ASK FATHER: Deacons in the Novus Ordo

From a diaconal reader…

QUAERITUR:

I have begun serving Solemn High Masses, at local parishes near my assignment for a couple of years now. The experience of serving at the Latin Mass has enriched my diaconal ministry in ways that I never imagined.

Which brings me to my two quick questions: First, when I am serving the Mass of Paul VI with a priest that wants me to turn the pages of the Roman Missal is it liturgically proper or appropriate for me to move back and forth, as I would in a Solemn High? If possible, it would seem to me to be precisely the mutual enrichment that is organic within authentic liturgical development and renewal. Perhaps this is done in other parts of the world or country. I have just never seen it done in the NO. Secondly, a deacon friend mentioned that there are rubrics for a deacon to function, at a Missa Cantata; however, I have not been able to find the rubrics. He stated that when done the deacon would function “almost as a blend of and emcee and what you would expect to see a deacon do in the NO.” Are you aware of any such function for a deacon?

Thank you again for your time and for all that you do.

I like this question.  Also, it’s good for St. Stephen’s Day.

I often mention how learning the Vetus Ordo will change the way a priest understands his priesthood.  You have brought in that deacons learn more about themselves in the traditional form.  Thanks for that.   There is no question that the same will be true of all the servers at Mass and all the lay baptized at Mass.

Yes, I think it is fully appropriate to move to the priest’s right for the sake of covering and uncovering the chalice using the pall, and then returning to the book after the consecration if the Eucharistic Prayer is long enough to warrant the trip.  In your absence from the book, another (male) server should come up to turn the pages.  That server would return to the side when you return to the book.

At my home parish in St. Paul, we had always two deacons on for the major Sunday and festal Masses with the Novus Ordo, all ad orientem and in Latin with traditional vestments, etc.  One would read the Gospel and become a kind of subdeacon, and the other would be the deacon “at the altar”, so to speak.  It was a division of roles that worked well.

As far as the deacon at a Missa Cantata is concerned, I won’t go there.  Frankly, I don’t like that set up.  Let the Missa Cantata be what it is.   Let the deacons serve for Solemn Mass.

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Your Christmas Mass 2019 Sermon Notes – VIDEOS

Was there a good point made in the sermon you heard at the Mass that fulfilled your Christmas Mass Obligation? What was it?  There are a lot of people who don’t get many good points in the sermons they must endure.

For my part, 1st Mass of Christmas, Midnight Mass (Dixit Dominus) …

And – on very little sleep – for the 2nd Mass, Mass at Dawn (Lux fulgebit) …

I post these “Sunday Sermon Notes” entries for several reasons. First, as I mentioned, above, there are people who don’t have an opportunity for something edifying in church. You can usually extract with pliers some good point, but often enough these days that can be difficult. Therefore, giving others good points you heard is helpful.

Also, if you are aware of these posts, perhaps you will be inspired to listen more closely and try to remember what Father said more accurately. Everyone wins that way.

Meanwhile, my good friend Fr. Murray was on Fox early this morning. HERE

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AUDIO: Singing the 2019 Christmas Proclamation – Kalendas – in Latin – TLM Extraordinary Form

Better late than never, for those priests out there who are going to, or want to, chant the annual Christmas Proclamation, or Kalenda.  

The nice folks at Cappella Gregoriana Sanctæ Cæciliæ olim Xicatunensis have a PDF again this year.

Here is a recording to help those who may need to sing or who simply want to know more about this beautiful Roman Catholic jewel.

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ASK FATHER: Too much water mixed with the wine in the chalice. Valid?

IMG_8892From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

Your article, “ASK FATHER: Altar boy notices priest skipped the consecration of the Precious Blood” states that Mass is not celebrated until the priest consumes both species of the sacrament. Since our congregation receives under both species, there are three chalices on the altar. No water is mixed with the two smaller chalices, (I know water isn’t required for validity) but sometimes, way too much water is mixed with the wine in the main chalice, winding up with the validity of the matter in doubt. Since the priest only drinks from the main chalice, I can only assume that the Mass may not have been celebrated. The problem of the water/wine mixture is common among both priests and deacons. Once I (very courteously) brought the problem to a deacon’s attention who used more water than wine in the mixture, and he nearly bit my head off. Since that time, I’ve sent documentation to priests and deacons who don’t seem to understand the concept of “valid matter”.

Any suggestions?

Yes.

If you have given them documentation about the issue, and there is still a problem with adding too much water to the wine in the chalice, try once more in writing.  If that doesn’t produce immediate results, then contact your local bishop with a brief description of the problem, some sort of demonstration or proof that it is happening, what you have tried to do, and the documentation that you sent, with copies of any written correspondence.

If the bishop doesn’t get the job done, write to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Also, there are issues of stipends involved.   If Mass isn’t celebrated, then the intention wasn’t fulfilled.   So, we can see that this is serious.

The problem is that people tackle issues like these in parishes or elsewhere and they have no way to substantiate what they say they saw.   For real action to take place in the matter of abuses, people need “proofs”, written, photographic, testimony from more than one person, etc.

Once again I put on my Unreconstructed Ossified Manualist hat to give a more complete answer about this very important issue.

Click me!

As I have written in the past, in the manual of dogmatic theology by Tanquerey, that tonic for the soul, we read that “quinta pars aquae ad vinum corrumpendum non sufficiat … a fifth part of water isn’t enough to break [the substance of] the wine”, and thus render it invalid matter for consecration.  Prümmer is not too lenient is saying a third part water and you have highly doubtful matter, it should not be consecrated, and more wine ought to be added before it is consecrated.  I am inclined to be guided by Tanquerey’s view and never add more than a fifth part.

This is important especially for priests who prefer small quantities of wine for Mass.

It is not a bad idea to use a “scruple spoon”. This has nothing to do with “having scruples” or “being scrupulous”.  This small spoon measures a scruple, an old apothecary measurement for the 24th part of an ounce in weight.  Sometimes an image of a scruple spoon will appear in the header of this blog.

I will grant that there is something proper about the pouring gesture.  However, given the issue of dilution, I think safe is better than iffy.  Sometimes the surface tension of the water can result in the necessity of adjustments with the wine.  Prümmer prudishly posits that the scruple spoon tolerari potest.  Whatever.

Scruple spoon with friends,
to provide scale.

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ASK FATHER: What’s up with Francis’ 2019 Christmas address to the Roman Curia?

I am being bombarded by questions from readers, priests included, about Francis’ 2019 Address to the Roman Curia for Christmas.

Here are a few notes.   First, let’s contextualize the speech, which I think is important as it probably signals what’s up for the next year.

You will recall that Francis has used this occasion, the “exchange of greetings” between the Pope and the members of the Roman Curia, to deliver gut punches.

In his first in 2013 Francis was a little more benign, asking for professionalism in their work. In 2014 he blasted away about clericalism for some 30 minutes. In 2015 he delivered a long list of “curial diseases” and 24 virtues based on the acrostic “misericordia” of the Curial official. In 2016 he excoriated anyone resisting change, listing 12 guidelines for reform, going on for 45 minutes, and then gave all the officials present a book: Tricks to cure the sicknesses of the soul by 16th c. Jesuit General Claudio Acquaviva. Merry Christmas. In 2017 invoked the image of cancer of cliques and of traitors and conspiracies for those are ambitious or who resist reform. In 2018 over 40 minutes he dedicated a lot of time to clerical abusers.

This year Francis seems to have given a counter-message to the Curia address which Benedict made in 2005, one of the most important speeches of his entire pontificate. That was the famous “hermeneutics of continuity and discontinuity” speech.  It was also a counter to Jesuit Fr. Rahner’s ongoing but – Deo gratias waning -influence.

In his 30 minute 2019 address Francis mentioned the resignation and new disposition of the Dean of College of Cardinals.  See Sandro Magister for the fascinating backstory on that development.   Surely, that has to do with clearing the deck in the College and readying a conclave: Sodano and Vice-Dean Re are over the age limit for entering a conclave.  The Cardinals will have to test the winds and waters and elect a new Dean.

On an obvious but neuralgic point, Francis (again, citing his favorite source, himself) announced: “Brothers and sisters, Christendom no longer exists!   Today we are no longer the only ones who create culture, nor are we in the forefront or those most listened to.”

Merry Christmas!

What are we to do about that?   We need a ” a change in our pastoral mindset”.  After that he goes into a section changes in the Curia in regard to social communications.

However, Francis also invoked the now proverbial quote from The Leopard: “Se vogliamo che tutto rimanga come è, bisogna che tutto cambi…. If we want everything to remain as it is, then everything must change.”  He went from there to quote radical progressivist and late-former-Archbp. of Milan Carlo Maria Martini (who was in the Bergoglio camp in 2013 but probably engineered the election of Benedict as things deadlocked), saying: “The Church is two hundred years behind the times. Why is she not shaken up? Are we afraid? Fear, instead of courage?”

And of course he got in his usual digs about “rigidity”, a perennial and predictable theme.

Citing an interview he did with Jesuit Antonio Spadaro (who curiously maintains a site about the Italian homoerotic writer Pier Vittorio Tondelli) there is some word salad:

“God manifests himself in historical revelation, in history.  Time initiates processes and space crystalizes them.  God is in history, in the processes.  We must not focus on occupying the spaces where power is exercised, but rather on starting long-run historical processes.  We must initiate processes rather than occupy spaces.  God manifests himself in time and is present in the processes of history.  This gives priority to actions that give birth to new historical dynamics.  And it requires patience, waiting”.

More on this, below.

After citing The Leopard and before launching into the “time is greater than space” stuff, he spoke about “an anthropological conversion.”  I don’t know what that means, but it’s a bit chilling.

There was a interesting citation, in a seeming throw away line.  Most of the address had to do with his ongoing reform of the offices or dicasteries of the Roman Curia.  He is merging and making in his reform.   In the middle of this section he said: “Tutto questo comporta necessariamente dei cambiamenti e delle mutate attenzioni anche nei suindicati Dicasteri, come pure nell’intera Curia[18]. … All of this necessarily entails changes and shifts in focus, both within the above-mentioned Dicasteries and within the Curia as a whole.[18]

That footnote interested me, so I had a look.  Here is footnote 18 in the Vatican translation.  He mentions the 50th anniversary of the imposition of the Novus Ordo:

[18] Saint Paul VI, some fifty years ago, when presenting the new Roman Missal to the faithful, recalled the correspondence between the law of prayer (lex orandi) and the law of faith (lex credendi), and described the Missal as “a demonstration of fidelity and vitality”.  He concluded by saying: “So let us not speak of a ‘new Mass’, but rather of ‘a new age in the life of the Church’” (General Audience, 19 November 1969).  Analogously, we might also say in this case: not a new Roman Curia, but rather a new age [una nuova epoca].

One might discuss the translation of Italian epoca.  How would it go into Latin?  Aevum? Saeculum?  Since there is a clear intent to invoke what Paul VI himself called the Novus Ordo Missae, it is an interesting question to ask.   Novus Ordo… Novum Saeculum?

It’s an amusing question.  I suppose now there will be some strong reactions, so I will turn on the moderation queue in case things get out of hand.

That “time is greater than space” citation in the Curial address drove me to drill.  I found a surprise.

This “time is greater than space” is one of the four principles Francis as deployed elsewhere, this one in Evangelii gaudium, Amoris laetitia, Lumen fidei, and Laudato si’.   Clearly it is central to his thought.  He gathered these four principles from an Argentinian caudillo named Juan Manual de Rosas (+1877) in his letter to another caudillo.

  • time is greater than space
  • unity prevails over conflict
  • reality is more important than ideas
  • and the whole is greater than the parts

These are the principles which govern Francis decision making and governance, so it is said. Pope Francis calls them principles for ‘building a people’. They run though his documents.

I think they boil down to praxis over theory.

As far as “time is greater than space” is concerned, read through a Jesuit lens, I turn to a commentary by Australian Jesuit on the topic at Jesuit.org.au by Fr Frank Brennan SJ who is or was CEO of Catholic Social Services.   Given that these principles are from a caudillo, I suspect that “building a people” is mainly a political reality.  But I don’t know much about de Rosas.

Here’s the core.  Early in Ignatius’ post-conversion career, before ordination and before founding the Society in Paris, Ignatius was at San Esteban in Salamanca under the Dominicans. He got into trouble while preaching around a bit and he was imprisoned and tried.  Eventually they told him that he had to study more and that he couldn’t speak about certain theological topics. That is when he determined to go to Paris, where he roomed with St. Peter Faber and thereafter founded the Jesuits. Brennan wrote:

“At San Esteban in 1527, the Dominicans had the power, the structures, the space. They had the structures of buildings, libraries, a long theological tradition, and the strictures of religious life. Ignatius had none of that. He was a lone individual on a spiritual quest. Developing his Spiritual Exercises, Ignatius was generating new processes and engaging others who were then able to develop to the point where they bore fruit in significant historical events throughout Europe and to the ends of earth then known to Europeans.”

That’s what Jesuit Fr. Brennan wrote.

In Francis’ 2019 Curial address in footnote 19 in the English translation we read:

[19] Evangelii Gaudium states the rule: “to give priority to actions which generate new processes in society and engage other persons and groups who can develop them to the point where they bear fruit in significant historical events.  Without anxiety, but with clear convictions and tenacity” (No. 223).

Brennan:

Ignatius was generating new processes and engaging others who were then able to develop to the point where they bore fruit in significant historical events

Francis footnote:

to give priority to actions which generate new processes in society and engage other persons and groups who can develop them to the point where they bear fruit in significant historical events.

Oddly similar, don’t you think?  The citation within footnote 19 is EG 223.  Check out 222-223 for more disorienting time-space travel.

There might be another way to put one important aspect of this “time/space” phrase: Cunctando regitur mundus… the world is ruled by delaying.  Your opponents may have the upper hand as far as power is concerned, but if you are patient, you will win in the end.

Sapienti pauca.

So, what’s up with the 2019 Curial address?  Some golden oldies and a couple of chilling portents for the coming year.

There are other issues in the speech one could write about but that’s enough. If you read it, watch for his “Dear brothers and sisters” line, which seems to mark off the sections and themes.

I wonder if we will have an explanation of the similarities in those citations.

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WDTPRS 23 December – The Final O Antiphon – O Emmanuel: The Lawgiver

Today is the final full day before the Vigil of Christmas.

In the last days of Advent before the Vigil, the Latin Church sings the O Antiphons for the Magnificat of Vespers.  The song O Come O Come Emmanuel is a setting of the essence of the O Antiphons.

When all of the O Antiphons have been sung, you can take the first letter of the first word (not O) and form an acrostic, SARCORE – which doesn’t mean much until you turn it backwards: EROCRAS, or “ero cras“, which in Latin means “I will be there tomorrow.”

LATIN: O Emmanuel, Rex et legifer noster, exspectatio gentium, et Salvator earum: veni ad salvandum nos Domine Deus noster.

ENGLISH: O Emmanuel (God with us), our King and lawgiver, the expectation of the nations and their Savior: come to save us, O Lord our God.

Again we find a reference to Christ as Liberator in the word “legifer“.

Scripture Reference:

Isaiah 7:14; 8:8
Matthew 1:23
Haggai 2:7

Relevant verse of  Veni, Veni Emmanuel:

O come, o come, Emmanuel,
And ransom captive Israel,
That mourns in lonely exile here,
Until the Son of God appear.

In his Christmas address to the Roman Curia in 2008, His Holiness Benedict XVI speaks of the rules and the order in creation flowing from the “message” in creation.

All thing came into being through the Eternal Word.  The Word, spoken from all eternity by the Father, echoes in all of creation.  A message is written into creation.

The message has consequences, including order in nature, rules for life.

The message, with the laws it conveys, also are the grounds of true freedom.

What so many people can’t grasp today is that submission to the Lawgiver results in true freedom.

Today we face a rising antinomian spirit.  I encountered a neologism the other day: nomophobia, which was defined as “fear of not having a mobile phone”.  At first I took it to be fear of law, because in Greek, law is nomos.   In the Church there are those who fear and hate law, invoking epithets such as “rigid” for those who desire to uphold it.  They claim authorization from “the spirit” (which spirit we are not ready to guess at) for their antinomian activities within the Church.  However, when these same antinomians and antirigidians are challenged, they attempt immediately recourse to law to shut down opposition.  Scratch one and, beneath, you find the rigidity of positivist dictators.

Law, however, is grounded in the order of creation, and commonsense elevated by charity.   In earthly terms, law and government, as Augustine points out, is a result of Original Sin.   Yet law we have, given by God in nature and in divine revelation.  Our Lord says: “Think not that I have come to abolish the law and the prophets; I have come not to abolish them but to fulfil them. For truly, I say to you, till heaven and earth pass away, not an iota, not a dot, will pass from the law until all is accomplished” (Matt 5:17–18).

Good law is a necessary.  However, all human laws are time bound.  There is a phrase: leges humanae nascuntur, vivunt, moriuntur… human rises are born, live and die.  Christ, Emmanuel and Legifer, Lawgiver, lives now and forever, the sure Liberator from all that binds us to anything other than Himself.

Let’s hear the monks of Le Barroux sing the antiphon.

Antiphonale Monasticum

Note the variations.

Liber Usualis

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WDTPRS – 22 December – O Rex Gentium: Mud or dust?

A continuation of our look at the O Antiphons for these last few days before Christmas…

LATIN: O Rex gentium, et desideratus earum, lapisque angularis, qui facis utraque unum: veni, et salva hominem, quem de limo formasti.

ENGLISH: O King of the gentiles/nations and their desired One, the cornerstone that makes both one: come, and deliver man, whom you formed out of the mud.

Scripture Reference:

Revelation 15:3
Psalm 118:22
Isaiah 28:16
Matthew 21:42
Mark 12:10
Luke 20:17
Acts 4:11
Ephesians 2:20
I Peter 2:6

Relevant verse of  Veni, Veni Emmanuel:

O come, Desire of nations, bind,
In one the hearts of all mankind;
Bid Thou our sad divisions cease,
And be Thyself our King of peace.

During Advent, the Voice of the Word, the greatest man born of woman, St. John the Baptist calls for us to prepare the way for the Lord who is coming.  The Lord is coming by the straight path, whether we have straightened it or not.

The Baptist’s message has it its core his own mission statement: He must increase, I must decrease.

In life we experience many different forms of “straightening” and “decreasing”.

Chief among them is rejection, with the pain that comes with it.

The King who is coming sacramentally and liturgically at Bethlehem teaches us how to empty ourselves and how to endure the emptying which comes from the vicissitudes of our fallen state, our face to face and heart to heart meetings with cruelty, malice and indifference.

Allow me to riff on a word or two.  Let’s take limus… mud.

In English when we “mud” something, we use a kind of cement. To “lime” something is to put a sticky covering on it. Ezekiel describes the walls that are limed with mud. The Jews in Egypt made bricks from mud and Nahum describes making bricks of mud to strengthen walls. The Lord used mud of saliva to heal a blind man.  Of course we human beings were made by God from the mud, sometimes described as mud’s opposite, dust.  Hebrew aw-fawr’ means, “clay, earth, mud:—ashes, dust, earth, ground, mortar, powder, rubbish.”

Limus is, ironically, something which falls apart like dust and which sticks things together like cement.  Christ, when He comes as Liberator, will free everyone to do as he pleases.   Some will be blown like dust in their self-liberation.  Others will freely stick to Christ like cement, and in Him be truly free.

Christ is the connector.

He is the cornerstone in the antiphon, which is an allusion to the cornerstone that was rejected.  In Acts 4 Peter, filled with the Holy Spirit, preached about the stone that builders rejected.  Peter repeated what he heard Christ quote, Ps 118, one of the great Hallel psalms, about the stone rejected by the builders winding up being the corner stone. Ps 118 is one of the six Psalms which were recited at Pesach, Shavuot, Sukkot, on Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah, and on the eight days of Hanukkah.  Peter uses the image again in 1 Peter 2.  Everyone would have recognized the reference.  But Peter goes on saying: “But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s own people, that you may declare the wonderful deeds of him who called you out of darkness into his marvelous light.”  In Ephesians 2:20 Paul has Christ as akrogoniaios – keystone, cornerstone.  A cornerstone describes also a keystone, the sort of stone that caps an arch and, by its presence, holds the other stones in their proper places.  A corner stone connects and holds together two walls.  Christ holds together Jews and Gentiles, that is “everyone”.  Holy Church, built on a Rock, is like a temple of living stones, limed and anointed with Christ, our mud mudded by and mortared to Christ.    Those who are mud limus are cemented down in Him and we are truly free to be who we are. Those who chose the dust limus are blown away, atomized on the wind, never to with anything or anyone.

In calling Christ the King of the nations, gentiles, we have a reference to the Passion and to the Second Coming.  As old Simon saw the Light of the Gentiles in the Infant Christ, we shall see the Light of the Son in glory in the Second Coming.  Also, remember that when Christ was wroth that people had taken over a section of the Temple for commerce, etc., His anger stemmed from the fact that they had taken the Courtyard of the Gentiles.   But the coming of the gentiles to find the Messiah was one of the signs that Christ’s mission was ready for its fulfillment in the Passion.  When the Jews and gentiles joined in this way, “the day” was at hand when He would set us free from our sins.

Shall we hear the monks of Le Barroux?  This was recorded last year, 2018, when 22 Dec fell on a Sunday.  Hence, because they are incensing the altar during the Magnificat, etc., which takes a while they repeat the antiphon.  Not a problem, of course!

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Your Sunday Sermon Notes – 4th Sunday of Advent – 2019

Was there a good point made in the sermon you heard at the Mass that fulfilled your Sunday Obligation?

What was it?  There are a lot of people who don’t get many good points in the sermons they must endure.   So, share good points.  Let us be edified!

For my part, I may at one point have startled people … a little.

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WDTPRS – 21 December – O Oriens: “O dawn of the East”

We continue our look at the O Antiphons.

LATIN: O Oriens, splendor lucis aeternae, et sol iustitiae: veni, et illumina sedentes in tenebris et umbra mortis.

ENGLISH: O dawn of the east, brightness of light eternal, and sun of justice: come, and enlighten those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death.

The shedding of light frees us from darkness.  Again, the subtle note of liberation, deliverance.

Scripture Reference:

Luke 1:78, 79
Malachi 4:2

Relevant verse of  Veni, Veni Emmanuel:

O come, Thou Dayspring, come and cheer,
Our spirits by Thine advent here;
Disperse the gloomy clouds of night,
And death’s dark shadows put to flight.

We are all desperately in need of a Savior, a Redeemer who is capable of ransoming from the darkness of our sins and from the blinding and numbing wound of ignorance from which we all suffer.  In their terrible Fall, our First Parents inflicted grave wounds in the souls of every person who would live after them, except of course – by an act of singular grace – the Mother of God.  Our wills are damaged.  Our intellect is clouded.  In Christ we have the Truth, the sure foundation of what is lasting.  All else, apart from Him fails and fades into dark obscurity.  He brings clarity and light back to our souls when we are baptized or when we return to Him through the sacrament of penance.

At Holy Mass of the ancient Church, Christians would face “East”, at least symbolically, so that they could greet the Coming of the Savior, both in the consecration of the bread and wine and in the expectation of the glorious return of the King of Glory.  They turned to the rising sun who is Justice Itself, whose light will lay bare the truth of our every word, thought and deed in the Final Day.

This is the Solstice day, for the Northern Hemisphere the day which provides us with the least daylight of the year, the least warmth and the least illumination.  From this point onward in your globe’s majestic arc about the your yellow star, we of the North, benefit from increasing heat and light.

It is as if God in His Wisdom, provided within the framework of the cosmos object lessons by which we might come to grasp something of His good plan for our salvation.

The main door of St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome and the main altar within – recently violated with demonic idols – are exactly aligned with the rising of the sun on the Vernal Equinox.   On the Winter Solstice, the Egyptian obelisk relocated to the center of St. Peter’s Square lines up with the obelisk and the rising Sun on the Winter Solstice. It lines up with the obelisk at Piazza del Popolo on the Summer Solstice.  Popes such as Sixtus V placed these obelisks precisely according to a urban renovation plan.  The obelisk at St. Peter’s serves as the spina of an enormous sundial.

Tick tick tick…

The great churches of Christendom served as accurate clocks and sometimes you see on the interior pavement an analemma where a shaft of sunlight darts to the floor.  There is a great example of this in Rome at Santa Maria degli Angeli.

Since the very earliest times, Christians observed the turning of the seasons and the changing direction of the sun’s apparent risings and settings. For example, because of the old Julian calendar, reformed by Pope Gregory XII in 1582 with an 11 day shift, in we make much of St. Lucy’s Day on 13 December (Latin for light is lux).  We have in the traditional calendar the Ember Days – and today is Ember Saturday – which tie us in the Northern Hemisphere closer to the seasons, we celebrate St. John the Baptist in the summer at the solstice.

Let us turn to the LIGHT, repent our evil ways and habits, and grasp onto Christ in His Holy Church, for as we read in Scripture:

“For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.  For God sent the Son into the world, not to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him.  He who believes in him is not condemned; he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only Son of God. And this is the judgment, that the light has come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil.  For every one who does evil hates the light, and does not come to the light, lest his deeds should be exposed.  But he who does what is true comes to the light, that it may be clearly seen that his deeds have been wrought in God.”

John 3:16-21 (RSV)

John the Baptist was the one who had to decrease so that the Lord, the Light, would increase.   The Nativity of the Lord, with calendar shifts, is the turning point of the year when the Light comes.  The Nativity of the Baptist, in June, is near the Summer Solstice.

Decrease – Balance – Increase.  Exitus – Conversio – Reditus.

Let us turn to the East in our liturgical worship of God.  It’s time.

CLICK

Shall we listen to the monks of Le Barroux sing the antiphon?

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ASK FATHER: Altar boy notices priest skipped the consecration of the Precious Blood

From a reader…

QUAERITUR:

I have a couple of questions regarding something that happened recently at a weekday TLM.  Our good and reverent priest was distracted during Mass one morning and completely forgot to consecrate the Precious Blood.  After consecrating the host, he genuflected, and then continued on with the prayers after Consecration.  My 12 year old son happened to be serving.  I have two questions… was the Mass valid?  And should the altar boys have, somehow, alerted the priest to his mistake as soon as they realized he had missed part of the Consecration?

Oh dear.

First, it is a serious problem to consecrate the sacred species outside of Mass.  It is a serious problem to consecrate one species without the other.

If intentional, either of those would be serious sins, possibly leading to the gravest of canonical penalties.

In this case, it seems that the priest was distracted and didn’t intend anything.  He didn’t sin and he is not open to canonical penalties.

However, if he did not consecrate both species, that means that he did not consume both species.  If he did not consume both, the it wasn’t Mass.  For the Sacrifice of Calvary to be renewed, you have to have the two-fold consecration and then the priest must consume them both.  That didn’t happen in this case, so Mass was not celebrated.

If Mass was not celebrated then the intention for that Mass was not fulfilled.  The priest must see that a Mass is celebrated for that intention as soon as possible.

The 12 year old server had no responsibility in the matter.  He could have done something, but he was not obliged to.  It is not his role as a minor to bring these things up.  If, being certain about what he saw and understanding what he witnessed, he had said something during Mass he would have done something meritorious.  He would have drawn the priest’s attention to the issue and the priest could have decided how to proceed.  However, he did not sin by not saying something, especially if he was not completely sure.  Another case could be made for a, say, seminarian serving or a man in his majority.

At this point, I want to assert that I know that a great many of the TLM altar boys out there DO understand about the two-fold consecration and its important to complete the Sacrifice and Holy Mass.

 

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