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Latin Mass Celebrated at 10:00am Sundays
Music by the Schola Cantorum
Mass Propers and Translations
2nd Sunday in Ordinary Time- January 14, 2024 |
3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time- January 21, 2024 |
4th Sunday in Ordinary Time- January 28, 2024 |
5th Sunday in Ordinary Time- February 4, 2021 |
6th Sunday in Ordinary Time- February 11, 2021 |
7th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
8th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
1st Sunday in Lent |
2nd Sunday of Lent |
3rd Sunday of Lent |
4th Sunday of Lent |
5th Sunday of Lent |
Palm Sunday |
Easter Sunday |
2nd Sunday of Easter |
3rd Sunday of Easter |
4th Sunday of Easter |
5th Sunday of Easter |
6th Sunday of Easter |
Ascension |
Pentecost |
Trinity Sunday |
Corpus Christi |
10th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
11th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
12th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
13th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
14th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
15th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
16th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
17th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
Transfiguration |
18th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
19th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
20th_sunday_in_ot.pdf |
21st Sunday in Ordinary Time |
22nd Sunday in Ordinary Time |
23rd Sunday in Ordinary Time |
24th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
25th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
26th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
27th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
28th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
29th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
30th Sunday in Ordinary Time |
31st Sunday in Ordinary Time |
32nd Sunday in Ordinary Time |
33rd Sunday in Ordinary Time |
Christ the King |
1st Sunday of Advent- December 3, 2023 |
2nd Sunday of Advent- December 10, 2023 |
3rd Sunday of Advent- December 17, 2023 |
4th Sunday of Advent- December 24, 2023 |
Christmas Eve Midnight Mass |
Mary Mother of God- January 1, 2024 |
Epiphany- January 8, 2024 |
Why the Latin Mass?
Are you curious about the Latin Mass?
Do you wonder why people are attracted to its mystery... its reverence... its transcendence?
Would you like to attend the Extraordinary Form of the Latin Rite Mass?
Then come celebrate it with us every Sunday and Wednesday at St. Odilo Church in Berwyn, IL.
* * * * * * *
The Mass — particularly in the Extraordinary (Latin) Form ... proclaims at every turn and with every syllable that there is communication on a deeper level than ever could be achieved with words or digits or cyphers in space. The Mass – even though it uses words – is essentially wordless. ...
The Mass — so well highlighted by this Solemn High Ceremony – teaches without books and without lessons, without screens and PowerPoints. It teaches by means of Presence and Beauty and sight and sound. And what does it teach? Love. And could anyone say that love needs words and paragraphs and punctuation to be understood?
The words of the Mass are the conduit of hearts. The Mass eschews typical ways of learning and understanding and communicating, and uses ritual and music and sense.
We have always heard that it is the Mass that matters. Not the sermons, not the homilies, nor even the readings or hymns — not any of the peripheral business to which we have all become so accustomed to in the last forty-five years.
The Mass is the ensemble of a thousand individual elements taken together — seen as a whole — appreciated as one moment — and gathered together in an intuitive surprise.
The Mass — every Mass — any Mass – is the center point of the universe. It is the sacrifice on a cross – of the God made man. What more is there? What more could there be than to know that everything in life — is simply a prelude to the moment where God out of love once and for all died for us — and at every Mass — out of love — sacrifices Himself again.