Saturday, October 20, 2018


St. John Cantius

Confessor

III class
White


Mass:

Mass of the feast, Gloria, no Credo, common preface


Breviary:

Office of the feast with proper hymn at Matins and Lauds

Matins: Invitatorium from the Common; proper hymn; psalms and antiphons of the feria; first two lessons of the occurring Scripture (second and third joined); lesson 3 of the feast; Te Deum

Lauds: Antiphons and psalms of the feria (first schema), remainder from the Common; proper hymn; oration proper

Hours: Antiphons and psalms of the feria, remainder from the Common; oration proper

I Vespers: Of the following Sunday; antiphons and psalms of Saturday; remainder per annum as given in the psalter; proper Magnificat antiphon and oration

Compline: Of Saturday


Reminder:

Next month’s reminders and announcements are below, and are also available in a usable document here:
November 2018 SSPX Ordo Notices

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The 2019 Online Ordo entries are complete. The entries may be consulted online, and may also be printed out if desired. For example, the week or the month may be printed out for the sacristy desk, or even the whole year may be printed and spiral-bound in the manner of a standard printed ordo.

Three of the Sundays remaining after Epiphany are used in November: 11/4: 4th Sunday, 11/11: 5th Sunday, 11/18: 6th Sunday. 11/25 is the Last after Pentecost.

All Saints’ Day is a Holy Day of Obligation in the USA.

All Saints and All Souls coincide with First Thursday and First Friday. Votive Masses may not be said; however, in churches and oratories in which special prayers are customarily said on First Thursday and First Friday, these devotions may certainly still be held.

In larger churches historically a side chapel with a catafalque was prepared for the week of All Souls or for the month of November, and the chapel would be visited by the faithful. In smaller churches, the catafalque used on All Souls in the main aisle may be left in place for some time, such as for the week following All Souls, especially if the III class Requiem Masses are offered during the week (see below). It may remain even if the Mass is not de requiem and if the absolution is not said.

The absolution at the catafalque may be done on any day except on I class feasts. If the Mass is not de requiem, it must be done as a function completely separate from the Mass. The celebrant must retire to the sacristy to change vestments, and the catafalque candles are not lighted until the Mass has concluded. If the absolution follows a Requiem Mass, however, the candles may be lighted from the beginning of the Mass, and the celebrant may change at the sedilia.

All Souls’ Day

On All Souls’ Day the three Masses are proper, as Requiem Masses with the rubrics of the same.

Every priest may say three Masses this day and three proper Mass texts are given. Whoever celebrates only one Mass uses the first Mass; the same applies to those who celebrate a sung Mass, with the ability to anticipate the second and third Masses if they are Low. Whoever celebrates three Masses without interruption is obliged to say the sequence Dies irae in the principal or first Mass; in the other Masses, unless sung, he may omit it.

Regarding the particular ceremonies involved when two or three Masses are celebrated within a short time frame, see the rubrics of Trination in the FAQ section of the Online Ordo. When one Mass follows another without pause, the prayers after Low Mass are omitted, to be said only after the final Mass of the series.

The intention of the first Mass is for All the Faithful Departed; that of the second is for any particular intention (from among the faithful departed); that of the third is ad mentem Summi Pontificis (for the intentions of the Holy Father); a stipend may be retained only for the Mass celebrated for the particular intention, any other stipend is declined or alienated.

The six Intentions of the Holy Father remain the same throughout history:  (1) the exaltation of Holy Mother Church; (2) the propagation of the Faith; (3) the uprooting of heresy; (4) the conversion of sinners; (5) peace and concord among Christian nations; (6) the other needs of Christendom. Note that for the purpose of the third All Souls Mass and for the purpose of gaining plenary indulgences, these fixed intentions are used; they do not have any relation to other changeable intentions published each month for the use of the Apostleship of Prayer.

Masses during the seven days following All Souls’ Day can be said as III class Requiems, when the rubrics allow the same, per RG 415d (the octiduum refers to November 2-9).

Special indulgences in November for praying for the Poor Souls and for visiting cemeteries

Enchiridion Indulgentiarum 1999, n. 29 §1: A plenary indulgence, applicable only to the souls in purgatory, is granted to the faithful who, (1) on any and each day from November 1 to 8, devoutly visit a cemetery and pray, if only mentally, for the departed; (2) on All Souls’ Day (or, according to the judgment of the ordinary, on the Sunday preceding or following it, or on the solemnity of All Saints), devoutly visit a church or an oratory and recite an Our Father and the Creed. §2: A partial indulgence, applicable only to the souls in purgatory, is granted to the faithful who (1) devoutly visit a cemetery and at least mentally pray for the dead; or (2) devoutly recite lauds or vespers from the Office of the Dead or the prayer Eternal rest.

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Several additional indulgences were listed in the previous Enchiridion Indulgentiarum (1950), which may serve to inform the piety of the faithful regarding the prayers and devout exercises which have been traditionally used in supplication for the faithful departed, especially during November:

(582-587) Requiem aeternam, Pie Iesu, Officium defunctorum, De profundis, Miserere, Dies irae.

(588) The faithful who devoutly offer prayers at any season of the year in intercession for the souls of the faithful departed, with the intention of so continuing for seven or nine successive days, may obtain: an indulgence of 3 years once each day; a plenary indulgence on the usual conditions at the end of their seven or nine days of prayer.

(589) The faithful who recite prayers or perform other devout exercises in supplication for the faithful departed during the month of November, may gain: an indulgence of 3 years once on each day of the month; a plenary indulgence on the usual conditions, if they perform these devotions daily for the entire month. Those, who during the aforesaid month, take part in public services held in a church or public oratory in intercession for the faithful departed may gain: an indulgence of 7 years on each day of the month; a plenary indulgence, if they attend these exercises on at least fifteen days and, in addition, go to confession, receive Holy Communion and pray for the intentions of the Sovereign Pontiff.

(590) The faithful, as often as they visit a church or public oratory, or even a semi-public oratory (if they may lawfully use the same), in order to pray for the dead on the day on which the Commemoration of All the Faithful Departed is celebrated or on the Sunday immediately following, may gain: a plenary indulgence applicable only to the souls detained in Purgatory, on condition of confession and Communion, and the recitation six times during each visit of Our Father, Hail Mary, and Glory Be for the intentions of the Sovereign Pontiff. (This indulgence was granted by St. Pius X on June 25, 1914.)

(591) All Masses that are celebrated at any altar by any priest within the period of eight days from the Commemoration of All Souls inclusive, enjoy the same privilege as if they were offered on a privileged altar, but only in favor of the soul for whom they are applied.

(592) The faithful who during the period of eight days from the Commemoration of All Souls inclusive, visit a cemetery in a spirit of piety and devotion, and pray, even mentally, for the dead may gain: a plenary indulgence on the usual conditions, on each day of the Octave, applicable only to the dead. Those who make such a visit, and pray for the Holy Souls, on any day in the year, may gain: an indulgence of 7 years applicable only to the departed.

(593) The faithful who make the Heroic Act of Charity in favor of the souls detained in Purgatory may gain: a plenary indulgence, applicable only to the dead on any day that they receive Holy Communion, if they have made their confession and visited some church or public oratory and prayed for the intentions of the Sovereign Pontiff and on any Monday of the year, or if some impediment arises, on the following Sunday, if they attend Mass in supplication for the faithful departed and moreover fulfill the usual conditions. Priests who make the aforesaid heroic act may enjoy the indult of a personal privileged altar every day of the year.

(594-600) Additional prayers for the faithful departed.

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Daylight Savings Time ends on November 4 (“Fall back”). The Thanksgiving Holiday is November 22.

Funerals are permitted every day this month except on the Feast of All Saints and where a church is celebrating its Titular feast.

Local observances (see dates below)

Calendar: These apply to priests assigned to these priories. For the public celebration of the Office and Mass, they apply only to the local territory. If a priest is celebrating Mass privately in another location, he may follow either the calendar of his priory or the calendar of the place. For the private recitation of Office, he must follow the calendar of his priory.

Titulars & Patrons: The External Solemnity of the priory or chapel’s titular saint and of the Principal Patrons of the nation, region, diocese, and city may be celebrated on the Sunday immediately preceding or following the feast unless impeded by a first class Sunday or feast, in which case it can be commemorated in the Sunday Mass (collects under single conclusion).

PRIORIES: Buckingham: November 28-29. Richmond Cathedral Consecration, I class. November 28: First Vespers of the Dedication. November 29: Festal Office and Mass of the Dedication. Chicago: November 20-21. Chicago Cathedral Consecration, I class. November 20: First Vespers of the Dedication. November 21: Festal Office and Mass of the Dedication. Los Gatos and San Jose: November 3-4. San Jose Cathedral Consecration, I class. November 3: First Vespers of the Dedication. November 4: Festal Office and Mass of the Dedication with no commemoration (same Person); this takes precedence over the Sunday. Sanford: November 19-20. Orlando Cathedral Consecration, I class. November 19: First Vespers of the Dedication. November 20: Festal Office and Mass of the Dedication.

CHAPELS: Grand Rapids: Grand Rapids Patron November 30 (St. Andrew). Little Rock: Chapel Titular Feast November 27 (Miraculous Medal) and Little Rock Patron November 30 (St. Andrew). Memphis: Chapel Titular Feast November 22 (St. Cecilia). San Antonio: Consecration of San Antonio Cathedral November 11 (I class; this takes precedence over the Sunday). San Diego: San Diego Patron November 13 (St. Didacus or Diego). Tavares: Chapel Titular Feast November 1 (All Saints).

Collect for the Ordinary under one conclusion with the collect of the Mass in the following places: Boise, Post Falls, and Saint Maries, November 4 (Petrum, Xylopolitanus); Sanger and Fort Worth, November 19 (Michaël, Arcis Vorthensis); Phoenix and Prescott, November 25 (Thomam, Phoenicensis); Los Gatos and San Jose, November 27 (Patricium, Sancti Ioseph).

SSPX Necrology
November 3: Sister Mary Barbara Lankenau (1986), American
November 6: Sœur Marie Joseph Eliville (1985), French
November 8: Abbé Xavier Basire (1987), French
November 23: Père Joseph Le Boulch (1988), French
November 26: Father Roland Gierak (1996), British
+Requiescant in Pace+