Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Rome Presentation of the Sacra Liturgia 2013 Proceedings

Sacra Liturgia is pleased to announce the presentation of the Italian and English editions of the Proceedings of Sacra Liturgia 2013, on Friday, November 21, from 7:30 p.m. – 9 p.m. in the Sala Camino of the Hotel Columbus, Via della Conciliazione, 33, Rome.

Sacred Liturgy: Source and Summit of the Life and Mission of the Church (Ignatius Press)
La Sacra Liturgia: Fonte e culmine della vita e della missione della Chiesa (Edizioni Cantagalli)

Interventions by Bishop Dominique Rey, Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke and Dom Alcuin Reid, followed by an aperitif. This event is open to the public at no charge.

Those intending to be present are asked to indicate this in advance by sending an email to contact@sacraliturgia.org for catering purposes.

Texts of the interventions will be available to journalists in Italian and English. Journalists who wish to ask for interviews should request this in advance: contact@sacraliturgia.org

Gli organizzatori di Sacra Liturgia sono lieti di annunciare la presentazione delle edizioni in lingua italiana e inglese degli Atti di Sacra Liturgia 2013, venerdì, 21 novembre ore 19,30 – 21,00, Sala Camino - Hotel Columbus, Via della Conciliazione, 33, Roma.

La Sacra Liturgia: Fonte e culmine della vita e della missione della Chiesa (Edizioni Cantagalli)
Sacred Liturgy: Source and Summit of the Life and Mission of the Church (Ignatius Press)

Interventi di S.E. Mons. Dominique Rey, Sua Em. Card. Raymond Leo Burke e Dom Alcuin Reid; la presentazione sarà seguita da un aperitivo. L’evento è aperto gratuitamente al pubblico. Coloro che intendono partecipare sono pregati di segnalarlo in anticipo inviando un mail a contact@sacraliturgia.org

I testi degli interventi saranno a disposizione dei giornalisti sia in italiano che in inglese. I giornalisti che desiderano un’intervista sono pregati di segnalarlo in anticipo. Per accrediti stampa: contact@sacraliturgia.org

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Photos from the Sacra Liturgia Summer School

The website of the Monastery of St Benedict in the Diocese of Fréjus-Toulon has a number of great photographs from the Sacra Liturgia Summer School held there from July 5-20 of this year. His Grace Archbishop Thomas Gullickson, Apostolic Nuncio to Ukraine, was a guest lecturer and celebrant of some of the liturgies; you can read his account of the event by clicking here. There are also links within that page to his various lectures. During the summer school, the Divine Office was sung daily in the monastic rite, as well as the Holy Mass. The participants went in pilgrimage to visit the relics of St Mary Magdalen at St Maximin la Sainte-Baume, to the chapel of Notre Dame de Miremer, to the Abbey of Le Thoronet and to the relics of St Roseline of Villeneuve. On Friday July 18th, His Excellency Dominique Rey, Bishop of Fréjus-Toulon, celebrated a Pontifical Mass at the throne, assisted by local clergy and participants in the summer school. At a dinner following the Mass Bishop Rey expressed the hope that the summer school will become a regular feature of the monastery's apostolate.

In November, the proceedings of the 2013 Sacra Liturgia conference (reviewed here by Dr Kwasniewski) will be officially presented in Rome; we will announce the details when they become available. You can check for further initiatives from Sacra Liturgia by clicking here.

Pontifical Vespers of Sunday celebrated by Archbishop Gullickson

Solemn Mass of Our Lady at the Chapel of N.D. de Miremer
Solemn Votive Mass of St Mary Magdalene at St Maximin la Saint-Baume 
Pontifical Mass celebrated by Bishop Rey

Monday, June 16, 2014

Book Review: The Sacred Liturgy, Source and Summit of the Life and Mission of the Church

The Sacred Liturgy, Source and Summit of the Life and Mission of the Church. The Proceedings of the International Conference on the Sacred Liturgy – Sacra Liturgia 2013. Ed. Alcuin Reid. San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2014. 446 pp.

Have you ever wished you could bring together a dream team of scholars, pastors, monks, liturgists, musicologists, all of them completely orthodox and totally committed to the sacred liturgy, and then have them commit to writing their finest insights, born of careful study, deep reflection, and pastoral experience? When I attended the Sacra Liturgia conference last summer in Rome (June 25–28, 2013), I found to my immense joy and profit that that was exactly what had been done by the conference’s organizers. The results are now in print for all the world to see, in the form of the complete proceedings of the conference, just published by Ignatius Press.

Publishers are aware that conference proceedings, like the genre of collected essays, are usually hard sells because readers tend to think: “Oh, this is just a random collection, and who can say whether the quality will be high across the board.” Fortunately, in this instance, we have a winner from cover to cover. I recently told a friend in charge of a library that this book is the most comprehensive, eloquent, insightful, hard-hitting, and refreshing volume on the liturgy that I have seen in the past ten years. It is a sheer pleasure to read most of the contents, and profitable to read all of it. The contributors are both clerical and lay, hailing from several continents, bringing their different cultural backgrounds, experiences, and professional expertise to bear on the most pressing (one is sometimes tempted to say intractable) questions of the liturgy in the Church today. These questions include sacred music, church architecture and furnishing, the ars celebrandi, the relationship of the old rite and the new evangelization, weaknesses or errors in the liturgical reform, liturgical formation and catechesis, the role and responsibility of the bishop, the meaning of “pastoral,” the Anglican contribution, the relationship between liturgy and social doctrine, and the canonical structure supporting liturgy.

It would be far too easy to turn this review into a lengthy summary of all the contents, which will be hardly necessary if, trusting my judgment, you get this book and read it yourself. But I cannot refrain from drawing attention to a few addresses that seemed to me particularly luminous and rousing when I heard them in Rome and that strike me as equally magnificent now that I am renewing my acquaintance with them in print.

Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith’s magisterial opening address, “The Sacred Liturgy, Source and Summit of the Life and Mission of the Church” (pp. 19–39) has the virtue of covering just about everything in a cosmic sweep that ranges from creation through Israel and the covenants to the Paschal Mystery of Christ, touching along the way such hot topics as the style of celebration, the use of Latin, the betrayal of the Fathers of the Council, and active participation.

Gabriel Steinschulte’s “Liturgical Music and the New Evangelization” (pp. 41–67) is an entertaining, perceptive, wide-ranging analysis of what has happened to church music and why, and the reasons behind the traditional stance of the Church on chant and polyphony. He sounds a theme that is taken up by several contributors, namely, how the new evangelization relies entirely on a sound, beautiful celebration of the sacred mysteries.

Bishop Peter J. Elliott, famed author of Ceremonies of the Modern Roman Rite, offers a reflection (pp. 69–85) on the principles of the ars celebrandi as applied to both the old and new forms of the Roman Rite, valuable reading for every celebrant and master of ceremonies. For those keen on liturgical arts, especially the design and arrangement of sacred buildings, the exquisite pieces by Fr. Stefan Heid and Fr. Uwe Michael Lang (pp. 87–114 and 187–211) provide ample nourishment. (My sole criticism of this book is the lack of the diagrams and photos that Fr. Heid and Fr. Lang shared with the conference in Rome to illustrate their arguments. But I do understand that adding a section of illustrations to this volume would have increased its bulk and price, and I also know that one can quickly find images on Google of most, if not all, of the things referred to by the authors; and fortunately, their arguments and descriptions are easy to follow.)

Tracey Rowland’s tour de force of theological anthropology, “The Usus Antiquior and the New Evangelization” (pp. 115–37) is required reading both for those who already know that the traditional Latin Mass is crucial to the Church’s mission in the contemporary world (these will gobble it up) and for those who suspect and worry that it might be so (these will come to a sobering realization and then start making plans for learning how to celebrate the EF). Here is a sample of Rowland’s vigorous style:
Joseph Ratzinger/Benedict XVI, Aidan Nichols and other lesser names have argued that the liturgy exists to worship God and that if we promote it for any other reason we are promoting sub-theological ideologies. The most common of these are liturgy as group therapy and liturgy as community building. Nonetheless, it is possible to hold that while the sole purpose of liturgy is worship, there are obvious spiritual and educational side effects and it is in this context that the usus antiquior can play an important role in the New Evangelisation. Specifically, the usus antiquior may be an antidote to the ruthless attacks on memory and tradition and high culture, typical of the culture of modernity, and it may also satisfy the desire of the post-modern generations to be embedded within a coherent, non-fragmented tradition that is open to the transcendent. (p. 117)
Alcuin Reid’s contribution, “Sacrosanctum Concilium and Liturgical Formation” (pp. 213–36) is, as we have all come to expect from him, brilliantly incisive and well-documented, as he demonstrates the central role given by the Council Fathers to a genuine immersion and formation in the “spirit and power of the liturgy” that would govern and control all reform and renewal. Sad to say, such a formation was utterly lacking, which is why the reform went sour and the renewal never happened. Reid urges us to take seriously the Council’s counsel by not neglecting ongoing liturgical formation in our own day, if we would ever surmount the difficulties in which we are mired.

Archbishop Alexander Sample’s “The Bishop: Governor, Promoter, and Guardian of the Liturgical Life of the Diocese” (pp. 255–71) created a stir at the conference for its comprehensiveness and clarity, bringing into one place all the most important conciliar and post-conciliar magisterial teachings on the precise role and responsibility of the bishop over the liturgy in his diocese—what he is obliged to do and what he should not do. His Excellency then makes a point of addressing Summorum Pontificum and its implications for the ministry of the bishop:
I would urge bishops to familiarize themselves with the usus antiquior as a means of achieving their own deeper formation in the liturgy and as a reliable reference point in bringing about renewal and reform of the liturgy in the local Church. Speaking from personal experience, my own study and celebration of the older liturgical rites has had a tremendous effect on my own appreciation of our liturgical tradition and has enhanced my own understanding and celebration of the new rites.
           I would further encourage bishops to be as generous as possible with the faithful who desire and ask for the opportunity to worship in the usus antiquior in their dioceses. Allowing for its natural flourishing will have its own effect on the liturgical life of the whole diocesan Church. It must never be seen as something out of the mainstream of ecclesial life, that is, as something on the fringes. The bishop’s own public celebration of it can prevent this from happening. (p. 270)
Complementary to this talk is Raymond Leo Cardinal Burke’s far-reaching, authoritative, and typically thorough “Liturgical Law in the Mission of the Church” (pp. 389–415), which refutes postconciliar antinomianism, establishes the right of God to receive due worship, and demonstrates how canon law supports this right and duty. It is worth mentioning, as a heartening "sign of the times," that among the 23 contributors to this volume are 4 cardinals, 4 bishops, 2 ordinaries, and 2 abbots. We are, thanks be to God, well past those dark days when the liturgical movement had nearly no hierarchical support or public profile.

For me personally, the talk that hit me in the gut and left me speechless was Msgr. Ignacio Barreiro Carámbula’s “Sacred Liturgy and the Defense of Human Life” (pp. 371–88). With incomparable candor, detail, and theological acumen, Msgr. Barreiro exposes the relationship between the ravaging of liturgical tradition and the destruction of the family, and how the lack of reverence towards God, especially as present in the mystery of the Mass and the Most Holy Eucharist, has trickled down into contempt for the unborn. His address held no less power for me when I re-read it in the book. An excerpt:
Recently Bishop Athanasius Schneider reminded us that the worst sin that humanity can commit is to refuse to adore God, to refuse to give Him the first place, the place of honor. A man that does not adore God in the liturgy will not value the main gift of God, which is life. A secularized man that considers himself autonomous will be uncomfortable that the tabernacle would be at the center of the Church or that the cross should be at the center of the altar.
          Secularization rejects the right relation of man with God. Secularization denies our dependence from God, so it refutes Him as giver of life and that man by his nature is a being that adores, giving due worship to God. We are all sensitive to the justice that is due to our neighbor, but the precedence should be given to the justice that is due to God. Catholicism has to be understood as a society of men who give to God the right worship and as a consequence they provide service to their fellow men. Service [to the neighbor] should not have priority, instead service should be the consequence of worship. In some ways we can say that service is a continuation that flows from worship. (p. 372)
The contributions from Fr. Nicola Bux, Fr. Andrew Burnham, Fr. Guido Rodheudt, and Fr. Paul Gunter are also noteworthy, but having said that, I want to reiterate that, surprisingly, there is no weak link in this lengthy chain: all 21 papers in this book are worth reading and re-reading carefully. Indeed, I predict that whoever gets this book and dips into it will either start photocopying pages from it for his friends (and perhaps also his enemies), or will buy more copies and give them away as gifts. Our profound gratitude is owed to all the conference speakers who, by means of this superb collection, now share their work with a worldwide audience.

In conclusion, I am willing to say, without the slightest hyperbole, that this book can serve as a kind of charter for the new liturgical movement—and I hope it shall do so.

Saturday, April 05, 2014

Proceedings of Sacra Liturgia 2013 Now Available for Pre-Order

The proceedings of the Sacra Liturgia 2013 Conference will be published next month, and are now available for pre-order. The links to purchase them through Amazon are on the Sacra Liturgia website (www.sacraliturgia.org); orders placed through these links (on the right side of the website, you may need to disable your ad-blocking program) will help the organization’s future initiatives.

Wednesday, February 05, 2014

Sacra Liturgia Summer School, 5-20 July 2014: Updated Program

The website of Sacra Liturgia (www.sacraliturgia.org) has posted an updated program for the Summer School to be held in La Garde-Freinet in the south of France (Provence) from July 5th to the 20th. The full details, including the link to the registration form, information about transport, etc., are available at the website, but here is the basic program of events:

A two week (three Sunday) English-language liturgical summer school following on from the international conference Sacra Liturgia 2013, organised by the Monastère Saint-Benoît of the Diocese of Fréjus-Toulon, France, in association with the Ad Fontes Institute of Lithuania, designed for families, individuals and groups of clergy and laity who wish to holiday in Provence in the South of France whilst having the opportunity to participate in liturgical celebrations according to the usus antiquior, including Solemn Pontifical Mass celebrated by Mgr Dominique Rey, the Bishop of of Fréjus-Toulon, and in pilgrimages and visits to historic sites, including the Royal Basilica and relics of St Mary Magdalen at St Maximin-La-Sainte-Baume, the chapel and relics of St Roseline of Villeneuve (†1329), and the ancient Cistercian Abbey of Le Thoronet, as well as in practical and academic liturgical formation. Training in Gregorian chant will be available for participants (including beginners) by tutors led by Adrija Čepaitė, the conductor of the womens' vocal ensemble Graces and Voices.

The mountain village of La Garde-Freinet, situated in a wine growing region some 20 km from Saint-Tropez and approximately 15 km from the Mediterranean Sea, is an ideal holiday location with mountain walks, a Provençal market, shops and restaurants. English is widely spoken in the village. Participants will arrange their own accommodation and meals and transport.

Academic Lectures: The lectures listed below are those confirmed to date. Other lectures and lecturers will be added in due course.
Liturgical Theology (2 lectures) - Father Gabriel Diaz Patri
The Twentieth Century Liturgical Movement - Dom Alcuin Reid
After Sacrosanctum Concilium: Continuity or Rupture? - Dom Alcuin Reid
Pastoral Liturgy Revisited - Dom Alcuin Reid
The Usus Antiquior: Its History and Importance in the Church after the Second Vatican Council - Dom Alcuin Reid

Practical training options:
Low Mass practice (for clergy and seminarians)
The Sacred Ministers at Solemn Mass including chants (for clergy and seminarians)
Sung Mass (missa cantata) including chants (for clergy and seminarians)
Serving low, sung and solemn Mass (men and boys)
The chant of the Mass and Office (any participants - beginners, intermediate & advanced)
Reading course in the 20th century liturgical movement (any participants)

Daily Schedule:
This schedule will change on days of pilgrimage and on July 11th & 18th. All liturgical celebrations will take place in the parish church and are open to the public. The lectures, training and evening presentations are open to registered participants.
The high altar of the chapel

Lauds: 6:00 a.m. (followed by private Masses)
Prime: 7:00 a.m.
Confessions: 8:30 a.m.
Terce: 8:45 a.m.
Sung Mass: 9:00 a.m.
Academic lecture: 10:15 a.m.
Break: 11:15 a.m.
Practical training: Chant/Ceremonies: 11:30 a.m.
Sext: 12:45 p.m.
None: 2:00 p.m.
Reading course discussion: 5:00-5:30 p.m.
Vespers: 6:00
Evening presentation and panel discussion & aperitif:  6:30-8:00 p.m.
Compline 8:00 p.m.
Latin-English texts of the Divine Office, including the musical notation, will be supplied for registered participants.

Summer School Programme:
- Sat 5 July: Registration from 3:00 p.m. (registration is possible on other days, as people arrive)
Solemn Vespers 6:00 p.m., followed by aperitif
- Sun 6 July: Normal schedule (without lecture or training sessions) Including Solemn Mass 9:00 a.m. & Solemn Vespers & Benediction 6:00 p.m. followed by aperitif.
- Mon 7 July: Normal schedule
- Tue 8 July: Normal schedule
- Wed 9 July: Normal Horarium (9:00 a.m. Solemn requiem Mass)
- Thu 10 July: Normal schedule
- Fri 11 July: No lecture or training sessions (preparation for solemn Mass) Solemn Mass of St Benedict 11:00 a.m.
The chapel of Notre-Dame de Miremer (near La Garde-Freinet- photo © Lainie Wrightson)

- Sat 12 July: No lecture or training sessions. Solemn Mass 11:00 a.m. – Chapelle N.D. de Miremer, followed by a picnic.
- Sun 13 July: Normal schedule (without lecture or training sessions) Including Solemn Mass 9:00 a.m. & Solemn Vespers & Benediction 6:00 p.m. followed by aperitif.
- 14 July: Normal schedule
The choir altar at St Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume, where Solemn Mass will be celebrated.

- Tue 15 July: No lecture or training sessions. Solemn Mass 11:00 – Basilica of St Mary Magdalen, St Maximin; afternoon visit to the cave of St Mary Magdalene at La Sainte-Baume
- Wed 16 July: Normal schedule
- Thu 17 July: Schedule as normal up to and including 9:00 a.m. sung Mass No lecture or training sessions Visit to the Abbey of Le Thoronet & Pilgrimage to St Roseline of Villeneuve (†1329).
The incorrupt body of St Roseline
- Fri 18 July: No 09:00 Mass Lecture & training sessions as normal; Solemn Pontifical Mass 6:00 p.m. (Votive Mass of the Holy Cross) Celebrated by Mgr Dominique Rey, Bishop of Fréjus-Toulon.
H.E. Bishop Dominique Rey

- Sat 19 July: Normal schedule
- Sun 20 July: Normal schedule (without lecture or training sessions) Including Solemn Mass 9:00 a.m. & Solemn Vespers & Benediction 6:00 p.m. followed by aperitif.

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Proceedings of Sacra Liturgia 2013 Now Available for Pre-order

The website of Ignatius Press is now listing for pre-order the proceedings of the Sacra Liturgia 2013 Conference, which took place this past summer in Rome. Our own Jeffrey Tucker was one of the speakers; you can re-read some of his reportage on the event here, and check out the photos via the link in this post. Our good friend Fr. Christopher Smith wrote an excellent account of the conference over at Chant Café.



From Ignatius' website:
"The Sacred Liturgy is not a hobby for specialists. It is central to all our endeavors as disciples of Jesus Christ. This profound reality cannot be over emphasized. We must recognize the primacy of grace in our Christian life and work, and we must respect the reality that in this life the optimal encounter with Christ is in the Sacred Liturgy."

With these words Bishop Dominique Rey of Fréjus-Toulon, France, opened Sacra Liturgia 2013, an international conference in which he brought together over twenty leading liturgists, cardinals, bishops and other scholars from around the world to emphasize the centrality of liturgical formation and celebration in the life and mission of the Church. "The New Evangelization must be founded on the faithful and fruitful celebration of the Sacred Liturgy as given to us by the Church in her tradition - Western and Eastern," Bishop Rey asserted.

Sacra Liturgia 2013 - the proceedings of which this book publishes - explored questions of liturgical art, architecture, music, the ars celebrandi, the importance of ritual in human psychology, truly pastoral liturgy, the place of the older liturgical rites in the New Evangelization, liturgical formation, liturgical law, the role of the diocesan bishop in respect of the liturgy, and more.

Sacred Liturgy - The Source and Summit of the Life and Mission of the Church is an important resource in ongoing liturgical formation for clergy, religious and laity, and makes a significant contribution to that renewal promoted in the Pontificate of Benedict XVI. That is the renewal which embraces the riches of liturgical tradition as valuable treasures, seeks to read the Second Vatican Council according to a hermeneutic of continuity, not rupture, and is in no doubt that, as Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger once wrote, "the true celebration of the Sacred Liturgy as the center of any renewal of the Church."

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