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Fr. Z is Moderator of the Catholic Online Forum and the ASK FATHER Question Box. The WDTPRS columns appear weekly in The Wanderer. Fr. Z lives in Rome, though he is often in the USA. He is available for retreats and conferences. E-mail
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  • 13 April 2006

    Holy Thursday or “Maundy” Thursday

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM, WDTPRS — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 3:49 pm

    Mandatum NovumThe term “Maunday” or “Maundy” Thursday refers to Christ’s mandate (mandatum) in John 13:34 to His apostles in the service of the Church.  It is also called sometimes “Shere” Thursday, perhaps from “shere” indicating “tolerance” and “remedy”, in the sense of “wiggle room”.  This “shere” was, according to the OED the difference or error permissible in a measure of something, such as the deviation from the standard in minting a coin.

    COLLECT

    Sacratissimam, Deus, frequentantibus Cenam,
    in qua Unigenitus tuus, morti se traditurus,
    novum in saecula sacrificium
    dilectionibus suae convivium Ecclesiae commendavit,
    da nobis, quaesumus, ut ex tanto mysterio
    plenitudinem caritatis hauriamus et vitae.

    This prayer is a new composition for the Novus Ordo.  It might have a thin tendril reaching back into the ancient Veronese Sacramentary #96: Uere dignum: qui se ipsum tibi pro nobis offerens immolandum idem sacerdos et sacer agnus exhibuit.  

    In our Lewis & Short Dictionary we find that frequento is “to visit or resort to frequently, to frequent; to do or make use of frequently, to repeat” and thence more suitably for our purposes, “to celebrate or keep in great numbers, especially a festival”.   Haurio is “to tear up, pluck out, draw out, to take to one’s self, take; to swallow, devour, consume, exhaust”.

    Agony in the GardenCommendo is “to commit to one for preservation, protection, etc., to intrust to one’s charge, commit to one’s care, commend to” and “implying a physical delivery, to deposit with, intrust to; constructed with aliquem or aliquid alicui, or absolutely”.  Moreover, it is “to commend or recommend, i. e. to procure favor for, to make agreeable, to set off with advantage, to grace”.  I was also intrigued by the possibilities in this definition: “Especially, of the dying, to commend children, parents, etc., to the care of others”.  You all know about the final commendation of a dying person.

    The embedding of convivium within suae…Ecclesiae suggests a connection.  However, you could take that suae to be a dative, and thus put it with Ecclesiae, or you could take it as a genitive, and put it with dilectionis.  It depends on how you hear it.

    At first glance there seems to be something wrong grammatically with this prayer.  It seems as if it is trying to be two different sentences: Deus ... dilectionibus suae convivium Ecclesiae commendavit.  Da nobis, quaesumus, ut ex tanto mysterio….   On the other hand, as we are often challenged to do when reading Latin, we are being asked to keep all sorts of concepts in the air until the final word of the sentence.  To put this into English, we have to rearrange it.  As a hint, you must see that Deus is the subject of the main verb da, and those to whom it is to be granted are found in frequentantibusFrequentantibus has as its object the Cenam.  The whole phrase in qua… commendavit is embedded within that structure.

    Frankly, this prayer is seriously overworked so self-consciously elegant that it is nearly impossible to sort out at a single hearing.  It becomes a tangled mass, just as when you are trying to twist up a forkful of spaghetti.  If you start the forkful with too many strands at the beginning, after a couple twists you have too much going on and the whole plate starts to move.

    LITERAL TRANSLATION
    O God, we beg, grant to us attending the most holy Supper
    in which Your Only-begotten, about to hand Himself over to death,
    commended to Church a new sacrifice unto the ages
    and a banquet of His love,

    that we may from so great a mystery
    drink deeply the fullness of charity and life.
    <supportLineBreakNewLine]—>
    The word haurio gives us the image of Christ’s bitter struggle on Thursday in the garden when faced with the chalice from which He would need to drink.  His bitter draught was our drink of new life.  This was the consequence of Christ’s sacrificial love, His perfect charity.

    (revised)

    • • • • • •

    New news on the Tridentine front

    CATEGORY: SESSIUNCULUM — Fr. John Zuhlsdorf @ 7:03 am

    Older form of MassOn the site of Archivum Liturgicum we read:

    12 Aprile 2006
    La Liturgia romana non e’ mai stata abolita
    Diverse fonti confermano che domani, Giovedi’ Santo, dovrebbe uscire un importante documento del Papa avente come argomento la validita’ attuale della Liturgia tridentina. Questo documento – si dice in forma di Motu proprio – e’ gia’ stato firmato e dev’essere solo promulgato ufficialmente. Recentissime udienze del Papa concesse al card. Arinze lasciano supporre ragionevolmente che la data di pubblicazione sia appunto domani.

    My translation and emphasis
    :

    12 Aprile 2006
    The Roman Liturgy was never abolished
    Different sources confirm that tomorrow, Holy Thursday, there ought to come forth an important document of the Pope having as its theme the present validity (probably read: juridical force) of the Tridentine liturgy.  This document, it is said in the form of a Motu propriohas already been signed and it needs only to be officially promulgated.   Very recent audiences granted to Cardinal Arinze leave us reasonably to suppose that the date of publication will indeed be tomorrow.

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