Wednesday, December 30, 2020
COMPLETE: The 1967 Dominican Breviary in English Online
Tuesday, December 29, 2020
UPDATE: The 1967 Dominican Breviary in English Online
Thursday, December 24, 2020
December 24: Vigil of the Nativity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, I Class
℣. Tomorrow the transgression of the earth will be blotted out. ℟. And the Savior of the world will reign over us. (Versicle before Lauds for the Vigil of the Nativity).
Tuesday, December 22, 2020
December 22: The Patronage of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Comm.
Happy Anniversary to the Order of Preachers!
Sunday, December 6, 2020
December 6: St. Nicholas, B., C., III Class
I have stumbled across a number of connections between St. Nicholas and our holy Order. I wrote did a post about how the feast of St. Nicholas was elevated to a totum duplex (1st Class) feast. The next year, I did a post on how the famous mystical experience which ended St. Thomas Aquinas' prolific theological writing occurred on the feast of St. Nicholas, right after the Angelic Doctor finished offering the Mass of this saint. I also did a posted on the fact that, when St. Dominic was approaching death, and was too ill to walk, he was carried by the brethren by stretcher to the Church of St. Nicholas in Bologna. And there, surrounded by his fellow friars, he passed to his eternal reward. Finally, in 2018, I posted on a scholarly article which suggested that the famous O lumen ecclesiae antiphon for the office of St. Dominic may have borrowed heavily from an existing antiphon for...you guessed it, the office of St. Nicholas (O Christi Pietas). You can find it here.
As always, I remind anyone who reads this blog to check out the website of a wonderful organization called The St. Nicholas Center, who contacted me two years ago to ask if they could include my post from last year on St. Nicholas and the Dominicans on their website. I was happy to oblige. This organization seeks to promote and educate the world on this wonderful saint, who is the inspiration for Santa Claus.
December 6: St. Nicholas, B., C., III Class
In keeping with past tradition, I am reposting some posts that I did in the past, which shows an interesting link between St. Nicholas, who's feast we celebrate today, and the Dominican Order. The feast of St. Nicholas, Bishop of Myra, is one of my favorite non-Dominican feasts in the liturgical calendar. It holds the liturgical rank of III Class, as in the Roman Rite, but unlike the latter rite the Dominican Breviary contains a near-complete set of propers, as if the feast were II Class (you can download the text of the propers here, taken from the 1967 English Translation of the Breviarium S.OP.).
I have stumbled across a number of connections between St. Nicholas and our holy Order. I wrote did a post about how the feast of St. Nicholas was elevated to a totum duplex (1st Class) feast. The next year, I did a post on how the famous mystical experience which ended St. Thomas Aquinas' prolific theological writing occurred on the feast of St. Nicholas, right after the Angelic Doctor finished offering the Mass of this saint. I also did a posted on the fact that, when St. Dominic was approaching death, and was too ill to walk, he was carried by the brethren by stretcher to the Church of St. Nicholas in Bologna. And there, surrounded by his fellow friars, he passed to his eternal reward. Finally, last year, I posted on a scholarly article which suggested that the famous O lumen ecclesiae antiphon for the office of St. Dominic may have borrowed heavily from an existing antiphon for...you guessed it, the office of St. Nicholas (O Christi Pietas). You can find it here.
As always, I remind anyone who reads this blog to check out the website of a wonderful organization called The St. Nicholas Center, who contacted me two years ago to ask if they could include my post from last year on St. Nicholas and the Dominicans on their website. I was happy to oblige. This organization seeks to promote and educate the world on this wonderful saint, who is the inspiration for Santa Claus.
Monday, November 30, 2020
The Ferial Office During Advent
From “Missale Sacri Ordinis Praedicatorum"; 1933 |
Wednesday, November 25, 2020
November 25: St. Catherine of Alexandria, V., M., III Class
Today, in the 1962 Dominican Rite Calendar, we celebrate the feast of St. Catherine of Alexandria, Virgin and Martyr. The feast is III Class, so the ordinary office is prayed according to the rubrics.
Due to the circumstances of her martyrdom, as one defending the Faith against pagans, and the fact that she is reputed to have been a philosopher, she has traditionally been referred to as one of the two "protectresses" of the Order, the other being St. Mary Magdalene. In a future post, I will give the account of their intervention in the miracle of St. Dominic at Soriano.
Thursday, November 12, 2020
November 12: Feast of All Saints of the Dominican Order, II Class
Today, in the 1962 Dominican Rite Calendar, we celebrate the feast of All Saints of the Dominican Order. The feast is II Class and so the semi-festive office is prayed according to the rubrics.
Saturday, October 31, 2020
LOST FEASTS: October 31 - Commemoration of the Holy Relics
Thursday, October 8, 2020
LOST TRADITIONS: October 7-14 Octave Of B.V.M. Of The Rosary
If the Order had maintained its system of keeping the octaves of its major feasts, the Octave of the B.V.M. of the Rosary would be celebrated from October 8 till October 14. This is one of the many octaves that the Dominicans included in their calendar, as a means of prolonging the celebration of saints (or in this case, their Patroness), that were casualties of the revisions of Dominican calendar that took place in the middle of the 20th Century. Not all of the Dominican saints had "solemn" octaves after their feast day, but the major ones like St. Dominic, St. Catherine of Sienna, St. Thomas Aquinas, and St. Peter Martyr did.
Every day during the octave, a commemoration was made at Lauds and Vespers using the proper versicle/responsory, Benedictus/Magnificat antiphons provided in the sanctorale. The versicles and responses come from the feast, as does the antiphon at Lauds (which comes from 1st Vespers of the feast), but I have not been able to tell where the antiphon for Vespers comes from. In fact, I could not find a translation of the antiphon for Vespers. So if anyone out there can either translate it, or can point me toward a good English translation of it, i would be immensely appreciative.
Ad Bened. ant. Speciosa facta es et suavis in deliciis virginitatis sancta Dei genitrix: quam videntes filiae Syon vernantem in floribus rosarum et liliis convalium. Beatissimam praedicaverunt,et regine laudaverunt eam. | Ad Bened. ant. The holy Mother of God is beautiful and comely in the delights of virginity. When they saw her flourishing among the roses and lilies of the valleys, the maidens of Sion called her happy and queens praised her |
V. Elegit eam Deus, et praeelegit eam. R. Et habitare eam facit in tabernaculo suo. | V. God has chosen her, and has given her preference. R. He gives her his home to dwell in. |
Oratio. Deus, cuius Unigenitus per vitam, mortem et resurrectionem suam nobis salutis aeternae praemia comparavit: concede, quaesumus; ut haec mysteria sacratissimo beatae Mariae Virginis Rosario recolentes, et imitemur quod continent, et quod promittunt, assequamur. Per Dominum nostrum… | Prayer O God, whose only begotten Son, by His life, death, and resurrection, has purchased for us the rewards of eternal life, grant, we beseech thee, that by meditating on these mysteries of the most holy Rosary, of the Blessed Virgin Mary, we may imitate what they contain and obtain what they promise. Through the same… |
Ad Magnif. ant. Sancta Maria virginum piissima suscipe vota servulorum assidua lapsos erige errantes corrige trementes corrobora pusillanimes conforta ut tibi semper referamus laudes quam Dei summi colimus Genetricem. | Ad Magnif. ant. Holy Mary, most tender of virgins, receive the constant prayers of your little servants: raise up the fallen, correct the wayward, strengthen the trembling, comfort the faint-hearted: so that we may ever offer praises to you whom we honor as the Mother of the Most High God. |
V. Regina sacratissimi Rosarii ora pro nobis. R. Ut digni efficiámur promissiónibus Christi. | V. Queen of the most holy Rosary pray for us. R. That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ. |
Wednesday, October 7, 2020
October 7: The Blessed Virgin Mary of the Rosary, I Class
Today, in the 1962 Dominican Rite Calendar, we celebrate the feast of the Blessed Virgin Mary of the Rosary. The feast is I Class in the calendar of the Dominican Order, so the festive office is prayed according to the rubrics. Traditionally, Dominican Tertiaries would fast on the vigil of this great feast. The hymns at 1st Vespers, Matins, and Lauds celebrate the three traditional groupings of mysteries...the Joyful, Sorrowful, and Glorious. You can download the entire English translation of the office here.
The Commemoration of Our Lady of Victory, which Pope Plus V instituted to be made annually, on account of the famous victory gained on this very day by the Christians in a naval battle against the Turks, by the assistance of the same Mother of God. However, Gregory XIII decreed that for the same victory there should be celebrated on the first Sunday of this month the annual solemnity of the Rosary of the Most Blessed Virgin.
Monday, October 5, 2020
October 5: Bl. Raymond of Capua, C., O.P., III Class
Today, in the 1962 Dominican Rite Calendar, we celebrate the feast of Blessed Raymond of Capua, confessor of the Order of Preachers. The feast is III Class, so the ordinary office is prayed according to the rubrics.
Saturday, September 5, 2020
September 5: Anniversary of the Associates and Benefactors of our Order
Today, in the 1962 Dominican Rite Calendar, we commemorate the Anniversary of the Deceased Associates and Benefactors of our Order. The commemoration is made at Pretiosa as follows:
The Anniversary of the deceased friends and benefactors of our Order.
Saturday, August 15, 2020
August 15: Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, I Class
A few years ago, while reading "Christ the Savior" by Fr. Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange, O.P. on the Assumption of the B.V.M., I came across the following passage:
Therefore the Blessed Virgin Mary, as Mother of the Savior and the new Eve, is also most closely associated with Christ's perfect victory over death, so that "she could not be held down or detained by the bonds of death, " as the liturgy says[19]; otherwise she would have been vanquished by death and would not have been the vanquisher, and her parallelism with Christ's resurrection and ascension, before the general resurrection of the dead, would be destroyed. Moreover, the exceptional benediction, "blessed art thou among women," excludes the malediction "into dust thou shalt return." (emphasis mine)
Wednesday, August 12, 2020
Antiphonarium S.O.P. - 1933
Yesterday, I received the latest, and probably last, addition to my collection of Dominican Rite liturgical books. The elusive "Antiphonarium Sacri Ordinis Praedicatorum - Pro Diurnis Horis". This is the volume that contains the chant for the day hours of the Dominican office. It was published in 1933, under the authority of Master General Stanislaus Gillet, O.P..
It's a great volume, chock full of the wonderful chant that the Order used to use to sing the office. The binding is tight and the leather cover is in good condition. Looking forward to using it!
Wednesday, August 5, 2020
LOST TRADITIONS: August 5 - 11: Octave of Our Holy Father St. Dominic
On August 5, at Pretiosa, we read in the Martyrology for August 6 the commemoration of his death on the actual day that he passed to his eternal reward:
At Bologna, the birthday of St. Dominic, confessor and founder of the Order of Friars Preachers. He was a man of great renown for holiness and learning. Until death he preserved without stain his virginity, and by the singular grace of his merits raised three dead men to life. By his preaching he curbed heresies, and established many persons in a religious and godly manner of life. He died on this day, but his festival, by an ordinance of Pope Paul IV, is celebrated on August 4.
Tuesday, August 4, 2020
August 4: Our Holy Father St. Dominic, C., O.P., I Class
O happy parent, Spain, rejoice in giving to the world the joy of new offspring! But, rejoice still more, Bologna, because you are favored with the glory of so great a father. O universal Mother Church, sing in praise as you celebrate the festival of this new source of fame! (Super psalmos antiphon to the Laudate psalms at First Vespers.)
Monday, August 3, 2020
August 3: The Vigil of the Feast of St. Dominic
At Bologna, our most holy Father St. Dominic, confessor and founder of the Order of Friars Preachers. He was most illustrious, being distinguished by nobility of birth, sanctity and learning. Until death he preserved without stain his virginity and by the singular grace of his merits he raised three persons from the dead. By his preaching he curbed heresies and established many persons in a religious and godly manner of life. On August 6, his soul soared to heaven, there to receive a reward commensurate with his extraordinary works. His feast, however, is celebrated on this day, by an ordinance of Pope Paul IV. A totum duplex feast of the first class with a solemn octave.
The office begins at 1st Vespers with the super psalm antiphon....Gaude (O happy parent, Spain,...), followed by the special arrangement of Psalms that are used in the Dominican Office for 1st Class feasts (Psalms 112, 116, 145, 146, & 147, a.k.a, the "laudate Psalms).
Sunday, August 2, 2020
Dominican Tertiary Indulgence Alert! - Feast of St. Dominic
In your charity, please consider offering the indulgence for a deceased fellow Tertiary, or perhaps a deceased friar or nun/brother who is suffering in Purgatory.
The complete list of days when the plenary indulgence may be obtained, can be found here, at the Australian Province Website.
Thursday, July 30, 2020
July 30: Bl. Mannes, C., O.P., Commemoration
At Calaruega in Spain, Blessed Mannes, brother of our Father St. Dominic. He possessed sincerity and simplicity to a high degree, and was devoted to contemplation. Rich in merit and renowned for his miracles, he died a holy death in the Cistercian monastery of St. Peter at Gamiel.
Friday, July 17, 2020
July 17: Bl. Ceslaus, C., O.P., Commemoration
Friday, May 22, 2020
The Ferial Office in Ascension-tide
Though this season is short, and is overshadowed by the looming arrival of Pentecost, it is a beautiful liturgical season nonetheless. The ferial days in Ascensiontide are IV Class, so when a III Class feast occurs on the calendar, no commemoration is made of the ferial office.
Wednesday, May 13, 2020
May 13: Blessed Imelda, V., O.P., Comm.
Sunday, May 10, 2020
May 10: St. Antoninus, B., C., O.P., II Class
At Florence, St. Antoninus, archbishop of the same city and a member of the Order of Preachers. On account of the excellence of his doctrine and his holiness, he was compelled to become bishop, although he was unwilling. He was illustrious for his mercy and his piety. He likewise excelled to a remarkable degree in sacerdotal zeal. He was so celebrated for his prudence and good counsel, that he was justly called "Antoninus the Counsellor." Famous for his virtues and his miracles, he departed for Heaven in the seventieth year of his life, on May 2. He lies buried in the Church of San Marco where he is held in high veneration by the people.
Friday, May 8, 2020
May 8: Blessed Virgin Mary - Mediatrix of All Graces, III Class
Tuesday, May 5, 2020
May 5: St. Pius V, P., C., O.P., II Class
St. Pius V is one of my favorite saints (I often wonder if that is a Dominican Breviary in his hand in the photo above!). Anyone who has been unwillingly thrust into a position of leadership, can sympathize with this humble man who wanted nothing more than to be a humble Dominican friar, yet found himself enmeshed in world affairs. He is also another example of a canonized Inquisitor, the presence of whose feast in the liturgical calendar helps to dispel some of the toxic myths that the enemies of the Church have spread to further their war against almighty God and his one true Church.
As surprising as it may seem, given the reputation this holy Pope and friary had, it took nearly a century and a half after his death before he was canonized! In his "History of the Dominican Liturgy", Fr. William Bonniwell, O.P., relates the story of his canonization:
Friday, May 1, 2020
LOST TRADITIONS: April 30 - May 7: Octave of St. Catherine of Siena
I do understand the concern about the sanctorale crowding out the temporale, but is it that difficult to make a commemoration at Lauds and Vespers for seven days?
Thursday, April 30, 2020
April 30: St, Catherine of Siena, V., D., O.P., I Class
Wednesday, April 29, 2020
April 29: St. Peter Martyr, M., O.P., II Class
Friday, April 24, 2020
April 24: Feast of the Most Holy Crown of Thorns, II Class
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.
"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."
Tuesday, April 21, 2020
The Devotion of the 15 Tuesdays to St. Dominic
Monday, April 20, 2020
Compline from Low Sunday to 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 crÃmina,
Crudélem mortem pátiens,
Ut nos a morte tólleres?
Inférni claustra pénetrans,
Tuos captÃvos rédimens,
Victor triúmpho nóbili
Ad dextram Patris résidens:
Ipsa te cogat pÃetas
Ut mala nostra súperes
Parcéndo, et voti cómpotes
Nos tuo vultu sáties.
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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
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From Low Sunday to the Ascension the last two versus are: | |
Quǽsiumus, Auctor óminum,
In hoc pascháli gáudio,
Ab omni mortis Ãmpetu
Tuum defénde pópulum.
Glória tibi, Dómine,
Qui surrexÃsti a mórtuis,
Cum Patre et Sancto SpÃritu
In sempitérna sǽcula. Amen
Ant. At Nunc Dimittis : Allelúia. Resurréxit Dóminus, allelúia, sicut dixit vobis, allelúia, allelúia.
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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.
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