Wednesday, 29 July 2015
Monday, 27 July 2015
Annual Latin Mass for the Assumption, Letterkenny Cathedral
A good friend has asked us to let you know that the annual Latin Mass for the feast of Our Lady's Assumption will take place on Saturday, 15th August, at 4 p.m. Photos of a previous Mass can be found here.
Friday, 24 July 2015
Sunday, 12 July 2015
Friday, 10 July 2015
Latin Mass in Bray, County Wicklow
This is the first occasion on which our Association has made a pilgrimage to Wicklow, the Garden of Ireland. On 4th July, we made a pilgrimage to Bray for a Traditional Latin Mass in the Church of the Holy Redeemer on the Main Street. Building upon the existing Chapel of c. 1824, our old friend Patrick Byrne enlarged the Church and added a tower and facade strikingly similar to St. Patrick's, Wicklow Town (c. 1844) and to Byrne's St. John's, Blackrock (c. 1845). W.H. Byrne further enlarged the Chapel into the present envelope, a Romanesque Church with colonnaded transepts and an apsidal Sanctuary c. 1894-1898, for Most Reverend Nicholas Donnelly, D.D., P.P., V.G., then Parish Priest of Bray and Greystones, Bishop of Canae and Auxiliary Bishop of Dublin. Presumably at the same time as the modernist facade was added (1965) the sanctuary was re-ordered and the organ erected in the apse.
Thursday, 2 July 2015
A Latin Mass Pilgrimage to Midleton
What could have been more perfect than a pilgrimage to Midleton, Co. Cork, in the Diocese of Cloyne? We learned that although Midleton is a medieval foundation, but that the foundation of the See at nearby town of Cloyne by St. Colman Mac Léníne takes the history of the place back to the earliest days of Christianity in this part of Ireland.
The present Parish Church of the Most Holy Rosary is a breathtaking example of the neo-gothic style of George Ashlin. The foundation stone was laid by the great Archbishop Croke of Cashel on 13th May, 1894, and the building was substantially complete by 1895. Ashlin was also responsible for the Churches in Clonakilty (1880), the Lough (1881), Ballycotton (1900) and St. Colman's Cathedral, Cobh (1878), perhaps the finest neo-gothic church in Ireland.
To quote Bishop Browne, who consecrated the Church on the Feast of the Most Holy Rosary, 7th October, 1928: "This magnificent Church is a credit to the zeal of the clergy and people of Midleton and for all time will stand as a memorial to what this generation and their forefathers did for God." It stands today as a credit to the Priests and people of Midleton of this and past generations who have preserved intact what had been handed down to them.
We were blessed to conclude our pilgrimage to Midleton with Holy Mass in the Gregorian Rite in the Parish Church followed by Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. It was our second pilgrimage organised to the Diocese of Cloyne, the pilgrimage to Charleville in May having been the first.
The present Parish Church of the Most Holy Rosary is a breathtaking example of the neo-gothic style of George Ashlin. The foundation stone was laid by the great Archbishop Croke of Cashel on 13th May, 1894, and the building was substantially complete by 1895. Ashlin was also responsible for the Churches in Clonakilty (1880), the Lough (1881), Ballycotton (1900) and St. Colman's Cathedral, Cobh (1878), perhaps the finest neo-gothic church in Ireland.
To quote Bishop Browne, who consecrated the Church on the Feast of the Most Holy Rosary, 7th October, 1928: "This magnificent Church is a credit to the zeal of the clergy and people of Midleton and for all time will stand as a memorial to what this generation and their forefathers did for God." It stands today as a credit to the Priests and people of Midleton of this and past generations who have preserved intact what had been handed down to them.
We were blessed to conclude our pilgrimage to Midleton with Holy Mass in the Gregorian Rite in the Parish Church followed by Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. It was our second pilgrimage organised to the Diocese of Cloyne, the pilgrimage to Charleville in May having been the first.