Posted on 05/24/2010 5:43:30 AM PDT by marshmallow
Years ago I told this Pentecost Monday tale and it has made the rounds.
It stands being repeated.
I think this stands as a lesson for what happens when we lose sight of continuity.
Take this for what it may be worth. Some years ago I was told this story by an elderly, retired Papal Ceremoniere or a Master of Ceremonies who (according to him) was present at the event about to be recounted.
You probably know that in the traditional Roman liturgical calendar the mighty feast of Pentecost had its own Octave. Pentecost was a grand affair indeed, liturgically speaking. In some places in the world such as Germany and Austria Pentecost Monday, Whit Monday as the English call it, was a reason to have a civil holiday, as well as a religious observance.
The Monday after Pentecost in 1970 His Holiness Pope Paul VI rose bright and early and went to the chapel for Holy Mass. Instead of the red he expected, there were green vestments laid out for him.
He queried the MC assigned that day, "What on earth are these for? This is the Octave of Pentecost! Where are the red vestments?"
"Santità," quoth the MC, "this is now Tempus per annum. It is green, now. The Octave of Pentecost is abolished."
"Green? That cannot be!", said the Pope, "Who did that?"
"Holiness, you did."
And Paul VI wept.
I don’t get it. Did he forget he had done it, or what?
The general gist is that Paul VI did or permitted many things which he naively thought were for the good of the Church only to discover later that there was another agenda afoot.
I don’t understand? Did the man suffer from dementia?
However, he may not have understood the implications of some of his decisions and later regretted them bitterly.
I would like to see this reversed, wouldn’t you.
I would love to have an Octave of Pentecost!
Well we have one, called Trinity Sunday!
This would be really nice to have. A day off today would have hit the spot.
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