No. 44 (New Series)
Summer, 2002
"May
is Mary's month, and I Muse at that and wonder why ....?"
The Celebration to Include and Unite
In The May Magnificat, the
Jesuit poet Gerard Manley Hopkins asks why May is Mary's
month. Mary's different feasts, he reasons,
are liturgically "dated due to season." May as Mary's month, he continues, must
have something to do with "Spring" which means "Growth in everything."
All things rising,
all things sizing,
Mary sees, sympathising
With that world of good,
Nature's motherhood.
The poem continues, "Spring's universal bliss / Much, had much to say / To offering
Mary May, " and it concludes
This ecstasy all though
the mother
earth
Tells Mary her mirth till Christ's birth
To remember and exultation
In God who was her salvation.
Popular religion spontaneously dedicated
the months of the year to various
patrons and devotional practices. Already
in the early church, Christians in the East dedicated months to Mary: the Copts
had a month corresponding to our month of December, and Byzantines marked a thirty-day
observance centered on the Assumption.
In the northern hemisphere, the
month of May was hailed in the pre-Christian era
as the time of new life and growth.
The Greeks celebrated Artemus, and the Romans, Flora, with festivities, games,
garland decorations. Exuberant celebrations developed in the middle ages, and
church authorities had to deal with the carousing and riotous conduct which erupted
as May approached. The feast of the Finding of the Holy Cross (formerly on May
3) suggested a relation between the ancient Maypole and the tree of the cross,
a symbol of new life. In 1549, Wolfgang Seidel, O.S.B., published at Munich Spiritual
May (Der geistliche Mai), which began giving the month a new meaning.
The earliest recorded association
of Mary with the month of May is found in the
thirteenth-century Cantigas de Santa
Maria of Alfonso X. St. Philip Neri, sometimes credited with beginning May observances
in Rome, encouraged youth to gather for floral and musical tributes to Our Lady.
In Rome and other parts of Italy, customs and observances marking May as Mary's
month spontaneously arose in families and religious communities.
A new stage in the month's history
was reached in the eighteenth century as Italian
Jesuits wrote books of meditations for
the month of Mary. The first, The Month of May or the Month of Mary (1725),
by A. Dionisi, S.J., appeared to describe already existing practices -- floral
decorations before a Marian image, prayers, suggested "good works" to be practiced
daily. In 1758, F. Lalomia, S.J., wrote The Month of May, daily meditations
for May, based on the life and attitudes of Mary; Fr. Lalomia is credited with
introducing May devotions to the sodalists of the Jesuit college in Rome. The
most influential of the early writers, and an ardent promoter of May observances,
was A. Muzzarelli, S.J., whose The Month of Mary (1785), was reprinted
over 150 times in the nineteenth century and several times in the twentieth century.
Muzzarelli's work dealt with the basic themes of the Christian life-creation,
the immortality of the soul, sin, salvation, grace, the sacraments-- each meditation
containing references to the Virgin Mary. These meditations were intended for
private use in the home, with family or friends.
Fr. Lalamia's The Month of Mary,
the oldest extant work currently available on
May, merits further examination. The
French translation of the work (1816) introduced French readers to the designation
of May as Mary's Month. Lalamia's meditations were translated into German by P.
Beckx, S.J. (who later served as the General Superior of the Society of Jesus,
1853-1887). Each of Lalamia's Marian meditations consisted of three succinctly-stated
points, dealing with Mary's holiness, her role in the Incarnation, her offering
of self and her cooperation with God as seen the Annunciation, the Visitation,
the Purification, the joys and sorrows of her life. Directions were given on how
the devotions were to be conducted: The family or the community was to gather
in a fitting room of the house before an "image of Our Lady . . . decorated
with flowers." The three points of the meditation were to be "read,
slowly and distinctly, a pause sufficient for meditation being made between each
point, so that the truths forming the subject of contemplation may take the deeper
hold upon the mind, be applied by each to his own individual case . . . . The
teaching or practice is also to be carefully studied." The May observance
were to began on the "eve before the first of May," and, on the final
day, there was to be an "offering of one's heart to the Mother of God that
she might strengthen it with holy fear, unshaken confidence, and ardent love of
God."
From Italy, meditations for May,
"Mary's Month," spread rapidly through
nineteenth-century Europe. In Germany,
writers frequently combined the moral tradition of "practicing virtue"
with the German love of flowers: each day of May was associated with a Marian
and Christian quality or virtue and illustrated by a specific flower. "God
is to the soul, what the sun is to nature, its light, its warmth, and its life."
French writers offered meditations for May on the Litany of Loreto or the mysteries
of the Rosary. Although St. Alphonsus de Liguori seems not to have been aware
of special May observances, his Marian writings, in English translation, were
quickly adapted and proposed as May meditations. Following the example of St.
Philip Neri, Cardinal John Henry Newman wrote both poetry and meditations for
the month of May. His May meditations begin, "Because in this climate we
have sometimes a bleak, inclement May, it is nevertheless a time of promise and
hope that begins and heralds in the summer . . . . May is a time of promise; it
is the month of Mary, the sure promise of the coming Savior." (The Marian
Library's collection contains about a thousand books of meditations for the month
of May).
At the end of the nineteenth century,
Fr. Frederick Faber wrote that what began
as a family devotion in Rome "has
overrun the world we can hardly tell how." Specific May practices developed.
A May altar - an image of Mary with fresh flowers of the season - was a prominent
feature in homes, schools, churches, the town center. Hymnals, first in Germany
then in the United States, included a new type of hymn-for May devotions and processions.
Programs in schools included musical and literary offerings, processions, and
May crownings. May devotions were included in the evangelization and missionary
movements of the nineteenth century. French, Italian, and German missionaries
implanted May devotions in Asia, Africa, and South America.
After Vatican II, the celebration
of special devotional months and some features
of May celebrations appeared to be at
variance with the liturgical calendar and the Scriptural orientation of Marian
devotion. May usually falls during the Paschal season, and commemorations of the
Virgin Mary during that period were to reflect the spirit of the liturgical season.
Slowly, materials with a broader orientation are being developed.
Cardinal Newman observed that May
belongs to the Easter season: the great feasts
of the Ascension,
Pentecost, and, not infrequently, the feast of the Holy Trinity are in May.
"It is the time in which there are such frequent Alleluias, because Christ
has risen from the grave, Christ has ascended on high, and God the Holy Ghost
has come down to take His place. Here then we have a reason why May is dedicated
to the Blessed Mary. She is the first of creatures, the most acceptable child
of God, the dearest and nearest to Him. It is fitting then that this month should
be hers, in which we especially glory and rejoice in His great Providence to
us, in our redemption and sanctification in God the Father, God the Son, and
God the Holy Ghost" (Meditations and Devotions, Pt. I. The Month of
May [London: Longmans, Green, 1920]).
Back To Top
Paul Hume, the music critic of The
Washington Post, who drew a famous rebuke
from President Harry S. Truman when
he panned a vocal performance give by the president's daughter, died Nov. 26,
2001, in Baltimore. In his 1956 history of Catholic Church music, he lamented
the poor taste manifest in many of the popular hymns sung at evening novena services
and at May crownings.
He was greatly encouraged by Pius
XII's encyclical on church music, Musicae
Sacrae (1956). The encyclical
stated that the texts should be in "full conformity with the doctrine of
the Catholic faith . . . and express and explain that doctrine accurately."
They should possess a religious dignity and decorum. Also, they should "use
plain language and a simple melody and must be free from violent and vain excess
of words" (no. 63).
In 1956-57, Mr. Hume wrote three
articles for The Marianist, a magazine from
the Marian Library. In the first, "Mother
Dearest, Save Us" (May, 1956), Mr. Hume recalled how he had received a call
from a Catholic layman who apparently was of the opinion that all Marian hymns
were beyond criticism and who was irate because Hume had reviewed unfavorably
the rendition at the previous evening's concert by a popular baritone of Ethelbert
Nevin's "The Rosary." Hume described the melody as a "sentimental
turn-of-the-century love ballad." After the phone call, Hume mused: "What,
then, would he think if he knew the horrible truth about some of the musical atrocities
that really are supposed to be doing honor to the Mother of God?" Some hymns
sung in the Catholic Church "are very bad hymns indeed. And it is infinitely
regrettable that so many from the absolute bottom of the barrel are hymns about
the Blessed Mother."
The hymns were bad, not only because
of the texts ("execrable poetry")
but also because of the melodies: "They
are anything but simple and easy to sing. Wide, swooping intervals and an unconscionable
use of the sixth (or what I always think of as the 'Liebestraum leap'), rampant
chromaticism (or barber-shop harmony) do not combine to make an easy-to-sing hymn.
Nor does the 3/4 time in which many of these hymns are written help. Most of them,
remember, come from the era when the waltz rhythm was at its height."
In the second article, "More
on Mother Dearest" (November, 1956),
he offered examples of good hymns which
were being written by contemporary composers to replace the traditional potboilers.
"Modern Church musicians are simply knocking themselves out providing you
something better, friends, if only you'll listen to what they have to offer and
stop fussing about 'tradition.' How, by the way, can these hymns be called 'traditional'
when their average age is about seventy-five?"
The third article, "Those May
Processions" (March, 1957), dealt with
the "old favorites" sung during
the May processions.* Why, he asked, when the Sisters in Catholic schools were
promoting good music and a "solid repertoire of excellent Masses," were
such bad hymns taught in the school?" The answer, "even though most
of the Sisters were too tactful to come right out and mention the reason, is the
man who lives in the rectory." Why such bad music in the schools? "Because
there is a small, loud group of parishioners who will complain about the absence
of the 'old favorites' from the May procession? What would you say to a group
who called on you to insist that Elsie Dinsmore and Horatio Alger be used as reading
texts in English class? These items are literary equivalents, in point of time
and value, of most 'old favorite' hymns."
Hume's three articles elicited more
response than any article previously or subsequently
published in The Marianist. In
the introduction to the third article, the magazine's editor noted that the previous
two articles had brought "orchids and brickbats from all over the world."
The Letters to the Editor covered the gamut. A lady in Chicago wrote, "Do
you know, Mr. Hume, the more you continue to persecute the precious 'old time'
hymns of Our Lady, the more they will survive: keep it up; they cannot die!"
Frank J. Sheed (Catholic author and publisher) wrote: "Some hymns, like old
soldiers, never die. They only sound that way."
A salute to the intrepid editor
who, forty-six years ago, published Paul Hume's
three articles in The Marianist,
and who, on April 2, 2002, marked his ninetieth birthday-Fr. Philip J. Hoelle,
S.M. .
*The "mainstay"
of May processions hymns was "Bring Flowers of the Rarest, Bring flowers
of the fairest..." written by Mary E. Walsh, known as the Crowning Hymn
(with the refrain, "O Mary, we crown thee with blossoms today, Queen of
the Angels, Queen of the May"). It first appeared in the Wreath of Mary,
1883, and later in the St. Basil's Hymnal (1889). Another favorite was
"There blooms a wondrous flower in fair Elysian fields . . ." (Es
blüht der Blumen eine") from the St. Cecilia Hymnal, 1929.
Back To Top
On February 25, 2001, Pope John
Paul II apointed Fr. Vincenzo Battaglia, O.F.M.,
of the Pontifical Antonianum Athenaeum
(Rome) as president of the International Pontifical Marian Academy.
The René Laurentin Pro
Ancilla Domini Award was conferred upon the Group
de Dombes, an ecumenical organization
composed of Catholics and Protestants, for their document addressed to the churches,
Mary in the Design of God and the Communion of Saints (Paulist Press will
soon publish an English translation of this important text). The document is the
result of several years of work and indicates how areas of disagreement could
be converted into areas of agreement. The citation for the award affirms the study's
conclusion: based on the investigation and suggestions proposed, "nothing
permits us to make Mary a symbol of what divides us."
On June 7-8, 2001, Msgr. Jacques
Perrier, bishop of Tarbes and Lourdes, hosted
a meeting at Lourdes, "Mary in
the Ecumenical and Interreligious Dialogue." In his address, Cardinal Francis
Arinze (Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue) spoke of references to
Mary in Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism, and proposed that the world's
religions seek convergence in Mary as an example for women, an inspiration for
cultivating family and life values, and a model of openness to God (Documentation
catholique, #2265 [3 March 2002]).
Dedicated to promoting family unity
through the rosary, The Holy Cross Family
Ministries' website (www.hcfm.org) has
reflections on the Family Rosary and on family prayers.
John M. Haffert, a man whose entire
life was dedicated to making known the message
of Fatima and promoting the Brown scapular,
died October 31, 2001. During the 1940s and 1950s, he made the message of Fatima
better known in the United States than perhaps anywhere else. In 1946, he developed
the "Fatima Message Pledge" and assisted in the founding of the Blue
Army of Our Lady of Fatima (World Apostolate of Fatima), which now claims millions
of members all over the world. In the 1950s, he traveled across the United States
with the International Pilgrim Virgin Statue of Our Lady of Fatima. He was responsible
for the construction of the Blue Army's International Headquarters in Washington,
New Jersey, and Domus Pacis in Fatima, Portugual, through which millions have
heard the message of Fatima.
Christianity and the Arts
(Fall, 2001) In addition to essays, poetry, and fiction
related to "the Madonna,"
there is a section where readers identify and comment on their favorite image
of Mary. Among the images were Our Lady of Czestochowa (Fr. Richard John Neuhaus);
Christ and the Virgin in Michelangelo's Last Judgment (Francis Cardinal George,
O.M.I.); the Belle Verrière (Rev. Frank T. Griswald).
The Missale Romanum, (editio
typica teria) was approved by Pope John Paul II on
March 18, 2002. New material includes
eight Masses from The Collection of Masses of the Blessed Virgin Mary (1986).
Among the new twenty-nine new commemorations added to the calendar are Our Lady
of Fatima (May 13), and the Most Holy Name of Mary (Sept. 12).
From IMRI . . . .
- The following have presented and
successfully defended their written theses
for the Licentiate in Theology (Marian
Studies) at the International Marian Research Institute:
- P. Antonio Larocca, S.M.C. (Barquisimeto,
Venezuela): Magisterio y Sentido de la Fe: Estudio de la Relación
entre Textos Mariológicos del Magisterio y la Devoción Mariana
en Latino America, Venezuela y la Arquidiócesis de Barquisimeto
(November 30, 2001).
- P. Javier Alson, S.M.C. (Barquisimeto,
Venezuela): La Corredención Mariana: Un Estudio Sistemático
de los Artículos sobre la Correndención en la Revista Estudios
Marianos (1942-1998) (November 30, 2001).
- Mr. Michael A. Scherschligt: To
Jesus through Mary: History and Theology (March 16, 2002).
An online course, "Mary in
Catholic Teaching," with the possibility
of gaining CEU's will be offered through
the University of Dayton's Institute for Pastoral Intiatives. Fr. Bert Buby will
be the coordinator. For more information: www.udayton.edu/mary/intro.htm
On August 31, 2002, the Marian Library/IMRI
will remember with great gratitude
Arthur W. Clinton, Jr. on the tenth
anniversary of his death (1992). In his will, Mr. Clinton bequeathed a substantial
sum to the Marian Library. Because of his generous bequest, this newsletter is
coming to you. All contributions help our work. Do remember the Marian Library/IMRI
in your will.
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