My friend Fr Andrew Marlborough has contacted me recently to tell me about a conference he is helping to organize, which will take place June 25-26 in London, on “Deification and Sacraments: Perspectives East and West.” The line-up of speakers is strong; two names that caught my eye in particular are Dr. Matthew Levering and Fr Uwe Michael Lang, CO.
Fr Andrew is a priest based in England who has previously written for the New Liturgical Movement about items of interest that appear at auction houses throughout Britain and Europe. Before becoming a priest, he worked in the commercial art world.
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
“Deification and the Sacraments” - Conference in London, June 25-26
David ClaytonMonday, March 23, 2026
The Gospel of Passion Monday
Gregory DiPippoYesterday, the Roman Rite began the season of Passiontide, in which the focus of the liturgy shifts from penance, fasting, and the preparation of the catechumens for baptism to meditation on the Lord’s impending suffering and death, before His glorious resurrection on Easter Sunday. The Mass chants of the season are mostly taken from Psalms which are evidently about the Passion, and were understood as such by the Fathers, as for example today’s introit, the beginning of Psalm 55: “Miserére mihi, Dómine, quoniam conculcávit me homo: tota die bellans tribulávit me. – Have mercy on me, o Lord, for a man hath trodden me down; all the day he hath made war and troubled me.” A treatise known as the Breviarium in Psalmos, traditionally but incorrectly attributed to St Jerome, which seems to have been read very closely by the unknown composers of many Gregorian chants, explains this verse as follows: “In the one who is a man and makes war, the Psalm shows the attack of the devil and of the other wicked spirits, at whose inspiration the Lord suffered.”
![]() |
| The Man of Sorrows, ca. 1434, by the German painter and Dominican friar Master Francke (ca. 1380- ca. 1440) |
The conclusion of the Gospel therefore speaks of the baptism of the catechumens both at the Easter vigil, and, according to the ancient tradition of the Church, at the vigil of Pentecost as well. On the latter, the Communio of the Mass is taken from this passage. “And on the last, and great day of the festivity (here, symbolically, on the last day of Lent, i.e. Holy Saturday), Jesus stood and cried, saying, ‘If any man thirst, let him come to me, and drink. He that believeth in me, as the scripture saith, “Out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water.” Now this He said of the Spirit which they should receive, who believed in him: for as yet the Spirit was not given, because Jesus was not yet glorified.”
- Week 3, Friday, John 4, 5-42 (the Samaritan Woman)
- Saturday, John 8, 1-11 (the adulteress)
- Fourth Sunday, John 6, 1-15 (the multiplication of loaves and fishes)
- Monday, John 2, 13-25 (the purging of the temple)
- Tuesday, John 7, 14-31 (the second part of Christ’s discourse in the temple during the feast of tabernacles)
- Wednesday, John 9, 1-38 (the healing of the blind man)
- Friday, John 11, 1-45 (the raising of the Lazarus)
- Saturday, John 8, 12-20 (“I am the light of the world.”)
- Passion Sunday, John 8, 46-59 (the discourse on Abraham)
- Monday, John 7, 32-39 (described above: the third part of Christ’s discourse in the temple during the feast of tabernacles)
- Tuesday, John 7, 1-13 (the first part of same)
- Wednesday, John 10, 22-38 (the discourse in the porch of the temple)
- Friday, John 11, 47-54 (the priests and pharisees take council against the Lord)
- Saturday, John 12, 10-36 (the triumphal entry into Jerusalem)
![]() |
| An unimportant part of Lord’s Passion, depicted by the Italian painter Sebastiano Ricci (1659-1734), ca. 1730. |
Posted Monday, March 23, 2026
Labels: Lectionary, Liturgical Reform, Passiontide, The Liturgical Revolution
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Durandus on Passiontide
Gregory DiPippo![]() |
| The Harrowing of Hell, depicted in an early 16th-century illuminated manuscript of the history of the Passion in French, known as the Vaux Passional. Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons. |
Saturday, March 21, 2026
The Feast of St Benedict 2026
Gregory DiPippo![]() |
Saints Benedict and Bernard, by Diogo de Contreiras, 1542; painted for the Cistercian convent of Santa Maria de Almoster in Portugal. (Public domain image from Wikimedia.)
|
![]() |
| The first two pages of the Rule of St Benedict, with the Prologue to be read on March 21st, from a Cistercian Martyrology printed at Paris in 1689. |
Posted Saturday, March 21, 2026
Labels: Benedictines, Cistercians, feasts, Rule of St. Benedict, St. Benedict
Friday, March 20, 2026
Ambrosian Vespers of the Fridays in Lent
Gregory DiPippoIn the Ambrosian Rite, the Fridays of Lent stand out from the rest of the week in two very notable ways. The first is that these days are “aliturgical”, meaning that no Mass is celebrated at all. (Exceptions are permitted only for the feasts of St Joseph and the Annunciation when they occur on Friday, the former being of very late institution.) As I have described many times before, the same custom once obtained in Lent in the Roman Rite, but on the Thursdays, and the Saturdays after Ash Wednesday and Passion Sunday, while it still holds in the Byzantine Rite for all the weekdays, likewise excepting only the Annunciation.
The other is that Vespers is celebrated in a special form which shares some characteristics with other liturgical days, but is in itself unique to these Fridays.![]() |
| A photograph of the clergy and cantors around the archbishop at the high altar of Milan cathedral, during Vespers of the Epiphany. (Colorized by Nicola.) |
![]() |
| Christ Defends the Plucking of Grain on the Sabbath, 1580-90, by the Flemish painter Martin van Valckenborch. |
Review of Fr. Robert Bradley’s Our Lady’s Psalter
Michael P. FoleyFather Hardon immediately wanted to know where they were going to place the Blessed Sacrament; Father Bradley wanted to be sure that there was enough room on the provided book shelves for his military history volumes; and Father Miceli was especially concerned about the space and convenient conformation of the kitchen, so that he might regularly make for them his good pasta “al dente,” which, according to his cherished traditions, required some tossing aloft of the potentially desirable pasta. [2]
What a gift this book has been for me! Father Bradley has inspired me to begin praying the Rosary again.
[This book] is really helping my prayer life… I find my mind and soul deeply reflecting on the words Father has written. Yes, these meditations were truly inspired by the Holy Spirit
Thursday, March 19, 2026
The Feast of St Joseph 2026
Gregory DiPippoWednesday, March 18, 2026
Another Chant for the Byzantine Liturgy of the Presanctified
Gregory DiPippoНынѣ Силы Небесныѧ съ нами невидимо служать, се бо входитъ Царь Славы: се Жертва тайнаѧ совершена дориноситсѧ. Вѣрою и любовию приступимъ, да причастницы жизни вѣчныѧ будемъ. Аллилуїа, аллилуїа, аллилуїа.
Earlier this month, I posted a setting of Psalm 140, “Let my prayer rise as incense etc.”, composed for the Byzantine Liturgy of the Presanctified gifts, along with a brief description of the first part of the ceremony. For the second part, the Litany of Fervent Supplication and special litanies for the catechumens are said, after which the royal doors are opened. The first part of the chant above is sung, then the Presanctified gifts are carried out the side-door, and back through the royal doors, followed by the second part (“With faith and love...”). This chant, therefore, replaces the hymn “We who mystically represent the Cherubim,” which is sung at the Divine Liturgy as the bread and wine are brought to the altar. The rest of the service is basically identical to the regular order of the Divine Liturgy.
Here is the Greek version:
Νῦν αἱ δυνάμεις τῶν οὐρανῶν σὺν ἡμῖν ἀοράτως λατρεύουσιν· ἰδοὺ γὰρ εἰσπορεύεται ὁ Βασιλεὺς τῆς δόξης. Ἰδοὺ θυσία μυστικὴ τετελειωμένη δορυφορεῖται· πίστει καὶ πόθῳ προσέλθωμεν, ἵνα μέτοχοι ζωῆς ἀιωνίου γενώμεθα. Ἀλληλούϊα, Ἀλληλούϊα, Ἀλληλούϊα.
Altar Cards and Portable Altars from Spanish Cathedrals
Peter KwasniewskiThus, in the cathedral of Sevilla, we have a side chapel in honor of St. Gregory the Great (you can see in the large center panel the famous scene of his miracle, one of the most frequently depicted subjects in Catholic sacred art), where the Last Gospel and Lavabo cards stand to left and right, while the main card is placed elsewhere in the chapel (note the handsome woodwork):
Already here, beneath the main reredos, we can see a feature that will recur through the churches of Spain: the words of consecration carved into wood or metal and placed right above the center of the altar, as if to ensure that, whatever else may be the case, these essential words are always available to the celebrant, and stand permanently as a verbal testimony to the mystery of transubstantiation.
The same cathedral shows us, elsewhere, a clear example in silver:
Posted Wednesday, March 18, 2026
Labels: altar cards, Art, Cordoba, Leon, Peter Kwasniewski, Sacred Art, Salamanca, Segovia, Sevilla









.jpg)



