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Mother’s Day Triduum Mass III with Special Blessing

Details:
May. 13, 7:30 pm
The third and final Mass of the Mother's Day Triduum honoring our mothers and grandmothers with a special blessing given by Fr. Frank Phillips, C.R. on our mothers and grandmothers.

Mother’s Day Triduum Mass II

Details:
May. 12, 7:30 pm  -  Feast of Our Lady of Fatima
The second Mass of the Mother's Day Triduum honoring our mothers and grandmothers. Mass is offered at 7:30 p.m.

Mother’s Day Triduum Mass I

Details:
May. 11, 7:30 pm
The first Mass of the Mother's Day Triduum honoring our mothers and grandmothers.

Station - St. John Lateran

Details:
Apr. 18, 2:00 am
SATURDAY IN EASTER WEEK
STATION – ST. JOHN LATERAN


In the Lateran Basilica, “head and mother of all the churches of the city and the world,” we began the Paschal solemnities; in this basilica we also conclude them. Today our Most Holy Savior gathers us together for a farewell celebration, desirous to write on our hearts the high dignity that is ours, but also the tremendous responsibility we have as branches in vital union with Christ, the Vine.

The design above illustrates the thoughts for today’s meditation. Upon the tomb are the linens, signs of Christ’s resurrection; they also remind us of the baptism robes put aside today by the neophytes, signs of their spiritual resurrection. Participants in the solemn celebration are Peter, Paul, John the Baptist (Stational church) and John the Evangelist; the two Johns carry a baptismal robe and a lamp. The Lamb with palm and milk pitcher represents the holy Eucharist, means by which the neophytes “put on Christ.” The lamb stands on the Cornerstone referred to in Sacred Scripture.

Through the mouth of St. Peter, whom Christ appointed shepherd and watchman over His flock he tells us:

Remember your Christian dignity, that you are living stones, set on the Supreme Cornerstone, Christ. Remember that you are a chosen generation, the adopted sons and daughters of God. Remember your royal priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices daily. Remember that you were purchased with the Lord’s most precious Blood.

St. Peter also reminds us of our responsibilities as followers of Christ. As living stones you must never, depart from the Chief Cornerstone. As a chosen generation you must by a truly Christian life declare the virtues of your God. As a royal priesthood you must make the Eucharistic Sacrifice the center and source of your words and deeds. Finally, as a purchased people you must keep away from the works of darkness and walk in Christ’s marvelous Easter light.

Grant us, we beseech Thee, O Lord, ever to rejoice in these Paschal mysteries, that the continued work of our redemption may be to us a source of perpetual joy. Amen.

And so today we conclude our Paschal Pilgrimage, our dying and rising with Christ. May these meditations restore you to full vigor in the Risen Christ and may these Fifty Days of Paschal Glory fill you with joy.

Station - St. Mary of the Martyrs (The Pantheon)

Details:
Apr. 17, 2:00 am
FRIDAY OF EASTER WEEK
STATION – ST MARY OF THE MARTYRS (THE PANTHEON)


Today we celebrate the paschal mysteries with the most holy Mother of God who on Good Friday was made “regina martyrdom, Queen of martyrs.” The Stational church is the old Pantheon erected by Agrippa, friend and relative of Caesar Augustus, and dedicated by the Roman people to “all their gods.”

In 610, Pope Boniface IV purified this “temple of iniquity” and turned it into a “temple of the true and living God” under the title of “St. Mary of the Martyrs” after he had transferred from the catacombs hundreds of bodies of martyrs to this imposing rotunda.

The original structure of the Pantheon remained the same, but that which made if false and ungodly was taken out, and a new spirit given it. May the temples of our bodies, consecrated in Baptism always be temples of the Holy Spirit.

Conducted by the Queen of martyrs we ascend this morning to the three mountains of salvation, power and life: Mount Calvary, the mount of Galilee and the holy mount of the altar.

1. Who would not think on this joyous Friday – one week after Good Friday – of the terrible conflict on Mount Calvary where “Christ died once for our sins, the Just for the unjust.”

2. Our hearts are filled with awe and reverence as we behold on the mount of Galilee the glorious Teacher, High Priest and King of the world bestowing on His Church his threefold power to teach, to sanctify and to rule.

3. This morning the risen Lord to Whom “all power is given in heaven and on earth” will appear on the holy mount of the altar to offer with us and for us His Sacrifice of Calvary; to speak to each one of us the words He spoke to His disciples on the mount of Galilee and to assure us that His apostles of this century will teach us, administer to us the life-giving sacraments, and that He Himself will remain with us all the days of our lives.

Holy Mother of God, glorious Queen of martyrs, accompany us on our way up to the mount of the altar and help us to celebrate always the Sacrifice of our Lord Jesus Christ in the spirit of love and unselfishness with which you did participate in it on Calvary so that after this life we may be found worthy to reign with your victorious Son on the mount of glory in the eternal “Galilee” of His Kingdom.

Station - The Twelve Apostles

Details:
Apr. 16, 2:00 am
THURSDAY IN EASTER WEEK
STATION – THE TWELVE APOSTLES


O victorious hand of Christ! Hand of strength and mercy! A week ago, on Holy Thursday this victorious hand gave to the apostles the most holy Eucharist “for the life of the world.”

A week ago today we saw how this victorious hand was raised over a few fishermen of Galilee consecrating teachers, priest and shepherds, empowering them to carry the fruits of the blessed passion and glorious resurrection unto men, to the end, that they be lifted from darkness into God’s wonderful light; that, as a purchased people, they might declare the virtues of their Savior and King.

This Thursday in a special way is dedicated to Mary Magdalene. It is the fourth time that we commemorate an appearance of the risen Savior. Today, I join Mary Magdalene and rejoice with her that Our Lord also calls us by name. He called me at baptism, and daily.

At times it is with a stern voice admonishing me, at times with words of love. During Lent He spoke like a father appealing to his child to return home; now at Easter His voice resembles that of a bridegroom speaking to his bride. In every Holy Mass the Good Shepherd calls His sheep by name, “I know Mine and Mine know Me.”

The basilica dedicated to the Twelve Apostles is no strange place for us. On the Ember Days we pilgrimage to it to atone for and expiate the sins of the past quarter year.

The stational church as represented in this design reminds us of the unity effected among peoples by Baptism. The twelve stones representing the Apostles are united to Christ, the Cornerstone. The lower portion of the design shows Philip and the Ethiopian, and water for baptism. Above them hovers the Holy Spirit. The top portion shows Mary Magdalene as the messenger of Easter’s glad tidings to the apostles.

Station - St. Lawrence Outside the Walls

Details:
Apr. 15, 2:00 am
EASTER WEDNESDAY
STATION - ST. LAWRENCE OUTSIDE THE WALLS


A Eucharistic chastity hovers over Easter Week which can better be sensed by the heart than expressed in words. Today, as we keep station with the Eucharistic Deacon whom St. Leo the Great calls the “most chaste Deacon” we are made even more conscious of that delicate paschal purity which permeates this season of inexpressible gladness. To this heroic Deacon were led the catechumens during their struggling days of Lent. To this chase Levite are presented on this Easter Wednesday “the new lambs who have come forth from the waters and are now filled with brightness.” “Come, blessed of My Father, receive the Kingdom which was prepared for you from the foundation of the world, alleluia.” Surely, the Lord has opened to them the doors of heaven. But to us also, and so we join these neophytes, God’s new-born children, to render thanks through the pure hands of St. Lawrence to Christ, the spotless Lamb of God.

“Hail, purest victim heav’n could find

The powers of hell to overthrow;

Who didst the bonds of death unbind;

Who dost the prize of life bestow.” (Ad regias)

Who can read today’s gospel without sensing the fragrance of paschal purity which pervaded the ‘morning-agape’ at the lake-shore of Galilee? Seven of the apostles went fishing, but caught nothing until the risen Lord arrived. “But when the morning came, Jesus stood on the shore; yet the disciples did not know that it was Jesus.” But one of them knew. The pure one, St. John. “It is the Lord” he cried out. “Blessed are the clean of heart, for they shall see God.”

On the shores of His holy altar the risen Lord is preparing this morning a Eucharistic love-feast for us. St. Augustine says, “the broiled Fish is the immolated Christ,” our food, our manna, our strength and the deepest source of purity.

May the most chaste Deacon Lawrence accompany us to the altar and pray for us that the paschal Meal “may cleanse us from our old nature and make of us a new creature.” During these fifty days we should feel as if we were living in heaven. A Christian walks on earth but lives in heaven.

Station - St. Paul Outside the Walls

Details:
Apr. 14, 2:00 am
EASTER TUESDAY
STATION – ST. PAUL OUTSIDE THE WALLS


Today the co-apostle, St. Paul, brings us the joyful message of the Lord’s resurrection. “Of the water of wisdom God gave you to drink” (Introit) are the apostle’s words of welcome to us as in spirit we enter his basilica. St. Paul’s Outside the Walls is one of Rome’s larges churches. Three weeks ago those preparing for Baptism received three precious jewels, the Our Father, the Gospels and the Creed. Today St. Paul instructs us through his Epistles. With the water of Baptism, Christ has satisfied our thirst with Divine Wisdom. Who knows better the transforming power of the “water and wisdom” than he who by this very water was changed from a Saul to a Paul, from a persecutor of Christ to His defender, from a foolish man to a wise Apostle?

Our baptismal day was our resurrection; was Christ’s resurrection in us, was our resurrection in Christ, the beginning of the “newness of life,” life in Christ. “If you are risen with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is sitting at the right hand of God, mind the things that are above.” Who preserved more faithfully and more gratefully the grace of baptism than Paul, the apostle of Christ? After the scales had fallen from his eyes and heart, he was through with the “things that are below.”

Holy Mother Church desires that we preserve the grace of the paschal mystery, i.e., the effects of those sacred actions which in these holy days are celebrated on the altar and applied to our souls.

In today’s Eucharistic celebration the Risen Lord will stand also in our midst to impart to us His “Pax vobix,” to show us His hands and feet and to give us those sacred “remains” to eat that will augment in us the newness of His life.

Accompanied by St. Paul let us approach our triumphant Lord and place into His hand the promise that, having risen with Him, we shall now seek the things that are above where He is sitting at the right hand of God, alleluia!

Station - St. Peter in the Vatican

Details:
Apr. 13, 2:00 am
EASTER MONDAY
STATION – ST. PETER IN THE VATICAN


The desert of Lent lies behind us. Fifty days of paschal joy are the reward for forty days of Lenten penance faithfully kept with Christ and the Church. St. Peter invites us to spend this Easter Monday with him. He desires to tell us, out of the fullness of his pastoral heart, all that Jesus of Nazareth has done for the salvation of His sheep; how He went about doing good, how they put Him to death hanging Him upon a tree, how God raised Him up on the third day, and how in His name all receive remission of sins who believe in Him.

Through the Holy Eucharist we are drawn deeper and deeper into the saving death and glorious resurrection of the immortal Christ. Like Cleophas and Luke of Emmaus we are Table-guests of Christ, we know Him, our crucified and risen Lord, in the breaking of the Bread; our cold hearts begin to burn, our blind eyes are opened, and our souls are filled with that paschal peace and joy with which these two disciples hastened from Emmaus back to Jerusalem on the first blessed Easter evening.

St. Gregory the Great offers two suggestions that should prove quite helpful towards a real Eucharistic Easter week. The first: “Because they doubted, He hid the countenance they would have recognized.” In other words, the manifestation of Christ to the two disciples on the road to Emmaus was in accordance with their spiritual dispositions. Let us, therefore, approach the Table of the immolated and risen Lord with great faith, and He will manifest Himself to us accordingly. The second: “Behold the Lord was not recognized while speaking to them but deigned to make Himself known when they set food before Him.” This, too, we must do in these blessed days, prepare for Him a table of love, and do it in the corporate spirit of Cleophas and Luke, then the risen Lord, Who appeared to Peter will also manifest Himself to us. Peter’s lambs and sheep.

The design depicts the journey to Emmaus with the risen Savior; our hearts burn within us as He explains to us the Scriptures. The middle section illustrates the land flowing with milk and honey which is the Church. Peter (keys), the day’s stational saint, unlocks these treasures to us: spiritual milk and honey from the rock of Christ. At the Eucharistic banquet “our eyes are opened” to a deeper understanding of Christ.

Station - Mary Major

Details:
Apr. 12, 2:00 am
EASTER SUNDAY
STATION – ST. MARY MAJOR


“This is the day which the Lord has made, let us rejoice and be glad.” The head of the old serpent is crushed. Darkness has disappeared. The light of Christ is with us. Man cast out from the garden of Eden has been admitted to the fields of Paschal delights.

The doorposts of our hearts are sprinkled with the blood of the true Lamb, who by His death has destroyed our death and by rising has given us eternal life. The Egypt of slavery is behind us, we have entered the land of promise flowing with the milk of the Easter Eucharist and the honey of Paschal rejoicing. The heavy stone of guilt is removed from the tomb of our souls and our life is hid with Christ in God.

St. Mary Major is the Stational church because the first one whom we wish to meet with hearts full of Easter joy is God’s own Mother. Today we rejoice and like the three chanted alleluias in full crescendo –

The Lord has completed His redeeming work, alleluia!

Our souls have risen anew, alleluia!

Springtime has made its appearance in the land, alleluia!

Station - St. John Lateran

Details:
Apr. 11, 2:00 am
HOLY SATURDAY
ST. JOHN LATERAN – EASTER VIGIL


In peace, in the selfsame I will sleep, and I will rest.

Good Friday at evening! Before the sun descends into his grave they must take the body of the “Sun of Justice” down from the altar of the Cross. With holy awe and love they let it down…and lay It into those pure, maternal arms that were the first to hold It, thirty-three years ago, in the cave of the not-too-distant Bethlehem.

Holy Mother, pierce me through
In my heart each wound renew
Of my Savior crucified

Let me share with thee His pain,
Who for all my sins was slain,
Who for me in torments died. (Stabat Mater)

The body is wrapped in linen cloths. Mother of Sorrows, remember that holy night when you wrapped in swaddling clothes the Blessed Light?

The funeral procession begins. John, a newly consecrated Bishop, Joseph of Arimathea, the owner of the tomb, Nicodemus, the courageous convert, Mary, His Mother and ours, the penitent Magdalen, some of His nearest relatives and a few devout women accompany the body of the God-Man to His place of rest.

“Now all is still. We breathe again now that the terrible distress is over at last, deep peace lies about the lonely tomb. It is the peace of fulfillment. He Who sleeps therein has, with divine fidelity, brought to an end all that the Father had laid upon Him to do. Now He rests from His work.”

Station - The Holy Cross in Jerusalem

Details:
Apr. 10, 2:00 am
GOOD FRIDAY
STATION – THE HOLY CROSS IN JERUSALEM


“Behold the wood of the Cross, on which hung the Savior of the world. Come, let us adore!”

The long expected day is at hand, the day of divine mercy and redemption! Good Friday! God’s Friday! That Thou might redeem the slave, Thou gavest up Thine own Son! “Thou didst set mankind’s salvation upon the Tree of the Cross, so that where death came, life might rise again; and he who overcame by the tree, on the Tree also might be overcome, through Christ our Lord.” O day of sadness and gladness, we salute you! With faith and love, with sorrow and hope we join Mother Church in today’s most holy re-enactment of the world-redeeming, life-bestowing death of our glorious High priest, Who by His Own Blood obtained for us an eternal redemption.

May we spend this day in silent preparation and reflect upon the Holy Word of God, especially the Passion narratives. Today let us gaze upon the Holy Wood, the wood of the cross on which hung the Salvation of the world. Today we may receive the Holy Fruit in reception of Holy Communion.

Station - St. John Lateran

Details:
Apr. 9, 2:00 am
THURSDAY IN HOLY WEEK – HOLY THURSDAY
STATION – ST. JOHN LATERAN


Holy Thursday, the beginning of the Paschal Mysteries! Hail, thrice blessed day, birthday of the Eucharistic Sacrifice, of the Eucharistic priesthood and of the Eucharistic commandment! Hail also to you, blessed “upper room,” for you witnessed the birth of this triple gift.

1. How intensely the Lord longed for this day! “With desire I have desired to eat this Pasch with you.” Today His longing is to be fulfilled. For the last time He celebrates with His disciples the ancient Pasch, observed for the first time fifteen centuries before, in that sacred night when God brought the children of Israel out of Egypt.

Tonight our Lord bequeaths to the world His sacrificed Body and Blood, the priceless pearl of the New Law, the center of Christian life, the Sacrifice of salvation, the food of pilgrims, the “elevator” into the Mystical Body, the guarantee of immortality.

“As often as you shall do these things, you shall do them in remembrance of Me.” Today we are doing these things, most solemnly, most gratefully, most joyfully, with desire we have desired to eat this Pasch with Him! Today!

2. Intimately related to His first gift is His second: the Eucharistic priesthood. He pours His priesthood into human beings, sending them as the Father had sent Him, making them carriers of the blessings of redemption, “ministers of Christ and dispensers of the mysteries of God.” Holy Thursday, a blessed day for every priest!

But let the faithful also rejoice! Is not every Christian – through the indelible character bestowed in baptism and confirmation – a sharer in Christ’s priesthood? The noblest deed of a priest is to offer. How well do you, a partaker in the Lord’s priesthood, perform this noblest of deeds today?

3. “A new commandment I give you, that you love one another; that as I have loved you, you also love one another. By this will all men know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.” A new commandment. A Eucharistic commandment. The holy Eucharist is the difference between paganism and Christianity. The holy Eucharist is the source of union, of charity, of that love “whereby men know that we are the disciples of Christ.”

May “the right hand of the Lord” imprint the full meaning of this triple gift on our heart as we assemble today around God’s altar to carry out what “on this day Christ commanded His disciples to celebrate in memory of Him.”

Station - St. Mary Major

Details:
Apr. 8, 2:00 am
WEDNESDAY IN HOLY WEEK
STATION – ST. MARY MAJOR


Could we have a more powerful leader to Jesus Christ on this, the last day of preparation, than Mary, our most holy Mother? Into thy hands, dearest Mother, we place the humble efforts we have made since Ash Wednesday. Mother of our Savior, carry them, together with thy own most worthy and most pleasing merits, to the throne of divine mercy. Petition the eternal Father that, through the infinite merits of His Son and through thy powerful intercession, He would “look down on this, His family, for which our Lord Jesus Christ hesitated not to be delivered up into the hands of wicked man, and to undergo the torment of the Cross.”

Let us pray: Only a few hours separate us from the arrival of the Paschal Mysteries. “Behold, thy Savior comes; behold His reward is with Him and His work before Him.” For all men the Savior died, for Mary and for Judas, and for all who stand between these two. The winepress of the Cross has made the one “Queen of all the Saints,” and the other…God only knows! Lord, turn not away Thy face from Thy servant. Mary, my Mother, pray for me that the divine Blood of thy Son be to me a laver of redemption and of life.

Station - St. Prisca

Details:
Apr. 7, 2:00 am
TUESDAY IN HOLY WEEK
STATION – ST. PRISCA


The last Lenten station is that of Saint Prisca on the Aventine. It is only a short way from Saint Sabina, from which church the procession left forty days ago to visit the tombs of the Martyrs. It is significant that the point of departure and the final arrival of the Lenten stations are on the Aventine Hill, for it was considered particularly sacred by the early Christians. It was, in fact, here that St. Peter and St. Paul lived for some time, in the house of saints Aquila and Priscilla, which was located on the spot where the church now stands.

St. Prisca, the faithful co-worker of St. Paul in the apostolate of “Christ Crucified,” leads us into the Sacred Triduum. We recommend to her our prayers and intentions. May this woman of faith, who was privileged to hear from the Doctor of the Gentiles of the power and triumph of the Cross, watch over us and assist us “that we may celebrate the mysteries of our Lord’s Passion in such a manner as to deserve to obtain God’s pardon.” (Collect)

Let us pray: (Pause in silent prayer, reflecting on your Lenten observances.) Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St.  Praxedes

Details:
Apr. 6, 2:00 am
MONDAY IN HOLY WEEK
STATION – ST. PRAXEDES


The spirit of this second day of the holiest of all weeks may be summed up in four words: Jesus, a supper, a penitent and an impenitent.

Jesus! Holy Savior, Thou art the center of our thoughts and love. Accept our thanks for all that Thou hast done for our salvation.

The Last Supper: A supper for Jesus! In a few days Jesus will make a supper for us, a “sacred banquet in which Christ is eaten;…symbol of that One Body of which He is the Head and to which He willed that we should be united as members by the closest bonds of faith, hope and charity, so that we should all speak the same thing, and that there should be no divisions among us,” as the Council of Trent so beautifully says.

A Penitent: Mary, “took a pound of ointment of costly nard, and anointed the feet of Jesus, and wiped His feet with her hair.”

An impenitent-traitor: An apostle of Christ is changed into a traitor, because he loved – not Christ – but thirty pieces of silver. “It were better if this man had not been born.”

We entrust ourselves today to St. Praxedes, the virgin who loved Jesus with her beautiful soul; who so often in her home prepared the table for the celebration of the Eucharistic Supper; and who anointed the “feet of Christ,” that is, the “lowest members” of the Mystical Body, the poor, by gladly giving to them all she possessed.

Let us pray: Help us, holy virgin, to spend this second day of Holy Week in thy spirit. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Palm Sunday

Details:
Apr. 5, 9:30 am  -  Latin High Mass (Ordinary Form)
Missa Dominus Deus Noster
Leonard Lechner (c. 1553 – 1606)

Ingrediente Domino
Giovanni Jannaconi (1741 – 1816)

St. Mark Passion
Giaches de Wert (1535 – 1596)

Improperium
Charels Russell Woolen (1923 – 1994)

Christus Factus est
Joseph Gabriel Rheinberger (1839 – 1901)

St. Cecilia Choir and the Choir of the Holy Innocents

Station - The Archbasilica of St. John Lateran

Details:
Apr. 5, 2:00 am
PALM SUNDAY
STATION – THE ARCHBASILICA OF ST. JOHN LATERAN


Today begins the greatest and holiest week of the year, a week opening with triumph and closing with triumph; a week commencing with the Hosanna, continuing with the Cross and terminating in the Alleluia.

This week is a picture of our Christian life, which began with the “Hosanna to our King” on that day when, at the font, Christ our Redeemer took possession of the city of our soul. At that blessed spot He made us His disciples and gave us the Cross. “If thou wilt be My disciple, take thy cross upon thyself and follow Me.” He, the divine Cross-bearer, shows us the way, strengthens us while on the way, and leads us to final victory, the eternal Easter with its never-ending Alleluia!

One of the main purposes of this week is to renew the first, i.e., the Christ-life we received in holy baptism, and to prepare us for the second, the everlasting triumph with Christ, our glorious Head.

In the hustle and bustle of material things we are so apt to forget “the things that are above.” Little conscious we are of the sacred mark printed indelibly upon our soul, the character of baptism and confirmation, the sign which neither time nor eternity can efface, and by which we became partakers in the priesthood of the immortal Christ.

The Church needs “Palm-Sunday men and women” who, with “the angels in heaven and with the children of Israel,” will sing their Hosanna to the conqueror of death.

Let us pray: Grant, O Lord, that what Thy people this day bodily do in Thy honor, they may perfect spiritually with complete submission, by gaining a victory over the enemy and ardently loving the work of Thy mercy. Through Christ our Lord. Amen. “Hosanna to the Son of David.”

Station - St. John Before the Latin Gate

Details:
Apr. 4, 2:00 am
SATURDAY IN THE FIFTH (PASSION) WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. JOHN BEFORE THE LATIN GATE


The station of this eve of Palm Sunday is of a comparatively late origin: formerly, the Pope spent a part of the day distributing alms to the poor, and rested in preparation for Holy Week.

As a Stational church was chosen St. John’s before the Latin Gate. Near the place where the Appian Way braches off, forming to the left the Latin Way, it was built on the spot where St. John was, by order of Domitian, plunged into a cauldron of boiling oil. St. John, who with Mary shared the privilege of standing near the Cross, also joined his sacrifice to that of Christ when he gladly accepted martyrdom in the boiling oil.

May St. John teach us the spirit of active, soulful participation in the very mysteries in which he did partake with great faith, reverence and love. The mystery of the Lord’s Table, the mystery of the Lord’s Cross and the mystery of the Lord’s Triumph.

Let us pray: May the people prosper who are devoted to Thee by the affection of pious devotion, we beseech Thee, O Lord; that instructed by the holy rites, they may be made more pleasing to Thy majesty, and more may they abound in excellent gifts. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Stephen on Mt. Coelius

Details:
Apr. 3, 2:00 am
FRIDAY IN THE FIFTH (PASSION) WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. STEPHEN ON MT. COELIUS


This Lenten Station takes us back to a sacred area which still preserves its aura of mystery. The area was sacred to the pagans who had, on the nearby Palatine, the black rock of the Magna Mater and who had there the sacred land on which the “profane” outsiders were forbidden to set foot. It was sacred also to the Christians who even today venerate it as the place which gave martyrdom and glory to saints. St. Stephen on Mt. Coelius, or St. Stephen Rotondo as the Romans call it because of its circular plan, is among the most ancient of the round churches with the altar in the center and thus visible from all sides. It was built between 400 and 450 and was consecrated by Pope Simplicius.

St. Stephen was the first martyr or witness of Christ. While dying, he beheld the Savior at the right hand of the Father in heaven. Thus it was fitting to assemble in this basilica at this holy time, consecrated to the memory of the Savior’s Passion, which prepares us to celebrate His triumph at Easter.

The interior decoration of this church contains a series of frescos depicting a martyrology of 34 saints.

Let us pray: Pour forth Thy grace into our hearts, we beseech Thee, O Lord, that we who refrain from sin by self-denial, may be rather afflicted in time than condemned to eternal punishment. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Apollinaris

Details:
Apr. 2, 2:00 am
THURSDAY IN THE FIFTH (PASSION) WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. APOLLINARIS


There are actually two stational churches indicated for today. The first Lenten Station, was established by Pope Gregory II (715-731) in the Church of St. Apollinaris and the second established by Pope Pius IX (1846-1878) with apostolic privilege in the Church of St. Mary the New in the Roman Forum as a closing for a Holy Year of Redemption.

In a week from today we shall begin the paschal mysteries. The truer the sorrow for our sins and the greater the realization of the need of God’s grace, the more fruitful will be the efficacy of these paschal mysteries.

Let us pray: Grant, we beseech Thee, Almighty God: that the dignity of human nature, wounded by excess, may be reformed by the practice of self-denial. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Marcellus

Details:
Apr. 1, 2:00 am
WEDNESDAY IN THE FIFTH (PASSION) WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. MARCELLUS


A patient sufferer, condemned by his enemies to work in a horse-stable, the good shepherd, Pope Marcellus, is our leader today to the King of Martyrs, Christ, our Good Shepherd.

Why must a human being suffer, physically, spiritually, or both? This has always been, and ever will be, the great problem; indeed a problem and a riddle for the worldly individual, but not for the follower of Christ, who finds the answer at the foot of the Cross.

For the Christ-loving soul, there is no suffering for suffering sake, there is suffering only for Easter’s sake, with its peace and strength and never fading victory.

The mystery of the Cross is the great answer, a solution which the carnal-minded man will never find. St. Marcellus found it, and having found it, suffered gladly as a true athlete of Christ. “I will extol Thee, O Lord, for Thou hast upheld me and hast not made my enemies to rejoice over me.”

Let us pray: Sanctify this fast, O God, and mercifully enlightening the hearts of Thy faithful, do Thou hear favorable those to whom Thou grant the grace of devotion. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Cyriacus

Details:
Mar. 31, 2:00 am
TUESDAY IN THE FIFTH (PASSION) WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. CYRIACUS


The Sacred texts which, like a garland, surround the celebration of the Eucharist Sacrifice and the Divine Office must not only be understood in their literal and historical sense, but above all in their liturgical one. This is always the case, but especially during Passiontide.

The Divine Head, who nineteen centuries ago underwent the great Passion is now undergoing it in His Body, the Church. An attack on the Church is an attack on Christ. Whenever the Church suffers, her Divine Head suffers. But all these sufferings lead to victory. “They have persecuted Me, they will also persecute you. The disciple is not greater than the Master.” Persecutions and sufferings purify the Church. They remove what is not of God. They cast forth all that comes form Satan, the arch-enemy, and that comes from the fatal act in Paradise, the arch-sin.

May the holy Deacon Cyriacus, obtain for us “God’s light and truth; and conduct us and bring us to His holy hill, to the altar, to Calvary, to Easter, to the immortal Christ at the right-hand of the Father.”

Let us pray: O Lord: deliver me from the unjust and deceitful man. Send forth Thy Light and Thy Truth, they shall lead me on. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Chrysogonus in Trastevere

Details:
Mar. 30, 1:00 am
MONDAY IN THE FIFTH (PASSION) WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. CHRYSOGONUS IN TRASTEVERE


We are branches of Christ, the Vine. As such we share in His life, share in His joys, and must share also in His sufferings, and thus as the Apostle so boldly put it – make up in our own body what is yet wanting in the sufferings of Christ, the Head. This we shall do – gladly – in these holy Passion days.

Our mortifications, our self-discipline, our temptations, our trials from within and from without, all our sufferings, we will unite with Christ’s Blessed Passion. They will then be lifted out of their own smallness and will share in the greatness and efficacy of His sufferings. He will suffer in us and we in Him.

We humbly ask St. Chrysogonus, in whose Roman home we observe today’s mysteries of redemption, that he would accompany us to “the Lord of Hosts, the King of Glory.”

Let us pray: O God, hear my prayer; give ear to the words of my mouth. Save me, O Lord, by Thy name and in Thy power deliver me. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

5th Sunday of Lent

Details:
Mar. 29, 11:00 am
TBA

Choir of the Holy Innocents

Station - St. Peter in the Vatican

Details:
Mar. 29, 1:00 am
FIFTH SUNDAY OF LENT PASSION SUNDAY
STATION – ST. PETER IN THE VATICAN


Passion Sunday! The Cross of Christ is veiled, so that we may seek it, and Him who died on it, all the more. The holiest season of the year is at hand, so holy that, “all other seasons of the year prepare us for keeping this one duly and worthily. These present days call for special fidelity seeing that they bring us so near to that sublime mystery of the divine mercy, the blessed Passion of Jesus Christ.” (Divine Office)

With an open mind and a willing heart let us approach the altar to celebrate the Passion Sunday Sacrifice with our High Priest, so that His “Body which shall be delivered for us, and His Blood that shall be shed for us” may bestow upon us the promise of eternal inheritance in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Let us pray: Deliver me, O Lord, from my enemies: teach me to do Thy will. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Nicholas in Carcere

Details:
Mar. 28, 1:00 am
SATURDAY IN THE FOURTH WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. NICHOLAS IN CARCERE


This Station is at a church built on the ruins of three pagan temples and consecrated to St. Nicholas. It is called “in carcere” because in ancient times it had been a dungeon – a prison devoid of light.

Water, food and light are indispensable for the maintenance and up-building of our natural life. Sacred Water, sacred Food and sacred Light are indispensable for the maintenance and up-building of our supernatural life.

1. “Unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Spirit, he can not enter into the Kingdom of heaven.”

2. “Unless you eat the Flesh of the Son of Man and drink His Blood, you shall not have life in you.”

3. “I am the Light of the world; he that follows Me walks not in darkness, but shall have the light of life.”

Catechumens and Faithful both were deeply impressed while listening to the gospel of “The Light of the World” read in today’s stational church which is over a dark dungeon. There criminals were held in confinement, deprived of light, liberty and the joys of life. A man in mortal sin walks in darkness. The light of Christ is not in him. He sits in darkness and in the shadow of death. With God’s help, we must free ourselves during the remaining days from all darkness.

St. Nicholas, lead us today to Him Who by sacred Water has made us His living branches, to Christ Jesus, our Divine Food and Holy Light.

Let us pray: Mercifully compel our rebellious wills and make them subject to Thee, O Lord. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Eusebius

Details:
Mar. 27, 1:00 am
FRIDAY IN THE FOURTH WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. EUSEBIUS


The Roman Martyr-Priest Eusebius, whom the Arian Emperor Constantius II had imprisoned for seven months in the priest’s own home so that he might slowly starve to death, is today our leader to the blessed Christ for whose Divinity Eusebius died and won eternal life.

In two weeks from today we shall celebrate the Lord’s lifegiving death, the source of our resurrection and life. Christ’s death is the Sacrament of all sacraments. All the Christian mysteries flow from this main-spring: “the mystery of new life” “out of water and the Holy Spirit;” the restoring or healing of life in the tribunal of God’s mercy; the reception of the Bread of Life at the Lord’s table, as well as the great “come forth” on the last day: (from our tombs as Lazarus was called from his tomb) these and all the other mysteries of our Faith are rooted in the death of the Lamb of God.

Let us pray: O God, Who renews the world by Thine ineffable sacraments, grant, we beseech Thee, that Thy Church may profit by Thy eternal institutions, and not be lacking in temporal help. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - Ss. Sylvester and Martin

Details:
Mar. 26, 1:00 am
THURSDAY IN THE FOURTH WEEK OF LENT
STATION – SS. SYLVESTER AND MARTIN


Near this church the penitents used to pass through one of the most infamous of places, near the crossroads of Mercury and the Serbian walls, where there was the Merulana necropolis (cemetery). That is where pagan Rome left the bodies of slaves and criminals to rot in the open, until the Christians built a chapel with the aim of venerating the Christian martyrs.

In two weeks from today the Church will celebrate with us the mystery of the living and life-giving Bread, the first source of life and health. “For he that eats this Bread shall have life everlasting…And unless you eat this Bread you shall not have life in you.”

Led by these two stational saints, the first Confessors who were given public veneration in the Church, St. Sylvester and St. Martin, we will go to God’s altar, to the Mystery of Life, to Him Who will say also to us: “I say to thee, arise!”

Let us pray: Grant, we beseech Thee, almighty God: that we, who are chastised by fasting, may rejoice with holy devotion, and that our earthly affections being weakened, we may more easily understand the things of heaven. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.


Station - St. Paul Outside the Walls

Details:
Mar. 25, 1:00 am
WEDNESDAY IN THE FOURTH WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. PAUL OUTSIDE THE WALLS


A pilgrimage to the tomb of St. Paul, in this penitential procession, at one time took on an exceptional character in view of the riches of doctrinal teaching which has come down to us from the Apostle to the Gentiles. For this reason it used to happen that, in this particular Lenten Station, the Pope carried out a “third scrutiny” for the baptismal candidates, that is for those catechumens who wanted to be baptized in water.

In this church at the tomb of this great convert-exemplar, the catechumens, turning westward – towards darkness – renounced Satan, his pomps and his works. Then, turning, eastward – towards the light – they pledged their loyalty to Christ and His Church.

Here at the tomb of the Apostle who was “the salt of the earth,” the catechumens receive a morsel of salt. “Accipe sal sapientiae – receive the salt of wisdom!” Receive the taste for the doctrine of God. Hereafter speak no longer the language of the flesh, but let your conversation be heavenly.

Let us pray: O God, who grantest to the just the reward of their merits, and to sinners pardon through their fasts; have mercy on Thy suppliant people: that the confession of our guilt may enable us to obtain the forgiveness of our sins. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Lawrence in Damaso

Details:
Mar. 24, 1:00 am
TUESDAY IN THE FOURTH WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. LAWRENCE IN DAMASO


We celebrate in spirit the holy mysteries in the church of St. Lawrence in Damaso, built by the “poet-Pope” and “lover of the catacombs,” St. Damasus, whose remains rest in this venerable edifice.

Mother Church points today to two leaders: Moses and Christ, figure and fulfillment. Both of them unappreciated by their flock; both them unmoved in their consecration to God and their holy calling. Their people: superficial, proud and selfish; the leaders: filled with the spirit of prayer, humility and the love of God.

In the spirit of our prayerful, humble and God-loving leader, St. Lawrence, let us make a sincere oblation of ourselves. Then the Divine Victim, through the prayers of the holy deacon, will increase in our souls so strikingly expressed in today’s Mass:

1. Humility. “With expectation I have waited for the Lord and He was attentive to me.”

2. Prayerfulness. “And He heard my prayer.”

3. Love. “And He put a new canticle in my mouth, a song to our God.”

Let us pray: Hear, O God, my prayer, and despise not my supplication: be attentive to me, and hear me. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - The Four Crowned Martyrs

Details:
Mar. 23, 1:00 am
MONDAY IN THE FOURTH WEEK OF LENT
STATION – THE FOUR CROWNED MARTYRS


The Station is on Mount Coelius, in a church erected in the seventh century in honor of four officers of the Roman army who, having refused to adore a stature of Aesculapius, received the crown of martyrdom. These were the “four Crowned ones” whose relics are venerated in this sanctuary together with the head of St. Sebastian, an officer of the army of Diocletian.

Under the leadership of the Four Crowned Martyrs let us celebrate the divine Sacrifice. May the Eucharistic Action “refresh us and defend us,” as it refreshed these great athletes and filled them with heavenly fortitude to go forth to make the supreme sacrifice for a true ideal, for their faith, for Christ, the King of Martyrs.

Let us pray: Grant, we beseech Thee, Almighty God, that as we keep with devotion year by year this holy fast, we may please Thee both in body and soul. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - Church of the Holy Cross in Jerusalem

Details:
Mar. 22, 1:00 am
FOURTH SUNDAY OF LENT
STATION – CHURCH OF THE HOLY CROSS IN JERUSALEM


In the year 320, Constantine placed the relics of the Holy Cross which his mother, St. Helen, had brought back to Rome from the Holy Land. Also there is soil brought from Calvary, placed under the flooring of the Chapel of the Holy Cross. Today in the Church of Calvary at Rome, that is of the Cross, our hope, the Church sends a ray of light upon our souls to stir us up to persevere in the struggle against the world, the flesh and the devil, until the great feast of Easter is reached.

“Rejoice, rejoice with joy,” we are told in the Introit, for having died to sin with our Lord during Lent, we are shortly to rise with Him by the Paschal Confession and Communion.

Our whole life is a texture of sorrows and joys. Good Fridays and Easters accompany us on our journey to the land of perennial Easter. But, as there is no Good Friday without the assurance that “by the wood of the Cross joy has come into the whole world,” so in the soul of a true Christian there is no sorrow without the joy that will come from living faith, strong hope and sincere love: a joy ever sustained and increased by that wonderful Bread which Christ’s loving hand multiplies for us in the this desert of life.

By the wood of this Cross, joy has come into the world, into your heart also. Laetare, Jerusalem! Endure the thorns of life courageously. Supernaturalize them.

Note: On this day, it was the custom to solemnly bless the “golden rose” which was then presented by the Holy Father to a Catholic who was zealous and outstanding in the Faith.

Station - St. Susanna

Details:
Mar. 21, 1:00 am
SATURDAY IN THE THIRD WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. SUSANNA

Today’s liturgy places before us three women, one in the white garment of virginity, the other in the blue mantle of chastity and the third in the purple robe of penitence. The first shows the triumph of Christ’s redemption, the second the power of faith in the coming Messiah, the third the compassion of the Good Shepherd who came to seek what was lost.

The first is today’s stational guides, St. Susanna, to whom the vow of virginity and consecration to Christ, the royal Bridegroom, meant more than the princely hand of the unprincely Galerius Maximianus. She refused his hand in marriage and was put to death.

The other Susanna is the chaste wife of Joachim living in Babylon in the days of Daniel, the prophet. Two adulterous men, ever to be remembered as a disgrace to manhood, two judges who perverted justice and drowned their manly honor in the pool of perjury, were this pure women’s adversaries. But Susanna prefers to be a victim of the hellish vengeance of her accusers than sin against her God.

And now the third one, the woman caught in adultery. She lost her virginity, her chastity, and has broken fidelity to her marriage vows. “She must be stoned,” was the cry. She is an outcast in the eyes of her merciless accusers, who themselves are whitened sepulchers inwardly full of worms. Jesus, the new Daniel, comes to her rescue. He condemns her sin, but raises her from an erring sheep to a penitential follower. “Has no one condemned you, woman? No one, Sir. Neither will condemn you. Now sin no more.”

Let us pray: Extend to Thy faithful the right hand of heavenly help; that they may seek Thee with their whole hearts, and deserve to obtain what they ask for worthily. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Lawrence in Lucina

Details:
Mar. 20, 1:00 am
FRIDAY IN THE THIRD WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. LAWRENCE IN LUCINA


For the second time this week the chaste Deacon Lawrence is our processional leader to the Savior of the world. Last Sunday we knelt at his tomb and heard his encouraging words: “Walk as children of the light…” (Sunday Mass)

Today we are making our pilgrimage to the church containing a large portion of the gridiron on which this holy Deacon made his last and most perfect oblation to God.

It was during the forty years passed in the desert that Moses and Aaron asked God to bring from the rock – a figure of Christ – “a spring of living water,” so that all the people could quench their thirst. During these forty days of Lent the Church asks Christ to give us the living water about which He spoke to the woman of Samaria near Jacob’s well, the water which quenches our thirst forever. This water is our faith in Jesus, it is grace, it is the Blood which flows from the wounds of the Savior, and which, through baptism, penance and the other sacraments, purifies our souls, and gushes forth into eternal life, of which It assures us a share.

Let us pray: Show me, O Lord, a token for good: that they who hate me may see, and be confounded: because Thou, O Lord, has helped me and hast comforted me. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - Ss. Cosmas and Damian

Details:
Mar. 19, 1:00 am
THURSDAY IN THE THIRD WEEK OF LENT
STATION – Ss. COSMAS AND DAMIAN


This church is made of two pagan temples, where rest the bodies of the holy martyrs Cosmas and Damian, who were put to death during the Diocletian persecution. The sick came in crowds to visit the tomb of these two brothers, doctors by profession, imploring them to restore their health.

The “unsalaried” physicians Cosmas and Damian, devoted time and talents to the service of the poor and the sick, so that, by curing the infirmities of the body without remuneration, they might more easily win immortal souls for Christ.

Today the Divine Physician will again come and refresh you. He carries with Him the divine antidote, the Eucharistic Medicine, for the healing of our infirmities.

Let us pray: May the blessed solemnity of Thy saints Cosmas and Damian magnify Thee, O Lord; by which Thou hast both granted eternal glory to them and assistance to us by Thy ineffable providence. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Sixtus

Details:
Mar. 18, 1:00 am
WEDNESDAY IN THE THIRD WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. SIXTUS


St. Sixtus’ stational church is located on the Appian Way and is a parish church dating to the fifth century. It was in this church that the catechumens were presented to the Church by their sponsors. Their names were written on tablets of ivory covered in leather, which were read at the Commemoration of the Living. After the Collect of the Mass, the catechumens received the initial parts of the Baptismal ceremony, viz., the rites of exsufflation, of the Sign of the Cross, of the imposition of hands and of that of the salt.

In an age which makes light of God’s commandments, it is of special importance that the faithful be uncompromising in the observance of the “ways of life.” Let us be “the salt of the earth and the light of the world,” as our holy leader Sixtus was in the third century. We invite this holy pontiff to precede us to the altar and to ask for us “that we who seek the grace of God’s protection, may serve Him with a quiet mind.”

Let us pray: Grant us, we beseech Thee, O Lord, that disciplined by wholesome fasting, and abstaining from all vices, we may more easily gain forgiveness. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Pudentiana

Details:
Mar. 17, 1:00 am
TUESDAY IN THE THIRD WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. PUDENTIANA


The church of St. Pudentiana, on the Viminal hill, was one of the most venerated places for Roman Christians. St. Pudentiana lived here with her sister, St. Praxedes. Here St. Peter received hospitality, and the first Christians often assembled. Today this church stands rather forgotten because it was closed for a very long time.

We turn to St. Pudentiana on this day. May she obtain for us by her powerful prayers:

1. The grace of mutual forgiveness, so that we may be able to say in truth: “Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those that trespass against us.” Not seven times, but seventy times seven.

2. The grace also of true love for our glorious Lord and each other. Pudentiana shows us the way. Where charity and love reign there is God. Christ will then be in our midst. And He shall be the Savior, Lord and King of our hearts and our home.

Let us pray: May the effect of our redemption be applied unto us, we beseech Thee, O Lord, by means of Thy grace, ever restraining us from human excesses and conducting us to the gift of salvation. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Mark

Details:
Mar. 16, 1:00 am
MONDAY IN THE THIRD WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. MARK


In the historic center of the city, near Piazza Venezia, stands the elegant Basilica of St. Mark. St. Mark had a very important role in the evangelization work in the Rome of his time, and, after the death of the Apostles, it was in this city that he wrote the Gospel of Mark.

The more sincerely we enter into each Lenten day, the more perfectly will the Holy Eucharist transform us and the more pleasing to God will be our Lenten efforts. Our spiritual life will take on a freshness, like that of a child, or, rather, it will glow in the very freshness of Christ Himself. The branch will receive daily a new portion of vital energy from the infinite freshness and vitality of the Vine.

Spring experiences not only the coming forth of new plants but also the renewal of old ones. In like manner this spiritual Springtide will witness not only the birth of new Christians “out of water and the Holy Spirit,” but also the re-birth of the entire Christian body.

We are looking forward to the “renewal of our baptismal life” at Easter. But let us not think for a moment that this renewal will be done only then. Easter means completion, the sealing of a process begun on Ash Wednesday and reaching its culmination of the “Day which the Lord hath made.”

Let us pray: Pour forth in Thy mercy, we beseech Thee, O Lord, Thy grace into our hearts, that as we abstain from carnal food, may we also restrain our senses from harmful excesses. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

3rd Sunday of Lent

Details:
Mar. 15, 12:30 pm  -  Latin High Mass (Extraordinary Form)
TBA

Choir of the Holy Innocents

Station - St. Lawrence Outside the Walls

Details:
Mar. 15, 1:00 am
THIRD SUNDAY OF LENT
STATION - ST. LAWRENCE OUTSIDE THE WALLS


The stational Mass brings us to another Basilica, St. Lawrence outside the Walls, erected by the emperor Constantine in the year 330. As the Basilica is near the Verano cemetery and above ancient catacombs where the bodies of the martyred St. Lawrence, St. Stephen and St. Justin were laid to rest, the penitential character of the Lenten Station takes a particular significance.

On this day, the catechumens of old were taken to the tomb of St. Lawrence, the illustrious deacon whose “eyes were ever towards the Lord.” Today they must decide whether they are “for Christ or against Him.” If for Him, then all fornication and uncleanness, covetousness, obscenity, foolish talking, gossip must be laid aside; “for no fornicator, or unclean or covetous person has inheritance in the kingdom of Christ Jesus.”

We have made our decision years ago. On the day of our baptism, we renounced Satan, his pomps and his works. “Heretofore we were darkness,” but by the waters of baptism “were made light in the Lord.”

If we are not keeping our baptismal oath, then “the last state of that man becomes worse than the first, for the unclean spirit will return into the house where he came from, together with seven other spirits more wicked than himself, and dwell there.” The result will be a scattering, a breaking up of the supernatural life, a separation from Him Who is our blessed hope in this life and our eternal joy in the next.

Let us pray: Pluck my feet out of the snare, look upon me and have mercy on me for I am alone and poor. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - Sts. Marcellinus & Peter

Details:
Mar. 14, 2:00 am
SATURDAY IN THE SECOND WEEK OF LENT
STATION - Ss. MARCELLINUS & PETER


This station is in the Basilica founded by St. Helen on the Via Lavicana, where were buried the bodies of St. Macellinus, priest and St. Peter, exorcist, martyred at Rome during the Diocletian persecution. Their names are mentioned in the Roman Canon of the Mass.

May today’s stational saints, not brothers in the flesh, but in spirit, obtain for us the gift of gratitude both for our holy calling, God’s free gift, as well as for the grace of conversion, our homecoming to the Father. For the remainder of our life may “the unspotted law of the Lord, which converts souls, and the testimonies of our faithful Lord fill us with such wisdom that we shall show forth the glory of God, and declare the works of His hands.

Let us pray: Grant, we beseech Thee, O Lord, a saving virtue to our fast; that the chastisement of the flesh, which we have taken upon us, may bestow new life to our souls. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.


Station - St. Vitalis

Details:
Mar. 13, 2:00 am
FRIDAY IN THE SECOND WEEK OF LENT
STATION - ST. VITALIS


Mother Church points today to the “Great Friday” on which our High Priest and Redeemer obtained for us eternal redemption. She takes us today to the church of St. Vitalis, father of the holy martyrs Gervase and Protase. For his loyalty to Christ, St. Vitalis was first buried up to the waist in an old cistern and then stoned to death.

Here at the altar of this martyr – his name means “full of life” – she directs our attention to the life-giving death of the Savior. In four weeks we will celebrate the life-begetting Passion of Christ. Pointing to this great mystery the Church prays that we continue to prepare for it; that the holy fast may chasten us and make our hearts pure, so that when the vintage time of the paschal solemnity arrives, the divine householder may not be obliged to say: “I looked that my vineyard should bring forth grapes, and it has brought forth thorns.”

May St. Vitalis, who drank so abundantly of the sacred winepress of the Lord’s Passion, accompany us today to the Eucharistic Banquet in which this most holy Passion is rendered present and the fruits thereof applied to our souls. Here all of us will become “Vitales,” living members of Christ, the fountain of all life and holiness.

Let us pray: Grant, we beseech Thee, Almighty God, that cleansed by this holy fast, we may be brought by Thee with pure hearts to the holy season which is to come. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Mary in Trastevere

Details:
Mar. 12, 2:00 am
THURSDAY IN THE SECOND WEEK OF LENT
STATION - ST. MARY IN TRASTEVERE


In the heart of Trans Tiber, in a beautiful Romanesque square, stands the church of St. Mary. On the spot of this church, shortly before the birth of Christ, oil gushed out of the ground. Mary carried Christ “the Anointed One” (reference to the oil) in her arms.

The Mother of God is today’s stational leader to Christ, the Light of the world. We fly to your patronage, holy Mother of God. Do present our humble prayers to Him whom you did bring forth, the King that rules heaven and earth. Help us, good Mother, that He may keep us away from the broad road which leads to darkness and perdition, and take us on the narrow but sure way to eternal light and life.

It is Thursday, four weeks from the great Eucharistic Thursday. May today’s Eucharistic Action give us light to see the right way and strength to follow it. And Christ is the “Way,” and Mary, our leader to this “Way.”

Per Mariam ad Jesum

Let us pray: Grant us we beseech Thee, O Lord, the help of Thy grace: that being duly intent on fasts and prayers, we may be delivered from enemies of soul and body. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Cecilia

Details:
Mar. 11, 1:00 am
WEDNESDAY IN THE SECOND WEEK OF LENT
STATION - ST. CECILIA


In the heart of Trans Tiber Rome, preceded by a cheerful courtyard enclosed by a Baroque gateway portal, there towers the splendid vision of the church of St. Cecilia. St. Cecilia, the virgin–martyr, is buried in this church. In the fifth century, this church was one of the most celebrated churches in Rome.

On Ash Wednesday, the church was St. Sabina, the martyr-matron. On Wednesday of the first week of Lent, we visited St. Mary Major. On this third Wednesday it is again a woman, the virgin-martyr and “glory of the early Church,” St. Cecilia, who leads us to “the Son of man who came not to be served, but to serve, and to give His life as a ransom for many.”

One reason why Christians often are lacking in joy and holy enthusiasm is their lack of purity. We know how the flesh lusts against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh. The two cannot live in the same house. One of the two must go. St. Cecilia knew no compromise. Her baptismal garment was never stained by impurity.

Let us pray: O God, the restorer and lover of innocence, turn towards Thee the hearts of Thy servants; that being inflamed with the fervor of Thy Spirit, they may be found both steadfast in faith and fruitful in good works. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Balbina

Details:
Mar. 10, 1:00 am
TUESDAY IN THE SECOND WEEK OF LENT
STATION - ST. BALBINA


The Station today is at the sanctuary of St. Balbina, a Roman virgin who lived in the second century and whose remains lie under the altar with those of her father, the martyr St. Quirinus. This church stands on a slope of the Aventine.

St. Balbina followed Christ. To Him she gave her home that it might henceforth be His home where He would “have mercy on His people according to His great mercy and blot out their iniquity,” and where they would seek His face, and finding it, “relate all His wonders, and be glad and rejoice and sing praise to the Name of the Most High.” “My heart has said to Thee: I seek Thy face, Thy face, O Lord, will I still seek. Turn not away Thy face from me. The Lord is my light and my salvation.” So chanted the faithful of old when entering the church of St. Balbina as they looked upon the face of the venerated image of Christ the Savior, over the altar of this church.

A man’s humility and generosity attract the face of the Lord, his pride and selfishness turn it away. To the humble the Lord will turn his face and will be to him light and salvation. From the proud He will turn it away, leaving the unfortunate man in darkness and death.

What a discord pride causes in our relation to God; that uncontrolled, inordinate love of one’s own excellence. It was the first sin committed in the heavens, it was the first sin committed on the earth. Shall we perpetuate that discord begun by Lucifer and continued by Adam and Eve? Or will we follow Him Who said: “Learn of Me, for I am meek and humble of heart.” I seek Thy face! Thy face, O Lord, will I still seek. Turn not away Thy face from me.

Let us pray: Of Thy goodness, we beseech Thee, O Lord, continue to help us in the observance of this holy fast, that having learned our duties from Thee, we may accomplish them by the help of Thy grace. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Clement

Details:
Mar. 9, 1:00 am
MONDAY IN THE SECOND WEEK OF LENT
STATION - ST. CLEMENT


This stational church is built above the very house of the third successor of St. Peter, and his name is found in the Roman Canon, St. Clement. This parish church of Rome established in the fifth century is a most faithful example of the old Roman basilicas. Under the high altar are the remains of the martyr, Ignatius of Antioch, and, of course, St. Clement.

Ss. Clement and Ignatius are true heroes, as their martyr-blood became “the seed of Christians.” Clement and Ignatius, kindness and fire, symbols of Him Who is kindness to men of good will, though their sins be red as scarlet; kindness and forgiveness to all who, in the spirit of Daniel, turn to Him and pray: “We have sinned, we have committed iniquity, O Lord, against all Thy justice; let Thy wrath and Thy indignation be turned away, I beseech Thee, from Thy city Jerusalem and from Thy holy mountain…for it is not for our justification that we present our prayers before Thy face, but for the multitude of Thy tender mercies.”

With St. Clement we will offer “the Sacrifice of propitiation and praise. May it render us worthy of God’s protection.”

Let us pray: Grant we beseech Thee, O Almighty God, that Thy family, while afflicting the flesh by fasting from food, may follow justice and abstain from sin. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

2nd Sunday of Lent

Details:
Mar. 8, 9:00 am
TBA

Choir of the Holy Innocents

Station - St. Mary in Domenica

Details:
Mar. 8, 3:00 am
SECOND SUNDAY OF LENT
STATION - ST. MARY IN DOMINICA


In the Piazza della Navicella (which gets its name from the fountain built around the marble model of a ship) is the Church of St. Mary in Dominica, an ancient church founded around the year 600.

The purpose of this Holy Season is to transfigure us. The transfiguration of Christ, the Head is the beginning and the source of the transfiguration of His Body, the Church , and of every member of the Church.

The work of transfiguration is preeminently the work of Christ. It is the “Vine” that transfigures His “branches.” He does this by His holy Gospel and His life-giving sacraments. Ipsum audite, ipsum accipite, ipsum manducate! Him we must hear, Him we must accept, His flesh we must eat, His blood we must drink, and injustice will give way to justice, darkness to light, and Satan to Christ. Then the face of our soul will shine like the sun and the garment of our heart will become white as snow.

The stational protectress today is our glorious Mother, Sancta Maria in Dominica, herself the grandest “transfiguration” accomplished by Christ, the Savior. To her maternal love and prayers we commend ourselves and so keep this second Sunday of Lent that we may merit to hear also from her lips: “This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased.”

Let us pray: O God, who sees that we have no power whatever from ourselves; keep us both outwardly in our bodies and inwardly in our souls; that we may be defended from all adversities which may happen to the body and from all evil thoughts which may hurt the soul. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Peter in the Vatican

Details:
Mar. 7, 2:00 am
SATURDAY IN THE FIRST WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. PETER IN THE VATICAN


In the past people used to prepare with prayer and fasting all the night before coming to this station which takes place in the major church of Christendom, by the tomb of the Prince of Apostles.

The human race has always felt the need of a priesthood: of men who have the official charge to be mediators between God and humanity, men who should consecrate themselves entirely to these mediations as to the very purpose of their lives; men who are set aside to offer to God public prayers and sacrifices in the name of society. For human society as such is bound to offer to God public and social worship. It is bound to acknowledge in Him its supreme Lord and first beginning, and to strive towards Him as to its last end, to give Him thanks and offer Him propitiation for sin.

It was in this station that the Pope consecrated priest, joining to the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist that of the Ordination of Priest. The monumentality of the Basilica and of the columned square which embraces the vast crowds like immense arms is only a frame work to the great light which from here radiates to all the world.

St. Peter, Rock of the Church, bearer of the keys of God’s kingdom, great priest of Jesus Christ, holy shepherd of His flock, bless those who are called to be fishers of men.

Let us pray: Direct our actions, we beseech thee, O Lord, by Thy inspiration and further them with Thy continual help, that every prayer of ours may begin always from Thee and through Thee likewise be ended. Thorough Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - The Twelve Apostles

Details:
Mar. 6, 2:00 am
FRIDAY IN THE FIRST WEEK OF LENT
STATION – THE TWELVE APOSTLES


Today we find ourselves at the Basilica dedicated to the Apostles and in particular to the Saints Philip and James the Minor whose bodies are enclosed in a precious marble urn located under the main altar in the crypt.

Today, thirty-eight days before Easter, the Church reads to us the account of the cure of a man sick for thirty-eight years. This miracle occurred at a pool of Bethsaida. The merciful Jesus healed body and soul of the friendless sufferer. After the cure, Jesus said to him: “Behold thou art made whole, sin no more, lest some worse thing happen to thee.”

This sick man is a picture of the world, especially of the pagan world, a world in a state of utter helplessness, laden with sin, steeped in despair, with no one to help it but Him who is “the expectation of all nations and their Savior.”

The Church entrusts us today to the holy apostles. In their company we will celebrate the healing mysteries. In their presence we will answer the question of the King of Apostles: “Wilt thou be made whole?” I will, Lord, “Save Thy servant, O my God, that trust in Thee. Give ear, O Lord, to my prayer.”

Let us pray: Be gracious, O Lord, unto Thy people, and even as Thou makest them devoted to Thee, so mercifully revive them with Thy kind assistance. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Lawrence In Panisperna

Details:
Mar. 5, 2:00 am
THURSDAY IN THE FIRST WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. LAWRENCE IN PANISPERNA


This church was built in ancient times on the site of the martyrdom of Saint Lawrence (258) under the emperor Valerian. In its harmonious interior, at the end of the nave is a large fresco depicting the martyrdom of St. Lawrence.

We place all our Lenten petitions in the hands of the “standard-bearer of the Roman Church,” St. Lawrence, to whose prayers and martyrdom is attributed the final triumph at Rome of the cross over paganism, of light over darkness. May the holy Deacon whose heart was filled with Eucharistic fervor accompany us on this Thursday to the reception of the bread which is Christ’s flesh for our life and for that of the whole world.

Let us pray: Mercifully look down, we beseech Thee, O Lord, upon the devotion of Thy people, that they who are mortified in the flesh by abstinence, may be refreshed in mind by the fruit of good works. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Mary Major

Details:
Mar. 4, 2:00 am
WEDNESDAY IN THE FIRST WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. MARY MAJOR


On the Esquiline Hill, not far from St. Peter in Chains, towers the Basilica of St. Mary Major.

Grandiose both in its exterior, and in its interior, the Basilica was erected by Pope Sixtus III (432-440), one year after the proclamation by the Council of Ephesus of the dogma of Mary Mother of God. Before being called St. Mary Major, the ancient Romans had called the Basilica Liberii (back to Pope Liberius 352-366). In August 352 Pope Liberius experienced a vision of Our Lady, and it was she who traced out the dimensions of this church. Pope Liberus then saw with his own eyes the area of land covered in snow on which the church was to be built.

This Basilica also contains the revered image of the Madonna of St. Luke, called Salus Populi Romani. How have I kept the first eight days of Lent? Surely, as “the glory of the Lord dwelt upon Sinai” and upon Moses, so the “right hand of His Majesty” was extended over us during the past week.

Let us pray: Graciously look down, O Lord, we beseech Thee, upon the devotion of Thy people, that they who are mortified in body by abstinence, may be refreshed in mind through the fruit of good works. We ask this through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Anastasia

Details:
Mar. 3, 2:00 am
TUESDAY IN THE FIRST WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. ANASTASIA


Linked to this church is the tradition of the first-light Mass, Mass at Dawn, which is celebrated in the first hours of the Christmas morning.

We keep this day in company with the widow-martyr whose heavenly birthday the Church observes on the very birthday of the Light of the world. In the Christmas Mass “at Dawn” St. Anastasia, whose name means dawn, new light, is commemorated. In that “aurora-Mass” and again today, the words, “fulgebit, fulgeat” occur, which mean to “shine, radiate.”

A holy “radiating” is the fruit of a holy Lent. Everyone is called to be an “Anastasia,” a new light, replenished by the light of Christ – “Lumen Christi.”

This “radiating” must be preceded by an honest cleaning and washing. Our souls, as the Church prays, must be “chastened by the mortifications of the flesh.” We know well enough how necessary this is. Many “buyers and sellers” have established themselves in the consecrated temples of our heart – earthly affection’s unworthy inclinations – which, as Christ drove out the money changers in the Temple, must be driven out as well. We are Christ’s property. Our affections cannot be divided. Our baptismal promises exiled all division. An yet, we confess in humility and sorrow that only too frequently we have made compromises and concessions that were a disgrace to our Christian dignity and certainly not a source of joy to Him who laid down His life for us.

Let us pray: Look down upon Thy household, O Lord, and grant that our souls, chastened by the mortification of the flesh, may radiate in Thy sight with the desire for Thee. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Peter in Chains

Details:
Mar. 2, 2:00 am
MONDAY IN THE FIRST WEEK OF LENT
STATION – ST. PETER IN CHAINS


From the heart of the Roman Forum, the penitential procession climbed up the road winding up towards the Esquiline Hill and came to the church of St. Peter in Chains, also called Eudossian Basilica, as it had been built in the place of another church by Eudossia, wife of the Emperor Valentinian III, to preserve in it the chains of St. Peter.

The station of this day is with St. Peter in Chains and the Church takes us today to the divinely appointed watchman of the lambs and sheep of Christ, St. Peter.

The Chains which held the shepherd of the lambs and sheep consist of forty-four links. Forty-four days separate us from Holy Thursday, the beginning of the paschal solemnities when our “Lenten” work must be an accomplished fact.

How many links has that chain from which Christ, our Good Shepherd, desires to free us in this acceptable time? We are fully aware that during this season of salvation this chain must be broken and the links thrown out, the big ones in particular. Which are your principal faults? Are you working against them?

Let us pray: Convert us, O God our salvation; and that the Lenten fast may be of profit to us, instruct our minds with heavenly discipline. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. John Lateran

Details:
Mar. 1, 2:00 am
FIRST SUNDAY OF LENT
STATION – ST. JOHN LATERAN


The Cathedral Basilica of Rome, caput et mater omnium ecclesiarum Urbis et Orbis, triumphantly celebrates the first solemn day of Lent.

Today the faithful pilgrim travels in spirit to the Lateran basilica of the Most Holy Savior, “head and mother of all the churches of the City and the world,” the cathedral of the Bishop of Rome. In this basilica Lent officially begins; in this church also it is concluded.

The acceptable time is at hand. “We exhort you that you receive not the grace of God in vain.” “It is true,” says St. Leo, “there is no season which is not rich with God’s gifts, His grace does ever give us an entry to His mercy; yet at this time the minds of all should be urged with greater earnestness towards spiritual progress, and should be animated by a trust in God stronger than ever; for now the anniversary of that day on which we were redeemed is drawing near; and, therefore, let us be moved to perform every work of godliness, to the end that we may be able to celebrate, with clean minds and bodies, that mystery which excels all others, the mystery of the Lord’s passion.” (Matins – 2nd nocturn)

This holy fast (Quadragesima) will open unto us the gates of Paradise. We must embrace it with prayer and supplication, so that we may rejoice with the Lord on the day of resurrection.

Let us pray: O God, who dost purify Thy Church by the yearly observance of forty days; grant to Thy household that what we strive to obtain from Thee by self denial, we may secure by good works. Through Christ Our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Augustine/St. Tryphon

Details:
Feb. 28, 2:00 am
SATURDAY AFTER ASH WEDNESDAY
STATION – ST. AUGUSTINE/ST. TRYPHON


Pope Pasquale II (1099-1118) laid to rest the relics of St. Tryphon under the present church of St. Augustine. In this church, by the Blessed Sacrament Altar, is located the tomb of St. Monica.

Health of body and, above all, health of soul are precious gifts from God, gifts for which we must be grateful. The church is particularly concerned about the health of our soul, the well-being in us of the life of Christ. She knows our spiritual short-sightedness, she knows the unsteadiness of our will, she knows the power of our passions, all of them infirmities caused by original sin as well as by our personal sins. She sees her children make resolutions and break them; she knows how often the fuller unfolding of the sacramental life is impeded because her sons and daughters are lacking in purity of intention and proper appreciation of God’s gifts.

For that very reason she instituted this holy season as a time of great healing. Lent is God’s hospital. Serious operations are to be performed during this time. And blessed are they who gladly submit to them “Vitia comprimis, mentem elevas,” – vices are to be curbed, spiritual cancers to be removed, the mind is to be renewed, elevated, so that, after our stay in His hospital, the same mind may be in us, which is also in Christ Jesus.

We humbly implore our dual Saints to guide us to the Divine Physician, the Healer of our soul and body.

Let us pray: Be mindful, O Lord, of our supplications, and grant that we may keep with devout service this solemn fast, which Thou hast wholesomely ordained for the healing of our souls and bodies. Through Christ Our Lord. Amen.

Station - Ss. John and Paul

Details:
Feb. 27, 2:00 am
FRIDAY AFTER ASH WEDNESDAY
STATION – SS. JOHN AND PAUL


The third Lenten station takes us up on to a high hill of ancient Rome: the Celian Hill which stands in front of the Palatine which dominates the valley of the Circus Maximus. The church was built upon the house where Saints John and Paul were martyred and buried; they were two imperial officers in Constantine’s court, martyred in the year 361 by Julian the Apostate.

We celebrate the diving mysteries today in the light of the “two candelabra shining before the Lord,” as the Church calls the two brothers John and Paul. There can be no fruitful Lent with out practical charity. Practical charity means that we must come to our brother’s rescue sincerely, unselfishly and supernaturally.

As children of the God of charity, let us so approach today’s Eucharist that it may enkindle in us the spirit of true Christian charity, and, thus, to “be perfect, as our heavenly Father is perfect.”

Let us pray: Regard with Thy loving care, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the fast which we have begun; that the abstinence which we keep with our body may be exercised with sincerity of mind. We ask this thought Christ Our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. George in Velabro

Details:
Feb. 26, 2:00 am
THURSDAY AFTER ASH WEDNESDAY
STATION – ST. GEORGE IN VELABRO


Just a short distance from St. Sabina stands our second stational church, St. George in Velabro. The church dates back to the year 500, but was reconstructed under Leo II (682-683). This church is one of the original 25 diaconal seats of the Roman church. The head of this warrior Saint is preserved under the high altar.

The purpose of Holy Lent is to bring about a spiritual renovation. This work of renovation is accomplished by both God and man; by God, principally through the Holy Eucharist; by man, mainly by fasting, prayer, and almsgiving.

Prayer is a great and sacred art and, by no means, an easy thing to accomplish. Earnest continuous efforts are required to overcome the wanderings of our mind, the weakness of our will, and the slothfulness of our body. But Lent is the time of a general renovation, also, of our prayer life.

By all means let us not become discouraged if, at times, we feel empty and dry. At such moments we must in humility bow before our God saying: “To Thee O God, I lift up my soul; in Thee O my God, I put my trust, none of them that wait on Thee shall be confounded.”

May our stational patron, St. George, help us to overcome the dragon of inertia in our prayer life and to cast again with new fervor our cares upon the Lord.

Let us pray: O God, Who by sin art offended and by penance appeased, mercifully regard the prayers of Thy supplicant people, and turn away the scourges of Thy wrath, which we deserve for our sins. Through Christ Our Lord. Amen.

Station - St. Sabina

Details:
Feb. 25, 2:00 am
ASH WEDNESDAY
Remember, man, that thou art dust, and into dust thou shalt return
STATION – ST. SABINA


If there is any place in Rome where Lent, with its atmosphere of penitential solitude mixes with the re-awakening of spring, then it must be along this path which climbs up from the Circus Maximus towards the Aventine on the top of which stands the Church of St. Sabina.

In God’s name then let us go up to the holy mount. Is it not significant that the first Lenten mystery is celebrated on a mount, the Aventine? Already in pre-Christian days this hill was an asylum for refugees, a post of security. To St. Sabina, martyr, converted to the faith by the prayers, fasts and example of her Christian servant, we entrust ourselves today. To her we have recourse in our sinfulness. She will present her martyrdom and her prayers to God on our behalf and obtain His blessing upon our Christian warfare, so that “we may be converted to God with our whole heart, in fasting and in weeping and in mourning, and rend our hearts and not our garments, and turn to the Lord, our God.”

Let us pray: Grant, O Lord, to Thy faithful people that they may begin the venerable solemnities of fasting with becoming piety, and may persevere to the end with steadfast devotion. Through Christ our Lord. Amen.

5th Sunday in Ordinary Time

Details:
Feb. 8, 11:00 am  -  Latin High Mass (Ordinary Form)
TBA

Choir of the Holy Innocents

Second Sunday in Ordinary Time

Details:
Jan. 18, 9:00 am
TBA

Choir of the Holy Innocents

Resurrection Choir Practice

Details:
Jan. 12, 7:30 pm
Members meet at 7:30 pm in the church hall to prepare for the next Mass on February 1st.

Resurrection Choir Practice

Details:
Jan. 5, 7:30 pm
Members meet at 7:30 pm in the church hall to prepare for the next Mass on February 1st.

Octave of Christmas

Details:
Jan. 1, 11:00 am
Latin High Mass (Extraordinary Form)
1962 Missale Romanum

Missa in Nativitate Domini, Op. 126
Josef Gabriel Rheinberger (1839 – 1901)

Dormi Jesu
Richard Lloyd (b. 1933)

Maria Mater Gratia, Op. 47, No. 2
Gabriel Fauré (1845 – 1924)

Cantate Domino Choir

*Note that there is not a 12:30 p.m. Mass on January 1, 2009.

Resurrection Choir Practice Cancelled

Details:
Dec. 29, 7:30 pm
No choir practice will be held today.

Sunday within the Octave of Christmas

Details:
Dec. 28, 12:30 am  -  Latin High Mass (Extraordinary Form)
TBA

Choir of the Holy Innocents

Solemn Feast of the Nativity of Our Lord-Christmas Day

Details:
Dec. 25, 11:00 am
Mass of the Shepherds
Pietro Yon (1886 – 1943)

O Magnum Mysterium
Tomás Luis de Victoria (1548 – 1611)

Chorus Innocentium Sanctorum

Solemn Feast of the Nativity of Our Lord - Christmas Eve

Details:
Dec. 24, 11:00 pm
A program of Christmas Carols and orchestral classics for Christmas will be held at 11:00 pm. Mass begins at Midnight with the blessing of the Nativity Scene.


Concerto (“The Christmas Concerto”) in G Minor, Op. 6
Arcangelo Corelli (1653 – 1718)

God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
Arranged by Sir David Willcocks (b. 1919)

Resonemus Laudibus
Malcolm Archer (b. 1952)

Alma Redemptoris Mater
Charles Gounod (1818 – 1893)

Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence
Gustav Theodore Holst (1874 – 1934)

Hark! The Herald Angels Sing
Arranged by Sir David Willcocks (b. 1919)

O Come all ye faithful
Arranged by Sir David Willcocks (b. 1919)

The First Nowell
Arranged by Sir David Willcocks (b. 1919)

Personet hodie
Gustav Theodore Holst (1874 – 1934)

O Holy Night
Arranged by Rene Clausen (b. 1953)

O Come All Ye Faithful
Arranged by Sir David Willcocks (b. 1919)

It Came Upon a Midnight Clear
Arranged by Rev. Scott Haynes, S.J.C. (b. 1971)



12:00 a.m. Latin Mass (Extraordinary Form)

Missa in C (“Coronation Mass”), K. 317
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756 – 1791)

Puer nobis nascitur
Arranged by Sir David Willcocks (b. 1919)

Christmas Symphony No. 26 in D Minor
Joseph Haydn (1732 – 1809)

Silent Night
Arranged by Rev. Scott Haynes, S.J.C. (b. 1971)

Resurrection Choir and Orchestra



Resurrection Choir Practice

Details:
Dec. 22, 7:00 pm
Members (choir and orchestra) meet at 7:00 pm in the lower west choir loft to prepare for the Midnight Mass of Christmas.

Columbian Squires Meeting

Details:
Dec. 20, 1:00 pm
The Columbian Squires, associated with the Knights of Columbus, is an organization for young men, between the ages of 10-18. The Columbian Squires meet monthly in Cafe San Giovanni to plan parish and community projects, recreate and develop spiritually and physically. For information contact

Padre Pio Prayer Group

Details:
Dec. 20, 8:30 am
The Padre Pio Prayer Group meets on the third Saturday of each month at St. John Cantius Church in Chicago (825 North Carpenter Street ). It begins with a Latin (Tridentine) Mass at 8:30 A.M., followed by recitation of the Chaplet of St. Padre Pio, prayers for the intentions of the Holy Father and for the success of the "Home for the Relief of Suffering" in Foggia, Italy. It concludes with a brief reception and meeting with light refreshments in Cafe San Giovanni.

Knights of Columbus Members Meeting

Details:
Dec. 16, 7:30 pm
There is a meeting scheduled tonight for the Members of Knights of Columbus, Council 361 - Lafayette in the Parish Hall.

Resurrection Choir Practice

Details:
Dec. 15, 7:30 pm
Members meet at 7:30 pm in the church hall to prepare for our the Midnight Mass of Christmas.

Third Sunday of Advent (Gaudete Sunday)

Details:
Dec. 14, 12:30 pm
Messe in D
Antonin Dvorak (1841 – 1904)

Gaudete Omnes
Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck (1562 – 1621)

Canite Tuba
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (1525 – 1594)

St. Cecilia Choir

Trio Sonata No. 4 in E Minor, BWV 528
Johann Sebastian Bach (1685 – 1750)

Organ Prelude & Postlude

Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols

Details:
Dec. 13, 7:30 pm
Favourite Christmas Carols and Motets

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Jesus Christ the Apple Tree
Elizabeth Poston (1905 – 1987)

Ding Dong Merrily on High
Arranged by Charles Wood (1866 – 1926)

Pat-a-pan
Burgundian Tune, attr. Bernard de la Monnoye (1641 – 1728)

I Wonder as I Wander
Appalachian Carol, Arr. John Jacob Niles (1892 – 1980) & Lewis Henry Horton

Resonet in Laudibus
Orlando di Lasso (1532 – 1594)

Videntes Stellam
Francis Poulenc (1899 – 1963)

Lullaby
William Byrd (1543 – 1623)

Lullay My Liking
Gustav Holst (1874 – 1934)

O Magnum Mysterium
Tomás Luis de Victoria (1548 – 1611)

Tantum Ergo, Op. 10, No. 4
Maurice Duruflé (1902 – 1986)

St. Cecilia Choir


Solemn Feast of the Immaculate Conception

Details:
Dec. 8, 7:30 pm
Christchurch Mass
Malcolm Archer (b. 1952)

Sub Tuum Praesidium
Marc-Antoine Charpentier (1643 – 1704)

Sicut Rosa
Orlando di Lasso (c. 1532 – 1594)

Cantate Domino Choir

Salve Regina
Naji Hakim (b. 1955)

Toccata in G Major
Eugène Gigout (1844 – 1925)

Organ Prelude & Postlude

Resurrection Choir Practice

Details:
Dec. 8, 7:30 pm
Members meet at 7:30 pm in the church hall to prepare for our the Midnight Mass of Christmas.

As today is a Holy Day of Obligation choir members are reminded that they should attend Mass prior to coming to choir practice.

2nd Sunday of Advent

Details:
Dec. 7, 12:30 pm
12:30 pm Latin Mass (Extraordinary Form)

TBA

Chorus Innocentium Sanctorum

Concert of Handel’s “Messiah”

Details:
Dec. 6, 7:00 pm
Messiah
George Frederick Handel (1685 – 1759)

Sine Nomine Ensemble and Orchestra

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First Saturday Devotion

Details:
Dec. 6, 8:30 am
The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass in the Extraordinary Form (Tridentine), followed by Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament, the Holy Rosary and prayers. For information of the First Saturday Devotions, click Here.

First Friday Devotion

Details:
Dec. 5, 7:30 pm
Nine first Fridays, which is based on the promise made to Blessed Margaret Mary by the Sacred Heart assuring the grace of final perseverance and the reception of the Sacraments before death to all who should receive Holy Communion on the first Friday of every month for nine consecutive months; it is customary to offer this novena in reparation for the sins of all mankind. The Service begins with the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass in the Extraordinary Form (Tridentine), followed by Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament, Compline, Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament and Reposition of the Blessed Sacrament in the Tabernacle.

For more information click here...