LMS ORDO and CALENDAR for 2020
Wednesday, 6 November 2019
Saturday, 26 October 2019
Masses at O.L. of the Assumption, Swynnerton on All Saints and All Souls
Day:
Also:
Article by the N. Staffs Rep in 'Oremus' Nov. 2017 may be of interest:
November is a month that begins following a challenging
day in the church calendar, or rather an evening: All Hallows’ Eve. For generations has there not been something
spooky about it? Do those gravestones
that local people become so familiar with throughout other days of the year
suddenly acquire a disturbing symbolism after dusk, an uncomfortable reminder
of grim inevitabilities? Typically, the
shopping malls pick up on the American idea of Halloween and encourage the
buying of pumpkins to make scary faces, while the film industry for years has
cashed in on the idea of horror films associated with this particular date in
the calendar. All this distorts and undermines
the significance of the event and spreads misconception. Yet the following day is a wonderful
occasion, the Feast of All Saints.
The thing about this Feast Day however, is that it celebrates the blessed faithful whose souls are already in Heaven. But not all the souls of those buried in hallowed ground are with them; many we can infer from the teachings of the Church are waiting in Purgatory for the day of release into eternal bliss. And the month of November is dedicated to these souls as much as to those in Heaven, and in recognising this, we remember our own personal and collective link to all these souls, although not just on their Feast Day on the second of the month.
All
Saints, Fri. 1 Nov – Low Mass 6 pm (Holy Day of Obligation)
All
Souls, Fri. 2 Nov - REQUIEM MASS 10 am
Also:
Article by the N. Staffs Rep in 'Oremus' Nov. 2017 may be of interest:
SOULFUL
SEASONAL THOUGHTS (or
‘NOVEMBER THOUGHTS’)
The thing about this Feast Day however, is that it celebrates the blessed faithful whose souls are already in Heaven. But not all the souls of those buried in hallowed ground are with them; many we can infer from the teachings of the Church are waiting in Purgatory for the day of release into eternal bliss. And the month of November is dedicated to these souls as much as to those in Heaven, and in recognising this, we remember our own personal and collective link to all these souls, although not just on their Feast Day on the second of the month.
In connection with this, we have to remind
ourselves that since so much has been deliberately or accidentally sidelined in
the pulpit and classroom teaching of the Catholic Faith in the last fifty
years, many worshippers are not aware of, or have forgotten, a most important
three-tiered structure of Christ’s
mystical Church: that it is comprised of all its members, living and dead. In Heaven it is the Church Triumphant. On earth as we fight to keep the faith
against all the distractions and temptations to abandon practice and belief, it
is the Church Militant. In Purgatory,
hence the name, those who “have fought the gallant fight” to quote Fr. Faber’s
hymn, undergo whatever is involved in the removal of sin. They are the Church Suffering. And so we might particularly think of these
souls dependent on all our prayers in this month of November.
Of course as we know so well, each month,
indeed each day, can offer reasons and examples for the faithful to talk of how
the Church is suffering in these present times.
But in remembering the Church Suffering in the context of the Church
Militant and the Church Triumphant, perhaps November gives it all an extra
focus. There is a sense of ending,
echoing those grave thoughts with which the month begins, as the final season
of the Church’s year closes and we move into Advent: the time of the promise of
things to come. The black vestments of
commemorative Requiem Masses annually held in November are laid aside for the
emergence of the rose coloured ones for the services leading to the birth of
Our Lord, and those things to come: joy, suffering. and redemption.
Tuesday, 22 October 2019
ADDITIONAL LATIN MASS SAT. 26 OCT. 10a.m.
There is an additional Saturday a.m. Latin Mass this
weekend, 26 Oct., at 10 am as usual, at Our Lady's, Swynnerton. It is at the request of two visiting
Knights of Malta whom Father Paul met in Rome at Cardinal Newman’s
canonisation. Please pass on the info’ to anyone interested. At the
time of the canonisation I was at the international Mass for the Feast of Our
Lady of Fatima, with some 400,0 00 pilgrims in attendance. At both venues
perhaps there were around 1,000,000 at these Roman Catholic celebrations –
always good to have heartening news!
Thursday, 12 September 2019
OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION SWYNNERTON WEBSITE
A separate website for the Church where weekly Latin Masses are held has been constructed by Benedict Scorey, who has been an altar server since a young boy, and in recent years a regular MC before and throughout his years at University. He continues to serve as he undertakes post-grad work and study.
Access to this website is via assumption@btinternet.com
A separate website for the Church where weekly Latin Masses are held has been constructed by Benedict Scorey, who has been an altar server since a young boy, and in recent years a regular MC before and throughout his years at University. He continues to serve as he undertakes post-grad work and study.
Access to this website is via assumption@btinternet.com
Missa Cantata at Swynnerton, Sept. & Cot.
The forthcoming Sunday Latin Masses at Our Lady’s,
Swynnerton (6 pm), on 15 Sept., 22 Sept. and 13 Oct. will each be a Missa
Cantata. The first will be celebrated by Fr. Dominic of the Birmingham
Oratory, the latter two by Fr. Stephen Goodman from Wolverhampton. Please
pass on this information to anyone interested or regulars not on-line.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)