Ember Days, Rogation Days, and Station Churches

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Many of the ancient parts of the liturgical year have been either forgotten or suppressed by Catholics. To aid in a retrieval and understanding of three such areas -- Embertide, Rogationtide, and Station Churches -- we include the following section.

 

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The "Four Times," or Ember Days

 

What Are They?

 

What Is Their Significance?

The Ember Days Are...

 

Universally Christian,

Wednesday and Friday: Wednesday because it is the day that Christ was betrayed, and Friday because it is the day that He was slain. (And we now know that this biweekly fast is actually older than some books of the New Testament). Later, Christians from both East and West added their own commemorations of the seasons.

The beauty of spring.

 

 

Uniquely Roman,

The brightness of summer.

was seen as the culmination of the Ember Week. A special Mass and procession to St. Peter’s in Rome was held, and the congregation was invited to "keep vigil with Peter."

 

 

Usefully Natural,

both the Hebrew seasonal fasts and the Christian Ember Days, we are invited to consider the wonder of the natural seasons and their relation to God. The seasons, for example, can be said to intimate individually the bliss of Heaven, where there is "the beauty of spring, the brightness of summer, the plenty of autumn, the rest of winter" (St. Thomas Aquinas).

 

The plenty of autumn.

 

 

Communally Clerical,

 

And Personally Prayerful

The rest of winter.

the wondrous cycle of nature and the more wondrous story of our redemption, the splendid differentiation of God’s ordained servants -- and lastly, the condition of our own souls. Traditionally, these were times of spiritual exercises and personal self-examination, the ancient equivalent of our modern retreats and missions. Little wonder, then, that a host of customs and folklore grew up around them affirming the special character of these days.

 

 


 

The Greater and Lesser Rogation Days

 

What Are They?

  • The Rogation Days consist of plaintive litanies to God and the saints chanted while the faithful proceed through town and country and the priest blesses their land and property. These processions, which are penitential in character, end at the church, where Mass is then celebrated.
  • "Rogation" is from the Latin rogare, to petition earnestly. The word "litany" comes from the Greek litaneia (lite), meaning the same thing.
  • There are two sets of Rogation Days. The first, called the "Major" or "Greater" Litanies, is celebrated on April 25th. The second, called the "Minor" or "Lesser" Litanies, is celebrated on the three days immediately preceding Ascension Thursday.

The Litany of the Saints

 

What Is Their Significance?

The Rogation Days Are...

 

Universally Christian,

 

Uniquely Roman,

 

Usefully Natural,

 

Communally Reconciling,

 

And Personally Prayerful

 


 

The Station Churches

 

What Are They?

  • Many Missals have notations for particular Masses indicating a station church. What does this mean? Station churches are churches in Rome specially designated to be the location for worship on a particular day. The seven most important -- the Sette Chiese -- are the four great and three minor basilicas: St. John Lateran, St. Peter, St. Paul, St. Mary Major, the Holy Cross in Jerusalem, St. Lawrence, and the Twelve Apostles. Others were added later to fit various liturgical occasions. The 1962 missal has 86 station days, with 45 station churches altogether, the last two -- Santa Agatha and Santa Maria Nuova (a.k.a. Santa Francisca Romana) -- having been added by Pope Pius XI in 1934.

St. Peter's in Rome - One of the Stations

 

What Is Their Significance?

The Station Days Are...

 

Universally Christian,

 

Uniquely Roman,

 

Usefully Instructive,

 

Communally Unifying,

 

And Prayerfully Efficacious

 

 

KEY TO STATIONAL CHURCHES

 
1.  S. Anastasia
2.  S. Apollinaire
3.  Santi Apostoli
4.  S. Balbina
5.  S. Cecilia
6.  S. Crisogono
7.  S. Clemente
8.  SS. Cosma e Damiano
9.  SS. Quattro Coronati
10.  S. Croce in
       Gerusalemme
11.  S. Ciriaco
12.  S. Stefano Rotondo
13.  S. Eusebio
14.  S. Giorgio in Velabro
15.  S. Giovanni in 
      Laterano
16.  SS. Giovanni e Paulo

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17. S. Giovanni a P. Latina 18. S. Lorenzo f. le  Mura
19. S. Lorenzo in Damaso
20. S. Lorenzo in Lucina
21. S. Lorenzo in 
      Panisperna
22. S. Marco
23. S. Marcello
24. SS. Pietro e Marcellino
25. S. Maria in Domnica
26. S. Maria Maggiore
27. S. Maria ad Martryres
28. S. Maria in Trastevere
29. S. Nicola in Carcere
30. SS. Nereo ad  Achilleo
31. S. Paolo f. le  Mura
32. S. Pancranzio f. le
      Mura

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33. S. Pietro in Vaticano
34. S. Pietro in Vincoli
35. S. Prassede
36. S. Prisca
37. S. Pudenziana
38. S. Sabina all’Aventino
39. S. Susanna
40. SS. Silvestro e Martino
      (now S. Martino ai 
      Monti)
41. S. Trifone (now S. 
      Agostino)
42. S. Vitale
43. S. Sistro
44. S. Maria Nuova
45. S. Agatha

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