During his visit to London around St. Philip's Day this past spring, Frater David Latorre purchased a statuette of St. Philip at the Oratory gift shop. As can be seen in the photo below, it initially came unpainted. As Fratellino pointed out, besides some details in the cassock, this gift shop statuette is a very faithful depiction of St. Philip. Paintwork was done by a friend of Frater Roberto Lionello and his wife Grace.
Friday, September 27, 2024
A Recently Painted St. Philip Statuette
Saturday, September 21, 2024
Saturday, Sep. 28: 1st Vespers of St. Michael the Archangel
Madonna and Child and St. John the Evangelist and St. Michael (1588) Giovanni Ambrogio Figino (? - 1608) |
with Benediction
More Videos from St. Peter in Chains 2024
Wednesday, September 11, 2024
83rd Anniversary of Cathedral Photopost
The reading of the Gospel |
Fratellino has provided us with photos from the Solemn High Mass at St. Anne to commemorate the Dedication of St. Joseph's Cathedral in Downtown San Diego. The celebrant that evening was Fr. Aaron Liebert, F.S.S.P., with Fr. Earl Eggleston serving as deacon and Mr. Ricardo Ascensio, F.S.S.P. serving as straw subdeacon.
In the eight months since this Mass, Fr. Liebert has since been relocated to a new assignment within the Fraternity. We will surely miss him, especially for his willingness to celebrate Vespers with us.
We sang the first Kyrie ad libitum provided in the Liber Usualis, "Clemens rector" (probably the longest Kyrie in the Liber). The rest of the Ordinary was taken from Mass IV. The Propers of the Mass beautifully related the dedication of church buildings to scenes from the Old Testament and the Apocalypse.
The Introit recalls the words which the patriarch Jacob spoke following his dream of angels ascending and descending a ladder connecting heaven to earth. These words precede Jacob's anointing of the stone at Bethel (the house of God), paralleling the anointing of the altar which occurs at a church's dedication.
Monday, September 9, 2024
Lenten Leftovers and Pax-Bredes
We will hopefully be posting more of our backlog before the end of the year.
Tea with milk, soda bread, and Kerrygold butter |
Exercises
During Lent, the Brothers prayed the Lenten Exercises at each other's houses, with each week's host providing a soup supper as usual. We visited Frater Tom Gray's house twice during Lent, and we enjoyed garlic bread, corn chowder, and grapes as part of our meals. Recounting his time in the Navy, Frater Tom also passed the rum bottle around.
One of our Chorus Breviarii members not yet made a Brother also hosted Exercises, with supper consisting of soda bread with butter, three kinds of soup (lentil and potato leek were certainly the standouts), and various beverages, including tea and hot toddies.
Frater Ron Clemente hosted us once again Walsingham Burrow and provided us with a tom yum soup and Vietnamese-style fresh spring rolls with peanut sauce.
Courtesy: Fratellino
A New Case for the Pax-Bredes
After spending a few years in a disheveled Amazon delivery box, our pax-bredes have found a new home in a carry case procured to us by Frater Ron. The paxes can now sit comfortably in custom-fitted foam rather than resting haphazardly on bubble wrap inside a crumbled piece of carboard.
Courtesy: Vaticanguard
Open-air Mass in Pala c. 1910-1911, from an unknown photographer |
A Small Historic Note
There are various photographs hanging inside Peterson Hall at UCSD that document the lives of San Diego's various bands of Mission Indians during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. One such photo depicts a Low Mass being celebrated under a green canopy in Pala around 1910 or 1911. An organ is present near the carpet the priest celebrates on. A man who can be visually discerned as the priest's server is not present in the photo, the suited man to the priest's left may be the server for the Mass. The priest may be a Franciscan, as the Franciscans were in charge of Mission San Antonio de Pala and the surrounding chapels up until the 1940s. However, the priest lacks the beard typical of a Franciscan friar.
The reason for the Mass being celebrated out in the open is unknown to us. The Mission church was probably still intact at the time this photo was taken, so it could be from a nearby village, there could have been a need for temporary repair, or there could be some kind of special event. The Luiseño Indians in the photo have accustomed themselves to the Mass attire typical to the American Southwest, with calico dresses and suits, as well as hats for women's head coverings rather than mantillas.
Friday, September 6, 2024
Gaudete Vespers 2023
We forgot a few photos from our Gaudete Party that were sent to us by Grace Williams Lionello.
Pippo Buono holds what I assume to be a Vespers booklet. |
Monday, September 2, 2024
Monday, Sep. 9: Office of the Dead for John J. Velasco
Prayer Book Brt. Mus. MS. Harl. 2915. |