Today, in the 1962 Dominican Rite Calendar, we celebrate the feast of the illustrious St. Catherine of Siena, Virgin, Doctor of the Church, Patroness of the Third Order of St. Dominic. At the time the 1962 Dominican Breviary was published, her feast was II Class, though it could be celebrated as I Class by Tertiaries and Churches which bore her name. By the time of the publication of the English translations of the Breviarium S.O.P., the Order raised her feast to I Class. Accordingly, the festive office is prayed according to the rubrics.
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Thursday, April 30, 2015
Wednesday, April 29, 2015
April 29: St. Peter Martyr, M., O.P., II Class
Today, in the 1962 Dominican Rite Calendar, we celebrate the feast of the illustrious St. Peter Martyr, martyr, of the Order of Preachers. The feast is II Class and the semi-festive office is prayed according to the rubrics.
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
April 28: St. Louis Marie Grignon de Montfort, C., O.P., Comm.
Today, in the 1962 Dominican Rite Calendar, we celebrate the feast of St. Paul of the Cross. In addition, we make a commemoration of St. Louis Marie Grignon de Montfort, confessor, of the Order of Preachers. The feast is III Class and the ordinary office is prayed according to the rubrics. At Lauds and Vespers, the commemoration of St. Louis M.G. de Montfort is made.
Sunday, April 26, 2015
Dominican Tertiary Indulgence Alert
Dominican Tertiaries (Lay Dominicans) are reminded that a plenary indulgence may be acquired, provided the usual conditions (confession, Communion and prayer for the intentions of the Supreme Pontiff) are properly fulfilled, who make or renew, at least privately, the promise to faithfully observe the statutes of the Third Order (Lay Fraternity of St. Dominic) on the upcoming Feast of St. Catherine of Siena on April 29 (new calendar) or April 30 (Dominican Rite calendar).
The complete list of days when the plenary indulgence may be obtained, can be found here, at the Australian Province Website.
Friday, April 24, 2015
April 24: Feast of the Most Holy Crown of Thorns, II Class
Today, in the 1962 Dominican Rite Calendar, we celebrate the feast of The Most Holy Crown of Thorns. The feast is II Class, so the Semi-Festive Office is prayed. This is one of the oldest feasts, unique to the Order, that is on the Order's calendar. In his history of the Dominican Rite, Fr. William Bonniwell, O.P. notes that this feast is actually listed on the oldest surviving Dominican liturgical calendar, which dates back to the time when Humbert de Romans was Master of the Order.
The history of the feast is detailed in the third lesson of Matins:
Among some of the more beautiful elements of the Office of this day are:"When Saint Louis, king of France, accepted from Baldwin II, emperor of Constantinople, the gift of the Lord’s crown of thorns, he sent to Constantinople two brethren, Stephen and James, of the Order of Preachers. In the year 1239, on the day following Saint Lawrence’s feast, they brought the crown to Sens, to the king. With great solemnity, it was borne to Paris and was finally placed in the royal palace, in a chapel built by Louis himself. The precious treasure, profanely stolen during the unhappy days of the French Revolution towards the end of the eighteenth century, was later restored and transferred to the metropolitan basilica. Louis however, made a gift of some thorns of the sacred crown to the Dominicans and commissioned them to celebrate, in the chapel dedicated to the crown, the anniversary of its reception there. The feast of the most holy crown of thorns was inserted into the calendar of the Order of Preachers about the middle of the thirteenth century."
Matins:
Invit. The solemnities of the Lord's crown are begun. * Let the church applaud with abundant praise, alleluia.
Ant to psalms: An unbelieving people mocks Christ as he wears the crown of thorns; by his red blood the crown of glory is conferred, alleluia.
R. i. The thornless Flower is pierced with the thorn through which the thorn if sin is broken; * the thorn of death is blunted by thorns, as Life itself is dying, alleluia. V. Through this mockery, the enemy is mocked; through death, the power of death is taken away. - The thorn of death.Lauds
Before Lauds V. Plaiting a crown of thorns, alleluia. R. They put it on the Lord's head, alleulia.
Ant. 1. This is the joyful day on which the crown of thorns, red with Christ's blood, is recalled to mind, alleluia, alleluia.
Ant. 3. How happy the puncture, how blessed the thorn, from which flows that unguent, the cure for the world! Alleluia.
Prayer
Almighty God, we who on earth recall the passion of our Lord Jesus Christ by honoring his crown of thorns, beseech you that we may be worthy to be crowned with glory and honor in heaven, by him; who lives and reigns with you…
Thursday, April 23, 2015
Happy 2nd Anniversary!!!
Tomorrow is the 2nd Anniversary of the Breviarium S.O.P. blog! Happy Anniversary! Our first post was put up on April 24, 2013...the Feast of Our Lord's Holy Crown of Thorn's.
Monday, April 20, 2015
St. Agnes of Montepulciano, V, O.P., III cl.
Today, in the
1962 Dominican Rite Calendar, we celebrate the feast of St. Agnes of
Montepulciano, virgin of the Order of Preachers. The feast is III Class,
so the Ordinary Office is prayed. Like many III Class
feasts of the Dominican saints in the Breviary, her office contains the full
propers as if the feast were II Class. At Lauds, the Psalms of Sunday are
prayed.
Thursday, April 16, 2015
The Devotion of the 15 Tuesdays to St. Dominic
The tradition of dedicating Tuesdays to Our Holy Father St.
Dominic takes its origins right from the beginnings of the Order. The first translations of the relics of our
holy Patriarch took place on Whit-Tuesday (May 24) in the year 1233 at
Bologna. Successive Chapters from 1239
to 1282 introduced various liturgical practices into the rubrics of the Mass
and Office of the Order, as a means of fostering devotion to him. This process culminated in the act of the
Chapter of 1362, which introduced the practice of dedicating the 3rd day of the
week (Tuesday) to the holy Patriarch.
From this point forward, on every Tuesday outside of Lent, the Mass of the
day was to be his Mass, with a commemoration of him in the Office.
The specific practice of the Devotion of the 15 Tuesdays was
instituted in Florence in the year 1631.
During an occurrence of the plague that year, a Fr. Michael Bruni, of
the Dominican monastery of Santa Maria Novella, exhorted the faithful to pray
to St. Dominic, and promise to receive on Communion on 15 consecutive Tuesdays,
presumably in honor of the 15 decades of the Rosary. The success of this effort led to a rapid
spread of the 15 Tuesdays devotion. Pope
Pius VII granted an indulgence for those who availed themselves of the pious
practice in honor of St. Dominic.
This year, the devotion of the 15 Tuesdays begins on
Tuesday, April 21 and ends on Tuesday, July 28.
Even though an indulgence is no longer attached to this wonderful
devotion, we can, nonetheless, keep this beautiful tradition alive and
undertake this pious work in honor of our our holy Patriarch, St. Dominic.
O
lumen Ecclesiae
Doctor
veritatis,
Rosa
patientiae,
Ebur
castitatis,
Aquam
sapientiae
propinasti
gratis,
Praedicator
gratiae,
nos
junge beatis.
|
Light
of the Church,
Teacher
of truth,
Rose
of patience,
Ivory
of chastity,
You
freely poured forth
The
waters of wisdom,
Preacher
of grace,
Unite
us with the blessed.
|
Monday, April 13, 2015
The Ferial Office During Paschaltide
This year,
during the season of the Paschaltide (April 5 through May 13), we will pray
the ferial office 10 times. In the Dominican Breviary, the ferial office
in Epiphany season is similar to that of the Roman Breviary, with slight
differences. Among the elements that are different include, the invitatory and hymn at Matins the hymn at Lauds, the Short Lesson at Prime, and the hymn at Vespers.
The ferial days in Paschaltide are IV Class, so when a III Class feast occurs on the calendar, no commemoration is made of the ferial office.
April and May are months par excellence in the traditional Dominican sanctorale. April contains the feasts of St. Vincent Ferrer (April 5), Our Lord's Most Holy Crown of Thorns (April 24), St. Agnes of Montepulciano (April 20), St. Louis de Montfort (April 28), St. Peter Martyr (April 29) and St. Catherine of Siena (April 30). May starts off with St. Pius V (May 5). Then we have the Feast of the Blessed Virgin Mary Mediatrix of All Graces (May 8), St. Antonius (May 10) , Blessed Imelda (May 13), the Transfer of Our Holy Father St. Dominic (May 24), and finally Bl. William and his Companions (May 29).
Sunday, April 12, 2015
Compline from Low Sunday to the Ascension
Continuing
our series on the unique features of the Dominican Breviary at Compline, we now
come to the period between Low Sunday and the Ascension.
Compline
begins as usual. After the responsory, which is said with the Alleluia's
as noted in the rubrics, the following hymn is said.
Jesu,
nostra redémptio,
Amor
et desidérium,
Deus
Creátor ómnium,
Homo
in fine témporum:
Quæ
te vicit cleméntia,
Ut
ferres nostra crímina,
Crudélem
mortem pátiens,
Ut
nos a morte tólleres?
Inférni
claustra pénetrans,
Tuos
captívos rédimens,
Victor
triúmpho nóbili
Ad
dextram Patris résidens:
Ipsa
te cogat píetas
Ut
mala nostra súperes
Parcéndo,
et voti cómpotes
Nos
tuo vultu sáties.
|
Redemption,
Jesus, all divine,
Whom
here we love, for whom we pine,
God,
working our creation’s plan,
And,
in the latter time, made man:
What
love of yours was that which led
To
take our woes upon your head,
And
pangs and cruel death to bear,
To
ransom us from death’s despair!
You
pierced the halls of Limbo bare,
Gave
freedom to your captives there;
And
now you sit in victor’s pride
Triumphant
at the Father’s side.
Let
very mercy force you still
To
spare us, conquering each ill;
We
pray you grant us our request,
That
seeing you we may be blest
|
From Low Sunday to the Ascension the last two versus are: |
|
Quǽsiumus,
Auctor óminum,
In
hoc pascháli gáudio,
Ab
omni mortis ímpetu
Tuum
defénde pópulum.
Glória
tibi, Dómine,
Qui
surrexísti a mórtuis,
Cum
Patre et Sancto Spíritu
In
sempitérna sǽcula. Amen
Ant.
At Nunc Dimittis : Allelúia. Resurréxit Dóminus, allelúia, sicut dixit vobis, allelúia, allelúia.
|
Creator
great, be you our guide
In
this the joy of Easter-tide;
Whenever
assaults of death impend,
Your
people strengthen and defend.
All
glory, Lord, to you we pay,
Arisen
from the dead, today;
With
Father and the Spirit be
All
glory yours eternally. Amen.
Ant.
at Nunc Dimittis: Alleluia. The
Lord
has risen, alleluia, as he told you,
alleluia,
alleluia.
|
The last two versus of the hymn change, during Ascension-tide and
the octave of Pentecost.
Sunday, April 5, 2015
The Holy Day Of The Pasch
This Day Was Made By The Lord; We Rejoice And Are Glad.
A blessed Easter to all the readers and followers of the Breviarium S.O.P. blog!!
There are a number of peculiarities in the Dominican Office for today's holy feast. Among these are some interesting additions to the Office of Vespers for today, and the following Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. In addition to the shortened psalter that you also find in the Roman Breviary, the Dominican Breviary contains the following: