A REFLECTION FOR THE GREATER LITANIES
(adapted from “The Liturgical Year by Dom Prosper Gueranger)
April
25 is honored in the Liturgy by what is sometimes called Saint Mark's
Procession. The term, however, is not a correct one, inasmuch as the
Procession was a privilege peculiar to April 25 previously to the institution
of the Evangelist's Feast, which even as late as the 6th century had no fixed
day in the Roman Church. The real name of this Procession is The
Greater Litanies. The word Litany means supplication,
and is applied to the religious rite of singing certain chants whilst
proceeding from place to place in order to propitiate Heaven. The two
Greek words Kyrie eleison (Lord, have mercy upon us) were also
called Litany, as likewise were the invocations which were
afterwards added to that cry for mercy, and which now form a liturgical prayer
used by the Church on certain solemn occasions.
The Greater
Litanies (or processions) are so called to distinguish them from
the Minor Litanies, that is, processions of less importance as far
as the solemnity and concourse of the faithful were concerned. We gather from
an expression of St. Gregory the Great that it was an ancient custom in the
Roman Church to celebrate, once a year, a Greater Litany, at which
all the clergy and people assisted. This holy Pontiff chose April 25 as the
fixed day for this Procession, and appointed the Basilica of St. Peter as the
Station.
The
institution of the Greater Litanies even preceded the
Processions prescribed by St. Gregory for times of public calamity, such as the
one famously held to end in the plague in 591. It existed long before his time,
and all that he did was to fix it on April 25. It is quite independent of the
Feast of St. Mark, which was instituted at a much later period. If April 25
occurs during Easter week, the Procession takes place on that day (unless it be
Easter Sunday) but the Feast of the Evangelist is not kept till after the
Octave.
The
question naturally presents itself—why did Pope St. Gregory choose April 25 for
a Procession and Station in which everything reminds us of compunction and
penance, and which would seem so out of keeping with the joyous Season of
Easter? Liturgists have shown that in the 5th, and probably even in the 4th
century, April 25 was observed at Rome as a day of great solemnity. The
faithful went, on that day, to the Basilica of St. Peter, in order to celebrate
the anniversary of the first entrance of the Prince of the Apostles into Rome,
upon which he thus conferred the inalienable privilege of being the capital of
Christendom. It is from that day that we count the 25 years, 2 months and some
days that St. Peter reigned as Bishop of Rome. The Sacramentary of St. Leo
gives us the Mass of this solemnity, which afterwards ceased to be kept. St.
Gregory, to whom we are mainly indebted for the arrangement of the Roman
Liturgy, was anxious to perpetuate the memory of a day which gave to Rome her
grandest glory. He therefore ordained that the Church of St. Peter should be
the Station of the Great Litany, which was always to be celebrated on that
auspicious day. April 25 comes so frequently during the Octave of Easter that
it could not be kept as a feast, properly so called, in honor of St. Peter's
entrance into Rome; St. Gregory, therefore, adopted the only means left of
commemorating the great event.
But
there was a striking contrast resulting from this institution, of which the
holy Pontiff was fully aware, but which he could not avoid: it was the contrast
between the joys of Paschal Time and the penitential sentiments and Station of
the Great Litany. Laden as we are with the manifold graces of this holy Season,
and elated with our Paschal joys, we must sober our gladness by reflecting on
the motives which led the Church to cast this hour of shadow over our Easter
sunshine. After all, we are sinners, with much to regret and much to fear; we
have to avert those scourges which are due to the crimes of mankind; we must,
by humbling ourselves and invoking the intercession of the Mother of God and
the Saints, obtain the health of our bodies and preservation of the fruits of
the earth; we have to offer atonement to Divine Justice for our own and the
world's pride, sinful indulgences, and insubordination. Let us enter into
ourselves, and humbly confess that our own share in exciting God's indignation
is great; and our poor prayers, united with those of our Holy Mother the
Church, will obtain mercy for the guilty, and for ourselves who are of their
number.
A day, then, like this, of
reparation to God's offended majesty, would naturally suggest the necessity of
joining some exterior penance to the interior dispositions of contrition which
filled the hearts of Christians. Abstinence from flesh-meat was long observed
on this day at Rome; and when the Roman Liturgy was established in the Kingdom
of the Franks by King Pepin and St. Karl the Great, the Great Litany of April
25 was, of course, celebrated, and the abstinence kept by the faithful of that
country. A council held at Aachen in 836 enjoined the additional obligation of
resting from servile work on this day: the same enactment is found in the
Capitularia of Charles the Bald. As regards fasting, properly so-called, being
contrary to the spirit of Paschal Time, it appears never to have been observed
on this day, at least not generally. Amalarius, who lived in the 9th century,
asserts that it was not then practiced even in Rome.
During the Procession, the
Litany of the Saints is sung, followed by several versicles and orations. The
Mass of the Station is celebrated according to the Lenten Rite, that is,
without the Gloria, and in violet vestments.
We take this opportunity of protesting against the
negligence of Christians on this subject. For centuries, even many persons who
had the reputation of being spiritual thought nothing of being absent from the
Litanies said on the Feast of St. Mark and the Rogation Days. One would have
thought that when the Holy See took from these days the obligation of
abstinence, the faithful would be so much the more earnest to join in the duty
left—the duty of prayer. The people's presence at the Litanies is taken for
granted; and it is simply absurd that a religious rite of public reparation
should be one from which almost all should keep away. We suppose that these
Christians will acknowledge the importance of the petitions made in the
Litanies; but God is not obliged to hear them in favor of such as ought to make
them and yet do not. When St. Charles Borromeo first took possession of the See
of Milan, he found this negligence among his people, and that they left the
clergy to go through the Litanies of April 25 by themselves. He assisted at
them himself, and walked barefooted in the Procession. The people soon
followed the saintly pastor's example.
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