ON LITURGICAL YEAR
AND NEW UNIVERSAL ROMAN CALENDAR
The Paschal Mystery and its celebration constitutes the essence of
Christian worship in its daily, weekly and yearly unfolding. The Second Vatican
Council clearly teaches this. It follows therefore that the restoration of the
liturgical year, whose norms have been formulated by the same Holy Synod,(1)
must put this Paschal Mystery in sharper focus with regard to the organization
of the Proper of the Season and the Proper of the Saints as well as in the
revision of the Roman Calendar.
I.
It is true that in the course of time the multiplication of feasts, vigils
and octaves, as well as the progressive complication of different parts of the
liturgical year, have often driven the faithful to particular devotions, in such
a way that their minds have been somewhat diverted from the fundamental
mysteries of our Redemption.
Everyone is aware, however, of the numerous dispositions taken in this
field by Our predecessors, St. Pius X and John XXIII of venerable memory, to
restore Sunday to its original dignity, considered by all as "the original feast
day,"(2) and likewise to restore the liturgical celebration of the Lenten
Season. Above all, Our predecessor of venerable memory, Pius XII, had decided
(3) to revive, within the Church of the West, in the course of the Paschal
Night, the solemn Vigil, in which, while celebrating the sacraments of Christian
Initiation, the People of God renew their covenant with Christ the Risen Lord.
Following the teaching of the holy Fathers and the firm tradition of the
Catholic Church, these Popes rightly thought that the unfolding of the
liturgical year is not just a commemoration of the actions by which Jesus
Christ, by dying, has brought about our salvation. Nor, according to them is
this unfolding merely a commemoration of past events so that the faithful, even
the more simple, might be instructed and nourished by meditating on them. They
also taught that the celebration of the liturgical year "enjoys a sacramental
force and a particular efficaciousness to nourish the Christian life."(4) We
Ourselves think and teach the same.
It is only right, therefore, that, when celebrating "the sacrament of the
birth of Christ"(5) and His manifestation to the world, we pray that "he who
outwardly was like us, may transform us interiorly."(6) When we renew the Pasch
of Christ, we ask God that those who have been reborn with Christ "may be
faithful, in their way of life, to the paschal mystery which they have received
by faith."(7) For, to use the very words of the Second Vatican Council, "in
recalling the mysteries of Redemption, the Church opens to the faithful the
riches of her Lord's powers and merits, so that these are in some way made
present at all times, and the faithful are enabled to lay hold of them and
become filled with saving grace."(8)
Thus the revision of the liturgical year and the norms which follow
logically from this restoration have no other purpose than to permit the
faithful to communicate in a more intense way, through faith, hope and love, in
"the whole mystery of Christ which she unfolds within the cycle of a year."(9)
II.
Nor, we believe, is there any disagreement between this re-emphasis on the
mystery of Christ and the feasts of the Blessed Virgin Mary, "who is joined by
an inseparable bond to the saving work of her Son,"(10) and the commemorations
of the saints, among which it is fitting to single out especially the natalicia
of "our lords, the martyrs and conquerors"(11); all these are feasts which shine
with particular brightness. For "the feasts of the saints proclaim the wonderful
works of Christ in His servants, and display to the faithful fitting examples
for their imitation."(12) Indeed, the Catholic Church has always held that the
paschal mystery of Christ is proclaimed and renewed in the feasts of the
saints.(13)
It cannot be denied, however, that in the course of centuries the feasts of
the saints have become more and more numerous. The Sacred Synod has therefore
decreed: "Lest the feasts of the saints take precedence over the feasts which
commemorate the very mysteries of salvation, many of them should be left to be
celebrated by a particular Church or nation or religious community; only those
should be extended to the universal Church which commemorate saints who are
truly of universal significance."(14)
In order to execute this decision of the Ecumenical Council, the names of
some saints have been removed from the universal Calendar, and the faculty has
been given of re-establishing in regions concerned, if it is desired, the
commemorations and cult of other saints. The suppression of reference to a
certain number of saints who are not universally known has permitted the
insertion, within the Roman Calendar, of names of some martyrs of regions where
the proclaiming of the Gospel arrived at a later date. Thus, as representatives
of their countries, those who have won renown by the shedding of their blood for
Christ or by their outstanding virtues enjoy the same dignity in this same
catalogue.
For these reasons we think that the new universal Calendar, prepared for
the Latin rite, is more in harmony with the piety and the needs of our times,
and that it better reflects the universality of the Church, in the sense that it
proposes the names of the most important saints, who present to all the People
of God a shining example of sanctity in a variety of ways. It is superfluous to
say that this will contribute to the spiritual well-being of the entire
Christian world.
Having very attentively weighed all this before the Lord, by Our apostolic
authority we approve the new Roman Universal Calendar prepared by
"Consilium"—"The Council for the Proper Implementation of the Constitution on
the Sacred Liturgy, and likewise the general norms concerning the arrangement
of the liturgical year. We establish that they will go into effect on January 1,
1970, according to the decrees which will be published jointly by the Sacred
Congregation of Rites and Consilium, and which will be valid until the edition
of the restored Missal and Breviary.
We wish that what we have established in this letter, given motu proprio,
be firm and effective, notwithstanding, to the extent necessary, the apostolic
constitutions and ordinances deserving particular mention and derogation.
Given at Rome, at Saint Peter's, February 14, 1969, the sixth year of Our
pontificate.
PAUL VI, POPE
NOTES
1. Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, chapter 5;
A.A.S. 56 (1964) 125-128.
2. Ibid., art. 106; A.A.S. 56 (1964) 126.
3. Sacred Congregation of Rites, Decree Dominicae Resurrectionis, February
9, 1951; A.A.S. 43 (1951) 128-129.
4. Sacred Congregation of Rites, General Decree Maxima Redemptionis, November 16, 1965; A.A.S. 47 (1955) 839.
5. St. Leo the Great, Sermon 27 for Christmas 7, 1; PL 54: 216.
6. Cf. Roman Missal, Prayer for the Commemoration of our Lord's Baptism, January 13.
7. Ibid., Prayer for the Tuesday of Easter.
8. Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, art. 102;
A.A.S. 56 (1964) 125.
9. Ibid.
10. Ibid., art. 103.
11. Cf. Syriac Breviary (5th cent.), ed. Mariani, Rome, 1956, p. 27.
12. Cf. Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium, art.
111; A.A.S. 56 (1964) 127.
13. Cf. Ibid., art. 104; 125-126.
14. Ibid., art. 111; 127.