VENI SANCTE
SPIRITUS
INTRODUCTION
The title of my reflection for today is, “Veni
Sancte Spiritus.”
This will be an information type sermon.
Relax – I am aiming for 6 minutes – whereas I usually aim
for 10 minutes with a Sunday homily.
This will be a bit much – appealing to the mind – more than the heart –
and our minds can only take so much. If this is a bomb, it will only be a 6 minute bomb. Relax. I spent my preparation time doing some research on
this Latin hymn, “Veni Sancte Spiritus.”
SEQUENCES
Veni Sancte
Spiritus is the Latin name for this hymn – called a sequence - for Pentecost found here in the missalette on page 173.
It’s in Latin and English.
It’s the sequence for today’s Feast of Pentecost.
It’s one of the 5 sequences we find in the liturgy – established with the Roman Missal of 1570 – a new Missal that
was called for by the Council of Trent [1545 to 1563].
The 5 sequences are:
1.
“Victimae Paschali Laudes
” It’s for Easter - (To the Paschal Victim give praise)
2.
“Veni Sancte Spiritus” -
Come Holy Spirit – the one for today.
3.
“Lauda Sion” - (Praise O Sion) – the one for Corpus
Christi.
4.
“Stabat Mater” - (Stood
the Mother sad and weeping) for the
feast of Our Lady of Sorrows – September 15.
5.
“Dies Irae” (Day of
Wrath) – for All Souls Day – November 2nd.
It’s my experience that these sequences are rarely used here at St. Mary’s – with the
exception of the Stabat Mater – which
Harry Thomson plays every Friday night during Lent at the Stations of the Cross – and Lauda Sion – which we sing at the 12:30
Corpus Christi Mass and Procession – which is coming up in a two weeks – June
22nd. You can find that
sequence in the Missalette on pages 178-179.
Sequence means “following” – as in the fancy avant-garde word "segue" [seg way] – a word I’m sure you’ve heard various people use in the past few years
– meaning “what follows without pause” – and the sequence was a hymn that
followed the reading before the gospel.
Before Trent there
were many more of these sequences – but with the new Roman Missal following
Trent, it seems the 5 best were picked.
Down thought the centuries various famous musicians and composers came up
with beautiful renditions of these
sequences.
If you like to do Google or computer search, you can listen to various compositions in
Gregorian Chant and other types of music
the Veni Sancte Spiritus as well as
the other sequences.
As you know from time to time – big time changes are made
in Church prayers and practices and music .
As you know the Council of Trent was the reform council by the Catholic
Church – in answer to the Protestant Reformation of Christianity that started with Martin Luther and John Calvin
and others. 1517 is the usual date given for the start of the Protestant
Reformation – when Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses on the door of All Saints
Church in Wittenberg, Saxony, Germany.
Our big council – Vatican II – 1962-65 – after years and
years of calls for changes called for a
reform on that same Roman Missal. Then the new missal was called the Sacramentary.
Two years ago a new translation of that came out, called once again, “The Roman
Missal.”
At present there are calls for a reform of this new Roman
Missal – because of complaints of a too
literal translation from the Latin. If you hear us priests mixing up words –
and getting tongue tied at times – it’s not just creeping dementia and old age.
THIS SEQUENCE: VENI
SANCTE SPIRITUS
Okay – having said all that, how to come to a helpful
conclusion?.
Besides listening to some religious music, what else?
Okay let me make once more a plug for a very practical
spiritual practice. I love to say, “Rosary beads can be used for more than Hail
Mary’s.”
I would assume everyone here has a rosary.
Simply during the next week – it’s called the Octave of
Pentecost – take your rosary and pray on the 59 beads the simple prayer, “Come
Holy Spirit” or if you love Latin, “Veni Sancte Spiritus.”
It takes 3 minutes to say, “Come Holy Spirit” or “Veni Sancte Spiritus” – with the 59
beads of the rosary.
Close your eyes in prayer and say that prayer – 59 times - praying that the Holy Spirit come into your life.
Or you can go through the Pentecost Sequence and pick out
just one word from the sequence and say that word for 59
times on the beads. There are some nice words in this sequence. For example pray any one of these words 59
times on your beads: comfort, welcome, refresh, renew, strengthen, heal, wash,
forgive, enrich, rest, cool, warm, melt, guide, save.
Try that for prayer – and getting lost in prayer – in God
– in the Spirit.
CONCLUSION
Come Holy Spirit. Veni
Sancte Spiritus.