Keeping with the nautical theme from last Friday, today I am excited to share one of my all-time favorite (and scarce) prayer-books with you:
📖 1925 - A Prayer Book for Catholic Seafarers
Check it out! 🧵
It is one of the most original, interesting, and moving prayer books I have ever encountered.
Compiled by the legendary and prolific Rev. CC Martindale, SJ, almost the entire book is newly-written original prayers and commentary specifically for sailors and seamen.
It also contains what is likely the first and only Marian hymn to include the word "torpedo"!
There is a ton of beautiful and fascinating content in this prayer book.
Here are prayers written for the various roles and classes of sailors on the ships. For young boys...
... for stewards and engineers ...
... and these special exhortations to the young Catholic boys, who worked some of the hardest jobs and received harsher treatment on British ships
Here is the exhortation at the beginning of a section of prayers specifically dedicated to when a sailor preparing to enter port
The prayers and commentary are written in a direct, honest, but deeply compassionate manner. The pastoral solicitude is palpable.
This sets it apart from many other modern prayer books, which recycled 'stock' prayer content and were full of fairly bland, generic advice.
It included prayers asking for the intercession of various saints who were sailors or had maritime connections
The section for Confession is likewise original, frank, and earnest
Yet another unique feature was a Q&A section in the back, which was given as a help for Catholics trying to defend themselves from the often hostile environments of British ships.
It is charming, funny, succinct, and very 'English' in providing replies to common objections:
Here are the devotions for Mass and Communion, which again are original compositions by Martindale and are deeply moving
Lastly, gave a list of an extensive network of Catholic Centers for sailors, at or near ports throughout the world
These places offering seafarers the chance to find Mass and Catholic support no matter where they found themselves in their travels
It remained in print, through multiple editions, from 1925 to at least 1959.
Thanks for checking out these pictures from this wonderful, fascinating prayer book! I hope you enjoyed this thread.
As always, we'll see you next week for more #MissalMondays
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📖 The 1932 Missal-Vesperal with Commentary... featuring 'Symbolico-liturgical' illustrations
It's notable for a few things:
✅ Longest missal ever (!)
✅ Unique illustrations
Check it out⤵️
Unlike most missals, which focused on offering commentary, notes, and context for the various sundays and feasts of the ecclesiastical year...
The Missal-Vesperal offered the unique feature of "Symbolico-liturgical illustrations" by carmelite Fr. Fath. Berthold
These were black and white symbolic drawings relating to the liturgy
While the actual texts of Sunday or Feast would receive a brief two-sentence explanation, the drawings were each explained with several paragraphs of text
Today, we're interrupting our regularly-scheduled content... here's a short thread on the hand missal Pope Benedict XVI requested for Christmas in 1934 at age 7.
🧵
Several years ago, a childhood Christmas letter from Ratzinger and his sister were found:
"Dear Baby Jesus, quickly come down to earth. You will bring joy to children. Also bring me joy. I would like a Volks-Schott [...] I will always be good. Greetings from Joseph Ratzinger"
The hand missal requested by young Joseph Ratzinger was the "Volks-Schott" mass book.
This was a simpler abridgmenet of an extraordinarily popular and groundbreaking German hand missal originally published by Anselm Schott, OSB
Good morning! We've got a bit of a doozy for #MissalMondays
The Saint Jerome Missal, published in 4 volumes in 1964.
It features the most .... unusual .... art we've ever seen in a hand missal (and that's saying something!)
Published by The Catholic Press of Chicago, it was clearly intended to be a new, major "flagship" missal property which was chock full of selling-point features.
They pulled together a large (and slightly unusual) cast of experts to contribute, including Father Andrew Greeley
(interesting note: it holds an imprimatur of January 1963 and a copyright date of 1964, and does not survive in many copies.
It's clear this was immediately overtaken and made irrelevant by the many sudden a d rapid changes to the mass which happened in 1964)
There are many interesting comments and replies in this thread, go check it out!
For anyone interested in the history, I did a series of short, illustrated articles on the history of microphones & loudspeakers in Catholic worship between 1922-1958
Part 1 reveals that mics & speakers were widely installed in Catholic churches throughout the world in the 1920s, and used for a variety of surprising things like radio broadcasts, simultaneous masses, and audio for overflow crowds.