Saturday, October 24, 2020

CHRISTIAN FEASTS AND CUSTOMS #1--- shocking eye-opener book!

 Christian Feasts and Customs #1


The upfront and revealing Book

                 

I  CAME  TO  CANADA  IN  MAY  1961  AT  THE  AGE  OF  18.  DURING THE  WINTER  OF  1961/62  I  WAS  CHALLENGED  BY  THE  PREACHING  OF  THE  RADIO  CHURCH  OF  GOD  CONCERNING  THE  "CHRISTIAN"  SUNDAY  AND  98  PERCENT  OF  ITS  OTHER  FESTIVALS (PENTECOST  BE  THE  EXCEPTION) AS  COMING  FROM  PAGANISM  AND  THE  TRADITIONS  OF  THE  ROMAN  CATHOLIC  CHURCH  AND  COULD  NOT  BE  FOUND  THE  SCRIPTURES  OF THE  BIBLE.


THE  FIRST  BOOK  I  READ  AT  THE  LOCAL  LIBRARY  WAS  "CHRISTIAN  FEASTS  AND  CUSTOMS"  BY  FRANCIS  WEISER.


IT  BLEW  ME  AWAY  WITH  CANDID  UPFRONT  WORDS  IN  EXPOUNDING  ALL  THE  COMMON  AND  NOT  SO  COMMON  FEASTS  DAYS  OF  THE  CHRISTIAN  WORLD.


I WAS  SO  PLEASED  TO  OBTAIN  ONE  OF  THE  FEW  COPIES  REMAINING  IN  THE  WORLD  OF  THIS  BOOK,  NOW  OUT  OF  PRINT.

IT  IS  MY  PLEASURE  TO  REPRODUCE  THIS  BOOK  -  Keith Hunt

......FRANCIS X. WEISER, S.J., was born in Vienna in 1901, studied at

Munich and Innsbruck, and received his doctorate of theology from

the Gregorian University in Rome. In 1931 he came to this country

for special studies. After six years' work as leader in the Catholic Youth 

movement of Austria, he returned to America in 1938. He was pastor of 

Holy Trinity Church in Boston from 1943 to 1950. From 1950 to 1961, 

Father Weiser, now an American citizen, taught at Emmanuel College 

in Boston. 



Handbook of

CHRISTIAN FEASTS AND CUSTOMS


by Francis X. Weiser


Preface by John Wright, Bishop of Worcester


Out of his vast knowledge of liturgy and folklore Weiser has now

compiled a welcome guide for laymen and clergymen who wish full

information and understanding of the feasts, customs, holydays,

and holidays of the "Year of the Lord." Written with reverence

and great warmth, it is a  work that will do much to inspire

fruitful celebration in the church and home, while it is also

useful as a convenient and singular work of reference.

Handbook of Christian Feasts and Customs combines material from

three of Father Weiser's widely praised previous volumes: The

Christmas Book, The Easter Book, and The Holyday Book. Entirely

reset and considerably rearranged for practical reference, this

volume contains new chapters and passages that comprise more than

one-third of the volume; they complete the whole radiant cycle of

the liturgical year.

In his preface to the volume, Bishop Wright of Worcester says:

"For the casual reader, this new work presents an easy,

convenient, genuinely entertaining approach to the thrilling

story of Christian life in the liturgical calendar. For the

discerning student, there is a wealth of reference material…..

The Handbook of Christian Feasts and Customs is destined to

become a classic in its field."

......



FRANCIS X. WEISER

Handbook of Christian Feasts and Customs

The Year of the Lord in Liturgy and Folklore

OFFICIALLY WITHDRAWN EAGLE PUBLIC LIBRARY

......



Preface


THOSE who wish to grow in knowledge and love of the Christian

life will surely welcome Weiser's Handbook of Christian Feasts

and Customs. For the casual reader, this new work presents an

easy, convenient, genuinely entertaining approach to the

thrilling story of Christian life in the liturgical calendar. For

the discerning student, there is a wealth of reference material

in the scholarly and exhaustive development of the ecclesiastical

celebrations and of the folklore inspired by the liturgical

feasts.

Each "Year of the Lord," with its feasts and celebrations, is the

living voice of our Christian faith. There is no facet of Divine

Revelation which is not somehow reflected in the Church calendar.

Indeed, the passing seasons unfold a colorful tapestry in which

are woven the strands of Church history, of Christian cult, of

moral and dogmatic theology. And there is always fresh drama as

each feast or season tells the ageless story of the life of

Christ, or recalls the "fulness of Christ" in Mary and in other

saints. All this, Weiser has captured for his readers in a truly

remarkable work.


The faith of a people is eloquently expressed in folklore and in

national customs and traditions. Nowhere will we find a more

effective or more concise development of this theme than in this

book. Present-day observances of the great Christian feasts have

their roots in many lands. Weiser presents a fascinating study of

this subject as he explores the origin and explains the

significance of the popular customs and celebrations by which the

central mysteries of the faith are brought close to the lives of

millions.


The Handbook o f Christian Feasts and Customs is destined to

become a classic in its field. May it be for many the key to a

devout and meaningful observance of the Year of the Lord.


March 31, 1958.

JOHN WRIGHT Bishop of Worcester

......



Foreword


THIS BOOK was written to explain the origin, history,

development, and observance of our Christian feasts throughout

the "Year of the Lord." In addition to the liturgical aspect of

these feasts, their celebration in folklore is also presented.

The radiation of liturgy has created many symbols, customs, and

traditions that have enriched the observance of festive days and

seasons in home and community, and remnants of pre-Christian lore

have, in most cases, assumed new meanings and motivations through

the influence of liturgical thought and celebration.

Classified within the vast field of knowledge, this book presents

a compendium of heortology, the historical science that explains

the origin and meaning of feasts. The word "heortology" is

derived from the Greek heorte (feast) and logos (discourse). This

work, then, is primarily intended as a historical explanation of

general interest and as a source book of information.


The feasts of saints were selected on the basis of their

celebration as holydays or holidays and because their folklore

traditions are still alive in large groups of the population.

Some purely liturgical feasts of recent date (Sacred Heart,

Christ the King, Holy Name, Holy Family), which have not yet

developed an established pattern of popular observance in homes

or communities, have been omitted.


Writings on the liturgical year often employ, under the term

"cycles," the twofold division that the Roman Missal and Breviary

use in the arrangement of liturgical texts - the "temporal" cycle

and the "sanctoral" cycle. This division of the official texts is

based on the necessity of separating dated celebrations from

those that are not held on the same calendar date. Actually, as

Godfrey Diekmann, O.S.B., has pointed out, "there is only one

cycle in the liturgical year, the cycle of Christ's redemptive

work. Because of artificial divisions of terminology we are apt

to consider the saints independently instead of being aware in

every case that the Saint's Day is really a reflection and minor

realization of the Passion and Resurrection of Christ."


The division into "cycles" is not used in this book. Its three

parts represent merely external aspects in the observance of the

one, and only, cycle of the liturgical year. The parts are: the

celebrations based on natural time units and seasons of the year,

the celebrations based on the commemoration of Christ's

redemptive work, and the celebrations based on the result and

fruit of the Lord's redemption in and through His saints.


The book combines material of three previously published works

(The Christmas Book, The Easter Book, and The Holyday Book),

augmented by a number of chapters and individual passages. The

first part is almost entirely new. In most of the other chapters

the passages on history and liturgy were enlarged by additional

details, and the subject matter was rearranged to fit the purpose

of a reference work. Popular items of restricted interest

contained in the three books mentioned above, such as recipes,

music, and poems, were omitted. Only those poems were retained

that serve as examples for particular customs or liturgical

celebrations.


Many details of religious and nonreligious folklore are given

without reference to printed source material. This information

the author has accumulated in the course of years through

personal contact with experts on the folklore of various national

groups. Much material was also collected through personal

observation and study in central Europe, Italy, Ireland, and in

the countries of the Near East.


A book like this must of necessity, and repeatedly, employ

certain terms that are quite familiar to some readers and not so

to others. For the convenience of the latter an alphabetical

dictionary of terms may be found at the end of the volume.

Reference notes will be found at the end of each chapter. The

reader will also find occasional repetition of information or

definition. This has been done to obviate the need for cross

references and, therefore, to make the book easier to use as a

reference work.


The author is gratefully indebted to His Excellency, Bishop John

Wright of Worcester, Massachusetts, for the preface to the book.

Acknowledgment for valuable help in the research on national

folklore is due especially to Rev. Gregory Tom (Ukrainians), Rev.

Claude Klarkowski (Poland), Rev. Vicente Beneyto, S.J. (Spain),

Gediminas Kijauskas, S.J. (Lithuania), Sr. Marie Margarita,

S.N.D. (France), Mrs. Hannah J. Ford (Ireland), Joaquin Herrero,

S.J. (South America), Rev. Zeno Vendler, S.J., and Lajos A.

Szathmary (Hungary), Mr. and Mrs. Michael Topjian (Armenia),

Stanley Marrow, S.J. (Near East), Rev. James L. Monks, S.J.

(Eastern Churches), Rev. Richard Brackett, S.J., and Lars Lund

(Scandinavia), Rev. John Correia-Afonso, S.J. (India).

Acknowledgment is also due to Edward C. Currie and Rev. Martin F.

McCarthy, S.J., for assistance in research on music, to Miss Anne

Ford and Miss Margaret O'Loughlin for help in preparing the

manuscript.


This book is dedicated, as a belated but sincere token of

gratitude, to my former professor at the University of Innsbruck

(Austria), the Rev. Joseph A. Jungmann, S.J. The lasting

influence of his personality and example no less than his

masterful teaching inspired me, as it did many others of his

former students, to attempt a modest contribution to the great

task of making the treasures of holy liturgy better known and

appreciated. May this handbook not only be useful to anyone

seeking information and understanding of our feasts and folklore,

but also help toward a joyful and fruitful celebration in our

churches, hearts and homes.


FRANCIS X. WEISER, S.J.

Weston College, Weston, Massachusetts.

..........


WELLLLL..... YOU WILL SEE HOW REVEALING THIS BOOK IS, AND HOW THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH COULD ADOPT FROM PAGANISM, AS WELL AS MAKING UP FEASTS, HENCE MAKING SO MANY THAT EVEN THE CASUAL READER WILL EASILY SEE WERE NEVER A PART OF SCRIPTURE. OF COURSE THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH HAS NO PROBLEM WITH ALL OF THIS AS THEY CLAIM THEY HAVE INSPIRATION FROM GOD, HANDED DOWN TO THE POPE, AND BISHOPS, SO MAKING EVERY FEAST OF THEIR LITURGICAL YEAR SANCTIONED AND INSPIRED BY GOD IN HEAVEN.


Keith Hunt


No comments:

Post a Comment