was the spiritual center of the Servant of God Zita, her home among her many exiles.


The ties of the Empress with Solesmes go back to 1909 when after studying with the Visitandine Sisters at Zangberg, Bavaria, she briefly went to study with the Benedictine nuns of the abbey of St. Cecilia of Solesmes, the female sister-abbey of St. Peter of Solesmes, likewise founded by Dom Guéranger, then in exile on the Isle of Wight in England. Her sisters Princesses Maria della Neve Adelaide, Francesca, and Maria Antonia of Bourbon-Parma were all nuns of St. Cecilia abbey. Zita herself later, in 1926, became an Oblate of St. Peter's Abbey of Solesmes. She also received a papal indult allowing her to spend three months of each year within the enclosure of St. Cecilia's abbey. All counted, the Empress spent about 1400 days at Solesmes, i.e. almost 4 years. Her intense spiritual life included, after rising each day at 5:30 a.m., praying part of the Office, hearing several daily Masses (usually three), and reciting the Rosary. If she is raised to the altars, she will also especially be the model of a wife - the deep religiosity of their marriage being exemplified by the famous words of her husband, Bl. Charles, on their wedding day: "Now we must help each other into heaven!", and significantly, their wedding day, 21 October, has already been appointed as the Feast Day of Bl. Charles - and of a widow, a concept sadly very much neglected in the modern age.

This is the official prayer to implore the Beatification of the Servant of God Zita, Empress and Queen:

God our Father, you redeemed the world by the self-abasement of your Son, our Lord Jesus Christ. He who was King became the Servant of all and gave his life as a ransom for many, therefore you have exalted him.

We ask you that your servant Zita, Empress and Queen, will be raised upon the altars of your Church. In her, you have given us a great example of faith and hope in the face of trials, and of unshakeable trust in your Divine Providence.

We beseech you that alongside her husband, the Blessed Emperor Charles, Zita will become for couples a model of married love and fidelity, and for families a guide in the ways of a truly Christian upbringing. May she who in all circumstances opened her heart to the needs of others, especially the poor and needy, be for us all an example of service and love of neighbour.

Through her intercession, grant our petition (mention here the graces you are asking for). Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

1 Pater, 3 Ave, 1 Gloria Patri

Imprimatur : 09/07/2009
† Mgr. Yves Le Saux
Bishop of Le Mans (France).


Those who have received graces through the intercession of the Servant of God, Empress Zita, should contact:

Association for the Beatification of Empress Zita
Abbaye Saint-Pierre
1, place Dom Guéranger
72300 Solesmes, France

Some images, videos and links which may be of interest:

The Servant of God and Blessed Charles on their wedding day:



The Empress on the day of her coronation as Apostolic Queen of Hungary:


Her private chapel at her exile in Québec:


A video of her funeral in Vienna, including the famous dialogue at the gate of the Capuchin Crypt:

The herold taps three time on the gate with his rod.

Capuchin friar: "Who begs entrance?"

Herold: "Her Majesty Zita, by the grace of God Empress of Austria, Apostolic Queen of Hungary, Queen of Bohemia, Dalmatia, Croatia, Slavonia, Galicia, Lodomeria and Illyria, Queen of Jerusalem etc.; Archduchess of Austria, Grand Duchess of Tuscany and Cracow, Duchess of Lorraine, Salzburg, Styria, Carinthia, Carniola and Bucovina; Grand Princesse of Transylvania, Margravine of Moravia; Duchess of Upper and Lower Silesia, Modena, Piacenza and Guastalla, of Auschwitz, Zator, Teschen, Friuli, Ragusa and Zara; Princely Countess of Habsburg and Tyrol, Kyburg, Görz and Gradisca; Princess of Trent and Brixen; Margravine of Upper and Lower Lusatia and in Istria; Countess of Hohenems, Feldkirch, Bregenz and Sonnenberg, etc.; Lady of Triest, Cattaro and in the Windic march; Grand Voivode of the Voivodeship of Serbia; née Princess Royal of Bourbon, Princess of Parma, etc."

Capuchin friar: "We know her not."

The herold knocks again.

Capuchin friar: "Who begs entrance?"

Herold: "Her Majesty Zita, Empress and Queen."

Capuchin friar: "We know her not."

The herold knocks for the third time.

Capuchin friar: "Who begs entrance?"

Herold: "Zita, a mortal, sinful man."




This is the website if the Diocese of Le Mans for the cause, where you can listen, inter alia, to the Bishop and the Abbot Solesmes (in French): link.

And this is the website of the Association mentioned above, with a lot of biographical information, images, and videos; most of it is only in French so far: link.

Saturday, December 12, 2009

Newman: A Meditation for the Third Sunday of Advent: Holiness in this Earth and the Next

From the site for the Cause for John Henry Cardinal Newman comes a meditation for the 3rd Sunday of Advent (Gaudete Sunday), Holiness in this earth and the next.

In the sermon ‘Holiness Necessary for Future Blessedness‘ (1826), Newman reflects on the implications of the vocation to holiness, giving his own answer to the question put to St John the Baptist, by those who seek God’s salvation: ‘What should we do?’ What is Newman’s answer? Only through Christian conversion – the search for ‘truth and purity’, and ultimately the search for God – can we prepare to enter heaven. Moreover, we learn what heaven is like from the Christian liturgy, a foretaste of the joy that we hope for in the company of the angels and saints:

Heaven then is not like this world; I will say what it is much more like,—a church. For in a place of public worship no language of this world is heard; there are no schemes brought forward for temporal objects, great or small; no information how to strengthen our worldly interests, extend our influence, or establish our credit. These things indeed may be right in their way, so that we do not set our hearts upon them; still (I repeat), it is certain that we hear nothing of them in a church. Here we hear solely and entirely of God. We praise Him, worship Him, sing to Him, thank Him, confess to Him, give ourselves up to Him, and ask His blessing. And therefore, a church is like heaven; viz. because both in the one and the other, there is one single sovereign subject—religion—brought before us. [...]

[If] we were told that no irreligious man could worship, or spiritually see Him in church; should we not at once perceive the meaning of the doctrine? viz. that, were a man to come hither, who had suffered his mind to grow up in its own way, as nature or chance determined, without any deliberate habitual effort after truth and purity, he would find no real pleasure here, but would soon get weary of the place; because, in this house of God, he would hear only of that one subject which he cared little or nothing about, and nothing at all of those things which excited his hopes and fears, his sympathies and energies.

If then a man without religion (supposing it possible) were admitted into heaven, doubtless he would sustain a great disappointment. Before, indeed, he fancied that he could be happy there; but when he arrived there, he would find no discourse but that which he had shunned on earth, no pursuits but those he had disliked or despised, nothing which bound him to aught else in the universe, and made him feel at home, nothing which he could enter into and rest upon. He would perceive himself to be an isolated being, cut away by Supreme Power from those objects which were still entwined around his heart. Nay, he would be in the presence of that Supreme Power, whom he never on earth could bring himself steadily to think upon, and whom now he regarded only as the destroyer of all that was precious and dear to him. Ah! he could not bear the face of the Living God; the Holy God would be no object of joy to him. “Let us alone! What have we to do with thee?” [Luke 4:34] is the sole thought and desire of unclean souls, even while they acknowledge His majesty. None but the holy can look upon the Holy One; without holiness no man can endure to see the Lord.

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