Thursday, 19 March 2020

Mass Cancellations


I’ve just received this sad message and request from Fr. Paul, though I suppose in the light of all the examples of other countries, it was inevitable:

You may have heard that earlier today the Bishops announced the suspension of all public Masses until further notice.  This news will doubtless upset many.  Would you be kind enough to let people know that there is no Mass this coming Saturday or Sunday, and nothing until we hear more.
Best wishes, and keep well,

Please relay this message to anyone you know not on the internet.  However, for those who do not know, there is access to a LIVE MASS via the internet.  Just google ‘Live Mass at Warrington’ and click on the section of the page that says ‘Live Mass’. At 12.10 pm.  Traditional Rite Latin Masses from Monday will be held behind closed doors at St. Mary’s Shrine, but will be screened live: as will others around the world , details on the website.
Here’s hoping, God bless

 

Wednesday, 11 March 2020

March 29 Our Lady's, Swynnerton

This being an exceptional day for the Catholic Church in England, instead of the Lenten Stations preceding the 6 pm Latin Mass, at 5.15 pm there will be special prayers and Benediction offered for the rededication of England as Our Lady's Dowry. 

On the matter of the spread of the Coronavirus, in case this should involve directives concerning reception of the Sacred Host, the Chairman of the Latin Mass Society has written to priests who regularly or occasionally celebrate the Traditional Rite.

The LMS can be contacted via www.lms.org.uk

Friday, 6 March 2020

Sat. AM Mass 7 March / Aquinas

The usual fortnightly Saturday 10 am Masses at Our Lady's, Swynnerton, resume this Saturday, which happens to be the important Feast of St. Thomas Aquinas, the great Dominican theologian and Doctor of the Church.  Masses thereafter are 21 March, 4 April, 18 April, 2 May, etc.

Saturday, 15 February 2020

Bridget R.I.P.

Some sad news to report.  Some of you will remember Henk and Bridget de Witt as regulars at the N. Staffs Latin Masses.  Henk, who in his eighties sometimes served Fr. Tynan’s Masses, died a while ago.  Now Bridget, who the last I heard was living in Cornwall, has gone to her rest.  They were a lovely and holy couple.   May she rest in peace.

 

Monday, 13 January 2020

Forthcoming Masses

Type Date Time
Low Mass
19/01/20
6:00pm
Low Mass
25/01/20
10:00am
Low Mass
26/01/20
6:00pm
Low Mass
02/02/20
6:00pm
Low Mass
08/02/20
10:00am
Low Mass
09/02/20
6:00pm
Low Mass
16/02/20
6:00pm
Low Mass
22/02/20
10:00am
 

Wednesday, 6 November 2019


LMS ORDO and CALENDAR for 2020
 
The Latin Mass Society publishes an Ordo each year with details for every Sunday and Daily Latin Mass throughout the year (£8).  It also publishes a Traditional Catholic Calendar and the one for 2020,  as are a selection of Christmas cards for this year. Each of these items are now available and can be purchased via the LMS website (https://lms.org.uk/blog/ordo-2020-and-wall-calendar).     Alternatively I can obtain these for you.  The Calendars are A4 in size and open up to A3, they retail at £7 and the cards are £4.99 for ten (https://lms.org.uk/catalog/christmas-cards).
                                                                                                                                                                                                                    

Saturday, 26 October 2019

Masses at O.L. of the Assumption, Swynnerton on All Saints and All Souls Day:

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’)

    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.

   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.