Saint Francis ends his Canticle of the Sun with this one-verse stanza:
Laudate et benedicete mi Signore et rengratiatee seruiteli cum grande humilitate.
Praise and bless my Lord, and give Him thanksAnd serve Him with great humility.
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Saint Francis ends his Canticle of the Sun with this one-verse stanza:
Laudate et benedicete mi Signore et rengratiatee seruiteli cum grande humilitate.
Praise and bless my Lord, and give Him thanksAnd serve Him with great humility.
In honor of the Second Feast of St Agnes, which is kept today in the Roman Rite, here is one of the very first Western hymns ever written in her honor, a work of St Ambrose (♰397). The Ambrosian Rite does not keep the Second Feast, but uses this hymn at both Vespers and Lauds of St Agnes on January 21st. It was never previously adopted at Rome itself, but in the post-Conciliar Liturgy of the Hours, it is assigned to Lauds.
Most of the translation given here is by Kathleen Pluth. Hers was done for the Liturgy of the Hours, which omits the half or whole of several of Ambrose’s original stanzas. These omitted parts are printed in italics, as is the accompanying prose translation, my own, very much inferior work. The recording has the whole of the original text.| Agnes, beatae virginis, natalis est, quo spiritum caelo refudit debitum, pio sacrata sanguine |
The blessed virgin Agnes flies back to her home above the skies. With love she gave her blood on earth to gain a new celestial birth. |
| Matura martyrio fuit, matura nondum nuptiis; nutabat in viris fides, cedebat et fessus senex. | Mature enough to give her life, though still too young to be a wife, the faith wavered in the men, and the tired old man yielded. |
| Metu parentes territi claustrum pudoris auxerant; solvit fores custodia fides teneri nescia. | Her parents struck with fear, had increased guards of her virtue; the guardians open the doors, knowing not how to keep to their duty. |
| Prodire quis nuptum putet; sic laeta vultu ducitur, novas viro ferens opes, dotata censu sanguinis. | what joy she shows when death appears that one would think: her bridegroom nears! bringing new riches to her Husband endowed with the price of blood. |
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Aras nefandi numinis adolere taedis cogitur, respondet: Haud tales faces sumpsere Christi virgines; |
Her captors lead her to the fire but she refuses their desire, “For it is not such smold’ring brands Christ’s virgins take into their hands.” |
| Hic ignis extinguit fidem, haec flamma lumen eripit: hic, hic ferite, ut profluo cruore restinguam focos. |
“This flaming fire of pagan rite extinguishes all faith and light. Then stab me here, so that the flood may overcome this hearth in blood.” |
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Percussa quam pompam tulit! Nam veste se totam tegens, curam pudoris praestitit, ne quis retectam cerneret. |
Courageous underneath the blows, her death a further witness shows, she took care of her modesty lest anyone see her uncovered. |
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In morte vivebat pudor, vultumque texerat manu; terram genu flexo petit, lapsu verecundo cadens. |
In death, her modesty lived, and she covered her face with her hand, for as she falls she bends her knee and wraps her robes in modesty. |
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Gloria tibi, Domine, gloria Unigenito, una cum sancto Spiritu in sempiterna sæcula. Amen. |
O Virgin-born, all praises be to You throughout eternity, and unto everlasting days to Father and the Spirit, praise. Amen. |
The Archbishop’s Schola will be there to sing the Byrd Mass for Four Voices, Byrd’s Emendemus in Melius, and Frank La Rocca’s Miserere, alongside all the proper chants. Join us for a reception following the Mass, where you’ll have the opportunity to gain a plenary indulgence for visiting the Shrine as a group (details on the indulgence here).
St. Francis, pray for us!
This is the second of three articles exploring the Catholic understanding of culture. Last week, in the first instalment, I defined culture as the emergent pattern of activity in a society that manifests and sustains its core beliefs and values, showing how it both reflects and shapes worldviews – making it a vital battleground for Christians to transform toward beauty, love, and faith, especially in issues like the fight against abortion. This time, I will examine how freedom, as the capacity to act in accordance with the common good, underpins a truly beautiful Christian culture, allowing nations to express love in their unique ways while drawing from shared eternal principles.
| Princeton University Graduate College, designed by Ralph Adams Cram (American), 1913; image from Wikimedia Commons by Zeete, CC BY-SA 4.0 |
Freedom, love, and the culture of nations
Love is by nature freely given (the moment we are compelled to love, it is no longer love!). Therefore, freedom - the freedom to love God and neighbor - is a necessary condition for a beautiful culture.
What is freedom? Many feel that freedom is simply the absence of constraint and compulsion. That is part of it, but the traditional approach has a deeper understanding. In the traditional understanding, freedom is best understood as the capacity to choose the practicable best. ‘Practicable’ here means what can be put into practice.
Therefore, three components must be present for us to be fully free and to choose the best course.
The first component is the absence of constraint or compulsion; the second is a full knowledge of what is best for us; and the third is the power to act in accordance with what is best.
The good that is best for each of us in the context of a society is known as the ‘common good’. When we act in accordance with the common good, we also do what is best for ourselves. In the proper order of things, the personal and common good are never in conflict. The most obvious guides to seeking the common good are the moral law and the principles of justice prescribed by Christ’s Church. All authentic and beautiful Christian cultures emerge from the freely taken actions of the members of society toward the common good.
It is in the interest of a Christian society, therefore, to promote freedom by a system of laws that are just, and so give security to the individual to act in accordance with the freedom to be moral and good. Such a system of laws would, in part, be designed to prevent interference with others' freedom. The state also encourages the formation of its citizens or subjects through an education that will help them to know the common good. The state fulfils its role by enabling effective teachers, especially parents, to teach well. If these conditions are satisfied, a culture of beauty will emerge naturally and organically from the bottom up.
Analogously, and regarding supporting the fine arts, I believe it is better to strive to create the conditions that promote the freedom to pursue art as a career than to impose the elitist vision of what art ought to look like onto people from the top down. In this context, the freedom afforded to an artist is understood as imparting knowledge of what forms of art might benefit society, as well as the skills, means, and inclination to create it. As a general rule, a top-down rigid imposition of artistic standards almost always restricts freedom and undermines the chance of creating an authentically beautiful culture.
| Willard Straight Hall, Cornell Univeristy, designed by William Adams Delano,1925 |
A society’s pattern of positive law (those laws created by human government) will inevitably be different from one nation to another, even for nations seeking to create laws for all the right reasons. The truths of the natural law, which inform positive law, are eternal and universal principles. Still, this universality of the principles does not mean that human society immediately and uniformly comes to know and apply them in exactly the same way everywhere. Human knowledge must progress slowly, in stages, step by step, and organically, or else it is not a true “human society” at all. It does so through trial and error, gradually seeing what works best. Therefore, until the end times, each society will take a different path towards this knowledge.
The good Christian society recognizes the difficulty of knowing fully and applying well the universal principles of the natural law, and thus, the good Christian society seeks the aid of revealed truth, which is Tradition (that is, Christian Revelation), and the experience of past laws to help guide reason. God revealed truths for two reasons, St Thomas Aquinas tells us, first because some truths are beyond the grasp of reason (for example, the Trinity, the Incarnation, the resurrection of the body); and second, God also revealed moral truths that, although part of the natural law and accessible to natural reason, would “only be discovered by a few, and that after a long time, and with the admixture of errors” (ST Ia Q1,1 co.). Arising from this, there are two important reasons why the pattern of exercising freedom will differ from one Christian nation to another. First, principles that are well understood can still be applied in different ways across societies without contravening them; second, knowledge or understanding of a principle is unlikely to be perfect or complete and will vary from nation to nation, each believing it knows best.
Accordingly, different Christian nations are free to observe the experience of other nations, imitate what is best in them, and adopt what is beautiful and good from them. This way, in the proper order of things, each nation is part of a family of distinct and autonomous nations, each helping the other to find what is best.
| Keble College, Oxford, England, designed by William Butterfield, 1870. Image from Wikimedia Commons by Diliff, CC BY 2.5 |
As already stated, a culture is a sign of the society’s core values that produce it, and is beautiful to the degree that it is Christian. We should be aware that this is true even in societies or countries that would not think of themselves as Christian. An Islamic nation, for example, has a beautiful culture to the degree that its culture is consistent with an expression of Christian truths, even when those truths are communicated to them by the Koran or through the discernment of natural law.
Furthermore, the Christian characteristics of different cultures connect them to one another, and the national expressions of that Christian faith, manifested in characteristic patterns of loving interaction and free behavior, distinguish these cultures.
So, for example, the United States began as a nation that adopted and then adapted a system of law from the English constitutional tradition. The English constitutional tradition is a system of laws, rooted in Christian values yet expressed in a characteristically English way that is quite different from that of its neighbor, France. Over time, the American legal system developed its own national characteristics, while still owing much to its English origins, but now expressed in a characteristically American way. If American culture is to be transformed so that it may be once more one of beauty, it will assert the importance of America as a distinct nation with characteristic values that are simultaneously Christian and of a particular American-English expression. As such, one would expect similarities between English and American cultures, and a natural tendency for developments in one nation to inform those in the other. We see, for example, that in the latter part of the 19th and early 20th centuries, American churches and universities were modelled on the English Neo-Gothic style. They even hired English architects to build them, but an American character quickly emerged in their neo-Gothic architecture. While Princeton and Oxford share similarities, they also differ. One reflects America, while the other reflects England.
In citing the above example, I should clarify that I am referring to the Princeton and Oxford buildings constructed before the widespread rejection of Christian values in American and British culture, which took hold strongly after the Second World War. In both nations, many institutions, especially universities, lost a sense of the importance of the Christian faith and rejected traditional forms and Christian culture generally. Many of the newer buildings on the campuses, reflecting this anti-Christian worldview, are ugly in my opinion.
| Mitchell Tower (1901-8), University of Chicago, Shepley, Rutan & Coolidge, architects. Modeled after the Magdalen Tower (1492–1508), Oxford University. Image from Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0. |
| Princeton University Art Museum, 2025, already known locally as ‘the concrete air conditioning unit’; Image from Wikimedia Commons by Kenneth C. Zirkel, CC BY 4.0 |
Here is an interesting thing I happened to stumble across today, a little oratory in the town of Germigny-des-Prés, about 76 miles directly south of Paris. It was built in 806 as part of a large palace complex by Theodulf (750/60 - 821), a Spaniard who served as bishop of the nearby city of Orléans for about 20 years, (798 ca. - 818), and was one of the leading literary figures of the Carolingian Renaissance. No other part of the palace survives; the oratory is of particular interest because it still preserves the original apsidal mosaic, the only example of a mosaic from its period still preserved in situ. It depicts two angels hovering over the Ark of the Covenant. There was a lot of cultural exchange between the court of Charlemagne and that of Byzantium, and the influence of Byzantine art is very evident here.
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| The Madonna and Child with Ss Paula of Rome and Agatha, ca. 1500, by the Italian painter Michele Ciampanti (from Lucca in Tuscany), formerly known as the Stratonice Master. Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons. |
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| St Paula Embarking on Her Journey at Ostia; after 1642, by the French painter Claude Lorrain (1604-82). Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons. |
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| The Holy Trinity, with Ss Jerome, Paula and Eustochium, ca. 1453, by Andrea del Castagno, in the Montauti chapel of the basilica of the Annunciation in Florence. Image from Wikimedia Commons by Sailko, CC BY 3.0) |
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| Christ and the Centurion, by Paolo Veronese, ca. 1571 |
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| The Crucifixion, by Ottaviano Nelli (1421-24), from the chapel of the Palazzo Trinci in Foligno, Italy; Blessed James of Voragine, who was archbishop of Genoa, Italy from 1292 until his death in 1298 or 99, is the bishop on the left. (Photograph by Georges Jansoone from Wikimedia Commons; CC BY-SA 4.0) |