
This Friday, November 1 is All Saints Day, a holy day of obligation. November 2 is All Souls Day. We have posted a schedule of traditional Masses: Link
This Friday, November 1 is All Saints Day, a holy day of obligation. November 2 is All Souls Day. We have posted a schedule of traditional Masses: Link
27
Oct
On Sunday, October 27, a Solemn Mass for the Feast of Christ the King inaugurated the new apostolate of the Institute of Christ the King, Sovereign Priest in Waterbury, CT. St. Patrick’s is an old parish church in the post-industrial city of Waterbury, an old mill town that is blessed with a disproportionate number of magnificent churches. Completed in 1903, St Patrick’s is noteworthy for its interior decoration, which features windows made in 1906 by a New York studio. Uniquely in the United States, as far as I am aware, the inscriptions of the windows are in the Irish language.
The music for this Mass was partially funded by the Society of St. Hugh of Cluny—your generous donations have helped make this possible.
(Above) David Hughes directed the ensemble “Tolle Lege” in music including the Missa Aeterna Christi Munera by Palestrina.
(Above) The church had a full congregation for this occasion. It seemed to me that some were veteran Traditionalists who had come from elsewhere in the area, some had been part of the long-standing Latin Mass community of Waterbury and others had already been members of the community of St Patrick’s. And maybe a fourth group had attended out of curiosity.
(Above) Canon Matthew Talarico introduced the community to the Institute. (Below) Msgr. R Michael Schmitz gave the sermon. Msgr Schmitz was the celebrant of the liturgy; Canon Talarico was deacon and Canon Joel Estrada ( the new pastor of St. Patrick’s) was subdeacon.
26
Oct
It’s off the record, on the QT, and very hush-hush… our coverage of the visit of Bishop Athanasius Schneider to Providence, Rhode Island to ordain a priest for the Fraternity of St Peter today.
24
Oct
St. Paul’s Church in Yonkers, NY will observe Forty Hours Devotion beginning at 12:15 pm, Sunday, October 27 to Tuesday, October 29.
Latin Mass will be celebrated on Sunday at 2:30 pm in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament.
The hours are as follows:
Sunday: Opening Mass at 12:15. Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament until 10 Pm.
Monday: Adoration continues after the 9 am Mass until 10 pm.
Tuesday: Adoration continues after the 9 am Mass until the closing Mass at 7 pm.
The Church of the Holy Innocents will start its annual Forty Hours Devotion this coming Friday, October 25, 2019.
First Day: The opening Mass will be on Friday, October 25 at 6PM, and it will be a Votive Mass of the Most Blessed Sacrament. At the end of the opening Mass, the Blessed Sacrament will be solemnly exposed, there will be a Eucharistic procession inside the church, and the Pange lingua, the Litany of the Saints, and some other special psalms, versicles, and prayers will be chanted.
Second Day: On the second day, Saturday, October 26at 1PM, we will have the traditional Votive Mass Pro Pace.
Third Day: The closing Mass will be on Sunday, October 27 at 10:30AM, which will also be the 1st class Feast of Christ the King. This closing Mass will be celebrated coram Sanctissimo (in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament exposed throughout the entire Mass). At the end of the closing Mass, the Litany of the Saints and other special psalms and prayers will be chanted and we will have another Procession of the Blessed Sacrament inside the church. This Procession will end with Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament, the Divine Praises, and the recitation of the Act of Consecration of the Human Race to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
While in the Roman Catholic Church there are many Feasts and devotions throughout the year, the Forty Hours Devotion is always awaited and received with extreme joy. “Devotion to the Blessed Sacrament is the queen of all devotions. It is the central devotion of the Church. All others gather round it and group themselves there as satellites; for others celebrate His Mysteries; this is Himself” (~Father Faber).
The Forty Hours Devotion is surrounded with 3 special dimensions: 1) The protection from evil and temptation; 2) Reparation for our own sins and for the poor souls in purgatory; and 3) Deliverance from political, material and spiritual calamities. All these three things are very much needed in the Church and in society these days! These petitions (for ourselves, for our neighbors, and for the entire Church) are also expressed in detail in the beautiful Litanies of the Saints that are chanted as part of the opening and the closing Masses for the Forty Hours.
This beautiful devotion was permanently established by Pope Clement VIII “in order that day and night the faithful might appease their Lord by prayer before the Blessed Sacrament solemnly exposed, imploring there His divine mercy.”
**The Church of the Holy Innocents (NYC) is still the only parish in the entire Archdiocese of NY that has the Forty Hours Devotion in its traditional form.
21
Oct
A one-day Marian Eucharistic retreat with the Franciscan Friars of the Immaculate took place this Saturday at St. Mary’s Church in Stamford and included a traditional Mass celebrated by Father Matthias. The photos are courtesy of Edwin Gonzales.
21
Oct
Beginning Sunday October 27, St. Patrick Church in Waterbury, CT will be under the care of the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest.
The first traditional Mass will be offered on October 27, the Feast of Christ the King, at 10:30 am. The celebrant will be the Institute’s Vicar General, Monsignor Michael Schmitz. A reception will follow.
Rev. Canon Joel Estrada of the Institute has been appointed Pastor of St. Patrick’s and Rector of the Oratory. He will be assisted by Brother Kevin Kerscher.