Showing posts with label Oriental Rites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oriental Rites. Show all posts

Friday, November 29, 2024

Deo Gratias to 2024 (Pt. 1)

Frater Jon T's picture of us at Martinmas supper

For our American readers keeping up with our blog, we hope that you had a wonderful Thanksgiving, and we pray for your acclimation to whatever penances you have planned for the rest of St. Martin's Lent and Advent. The Brothers and Chorus Breviarii give thanks to God for their ability to continue their activities, both liturgical and recreational, throughout the liturgical year. To commemorate the end of the 2024 liturgical year, we present some photos from events much earlier in the year that we were unable to post earlier. We have a large backlog of photos from earlier in the year and from years past, so stay tuned for more.



First Visit to the Chaldean Cross

Our poster designer Martin helped to organize the St. Anne Young Adult Group's first hike up to the Chaldean Holy Cross in Jamul, CA on Passion Saturday. Fr. Jesus Valenzuela, F.S.S.P. led the young adults in praying the Stations of the Cross while climbing to the summit of the hill, which was about 900 feet above sea level. We were joined by Mr. Peter O'Connor, F.S.S.P., a seminarian at Our Lady of Guadalupe Seminary in Denton, NE. Mr. Grant Dunn, who was leading the young adult group at the time of the hike and has sung in choir with the Brothers for a few Vespers events in the past, is also currently enrolled in his first year at the Denton seminary. Our climb to the top was very penitential, as aside from the steep incline and loose dirt, we also had to deal with a cold drizzle that eventually intensified into windy rain. The rainy conditions died down when we were halfway down the mountain. 

Set on private land between rural and suburban East County, this cross commemorates the persecuted Christian communities of the Middle East, many of whom have been martyred for their embrace of the faith. Many persecuted Middle Eastern Christians have come to the United States, with a large percentage of them being Chaldean Catholics such as the family who installed this cross last December, the Attishas. Counting the Catholic communities alone, there are also Melkites, Maronites, and Syriacs. The Chaldeans have established a large presence in El Cajon and adjacent communities, with a monastery located just east of Montgomery Field. The prominent placement of the Chaldean Cross makes it visible from the southern edge of Rancho San Diego, a community located just south of El Cajon proper which is home to St. Peter's Chaldean Cathedral and an adjacent convent. The future site of an expanded St. Anne Catholic Church is located on the northern edge of Rancho San Diego, only a brief walk from the Chaldeans' seminary in El Cajon. 

Interestingly, the unity between the Chaldean communities of El Cajon and Rancho San Diego was the subject of a lawsuit filed a couple years ago by LiMandri & Jonna LLP that disputed the legality of the new San Diego County Supervisorial District boundaries. As business-oriented Catholics who have suffered at the hands of Muslims, the Chaldeans have generally voted along conservative lines like the rest of East County. Both the Chaldean community and the County's Independent Redistricting Commission (IRC) admitted that the redraws were made in the interest of "BIPOC" activism, with the Chaldean Coalition claiming that "BIPOC" / BLM / anti-conservative interests motivated the push to dilute the Chaldean vote. Meanwhile, the County claims that the IRC was acting in the interest of immigrant and refugee communities, which may highlight that Arab Muslim communities in East County are politically closer to fellow Muslim refugees in San Diego's Mid-City neighborhoods than Chaldeans in East County. Regardless of the validity of the IRC's justification, the lawsuit was rejected in 2023, leaving Rancho San Diego's Chaldean community in the county's most diverse Supervisorial District, with some of the areas represented including immigrant neighborhoods, Black communities, and homosexual enclaves. In general, the District votes solidly liberal.

Many of our younger Chorus Breviarii members are familiar with both Fr. Andrew "Andy" Younan, chorbishop and seminary rector, and Fr. Ankido (Enkidu) Sipo, abbot, due to their positions as professors at JPCatholic University in Escondido. Fr. Andy also offers the Sunday Divine Mysteries in the Chaldean Rite ad orientem at Mar Narsai Chaldean Catholic Mission, which shares facilities with Holy Martyrs of England and Wales Anglican Ordinariate Parish, the home parish of our Chorus Breviarii brethren in Murrieta.


Delayed Tenebrae Scenes

We currently have multiple days of Tenebrae videos from both 2023 and 2024 that we plan on uploading to YouTube around Ash Wednesday of 2025. We also have a large collection of photos from both St. Anne and Holy Martyrs. As at last year's Tenebrae services at St. Anne, Fr. Valenzuela was our hebdomadary. Mr. Peter O'Connor, F.S.S.P. and Mr. Grant Dunn also joined us for Tenebrae, each one reading a Lesson. Since 2022, a few of us have made it a custom to visit the Ruthenians at Holy Angels Byzantine Catholic Church following Tenebrae of Holy Saturday for the celebration of Jerusalem Matins, where we always see Chorus Breviarii associate Gary Huber leading as cantor.



Courtesy: Bert Porciuncula


The Crown Point Country Club

Our annual Paschal Gaudeamus took place on April 22 at the highly-exclusive and extremely secretive Crown Point Country Club. Chorus Breviarii members from down near the Mexican border all the way up to Murrieta gathered to enjoy the end of Lenten fasting to engage in Paschaltide feasting. Our potluck dinner, which included bratwurst, "Tasting is Believing" chicken, and various other dishes was delicious. Highlights at the club that night included an outdoor grill and tiki bar, heated and unheated saltwater pools, and live coverage of the San Diego Padres. My own dip in the pool was followed by some cozying-up by the fire-ring. Considering the cold air that often passes over Crown Point, some modest drinking also aided in warming up the body. For information about the club's history, membership dues, and actual existence, please contact Mr. John B. Polhamus.


Ecce quam bonum et quam jucundum, habitare fratres in unum!

Saturday, November 26, 2022

Scenes from the Requiem for Jon Roussos

Jonathan Roussos, known to us by the shorter name Jon, was a brief yet enthusiastic member of Chorus Breviarii San Diego, as well as a former member of the St. Anne Choir. During the later years of his life, he offered his voice to the choir at St. Augustine of Canterbury Catholic Church, the Ordinariate parish in San Diego, whose choir is directed by the wife of one of our members. He was also blessed to have friends from Holy Angels Byzantine Catholic Church. Deacon Keith Way of the Ordinariate, Fr. Deacon Jonathan Deane of Holy Angels, and Fr. James Bankston of Holy Angels were in attendance at the Requiem Mass.


From Fratellino:

Today's requiem mass for Jon Roussos ran right up against the beginning of Advent, when we prepare for the commemoration of Christ's first coming, by considering the end of all things. Jon was only a member of Chorus Breviarii for a short time, but he was an enthusiastic supporter, and generous musical colleague, whose illness gave the Brothers the opportunity of visiting the sick, and raising their spirit through music and fellowship, an approximation of St. Philip's apostolic work for the Brothers of helping in the hospitals of his day. So, even after his passing, Jon is helping us to recollect ourselves as we enter a joyous, yet penitential season. For this, and other memories, we will continue to bless him. Requiescat in pace.

Courtesy: Fratellino

Before Jon passed, he was blessed to have completed a walking pilgrimage along the Way of St. James to the major medieval pilgrimage site of the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Spain, a fact that was noted on his remembrance booklets. We pray that the spiritual journey he experienced on this pilgrimage gave him the strength to endure in Faith to the very end of his life. We are also very thankful to have been blessed to pray Compline with him on many occasions during his last year. In your charity, please continue to pray for his soul.



Jon at Compostela

Friday, September 30, 2022

Videos from St. Michael's Vespers 2022

Special thanks to Martin for posting these videos that his sister recorded from the pews.

The full playlist is available HERE.


Video 1: v.4 of Ps. 109 to End of Ps. 110


Video 2: Ps. 112, Antiphon to End of Psalm


Video 3: Repeat of Antiphon for Ps. 112 to part of the 5th Antiphon


Video 4: Chapter to v.8 of Magnificat


Video 5: "Holy God We Praise Thy Name" during the Procession to the Marian altar



An interesting thing to note is that Ps. 112 for St. Michael's Feast Day(s) is one of the few times (if not the only time) where the ancient tonus peregrinus is used outside of Ps. 113 at Sunday Vespers.


Thursday, September 29, 2022

Photo Recap of St. Michael's Vespers 2022

First Vespers of St. Michael was attended well with about 86 people in attendance, including our own Fratellino in the loft on the organ, and the 16 men in the sanctuary. We were joined by two priests, with Fr. Aaron Liebert, F.S.S.P. as hebdomadary, and the Byzantine Catholic chaplain to Wyoming Catholic College, Fr. David Anderson, sitting in choir. Two members of Chorus Breviarii Murrieta and two students at John Paul the Great Catholic University in Escondido also came down to join us in choir. Many thanks to them. We would also like to thank one of the St. Anne Choir members who joined us tonight for bringing a relic of St. Michael the Archangel for us to place on the altar. For many of the young adults in attendance, this could very well be their first exposure to the liturgical celebration of Vespers, particularly within a parish setting. We pray that the night's ceremonies added to their rejoicing in the Feast of the Guardian Angel of Holy Church, St. Michael the Archangel.

Benediction
At the Salve Regina (Solemn Tone)


(Courtesy: Fratellino)

Additional photos were also taken following the conclusion of ceremonies.

JPCatholic students and other young adults with Fr. David Anderson

Most of the young adults in attendance, with most of those who were in choir

(Courtesy: Fratellino)

A few of us with Fr. David in the acolyte room
The relic of St. Michael


Happy Feast!