T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1431.1 | Ascension day in Lake Leman area. | GVPROD::MEYER | Nick, DTN 7-821-4172 | Thu May 08 1997 03:04 | 25 |
| Today is not only the memorial day for the end of the hostilities in
Europe in May 1945, but also Ascension Day.
Most of Europe is on holiday today, (except UK Etc...)
Our Anglican church in Geneva is planning a Eucharist & pic-nic at the
monastery of Notre Dame des Voirons, where there is a community of some
90 Little Sisters of Bethleem.
As it has been snowing below 3000 feet & their monastery is at 4000ft
I have just had to put on my snow tires again on our 4WD Golf. :o)
Traditionally this is an ecumenical Eucharist at a little chapel in the
woods, that we are allowed to use & we usually get representatives from
6 or more anglophone churches in Geneva, as well as French speaking
Swiss of French passer.
When the weather is beautiful, we have the whole Alpine range at our
feet so to speak with Mont Blanc (approx 15000ft) towering over the
whole Chamonix valley. When the weather is poor we gather in a small
house & make a fire & all share each others quiches, cheeses, wines &
pies.
de Colores,
nm
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1431.2 | | CSC32::HENNING | A rose with no thorns | Thu May 08 1997 12:09 | 5 |
| Hi Nick,
Sounds like a beautiful way to observe the Ascension of our Lord! Here
in the States, the feast is celebrated as a holyday of obligation. No
national observance at all.
|
1431.3 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu May 08 1997 12:22 | 25 |
| In the United States, we have no religious holidays, so today is a normal
workday.
It is, however, a Holy Day of Obligation, both for Roman Catholics (cf.
Canon 1246) and for Anglicans (cf 1979 BCP p.15, Principal Feasts), so
all who are observant will be at mass today (or will have gone to a
vigil mass yesterday evening).
My parish will observe the Feast this evening at 6:30 p.m. with a Solemn
High Mass; the music will be Missa Brevis in D, Op. 63 ... Benjamin Britten;
Surgens Jesus ... Claudio Monteverdi; Let all the world in every corner sing
... Healey Willan, plus hymns:
214 Hail the day that sees him rise,
483 The head that once was crowned with thorns
Is crowned with glory now
221 O Lord most High, eternal King
450 All hail the power of Jesus' name
215 See the conqueror mounts in triumph
(the first and last being the most traditional of Ascension Day hymns.)
There is a festival reception in the church garden afterwards.
/john
|
1431.4 | Bavaria | OSITEL::BRITTAIN | Peter, TOEM support Munich @RTO 865-3102 | Mon May 12 1997 09:37 | 16 |
|
Here in Germany it's a "Hol' of Ob'", and in Bavaria at least, a public
holiday.
Lots of 'First Holy Communions', little boys in posh suits, little
girls in white dresses.
It's also traditionally Father's day, which unfortunately sometimes
means drunk men staggering round the streets.
A friend wrote from San Francisco describing an all night Vigil
"sign-up and pray an hour" kind of thing.
-pb
|
1431.5 | "What do you do when Ascension Thursday falls on a Sunday?" | LYCEUM::CURTIS | Dick "Aristotle" Curtis | Mon May 12 1997 17:38 | 19 |
| .3:
Well, it was a Holy Day of Obligation for Roman Catholics in about 2/3
of the United States. There's a little note (and I do mean in LITTLE
typeface!) that states that the dioceses in the states of Alaska,
Hawaii, California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Utah, Nevada, and I
think some others will have observed Ascension Thursday on Sunday, the
11th.
If I understand it correctly, this is the third year of a three-year
trial, and over the coming months it will be decided whether to
continue to require Mass attendance on Thursday (as has been
traditional for lo these many centuries), or to move the observance of
the feast to a Sunday, as was done some years ago for the Epiphany of
the Lord.
I presume that the various Eastern Rites will be unaffected.
Dick
|
1431.6 | A great long weekend! | GVPROD::MEYER | Nick, DTN 7-821-4172 | Tue May 13 1997 08:30 | 26 |
| Well we had a super day out at the Voirons monastery. It started off
with Holy communion, lots of nice hyms sung a capella, as the chapel in
the woods we used has no electricity. We had great big noises as
mountains of snow slipped off the chapel roof in the warm sunshine.
The lessons read were the same that my wife had read that morning at
breakfast time, our Bible reading time, after breakfast, before the
world goes crazy with busy-ness.
This was followed by a pic-nic, half in a little house that the little
sisters let us use, & half ouitside in the sunshine, once my wife had
cleared a foot of snow off the benches & pic-nic table.
We met lots of new people, new arrivals to the Geneva area, English
people who were pic-nicking by themselves & who joined us.
We then walked back down to the monastery & met two sisters, which we
had sot seen in 6 to 8 years, as it is a silent order & they live in
solitary in their little cells, making & decorating pottery, Icons
etc...
Then we had to pack-up & go home to get ready for a dawn car ride to
Paris, for my daughter's wedding.
All told an absolutely great long week-end.
:o)
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