Rosy Reminder

| | Comments (3)

pink.jpg

Did you get pink (or rose) flowers for Gaudete Sunday? Rose–coloured roses may be your first choice, but I like carnations — one single huge bouquet — for Gaudete Sunday.

It is always distressing to see flowers dispersed about the sanctuary in multiple little bouquets. It is even worse when such bouquets are placed in glass vases from the jumble sale and balanced on odd little tables and metal stands. Why do people do such things? A dozen or more flowers arranged in a single bouquet offer an intensity of colour that is lost when one attempts to use them in multiple arrangements.

carnationdozlarge-thumb.jpg

After the Second Vespers of Sunday when the sanctuary returns to its Advent austerity, consider offering the Gaudete bouquet to the Blessed Virgin at your Lady Altar or, at least, keep the flowers until 20 December for the lovely Golden Mass of the Missus Est. It is fitting to flower the principal image of Our Lady during Advent, especially when it is located in a Lady Chapel or outside the sanctuary proper.

3 Comments

I'm new to your blog, but not to Catholicism. My faith in God waivers in light of what science says about the universe and about us. Despite my LOVE for the Catholic tradition, I can't find God. Can you help.

Tom

We had dozens of red roses... left from the funeral of a 45 year old father of 3 who died of cancer. Please keep Joseph, his widow and his sons in your prayers.

Father Cyprian: Please send your photo to me at ocist@sbcglobal.net. I look forward to receiving it.

Leave a comment

About Father Mark, Benedictine Monk

photo: Fr. Mark Daniel Kirby His Excellency, Bishop Edward J. Slattery of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Tulsa, Oklahoma has given Father Mark a special mandate to live under the Rule of Saint Benedict in adoration before the Eucharistic Face of Jesus, offering thanksgiving, intercession, and reparation for all his brothers in Holy Orders. In this way, Father is preparing the foundation of the new Diocesan Benedictine Monastery of Our Lady of the Cenacle. Father Mark is available to the priests and deacons of the Diocese for spiritual and sacramental support in their pursuit of holiness. He is also charged with the spiritual formation of women who desire to dedicate themselves to spiritual motherhood in favour of priests.

Pages