Midnight Mass at St Mary’s Norwalk, 2017.

Leading the rosary before the start of the service.

Singing of Carols before the mass.
17 Dec
2017
13 Dec
2017

(Above) An image of Our Lady of Guadalupe at Immaculate Conception church.
Yesterday a large congregation was present for the festive celebration of the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, organized by the Society of St Hugh of Cluny and made possible by the generosity of the late Msgr. Ignacio Barreiro. How inspiring to experience the return of the traditional liturgy to the “upper church” after an absence of so many decades! We have to thank this parish and in particular the indefatigable Manny Albino (who also served as subdeacon) for making this evening possible. Bill Riccio, who served as MC along with Eddy Toribio, did his accustomed magnificent work in surmounting all kinds of difficulties, major and minor, to assure the smooth and polished execution of the ceremonial. Two young priests, Fr. Robert Rodriguez (New York) and Fr. Joseph Zwosta (Brooklyn) served as celebrant and deacon, respectively – Fr. Rodriguez preached in English and Spanish. I’d also like to thank the servers, from several different parishes, who contributed their time.
Integral to this liturgy was the performance of rare music from 18th century Mexico composed by Ignacio de Jerusalem. We understand his Masses were heard, not just in Mexico City, but in the missions of California! This unusual repertoire had been graciously made available to us by a leading scholar of the music of de Jerusalem, Prof. Craig Russell. Charles Weaver did an incredible job in organizing the music for the mass and assembling the instrumentalists – and also performing himself. James Wetzel, music director at St. Vincent Ferrer, led the singers and orchestral forces with his customary professionalism and skill.
Finally, we have to thank the members of Immaculate Conception parish for organizing the festive reception after the mass. It was an appropriate conclusion to this memorable evening!

(Above) The remarkable if little known church of the Immaculate Conception (once the Episcopalian “Grace chapel”) as seen earlier that afternoon.
13 Dec
2017
10 Dec
2017
Two churches in Connecticut will have Rorate Masses in honor of Our Lady early next Saturday morning, December 16.
St. Mary Church, Norwalk, 6:30 am
St. Mary Church, Greenwich, 6:30 am.
This notice in the St. Mary Norwalk bulletin explains what a Rorate Mass is:
“Rorate” comes from the Introit of the day: “Drop down ye heavens from above…” This is a Mass celebrated in honor of our Lady on a Saturday in Advent. This Mass is always done in darkness with only candlelight. Ideally the sun should begin to rise at the Consecration. This year sunrise is at 7:14 am, so that starting the Mass at 6:30, the dawn will indeed begin to show her roseate face when the Body of Christ is lifted up to be adored.
There are also Rorate Masses scheduled this week at the Church of the Holy Innocents in New York: see https://sthughofcluny.org/2017/11/rorate-masses-at-church-of-holy-innocents.html
Rorate Mass at St. Mary Church, Greenwich, 2015
8 Dec
2017
3 Dec
2017
Connecticut
St. Marguerite Bourgeoys, Brookfield
Christmas Day: Traditional Latin Mass 12:30 PM in chapel
St. Mary Church, Norwalk, CT, 12 midnight, Solemn Midnight Mass (11 pm Rosary by the Creche, 11:30 pm carols); 9:30 am Solemn Mass for Christmas Day.
Sts. Cyril and Methodius Church, Bridgeport, CT, Midnight (11:45 procession to the Crèche); 8:30 Mass at Dawn Low Mass; 10:15 Mass for the Day High Mass. (Beginning on December 31, the church will have a Low Mass at 8:30 am every Sunday in addition to the 10:15 High Mass)
St. Stanislaus Church, New Haven, Missa Cantata, 2 pm.
St Martha’s Church, Enfield, High Mass at midnight and a low Mass at 11 AM Christmas Day.
New York
Sacred Heart Church, Albany
Christmas Midnight Mass, Sacred Heart Church Hall
St. Matthew, 35 North Service Road, Dix Hills (Long Island)
Monday, December 25th, Traditional Latin High Mass 12:30 P.M. in the
Parish Center Chapel
St. Ladislaus, Hempstead (Long Island)
Christmas Day, 9:00 AM
St. Rocco, 18 Third St., Glen Cove (Long Island), 11:30 pm carols followed by Midnight Mass.
Church of the Holy Innocents, New York, 12 midnight, Traditional High Mass (followed by a festive reception in the parish hall); 2:30 am, Mass at Dawn (Low Mass); 9 am, Traditional Low Mass, 10:30 am Traditional High Mass.
St. Catherine of Siena Church, New York, Missa Cantata in the Dominican Rite for Christmas, 12 Midnight. Featuring Tomas luis de Victoria’s Missa Alma Redemptoris
Pontifical Shrine of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, New York, 10:25 am, Missa Cantata.
St. Agnes Church, New York, 9 am.
Our Lady of Peace Church, 522 Carroll St, Brooklyn,
High Mass, 9:30 am.
Church of Saint Anthony, 1496 Commonwealth Avenue, Bronx, 12:00 midnight, High Mass. The celebrant will be the parochial administrator, Fr. Louis Anderson. His sermon will be given in both English and Spanish.
Immaculate Conception Church, Sleepy Hollow, NY, Dec 24. 1:30 pm Low Mass Vigil of Christmas; Dec 25. 1:30pm Sung Mass.
St. Patrick Church, Newburgh, NY, 3 pm.
New Jersey
St. John the Baptist, Allentown
Midnight Solemn High Mass – Vierne’s Missa Solennelle
Sacred Heart, Clifton
Christmas Day 8:00 AM
Our Lady of Victories, Harrington Park
Christmas Eve: 9:00 PM Sung Latin Mass
Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church, 259 Oliver Street, Newark
Solemn Mass at midnight.
The mass will be of Franz Schubert in G. After mass there will be coffee and refreshments in the rectory.
St. Anthony of Padua, Jersey City, Dec. 24, 9 pm, Mass of the Shepherds; Dec. 25, 9 am.
St. Catherine Laboure, Middletown
Christmas Day 8:45 am Traditional Latin Sung High Mass
Chapel of Our Lady of Fatima, 32 West Franklin Ave., Pequannock
Sunday, December 24,
Christmas Carols at 11:00 PM on the evening
Monday, December 25th
CHRISTMAS MIDNIGHT MASS 12:00 AM
CHRISTMAS DAY MASS AT DAWN 7:00 AM
CHRISTMAS DAY MASS OF THE DAY 9:00 AM
CHRISTMAS DAY MASS OF THE DAY 11:00 AM
St. Anthony of Padua Oratory, West Orange
Sunday, Dec. 24th CHRISTMAS EVE
9:30 pm Confessions,
10:30 pm Traditional Christmas Carols
11:00 pm Solemn High Midnight Mass (First Mass of Christmas)
Monday, Dec. 25th CHRISTMAS DAY
7:30 am Low Mass (Second Mass of Christmas)
9:00 am Low Mass (Second Mass of Christmas)
11:00 am High Mass (Third Mass of Christmas)
January 1st, Octave of Christmas Schedule:
St. Mary Church, Norwalk, CT, 9 am.
St. Stanislaus Church, New Haven, low Mass, 2 pm.
Church of the Holy Innocents, New York, on December 31: 4 pm to 11pm exposition of the Blessed Sacrament; 11pm singing the Te Deum followed by Benediction; 11:30 pm, Mass of Reparation (Missa Cantata); Monday, Jan. 1, 9 am low Mass, 10:30 am high Mass.
Church of St. Agnes, New York, Missa Cantata, 10:30 am followed by the singing of Veni Creator Spiritus.
Immaculate Conception Church, Sleepy Hollow, NY, 3 pm low Mass.
St. Patrick Church, Newburgh, NY, 3 pm.
Stained glass window from the Church of the Incarnation, Washington Heights, New York
3 Dec
2017

(Above)Stained glass window in the Cathedral of St. James, Brooklyn.
Friday, December 8th, is the Feast of the Immaculate Conception, a holy day of obligation. The following churches have scheduled traditional Masses.
St. Mary Church, Norwalk, CT, Low Mass 7:30 am; Solemn Mass 5:30 pm.
Sts. Cyril and Methodius Church, Bridgeport, CT, 7:45 am Low Mass, 6:00 pm High Mass (Consecration to the Immaculate Conception prior to Mass)
St Martha Church, 214 Brainard Rd, Enfield, CT, 5:30 pm.
Our Lady of Lourdes, 1650 Route 12, Gales Ferry, CT, 8:00 am.
Holy Innocents Church, NY, Low Mass 8 am, Missa Cantata, 6 pm.
Pontifical Shrine of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, NY, Low Mass, 7:45 am; Solemn Mass, 7:30 pm. After the 7:30 pm Mass there will be the National Night of Prayer for Life concluding at 5 am with a Rorate Mass. information
Immaculate Conception, Sleepy Hollow, NY, 7 pm, Low Mass.
St. Matthew Church, Dix Hills, NY (Long Island), Missa Cantata, 10:30 am.
St. Anthony of Padua, Jersey City, 8:00 pm.
Oratory of St. Anthony Of Padua, West Orange, NJ, 7 pm.
Our Lady of Victories, Harrington Park, NJ, 6 pm
3 Dec
2017
On Tuesday December 12 at 7:00 PM the Society of St. Hugh of Cluny will be sponsoring a Solemn High Mass for the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe at the Church of the Immaculate Conception, 414 East 14th Street New York.
The music will be extraordinary: an orchestral mass and and selections from “Matins for the Virgin of Guadalupe” by Ignacio de Jerusalem, an 18th century composer from Lecce, Italy and Cadiz. He was active since the 1740’s in Mexico City, where he was chapel master at the cathedral. This will be a rare opportunity to hear this unique music from Spanish Mexico, a blend of European and local traditions! James Wetzel will direct and Charles Weaver will be among the performers.
After the Mass all are invited to a wine and cheese reception in the parish center.
Who was Ignacio de Jerusalem, the composer of the mass to be performed on December 12? Prof. Craig Russell, a leading expert on his music, provides more details:
Born on June 3, 1707 in Lecce, Italy, Ignacio de Jerusalem became an accomplished violinist and composer, eventually being enticed to move to Mexico through the efforts of Josef Cárdenas, the Administrator of the Royal Hospital of Indigenous Citizens in Mexico City. The Royal Hospital was a charitable institution and received its income through the ticket receipts of the major “Broadway” theater, the Coliseo. Cárdenas had argued persuasively that if the music resources at the Coliseo were made top-notch, then the income of the theater would flow in; Cárdenas embarked to Spain in 1742 and recruited a dozen impressive talents—the best of them being “the celebrated musical composer Ignacio de Jerusalem.” He directed the musical activities at the Coliseo upon his arrival, and by 1746 he was contracted by the Mexico City Cathedral to compose villancicos and instruct the children at the Colegio de Infantes (College of Noble Youths). His own son, Domingo, applied for entrance into the Colegio. In 1749 the Cathedral Chapter was frustrated to no end by the ineffectual leadership of the interim Chapel Master, Domingo Dutra. In 1750 they finally moved to resolve the issue by declaring the post vacant and having oposiciones (exams and contests) to determine the Chapel Master. The musical jurists—all trained in an older and more conservative style—were dumbfounded by many of Jerusalem’s solutions and compositions. They simply didn’t know what to think. On a split decision, they at last confirmed him as the new Chapel Master on November 3, 1750. The 1750s were bumpy years for Jerusalem: he became embroiled in a lawsuit with the tenant of the Coliseo, Joseph Calvo; Jerusalem’s wife, Doña Antonia de Estrada, moved out of the house and petitioned the Cathedral to garner some of Jerusalem’s wages; he attempted to squelch musicians from other parishes who were taking away some of the job opportunities from the Cathedral musicians; and he locked horns with the newly arrived Matheo Tollis de la Rocca who was a clear favorite of the vice-queen herself. By the last years of the decade, however, he had turned his ship around. He reformed antiquated notation practices by the Cathedral copyists, upgraded the quality of poetic texts that were to be set as villancicos, greatly expanded the size of the Cathedral orchestra, and composed at a prolific rate. By the time of his death on December 15, 1769, he had won the hearts and respect of his colleagues; he was eulogized by the Cathedral Chapter and was fondly remembered for many years after his death.
On December 12 the music will include excerpts from de Jerusalem’s Matins for the Virgin of Guadalupe. Prof. Russell describes it in these words:
Of course, you are probably wondering what makes Jerusalem’s Matins for Our Lady of Guadalupe important or worthy enough for a revival. What is it like? —Quite simply, it is fabulous! It is a glorious gem in the choral literature that resembles in scale, magnificence, and grandeur the operas of Alessandro Scarlatti, oratorios of Handel, or larger cantatas of Bach. It is chockful of varied styles, differing emotions, and multifarious moods. The main corpus of the composition features the full choir with orchestral accompaniment, and the styles run the gamut.
This mass will be celebrated for the soul of Msgr. Ignacio Barreiro, and is made possible in part by his generosity. He was at all times a great enthusiast of the history, art and culture of the Spanish-speaking world. Msgr. Barreiro died on April 13 of this year – we reprint his obituary:
Msgr. Barreiro was born in Montevideo, Uruguay, Oct. 22, 1947, the son of the late Antonio Barreiro Brunel and Margarita Blanca Carámbula Regules. Schooled in Uruguay, he obtained a law degree and joined the diplomatic service of his country, where he was eventually stationed at the United Nations in New York City from 1978-1983.
He entered the Seminary and College of St. Joseph (Dunwoodie) in 1983, and was ordained priest by John Cardinal O’Connor at St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Nov. 22, 1987.
After parish work in New York, he entered the University of the Holy Cross in Rome, where he earned a licentiate and eventually a doctorate in 1997. In September 1998, he was appointed the first director the Rome bureau of Human Life International (HLI), founded in that year. In 2010-11 he briefly served as interim president of HLI. In 2004 he was named chaplain of his holiness by Pope John Paul II.
In April 2016, he became the parochial vicar at St. Mary’s Church, Norwalk, where he ministered especially to the Hispanic and other ethnic communities that make up the parish.
From the day of his ordination, Msgr. Barreiro was always an avid supporter of the restoration of the traditional rites of the Church, and was a regular celebrant of what is now called the Extraordinary Form.
We hope many of you can make it to the Church of the Immaculate Conception for this beautiful mass in honor of Our Lady of Guadalupe! (As always, there is no “admission” charge – other than what you may wish to voluntarily give to support the parish and the celebration of such liturgies.)
29 Nov
2017
This year, the Church of the Holy Innocents in New York will have 10 Rorate Masses again during the first part of the holy season of Advent.
The Rorate Mass is a traditional Advent devotion wherein the Mass of the Blessed Virgin Mary for Advent is offered just before dawn. The Mass takes its title from the first words of the Introit (Rorate Caeli), which are from Isaiah 45:8:
“Rorate, caeli, … Drop down dew, ye heavens, from above, and let the clouds rain the just: let the earth be opened and bud forth a Saviour.”
The Rorate Mass is lit only by candlelight. Because it is a votive Mass in Mary’s honor, white vestments are worn instead of Advent violet. In the dimly lit setting, priests and faithful prepare to honor the Light of the world, Who is soon to be born, and offer praise to God for the gift of Our Lady. As the Mass proceeds and sunrise approaches, the church becomes progressively brighter, illumined by the sun as our Faith is illumined by Christ.
The readings and prayers of the Mass foretell the prophecy of the Virgin who would bear a Son called Emmanuel.
***The “Rorate Mass” will be celebrated at the Church of the Holy Innocents on the following days of Advent:
· Monday, December 4 – at 6AM
· Tuesday, December 5 – at 6AM
· Wednesday, December 6 – at 6AM
· Thursday, December 7 – at 6AM
· Saturday, December 9 – at 6AM
· Monday, December 11 – at 6AM
· Wednesday, December 13 – at 6AM
· Thursday, December 14 – at 6AM
· Friday, December 15 – at 6AM
· Saturday, December 16 – at 6AM