Hello everyone. Recently, we finished designing a set of altar cards for the Roman Catholic Carmelite Rite. Last night, on Ascension Thursday, the altar cards were used for the first time during a very special Carmelite High Mass. The following was posted online describing the Mass:
Ascension Thursday, May 17, 2012
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On Thursday, May 17,
2012 at St. Joseph's Church (416 3rd Street, Troy, New York) Father Romaeus Cooney O. Carm.
used the historic Missale Carmelitarum for
the the Feast of the Ascension. This was a Missa Cantata according to the Rite of the Holy Sepulchre; the rite of mass proper to the Order of Carmelites. This
form
of the liturgy was not been
celebrated publicly by any priest in the Order of Carmelites since
adopting the Roman Liturgy
in 1972.
The Carmelite Rite
From
the very beginning of its existence Carmelite liturgy has been
connected with the Rite of the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. For centuries, in all the
official documents, the
Liturgy of the Carmelites was
described as the "Rite of the brothers of our Blessed Lady of Mount
Carmel according to the
custom of the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre in Jerusalem". The Holy Sepulchre is important for Carmelites
not because it was
the site of burial for Jesus but
because it was the place of the Resurrection. The Rite itself comes from
France as it was
brought to the Holy Land by French
crusaders. There is also influence from the Augustinian tradition as the
Canons of the
Holy Sepulchre followed the Rule of
St. Augustine. It was this liturgy that the Carmelites took as the
source of
their inspiration. Different
Carmelites who have studied our liturgy suggest that the Carmelites from
the earliest times on
Mount Carmel celebrated the Rite of
the Holy Sepulchre. The first written proof of this is in our
Constitutions of 1281 from
the London General Chapter. These
Constitutions are important for a number of reasons since they are the
earliest Constitutions
to survive. It is suggested that the
Carmelites of that time formally adopted what was already their custom
since the days
on Mount Carmel. -Francis
Kemsley O.Carm.
We
celebrate this form of the Carmelite liturgy as part of the living
tradition of the Church and the
Order of Carmelites, in accordance with the Apostolic Letter Summorum Pontificum and the instruction Universae Ecclesiae (Ref, art.34). It
is our hope that this treasure of
the Carmelite Order, and this historic liturgy of the Church will
continue to nourish the
lives of the faithful.
“The Lord God lives,
in
his presence I live."
Here is the link to the web page where you can view the pictures of taken during Mass.
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