Saturday, March 26, 2011

Preparing the Way for the Roman Missal


h/t to Father Tim at the Hermeneutic of Continuity

More reason to encourage belief in Fr Corapi's innocence?

Santa Cruz Media Inc. is a secular corporation and although it appears to take a Christian stance, is not affiliated with the Catholic Church in any way. It is the owner of all Fr John Corapi's intellectual property. Bobbi Ruffatto, its Vice President of Operations, has issued a statement on Father's recent suspension at the blog fratres.wordpress.com/ Scroll to appropriate post, at the moment showing second on the page.
[FULL TEXT] Statement of Santa Cruz Media Inc. Relative to Fr. Corapi's suspension

This is worth reading, particularly because of the following details:

".......there is no evidence that Fr. Corapi did anything wrong, only the unsubstantiated rant of a former employee, who after losing her job with this office, physically assaulted me and another employee and promised to 'destroy' Fr. Corapi."

One hopes the assault was reported to the police at the time. For Ruffatto to report it now, after the accusations, might be seen as unhelpful because of his corporation's vested interest in proving Father's innocence.

Friday, March 25, 2011

'Sufficient unto the day .......'

I've spent the evening reading up on the case of Father John Corapi, hopefully preparatory to a post tomorrow afternoon. My present view is that the evil one is definitely at work here, wanting as he always does, to destroy the holy priesthood. No priests, no Eucharist. I am now going to bed, and will be praying for Father John during the waking hours of the night. The fact remains that his case presents two starkly opposed possibilities. One, that Father Corapi has been guilty of the most appallling hypocrisy, and that he is a total sham; or two, that he is a victim of some mad female's search for revenge in the form of monetary, yet totally undeserved recompense. I have the senstaion that it is most likely a case of
'Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned' (Congreve).

All my experience (I'm 67) leads me to favour the latter explanation.

Hans Leo Hassler: Missa super dixit Maria (Agnus Dei)

Hans Leo Hassler: Missa super dixit Maria (Benedictus)

Hans Leo Hassler: Missa super dixit Maria (Sanctus)

Hans Leo Hassler: Missa super dixit Maria (Credo)

Hans Leo Hassler: Missa super dixit Maria (Gloria)



I intend to post all the movements of this Mass in celebration of today's Solemnity and epect to reach the Agnus Dei by mid-evening.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Hans Leo Hassler: Missa super dixit Maria (Kyrie)





Eve of the Annunciation:

Kyrie of a favourite Mass, based in its turn upon a favourite motet by the same composer, Hans Leo Hassler. Lovely to sing, but deceptively simple and consequently easy to foul up, as demonstrated by some of the YouTube offerings.

Monday March 21: the 2011 generation of swallows arrived in Saint Romain, about a fortnight earlier that last year. It was the 105th anniversary of my father's birth. God rest and bless him for being such a wondeful parent. Sadly, he did not live to see the publication of my first three books, sadly for me that is, because I believe that since he died, he has always known about them.

Today I finished the proposal for my fourth book. Having done my very best, I will be glad to get it in the post to London, and forget about it until the (probable) rejection slip arrives. When and if it does, I will 'start over'.

'Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp,
Or what's a heaven for?' (Browning - Andrea del Sarto)

Meanwhile, my dear friend Mulier Fortis has fulminated against BST. Her felines are going to be tremendously confused. What a time to introduce a cat flap into innocent and reasonable feline lives. On top of everything else there will be a Census going on. Anyway, we will do the same artificial time-juggling stunt here in France this coming weekend, so as to keep an hour ahead of the Brits you understand. At least it's one thing on which the European Community is agreed.

More tomorrow as promised, D.V

Have a happy and holy Feast day.

In Christo pro Papa,

J

Monday, March 21, 2011

Next post coming Friday 25 March, D.V.

In which I hope to offer appropriate music and reflections on some interim concerns, Father Corapi for instance, Lord help him.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Essential preoccupations

It's been an undeniably frightful week. I am sure my readers don't need a list of major news headlines and stories to be reminded of this and that like me, they will have intensified their Lenten observance as a result.

As is frequently the case, the Psalmody of the Divine Office has been strikingly apposite. Here are a couple of examples. On Wednesday at the Office of Readings we had:

From Psalm 17, with the sub-heading "A great earthquake took place at that time (Rev 11:13)

"The waves of death rose about me;

the torrents of destruction assailed me;

the snares of the grave entangled me;

the traps of death confronted me.



In my anguish I called to the Lord;

I cried to my God for help.

From his temple he heard my voice;

my cry came to his ears.


Then the earth reeled and rocked;

the mountains were shaken to their base:"


And today from the same Hour
Sub-headed "The Lord is a Saviour in time of Persecution"

From Psalm 34 (They united in making plans to arrest Jesus by treachery and have him put to death (Mt 26: 3,4)

"Now that I am in trouble they gather,

they gather and mock me.

They take me by surprise and strike me

and tear me to pieces.


They provoke me with mockery on mockery

and gnash their teeth."

Japan struggles with the results of natural disaster, and Christians throughout the world face increasingly violent persecution, whilst goverments in the West seem to be blind to the precious commodity they are squandering. Praying the Office, one could not fail to think of these things, and not only on the literal level. We are living through the collapse of western Christendom, immersed in a culture of death. As the earth of Japan literally reeled and rocked, so spiritually, the Christian world reels and rocks. Our beloved earth is no longer physically secure, partially as a result of human bad stewardship; our Christian world is desperately vulnerable in the onset of a most fierce spiritual battle.

As always the Breviary reminds us that the Psalms prefigure Christ's own suffering. He endured persecution before us, and He warned us that we will also suffer it if we choose to follow Him. But we hold to the one difference between His suffering and ours. He endured if not only before us, but FOR us and our eternal salvation.

The psalmody of this morning's Office of Readings ends with some closing verses from Psalm 34

"I will thank you in the great assembly,

Amid the throng I will praise you.

Let there be joy for those who love my cause.

Let them say without end

'Great is the Lord who delights

in the peace of his servant.'

Then my tongue shall speak of your justice,

all day long of your praise."

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Kyrie. www.iuvenismusica.com



Apparently the Kyrie and Agnus Dei of this Mass (Victoria's Missa Quarti Toni) were sung today at Buckfast Abbey, attended by members of the S.W. Ordinariate group. This is the only version I could find on YouTube, and the sopranos are too loud with # tendency. Trust the Buckfast rendition was superior! I've posted here in celebration of the occasion and especially for two very dear friends who are members of S.W.O. and were present. Sorry to hear you are both rather unwell and hope this makes you feel a little better. btw Fr Ian is doing a great job with the South West Ordinariate blog (see sidebar here)

God bless you all and welcome to the boarding quay for the Barque of Saint Peter!

Saturday, March 12, 2011

Invocabit Me


INTROIT FOR THE FIRST SUNDAY IN LENT
(Roman Gradual page 71, Ps. 90 vs 15,16 & 1)
After a fairly lengthy search, all things taken into consideration, this is the best version I could find. I will go to Mass tomorrow morning with the chant ringing in my heart and soul.
It's a pity the account is not in a liturgical setting, even though the concert was given in a church. One appreciates the applause being cut short at the end.

NEXT POST THIS COMING FRIDAY DV.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Jesus of Nazareth: Holy Week - Book Trailer

St. Conleth's Catholic Heritage Association; a Holy Year for Nuns

St. Conleth's Catholic Heritage Association (hereinafter SCCHA) is a beautiful site, based in the diocese of Kildare and Leighlin. According to the Breviary, St. Conleth is patron of that See. SCCHA's main raison d'etre is to promote the Usus Antiquior but it also provides an ongoing photo gallery of Irish cultural/religious history (arguably the same thing). This latter aspect is extremely important and beautifully presented. I for one find it comforting, particularly at a time when Ireland, like Britain, appears to be turning its back on its ancient Faith, in favour of secularism, relativism, liberalism, and all the other 'isms' which are proving to be so destructive of a healthy society. Anyone with Irish connections will love the site.

English Catholics, particularly those in the north, have reason to be eternally grateful to Irish priests and religious sisters. Their influence, particularly at parish level, was vast. As an example, my own parish (of long ago) was founded and run by a community of around 10 members of the Congregation of the Mission, with strong support from a community of Daughters of Charity of at least twice that number. Those were the days! Now, Ireland has enough to do in the battle to save her own heritage. I know from my native Irish mother-in-law, who lives in Dublin, that the situation there is dire. I heartily recommend SCCHA and exhort you to pay a visit and spike its stats'.

Saint Conleth
He was born C450 in Ireland. Later he became a skilled worker in gold and silver and a manuscript illuminator. He lived as a hermit, but tradition has it that Saint Brigid persuaded him to leave the eremitical life. They ran a double monastery together and St. Conleth became the first Bishop of Kildare C490. It is handed down to us that in 519, he was attacked by wolves in the forests of Leinster. Dying from his injuries he was buried nearby. His relics were translated Kildare cathedral in 799 and were taken to Connell in 835 to protect them from Danish invaders. (If any of these details are incorrect, I hope 'Convenor' will correct me.)

A Holy Year for Nuns
SCCHA is the first place where I have seen this suggestion. I do not know the size of its readership, but although my own is not huge, I want to do everything I can to promote the idea I do know that my own blogs are read by a handful of the more inflential member of the blogosphere. Perhaps Pastor in Valle could help here and ensure that the idea reaches a wider audience. SCCHA encourages us 'to ask Ecclesiastical authorities to dedicate a special year to give thanks to God for nuns and to pray for Nuns and for more nuns'. It seems the natural thing to do after the Year for Priests. It would also sweep from the board any unpleasantness which may result from the Visitation of American Female Religious orders, bringing the positive power of prayer to bear on the outcome of that thorny situation, not to mention the effect upon vocations.

During Lent I will write to Archbishop Joseph William Tobin, C.SS.R.,the Secretary of the appropriate Congregation in Rome. I feel a letter is wise in the first place, and will send copy to the Pro-Prefect Archbishop Braz de Aviz, and also to Sister Enrica Rosanna, F.M.A., Under-Secretary, at the same address.

Address and email details

Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life
Piazza Pio XII, 3
00193 Rome

To email Archbishop Tobin,
civcs.segr@ccscrlife.va

Saints Conleth and Brigid, pray for us, and especially for our Holy Father, that he 'may not flee for fear of the wolves'.

How appropriate that it is the Memorial of St. Louise de Marillac today, foundress under the direction of St Vincent de Paul, of the Daughters of Charity. May she too assist us.


Monday, March 7, 2011

News of Adoratio 2011

Continued domestic upheavals have put me behind with my stated blog intentions. Originally I said my first post in Lent would be about the possibility of A Year for Nuns which had been suggested on the blog of 'St. Conleth's Catholic Heritage Assocition' I was led to the blog by Fr Tim's 'Hermeneutic of Continuity. I put a note of thanks in his combox but think he may have missed it, being away at the 'Faith' Conference at Ampleforth at the time. Anyway, a repeated h/t to Father for his alert to what I feel is and excellent idea. A post on this subject will, after all, be my first one in Lent. (Link to St. Conleth's may take a little time, but it does work.)

ADORATIO 2011
Zenit has two items of interest entitled 'Before all Else, The Eucharist' Part 1 here, and Part 2 here. The items contain an interview with Father Florian Racine ( appropriate name), background information, and a clear statement that the Eucharist and Its Adoration are the source of all effective Evangelisation. Father Racine is one of the French founders and organisers of the Adoratio 2011 conference, that will take place in Rome this summer (June 20-23) Don't forget that our own dear Dom Mark Kirby will be one of the speakers, not to mention Msgr Marini and several high-ranking 'Benedictine' prelates, including Cardinals Ranjith, Burke and Piacenza. Veritably, an occasion not to be missed!

A full list of speakers can be found at the Adoratio site. Link in the sidebar here.



Next post on Thursday D.V.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Benedict XVI visits seminarians of Rome


H/t to Catholic Herald
Could not resist this.
Something beautiful and encouraging for the Sunday before Lent.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Next post on Monday. Apologies for unavoidable delay

I intend that the next post will cover the idea of 'A Holy Year for Nuns' As far as I know it was launched by St. Conleth's Catholic Heritaage Association. So far, it seems that only Fr Finigan and myself have mentioned it. Please correct me if I'm wrong.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Katherine Jenkins Guide Me O Thou Great Redeemer



I hope and pray that you all had a happy and holy St. David's
day.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

NLM; Lenten preparation; A Year for Nuns; my fourth book; and other matters

I've sent NLM the links to the 'Amazing Retreats' photo gallery and to http://www.superstock.co.uk/stock-photography/Stanbrook+Abbey which has many photos of the new Stanbrook at Wass. Nothing yet on NLM's site as a result. I'm told they get innundated with stuff but will nag them if necessary. More people should know and see for themselves what has happened, than can possibly be reached by my blog.

The last few days have been spent catching up with domestic and other work that had been shelved because of the Stanbrook series, - with preparing for Lent, and making some related decisions. I say related, because although before every Lent I make a list of intended intensified practice under the three traditional Lenten headings, every year for at least the last 20, the Lord has sent me an an additional, unexpected and usually surprising task, one which knocks the sails out of me, but which I always try to embrace to the best of my ability, praying always for His help and that of his Blessed Mother.

I will not post often during Lent, maybe only once a week. Please follow me and I will explain during the coming weeks what I believe I have to do this year.

The first thing, I can tell you now, is to do everything I can to promote a Holy Year for Nuns. (My first Lenten post will probably be about that. And very soon, I will , and must, tell you more about St. Conleth's Catholic Heritage Association. )

Since my retirement in 2006, I had more or less given up the idea that I would ever write the fourth book in the unfinished quartet. Somehow at the end of the present winter, the indications are very different. I will tell you all about this a time goes on. And we will see. The actual writing of a book is no mean task in itself, but the other stages one goes through, from proposal to publication, are perhaps even more demanding. I've been through them three times. If it's God's will, I will go through them for a fourth time and happily, that I may be less and He may be more.

In the meantime, I really believe my Guardian Angel has been looking after me. Yesterday I went out into our courtayard to give the cats their afternoon meal. I slipped on a rotting leaf and fell flat on my back. This had nothing to do with my chronic vertigo. Fortunately I fell on the grass rather than on the adjacent concrete path which did graze my head, but had no impact on the top of the spine. After I hit the ground, I lay there in the shock of the moment, thinking that it would be remarkable if I had avoided severe injury. Fortunately, as usual, my husband was watching from the study window and came out to help me back to the vertical. It was a remarkable escape. I appear to have sustained a bruised coxyx. That is all.

Deo gratias, and of course to my Guardian Angel. There was another thing tonight about a failing gas bottle and a Yorkshire pudding, but that could have been St. Martha!

In closing tonight, if you have not yet signed the NLM Summorum Pontificum petition, or contributed to the WDTPRS spiritual bouquet for Pope Benedict's baptismal feast, PLEASE DO SO at your earliest possible convenience.

In Christo pro Papa

J

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Personal Tribute to Dame Felicitas Corrigan O.S.B. (March 6 1908-Oct 7 2003)

" I think the communion of saints is stronger than we realise. You haven't got to meet a person in the flesh really to get to know them, to affect one another very deeply at a spiritual level."

This was Dame Felicitas' response to someone who had asked her whether, in the writing of her 1976 award-winning biography of Helen Waddell, she had felt disadvantaged by never having met her subject. It was a fatuous question in any case but you will note that Dame Felicitas' answer immediately spiritualises its context. It speaks a truth about spiritual correspondence in general, and one which was borne out in my own association with her. I am NOT suggesting that I had any spiritual effect on HER, but she most certainly did on me. We never met and yet my three books would not have been written without her willing involvement and advice. This appreciation of her gifts to me is most definitely not an attempt to 'puff'' my own books, but in order to show how Dame Felicitas helped me, I will need to say something about their content and structure.

The Beginning
1995
My former parish priest Canon Michael Richards (RIP) knew Dame Felicitas quite well through his editorship of the Clergy Review. It was he who recommended that I write to her for advice as to which publishers I should approach with a proposal, for what I originally thought would be a single book. Admiring Dame Felicitas' own writing, I was somewhat in awe of her, but did as Canon Richards suggested. I don't think it was more than a fortnight before I received her first letter. That and subsequent ones, changed my life in all its aspects.

The books constitute a spirituality of gardening, but not in an airy-fairy new age sort of way. They are firmly rooted in the liturgical year of the Church, in her Mass readings, the Divine Office and the history of her saints and feasts.

The Development
1996-2005
At the time of her first letter Dame Felicitas must have been in her late eighties, but her cogency and clarity leapt from the pages of neat and compact handwriting. Having given a name for me to write to, and explaining that she had by then little contact with publishers, she went on to address the content of my work. I had sent her the 13 page preface I had already written. This was eventually to appear as the introduction of my first book. It was obvious that she had studied it closely but did not suggest any alterations or additions. She corrected one very careless spelling mistake (oh the shame for me an English teacher!) and adjusted the way I had laid out a quotation from one of the psalms. Then she let me know that she had consulted two other nuns about the standard of gardening knowledge I had demonstrated. Having conveyed to me that I had passed their tests, she went on to compliment me on my scriptural knowledge and later gave the command on the subjects of gardening, prayer and Holy Writ, "Write everything you know!" That would have been daunting enough, even had she not earlier given the dictum "Every word must count." During the writing of the books I would struggle with obedience to those two imperatives.

My initial reaction to her first instruction was a weak-kneed realisation that it couldn't be achieved in one book. There would have to be four of them, each dealing with a specific period of the Church year. (Advent and Christmastide; Lent-Pentecost; Trinity Sunday-Exaltation of the Holy Cross; Seven Sorrows of Our Lady - Feast of St. Andrew. This scheme was completely unbalanced by later publishing decisions, but that is another story) The inner structure of the books came directly as a result of Dame Felicitas' reactions. A plant is chosen for each day and its entry is divided as follows - Brief Cultivation Notes; History and Lore of plant and Feast; Towards Meditation; List of Biblical Readings; Suggested Place of Spiritual Retreat. Suffice to say that only three books are written. (see cover illustrations lower down sidebar to the left) Dame Felicitas is waiting for me to get on with the fourth!

The first book was published in 2002, the year before Dame Felicitas died. I sent a copy to the Abbey, but I think by then that she was in a home or hospital. In her reply to my accompanying lettter Abbess Joanna, said she was just about to visit Dame Felicitas and would give her my messages of concern and promise of prayers. I was not informed as to her exact whereabouts, probably because she was by then too weak to receive correspondence.

The above details give some idea of Dame Felicitas' thoroughness and integrity in dealing with her vast correspondence. It was as if she put everything and everybody else out of her mind, except the detailed needs of the person she was addressing. In my own case, it was not just the help she gave with the structure, content and lay-out of the books, but that her interest gave me the confidence and the courage to write them. She 'spoke' to me as if she assumed that I could and would do it. That perhaps was the most amazing thing.

There is no end to the story.
2005 -
The third book was published in 2005, and therefore written before the election of Pope Benedict XVI. It is dedicated to Our Lady of Consolation in memory of Dame Felicitas, and of Rumer Godden her novelist and poet friend. I have not published anything since then, but as hinted earlier, I now feel the stirrings of renewed courage to write a proposal for the last book of the unfinished quartet.

She must have known about the planned move from Stanbrook, and we have to wonder whether she approved. We do know from her Telegraph obituary, that if she didn't approve, she would have said so. " No, Mother, I don't agree.' "

If the move to Wass would have been against her wishes, I have to record a sad relief that at the age of 95 she was spared the experience, going to her eternal reward some 6 years before the move happened. Whether or no, I pray that she had a happy and peaceful end. I thank her now and always. I find it difficult to believe she is not already in heaven and so I ask her prayers and remember her daily in my own.

**************************************************

Final update:
Dame Joanna is now Novice Mistress.
Dame Maria Boulding died in 2009 after only a few months at Wass.

But that is another part of 'The Benedictine Tapestry', not to be explored today.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Gregorio Allegri (1582-1652) - Messe Vidi turbam magnam - Exaltent eum (...



H/t to Br. Laurence Lew, O.P. for his post today at NLM "The Feast of St. Peter's Chair". He has a video of Britten's 'Hymn to St. Peter' (You won't be surprised, that although I appreciate the Britten, I prefer to celebrate the feast with Allegri!) Br. Laurence's suggested meditation for today, written by Pope Benedict, is "Primacy in Love. The Chair Altar of St. Peter's in Rome" If you have a copy of 'Images of Hope', the meditation appears on pages 29-35 therein.) Br. Laurence gives a link to Ignatius Insight where the text may be found. Here it is again.

Have a holy, happy feast.

In Christo pro Papa.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Final post in current Stanbrook series; the need to rediscover, understand and promote the Contemplative ideal

I intend to put up the final Stanbrook post on Thursday, although it may be possible before that. Largely, it will be about the influence Dame Felicitas Corrigan had on me, and will contain my tribute to her.

The previous post to this one gives a clue as to what kept me busy all morning. (The afternoon was a wash out because it was shopping day, a weekly item on the agenda which I dread and detest!)
I had already decided to send links to NLM re photos of the old and new Stanbrooks. It is merely a matter of recording history now, and the photos will be seen by many more people at NLM, if only they see it as important enough to post them. (Anyone is welcome to forward these links, the more exposure, the better.)
After reading Father Tim's post this morning (thank you Father). I contacted Catholic Heritage by email and have not had a reply yet. They are a specifically Irish group devoted to the EF Mass. In spite of the strength and effectiveness of the English and Welsh LMS, perhaps we need an English/Welsh equivalent of this group. However the suggestion about having a Year for Nuns started me off on a search for names and addresses of people we could write to in Rome in order to earnestly suggest a 'Year for the Nuns'.

Some of you may remember that several months ago I learned from experience that it is pretty useless to write directly to the Pope. (It wasn't like that at the beginning of his Pontificate, so it was quite a painful lesson to learn.) Writing to the Dicastery most closely concerned, therefore seemed the best first step. So I began to look up names and addresses at the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life, in order to post them here for you. Archbishop Tobin is the Secretary, so for Anglophones, he would be a good idea. Then I discovered a John Allen Interview with one of the under-Secretaries, Sister Enrica Rosanna, a Salesian nun, who was appointed to the post by Venerable John Paul II in 2004. The Allen interview is long and very informative about Sister Enrica's history and attitudes. It can be found here and I recommend you read or re-read it. She is 72 now and still in post as the first woman ever to hold such high responsibility in the Roman curia. I will study it again but the first perusal kept me busy for some time this morning. Apart from anything else she makes a lot of points that I simply have not had time to include in short blogposts, and of course she expresses them more cogently than I could have done, even with all the time in the world!

Later this week, I will post the other information I found, to save you the trouble of looking up addresses etc. The more letters the Dicastery receives, the more chance there will be of a 'Year for Nuns'.
The reason I think this so important is that I believe it essential that we pray for female vocations to the Contemplative Life. The 'they are wasting their lives' argument must be refuted and countered. There needs to be a Church-wide new apologia for the female contemplative life. They are doing well in the traditional pockets of the Church, (Dominicans at Ann Arbor USA, Franciscans of the Immaculate in Lanherne UK for instance, but in mainstream Catholicism, as Fr Mark suggests in his comment, the modern revisionist trend (at least in England) is moribund, its minimalist architecture passe and cold. For the good of the Church, new life must be breathed into it.

You know, I wouldn't be surprised if the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham produces the first 'home-grown' traditional Order in the UK. I think there's a beloved and Most Holy gentleman in Rome who wouldn't be surprised either, in fact he's probably counting on it!

Increase in number of faithful and priests, decline in nuns


Not very encouraging in relation to my last post.
Oremus.

Deo gratias. Have just seen a marvellous idea highlighted at Father Tim's blog. 'A Holy Year for Nuns'. Let us do all we can to help it become a reality.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Stanbrook 6 continued

When I was a young woman, and young in my Catholicism, I firmly believed and still do, in several things, some of which are now, astonishingly to me, a subject of apparently legitimate debate in the Church. One of those sureties of belief was/is, in the Real Presence of our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament. I have enough desperately worried private correspondence from people in English Catholic parishes who tell me that there are people in those communities who declare disbelief in the Real Presence and yet receive Communion every week.

Another certainty of my youth upon which all seemed to agree at the time, was that the contemplative vocation was essential to the life, health and survival of the Church. Few of us could aspire to it, but that did not mean we did not know about it, value it, and wish to see it promoted. Quite the reverse, it made us see how essential these 'power houses of prayer' (like Stanbrook) actually were/are. I think that since the second Vatican Council, the emphasis has been so much on the laity doing everything for themselves, that the earlier necessity and concentration has been almost entirely obliterated. And it is this above all, I think, that has allowed Stanbrook to fade from relevance and awareness.

In the video, Dame Julian, unquestionably a holy nun, says that the Stanbrook nuns are there for all of us, but she doesn't really explain the reasons, and how they go about it in prayer. She doesn't speak of Jesus Christ as the centre of everything for her, of the Divine Office as her major work as a Benedictine.. I'm sure Jesus is central to her, as is the Office, but we need her to tell us, and so does the rest of the world. You can watch the video and come away with a creationist, ashram sort of feel. Rather than promoting contemplative life and attempting to explain it to the outside world, the video comes over as a defence of the ecological convictions which have led the nuns to do as they have done, not as a reason for trying to follow the Benedictine vision..

Whether it is generally known now or not, Stanbrook, for the last 150 years, has been the jewel in the crown of English female Benedictinism, althought I think that St. Cecilia's in Ryde may have overtaken it and been less affected by modern trends. Ryde has stuck unswervingly to the Latin liturgy. Stanbrook has not, regardless of Dame Laurentia. Ryde is of the Solesmes group, and not EBC. They have suffered from the deaths of many of their nuns in recent years, as has Stanbrook, but they have kept up their numbers. As for Stanbrook, I pray that they will have many vocations in the next few years. Without these it is difficult to hope for a happy future for a community of whom at least half are over 60.

Stanbrook 6: Why, when and how

First, an extract from "The Religious Orders of Great Britain and Ireland" by Peter Anson (1949 published by Stanbrook Abbey. I bought my copy of this classic, circa 1961, at the old CTS bookshop opposite Westminster Cathedral. It carries a Nihil Obstat and Imprimatur, and has a Dedication to the Abbess and Community of Talacre Abbey, now at Curzon Park, Chester. I probably paid about two shillings for it. Amazon.co.uk only lists two available copies, the cheapest at £100; Amazon.com lists it as currently unavailable)

"The Abbey of Our Lady of Consolation was founded at Cambrai, Flanders in 1625...was promoted by the newly restored English Benedictine Congregation. ....the first Abbess was Dame Catherine Gasgoine.............the actual foundress was DAme Gertrude More, through whom the community is linked to St. Thomas More.

"On the outbreak to the French Revolution in 1793 the nuns were..........imprisoned at Compiegne . Here they remained for eighteen months, in daily expectation of sentence of execution, which their companions, the Carmelite martyrs, actually received. Four (of them) died in prison. When the rest were released, they were broken in health and almost destitute. The community managed to reach England...................

They took refuge first at Woolton in Lancashire and then at Salford Hall Warwickshire where they spent 31 years, before finally, and with some subterfuge, buying Stanbrook in 1938. In his Stanbrook entry Anson refers to the Abbey's connection with the restoration of plainchant, but he doesn't date that, nor does he acknowledge the valuable work of Dame Laurentia McLachlan. the latter omission was probably due to the fact that until recently, if a nun authored a published work or did anything of scholastic, artistic merit, she was only named as 'a nun of Stanbrook'. This habit, was probably in place to protect humility, but it makes things very difficult now, it one is trying to assemble proof of the vast contribution made by Stanbrook Abbey not only to musical scholarship, but to other areas of study. There is a site that lists 'Stanbrook Contributions' but I should think is far from complete.

'In a Great Tradition', now generally acknowledged to have been penned by Dame Felicitas Corrigan, appeared in 1956 as being by the Benedictines of Stanbrook. It gives a detailed account of Dame Laurentia's contribution, and her connection with Abbot Gueranger and other Solesmes luminaries.The book is a must-read for students of chant and its history. It is now out of print
but several used copies are available at Amazon's two English sites. (cheapest £9.50 and for the US $16.50) Dame Felicitas who died on the Feast of the Holy Rosar in 2003, was no light weight when it came to writings about the history of female Benedictinism and Stanbrook itself.. Google her name for access to several obits. that appeared in the British press at the time. Whilst you're at it try the same with Dame Maria Boulding, who went to her reward in 2009 not long after the move to Wass. Between 1985 and 2004, she had left the Abbey for the eremitical life, but was requested to return and prepare the the Stanbrook Library of 40,000 volumes in advance of the move.

I mention all the above out of general interest, but specifically because a certain nunly modesty may have prevented the significance of their work from being more widely known amongst Catholics. I'm sure it played a small part, but there are other reasons, which I am sure are leaping into the minds of my readers. I will mention them briefly after supper before going on to say what I propose to do about it all..

To be continued later this evening.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Note relevant to current Stanbrook series

First, a heartfelt thank you to 'Gertrude' of CP&S for her kindness in having sent me a copy of the 2011 Benedictine Year Book. It arrived this morning and the first perusal shows details that will enable me to be as up-to-date as possible in the remaining posts of this series. I think about two posts will cover everything I want to say, for the moment at any rate!

'STANBROOK 6' WILL FOLLOW TOMORROW AFTERNOON (It's been a busy day here clearing up after Thursday's plaster-boarding event and in any case I can see from stats that people are still catching up on what I've already posted.) I'm pleased that the subject generates so much interest, but have to plead the time consuming nature of finding stuff on the Internet, of which there seems relatively little, apart from news and many pictures of the new monastery in Wass. Quite a lot about that, but very little comment on the Catholic blogosphere about the build up to the move. Father Tim Hermeneuticalness had two posts (2nd and 13th Feb 2008, a few months before I started this blog) which attempted to draw attention to the Abbey's possible fate; NLM picked up on Fr Tim's posts but after receiving no comments, didn't pursue it thereafter. Catholic Church Conservation had a one line alert, with no explanation; and the BCEW site had a page saying the Community would be moving. When I checked yesterday, the page had been removed. (Perhaps I got that information from DT at Holy Smoke.). And as far as I can see they have not reported on it since.

It seems that Stanbrook had already slipped below the radar of Catholic consciousness, even before the 2002 announcement by Abbess Joanna that the community intended to move. Catholics just don't know about its past glories anymore, and I'm afraid that there are some who couldn't care a fig about their ignorance of it. I was astonished when a dear friend, commented on an early post in this series, that she had never heard of Stanbrook. I know for a fact that she WOULD have cared had she known about it.

So Stanbrook 6 will deal with how, when and why, the English Catholic Church began the inexorable loss of this most valuable female Benedictine part of her heritage. Sure as eggs, it didn't begin when the 22-strong Stanbrook community decided they wanted to go 'green'.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Stanbrook Abbey series alert:photos of the empty Abbey

Will try to get to the next stage tonight. In the meantime do check this link to 'Amazing Retreats' who bought Stanbrook Abbey. Do not let the word 'Retreats' raise your hopes too much. Do have a look at the gallery of about 70 photographs (internal and external) for a poignant, and to me very upsetting, impression of what the nuns have left behind. They are valuable photographs. I think they were taken before the 'refurbishment' began. Click on each small image to enlarge. tMy heart lurched and I was brought to tears by many of these images, particularly of the deserted choir stalls, the Abbey's two cemeteries and the library shelves now stripped of their precious volumes.

If you have tears, prepare to shed them now.

Stanbrook: 5

DAME JOANNA JAMIESON ABBESS EMERITUS
After half a century of enclosed contemplative life, Dame Joanna's experience at the Art School in modern East-End London must have been like a cacophonous vision of hell. It would have destroyed a person of less courage, strength, determination and faith, and one has tremendous admiration for her. And yet the decision to make this sojourn was her own choice. She 'had been intructed' to take a year out after the election of her successor, but did not follow the usual practice, in such circumstances, of spending the time at another Abbey. Permission must have been given for her to do as she wished. When she returned to Stanbrook, before the move to Wass, Abbess Andrea apponted her as Sacristan and gave permission for her to spend the rest of her time on her Art. What a wonderfully compassionate two-fold gift of balm!

Rumer Godden's novel 'In this House of Brede' (first published 1969) was largely based on Stanbrook, and written in response to Dame Felicitas Corrigan's wish that 'someone would write a book about nuns as they really are, not as the author wants them to be'. The book is based on countless private and individual interviews with the nuns. Its dedication hints that these took place over a period of five years. Just one of the things that stands out, is that after appointment as Sacristan, the recipient of that office is the happiest nun in the Abbey. No believing orthodox Catholic will be surprised by that. I was very disappointed that in the Fergussun/Times piece Dame Joanna did not mention happiness at this part of her new job. (Perhaps she did say something and it was edited out as not being relevant to the main thrust of the article - one of the dangers of giving interviews to secular press.) She does mention great relief at being allowed to continue with her art and says she would probably have had a breakdown otherwise. She then goes on to speak of the difficulty of living the two vocations of Nun and Artist. I leave that to the reactions of my readers, but it worries me.

THE STANBROOK COMMUNITY AND THE MOVE
An Abbess has tremendous power and control over her Community, approaching that of a bishop in his diocese, although, like a bishop consulting with his Priests, she consults with her Council of senior nuns before making any major decision. However, the whole question of Obedience must be taken into account. If the Abbess (or indeed, the bishop) gets a bee in the bonnet about a certain issue and exerts undue pressure and persuasion on her Council, what then? Unless there have been radical changes of which I am unaware, at the end of all discussion and debate, agree or not, they must obey the final decision of the Abbess or break one of their vows. Of course it's possible that at Stanbrook a member or members of the Council, having been bitten by the 'green' bug', presented the ecological move to the Abbess whilst she was trying to discern the future. She was persuaded and it all went full 'reed bed' ahead. Others have hinted that the idea came from her and that she railroaded her Community into its fulfilment.

Sheridan Gilley(Emeritus Reader, University of Durham) wrote to the Times 23 Jan 2006 commenting on an article (17 Jan 2006) title 'Nuns, Pugin and a grotesque redevelopment' The original article was sympathetic to the catholic heritage argument, and to the nuns, although it hints that the Abbess was determined to sell, and gives some proof of that. Apparently she counterpetitioned an earlier petition to the Prince of Wales that a sale should be avoided at all costs. It claims that there was disagreement among the nuns and that four 'dissenters' had left as a result. Dame Catherine (now at East Hendred) responded to Morrison, and whilst not denying that she had left because of disagreement over the sale, she objects to the word 'dissenters' and states that she and two others left because of a 'matter of conscience'.. This does not quite tie in with her New Statesman post, in which she claimed that her superiors had said she would have to leave, at least for a while. (This article has one of those infuriatingly long links. It's quicker for you to Google the article title and I do recommend it) Sheridan Gilley in his comment does not mention the 'green fever' that seems to have been taking over at Stanbrook, and concentrates more on the Abbess's determination to sell. He lays the blame firmly at the door of post-conciliar liberalism which has done 'immense harm to the English Catholic Church and looks likely to consign the Stanbrook community to extinction.' He then goes on to blame the Abbess personally, who 'seems oppressed not only by her Puginian Gothic surroundings but by the memories preserve of great scholarly nuns such as Dame Laurentia McLachlan and Dame Felicitas Corrigan.........................'

We will probably never get to the entire truth of the matter. As I said some time ago, maybe it's not our business. However, there is usually 'no smoke without a fire', and my own view is that the results of this whole sorry affair most definitely are our business.




(It's been an exceptionally and unexpectedly noisy and dusty day here. The builders have been up and down replacing some plaster board in the library ceiling This post will continue under the following headings asap. I will alert you when it is complete.)


THE FATE OF THE OLD -'AMAZING RETREATS'
Well, we should be grateful that the empty Abbey was not vandalised or 'squatted' during the 4 or five months between the Nuns' departure and its eventul purchase by Clarenco (Amazing Retreats). All who cared about the place worried about those possibilities at the time. On their own site, the Abbess states that she and her community are satisfied that the purchaser will treat the Abbey with sensitivity, both in its refurbishment and the use to which it will eventually be put. The word 'retreats' is mentioned and I had high hopes when investigating Clarenco. Perhaps the Abbess didn't know that the world generally applies the word to quiet hideaways and bizarre follies, a la English heritage.. In this worldly use, there is certainly no assurance of spirituality being part of it. Yes, it does look as if Clarenco will be sensitive, at least to the history of Stanbrook, but the idea of banqueting and dancing in the Pugin chapel is unpalatable to say the least. On the other hand, apparently the nuns have retained the right of access to the two cemeteries. It is a tremendous relief to know that they will not be disturbed. On balance it could have been a lot worse. Several groups prayed regularly that the Abbey would not be sold and that somehow, the nuns would be able to stay, whether or not they suspected that the Abbess wanted to move in any case, as suggested in the earlier part of this post. Those groups, must have thought their prayer was being answered, until the thrice delayed sale finally went through. It must have been, and still must be, a terribly sad time for the lay community surrounding Callow End, The nuns acknowledge that the village grew up around them and their Abbey. That is just such a Benedictine thing, a pattern that goes back to medieval times. To take it away is rather like taking Winchester Cathedral out of Winchester At places where there used to be a priory or an Abbey, Walsingham and Shaftesbury for instance, I always feel sad, and sense the ancient pain in the place that must have been felt at the original amputation. At the very least what has happened to the community surrounding Stanbrook is a sociological rupture. The Callow End community was small but loyal. It will take a long time for its members to adjust to the loss of Benedictine presence at the centre of their lives. One hopes that some of them will find work with 'Amazing Retreats' and guide the owners away from ignorant mistkes in future. They are in my prayers, just as much as are the nuns who have gone.

The remaining sections mentioned below will appear in future posts of their own.


PAST THAT IS LOST
UNCERTAIN FUTURE DEPENDENT ON MANY MORE VOCATIONS THAN STANBROOK HAS BEEN ATTRACTING FOR MANY YEARS

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Pergolesi Stabat Mater - Cambridge ensemble 01



Whilst I get on with 'Stanbrook 5', here is a treasure to enjoy in celebration of tomorrow's memoria of the Seven Holy Founders of the Servite order, and to put us in a Lenten frame of mind.

Personal memory: this was the first piece of Catholic music I ever learned, at least the chorus parts, for a public performance in Sheffield City Hall when I was 13. It was a civic thing and not organised by the RC church. The young choir was selected from schools across the city. How I got in I have absolutely no idea. It was a good two or three years before I took Catholic instruction and certainly had no idea at the time about conversion from the C. of E. But Latin is good for you, so 'Forest Murmurs' said today. It was always good for me. With the Stabat Mater of Pergolesi a door began to open.

Hope to post other parts of this during Lent.

Stanbrook 5 in preparation ...

...for posting tomorrow afternoon, DV.

The Hollies - Carrie Anne




(or HEY KEIRI ANN, WHAT'S YOUR GAME, NOW CAN ANYBODY PLAY?)
After yesterday's loss of bloglist, a vicious hale storm later in the afternoon which sent the computer into crash mode, and this morning, the item on Zenit about Bishop Keiran Conry's latest public evidence of a change of mind, (and one hopes, heart) about the Pope, I have to burst out with a little frivolity before returning to the very serious matter of STANBROOK ABBEY. All day the Hollies' tune has been zinging through my brain with a slightly changed title as in brackets above. I had to check the words of the original song. Not really ideal but some of the lines made me smile. Anyway its a pleasant bit of nostalgia.
It's not that I'm questioning the Bishop's sincerity, but it would have been more edifying had he admitted that Pope Benedict has worked wonders on HIS OWN previously published opinions . It isn't surprising that his current volte face is confusing, if not unconvincing, to some of us who had been alarmed by several of his decidedly unhelpful statements between the Ad Limina and the Pope's visit.

Of course we pray constantly for the Pope and for all our Bishops.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

A moment of panic

I nearly fell over myself in excitement about the new CTS blog (h/t to Protect the Pope). In my haste to get it into my side bar, I thought I may have lost the whole list. Then it appeared again. Is it still there? Hardly dare look. If it is, the link to the new blog should still be there..

Yes, I've just checked and the whole list is lost. It will take ages to rebuild. Oh well a good lenten job. Don't think I can face it at the moment. Could be sheer accident, or a devilish gremlin in the works, or perhaps St. Scholastica is trying to tell me something................

Stanbrook: 4

I have decided, mainly because of lack of time, to link you to the current Stanbrook Abbey site.

The other reason for the link is to provide access to info. that is already in the public domain. I'd like you to read it before I express any further personal opinion, or write about my own experiences as promised.

Judging from the interest already shown, as reflected in my stats, many of you will already have found the Stanbrook site. Several of its sections show Abbess Joanna Jamieson's thinking and rationale behind the move. For more about what Abbess Joanna did after she resigned in 2007, go to this Times Online article by Maggie Fergusson (Times Dec 14 2008). It reports an interview with Dame Joanna conducted the day before she returned to Stanbrook, and now includes an additional paragraph about what has happened since she returned to the old Abbey before the move to Wass.

I will post again either later today or tomorrow afternoon

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Stanbrook Abbey 3: East Hendred continued

In one sense it could be said that the inner workings of an enclosed contemplative order are no business of an outsider, not even a devoted Catholic lay person. But if those workings have a bearing on a place like Stanbrook then I would at least invoke the Catholic Heritage argument as mentioned earlier. Originally I did not set out in 2008 to know the details of what went on at Stanbrook during the last decade. It was only when I found Dame Catherine's piece online a couple of years ago, (written 24th Jan 2008), that I began to feel uneasy about what may have happened there. It may of course have nothing to do with the move decision, but as I said earlier the timing of it all occasioned deep misgivings.
In her New Statesman Faith Column post, Dame Catherine wrote as follows about her life at Stanbrook and what brought it to an end: (Post title "What matters is not the sacrifice but the music: the role of work is central to the Benedictine way of life") She speaks first of a period of adjustment to work in the monastery scullery and the kitchen. She is a Cambridge graduate and was in banking before entering the monastery. Then she goes on:
"Assignment to the printing room* brought with it two great blessings.: I began to work alongside a woman of rare nobility and huge moral stature, Dame Hildelith Cummings, who made me think aboutthe white space on the page, the colour of black, the texture and smell of paper and ink, the moral import of all we do. I also found in my Junior Mistress Dame Gertrude Brown, a wise and generous friend, with whom I could argue to my heart's content about all the questions that bubbled up inside. Both were as one in focusing on the contemplative quest of 'preferring nothing whatever to Christ.'

Then my world fell apart. The next few years were lonely and difficult, made all the more so because I was forced into a position where I could not openly tell all I knew and had to endure a number of false accusations....."

It shook her faith in the Church and her institutions and she goes on to say how she was saved by the Rule of St Benedict.

There were several sympathetic comments from people who know Dame Catherine and some from a person who criticised her for washing dirty linen in public, a particularly nasty phrase in view of the circumstances. Dame Catherine reacted with dignity and charity, inviting the person (who had written under a pseudonym) to write to her privately.

It was an unfair accusation. Dame C had tried to do the impossible, that is, tell the truth about why she had left Stanbrook without naming the people who had hurt her or giving any details of how they had done it. To my knowledge, apart from this slight lifting of the veil, both Stanbrook and EH have been silent on the issue. Except, I've just remembered that Dame C wrote a short letter to the Times Editor in 2006 stating that she and two others had left because of ' a matter of conscience'. I only discovered this letter online yesterday.

My own feelings in her favour were increased by the fact that Dame Teresa Rodrigues, a senior nun and a famous scholar in her own right among those who know the Benedictine English world, also left Stanbrook and went with Dame CW and Dame Lucy King to EH. To leave S. must have been even worse for her. Dame TR died at the beginning of 2010 aged 79 (RIP) I had correspondence with her in 2004, from EH but did not know the situation then. She put me in touch with Rumer Godden's daughter, who in her turn gave me an unpublished poem by her late mother, 'The Christmas Rose' . May she too rest in peace.

More Stanbrook musings asap, probably Tuesday DV, when I will share more of my own Stanbrook experiences and particularly of Dame Felicitas Corrigan, may she rest in peace. Also need to bring you up to date with what has happened to Dame Joanna Jamieson, the former Abbess.


* The print room: Many of you will know that Stanbrook was famous for its fine printing. It had the oldest printing press in the country. I do hope the Community have taken it with them to Wass.

Message for Deacon Edwin Barnes

Congratulations and a warm welcome. Next time I look forwaard to addressing you as Father.

Many prayers for you and the entire Ordinariate. May it grow and flourish.



(Stanbrook Abbey series of posts to continue this evening)

Stanbrook Abbey 2

My Stanbrook Abbey 1 post, and the video, explain the mixed feelings to which I referred. Clearly the nuns who speak on the video (4 out of 22) are happy and hopeful for the future. Clearly they are women of great faith who believe that the Holy Spirit guides them. The Stanbrook reports in the Benedictine Yearbooks between 2003-9 often refer to a process of discerment that led to the decision to move. It's hard to argue with the basic decision. The old Stanbrook was too big for them and was cripplingly expensive to run. Oil and gas heating was costing them sometimes as much as £6,000 a month. There were no lifts to ease the movement of old incapacitated sisters, and lifts would have been prohibitively costly to put in. Set against these arguments is the one that raises hands in horror at the loss to our Catholic Heritage of historic Stanbrook, its contents and associations with many literary and musical nuns of the past, and their famous friends. When George Bernard Shaw brought a gift of a stone from the Holy Land, his friend Abbess Laurentia cast it into the garden where it would make the whole place holy ground because no one would be able to identify it from any other. This last argument was firmly knocked on the head by the new Abbess when she said in one interview 'we are not museum curators'.

There is another thing that worries me and that is the departure from Stanbrook in 2003 by three of its nuns to East Hendred Monastery near Oxford which was founded in 2004 by Bishop Hollis of Portsmouth, but not mentioned in the Yearbook until 2008. The timing of this incident leads one to wonder whether there had been a mini-rebellion at the decision to abandon Stanbrook. One of those nuns Dame Catherine Wyebourne stated in a New Statesman interview that in 2003, she was told by her superiors that she would have to leave Stanbrook, at least for a while.

More about this in the next post.

The nuns of Stanbrook Abbey

Stanbrook Abbey - I

I intend to write a second post this afternoon.. It's hard to have anything other than divided feelings about the sale of Stanbrook Abbey in Worcestershire. It was originally on the market as early as 2003, maybe the year before that, for £6 million. Three sales fell through before it was finally sold last August to Clarenco LLP, a conglomerate of Property Purchasers based in Buckinghamshire, and who have a section advertised as 'Amazing Retreats'. (More about this later)It's not been easy to find out the exact amount that the group paid for Stanbrook, but piecing together other financial details that have been made public, it seems to have been sold for 4 million pounds sterling. This will enable the nuns, who moved to North Yorkshire in May 2009, to finish paying for the first building phase of their new ecological monastery. This leaves them with another 4 Million pounds to raise before remaining phases can begin, that is for their Church, Library and Guest accommodation.

To most ordinary folk, the purchase of land and the building of an architect designed property into which one moves before one's old property has been sold, seems a somewhat risky way of going about things. As it was it seems that the nuns are about 2 million short on their originally hoped-for financial calcultions. If they had professional financial advice, well, one wonders.......

Before going further, I want to let the nuns speak for themselves and will link you to a video showing the new Monastery. This gives me a break to prepare Sunday lunch. I'll be back later.

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Stanbrook Abbey:Apologies for delay;Medjugorje; Georg Ratzinger etc.

I'm sorry to delay the Stanbrook post. I needed to do a little more surfing to see what else I could find. And before that Francis Phillips Catholic Herald blog posting on Medjugorje and its full combox kept me occupied for longer than I ought to have spent. Gertrude at CP&S says the post is 'reasoned', and has a link to the Herald page. I agree with her. It's a complex issue and a tall order for Cardinal Ruini's Commission to sort out. By the time I'd finished everything else I had to do today it was time for the late afternoon Rosary. Now, another day has almost gone.

I had a long conversation on Friday night with a dear friend who told me that Georg Ratzinger had a knee replacement operation a week yesterday. (How I missed that news item I don't know.) I thought the Pope wasn't quite himself at Wednesday's GA. A very natural worry about his brother could explain it. Anyhow he seemed distracted. Very unusual for him. We agreed how sad it was that the Holy Father can't be given time off to go and visit his brother. Isn't there a gap in the diary, now the Spanish football squad have postponed their Papal Audience because of training demands before their match against Arsenal?!. Well I'm praying that he will be able to visit his brother privately, and praying for Msgr Georg's recovery.

A demain

In Christo pro Papa

Friday, February 11, 2011

Jubilee Year - Lourdes 11th-14th February 2008



Father Mark recommends we make a spiritual Pilgrimage to Lourdes today.. by praying the Akathist to Our Lady of Lourdes. See text at his Vultus Christi post today. I've printed it off and will put the Lourdes Webcam on my screen to pray the Akathist this evening. It's quite long so if you haven't time, here's a video for you which has a plainchant soundtrack. The pictures are rather blurred but really give you the 'feel' of spiritual Lourdes. Have a good 'pilgrimage' and a blessed and happy feast day.
O Mary conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to you.
Our Lady of Lourdes, pray for us.

More up to date information about Stanbrook, tomorrow I hope.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Final agenda for WYD 2011 in Madrid is released



Final Agenda? And no mention of a Papal presentation of YouCat?
Final Agenda? Fortunately that's for the Pope to decide, and carry out, but I'm grateful for a basic outline.

A Fragrant Flower for Saint Scholastica

My first book 'Gardening with God' covers this period of the Liturgical year. The following is an extract from my entry for Saint Scholastica's day, and explains why I chose Dame's Violet for her.

DAME'S VIOLET Hesperis Matronalis
(Sweet Violet, Vesper Flower)

'History and Lore:
It is chosen for St Scholastica because nuns of the English Benedictine Congregation are formaslly addressed as Dame. But there are other reasons. In flower lore the plant represents watchfulness, a quality that Scholastica possessed in more ways than one. The name 'Vesper Flower' comes from the fact that it is at its most fragrant after sunset. This too is appropriate for the sister of St Benedict. Also the plant sometimes sends out new shoots from the old roots. Here I am thinking of the nunneries founded in Australia, Brazil,Peru and India from our English monasteries of Stanbrook, * Tyburn and Saint Cecilia's Isle of Wight. Lastly, Benedict and his sister were born in Umbria and although Dame's Violet is found throughout Europe and North America, it is native to Italy. As well as being part of the plant's botanical name, Hesperis also means 'the western land', that is Italy. '
Copyright Jane Mossendew 2002

*Additional note added today.
Of course the original Stanbrook is now empty, at least I think it still is, since the community moved to a specially designed set of modern monastery buildings at Wass on the North Yorkshire Moors. The last time I checked their site, the chapel was not ready and I don't think the old Stanbrook has been sold yet. I've no doubt that Abbess Joanna Jameson, who presided over the decision to abandon the original monastery, would see this as an example of putting out new shoots from old roots. I reserve judgment on the wisdom with which this was handled but pray for the Stanbrook community in their new home. They have a new Abbess, Dame Andrea Savage. Following her retirement as Abbess, Dame Joanna took a year's sabbatical in a London art school

Saint Scholastica, pray for all Benedictine nuns, particularly those of the new Stanbrook.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Father Z's Poll about Women's head-covering in church

I'm sure most of my blogging friends have voted by now, but if not, please head over to WDTPRS and register your vote, particularly women. And if you have a blog please advertise the poll.

Peter Seewald effectively waspish about dissenting theologians

Catholic Culture has the report here
The quote from 2 Timothy 4:3 is an absolute corker! Now I wonder who could have suggested that text to him?! Someone who can't say it himself, but wants us all to see it in the media. Even if he didn't suggest it, he is fairly certain to have read it and is probably still chuckling.

Thank you Herr Seewald. You deserve a Bene Merenti at least!

PS Have tried the link twice and it's not working cleanly. It will redirect you to Cath News Headlines front page. At the foot of the report on German Bishops reaction there is a link to the Seewald item. It's worth the trouble I promise you.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

O Sacrum Convivium - Richard Farrant [1530 - 1585]



I've put this up tonight because I'm sorting some CDs to sell via 'Bones' Catholic Store'. I've only one CD that includes it and I simply can't bear to lose this motet. So it has to be here for my sake! The first Communion motet I ever learned. Easy? Yes. Great? Not really. But very special and with so many beautiful memories for me.
Hope you enjoy it.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Why isn't 'YouCat' all over the Blogosphere?

Well, as far as I can see it isn't, and I read fairly widely as I'm sure you realise. Apart from this morning's Episcopal ordinations in St. Peter's, it's been a day of miserable whingeing dissent, with illogical and distinctly unhelpful 'contibutions' from 144 German-speaking 'soi-disant' theologians; from the Benedictine (ICEL) Father Ruff, and from the Irish Priests who object to the corrected version of the Missal as being 'sexist and elitist'. (see Catholic Herald, Fr. Z. and Protect the Pope)

Of course we have to face up to these negatives and the above-mentioned sources must not be underrated. They richly deserve our gratitude and their place on all our bloglists. But yet again, Father Mark Kirby saves the day with his remarkable post on Vultus Christi about the Holy Father's message to youth, not only introducing YouCat (well-named) but giving them some honest and clear explanations, from his personal experience, as to the history and inception of the CCC on which YouCat is based. PLEASE go read Father Mark. His post will cheer you up, increase your hope for the future, and your faith that we have a great and wise Pope. Love him, trust him, pray for him, and Father Mark too!

In Christo pro Papa

.

Candlelit Vigil organised by the Vaughan Parents' Action Group



h/t to Damian Thompson Holy Smoke

Friday, February 4, 2011

Bold child greets Pope at the Vatican

UK Bishops prepare for the 'new' Mass

Zenit has this report
(The link took rather a long time when I tested it just now but it did work.)

You will note the absence of the honest and accurate phrase 'more correct', to describe the new translation of the Mass. It has to be eschewed at all costs, because its use would be to admit that for four decades the bishops have condoned and encouraged the inaccurate version. Difficult to admit that the Flock has been misled. The content of the first handout in 'Praying the Mass' for Priests and others in leadership roles' (link on the Zenit report), certainly shows that the Archbishop realises they need to be put back on track, but I could find no advice about how to deal with laity, and I'm afraid some priests, who object to having this 'new' version 'foisted' upon them. I hope people like this will not create too much difficulty, but surely one needs to be ready for them. People will want to know WHY this or that phrase has changed. Many may still need to be convinced that the changes are necessary. Yes, it is an opportunity for catechesis if people know the reasoning behind the changes. To explain this simply and clearly, there needs to be a three-fold table in the following parallel columns 1. The original Latin 2. A straightforward English translation 3. The outgoing English 'translation'. That's all that's needed to START proper catechesis. Of course when people see how inaccurate the 'old' version is, they could be forgiven for asking why it was ever allowed, let alone for so long. Another difficult one for the Conference to answer. But their Excellencies shouldn't worry too much. After all, people are so loving and obedient to them as their shepherds and are so tolerant and forgiving these days, aren't they?

Thursday, February 3, 2011

The festivity of Saint Blaise, the patron of Dubrovnik



This film, I think made for distribution by UNESCO, is interesting, but its commentary falls short for me because it concentrates on the cultural, historical, and doesn't sufficiently address the spiritual. It twice refers to the 'worship' of saints. Tut, Tut!

I think I last had my throat blessed on St. Blaise's day in the late sixties, probably at Holy Apostles, Pimlico in London, or it may have been in Sheffield at St. Vincent's Solly Street.... It is a dim, distant but treasured memory. Do please let me know if you are aware of a church in England and Wales where the Blessing of Throats still takes place on this day..

Anyway, have a holy and happy feast of Saint Blaise.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Nunc Dimittis - County Upper School



Burgon's Nunc Dimittis sung at an Evensong in Wells Cathedral by the choir of County Upper School, Bury St. Edmunds. At our London RC church we had the Latin version, as well as this more generally heard English one. We used to alternate the two settings year by year. A rare example of English being as beautiful as Latin in liturgical music, well almost!! Obviously I admit that the English is appropriate for Wells, and particularly in these early days of the Ordinariate.

If you are nostalgic for the BBC credits of 'Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy' click the next up title after the Wells version has finished.

Have a holy and happy Candlemas.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Message for 'Epsilon'

After all this time I have at last managed to link to your blog. It hasn't worked for months. Hope you look here occasionally and will see that I've done so.

God bless,

Jane

William Byrd: Alleluia Senex portabat puerum



On the Eve of the Presentation of the Lord - a musical treat from the English patrimony - William Byrd sung by the choir of Hereford Anglican Cathedral : 'The old man held the child but the child was his king..." Magnificat Antiphon for First Vespers.

More music tomorrow on the Feast itself.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Dream at Nine (Don Bosco)



A Holy and happy Feast of Saint John Bosco.

Before I found this video I had indulged myself, or so I thought, and ordered from Amazon a copy of 'Forty Dreams of Don Bosco'. Several hours of research later, I no longer think it was an indulgence. I thought I knew quite a lot about Don Bosco. I knew he had several dreams, which Mother Angelica calls visions, but not as many as forty. I thank God for a most fruitful day, particularly after the low point, as demonstrated in my post of yesterday.

Saint John Bosco pray for us.

The Pope and the Doves of Peace

For video clip and comment see Spiritual Mothers of Priests blog. Link in sidebar here after the bloglist, fourth link down from Search this Blog.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

News from Pelerin via the Lourdes webcam

Pelerin alerted me to a slight change at the Grotto. She writes:
'The statue has been covered in netting and the altar protected with a tarpaulin so they are still working above. Have just watched a man talking and laughing on his mobile, facing the camera and he has just been told off and sent on his way by one of the workmen.'

The webcam is 24/7 and can be easily found at the Home page of the official Lourdes website -
Lourdes-france.org

Thanks Pelerin! Have just been watching and seen a sizeable group troop by behind the altar like all pilgrims (French soldiers I think). They were standing quietly and respectfully listening to a talk when I left just now. Not a mobile in sight!

Friday, January 21, 2011

Benedict XVI blesses two lambs for the feast of St. Agnes

Click here to see Benedict XVI blesses two lambs for the feast of St. Agnes

The year has turned again. But this year I think that's Cardinal Burke in the video. Happy, holy Feast day everyone!

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Pope Benedict to celebrate his Diamond Jubilee of Ordination (29. 06.51) June 29, 2011

Is that not right? That is, almost two months after the joy of the beatification of Venerable John Paul II, and the expected 2,000,000 pilgrims have departed from Rome.

Characteristically our Holy Father will probably want to celebrate the personal milestone quietly with his brother Georg, ordained on the same day. But none of us will forget.

In Christo pro Papa

Monday, January 17, 2011

Ushaw for the Ordinariate?

Brilliant idea from the Rorate blog tonight (see sidebar link). But can it work?



Our Lady of Walsingham pray for us.

Blessed John Henry Newman pray of us.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Te Deum [Alternatim] - Pierre Cochereau / Maîtrise de Notre-Dame


I posted this some months ago. It seems suitable again on this great day.
From France, a warm welcome to the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham, to its first three priests ordained today in Westminster Cathedral, and also to their families. Special congratulations to Father Keith Newton, the newly appointed Ordinary.

Thank you Holy Father for your loving concern for the Church in England and Wales and for all the help and inspiration you have given her.
Deo gratias.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Announcement of Pope John Paul II's beatification imminent?

According to my latest Rome Reports video newletter (Link in sidebar), the announcement will be made 'in the coming hours'. Careful choice of words!

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Eucharistic Novena starts today.

For link, see 'Vultus Christi' in the sidebar bloglist here. Yet again, thanks to Father Mark Kirby.

A holy and happy Solemnity everyone.

Interesting info. re. Lourdes from Pelerin

............in the com box of previous post. Thanks Pelerin!

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Lourdes update

As I type, kto is showing its live daily broadcst of the Rosary. The statue is still in position and the priest is standing directly below it asusual. There seems to be no evidence of limited access to the site. Perhaps access is limited EXCEPT when the Rosary is in progress. Sorry about the false alarm.

Lourdes Grotto closed until beginning of February

According to our local paper (Charente Libre) the Grotto is closed for safety work to the cliff face above Our Lady's statue. The statue has been removed. Irritatingly, and I'm afraid typically, the paper fails to inform those of us who are really interested in this news item, where the statue has gone, and where the daily Rosary will be held whilst the Grotto is closed. I will update if/whenI find out more.

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Alma redemptoris mater - Peter Philips (1561 - 1628) from Cantiones Sacr...



No prizes for substituting 's' for the things that look like 'f' in the English version above, or for wondering about the spelling of 'receive' and the lower case 'm' for Mater ..... Otherwise....

Enjoy!

New Year Prayers and good wishes .......

......to all readers, friends and followers.

In Christo pro Papa

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Christmas Day 2010

"My beloved, let us offer thanksgiving to God the Father, through his Son, in the Holy Spirit. In the great mercy with which he loved us, he had pity on us, and in 'giving life to Christ, gave life to us too, when we were dead through sin,' so that in him we might be a new creation, a new work of his hands."

St. Leo the Great, - from today's Office of Readings

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

The Pope to present 'Thought of the Day' on Christmas Eve.

H/t to Pastor in Valle for this great news. Clearly our dear Holy Father is not going to 'let us go'. Congratulation to Mark Thompson for making this possible. Much better now than during the Papal visit. The naysayers have already accused the BBC of being obsessed with religion! The audience figures will be interesting indeed. Apparently the programme has already been recorded in Rome this week.

O Rex Gentium

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

O oriens - Antifone "O"

Father Mark Kirby and Adoratio 2011

The first International Eucharistic Adoration Conference is to take place at Rome in June next year, i.e. Adoratio 2011 (link in sidebar). Our own Father Mark ( I say 'own' because he is honorary spiritual director of this blog) will give the first talk on 'Eucharistic Spirituality' on June 2oth. Several Cardinals, Bishop Schneider (Dominus Est) and Msgr Guido Marini will aslo be speakers. I know you will join me in praying for Father Mark as he prepares for this important assignment, and that you will also pray for Father's well-being, and for his Monastery of Our Lady of the Cenacle in Tulsa OK

Monday, December 20, 2010

Sunday, December 19, 2010

O Radix

Gregoriano, Dominica IV Adventus: RORATE CAELI, Schola Gregoriana Mediol...


Happy 4th Sunday of Advent everyone! The Introit (one of my favourites of the entire year) is sung three times on this video. There are pictures of lowering clouds waiting to 'drop down dews from heaven', and one of birds sitting on a telegraph wire. When they take off, they call to mind a line of living chant. Rather lovely.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Friday, December 17, 2010

Vatican lights up its Christmas tree

Find the video at Rome Reports, plus another of the Holy Father's Christmas card. Link in sidebar here.

Gregorian Chant: O Sapientia, Abteikirche Niederaltaich, Ger



The first Great O Antiphon and Magnificat

O Wisdom, that proceedest from the mouth of the Most High, reaching from end to end mightily,
and disposing all things sweetly, come and teach us the way of prudence.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Fr. Barron comments on Pope Benedict as a Witness to God

Father Barron on 'Light of the World'

Thanks to Damian Rhodes for giving a link (on his Facebook page) to Father Barron's video commentary on the Holy Father's recently published interview with Peter Seewald. I finished the book earlier in the week. Father Barron has saved me the task of expressing my reaction, and of course does it a great deal more effectively than I ever could have done. His video follows in the next post. Many thanks Father, and thanks again Damian.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Adventus, POPULUS SION, Giovanni Vianini, Canto Gregoriano

Alleluia! 'Light of the World' arrives chez moi

In spite of the fact that I pre-ordered the book at the beginning of November, its arrival here was delayed by bad weather. Last week we had no mail deliveries for three days. Snow and ice meant that roads between here and the sorting office near Angouleme were non-negotiable. A rise in temperature overnight on Friday brought the Seewald book to me on Saturday morning. It also brought more heavy rain, but I have little excuse for spending a great deal of yesterday and today with the book and am two thirds of the way through it.

No time now to comment on the content, except to say that the Holy Father makes it very clear that he is not well-served by Vatican PR, and knows it. Seewald tells him (what many of us felt about the Williamson affair), that the timing of the whole thing indicated a plot to discredit the Holy Father's initiative in lifting the excommunications. By whom, he does not make any suggestion. Typically, Pope Benedict makes no direct accusations, and uses expressions, like 'we did not do this well.' etc. However now we know that he is well aware of these shortcomings, we can only pray that something will be done about them. Unfortunately, as we all know, nothing was done in time for the release of this book. Pope Benedict acknowledges an awareness that the enemy lies in wait, looking for the opportunity to 'pounce on its victim'. It was not clear to me after this first reading whether he is talking about the enemy within, as well as the enemy without.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Protect the Pope will be reinstated in the morning!

Deacon Nick has let me know that he has now employed the asterisk! Many thanks Deacon. I know my objection may have seemed prudish to some. Can't help it. I'm an old fashioned girl! Time and a place and all that.

Temporary removal of 'Protect the Pope' from bloglist

I have had to remove this because P the P has quoted direct from Andrew Brown, and in so doing has made a four letter word appear on the Oasis List. . I will replace the site when the good Deacon posts again with another title.

Sunday, November 21, 2010

Pope Benedict and the 'Eucharistic Springtime' etc.

During his catechesis at this week's General Audience, the Pope affirmed with joy that the Church is experiencing a 'Eucharistic Springtime'. I was very happy to hear him say that, albeit a little surprised. It is natural to want to know how he has come to that conclusion. He gave only one concrete example, namely the Eucharistic Adoration in Hyde Park during his September visit to the UK. Indeed that was a wonderful surprise, but it was a very public event, the success of which must, to a condiderable extent, have been due to the Pope's own presence and the example of his own devotion. I pray that he has many other sources of information which prompted him to make that announcement on Wednesday. If he has, I wish he would tell us. That would really give us all tremendous strength and encouragement.


As it is, we now have another problem because the Osservatore has made a less that prudent editorial decision and leaked from the Seewald book not to be published until Tueseday. One begs forgiveness for saying that with friends like this, Pope Benedict hardly needs enemies. He has plently outside the Church, as is plain. One has to wonder whether these people at OR are deliberate saboteurs out to destroy a potentially great papacy, or are they merely but damagingly incompetent. Either way, enough is enough. Going off to check whether Sandro Magister has said anything about this, so will leave you now.


How refreshing that at yesterday's public Consistory and today's Mass there was not one camera shot of those dreadful fidgeting boys in the Sisine choir. In fact there weren't any shots of the choir at all. Hope this is a new policy. That whole thing is so distracting. They seemed to sing better without the attention of the camera.


The Gabrieli style brass consort from one of the balconies was a stroke of ge(marini)us?


btw, thought I spotted the Triple Tiara dangling again from the Papal window today at the Angelus.

Thank you for your prayers for the priest mentioned in my last Spiritual Mothers post.

In Chrito pro Papa

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Prayer request for a priest in Crisis

Please see my other blog for details, that is Spiritual Mothers of Priests - fourth link in sidebar here after 'Search this blog'.


Monday, November 8, 2010

This morning's Liturgy in St. Romain exceeded all expectation

As planned my husband unlocked the church at 7.30am. It was cold and pouring with rain. Just before 8am I went across to turn on the lights in the main body of the building and to light the sanctuary lamp in the chapel of the Virgin where the Blessed Sacrament is reserved. Judging that the priests would prefer privacy for their Office I then retired to the house before they arrived. I went back at 8.50 and as I opened the church door I heard singing. Going in as quietly as possible, I turned into the west end of the south transept. And there a glorious sight met my eyes. Pere Marchand was there with not one, but two other priests, the three ranged immediately in front of the Blessed Sacrament chanting the psalms of Lauds, directly to and for the Lord. They were singing in French to a harmonised setting which could have been one of the many written during the 20th century by Cistercian monks, which are familiar to me from visits to a Trappistine monastery about 20 km from here. I once mentioned here that Pere Marchand has a beautiful but totally unshowy singing voice. So did his confreres. All three were profoundly musical and although they were in harmony they sang as one. Riveted to the spot, I could not have been any more 'spellbound' even had they been singing Plainchant!

By the time the Psalms were completed Christiane had joined me. (She takes me to Mass at nearby St. Severin whenever possible.) As the office proceeded, she silently brought two chairs and we sat next to each other in the absolute stillness of prayer until it ended. Pere Marchand then brought the two priests to meet us. One was from the Bordeaux Archdioece and the other from Limoges Diocese. We thanked them for the privilege of being able to hear the sung Office and I managed to explain that for me it had been an answer to prayer. Many times when I'm alone with our Lord, I have told Him how much I long for more people to pray and adore Him here; and how I long for the church to be filled with music. One of the priests commented that he was glad that now when I'm alone with the Blessed Sacrament, I will always remember the occasion. I agreed and said that each time I would offer Him that living memory.

Then to my astonishment two more priests arrived and the five went into the Sacristy to vest for Mass. It transpired that they were all from the same year at the Seminary (Bordeaux). It was their annual day together, for discussion and the sharing of experience in their parishes.

And so it happened that our little congregation of two had a concelebrated Mass, also sung by our five priests in the same style as the Office had been before it. At times during the Mass I had to 'pinch myself' to make sure it was really happening. The word 'surreal' took on a new meaning a new truth. The nearest I can get is 'above earthly reality'. (Remember that we have Mass here only three times a year, and that in itself is a new arrangement since Pere Marchand began his ministry as our Abbe. Before that, and for nearly 20 years, there was nothing.) But today Our Lord had gathered five of His beloved sons in our little church, and had seen fit to allow myself and Christiane to be present. It was the priests' private Mass but I was allowed to see, and trust Christiane did too, the love of Christ for these young priests, and theirs for Him. There was no question of feeling excluded, or of not participating. Quite the reverse, it was an utter joy to be there. Such words were totally irrelevant and only occur to me now because of those who like to apply them in regard to the laity at Mass. Anyone who wants to use those words should have been in my shoes this morning. At the moment I can write very little else that is intelligible about it, if indeed I have been intelligible so far ; I am still too moved to make any sense with words, but have no doubt that this occasion will feature in future posts, as the experience shakes down and perhaps, I become capable of expressing its many messages.

Deo gratias


Sunday, November 7, 2010

Monday November 8: the crack of dawn in St. Romain

Normal weekly post delayed until tomorrow night.

Pere Marchand phoned me this afternoon to let me know that in the morning, he and a visiting priest friend will pray their Office in St. Romain Church, and then the visitor will celebrate Mass. The church must be open by 7.30am so an early night is required. I can't possibly estimate how long it has been since such a thing has happened.

Further reports as soon as possible, on this extraordinary event.

Deo gratias

In Christo pro Papa