----- Original Message -----
From: "John B. Wickstrom" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Friday, 02 February 2001 3:25 p.m.
Subject: Re: Annunciation
> I don't have an old ordo to hand, but wouldn't you agree that the
> Annunciation, despite its double of the first class rank could not be
> celebrated either in Holy Week (the week immediately preceding Easter), or
> during Easter Week, (the week immediately following.) With the caveat that
> they did things differently and locally in a pre-Tridentine world.
> jw
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Scholarly discussions of medieval religion and culture
> [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of Dennis Martin
> Sent: Friday, February 02, 2001 2:55 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: Annunciation
>
>
> I am no expert in this, but while saints' feasts may be transferred when
> they fall during Lent, I would be surprised to find that a Solemnity like
> the Annunciation has ever been transferred. It is not a saints' feast,
> rather a Marian and Christological feast of the highest level. Moreover
> there was the tradition that March 25 was the day of creation (vernal
> equinox) and of the new creation (Incarnation). I'd be surprised that it
> was ever transferred. Perhaps someone who really does know the answer can
> respond. And, of course, as someone point out, it always falls during
Lent,
> so "transfer" would not be the right word. There are few saints days
> clustered near to the general range of Easter dates that would be similar.
> The saints' feasts that get transferred tend to be the ones in February or
> April which some years are within and some years outside Lent. The
> Annunciation is very close to Easter--nearly always within four weeks and
> there is even a tradition that placed the Passover in the year Christ was
> crucified on the vernal equinox, making the Triduum coincide, more or
less,
> with the Annunciation. But I have no clear details on this.
>
> Dennis Martin
When Annunciation falls during Holy Week, it is transferred to the Monday
after Low Sunday (i.e. Second Sunday of Easter or First Sunday after Easter
depending on your terminology). This did occur only a few years ago. Even
when the Annunciation is your patronal feast day you can not celebrate it
during those two weeks. It has been the patronal feast of Our Lady of
Walsingham, but the Catholic See in England and Wales have instituted a
celebration specifically for OLW on Sept. 24. We will be asking permission
of our local bishop to observe that day also.
Stephen M. Collins, Kantor
Our Lady of Walsingham
Houston, Texas
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