about 6 days ago - No comments
The Gospel. St. Luke ii. 22.
AND when the days of her purification according to the law of Moses were accomplished, they brought him to Jerusalem, to present him to the Lord; (as it is written in the law of the Lord, Every male that openeth the womb shall be called holy to the Lord;) and to More >
about 1 week ago - 3 comments
Note: This article is inspired to some extent by a chapter in Dom Guéranger’s Liturgical Year, which is too lengthy to reproduce here. Also see this fine article in the New Liturgical Movement.
Septuagesima is a brief period of two and a half weeks to prepare us for Lent. Anglicans using the Prayer Book are familiar More >
about 1 week ago - 3 comments
Heavenly King, of Kings the Pastor,
Giv’r of laws, of justice master,
Ruling all by Thy behest,
Unto Thee to-day we render
Praise for him, to memory tender,
Charles our King, of kings the best.
Traitors shedding blood like water
Filled the land with crime and slaughter,
Law was trampled in the mud,
Noble churches left forsaken
And the White Rose, overtaken
By the sword, was More >
about 1 week ago - 1 comment
I am quite surprised that this site – Full Homely Divinity – hasn’t been mentioned here.
It concentrates on the old folk traditions of English parish religion and spirituality, both in medieval English Catholicism and its survival in post-Reformation Anglicanism. I have often found this site useful for matters like Sarum Lenten Array (which I use) More >
about 1 week ago - 28 comments
“I shall go from a corruptible to an incorruptible Crown, where no disturbance can be.”
Tomorrow, the thirtieth day of January, is the anniversary of the martyrdom of King Charles I. In all editions of the Book of Common Prayer from A.D. 1662 to A.D. 1859, opposite January 30 in the Kalendar stands the More >
about 3 weeks ago - 6 comments
I touch upon a sensitive subject here, because I know that some of our TAC bishops and priests favour (without obliging their clergy in the matter) following the three-year lectionary used in the modern Roman rite, the current Anglican Use and most Anglican liturgies in use since the 1970’s.
I find it pointless to go into More >
about 4 weeks ago - No comments
Tomorrow is celebrated the feast of the illustrious Northumbrian monk Biscop Baducing. St. Benedict Biscop, as he has come to be known, established the twin-foundation Anglo-Saxon monastery of Monkwearmouth-Jarrow Abbey. The saint caused his model monastery to be constructed with stone and glass in the Romanesque fashion (techniques and materials new to England) and furnished More >
about 1 month ago - 4 comments
It is a custom of Holy Church for the priest to bless chalk on the Feast of the Epiphany (January 6th, this coming Wednesday) and for the faithful to inscribe the numerals of the year and the initials of the Three Wise Men over the doors to their houses. It is also traditional for the More >
about 1 month ago - No comments
These are the Monastic Breviary Lessons from the second Nocturn of Christmas Matins. The translation used here is taken from the 1961 edition by the Society of the Sacred Cross in south Wales. Pope Saint Leo the Great is most famed for his Tome to Flavian, his authoritative contribution to the Council of Chalcedon (451) More >
about 1 month ago - No comments
December 23: The Expectation of the Blessed Virgin Mary – Eighth Antiphon (according to the Sarum Use / Book of Common Prayer)
O Virgo virginum, quomodo fiet istud? quia nec primam similem visa es, nec habere sequentem. Filiae Jerusalem, quid me admiramini? Divinum est mysterium hoc quod cernitis.
O Virgin of virgins, how shall this be? for More >