November is an especially busy month for our good friends of the Schola Sainte-Cécile in Paris, since both of their patronal feasts fall within it. Their home church was built in 1854, in the reign of the last French Emperor, Napoleon III, and named for St Eugenius, a 7th-century bishop of Toledo, Spain, partly to honor the emperor’s Spanish-born wife, Eugénie. His feast day is November 15th; one week later is the feast of St Cecilia, patron of musicians, who was added as a second patron of the church in 1952 because of its proximity to the Paris Conservatory. As has been the general custom in Francis for over two centuries, both of these feasts are usually celebrated on the Sunday following as external solemnities.
All of the ceremonies in the church are broadcast live on their YouTube channel, and then permanently reposted. Below, I have also included links to their website, which gives the complete musical program (in French) for each ceremony. (Those pages include links to pdfs with the musical scores as well.) The Mass of St Eugenius begins with a rousing Christus vincit, as a relic of the Saint is carried though the church in procession – Feliciter! Feliciter!Monday, November 24, 2025
Patronal Feasts of the Schola Sainte-Cécile
Gregory DiPippoSunday, November 23, 2025
For He Must Eventually Reign...
Gregory DiPippoIt is no secret that the post-Conciliar liturgical reform, finding the original purpose of the feast of Christ the King, and the doctrine of Christ’s social kingship, rather an embarrassment in Modern Man™’s brave new world, completely denuded it of that purpose and transformed it into a celebration of Christ’s eschatological kingship, a kind of Septuagesima of Christmas. Following the lead of the wise Fr Hunwicke, I here share some considerations on this subject from N.T. Wright, one of the best Biblical scholars of our times, from his book “For All the Saints: Remembering the Christian Departed.” Prof. Wright is an Anglican, and formerly served as the bishop of Durham; he is therefore speaking here principally about the adoption of the new version of the feast of Christ the King into the Anglican liturgy, but his observations are just as pertinent to the post-Conciliar Catholic rite.
“The Sunday next before Advent had an old popular name: ‘Stir-up Sunday’. This derived from the old prayer, the Collect set for the day, which began, ‘Stir up, we beseech thee, O Lord, the wills of thy faithful people… ’, (traditionally also the date when people began preparing cakes and puddings for Christmas.) Its readings gave just a hint of things to come in Advent itself…![]() |
| The prayers of the last Sunday of the year in the Gellone Sacramentary, ca. 780 AD. (Bibliothèque National de France, Département des Manuscrits, Latin 12048) |
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| Christ before Pilate, 1881 by the Hungarian painter Mihály Munkácsy (1844–1900). Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons. |
Saturday, November 22, 2025
The Little Vespers of the Byzantine Office
Gregory DiPippoEarlier this week, I published an article which described the Inter-hours of the Byzantine Divine Office, a second Prime, Terce, Sext and None which are said after the main ones on certain penitential days. There are also days on which two Vespers are appointed to be celebrated, which are distinguished from each other by the terms “Little Vespers” and “Great Vespers.” As with the Inter-hours, this practice is for the most part only observed in the more liturgically energetic monasteries, and indeed, it emerged specifically because of the monastic discipline of fasting.
There is a perception in some quarters that nothing has ever changed in the Byzantine Rite, a perception which is sometimes played up for propagandistic purposes, as a way of unfavorably contrasting the drastic liturgical rupture in the Roman Catholic Church after Vatican II with the continuity of worship in the Orthodox churches. There is, of course, a very considerable degree of continuity in the history of the Byzantine liturgy, as there is in the Roman, but there have also been some very significant changes, and especially in the Divine Office. And it was one of these changes that led to the institution of Little Vespers, which became a standard part of the rite in the later 14th century.![]() |
| The rubrics for Little Vespers, and the first part of Great Vespers, in a Greek typikon printed in Venice in 1603. |
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| An aerial view of the lavra of St Sabas. (Image from Wikimedia Commons by Andrew Shiva, CC BY-SA 4.0) |
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| An icon of the Virgin of the Passion, by the Cretan icon painter Emmanuel Lampardos (1567-1631), so called because Mary is holding Jesus as He looks forward to His passion, represented by the Cross which the angel in the upper right hand corner is showing to him. (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons.) |
Recent Events at the Palestrina500 Festival in Grand Rapids
Gregory DiPippoOn this feast of St Cecilia, patroness of musicians, we are very pleased to share another update from the church of the Sacred Heart in Grand Rapids, Michigan, which is marking the 5th centenary of the birth of Palestrina this year with a special series of musical events, one every month.
On August 15, the feast of the Assumption, Sacred Heart of Jesus Parish in Grand Rapids, Michigan, welcomed His Majesty’s Men to sing a choral meditation and Mass for the parish’s year-long Palestrina500 festival.
Highlights from the choral meditation include:- Ave Maris Stella by duFay (1397-1474)
- Salve Regina by Byrd (1540-1623)
- Sicut Cervus by Palestrina (1525-94)
- Duo Seraphim by Vittoria (1548-1611)
- And new works from composers Mark Nowakowski, Philip Moore, Nathaniel Adams, and Chad McCoy.
- In monte oliveti by Palestrina
- Ave verum corpus by Josquin des Prez (1455-1521)
- Ave verum corpus by Andrew Bolden (b. 1977)
- Ave maris stella by Edvard Grieg (1843-1907)
- Crux Fidelis by Adrian Pool (b. 2000), a world premiere
- Stabant autem iuxta crucem by Michael Finnissy (b. 1946)
- Vexilla regis by Palestrina
- O sacrum convivium by Olivier Messiaen (1908-92)
- Lamentations of Jeremiah (Book 3, Set 2, no. 1) by Palestrina
- Totus tuus by Henryk Gorecki (1933-2010)
Friday, November 21, 2025
The “Barbarous” Sequence of the Presentation
Gregory DiPippoThe fact that this could find its way into print in a serious publication demonstrates what an atrocious state liturgical scholarship was when Thurston wrote these notes in the 1930s, and still was when Attwater put his hand to revising them in the 1950s. And indeed, the entire entry on the feast is grossly lacking. It states that it is “not very ancient”, while simultaneously asserting that it probably originated with the dedication of a church to the Virgin Mary in Jerusalem in 543, making it older than a great many other feasts on the calendar in both East and West. [1] But it fails to mention that it is counted among the Twelve Great Feasts of the Byzantine Rite, which celebrates it with a fore-feast and an after-feast, the equivalent of the Roman Rite’s vigil and octave.
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| An icon of the Entrance of the Mother of God into the Temple, as the feast is called in the Byzantine Rite. Note that the Virgin is represented as a small adult, rather than as a child; the reason for this is give below. (Cretan, 15th century; public domain image from Wikimedia Commons.) |
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| A page of a Roman Missal printed at Venice in 1521, in which the Mass of the Presentation consists solely of the aforementioned rubric in the upper part of the right column. |
Here then is the text of the sequence; the first letters of each stanza form an acrostic: “Ave Maria; benedico te. Amen.” As told in the Protoevangelium, when she entered the temple at the age of three, the Virgin already walked as if she were fully mature; this is the reason why in icons of the Presentation, she is represented not as a toddler, but as a small adult. The sequence also refers to the tradition that when it came time for the maidens who served in the temple to marry, St Joseph was chosen as her spouse because a flower bloomed on his walking staff, as did the rod of Aaron in Numbers 17. The translation is taken from the English edition of the apposite volume of Dom Gueranger’s Liturgical Year, with several modifications. Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, there is no recording available on YouTube.
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| The Marriage of the Virgin, ca. 1475-95, by an anonymous Netherlandish painter known as the Master of the Tiburtine Sybil. In the background are various other episodes from the Protoevangelium of James: in the upper middle, Joachim walks away from the temple, as his offering is rejected, since he is believed to be disfavored by God because of his failure to beget a child; he then goes out into the desert, and in the far background, an angel comes and tells him to return to his wife, and that they will conceive a child; Joachim and Anne are reunited at the gate of Jerusalem. At the left, the birth of the Virgin, and opposite, Her entry into the temple, with Joachim and Anne looking on behind her. (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons.) |
| Altissima providente, Cuncta recte disponente, Dei sapientia: |
As the Wisdom of God, foreseeing the greatest mysteries, disposeth all things rightly: |
| Uno nexu coniugatis Ioachim et Anna gratis Iuga sunt sterilia. |
Joachim and Anne are united in wedlock, but their union is sterile. |
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Ex cordis affectu toto Domino fideli voto Se strinxerunt pariter: |
With all the heart’s affection they together bind themselves by faithful vow to the Lord: |
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Mox si prolem illis dare Dignetur, hanc dedicare In templo perenniter. |
that if He deign to give them a child, they soon will consecrate it for ever in the temple. |
| Angelus apparuit Lucidus, qui docuit Exaudita vota, |
A bright Angel appears, and tells them their prayers are heard |
| Regis summi gratia Ut detur his filia Gratiosa tota. | By the most high King’s grace, a daughter shall be given them, full of grace. |
| In utero consecrata, Miro modo generata, Gignet mirabilius |
Consecrated in the womb born in a wondrous manner, more wondrously will she give birth |
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Altissimi Patris natum, Virgo manens, qui reatum Mundi tollet gratius. |
to the Son of the Father most high, remaining a virgin; and He shall freely take away the world’s guilt. |
| Benedicta virgo nata, Templo trina præsentata, Ter quinis gradibus |
Blessed is the Virgin born, at three years presented in the temple; by the fifteen steps |
| Erecta velox ascendit, Et uterque parens tendit, Ornando se vestibus. |
Swift and erect, she ascends adorned with her beautiful robe, as her parents’ watch. |
| Nova fulsit gloria Templo, dum eximia Virgo præsentatur. |
The temple shines with a new glory, when the august Virgin is presented; |
| Edocta divinitus, Visitata cælitus Angelis lætatur. |
Taught by God, Visited from heaven, she rejoices with the Angels. |
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Dum ut nubant iubet multis Princeps puellis adultis, Primo virgo renuit. |
When the chief (priest) bids the maidens of adult age to marry, the Virgin at first refuses; |
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Ipsam namque devovere Parentes, ipsaque manere Virgo voto statuit. |
for her parents have devoted her to God, and she herself has vowed to remain a virgin. |
| Consultus Deus responsum Dat ut virgo sumat sponsum, Quem pandet flos editus. |
God, being consulted, answers that the Virgin shall take that spouse whom the blooming flower shows; |
| Ostensus Ioseph puellam Ad parentum duxit cellam, Nuptiis sollicitus. | Joseph thus chosen weds the maiden, and leads her to his parents’ home, careful of the marriage. |
| Tunc Gabriel ad virginem Ferens conceptus ordinem, Delegatur. |
Then Gabriel is sent to the Virgin, bearing (God’s) command of her conception; |
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Erudita stat tacita, Verba quam sint insolita Meditatur. |
the prudent Virgin stands silent, pondering over the strangeness of the message. |
| At cum ille tradidit Modum, virgo credidit, Sicque sacro Flamine |
But when he explains how this shall be, she believes him; and thus by the Holy Spirit |
| Mox Verbum concipitur, Et quod nusquam clauditur, Conditur in virgine. |
Soon the Word is conceived, and He whom no space can contain is concealed within the Virgin. |
| Ecce virgo singularis, Quanta laude sublimaris, Quanta fulges gloria. |
Behold, peerless maiden, with what great praise thou are exalted, with what great glory thou shinest. |
| Nos ergo sic tuearis, Ut fructu quo gloriaris Fruamur in patria. Amen. |
Therefore, do so protect us, that in our fatherland we may enjoy the fruit, whereby thou art so honored. Amen. |
[1] This church, known as the “nea ekklesia – the new church”, or simply the Nea, was a project of the emperor Justinian, and was located very close to the site of the temple of Solomon into which the Virgin entered, the event celebrated by today’s feast. Its dedication was celebrated on November 20, 543; it seems likely, therefore, that the Presentation came into existence as a concomitant feast for the anniversary of this dedication, as the Exaltation of the Cross did for the dedication of the Holy Sepulcher. Thurston and Attwater inexplicably given no indication of any of this. (The Nea no longer exists; another church of the same name was built in Constantinople in the later 9th century, and has also disappeared.)
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| Jerusalem in a mosaic map in the floor of the church of St George in Madaba, Jordan, ca. 570 A.D., discovered in 1884. The main street is clearly visible running through the middle of it; the Nea Ekklesia is the building which fronts on it at the end of the street on the right. (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons.) |
The Sacrifice of the Mass (Papers of the Fota XIV Liturgical Conference): A Book Review
Michael P. Foley![]() |
| The Sacrifice of Abraham, 1631/35, by the Flemish painter Cornelis de Vos (1585-1651) |
The current effort to return to liturgical tradition takes, and must take, several forms. There are fraternities of priests who actively run parishes and shepherd souls, and there are contemplative nuns who pray without ceasing from behind cloister walls. There are polemicists on the front lines engaged in apologetics, like the late Michael Davies, and there are artists in music, painting, stained glass, and architecture trying to make churches once again centers of beauty.
Upon these [the consecrated Host and Chalice] deign to look with a favorable and serene countenance, and to accept them, as Thou wert graciously pleased to accept the gifts of Thy just servant Abel, and the sacrifice of our patriarch Abraham, and that which Thy high priest Melchizedek offered to Thee, a holy Sacrifice, an unspotted Victim.
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| Abraham and Melchizedek, anonymous Italo-flemish, late 16th century |
Israel’s liturgy and the aspirations of all human reverence towards the divine are thus taken up and fulfilled in the Eucharistic sacrifice. The sacrificial matter of Abel (the lamb) and of Melchizedek (bread and wine) lend themselves to this interpretation, since the Eucharistic sacrifice of bread and wine makes present the sacrificed Lamb (see Rev. 5, 6) (26).
Thursday, November 20, 2025
A New Edition of the Monastic Breviary from Farnborough Abbey
Gregory DiPippoWe are glad to share this notice from the abbey of St Michael in Farnborough, England, about their new republication of the Monastic Breviary. It may be purchased at a special pre-order price at this link: https://www.theabbeyshop.com/product/breviarium-monasticum. Orders will ship in February of next year.
Many readers of the NLM will be familiar with the extremely popular Monastic Diurnal in Latin & English. The St Michael’s Abbey Press has been publishing that title for about 20 years now, and it is now in its 8th edition. We are therefore delighted to announce that, after some years of preparation, we are publishing a full Breviarium Monasticum - the 1962 Monastic Breviary in two volumes in Latin only. These volumes contain everything necessary to follow the entire Monastic Office including the Office of Matins, which is not given in the diurnal.
Posted Thursday, November 20, 2025
Labels: Buy Liturgical Books, Monastic Office, St Michael's Abbey
Wednesday, November 19, 2025
Reliquaries of St Elizabeth of Hungary
Gregory DiPippoSt Elizabeth of Hungary was canonized on Pentecost of the year 1235, May 25th, just over three-and-a-half years after her death, the third Franciscan Saint, and first woman among them, since at the time St Clare of Assisi was still alive in this world. She was one of the very earliest prominent members of the Third Order, and has long been honored as its chief patron alongside St Louis IX, king of France. (St Francis himself and St Anthony of Padua were canonized before her, and even more rapidly, by the same pope, Gregory IX.)
Tuesday, November 18, 2025
The Dedication of the Basilicas of Ss Peter and Paul
Gregory DiPippo![]() |
Pope Urban VIII draws the letters of the Latin alphabet in ashes spread over the floor, during the consecration of St. Peter’s Basilica on November 18, 1626, the 1300th anniversary of the original church’s consecration by Pope St Sylvester I. (Roman tapestry, ca. 1660)
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| The prayers for the Mass of the anniversary of the dedication of a church in the Echternach Sacramentary, 895 A.D. (Bibliothèque nationale de France, Département des manuscrits, Latin 9433) |
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| The chancel arch, apse and high altar of the basilica of St Paul Outside-the-Walls, seen from the nave. Each image of St Paul is accompanied by one of St Peter, on the chancel arch, in the apsidal mosaic, and with the two statues seen here at the lower corners. (Image from Wikimedia Commons by Fallaner, CC BY-SA 4.0) |
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| Ss Ambrose and Augustine, ca. 1495, by the Spanish painter Pedro Berruguete (1450-1504.) Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons. |
Elijah And The Priests of Baal - An Anticipation of the Trinity
David ClaytonRecently, I was reading some of the hymns from the Midnight Office of the Byzantine Rite, and the following one from the third tone of the Sunday octoechos particularly caught my attention:
In days of old, Elijah ordered that water be poured three times over the wood and the sacrifice; thus, he manifested a symbol of the Three Hypostases of the one and divine Lordship.This is a commentary on a passage from 1 Kings 18, in which the prophet Elijah challenges 450 prophets of the pagan God Baal to a contest on Mount Carmel. Each side prepares a bull on an altar without lighting a fire:
Then Elias bade the people come near; and when they were standing close to him, he began repairing the altar of the Lord, which was broken down. Twelve stones he took, one for each tribe that sprang from the sons of Jacob, to whom the divine voice gave the surname of Israel; and with these stones he built up the altar again, calling on the Lord's name as he did it. Then he made a trench around the altar of some two furrows breadth; piled the wood high, cut the bull into joints, and laid these on the wood. Now, he said, fill four buckets with water, and pour it over victim and wood alike. And again he bade them do it, and when they had finished a third time. The water was running all around the altar, and the trench he had dug for it was full. (1 Kings 18, 30-35)
He then calls on their god to send flames from heaven to consume the sacrifice. Elijah, needless to say, prevails, calling upon God who consumes altar, bull and water with fire.
Here are examples of artistic depictions of this scene that I found. There weren’t many to choose from, so this is pretty much all of them!
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| 3rd Century Fresco, Dura Europos, in modern Syria. |
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| The Sacrifice of Elijah, by Aert Jansz. Marienhof (1626-54) Credit: The Bowes Museum |
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| Albert Joseph Moore: Elijah’ Sacrifice, 1863. (Bury Art Museum) |
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I was reflecting on this and thinking about how I would do it if I were to paint it. What follows is purely speculative.
I suggest incorporating a clear triangular geometry and a representation of the triple action of pouring water, showing each of the three instances as a triple image.
We might also draw out other prototypes too, it occurs to me. First is Eucharistic (just as Rublev’s Trinity is both Eucharistic and Trinitarian...and even Marian); second is Baptismal; and third is Pentecostal.
The Eucharistic parallels are in the sacrifice, while the baptismal arises from the purifying action of the water.
It is the pentecostal that is most interesting to me. First, the action of fire that consumes evil but leaves the pure untouched echoes that of the three children in the fiery furnace in the book of Daniel. The hymns of the liturgy describe this scene from Daniel very often, and refer to the action of God in the fire of the furnace, and of the young men who were protected by the presence of a cooling dew. Both dew and fire are connected symbolically to the Holy Spirit. The other place where this parallel with dew and the Spirit is made in the commentaries of Church Fathers is in the description of the fleece of Gideon. So how might I bring all of this together?
I suggest creating a painting of Pentecost in which the New Testament scene is the primary image, with subsidiary images in the same painting of Gideon, Elijah, and the prophets of Baal, and the three young men in the fiery furnace. Just a thought!





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