
24 Aug
2019

21 Aug
2019

20 Aug
2019

19 Aug
2019

Canon Jean Marie Moreau of the Institute of Christ the King is visiting the United States. He’ll be saying Mass at Church of the Holy Innocents, New York at 6:00 PM on Wednesday, August 21st and again on Thursday, August 22nd. There will be a small reception after Mass at Holy Innocents on Wednesday. He wants to be sure that all of you, his friends, know about his visit.
Canon Moreau was pastor of St. Antony of Padua Oratory in West Orange until he was transferred to an assignment on the island of Mauritius in 2016

1 Aug
2019

There will also be a traditional Mass for this Feast Day at St. Mary Church, Greenwich, CT, at 7:30 pm.
31 Jul
2019
This Saturday at there will be a solemn high Mass in honor of St Rocco at 4 pm at the church of St Rocco in Glen Cove on Long Island. (Near LIRR station.)
This is part of their big annual St Rocco feast celebration with amazing food made by Italian grandmas, rides, games, etc. They have beautiful religious events every night during the feast, and this annual High Mass is the highlight.
More information about the feast: https://www.glencovecatholic.org/feast-of-saint-rocco

29 Jul
2019

Hosted by Adeste Fideles Fellowship Long Island:
Curious about the Latin Mass? Long time lover of the traditional liturgy? This is perfect for you!
Please join us on Wednesday, August 14th at 7:30 at Saint Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church in Babylon, NY for Mass and free dinner.
August 14 is the feast of Saint Arnold, the patron of Beer and Brewers! We will all be going out after to celebrate him with a drink. In observation of current canon law, the Mass will count as fulfilling your obligation for the Assumption the following day.
Hope to see you all there. Bring a friend!
**Older Catholics, please respect that this is a young adult event.
29 Jul
2019

This Thursday, August 15, is the Solemnity of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, a holy day of obligation. The following churches will offer traditional Masses:
St. Mary Church, Norwalk, CT, Solemn Mass, 6 pm, followed by a parish picnic. The church will provide hamburgers and hot dogs. Bring a dessert or side dish to share plus a drink of your choice.
St. Pius X Church, Fairfield, CT, 7:30 pm
St. Patrick Church, Bridgeport, CT, 7 am low Mass; 6 pm Missa Cantata
Sts. Cyril and Methodius Oratory, Bridgeport, CT, Missa Cantata, 6 pm
St. Stanislaus Church, New Haven, 5:30 pm low Mass
St. Francis Church, New Britain, CT, 7 pm
St. Martha Church, Enfield, CT, 7 pm
Holy Innocents, New York, 8 am and 6 pm
Our Lady of Mount Carmel, 448 E. 116th St., New York, Low Mass at 7:45 am; Missa Cantata at 7:30 pm; blessing of fruits, herbs and flowers at 8:30 pm.
St. Josaphat, Bayside, Queens, NY, 7:30 pm
Immaculate Conception, Sleepy Hollow, NY, 7 pm
St. Paul the Apostle, Yonkers, NY, 12 noon.
Our Lady of the Way Chapel at the Culinary Institute, Hyde Park NY at 12:00. Enter the campus at the north gate from Rt 9.
St. Joseph Church, Babylon, NY, Wednesday, August 14 (fulfills feast day obligation) 7:30 pm, Young Adult Mass and social
St. Matthew, Dix Hills, NY, 10:30 am
St. Rocco, Glen Cove, NY , 7:30 pm
Assumption Church, 344 Pacific Ave., Jersey City, 6 pm
St. Anthony of Padua Oratory, West Orange, NJ , 9 am, 7 pm Missa Cantata
Our Lady of Fatima Chapel, Pequannock, NJ, 7 am, 8 am, 12 noon, 7 pm
Corpus Christi Church, South River, NJ, 7 pm
Church of St. Catherine Laboure, 130 Bray Ave., Middletown, NJ, 9 am, Low Mass
Shrine of the Blessed Sacrament, Raritan, NJ, 5 pm
27 Jul
2019

Yesterday evening the Society sponsored a Solemn High Mass for the Feast of St. Ann at the church of the Immaculate Conception on East 14th Street in New York City. Father Richard Cipolla was the celebrant and delivered the sermon:
Sermon for St. Ann’s Day 2019
In July of 1931, the New York World-Telegram reported about the miraculous cure of the young son of Hugh F. Gaffney. The boy, who lived at 348 East 18thStreet, was stricken with paralysis. A relic of St. Ann, namely the bone of a finger, was brought to his hospital bed, where, according to the newspaper, after being touched by the bone, the invalid was cured. The thought that a New York newspaper today would print such a story boggles the mind. Militant secularism under the guise of liberalism, a liberalism that barely tolerates the Catholic Church, would see this as fake news and perhaps harmful to its world picture.
St. Ann’s church was located just a couple of blocks from this church, on East 12thStreet. The building had an interesting history: Baptist church, Episcopal Church, Jewish Synagogue, and then Catholic church. When the church became too small for the size of the parish, the decision was made to rebuild the entire church in the French gothic style but to keep the original façade. The new church was dedicated in 1871, and the New York Times called it “among the most beautiful and costly churches in this City”. They compared it to the elegant and fashionable Grace Episcopal church in the same area of the City, which, by the way is still standing as we speak. Alas, St. Ann’s fell victim to a decision of the Archdiocese of New York to close the parish and to sell the property. The property was bought by a developer in 2005. The church was demolished, despite outcries from preservationist and local residents, and on that site NYU built a 26 story dormitory. As a sop to the preservationists, NYU kept part of the façade of St. Ann’s, and it stands there today, as someone in a guide to New York City said, like a “majestic elk, shot and stuffed”.
One of the glories of St. Ann’s was a relic of a finger of St. Ann, to which was attributed the healing we spoke about earlier. The finger of St. Ann. In the first place who is Saint Ann? Every one here who is Catholic would reply immediately: Saint Ann is the mother of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and the name of her husband is Joachim. But how do we know these names of this woman and this man? They are not found in the Gospels nor in any other part of the New Testament. The names and stories about Ann and Joachim come from the apocryphal literature of the second century, books written in Greek with stories about Mary and Jesus, that the Church never accepted as part of what we know as Scripture.
The Church Fathers in the West denied their validity for any basis of teaching about the Christian faith. But they were widely read in the East. In one of these apocryphal texts called the Protoevangelium of James we read the charming story of Ann, called Hannah, and Joachim. They were childless, and Joachim understood this as a reproach from God upon himself. They prayed fervently for a child, and, like Hannah in the Old Testament prayed for a child, their prayer was answered, and that child was Mary. The parallel between the story of Ann and Joachim in the Protoevangelium and Hannah in the Old Testament, who bore Samuel in her old age, is striking.
The cult of Saint Ann begins in the East and by the fourth century the emperor Justinian dedicated a church to St. Ann. In the West the cult of St. Ann does not appear until the eleventh century, but from that point on St. Ann becomes one of the most popular of the saints in the West. And it is the immigrants from Europe in the latter part of the nineteenth century and early part of the twentieth century who brought this devotion to our own country and hence to the great parish of Saint Ann’s on East 12h Street.
The finger of St. Ann. What can this mean if the origin of the person of St. Ann comes from a book of the second century that was not approved by the Church as a source of the teaching of the faith? The answer to this question lies in the meaning of Sacred Tradition. Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof had a wonderful sense of tradition, as we hear in that memorable song from the musical. But that is not what we are talking about. Our understanding of Sacred Tradition is what has been handed down to us both orally and written from the time of the Apostle to the present time. In a way, Scripture is the center of Sacred Tradition and certainly its foundation. But we must remember that Sacred Tradition is something living, something dynamic, that grows and develops in the power of the presence of the Holy Spirit in the Church. Sacred Tradition is built on Truth, not Truth in general, but on the Truth who is the person of Jesus Christ, true God and true man. And so what is contained in Sacred Tradition, its stuff, so to speak can never be denied or changed. It is true that there is a development of doctrine within Sacred Tradition, but that development can never deny the Truth that lies at the heart of the development.
The content of Tradition is not merely the teaching of the Church through 2000 years. That certainly is an integral part of Tradition. But the worship of the Church is also a vital part of Sacred Tradition. In a real sense the worship of the Church is the womb of the unfolding of Tradition and the development of dogma.
First came the feast celebrated in the Church of the Falling Asleep of the Blessed Virgin Mary as early as the fifth century in the East. The fruit of celebrating this feast is the definition in 1950 of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary into heaven. The feast of the Conception of the Virgin Mary was already celebrated in Syria in the fifth century. Theological debate went on about this doctrine for 1300 years. But this debate occurred while the feast of the Conception was celebrated throughout the Christian world. And the fruit of the celebration of this feast in the Liturgy through the centuries enabled Pope Pius IX to solemnly define the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
The Traditional Roman Mass that we celebrate here this evening lies at the heart of Catholic Tradition. It is the binding force of Tradition, the womb of Tradition, the life-blood of Tradition. And it was one of glories of St. Ann’s parish that it was one of only three parishes in Manhattan where the Traditional Roman Mass was celebrated on a regular basis.
By the time the feast of St. Ann was made part of the universal calendar of the Catholic Church in the fifteenth century, the reality of St. Ann had permeated the Church in prayer and in the worship of the Church. St. Ann had become part of Sacred Tradition. She became part of the Tradition because she was authentic. She was real. That her earthly origin lies in an apocryphal book of the second century does not take away from her realness as a woman saint who became an important element in Sacred Tradition. The countless people who asked for her prayers in times of need recognized her as real and as a saint. The people who gathered for devotions to St. Ann and who sang hymns about her knew that they were singing about Mary’s mother.
And so we come back to the relic of the finger of St. Ann. Is this authentic? Is it real? The answer to this question is what we are doing here this very evening: celebrating her feast as the mother of the Virgin Mary within the glory and beauty of this Mass that lies at the very heart of Sacred Tradition. St. Ann, pray for us.



Father Michael Novajosky served as Deacon and Father Donald Kloster was the subdeacon. William V. Riccio, Jr. was, as always, a masterful Master of Ceremonies. He and the three sacred ministers had an arduous two hour drive to get to New York.
James D. Wetzel was Director of Music and Organist, leading the Schola Cantorum of Saint Vincent Ferrer in a marvelous musical evening. The setting of the Mass Ordinary was Palestrina’s Missa Salve Regina.
We would also like to thank for this wonderful evening Monsignor Kevin J. Nelan, Pastor of the Parish of the Immaculate Conception, and Manny Albino and the people of the parish for their hospitality (Manny also led the altar servers).




26 Jul
2019
This Sunday ONLY, July 28, the traditional Mass at Immaculate Conception Church in Sleepy Hollow, NY, will be at 1:30 instead of 3 pm. The following Sunday, Mass will resume at 3 pm.