Liturgical

The Feast of St John Nepomuk in Prague: Photos by Fr Lew

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Thu, 05/16/2024 - 21:00
Our long-time contributor Fr Lawrence Lew has just visited Prague, which today celebrates the feast of one of its patrons, a priest of the archdiocese who was martyred in the year 1393. We are grateful to Father for sharing these pictures us; Prague is one of the loveliest cities in all of Europe, and really deserves to be captured by such a talented photographer.St John’s family name is Gregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

Do Bishops Have Rights vis-à-vis the Pope? Does the Pope Have Duties vis-à-vis the Bishops?

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Thu, 05/16/2024 - 13:30
We have all certainly heard about the rights of the pope, who enjoys supreme jurisdiction in the Church; and we have certainly heard about the duties of bishops toward the Chair of Peter. But what about the pope’s duties to the bishops (and, indeed, to the Church as a whole, and to Christ its eternal Head?) And what of the bishops’ rights over against papal overreach? Os Justi Press has just Peter Kwasniewskihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02068005370670549612noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

Pictures of an Ambrosian Rogation Procession

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Wed, 05/15/2024 - 22:30
As we described in an article last year (my translation of notes by our Ambrosian expert Nicola de’ Grandi), the Ambrosian liturgy keeps the Minor Litanies on the Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday after the Ascension, where the Roman Rite has them before. Since the week ends with the vigil of Pentecost, one of the two great occasions for the celebration of baptisms, the traditional Ambrosian Gregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

An Illustrated Sacramentary of the Late 11th Century

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Wed, 05/15/2024 - 14:00
Here is another interesting discovery from the endless treasure trove of one of my favorite websites, that of the Bibliothèque nationale de France. This sacramentary was made for the Benedictine abbey of Saint Winnoc, in a town called Bergues in the northernmost part of the modern state of France (less than six miles south of Dunkirk, where the famous evacuation took place in 1940.) It dates to Gregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

The Elevation of the Bodies of Ss Ambrose, Protasius and Gervasius

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Tue, 05/14/2024 - 23:30
In 386 A.D., St Ambrose had uncovered the relics of two Milanese martyrs, the brothers Protasius and Gervasius, having been shown the place of their long-forgotten burial in a dream. Nothing is known for certain of these saints, not even the era of their martyrdom, but devotion to them was once very widespread; they are even named in the Roman version of the Litany of the Saints, last among the Gregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

Durandus on the Ascension

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Tue, 05/14/2024 - 13:30
The following texts are take from William Durandus’ Rationale Divinorum Officium, book 6, chapter 104, in my own translation. On the feast of the Lord’s Ascension, which is celebrated on the fortieth day after Easter, since Christ on the fortieth day after the Resurrection ascended into heaven, a solemn procession is held; for the Lord commanded that His disciples go before him to the Mount of Gregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

A Reader’s Guide to the Mystical Writings of Julian of Norwich

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Mon, 05/13/2024 - 20:15
Julian of Norwich was a medieval anchoress who wrote two extraordinary books about sixteen visions of Christ granted to her when she was thirty years old, in 1373. Though she was never beatified or even widely venerated, she is informally honored on May 13th, the approximate date when she was healed from the grave illness that prompted her mystical experiences. It is characteristic of Julian’s Robert Keimhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02834375772428838593noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

New Printing of the Pre-55 Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Mon, 05/13/2024 - 14:00
A splendid announcement to make in Our Lady's Month of May, and on this day dedicated to the Fatima apparitions!Roman-Seraphic Books has created a new edition of the Traditional Little Office of the Blessed Virgin Mary, in accordance with the rubrics of the St. Pius X 1910 reform. This edition seeks not only to preserve but to rejuvenate a venerable form of prayer that has been the Marian Prayer Peter Kwasniewskihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02068005370670549612noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

The Sunday after the Ascension 2024

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Sun, 05/12/2024 - 14:21
At that time, Jesus said to His disciples: When the Paraclete has come, Whom I will send you from the Father, the Spirit of truth Who proceeds from the Father, He will bear witness concerning Me. And you also will bear witness, because you are with Me from the beginning. These things I have spoken to you that you may not be scandalized. They will expel you from the synagogues; but the hour is Gregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

Easter 2024 Photopost (Part 2)

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Sat, 05/11/2024 - 22:15
This post is the very last of this year’s Holy Week and Easter photopost series, and in terms of the beauty of the pictures, we certainly end on a high note! As always, we thank all the contributors, past and present. Our next series will be for Pentecost, and include the Ascension and Rogation days, so have your cameras ready - Veni, Sancte Spiritus! Oratory of Ss Gregory and Augustine – St Gregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

A Day in the Life of Sarum Cathedral

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Sat, 05/11/2024 - 15:04
Here is another big win for the YouTube suggestion algorithm, a very interesting lecture which explains the round of daily services at Sarum Cathedral, ca. 1500. It was given three years ago by Dr William Renwick, a professor in the department of music at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, hosted by the Royal School of Church Music. In addition to a very thorough explanation of the daily Gregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

Easter 2024 Photopost (Part 1)

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 23:45
Finally we come to the last part of this year’s Holy Week and Easter photopost series! Once again, we are very grateful to all the contributors, and wish it were possible to include all of the beautiful photos that were sent in. There will be a second part, before we move on to Pentecost, so have your cameras ready - Veni, Sancte Spiritus! Nuestra Señora del Pilar – Guadalajara, Mexico (FSSPGregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

The Vidi Aquam

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Fri, 05/10/2024 - 13:30
Lost in Translation #86In the days that remain of Paschaltide, we turn to the Vidi Aquam, which is used from Easter to Pentecost at the Asperges rite instead of the antiphon Asperges Me and the verse, Psalm 50,3.The AntiphonThe antiphon for the season is:Vidi aquam egredientem de templo a látere dextro, allelúja: et omnes ad quos pervénit aqua ista salvi facti sunt, et dicent: allelúja, Michael P. Foleyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02649905848645336033noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

A Medieval Hymn for the Ascension

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Thu, 05/09/2024 - 22:15
The Roman Breviary of St Pius V derives from the medieval use of the Papal Curia, which was traditionally very conservative in most regards, and especially so in its repertoire of hymns. Many feasts, including some of the greatest solemnities (e.g. Christmas and Epiphany), have only two proper hymns, one of which is sung at both Vespers and Matins, and the other at Lauds; the same is true of Gregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

The Ascension of the Bleeding Christ in Medieval Popular Piety

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Thu, 05/09/2024 - 13:00
The Christian liturgical tradition envisions the Ascension of Our Lord as a climactic event in which the risen Christ, magnificent with His glorified Body, makes a triumphant return to the heavenly kingdom. In the Roman rite, the hymn, antiphons, and responsories of Matins would have ensured that these themes and images were prominent from the earliest hours of the great feast day: “Alleluia. Robert Keimhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02834375772428838593noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

The Apparition of St Michael

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Wed, 05/08/2024 - 14:00
In addition to the universal feasts of the Mother of God, from the Immaculate Conception to the Assumption, the Church also keeps local feasts connected with major centers of Marian devotion such as Loreto in Italy, Walsingham in England, Guadalupe in Mexico etc. A similar custom holds in regard to the Archangel Michael, and in one sense, may be called a universal custom of the Western Church. Gregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

Good Friday 2024 Photopost (Part 3): Via Crucis and Processions in Mexico and Brazil

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Wed, 05/08/2024 - 00:00
For our final Good Friday photopost, I saved these particularly interesting sets of images. From the FSSP apostolate in Guadalajara, Mexico, we have a live representation of the Via Crucis, and a nighttime procession with a statue of the dead Christ and the Mother of Sorrow. From the cathedral of São João del Rei in the state of Minas Gerais, Brazil, we have a deposition and burial ceremony (withGregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

The Institution of the Rogation Days

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 19:02
Today is the second day of the penitential observance known as the Lesser Rogations or Minor Litanies. On Saturday, there will occur the feast of St Mamertus, bishop of Vienne in France, who first instituted them around the year 470 A.D. His successor but one, St Avitus, has left us a sermon on the Rogations, in which he describes the reason why they were instituted, in the wake of a series of Gregory DiPippohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13295638279418781125noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

Book Recommendation: “The Spiritual History of English,” by Andrew Thornton-Norris

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Tue, 05/07/2024 - 14:00
A new edition, revised, expanded and published by Os Justi Press What makes literature or art Christian? Some would say just the content, that is, what is said; others would say both the content and the form, because the way in which certain truths are conveyed can communicate them more fully. It’s not just what you say that’s important, but also how you say it. If this is the case, the style David Claytonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07041908477492455609noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

Norcia’s New Sanctuary Paintings in Honor of Our Lady

Novus Motus Liturgicus - Mon, 05/06/2024 - 14:00
Near the start of this month of Our Lady, I am very pleased to be able to share with NLM readers several photos of the new wall paintings in the church of the Monastery of San Benedetto in Norcia, Italy. As will be quickly apparent, these are only the start (but what an auspicious start!) of an ambitious iconographic program that will eventually encompass the walls on both sides of the sanctuary,Peter Kwasniewskihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02068005370670549612noreply@blogger.com0
Categories: All, Clergy, Liturgical, Traditional

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