Our long-time friend and contributor, and photographer extraordinaire Fr Lawrence Lew, is currently with a group of pilgrims in Italy, and was able to say the Dominican Mass yesterday at the tomb of St Dominic in the Order’s church in Bologna. (This is an important liturgical week for the Dominicans: November 12th is the traditional date for the feast of All Dominican Saints, although in the post-Conciliar Rite, it has been moved to November 7th. Today is the feast which honors St Thomas Aquinas as the patronage of all Catholic schools, and on Saturday is the feast of St Albert the Great.) The arc of St Dominic was original commissioned from the sculptor Nicola Pisano in 1264, 30 years after Dominic’s canonization, and completed in 3 years, but new sculptures were added to on more than one occasion, including three by the young Michelangelo in the later 1490s. It has stood in its current location since 1411, but the decorations of the chapel have been reworked very considerably since then. The basilica is currently undergoing a major renovation, but worked halted long enough for Fr Lew and his group to have Mass and venerate the relic of St Dominic in the very beautiful Gothic reliquary, which is accessed from behind the altar, as seen below. It’s very nice to see the red drapes on the columns, a custom which was once very popular in Italy and is making something of a comeback.
The fresco in the apse of the chapel of St Dominic in the glory of heaven was painted by a native of Bologna, and one of the greats of the Italian Baroque, Guido Reni (1575-1642).Thursday, November 13, 2025
Wednesday, November 12, 2025
New Masters in Sacred Music & Certificates in Gregorian Chant at the Catholic Institute of Sacred Music
Jennifer Donelson-Nowicka- History and Principles of Sacred Music
- Advanced Seminar in Gregorian Chant: Manuscript Sources, Semiology, and Interpretation
- Advanced Seminar in Gregorian Chant: Vocal Technique and Semiological Performance Practice
- Teaching Gregorian Chant to Children
- Liturgical Theology
- Introduction to Gregorian Chant
- Organ Accompaniment of Chant
- Choral Institute
- Composition Seminar
- Organ Improvisation
- Choral Preparation: Choral Conducting, Rehearsal Techniques, and Group Vocal Pedagogy
- Advanced Seminar in Gregorian Chant: Notation and Practice in the Tenth through Fourteenth Centuries
- Advanced Seminar in Gregorian Chant: Cantare super librum
- Dr. Jennifer Donelson-Nowicka, Music History and Gregorian Chant
- Prof. Christopher Berry, Choral Music and Organ
- Dr. Frank La Rocca, Composition
- Dr. Charles Weaver, Gregorian Chant
- Dr. Alison Altstatt, Gregorian Chant
- Prof. Sandra Raquel Bengochea, Vocal Pedagogy
- Dr. Joseph Dyer, Gregorian and Old Roman Chant
- Dr. Rosemary Heredos, Gregorian Chant
- Fr. Joshua Neu, Liturgy and Scripture
- Dr. Edward Schaefer, Gregorian Chant
- Dr. Christopher Tietze, Organ
- Fr. Nicholas Schneider, Liturgy
- Dr. Adrian Walker, Philosophy
- Fr. Vincent Woo, Canon Law and Liturgy
Pictures from Mt Athos (Part 5): Iviron Monastery
Gregory DiPippoI realized this morning that I had forgotten to post the last set of photos from Mt Athos which a friend very kindly shared with me. The first four parts were published in late September and October, from the monasteries of Simonos Petra, Koutloumousiou, the church of the Dormition in Karyes, the administrative center of the Monastic Republic, and the Skete of St Andrew. This final set was taken at Iviron Monastery, the third in the Athonite hierarchy, which was founded in the 980s by monks from Georgia. (The name derives from “Iberia”, the Greek word for the Caucasus.) Iviron was very influential in the development of Georgian language and liturgy, but the community waned over the centuries, and the last Georgian monk died in 1955. The photos below include views of the original, very beautiful cosmatesque floor and marble panels on the walls, very little of which survives on Athos, and some pictures of liturgical items in the museum.
These first two photos were taken on the feast of the Nativity of the Virgin Mary (which falls on September 21 on the Gregorian Calendar), during the All-night Vigil, the concatenation of Great Vespers, Orthros (Matins and Lauds) and the First Hour. The term “all-night vigil” is something of a rhetorical exaggeration, but on Athos, not by much; the service began at 8 p.m., and ended at 2 a.m.This plate with three candles attached at the back is used for the ceremony called the Litia. There are five loaves of bread on the plate, and in the three cups below them, wine, oil, and some grains of wheat. These are blessed towards the end of Vespers; during Orthros, the bread is distributed to the clergy and faithful, tinged with the wine, and a cross of the oil is painted on each person’s forehead, a symbol that the feast has now formally begun.
Tuesday, November 11, 2025
Simone Martini’s Frescos of the Life of St Martin
Gregory DiPippoA document dated to March of 1312 attests that an Italian cardinal named Gentile Partino, a member of the Franciscan Order, commissioned a chapel to be added to the lower basilica of St Francis in Assisi, dedicated to St Martin of Tours, whose feast is kept today. Later that spring, His Eminence was in Siena, and commissioned the painter Simone Martini, a native of that city, to go to Assisi and decorate the chapel with a series of frescos of the titular Saint’s life. The cardinal himself died in October of that year; Martini would complete his work in the chapel in three phases, ending in 1318. Martin is one of the very first confessors to be widely venerated in the West, partly because of a biography of him written by a contemporary and friend named Sulpicius Severus. The stories presented here are partly based on it, but also on traditional legends which are not in Sulpicius’ work.
The cycle begins with the most famous story of Martin’s life, that when he was a young soldier serving near Amiens, and still only a catechumen, he met a half-naked beggar, and having nothing else to share with him, cut his own cloak in two and gave the beggar one of the halves.Posted Tuesday, November 11, 2025
Labels: feasts, Franciscan Order, Renaissance, saints, St Martin of Tours
The Essential Place of Liturgical And Mystagogical Catechesis in Catholic Education
David ClaytonAnd how parents and teachers can work together in this formation.
Here is my article on the supernatural end of Catholic education, recently published by Gravissimum: The Catholic Classical Education Journal. I was invited to contribute to the edition that commemorates the 60th anniversary of the promulgation of Gravissimum Educationis.
Read the full article: The Supernatural End of Education and the Role of the Domestic Church.Monday, November 10, 2025
A History of the Popes Named Leo, Part 7: Leo XIII
Gregory DiPippoSince today is the anniversary of the death of Pope St Leo I in 461, and his feast day in the post-Conciliar Rite, it seems like a good day for the seventh and final installment of this series on the thirteen papal namesakes of our new Holy Father Leo XIV; click these links to read part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5, and part 6.
Before the reign of Bl. Pius IX (1846-78), nine among the successors of St Peter (numbering 254 at that point) had reigned for more than 20 years, but none had ever reached the 25 years traditionally ascribed to Peter himself. For many centuries, therefore, it had been part of the papal coronation ritual that as soon as the cardinal archbishop of Ostia placed the crown on a new pope’s head, he would say to him, “Numquam videbis annos Petri. – Thou shalt never see the years of Peter”: a way of reminding him, amid the glories of the Church’s highest office, that like all popes, he is the steward of Another.
But Pius IX did in fact live to see the years of Peter, surpassing the 25-year mark in 1871, and living for more than 6½ years beyond that. This custom was then removed from the coronation rite, and his successor, Leo XIII, reigned for exactly 25 years and 4 months. (St John Paul II, who beatified Pius IX in 2003, also surpassed it, reigning for a bit less than 26½ years.) Pope Leo was over 93 at the time of his death, and had been in the service of the Church since he was in his 20s, making any attempt at a convenient summary of his career a difficult prospect.![]() |
| A photograph of Cardinal Giuseppe Pecci taken in 1887. |
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| The church of St Constantius (‘Costanzo’ in Italian), the first bishop of Perugia, traditionally said to have died as a martyr in the persecution of Marcus Aurelius, ca. 170. The construction was begun by Bp Pecci, but the decoration was not concluded until some time after his papal election. (Image from Wikimedia Commons by Lumen roma, CC BY-SA 3.0) |
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| A contemporary engraving of the moment of Leo XIII’s papal coronation. (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons.) |
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| The tomb of Pope Leo XIII in the Lateran basilica. Image from Wikimedia Commons, © Marie-Lan Nguyen, CC-BY 2.5. |
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| The famous portrait of Cardinal Newman made in 1881 by Sir John Everett Millais. (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons) |
Sunday, November 09, 2025
The Dedication of St John in the Lateran
Gregory DiPippo![]() |
| The high altar of St John in the Lateran. (Photo by Fr Kevin Kimtis.) |
This feast also took place in the Old Testament, whence we read in the book of Maccabees (1 Macc. 4, 42-43), “Judah Maccabee chose priests without blemish, and they cleansed the holy places.” Now the Church Militant can be cleansed, but not the Church Triumphant… * the Church on earth is built in baptism (i.e. washing), and in teaching, and in penance; here are heard (the noise of) the axe and every sort of metal tool, which are the many kinds of penances and disciplines in the Church Militant, … but the temple of Solomon signifies the Church Triumphant, in which these things are not heard.
The Jews celebrated the dedication for eight days, whence it seems that we likewise ought to solemnly keep the feast of the dedication for eight days. But it is strange that they celebrated it for eight days, when they kept Passover and Pentecost for only seven. The reason for this is that this festivity especially signifies the eternal dedication, in which the Church, that is, the holy soul, will be dedicated to God, that is, will be so joined to him that it cannot be transferred to other uses. And this will take place on the octave of resurrection, and therefore, in the New Testament, this feast has an octave. (In Durandus’ original text, this paragraph is actually where the red star is marked above, interrupting his allegorical passage about cleansing the Church.)
In the Office of Matins are said those Psalms in which there is a mention of doors, which represent fear and love, as in the Psalm “The earth is the Lord’s”, where it says “Lift up your gates, o ye princes” (23); those in which there is mention of an altar, as in the Psalm, “Judge me, o God, etc.” (42, not in the Roman Use); those in which there is mention of a city, such as “Our God is a refuge” and “Great is the Lord” (45 and 47); those in which there is mention of atria and gates, such as “How lovely are thy tabernacles” and “Her foundations are in the holy mountains.” (83 and 86)
Bishop Fabian Bruskewitz during the consecration of the seminary chapel of Our Lady of Guadalupe, the FSSP Seminary in Denton, Nebraska. After sprinkling the outside of the church with holy water, the bishop knocks on the door three times with his crozier, saying the words of Psalm 23, “Lift up your gates, o ye princes, and be lifted up, ye everlasting doors, and the king of glory shall come in.” From within, the deacon answers from the same psalm, “Who is this king of glory?”, and the bishop replies “the Lord of hosts, he is the king of Glory!” A porter then opens the door, and the bishop blesses the threshold, saying “Behold the sign of the Cross, let all phantasms flee,” then, as he enters, “Peace to this house” to which the deacon replies “Upon thy entrance. Amen.”
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But the eighth Psalm (seventh in the Roman Use) is “He that dwelleth in the aid of the Most High” (90), that is, in the Church, in which it is said, “thou hast made the most High thy refuge,” because the Church is founded above all, on the height of the mountains.
The last antiphon, that of the Magnificat at Vespers, is “Eternal peace,” since the dedication is celebrated for this reason, that we may dedicated, and have that eternal peace.
(This antiphon, incorrectly labelled in the video as the Salve regina, is found in the Dedication Office in most medieval Uses, with a number of minor textual variations. Note the long melisma on the O of the last ‘domui.’ “Pax aeterna ab Aeterno huic domui; pax perennis Verbum Patris sit pax huic domui; pacem pius Consolator praestet huic domui. - Eternal peace this house from the Eternal One; may the Word of the Father be everlasting peace to this house; may the Holy Comforter grant peace to this house.”)
… To this feast certainly belongs Jacob’s vision of the ladder, and the angels ascending and descending, which is to say, he saw the whole Church in one vision, and raised up a stone, that is, Christ, who is the cap-stone, and the corner-stone, and foundation, who supports all the rest. He raised it up as a title of proclamation, of memory, of triumph, pouring oil upon it. For Jacob, who signifies the bishop, poured oil upon the stone, that is, on Christ, to show forth His anointings, and prophesied the same, saying, “How terrible is this place! this is no other but the house of God, and the gate of heaven. Indeed the Lord is in this place, and I knew it not.” (Gen. 28, 17 and 16)
For the Church is terrible to demons, because of the likeness which it has to God, and therefore this is the Introit at the Mass, “Terrible is this place.” There follows “and it will be called the court of God.” The blessed Gregory added these words of his own initiative, since God is ready to hear us therein, as the Lord said to Solomon, “I have heard thy prayer etc.” But why it is terrible is shown in the verse, “The Lord hath reigned, he is clothed with beauty,” that is, in His members, and therefore the Church is terrible to demons. …
The Gradual “This place”, that is, the material church, “is holy”, because it is sanctified for this purpose, that the Lord may hear payers in it, and therefore it gives holiness to those praying. For Solomon prayed that the Lord might hear those who pray there, and the Lord said to him, “Thy prayer is heard.”
Saturday, November 08, 2025
The Octave of All Saints 2025: The Confessors
Gregory DiPippoFrom the Breviary according to the use of the Roman Curia, 1529, the end of the sermon for the second day in the Octave of All Saints.
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Scenes from the Lives of the Holy Hermits, or “Thebaid”, by Paolo Uccello, 1460s; now in the Academia Gallery in Florence. (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons.)
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Posted Saturday, November 08, 2025
Labels: All Saints, monastic life, Octave, Relics, Roman Basilicas
Gregorian Chants in Chinese
Gregory DiPippoA friend recently brought to my attention a Taiwan-based YouTube channel called “The Heritage of Chinese Sacred Music by Fr Vincent Lebbe.” Fr Frédéric-Vincent Lebbe (1877 – 1940) was a Belgian, born in the Flemish city of Ghent, who entered the Congregations of the Mission (a.k.a. Lazarists) in 1895, and spent much of his life in China, from 1901-20, and again from 1928 until his death in 1940.
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| A photograph of Fr Lebbe taken in Paris during the period of his seminary studies. (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons.) |
We have been deeply saddened by some recent accounts of missionary life, accounts that displayed more zeal for the profit of some particular nation than for the growth of the kingdom of God. We have been astonished at the indifference of their authors to the amount of hostility these works stir up in the minds of unbelievers. This is not the way of the Catholic missionary, not if he is worthy of the name. No, the true missionary is always aware that he is not working as an agent of his country, but as an ambassador of Christ. And his conduct is such that it is perfectly obvious to anyone watching him that he represents a Faith that is alien to no nation on earth, since it embraces all who worship God in spirit and in truth, a Faith in which “there is neither Gentile, nor Jew, neither circumcised nor uncircumcised, no barbarian, no Scythian, no slave, no free man, but Christ is all in all.” (Col. 3, 11).
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| The first six native Chinese bishops of modern times, photographed outside St Peter’s basilica after their episcopal consecration. On the left, Bishops Joseph Hu Ruoshan, Simon Zhu Kaimin, and Philip Zhao Huaiyi; in the middle, Bp (later Cardinal) Francesco Marchetti, then Secretary of Propaganda Fide, Willem Cardinal Van Rossum, Prefect of Propaganda Fide, and Abp Celso Costantini, then the papal delegate to China, (later cardinal, and secretary of Propaganda Fidei); on the right, Bishops Melchior Sun Dezhen, Odoric Cheng Hede, and Aloysius Chen Guodi. (Copyright of the Société des Auxiliaires des Missions, with permission for educational use.) |
Friday, November 07, 2025
The Feast of All Saints 2025: the Martyrs
Gregory DiPippoFrom the Breviary according to the use of the Roman Curia, 1529, the continuation of the sermon for the second day in the Octave of All Saints.





























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