Et Reliqua...
Liturgical Reflections
What is the Breviary Online?
The Official Prayer of the Church
Next to the Holy Mass, the Divine Office (or Breviary) is the most important prayer offered to God. It is offered by the Church and in the name of the Church, conferring multifold graces and blessings on those who recite it worthily, attentively and devoutly. Normally the domain of priests and religious, the Church has continued to recommend her official prayer to the faithful. However, until now, the complexity of the rubrics and a lack of suitable translations has deterred many.
Now Accessible to the Layman
With the help of modern technology, it has become easier to overcome these problems. The result is the Roman Breviary published by the Confraternity of Ss. Peter & Paul in both Latin and English. No knowledge of the liturgy is required. All you have to do is click on the feastday, and then on the Canonical Hour you want to say. The rest is just like reading a book—everything is laid out for you in order according to the rubrics of the day. No more flicking through the ribboned sections of a weighty volume. No more apprehension that you are forgetting some obscure rubric. It's all there spelled out, in order, every day.
Learn More about the Breviary
And if you do want to deepen your knowledge of the Breviary or the Confraternity, this website can help you with that too. We already provide a short history of the Breviary, instructions on when to recite which Hours, a brief commentary on the psalms, and much more. And for those who would really like to understand the rubrics in greater depth, we provide in our bookstore a detailed but simply written electronic manual entitled How to Say the Breviary. We shall be expanding this website regularly with more information, so check back with us frequently. And may God reward your prayers by bestowing on you all those spiritual favours that come from a devout reading of the Church's Divine Office.
Is this Breviary for You?
Check out the Features
Link to our Features Page to see what a difference our online edition of the traditional Roman Breviary can make in your life.
Check out a Sample Day
Link to the Office for the Feast of St. Pius X, our secondary patron. You can browse through the various Hours of the Office and get a feel for what to expect.
Check out the artwork, the original photos, play some of the music. We hope you enjoy the experience. More importantly do you think this approach to prayer is something that could be spiritually beneficial for you?
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Sermons
For Sundays and Holydays
Pentecost XII—The Face of Love
Pentecost XIII—The Leprosy of Mortal Sin
Pentecost XIV—Entering the Gloom
Pentecost XV—Reaping What We Sow
Pentecost XVI—Compassion of Our Lady
Pentecost XVII—To Love Is To Give
Pentecost XVIII—Pharisaic
Scandal
Pentecost XIX—Rosary and the Angels
Pentecost XX—Redeeming Time
Penteocst XXI—Them That Trespass
Upcoming Questions
Liturgical and Rubrical
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Rules of fast and abstinence
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The ranking of feasts
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Order of commemorations
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Why we use Pius X rubrics
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Choir rubrics
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Different kinds of Octaves
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Rules for transferring feasts
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Scheduling the canonical hours
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Office of the Dead
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Why is Martyrology a day early?
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Ember Days or Quarter Tense
Today, the Wednesday of the First
Week in Lent, is the first of the year’s Ember Days, and thus is a good time to
discuss the significance of these often overlooked days of fasting and penance.
The Ember Days occur four times a
year, corresponding to the start of each new season, and each comprises the three
days of the week, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. Their actual timing is as follows:
1. Spring: between the first and second Sundays in Lent.
2. Summer: between Whitsunday and Trinity.
3. Autumn: during the liturgical third week of September
4. Winter: between the third and fourth Sundays in
Advent
An old English rhyme may help you
to remember these dates:
Fasting
days and Emberings be
Lent, Whitsun, Holyrood, and Lucie.
Lent and Whitsun are obvious of
course, while Holyrood refers to the Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross
(known in England as Holy Rood Day).
This feast falls on September 14, and the Ember Days are celebrated in
the week after the Sunday following this feast.
This is always the liturgical
third week of September, which can differ from the actual third week of the month, as liturgically the first Sunday of
September is the Sunday closest to September 1st (August 29 –
September 4). The last reference to “Lucie”
is of course the feast of St. Lucy, Virgin and Martyr, which falls on December
13, after which follows the last complete week of Advent.
On these days, the laws of
fasting and partial abstinence apply on the Wednesday and Saturday, while
Friday is also a day of fast but of course retains its complete
abstinence. While these rules apply in
the United States, other local laws apply in many countries, and you should
check with a local Catholic calendar or directory for the rules of fast and
abstinence in your part of the world.
The history of Embertide goes
back to very ancient times. It is
possible that it originates with ancient pagan festivals that were taken over
by the early Christians in the west. In
Christian usage, some claim that it goes back to Apostolic origins, but it is
more commonly agreed that it began probably in the fourth century. Pope Leo the Great (A.D. 440-461) refers to
the Fasts of Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter, and gradually the Roman use
spread throughout Christendom. It took
many centuries, however, before becoming common throughout the Western
Church. It reached the shores of England
as early as the sixth century with St. Augustine of Canterbury, but was not practiced
in Gaul until the eighth century, and in Spain not until the eleventh
century. Surprisingly, Embertide was not
celebrated in the important diocese of Milan until St. Charles Borromeo introduced
it in the sixteenth century. It never
did become part of the calendar of the Eastern Church.
Liturgically, the Mass for the
Ember Days varies on the different days of the week. While the Mass of Ember Friday follows the
normal pattern, on Ember Wednesday there are two lessons before the Gospel,
while Ember Saturday has six. Traditionally,
ordinations to each of the minor and major orders were performed after each
lesson, starting with the office of porter and working up to the priestly
ordination itself. Pope Gelasius I
(492-496) is said to have been the first to limit ordinations to the Ember
Days, and the practice quickly
spread. From the pontificate of Archbishop Ecgbert of York, A.D.
732-766, to the capitulary of Charlemagne, we find it listed as a canonical
rule, and it became a universal law in the Church during the pontificate of
Pope Gregory VII around the year 1085.
Finally, in case you were
wondering why we call them “Ember” Days, you should know first of all that it
has nothing to do with the modern English word “embers”, meaning the glowing
ashes of a fire. However, there is some
discussion about the actual etymology.
The most likely version is that the term comes from the Anglo-Saxon word
ymbren, meaning a circuit or
revolution. In this case, it is an
apparent reference to the annual cycle of the seasons. To back up this theory we can find various Anglo-Saxon compound words, such as ymbren-tid
("Embertide"), ymbren-wucan ("Ember weeks"), ymbren-fisstan
("Ember fasts"), ymbren-dagas ("Ember days"). It also corresponds with Pope Leo the Great’s
definition, jejunia ecclesiastica per totius anni circulum distributa
("fasts of the church distributed through the whole circuit of the year").
However, a second version maintains that the word Ember is derived from the
Latin term for Ember Days, Quatuor Tempora, meaning "four
times" (a year). This Latin name has remained the same in
modern languages, such as French and Italian, while being reduced to simply Temporas in Spanish and Portuguese. We even find the term Quarter Tense in use in archaic English. In German
the term is translated as Quatember, and it is easy to see how this
would have been corrupted, as so often happens by dropping the first syllable, to
form the English Ember.
On a final spiritual note, we should observe the four Embertides with
reverence and, in the spirit of the Church, with penitence and resolution to do
better in the coming new season of the year.
Each day has its own Gospel, and we would do well to meditate during
these special days on the lessons that each Gospel teaches us.
The Holy Name, St. Bernardine, and the Jesuits
The Holy Name of Jesus is
celebrated usually on the very day after the Feast of the Circumcision. In truth, they are one and the same, as
according to Jewish custom, a newborn son was both circumcised and named on the
eighth day after his delivery. Thus it
is that on the Octave of Christmas, the first day of January, we commemorate
the first spilling of the blood of Jesus, and immediately on the following day
we celebrate the Divine and Most Holy Name of Jesus.
The Holy Name of Jesus brings
help in bodily needs, consolation in spiritual trials, and protection against
Satan and his wicked snares. It is in
the Name of Jesus that we obtain any and all blessings from God, and all we ask
of God, we ask in Jesus’ Holy Name.

Surely the greatest promoter of
devotion to the Holy Name of Jesus was St. Bernardine of Siena. By his efforts the custom of adding the Name of Jesus to the Ave Maria was spread in Italy, and from
there to the Universal Church. When St.
Bernardine traveled about the cities of Italy, he carried with him a copy of
the monogram of the Holy Name, surrounded by rays, painted on a wooden
tablet. With this he used to bless the sick, and many
great miracles attest to the efficacy of his prayers. This monogram or emblem representing the Holy
Name of Jesus consisted of the three letters: IHS. In the Middle Ages the Name of Jesus was
written: IHESUS; the monogram contains
the first and last letter of the Holy Name.
Whenever St. Bernardine finished his sermons he would display the
monogram on his wooden tablet to the faithful, exhorting them to prostrate
themselves and adore the Redeemer of mankind.
It was his practice to recommend that the monogram of Jesus be placed
over the city gates of the cities and above the doors of each dwelling place. If you walk around the city of Siena today
you will see countless examples of where this was put into practice, and one
can scarcely walk more than a few yards without seeing the IHS monogram
prominently displayed. Because the
manner in which St. Bernardine preached this devotion was new, he was accused
by his enemies, and brought before the tribunal of Pope Martin V. But St. Bernardine’s disciple, St. John
Capistran, defended his master so successfully that the pope not only permitted
the worship of the Holy Name, but also assisted at a procession in which the
holy monogram was carried. Today the tablet
used by St. Bernardine is venerated at Santa Maria in Ara Coeli at Rome.
The IHS monogram representing the
Holy Name of Jesus is sometimes erroneously interpreted to mean the three initial
letters of: "Jesus Hominum Salvator" (Jesus Saviour of Men). The Jesuits took this idea and made the IHS the emblem of
their Society, adding a cross over the H and three nails under it. Consequently
a new explanation of the emblem was invented, pretending that the nails
originally were a "V", and that the monogram stands for "In Hoc
Signo Vinces" (In This Sign you shall Conquer), the words which, according
to a legendary account, Constantine saw in the heavens under the Sign of the
Cross before the battle at the Milvian bridge (312). Even today, the Jesuits hold the Holy Name in
great reverence, and organize grand processions on the feastday in its honour.

Christmas in Italy
Christmas, as it is celebrated in Italy, has two origins: the familiar
traditions of Christianity blended with the pagan traditions predating the
Christmas era. The greatest feast of the ancient Roman Empire, “Saturnalia” (a
winter solstice celebration), just happens to coincide with the Christmas
celebrations of Advent. Consequently, Christmas fairs, merry-making and torch
processions, honor not only the birth of Christ, but also the birth of the
“Unconquered Sun.” “Natale,” the Italian word for Christmas, is literally the
translation for “birthday.”
A delightful, but rapidly disappearing tradition in Italy, is the
ushering in of the coming festivities by the “Piferari” or fifers. They descend
from the mountains of the Abruzzo and Latium playing inviting and
characteristic tunes on their bagpipes, filling the air with anticipation for
the joyous celebration to come.
Christmas Eve is a time for viewing Italy’s artistic and elaborate manger
scenes or Cribs. They consist of figurines, in clay or plaster, of the infant
Jesus, Mary and Joseph. An ox and ass are nearby because legend has it that
they warmed the child with their breath. It is around this basic focal point
that individual artisans create their own intricate landscapes. There may be
grottoes, small trees, lakes, rivers, the lights of “Bethlehem” in the
background, angels hung from wires, and occasionally, even local heroes. The
most beautiful Cribs are set up in churches. There is often a contest between
churches of the same town for the best Crib. People go from church to church to
view and compare the Cribs and displays.
From the delightful small towns of Umbria to Venice’s splendour,
this is an adventure for those looking to indulge in Italy’s delights at
Christmas time, when the crowds are fewer and the food and drink in even
greater abundance than usual.
Another tradition is the burning of the Yule log, which must stay alight
until New Year’s Day. This, again, is an example of pagan and Christian
blending. The pagan belief explains the purifying and revitalizing power of
fire, and that with the burning log, the old year and its evils are destroyed.
Christian legend tells how the Virgin Mary enters the homes of the humble at
midnight while the people are away at Midnight Mass and warms her newborn child
before the blazing log.
Amidst the general merrymaking and religious observance of Christmas Eve,
Christmas tapers (long slender candles) are lighted and a Christmas banquet is
spread. In some places, Christmas Eve dinner consists largely of fish. There
may be as many as 10 to 20 fish dishes prepared. In Rome, the traditional dish
of Christmas Eve is “Capitone,” a big female eel, roasted, baked or fried.
North of Rome a traditional dish may be pork, sausage packed in a pig’s leg,
smothered in lentils, or turkey stuffed with chestnuts.
Common throughout Italy are the Christmas sweets: “panettone” (cake
filled with candied fruit), “torrone” (nougat) and “panforte” (gingerbread)
made with hazelnuts, honey and almonds. All Christmas sweets, as a rule,
contain nuts and almonds. Peasant folklore theorizes that to eat nuts favors
the fertility of the earth and aids in the increase of flocks and family. In
ancient Rome, honey was offered at this time of year so that the new year might
be sweet.
Sapientiatide
Adapted from The Liturgical Year by Dom Prosper Guéranger
On December 17, the Church entered on the seven days
leading up to Christmas Eve, and which are known in the liturgy under the name
of the Greater Ferias of Sapientiatide. The ordinary of the Advent
Office becomes more solemn; the antiphons of the psalms, both for Lauds and the
Hours of the day, are proper, and allude expressly to the great coming. Every
day, at Vespers, is sung a solemn antiphon, consisting of a fervent prayer to
the Messiah, whom it addresses by one of the titles given Him in the sacred
Scriptures.
There are seven of these antiphons, one for each day of
Sapientiatide. They are commonly called the O's of Advent, because they all
begin with that interjection. In other Churches, during the middle ages, two
more were added to these seven; one to our blessed Lady, O Virgo virginum;
and the other to the angel Gabriel, O Gabriel; or to St. Thomas the
apostle, whose feast comes during the greater ferias ; it began O Thoma
Didyme. There were even Churches where twelve great antiphons were sung;
that is, besides the nine we have just mentioned, O Rex Pacifice to our
Lord, O mundi Domina to our Lady, and O Hierusalem to the city of
the people of God. In the English
Church, following the Sarum Use, the Great "O" Antiphons were
commenced on the 16th of December with an eighth antiphon, O Virgo virginum,
said on the 23rd. This usage appears by no means to have been exclusive to
England and seems a later addition to the Roman custom.
The canonical Hour of Vespers has been selected as the most
appropriate time for this solemn supplication to our Saviour, because, as the
Church sings in one of her hymns, it was in the evening of the world (vergente
mundi vespere) that the Messiah came amongst us. These antiphons are sung
at the Magnificat, to show us that the Saviour whom we expect is to come
to us by the Blessed Virgin Mary. They are sung standing, and twice, once
before and once after the canticle, as on double feasts, and this to show their
great solemnity. In some Churches it was formerly the practice to sing them
thrice; that is, before the canticle, before the Gloria Patri, and after
the Sicut erat. Lastly, these admirable antiphons, which contain the
whole pith of the Advent liturgy, are accompanied by a chant replete with
melodious gravity, and by ceremonies of great expressiveness, though, in these
latter, there is no uniform practice followed. Let us enter into the spirit of the Church;
let us reflect on the great day which is coming; that thus we may take our
share in these the last and most earnest solicitations of the Church imploring
her Spouse to come, to which He at length yields.
St. Nicholas and the Custom of the Boy Bishop
Before the English Reformation, when Henry VIII led the
Church of England away from the Roman Catholic Church, Nicholas was one of the
most popular saints in England. Besides churches under St. Nicholas' patronage,
"Nicholas" was one of the most common names for boys, as shown by baptismal
records of the time. The medieval Boy Bishop custom, though practiced on the
Continent, was most enthusiastically embraced in England.
Some English parishes and cathedrals have recovered the
Boy Bishop custom which dropped out of favor in the 16th century. One of the
choristers is selected to serve as the Boy or Nicholas Bishop. He wears
full episcopal robes and carries the Lord Bishop's pastoral staff. During the First Vespers of St. Nicholas, at the words
from the Magnificat, "He hath put down the mighty from their seat," the real
Bishop would step down from his throne, while the Boy Bishop processes through
the Quire and takes the Bishop's seat at the words "And hath exalted the humble
and meek."

The Boy Bishop was invested with all of the symbols of
the episcopal office (some cathedrals owned elaborate sets of vestments for the
Boy Bishop and his attendants). Although he could not celebrate the
Eucharist, he had the authority to bless the people, was required to preach at
least one sermon, and in cathedral cities he made a formal visitation of the
parishes of the city and received certain revenues from parishes and church
officials--in York he and his assistants traveled on horseback around the whole
diocese. He was assisted by choristers who took the offices of the senior clergy
of the cathedral and diocese and he and his canons could expect to be lavishly
entertained. Records show that on occasion the celebrations degenerated into
rude and even riotous behavior, boys being boys, after all. The Boy Bishop
used to hold his office until the Feast of the Holy Innocents on December 28.
In keeping with the tradition of St. Nicholas, the Boy
Bishop was given a supply of tokens to distribute to the poor. These could be
redeemed for food and drink in local shops.
In England the custom of the Boy Bishop was abolished in
1542 by Henry VIII who thought it "unfitting and inconvenient." Revived by
Queen Mary in 1552 it was finally abolished by Elizabeth I. It has been
revived recently in some cathedrals and parishes.
St. Clement and the Anchor
The fourth Pope, St. Clement,
whose feast we celebrate today, was put to death under the Emperor Trajan by
being thrown into the ocean with an anchor tied round his neck. When St.
Clement’s body was dragged by the anchor to the bottom of the sea, his martyred
soul was released and rose into heaven. As
his fellow-Christians prayed for him at the seashore, it is said that the sea
went back three miles, and when they followed it they found a grotto of marble
shaped like a church, which contained the body of the Martyr laid out in a
stone coffin. The anchor that had been
tied round his neck now lay next to him.
In the early days of the
Christian Church, the anchor was a symbol used even more than the cross to
stand for the Christian faith, and in particular for the hope the Christians
had in the resurrection. In those days when
the Emperor Nero was still crucifying Christians in the Colosseum for the
amusement of the masses, the cross was an unpleasant reminder of the type of
death the Christians might expect, and the anchor was a more appropriate symbol
of their hope in the resurrection.
The symbolism of the anchor comes
from its obvious association with maritime practice. As the anchor was often a seaman’s last
resort in stormy weather, it was frequently connected with hope. Being made of a solid body, the anchor was
also identified with firmness, solidity, tranquility and faithfulness. The anchor remains firm and steady amidst the
stormy waters, symbolizing the stable part of a human being, that quality which
enables us to keep a clear mind amid the confusion of sensation, emotion and
the general “storms” of life. Therefore the anchor keeps us steady in the
storms of temptation, affliction, and persecution. Indeed St. Paul mentions that
“Which hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast” (Hebrews
6:19). Christ is sometimes referred to as the anchor in the sea of life. It could also be that the word “anchor” was
actually a word play in Greek—ankura resembling en kurio, or
"in the Lord”.
When sailors weigh anchor, the
heavy weight is raised from the sea floor where it has been keeping the ship
safe and stable in the midst of the stormy waters. Similarly, when we die, our soul may then
rise to heaven. Instead of keeping us firmly
grounded in this life, it may now rise up and allow us to move freely to the
next port-of-call, that of our heavenly home. The death of St. Clement clearly
presents to us this aspect of the anchor, and his feastday today is a wonderful
opportunity to renew our sense of hope in the goodness and mercy of God, our
final destination in these stormy seas we call Life.
Ss. Simon and Jude
The history of these two glorious
Apostles is summarized in the Fourth Lesson of today’s Matins. Here we learn that St. Simon was called
"the Zealous," and started his preaching in Egypt, while St. Jude was
the brother of James the Less, and began his evangelization in
Mesopotamia. That their names are
mentioned together in the Canon of the Mass, and that they are celebrated on
the same feastday, is due to their later meeting and work together in Persia,
as the Breviary recounts:
“They met
together afterwards in Persia, where they begat countless children in Jesus
Christ, spread the faith far and wide in those lands, amid raging heathens, and
glorified together by their teaching and miracles, and, in the end, by a
glorious martyrdom, the most holy Name of Jesus Christ.”
St. Simon is represented in art
with a saw, the instrument of his martyrdom.
For this reason he has been named the patron saint of sawyers, as well
as curriers and tanners. In Italy, he
has been confused with the “foletto”, a kind of holy goblin, because of a
similarity in names.
St. Jude is often depicted
holding an architect’s square, clearly representing him as one of the principle
builders of Christ’s Church. He often
holds a medallion of the Saviour and has a flame atop his head, signifying the
inspiration he received to write the Catholic Epistle of St. Jude, which forms
part of Holy Writ. This apostle was the
nephew of St. Joseph and thus the legal cousin of Our Lord. He is referred to by his compatriots, along
with his brother St. James, as one of the brethren of Jesus.
Over the years great popular devotion
has grown up around Saint Jude as the Patron Saint of Lost Causes, and praying
to Saint Jude has been proven to restore the most difficult of spiritual causes.
He is therefore an important saint in
our own times, as we struggle against all odds to preserve the traditions of Holy
Church.
The “City of St. Jude” in Alabama
is a Roman Catholic social-service
organization that was established in 1937 to provide medical, educational, and
spiritual assistance to African Americans in central Alabama. Founded by Father Harold Purcell, a Catholic
priest, the City of St. Jude was the first Catholic institution in the state of
Alabama dedicated exclusively to ministering to African Americans. The
organization played an important support role during the civil rights movement,
and it continues to provide services to African Americans in and around
Montgomery.
Not very far away in Memphis, Tennessee, is another famous monument to the
beneficence of St. Jude. It is of course
the famous St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital founded by entertainer Danny Thomas as
a research hospital, on the premise that "no child should die in the dawn
of life". This idea resulted from a
promise that Danny Thomas had made to St. Jude years before the hospital was
founded, when Thomas was a struggling comedian, living paycheck to paycheck.
When his first child was about to be born, he attended Mass in Detroit and put
his last $7 in the offering bin, praying to St. Jude for a means to provide for
his family. A week later, he was offered
a job that paid ten times what he had put in the offering bin. From that time on, Thomas believed in the
power of prayer, and promised St. Jude that if he made him successful, he would
one day build him a shrine. Years later, Danny Thomas became an extremely
successful comedian and built St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital as a shrine
to St. Jude to honor his promise.
The feastday of Ss. Simon and
Jude falls just before the feasts of All Saints, with its Halloween vigil, and
All Souls. From this old association
with holy goblins and feasts of the dead, there has come down to us the tradition
of preparing a cake often eaten in Scotland and England in honor of the saints Simon
and Jude. In Scotland, it is known as a Dirge Cake, in England as a Soul Cake. Traditionally Christians used to begin to
prepare food such as Bread of the Dead and Soul Cakes for the feast of All
Souls beginning on the Feast of Saints Simon and Jude. These cakes were given
in return for prayers for departed souls.
In some areas people would beg for ingredients to make these cakes on
this day. When All Souls Day arrived, children
would go from home to home chanting:
“Soul! Soul! For a souling cake. I pray you, good missus, a souling cake! Apple, or pear, or plum, or cherry Anything good to make us merry.”
From this of course, came the
later tradition of “Trick or Treat”, where children dress up in costumes and go
from door to door collecting candy. Why
not catholicize this Halloween, and provide Soul Cakes for your little
Trick-or-Treaters! Recipe available upon
request.
The Itinerarium
The Itinerarium
The last of October’s Angel
Feasts, St. Raphael, occurs today, and our Breviary and Mass readings are replete
with quotations from the Book of Tobit.
The story of Tobit and his son Tobias is worthy of a Hollywood movie and
I sometimes wonder (though not for very long after I think about Hollywood) why
one was never made.
In this story, Tobias is
conducted by a young man named Ananias on a journey filled with dangers and
adventures. Among other things, Ananias
drives out an evil spirit from the fiancée of Tobias and also rescues Tobias
from being devoured by a large fish. After
he safely leads Tobias back home with the means to cure his aged father of
blindness, Ananias finally reveals himself to be the Angel Raphael sent from
God. Because of his task in conducting
Tobias safely on his adventures and then back home again, St. Raphael has been
named by the Church as the Patron of Travelers.
We often invoke St. Raphael and
our Guardian Angels to keep us safe on our travels. After many years of traveling, and many trips
in the cars of fellow Catholics, I can vouchsafe that there are dozens of
different prayers used to draw down their protection on our journeys. However, the Church has given us an official Prayer Before a Journey for use at these
times, and it is contained in the Roman Breviary. It is called the Itinerarium.
The Itinerarium is a form of prayer
used by monks and clerics before setting out on a journey, and for that reason
usually printed at the end of the Breviary, where it can be conveniently found
when required. Most probably the use of
such prayers originated in monastic observance. The early rules of the Fathers of the Desert lay
down very specific rules for the behaviour of monks when travelling. When St. Benedict wrote his Rule he specified
that when any of the brethren were to be sent on a journey, they should, before
setting out, commend themselves to the prayers of the abbot and community, by
whom they were to be remembered daily during their absence from the monastery. According to monastic tradition, if the
absence were to be only a short one, i.e. if they were to return the same or
the following day, they merely asked the abbot’s blessing, usually at the
conclusion of one of the canonical hours, and then requested the prayers of the
community.
But if the journey was, to occupy
a longer time, a more solemn form of itinerarium was customary. Kneeling or
lying prostrate at the altar steps, some versicles and prayers were recited
over them by the abbot, who then dismissed the travellers with his blessing and
the kiss of peace. This was most likely
the origin of the itinerarium as we have it at present. The duty of a community to pray for those who
may be travelling is fulfilled at the present day by the versicle Divinum auxilium, (May help divine be
with us all, forever abiding) said for absent brethren at the end of each of
the canonical hours.
The inclusion of the Itinerarium
in the secular Roman Breviary indicates that its use is at least recommended to
all clerics, though not obligatory. It consists of the
canticle Benedictus with antiphon,
certain versicles, and several collects. Two of these latter are very ancient, being
found in the Gregorian Sacramentary.
The Itinerarium may be found on our
Breviary Online by clicking on the link to Other
Prayers of the Roman Breviary and then on the link to Prayer Before a Journey. Alternatively,
enter the following address:
www.breviary.mobi/members/prayers/itinerary.php
The Venerable English College in Rome
About the same time Pope Gregory
XIII called on three of his cardinals to establish a commission which would
eventually become the Propaganda Fide (see yesterday’s Et Reliqua), he was busy also founding several national “colleges”
or seminaries in Rome. It had been the
wish of the Council of Trent to formalize the training of men for the
priesthood, and these national seminaries in Rome aimed to provide the highest
standards yet for the education of new priests.
One of these seminaries, the
English College, was founded in the year 1579 on the site of the English
Hospice of St. Thomas. This ancient hospice had been founded in 1362,
thus making the English College in Rome the oldest English institution outside
England.
The Hospice of St. Thomas
Rome was, of course, an important
centre of pilgrimage, especially with the proclamation of the Holy Years of
1300 and 1350. Over a million pilgrims are reported to have come to Rome during
the Jubilee of 1350 and the city seems to have been caught unaware - innkeepers
gave rooms designed to accommodate four people to groups of eight or more and
often treated the pilgrims with violence and extortion. A remedy was clearly necessary. By the
mid-fourteenth century some of the English in Rome organized themselves into a
Society or Guild. In 1362 an English
couple, John and Alice Shepherd, rosary sellers by trade, sold this Guild a
house on what is now the Via di Monserrato so as to provide lodgings for
English pellegrini and care for the "poor, infirm, needy and wretched
persons from England".
The Hospice of St Thomas grew
into an important centre for the English in Rome. In
1376 a chapel was built on the site of the present College church. It attracted
royal patronage, and by the reign of Henry VII it had become known as "The
King's Hospice", with a warden appointed by the Crown.
The wardens included Thomas
Linacre, founder of the Royal College of Physicians, and Cardinal Christopher
Bainbridge, Archbishop of York and Papal Legate, who was poisoned by one of his
chaplains at the Hospice on 7 July 1514 and whose magnificent tomb remains in
the College church to this day.
Foundation of the English
College (1579)
The religious settlement of 1559
and the sheer length of Elizabeth I's reign (1558-1603) contributed greatly to
the success of the Protestant Reformation in England. The Government hoped that
Catholicism would gradually fade from memory as the Marian priests died out and
people found compulsory attendance at the parish church a more attractive
option to financial penalties or social marginalization. Catholics were still a
substantial minority, especially at Court (for example William Byrd, the
composer), but they increasingly found it difficult to find priests.
The situation was largely changed
by Cardinal William Allen, the founder of a system of English seminaries
overseas which would provide the struggling Catholic Church in England with an
orthodox education and new blood in the form of priests. In 1568 he founded the first of these colleges
at Douai in Flanders, which already had 240 students by the mid 1570s. Then, in 1576, he converted the moribund
English Hospice in Rome into a seminary. Its first students arrived there from Douai in
1577 and Gregory XIII issued the Bull of Foundation in 1579. The Pope gave the new English College a yearly
grant and property, including the Abbey of San Savino at Piacenza. Moreover,
the tradition of hospitality continued, and the College received many famous
guests, among them the poet John Milton (1638).
The College has been known as the
"Venerable English College" since 1818 because of the 44 students who
were martyred for the Catholic faith between 1581 and 1679, as well as the 130
who suffered imprisonment and exile. 41
of these have since been beatified by the Church.
The College's
"Protomartyr" was Blessed Ralph Sherwin. He was born in Roddesley, Derbyshire, around
1550 and educated at Exeter College, Oxford, before leaving for Douai and then
Rome. His name stands first in the
famous Liber Ruber (a list of students who took the missionary oath in Rome
before returning to England), where he is recorded as saying that he was ready,
"today rather than tomorrow, at a sign from his superiors to go into
England for the helping of souls".
His time soon came, and within
four months of landing he was captured, imprisoned, tortured and finally
hanged, drawn and quartered at Tyburn on 1 December 1581. Many others followed
- including the Blessed Robert Southwell, the Jesuit poet (1595) and Blessed Henry
Morse, the "Priest of the Plague" (1645). The last College martyrdoms
were in 1679 during the anti-Catholic hysteria following the "Popish
Plot", when Bl. David Lewis, Bl. John Wall and Bl. Anthony Turner
suffered.
The College soon gained a
reputation as a nursery of martyrs. A
custom arose of a student preaching before the Pope every St Stephen's Day on
the theme of martyrdom - Bl. John Cornelius called the College the
"Pontifical Seminary of Martyrs" in his St Stephen's sermon of 1581. St Philip Neri, the "Second Apostle of
Rome", who lived opposite the College at S.Girolamo della Carità, used to
greet the students with the words Salvete
flores martyrum (Hail! flowers of the martyrs), and the great Oratorian
historian, Cardinal Cesare Baronio, paid tribute to the English martyrs in his
1585 revision of the martyrology. In the
College church Pomarancio painted a series of frescoes of English saints and
martyrs which began with St Joseph of Arimathea's supposed visit to England and
ended with the College martyrs, their sufferings shown in graphic detail.
Copies of these frescoes can be seen in the tribune, and afforded important
evidence of contemporary veneration of the martyrs during the process of their
beatification.

"The Martyrs' Picture” is
the first thing one notices upon entering the College church. It was painted by
Durante Alberti in 1580, just after the foundation of the College, and depicts
the Blessed Trinity with two English martyrs: St Thomas of Canterbury on the left hand side
and St Edmund, King of East Anglia, on the right. Blood from Christ's wounds is shown falling
onto a map of the British Isles, and from this blood fire is springing up. This ties in with the College motto, held by a
cherub: Ignem veni mittere in terram (I have come to bring fire to the
earth). According to tradition, students
gathered around this picture to sing a Te
Deum whenever news reached Rome of a martyrdom of a former student. This custom continues today when the Te Deum is sung in front of the painting
on 1 December, "Martyrs' Day”.
The Second World War resulted in
a period of exile for the College. Dressed
in civilian clothes, the house left Rome on 16 May 1940 and narrowly secured
places on the last boat for England from Le Havre, which was about to fall. The
College buildings were used as a hospital organized by the Knights of Malta
from 1941 to 1944. Students continued classes and seminary life first at
Ambleside in the Lake District and then at the Jesuit school of Stonyhurst. Students returned to Rome in the autumn of
1946.
The English and Welsh bishops
stayed at the College during the Second Vatican Council (1962-65), as they had
done during the First Vatican Council (1869-70). I note with dismay that the seminarians today are
actually forbidden to wear the cassock when in the seminary, and can’t help
wondering what their venerable and blessed predecessors must be thinking from their thrones in heaven
when they see that what was once forbidden in their homeland by heretics and
persecutors of the faith is now forbidden by the authorities of the very Church
they died for. How the tables have
turned.

My recent visit to the Venerable
English College was fortunately not fraught with danger in spite of my cassock,
and I was swiftly shown into the chapel which is worth a side trip for anyone
who happens to be visiting Rome. Recently restored, the chapel reveals all its
glory with lighting arranged most tastefully and to full effect. Like so many ancient Roman churches, the symmetry
and artistic beauty has been completely upset by the removal of the old altar
and its replacement by a functional modern block protruding in the middle of
the sanctuary like a pimple on the Mona Lisa.
One has to try and put it out of mind, and instead look up to the
exquisite architecture of the rest of the chapel. It is interesting that no pictures are on
display showing what the chapel looked like before the post Vatican II philistines
did their ugly work. One is reminded of
Orwell’s 1984 and the deliberate destruction of historical evidence. A certain amount of hope may be attached to
the fact that many of the young seminarians today are far more Catholic in
their attitudes, outlook and indeed, faith, than their tired old liberal professors
who wore out their welcome long ago.
In short, it was delightful to
see the results of the restoration work to the chapel and its artwork. But we would now like to see a similar
restoration of the traditional Mass and the Faith that goes with it. Let’s start by heaving out that ugly butcher’s block of an altar, and
digging up the old one from its resting place.
Then maybe the English Martyrs will once again smile down on their Alma
Mater and bestow their much needed blessings for the conversion of England.
Our thanks to the website of the Venerable English College, from which much of the above history was lifted.
Mission Sunday & Propaganda Fide
Apart from being the 21st
Sunday after Pentecost yesterday, it was also the second last Sunday in
October. This Sunday has been designated
by Pope Pius XI as Mission Sunday. On
this day we pray for the advancement of the work of the Propagation of the Faith,
or Propaganda Fide, and some of you
may have noticed the addition of a fourth Collect at Mass for this very reason. The Church further emphasizes the importance
of its missionary work by granting a Plenary Indulgence on Mission Sunday to all
the faithful who approach the Sacrament and pray for the conversion of unbelievers.
The Church’s missionary work
falls under the jurisdiction of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of
the Faith, known for short as Propaganda
Fide. It has its headquarters on the
site of the former Palazzo Ferratini on the south side of the Piazza di Spagna
in Rome, and close to the famous Spanish Steps.
The Palace is one of the few remaining buildings in Rome outside Vatican
City which is still considered Vatican territory and not Italian.

In the sixteenth and early
seventeenth centuries, Rome saw clearly the ever-greater need to provide an
organized Congregation that would oversee the spread of Catholicism around the
globe. The faith had been severely
eroded in Europe thanks to the protestant revolt, and now to make matters
worse, two of the countries who had left the faith, England and Holland, were establishing
huge global empires and spreading their errors across the world. Pope Gregory XIII (1572-85) established a commission
of three cardinals whose chief task was to promote the union of the oriental
churches with Rome. They had some success
with the return to Rome of the nation of Ruthenia.
Although it had already been
functioning in a semi-informal manner, it was Pope Gregory XV (1621-23) who officially
founded the Congregation as the overseer of missionary work on behalf of the
various missionary institutions. It was,
appropriately enough, on the feast of the Epiphany, January 6, 1622 that Pope
Gregory summoned thirteen cardinals and two prelates, and gave them the task of
organizing and running the new Congregation.
Sadly, he died before the work had been completed. However, his successor, Urban VIII (1623-44),
who as Cardinal Barberini had been one of the thirteen founding cardinals, was committed
to the completion of his predecessor’s project.
Urban VIII was inspired by the
success of the various national colleges in Rome which had been founded after
the Council of Trent to train priests who had no seminaries in their own
country. The English College in Rome is
one famous example, and after ordination, its priests would be smuggled into
the virulently anti-Catholic England of the first Queen Elizabeth, often to
meet their death on Tyburn Tree. Hoping
to apply the success of these national seminaries in a wider sphere, Pope Urban
founded a missionary seminary in Rome in 1627, which was named the Collegium Urbanum after him, and which
was placed under the direction of Propaganda
Fide. The work of the Congregation
began to spread quickly, and eventually had to be divided amongst a variety of
smaller commissions, although still under the umbrella of Propaganda Fide.
At first, the work of the
Congregation was extended to almost all countries that were non-Catholic. Thus the United States and Canada, Great
Britain, the protestant kingdoms, principalities and duchies of what is now
Germany, Luxembourg and Switzerland, Scandinavia, Holland and so on, were all
territories under the charge of Propaganda
Fide. Eventually in 1908, Pope St.
Pius X removed countries that had their own Catholic hierarchy established, and
so the USA, Canada, Britain and Holland left the list of nations under the care
of the Congregation. This might explain
why I could not get directions to the English College in Rome when I knocked on
the door of the Palace of the Propaganda Fide a couple of weeks ago. The guard was very pleasant and was able to
give good directions to some of the better local restaurants. But even when he called inside the palace on
his cell phone to ask around, alas, the location of one of the greatest of the
national missionary colleges was now unknown to the Sacred Congregation of the
Propaganda Fide.
Inside the Palace today, the
Congregation possesses an important cabinet of medals and many ethnological
curiosities sent as gifts by missionaries in far distant lands. Scattered through the Palace of Propaganda
are many valuable paintings of the old masters. Propaganda also conducted, until the early
twentieth century, the famous Polyglot printing press whence, for some
centuries, issued liturgical and catechetical books, printed in a multitude of
alphabets. Among its most noteworthy curios is a Japanese alphabet in wooden
blocks, one of the first seen in Europe.
The Catholic Encyclopedia notes
the following noteworthy customs of the Propaganda Fide, although it is unclear
if these traditions have survived to the present day:
“One of the customs of
Propaganda, worthy of special mention, is the gift of a fan to all employees at
the beginning of the summer. This custom appears to have arisen in the early
days, when fans were sent from China by the missionaries. It is customary for the Urban College to hold,
at Epiphany, a solemn "Accademia Polyglotta", to symbolize the
world-wide unity of the Catholic Church. At this accademia the
Propaganda students recite poems in their respective mother tongues. Invited
guests always find it very interesting to listen to this medley of the
strangest languages and dialects. Another custom of the Urban College is that
every graduate student (alumno), wherever he may be in the pursuit of
his ministry, is bound to write every year a letter to the cardinal prefect, to
let him know how the writer's work is progressing and how he fares himself. The
cardinal answers immediately, in a letter of paternal encouragement and
counsel. By this means there is maintained a bond of affection and of mutual
goodwill between the "great mother" — as the
"Propagandists", or the alumni of Propaganda,
designate the congregation — and her most distant sons.”
In 1982 John Paul II renamed Propaganda Fide, and it is known today
as the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples. Although it claims to maintain its original
mission unbroken, the emphasis these days appears to be directed away from the
conversion of protestants and other non-Catholics, and more towards the spread
of the faith among the far-flung pagan tribes of the various third world
countries. Of course other more trendy
notions have crept in to the work of Propaganda,
and social issues such as the spread of democracy and women’s rights appear to
be gaining prominence. We shall leave
history to resolve this mounting problem.
Our own Confraternity of Ss. Peter
& Paul is very much concerned with the conversion of non-Catholics, and we
observe the Chair of Unity Octave in January in a very special way. We are chiefly concerned these days with the
spread of modernism within the Church, and ask you during this week following
Mission Sunday to pray for the conversion of modernists everywhere, and
especially those within the clergy and hierarchy of the Church. There is urgent work remaining for Propaganda Fide, and unfortunately they no
longer need to look far beyond the Spanish Steps to find it.
Next Page
Ember Days or Quarter Tense
Today, the Wednesday of the First
Week in Lent, is the first of the year’s Ember Days, and thus is a good time to
discuss the significance of these often overlooked days of fasting and penance.
The Ember Days occur four times a
year, corresponding to the start of each new season, and each comprises the three
days of the week, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. Their actual timing is as follows:
1. Spring: between the first and second Sundays in Lent.
2. Summer: between Whitsunday and Trinity.
3. Autumn: during the liturgical third week of September
4. Winter: between the third and fourth Sundays in
Advent
An old English rhyme may help you
to remember these dates:
Fasting
days and Emberings be
Lent, Whitsun, Holyrood, and Lucie.
Lent and Whitsun are obvious of
course, while Holyrood refers to the Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross
(known in England as Holy Rood Day).
This feast falls on September 14, and the Ember Days are celebrated in
the week after the Sunday following this feast.
This is always the liturgical
third week of September, which can differ from the actual third week of the month, as liturgically the first Sunday of
September is the Sunday closest to September 1st (August 29 –
September 4). The last reference to “Lucie”
is of course the feast of St. Lucy, Virgin and Martyr, which falls on December
13, after which follows the last complete week of Advent.
On these days, the laws of
fasting and partial abstinence apply on the Wednesday and Saturday, while
Friday is also a day of fast but of course retains its complete
abstinence. While these rules apply in
the United States, other local laws apply in many countries, and you should
check with a local Catholic calendar or directory for the rules of fast and
abstinence in your part of the world.
The history of Embertide goes
back to very ancient times. It is
possible that it originates with ancient pagan festivals that were taken over
by the early Christians in the west. In
Christian usage, some claim that it goes back to Apostolic origins, but it is
more commonly agreed that it began probably in the fourth century. Pope Leo the Great (A.D. 440-461) refers to
the Fasts of Spring, Summer, Autumn and Winter, and gradually the Roman use
spread throughout Christendom. It took
many centuries, however, before becoming common throughout the Western
Church. It reached the shores of England
as early as the sixth century with St. Augustine of Canterbury, but was not practiced
in Gaul until the eighth century, and in Spain not until the eleventh
century. Surprisingly, Embertide was not
celebrated in the important diocese of Milan until St. Charles Borromeo introduced
it in the sixteenth century. It never
did become part of the calendar of the Eastern Church.
Liturgically, the Mass for the
Ember Days varies on the different days of the week. While the Mass of Ember Friday follows the
normal pattern, on Ember Wednesday there are two lessons before the Gospel,
while Ember Saturday has six. Traditionally,
ordinations to each of the minor and major orders were performed after each
lesson, starting with the office of porter and working up to the priestly
ordination itself. Pope Gelasius I
(492-496) is said to have been the first to limit ordinations to the Ember
Days, and the practice quickly
spread. From the pontificate of Archbishop Ecgbert of York, A.D.
732-766, to the capitulary of Charlemagne, we find it listed as a canonical
rule, and it became a universal law in the Church during the pontificate of
Pope Gregory VII around the year 1085.
Finally, in case you were
wondering why we call them “Ember” Days, you should know first of all that it
has nothing to do with the modern English word “embers”, meaning the glowing
ashes of a fire. However, there is some
discussion about the actual etymology.
The most likely version is that the term comes from the Anglo-Saxon word
ymbren, meaning a circuit or
revolution. In this case, it is an
apparent reference to the annual cycle of the seasons. To back up this theory we can find various Anglo-Saxon compound words, such as ymbren-tid
("Embertide"), ymbren-wucan ("Ember weeks"), ymbren-fisstan
("Ember fasts"), ymbren-dagas ("Ember days"). It also corresponds with Pope Leo the Great’s
definition, jejunia ecclesiastica per totius anni circulum distributa
("fasts of the church distributed through the whole circuit of the year").
However, a second version maintains that the word Ember is derived from the
Latin term for Ember Days, Quatuor Tempora, meaning "four
times" (a year). This Latin name has remained the same in
modern languages, such as French and Italian, while being reduced to simply Temporas in Spanish and Portuguese. We even find the term Quarter Tense in use in archaic English. In German
the term is translated as Quatember, and it is easy to see how this
would have been corrupted, as so often happens by dropping the first syllable, to
form the English Ember.
On a final spiritual note, we should observe the four Embertides with
reverence and, in the spirit of the Church, with penitence and resolution to do
better in the coming new season of the year.
Each day has its own Gospel, and we would do well to meditate during
these special days on the lessons that each Gospel teaches us.
The Holy Name, St. Bernardine, and the Jesuits
The Holy Name of Jesus is
celebrated usually on the very day after the Feast of the Circumcision. In truth, they are one and the same, as
according to Jewish custom, a newborn son was both circumcised and named on the
eighth day after his delivery. Thus it
is that on the Octave of Christmas, the first day of January, we commemorate
the first spilling of the blood of Jesus, and immediately on the following day
we celebrate the Divine and Most Holy Name of Jesus.
The Holy Name of Jesus brings help in bodily needs, consolation in spiritual trials, and protection against Satan and his wicked snares. It is in the Name of Jesus that we obtain any and all blessings from God, and all we ask of God, we ask in Jesus’ Holy Name.

Surely the greatest promoter of
devotion to the Holy Name of Jesus was St. Bernardine of Siena. By his efforts the custom of adding the Name of Jesus to the Ave Maria was spread in Italy, and from
there to the Universal Church. When St.
Bernardine traveled about the cities of Italy, he carried with him a copy of
the monogram of the Holy Name, surrounded by rays, painted on a wooden
tablet. With this he used to bless the sick, and many
great miracles attest to the efficacy of his prayers. This monogram or emblem representing the Holy
Name of Jesus consisted of the three letters: IHS. In the Middle Ages the Name of Jesus was
written: IHESUS; the monogram contains
the first and last letter of the Holy Name.
Whenever St. Bernardine finished his sermons he would display the
monogram on his wooden tablet to the faithful, exhorting them to prostrate
themselves and adore the Redeemer of mankind.
It was his practice to recommend that the monogram of Jesus be placed
over the city gates of the cities and above the doors of each dwelling place. If you walk around the city of Siena today
you will see countless examples of where this was put into practice, and one
can scarcely walk more than a few yards without seeing the IHS monogram
prominently displayed. Because the
manner in which St. Bernardine preached this devotion was new, he was accused
by his enemies, and brought before the tribunal of Pope Martin V. But St. Bernardine’s disciple, St. John
Capistran, defended his master so successfully that the pope not only permitted
the worship of the Holy Name, but also assisted at a procession in which the
holy monogram was carried. Today the tablet
used by St. Bernardine is venerated at Santa Maria in Ara Coeli at Rome.
The IHS monogram representing the Holy Name of Jesus is sometimes erroneously interpreted to mean the three initial letters of: "Jesus Hominum Salvator" (Jesus Saviour of Men). The Jesuits took this idea and made the IHS the emblem of their Society, adding a cross over the H and three nails under it. Consequently a new explanation of the emblem was invented, pretending that the nails originally were a "V", and that the monogram stands for "In Hoc Signo Vinces" (In This Sign you shall Conquer), the words which, according to a legendary account, Constantine saw in the heavens under the Sign of the Cross before the battle at the Milvian bridge (312). Even today, the Jesuits hold the Holy Name in great reverence, and organize grand processions on the feastday in its honour.

Christmas in Italy
Christmas, as it is celebrated in Italy, has two origins: the familiar
traditions of Christianity blended with the pagan traditions predating the
Christmas era. The greatest feast of the ancient Roman Empire, “Saturnalia” (a
winter solstice celebration), just happens to coincide with the Christmas
celebrations of Advent. Consequently, Christmas fairs, merry-making and torch
processions, honor not only the birth of Christ, but also the birth of the
“Unconquered Sun.” “Natale,” the Italian word for Christmas, is literally the
translation for “birthday.”
A delightful, but rapidly disappearing tradition in Italy, is the
ushering in of the coming festivities by the “Piferari” or fifers. They descend
from the mountains of the Abruzzo and Latium playing inviting and
characteristic tunes on their bagpipes, filling the air with anticipation for
the joyous celebration to come.
Christmas Eve is a time for viewing Italy’s artistic and elaborate manger
scenes or Cribs. They consist of figurines, in clay or plaster, of the infant
Jesus, Mary and Joseph. An ox and ass are nearby because legend has it that
they warmed the child with their breath. It is around this basic focal point
that individual artisans create their own intricate landscapes. There may be
grottoes, small trees, lakes, rivers, the lights of “Bethlehem” in the
background, angels hung from wires, and occasionally, even local heroes. The
most beautiful Cribs are set up in churches. There is often a contest between
churches of the same town for the best Crib. People go from church to church to
view and compare the Cribs and displays.
From the delightful small towns of Umbria to Venice’s splendour, this is an adventure for those looking to indulge in Italy’s delights at Christmas time, when the crowds are fewer and the food and drink in even greater abundance than usual.
Another tradition is the burning of the Yule log, which must stay alight
until New Year’s Day. This, again, is an example of pagan and Christian
blending. The pagan belief explains the purifying and revitalizing power of
fire, and that with the burning log, the old year and its evils are destroyed.
Christian legend tells how the Virgin Mary enters the homes of the humble at
midnight while the people are away at Midnight Mass and warms her newborn child
before the blazing log.
Amidst the general merrymaking and religious observance of Christmas Eve,
Christmas tapers (long slender candles) are lighted and a Christmas banquet is
spread. In some places, Christmas Eve dinner consists largely of fish. There
may be as many as 10 to 20 fish dishes prepared. In Rome, the traditional dish
of Christmas Eve is “Capitone,” a big female eel, roasted, baked or fried.
North of Rome a traditional dish may be pork, sausage packed in a pig’s leg,
smothered in lentils, or turkey stuffed with chestnuts.
Common throughout Italy are the Christmas sweets: “panettone” (cake
filled with candied fruit), “torrone” (nougat) and “panforte” (gingerbread)
made with hazelnuts, honey and almonds. All Christmas sweets, as a rule,
contain nuts and almonds. Peasant folklore theorizes that to eat nuts favors
the fertility of the earth and aids in the increase of flocks and family. In
ancient Rome, honey was offered at this time of year so that the new year might
be sweet.
Sapientiatide
Adapted from The Liturgical Year by Dom Prosper Guéranger
On December 17, the Church entered on the seven days
leading up to Christmas Eve, and which are known in the liturgy under the name
of the Greater Ferias of Sapientiatide. The ordinary of the Advent
Office becomes more solemn; the antiphons of the psalms, both for Lauds and the
Hours of the day, are proper, and allude expressly to the great coming. Every
day, at Vespers, is sung a solemn antiphon, consisting of a fervent prayer to
the Messiah, whom it addresses by one of the titles given Him in the sacred
Scriptures.
There are seven of these antiphons, one for each day of
Sapientiatide. They are commonly called the O's of Advent, because they all
begin with that interjection. In other Churches, during the middle ages, two
more were added to these seven; one to our blessed Lady, O Virgo virginum;
and the other to the angel Gabriel, O Gabriel; or to St. Thomas the
apostle, whose feast comes during the greater ferias ; it began O Thoma
Didyme. There were even Churches where twelve great antiphons were sung;
that is, besides the nine we have just mentioned, O Rex Pacifice to our
Lord, O mundi Domina to our Lady, and O Hierusalem to the city of
the people of God. In the English
Church, following the Sarum Use, the Great "O" Antiphons were
commenced on the 16th of December with an eighth antiphon, O Virgo virginum,
said on the 23rd. This usage appears by no means to have been exclusive to
England and seems a later addition to the Roman custom.
The canonical Hour of Vespers has been selected as the most
appropriate time for this solemn supplication to our Saviour, because, as the
Church sings in one of her hymns, it was in the evening of the world (vergente
mundi vespere) that the Messiah came amongst us. These antiphons are sung
at the Magnificat, to show us that the Saviour whom we expect is to come
to us by the Blessed Virgin Mary. They are sung standing, and twice, once
before and once after the canticle, as on double feasts, and this to show their
great solemnity. In some Churches it was formerly the practice to sing them
thrice; that is, before the canticle, before the Gloria Patri, and after
the Sicut erat. Lastly, these admirable antiphons, which contain the
whole pith of the Advent liturgy, are accompanied by a chant replete with
melodious gravity, and by ceremonies of great expressiveness, though, in these
latter, there is no uniform practice followed. Let us enter into the spirit of the Church;
let us reflect on the great day which is coming; that thus we may take our
share in these the last and most earnest solicitations of the Church imploring
her Spouse to come, to which He at length yields.
St. Nicholas and the Custom of the Boy Bishop
Before the English Reformation, when Henry VIII led the Church of England away from the Roman Catholic Church, Nicholas was one of the most popular saints in England. Besides churches under St. Nicholas' patronage, "Nicholas" was one of the most common names for boys, as shown by baptismal records of the time. The medieval Boy Bishop custom, though practiced on the Continent, was most enthusiastically embraced in England.
Some English parishes and cathedrals have recovered the Boy Bishop custom which dropped out of favor in the 16th century. One of the choristers is selected to serve as the Boy or Nicholas Bishop. He wears full episcopal robes and carries the Lord Bishop's pastoral staff. During the First Vespers of St. Nicholas, at the words from the Magnificat, "He hath put down the mighty from their seat," the real Bishop would step down from his throne, while the Boy Bishop processes through the Quire and takes the Bishop's seat at the words "And hath exalted the humble and meek."

The Boy Bishop was invested with all of the symbols of the episcopal office (some cathedrals owned elaborate sets of vestments for the Boy Bishop and his attendants). Although he could not celebrate the Eucharist, he had the authority to bless the people, was required to preach at least one sermon, and in cathedral cities he made a formal visitation of the parishes of the city and received certain revenues from parishes and church officials--in York he and his assistants traveled on horseback around the whole diocese. He was assisted by choristers who took the offices of the senior clergy of the cathedral and diocese and he and his canons could expect to be lavishly entertained. Records show that on occasion the celebrations degenerated into rude and even riotous behavior, boys being boys, after all. The Boy Bishop used to hold his office until the Feast of the Holy Innocents on December 28.
In keeping with the tradition of St. Nicholas, the Boy Bishop was given a supply of tokens to distribute to the poor. These could be redeemed for food and drink in local shops.
In England the custom of the Boy Bishop was abolished in 1542 by Henry VIII who thought it "unfitting and inconvenient." Revived by Queen Mary in 1552 it was finally abolished by Elizabeth I. It has been revived recently in some cathedrals and parishes.
St. Clement and the Anchor
The fourth Pope, St. Clement,
whose feast we celebrate today, was put to death under the Emperor Trajan by
being thrown into the ocean with an anchor tied round his neck. When St.
Clement’s body was dragged by the anchor to the bottom of the sea, his martyred
soul was released and rose into heaven. As
his fellow-Christians prayed for him at the seashore, it is said that the sea
went back three miles, and when they followed it they found a grotto of marble
shaped like a church, which contained the body of the Martyr laid out in a
stone coffin. The anchor that had been
tied round his neck now lay next to him.
In the early days of the
Christian Church, the anchor was a symbol used even more than the cross to
stand for the Christian faith, and in particular for the hope the Christians
had in the resurrection. In those days when
the Emperor Nero was still crucifying Christians in the Colosseum for the
amusement of the masses, the cross was an unpleasant reminder of the type of
death the Christians might expect, and the anchor was a more appropriate symbol
of their hope in the resurrection.
The symbolism of the anchor comes
from its obvious association with maritime practice. As the anchor was often a seaman’s last
resort in stormy weather, it was frequently connected with hope. Being made of a solid body, the anchor was
also identified with firmness, solidity, tranquility and faithfulness. The anchor remains firm and steady amidst the
stormy waters, symbolizing the stable part of a human being, that quality which
enables us to keep a clear mind amid the confusion of sensation, emotion and
the general “storms” of life. Therefore the anchor keeps us steady in the
storms of temptation, affliction, and persecution. Indeed St. Paul mentions that
“Which hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast” (Hebrews
6:19). Christ is sometimes referred to as the anchor in the sea of life. It could also be that the word “anchor” was
actually a word play in Greek—ankura resembling en kurio, or
"in the Lord”.
When sailors weigh anchor, the
heavy weight is raised from the sea floor where it has been keeping the ship
safe and stable in the midst of the stormy waters. Similarly, when we die, our soul may then
rise to heaven. Instead of keeping us firmly
grounded in this life, it may now rise up and allow us to move freely to the
next port-of-call, that of our heavenly home. The death of St. Clement clearly
presents to us this aspect of the anchor, and his feastday today is a wonderful
opportunity to renew our sense of hope in the goodness and mercy of God, our
final destination in these stormy seas we call Life.
Ss. Simon and Jude
The history of these two glorious
Apostles is summarized in the Fourth Lesson of today’s Matins. Here we learn that St. Simon was called
"the Zealous," and started his preaching in Egypt, while St. Jude was
the brother of James the Less, and began his evangelization in
Mesopotamia. That their names are
mentioned together in the Canon of the Mass, and that they are celebrated on
the same feastday, is due to their later meeting and work together in Persia,
as the Breviary recounts:
“They met
together afterwards in Persia, where they begat countless children in Jesus
Christ, spread the faith far and wide in those lands, amid raging heathens, and
glorified together by their teaching and miracles, and, in the end, by a
glorious martyrdom, the most holy Name of Jesus Christ.”
St. Simon is represented in art
with a saw, the instrument of his martyrdom.
For this reason he has been named the patron saint of sawyers, as well
as curriers and tanners. In Italy, he
has been confused with the “foletto”, a kind of holy goblin, because of a
similarity in names.
St. Jude is often depicted
holding an architect’s square, clearly representing him as one of the principle
builders of Christ’s Church. He often
holds a medallion of the Saviour and has a flame atop his head, signifying the
inspiration he received to write the Catholic Epistle of St. Jude, which forms
part of Holy Writ. This apostle was the
nephew of St. Joseph and thus the legal cousin of Our Lord. He is referred to by his compatriots, along
with his brother St. James, as one of the brethren of Jesus.
Over the years great popular devotion
has grown up around Saint Jude as the Patron Saint of Lost Causes, and praying
to Saint Jude has been proven to restore the most difficult of spiritual causes.
He is therefore an important saint in
our own times, as we struggle against all odds to preserve the traditions of Holy
Church.
The “City of St. Jude” in Alabama
is a Roman Catholic social-service
organization that was established in 1937 to provide medical, educational, and
spiritual assistance to African Americans in central Alabama. Founded by Father Harold Purcell, a Catholic
priest, the City of St. Jude was the first Catholic institution in the state of
Alabama dedicated exclusively to ministering to African Americans. The
organization played an important support role during the civil rights movement,
and it continues to provide services to African Americans in and around
Montgomery.
Not very far away in Memphis, Tennessee, is another famous monument to the
beneficence of St. Jude. It is of course
the famous St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital founded by entertainer Danny Thomas as
a research hospital, on the premise that "no child should die in the dawn
of life". This idea resulted from a
promise that Danny Thomas had made to St. Jude years before the hospital was
founded, when Thomas was a struggling comedian, living paycheck to paycheck.
When his first child was about to be born, he attended Mass in Detroit and put
his last $7 in the offering bin, praying to St. Jude for a means to provide for
his family. A week later, he was offered
a job that paid ten times what he had put in the offering bin. From that time on, Thomas believed in the
power of prayer, and promised St. Jude that if he made him successful, he would
one day build him a shrine. Years later, Danny Thomas became an extremely
successful comedian and built St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital as a shrine
to St. Jude to honor his promise.
The feastday of Ss. Simon and Jude falls just before the feasts of All Saints, with its Halloween vigil, and All Souls. From this old association with holy goblins and feasts of the dead, there has come down to us the tradition of preparing a cake often eaten in Scotland and England in honor of the saints Simon and Jude. In Scotland, it is known as a Dirge Cake, in England as a Soul Cake. Traditionally Christians used to begin to prepare food such as Bread of the Dead and Soul Cakes for the feast of All Souls beginning on the Feast of Saints Simon and Jude. These cakes were given in return for prayers for departed souls. In some areas people would beg for ingredients to make these cakes on this day. When All Souls Day arrived, children would go from home to home chanting:
“Soul! Soul! For a souling cake. I pray you, good missus, a souling cake! Apple, or pear, or plum, or cherry Anything good to make us merry.”
The Itinerarium
The Itinerarium
The last of October’s Angel
Feasts, St. Raphael, occurs today, and our Breviary and Mass readings are replete
with quotations from the Book of Tobit.
The story of Tobit and his son Tobias is worthy of a Hollywood movie and
I sometimes wonder (though not for very long after I think about Hollywood) why
one was never made.
In this story, Tobias is
conducted by a young man named Ananias on a journey filled with dangers and
adventures. Among other things, Ananias
drives out an evil spirit from the fiancée of Tobias and also rescues Tobias
from being devoured by a large fish. After
he safely leads Tobias back home with the means to cure his aged father of
blindness, Ananias finally reveals himself to be the Angel Raphael sent from
God. Because of his task in conducting
Tobias safely on his adventures and then back home again, St. Raphael has been
named by the Church as the Patron of Travelers.
We often invoke St. Raphael and
our Guardian Angels to keep us safe on our travels. After many years of traveling, and many trips
in the cars of fellow Catholics, I can vouchsafe that there are dozens of
different prayers used to draw down their protection on our journeys. However, the Church has given us an official Prayer Before a Journey for use at these
times, and it is contained in the Roman Breviary. It is called the Itinerarium.
The Itinerarium is a form of prayer
used by monks and clerics before setting out on a journey, and for that reason
usually printed at the end of the Breviary, where it can be conveniently found
when required. Most probably the use of
such prayers originated in monastic observance. The early rules of the Fathers of the Desert lay
down very specific rules for the behaviour of monks when travelling. When St. Benedict wrote his Rule he specified
that when any of the brethren were to be sent on a journey, they should, before
setting out, commend themselves to the prayers of the abbot and community, by
whom they were to be remembered daily during their absence from the monastery. According to monastic tradition, if the
absence were to be only a short one, i.e. if they were to return the same or
the following day, they merely asked the abbot’s blessing, usually at the
conclusion of one of the canonical hours, and then requested the prayers of the
community.
But if the journey was, to occupy
a longer time, a more solemn form of itinerarium was customary. Kneeling or
lying prostrate at the altar steps, some versicles and prayers were recited
over them by the abbot, who then dismissed the travellers with his blessing and
the kiss of peace. This was most likely
the origin of the itinerarium as we have it at present. The duty of a community to pray for those who
may be travelling is fulfilled at the present day by the versicle Divinum auxilium, (May help divine be
with us all, forever abiding) said for absent brethren at the end of each of
the canonical hours.
The inclusion of the Itinerarium
in the secular Roman Breviary indicates that its use is at least recommended to
all clerics, though not obligatory. It consists of the
canticle Benedictus with antiphon,
certain versicles, and several collects. Two of these latter are very ancient, being
found in the Gregorian Sacramentary.
The Itinerarium may be found on our
Breviary Online by clicking on the link to Other
Prayers of the Roman Breviary and then on the link to Prayer Before a Journey. Alternatively,
enter the following address:
The Venerable English College in Rome
About the same time Pope Gregory
XIII called on three of his cardinals to establish a commission which would
eventually become the Propaganda Fide (see yesterday’s Et Reliqua), he was busy also founding several national “colleges”
or seminaries in Rome. It had been the
wish of the Council of Trent to formalize the training of men for the
priesthood, and these national seminaries in Rome aimed to provide the highest
standards yet for the education of new priests.
One of these seminaries, the
English College, was founded in the year 1579 on the site of the English
Hospice of St. Thomas. This ancient hospice had been founded in 1362,
thus making the English College in Rome the oldest English institution outside
England.
The Hospice of St. Thomas
Rome was, of course, an important
centre of pilgrimage, especially with the proclamation of the Holy Years of
1300 and 1350. Over a million pilgrims are reported to have come to Rome during
the Jubilee of 1350 and the city seems to have been caught unaware - innkeepers
gave rooms designed to accommodate four people to groups of eight or more and
often treated the pilgrims with violence and extortion. A remedy was clearly necessary. By the
mid-fourteenth century some of the English in Rome organized themselves into a
Society or Guild. In 1362 an English
couple, John and Alice Shepherd, rosary sellers by trade, sold this Guild a
house on what is now the Via di Monserrato so as to provide lodgings for
English pellegrini and care for the "poor, infirm, needy and wretched
persons from England".
The Hospice of St Thomas grew
into an important centre for the English in Rome. In
1376 a chapel was built on the site of the present College church. It attracted
royal patronage, and by the reign of Henry VII it had become known as "The
King's Hospice", with a warden appointed by the Crown.
The wardens included Thomas
Linacre, founder of the Royal College of Physicians, and Cardinal Christopher
Bainbridge, Archbishop of York and Papal Legate, who was poisoned by one of his
chaplains at the Hospice on 7 July 1514 and whose magnificent tomb remains in
the College church to this day.
Foundation of the English
College (1579)
The religious settlement of 1559
and the sheer length of Elizabeth I's reign (1558-1603) contributed greatly to
the success of the Protestant Reformation in England. The Government hoped that
Catholicism would gradually fade from memory as the Marian priests died out and
people found compulsory attendance at the parish church a more attractive
option to financial penalties or social marginalization. Catholics were still a
substantial minority, especially at Court (for example William Byrd, the
composer), but they increasingly found it difficult to find priests.
The situation was largely changed
by Cardinal William Allen, the founder of a system of English seminaries
overseas which would provide the struggling Catholic Church in England with an
orthodox education and new blood in the form of priests. In 1568 he founded the first of these colleges
at Douai in Flanders, which already had 240 students by the mid 1570s. Then, in 1576, he converted the moribund
English Hospice in Rome into a seminary. Its first students arrived there from Douai in
1577 and Gregory XIII issued the Bull of Foundation in 1579. The Pope gave the new English College a yearly
grant and property, including the Abbey of San Savino at Piacenza. Moreover,
the tradition of hospitality continued, and the College received many famous
guests, among them the poet John Milton (1638).
The College has been known as the
"Venerable English College" since 1818 because of the 44 students who
were martyred for the Catholic faith between 1581 and 1679, as well as the 130
who suffered imprisonment and exile. 41
of these have since been beatified by the Church.
The College's
"Protomartyr" was Blessed Ralph Sherwin. He was born in Roddesley, Derbyshire, around
1550 and educated at Exeter College, Oxford, before leaving for Douai and then
Rome. His name stands first in the
famous Liber Ruber (a list of students who took the missionary oath in Rome
before returning to England), where he is recorded as saying that he was ready,
"today rather than tomorrow, at a sign from his superiors to go into
England for the helping of souls".
His time soon came, and within
four months of landing he was captured, imprisoned, tortured and finally
hanged, drawn and quartered at Tyburn on 1 December 1581. Many others followed
- including the Blessed Robert Southwell, the Jesuit poet (1595) and Blessed Henry
Morse, the "Priest of the Plague" (1645). The last College martyrdoms
were in 1679 during the anti-Catholic hysteria following the "Popish
Plot", when Bl. David Lewis, Bl. John Wall and Bl. Anthony Turner
suffered.
The College soon gained a reputation as a nursery of martyrs. A custom arose of a student preaching before the Pope every St Stephen's Day on the theme of martyrdom - Bl. John Cornelius called the College the "Pontifical Seminary of Martyrs" in his St Stephen's sermon of 1581. St Philip Neri, the "Second Apostle of Rome", who lived opposite the College at S.Girolamo della Carità, used to greet the students with the words Salvete flores martyrum (Hail! flowers of the martyrs), and the great Oratorian historian, Cardinal Cesare Baronio, paid tribute to the English martyrs in his 1585 revision of the martyrology. In the College church Pomarancio painted a series of frescoes of English saints and martyrs which began with St Joseph of Arimathea's supposed visit to England and ended with the College martyrs, their sufferings shown in graphic detail. Copies of these frescoes can be seen in the tribune, and afforded important evidence of contemporary veneration of the martyrs during the process of their beatification.

"The Martyrs' Picture” is
the first thing one notices upon entering the College church. It was painted by
Durante Alberti in 1580, just after the foundation of the College, and depicts
the Blessed Trinity with two English martyrs: St Thomas of Canterbury on the left hand side
and St Edmund, King of East Anglia, on the right. Blood from Christ's wounds is shown falling
onto a map of the British Isles, and from this blood fire is springing up. This ties in with the College motto, held by a
cherub: Ignem veni mittere in terram (I have come to bring fire to the
earth). According to tradition, students
gathered around this picture to sing a Te
Deum whenever news reached Rome of a martyrdom of a former student. This custom continues today when the Te Deum is sung in front of the painting
on 1 December, "Martyrs' Day”.
The Second World War resulted in
a period of exile for the College. Dressed
in civilian clothes, the house left Rome on 16 May 1940 and narrowly secured
places on the last boat for England from Le Havre, which was about to fall. The
College buildings were used as a hospital organized by the Knights of Malta
from 1941 to 1944. Students continued classes and seminary life first at
Ambleside in the Lake District and then at the Jesuit school of Stonyhurst. Students returned to Rome in the autumn of
1946.
The English and Welsh bishops
stayed at the College during the Second Vatican Council (1962-65), as they had
done during the First Vatican Council (1869-70). I note with dismay that the seminarians today are
actually forbidden to wear the cassock when in the seminary, and can’t help
wondering what their venerable and blessed predecessors must be thinking from their thrones in heaven
when they see that what was once forbidden in their homeland by heretics and
persecutors of the faith is now forbidden by the authorities of the very Church
they died for. How the tables have
turned.

My recent visit to the Venerable
English College was fortunately not fraught with danger in spite of my cassock,
and I was swiftly shown into the chapel which is worth a side trip for anyone
who happens to be visiting Rome. Recently restored, the chapel reveals all its
glory with lighting arranged most tastefully and to full effect. Like so many ancient Roman churches, the symmetry
and artistic beauty has been completely upset by the removal of the old altar
and its replacement by a functional modern block protruding in the middle of
the sanctuary like a pimple on the Mona Lisa.
One has to try and put it out of mind, and instead look up to the
exquisite architecture of the rest of the chapel. It is interesting that no pictures are on
display showing what the chapel looked like before the post Vatican II philistines
did their ugly work. One is reminded of
Orwell’s 1984 and the deliberate destruction of historical evidence. A certain amount of hope may be attached to
the fact that many of the young seminarians today are far more Catholic in
their attitudes, outlook and indeed, faith, than their tired old liberal professors
who wore out their welcome long ago.
In short, it was delightful to see the results of the restoration work to the chapel and its artwork. But we would now like to see a similar restoration of the traditional Mass and the Faith that goes with it. Let’s start by heaving out that ugly butcher’s block of an altar, and digging up the old one from its resting place. Then maybe the English Martyrs will once again smile down on their Alma Mater and bestow their much needed blessings for the conversion of England.
Mission Sunday & Propaganda Fide
Apart from being the 21st
Sunday after Pentecost yesterday, it was also the second last Sunday in
October. This Sunday has been designated
by Pope Pius XI as Mission Sunday. On
this day we pray for the advancement of the work of the Propagation of the Faith,
or Propaganda Fide, and some of you
may have noticed the addition of a fourth Collect at Mass for this very reason. The Church further emphasizes the importance
of its missionary work by granting a Plenary Indulgence on Mission Sunday to all
the faithful who approach the Sacrament and pray for the conversion of unbelievers.
The Church’s missionary work falls under the jurisdiction of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, known for short as Propaganda Fide. It has its headquarters on the site of the former Palazzo Ferratini on the south side of the Piazza di Spagna in Rome, and close to the famous Spanish Steps. The Palace is one of the few remaining buildings in Rome outside Vatican City which is still considered Vatican territory and not Italian.

In the sixteenth and early
seventeenth centuries, Rome saw clearly the ever-greater need to provide an
organized Congregation that would oversee the spread of Catholicism around the
globe. The faith had been severely
eroded in Europe thanks to the protestant revolt, and now to make matters
worse, two of the countries who had left the faith, England and Holland, were establishing
huge global empires and spreading their errors across the world. Pope Gregory XIII (1572-85) established a commission
of three cardinals whose chief task was to promote the union of the oriental
churches with Rome. They had some success
with the return to Rome of the nation of Ruthenia.
Although it had already been
functioning in a semi-informal manner, it was Pope Gregory XV (1621-23) who officially
founded the Congregation as the overseer of missionary work on behalf of the
various missionary institutions. It was,
appropriately enough, on the feast of the Epiphany, January 6, 1622 that Pope
Gregory summoned thirteen cardinals and two prelates, and gave them the task of
organizing and running the new Congregation.
Sadly, he died before the work had been completed. However, his successor, Urban VIII (1623-44),
who as Cardinal Barberini had been one of the thirteen founding cardinals, was committed
to the completion of his predecessor’s project.
Urban VIII was inspired by the
success of the various national colleges in Rome which had been founded after
the Council of Trent to train priests who had no seminaries in their own
country. The English College in Rome is
one famous example, and after ordination, its priests would be smuggled into
the virulently anti-Catholic England of the first Queen Elizabeth, often to
meet their death on Tyburn Tree. Hoping
to apply the success of these national seminaries in a wider sphere, Pope Urban
founded a missionary seminary in Rome in 1627, which was named the Collegium Urbanum after him, and which
was placed under the direction of Propaganda
Fide. The work of the Congregation
began to spread quickly, and eventually had to be divided amongst a variety of
smaller commissions, although still under the umbrella of Propaganda Fide.
At first, the work of the
Congregation was extended to almost all countries that were non-Catholic. Thus the United States and Canada, Great
Britain, the protestant kingdoms, principalities and duchies of what is now
Germany, Luxembourg and Switzerland, Scandinavia, Holland and so on, were all
territories under the charge of Propaganda
Fide. Eventually in 1908, Pope St.
Pius X removed countries that had their own Catholic hierarchy established, and
so the USA, Canada, Britain and Holland left the list of nations under the care
of the Congregation. This might explain
why I could not get directions to the English College in Rome when I knocked on
the door of the Palace of the Propaganda Fide a couple of weeks ago. The guard was very pleasant and was able to
give good directions to some of the better local restaurants. But even when he called inside the palace on
his cell phone to ask around, alas, the location of one of the greatest of the
national missionary colleges was now unknown to the Sacred Congregation of the
Propaganda Fide.
Inside the Palace today, the
Congregation possesses an important cabinet of medals and many ethnological
curiosities sent as gifts by missionaries in far distant lands. Scattered through the Palace of Propaganda
are many valuable paintings of the old masters. Propaganda also conducted, until the early
twentieth century, the famous Polyglot printing press whence, for some
centuries, issued liturgical and catechetical books, printed in a multitude of
alphabets. Among its most noteworthy curios is a Japanese alphabet in wooden
blocks, one of the first seen in Europe.
The Catholic Encyclopedia notes
the following noteworthy customs of the Propaganda Fide, although it is unclear
if these traditions have survived to the present day:
“One of the customs of
Propaganda, worthy of special mention, is the gift of a fan to all employees at
the beginning of the summer. This custom appears to have arisen in the early
days, when fans were sent from China by the missionaries. It is customary for the Urban College to hold,
at Epiphany, a solemn "Accademia Polyglotta", to symbolize the
world-wide unity of the Catholic Church. At this accademia the
Propaganda students recite poems in their respective mother tongues. Invited
guests always find it very interesting to listen to this medley of the
strangest languages and dialects. Another custom of the Urban College is that
every graduate student (alumno), wherever he may be in the pursuit of
his ministry, is bound to write every year a letter to the cardinal prefect, to
let him know how the writer's work is progressing and how he fares himself. The
cardinal answers immediately, in a letter of paternal encouragement and
counsel. By this means there is maintained a bond of affection and of mutual
goodwill between the "great mother" — as the
"Propagandists", or the alumni of Propaganda,
designate the congregation — and her most distant sons.”
In 1982 John Paul II renamed Propaganda Fide, and it is known today
as the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples. Although it claims to maintain its original
mission unbroken, the emphasis these days appears to be directed away from the
conversion of protestants and other non-Catholics, and more towards the spread
of the faith among the far-flung pagan tribes of the various third world
countries. Of course other more trendy
notions have crept in to the work of Propaganda,
and social issues such as the spread of democracy and women’s rights appear to
be gaining prominence. We shall leave
history to resolve this mounting problem.
Our own Confraternity of Ss. Peter
& Paul is very much concerned with the conversion of non-Catholics, and we
observe the Chair of Unity Octave in January in a very special way. We are chiefly concerned these days with the
spread of modernism within the Church, and ask you during this week following
Mission Sunday to pray for the conversion of modernists everywhere, and
especially those within the clergy and hierarchy of the Church. There is urgent work remaining for Propaganda Fide, and unfortunately they no
longer need to look far beyond the Spanish Steps to find it.

