There’s Still Time to Enroll in Our Mother’s Day Mass!
Mother’s Day is fast approaching on Sunday! If you haven’t enrolled your mother in our yearly Mother’s Day Mass, you still have time to do so. It takes just a minute to fill out the online enrollment form found here. Also on that page you will find a downloadable holy card that you can print out and give to those you enroll, and the letter for Mother’s Day 2020 from North American Superior Fr. Michael Stinson.
There’s no better gift we can give our mothers than the Holy Mass and our prayers. You can enroll your natural mother, those spiritual mothers in your life, and any mothers who are special to you, living or deceased.
When the October 2019 edition of our Meménto newsletter hit your mailboxes last fall, some of you wrote in to us asking about the beautiful image on the front cover. It is Simone Cantarini’s The Madonna and Child Holding A Rosary, Crucifix and a Rose, also called the Madonna Della Rosa. Click the image to enlarge and download it (it’s in the public domain, so feel free to share and print it). It’s a wonderful depiction of the love between the infant Jesus and His Blessed Mother, and we hope you enjoy it as you celebrate her Motherhood and that of all mothers this Sunday. +
May 8, 2020

FSSP Dallas Bookstore Offers Relief During Pandemic
In the midst of great difficulty, great good always finds a place to take root. In fact, adversity is the only kind of soil where the works of mercy thrive, and at Mater Dei Parish, our apostolate in Dallas, Texas, in a landscape altered by the reality of the coronavirus, we found them growing strong.

When the restrictions on public gatherings closed churches across the state around the Second Sunday in Lent, Mater Dei too had to halt its public Masses, which are celebrated five times on Sunday by four priests for one of the largest and oldest congregations in the District. Its busy parish life came to a sudden stop, and as Sunday socials, youth group events and Knights of Columbus meetings were put on hold, Thomas Walters, manager of the Mater Dei Bookstore, began to think.

A parishioner of Mater Dei since 2010, Mr. Walters began the bookstore in December of 2015 at the request of the pastor and brings substantial experience in running religious bookstores to his work at Mater Dei. His wife Kimberly is also active in parish life, having spent many years as the choir director before only recently transitioning into the role of assistant director (they do all this while raising 4 kids).
Mr. Walters knew that without the Mass and the Holy Eucharist, his fellow traditional Catholics would be hurting and in need of support. While pastors across the District have striven to provide as much spiritual sustenance to their flocks as possible, Mr. Walters knew he also had a part to play and was not one to sit idle when there was work to be done. He kept the bookstore open, and then did a whole lot more.

“I was in the bookstore and I thought, ‘This is going to impact traditional Catholics in a negative way’,” he explained. “I knew that blogs would come out and people would be depressed. So I prayed, ‘What can I do to raise their spirits?’ And it helped me to go forth and open the bookstore with basically a buffet, free food, free snacks, free coffee, 20% off of everything storewide, in order to give some kind of hope and encouragement to people because I knew they would be suffering.”

He swiftly renamed the bookstore the “Mater Dei Relief Center” and provided not only free refreshments and discounts, but also necessities such as soap and that most elusive staple, toilet paper. He keeps to his regular store hours, even extending some hours, particularly on Sunday. While he normally is open after all Sunday Masses and schedules break time in between, he stays open from 8am to 7:30pm at present since people are filtering in and out of the church all Sunday to pray. He greets both Mater Dei parishioners and visitors at the Center, and his initiative has been received with joy and gratitude.
“I would say I’ve received from visitors as well as parishioners a lot of thank-you’s, especially from the elderly, who come to not only visit but to also come and pick up their essentials like toilet paper and soap,” he said, explaining that he provided these items as soon as he renamed the bookstore and opened it up as the Mater Dei Relief Center.
But the parishioners of this vibrant parish were not going to let him do it alone. The project grew into a group effort as others began donating food and essentials to supply the Center.
“Lots of parishioners have donated toilet paper and soap and food and therefore it’s created quite the community,” he said.

And what better time to engage in works of fraternal charity than during the season of Lent? We are often advised by our pastors to think not only in terms of what we can give up for Lent but what we can do in addition, and not only prayer and penance but also almsgiving are recommended practices during this holy season. In a paradoxical way, the arrival of the coronavirus this year presented us with extra opportunities for charity. The restrictions forced most of us into isolation, and concurrently gave us a chance to check in on our family, neighbors and fellow-parishioners and offer assistance to the suffering.
“I flocknoted* people and was honest and said this has been the best Lent for me since I’ve been here at Mater Dei, because I just immediately acted and focused on the positive and it’s been the best Lent,” Mr. Walters said. “It’s reminded me to be other-directed, to serve my neighbor as myself, and then to just imitate Jesus Christ in the story of St. Damien [of Molokai], because I took a lot of encouragement from St. Damien.”

St. Damien of Molokai, fondly known as Father Damien, was a missionary priest from Belgium who worked in a leper colony in Hawaii in the latter half of the 19th century. His love for those he served overcoming any fear or revulsion he may have had for the then-incurable disease, he labored among the lepers for 16 years, ministering to their spiritual needs, caring for their wounded and diseased bodies, and assisting them in organizing their community and building houses, schools, hospitals and churches. All the while he lived as one of them and had no concern for contracting the ailment, which he eventually did, dying a “martyr of charity” at the age of 49.
“I realized St. Damien went to the lepers, I wasn’t going to be afraid of the COVID and I was just going to help people where they’re at and to focus on the positive,” Mr. Walters said.
If you are in the Dallas area, we encourage you to stop by for some time in prayer at Mater Dei – their doors are open from 6am to 6pm, and hopefully the regular Mass schedule will be back in full swing very soon. And while you’re there, be sure to walk across the breezeway to the parish office building and visit the Mater Dei Relief Center, a place offering an oasis of charity and good cheer in a world of isolation and uncertainty. Maybe you too will be inspired, in whatever small way you can and in whatever circumstances you find yourself, to do it like Damien. +
*i.e. contacted parishioners via Flocknotes.
May 5, 2020

Happy Feast of St. Joseph the Worker!
A happy and most blessed feast of St. Joseph the Worker! Today we honor the good St. Joseph in his capacity as a workman and as the patron of laborers. Pope Pius XII instituted this feast in 1955 as a counter to the Communist “May Day” celebrations, the feast offering a far superior way to honor workers by honoring their model and patron. We especially wish a happy patronal feast to St. Joseph the Worker Parish, our apostolate in Tyler, Texas!

A carpenter by trade, St. Joseph passed on his knowledge and skills to his foster-son, Jesus, and side-by-side they labored together for countless hours, days and years in the woodshop in Nazareth, living a humble, holy and most hidden life in the company of Our Lady. Though St. Joseph speaks not a word in the Gospels, how easily we can imitate his example! Whatever kind of work we do, we can do it in the company of Our Lord and Our Lady, inviting them to sanctify even our most trivial tasks so that they might become a source of great grace for us.
During this time when many businesses have been forced to close and lay off their staff, let us pray for those workers who suddenly find themselves without a livelihood and face difficult circumstances. So many of those laid off are low-income workers who can least afford to be without work. Let us pray to St. Joseph the Worker to grant them their necessities, renewed work prospects, and a hopeful future, and let us help one another in whatever ways we can.
In view of the ongoing pandemic, today the U.S. Bishops will join those of Canada is reconsecrating their respective nations to Our Lady. His Excellency the Most Reverend José Gomez, Archbishop of Los Angeles and president of the USCCB, will lead the reconsecration of the United States at 3pm Eastern time. You can join the livestream of the event at the USCCB’s Facebook page, and you can find the text of the prayers here. +
Omne quodcúmque fácitis in verbo aut in ópere, ómnia in nómine Dómini Jesu Christi, grátias agéntes Deo et Patri per ipsum.
All whatsoever you do in word or in work, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, giving thanks to God and the Father by Him.
– Colossians 3:17, from the Epistle for today
May 1, 2020

Battling the Pandemic in Mexico
by Fr. Daniel Heenan, Pastor, FSSP Guadalajara, Mexico

Across the globe, society and the Church are struggling to cope with a global pandemic on a scale which has not been seen for a long time. Whatever opinions one might have regarding the appropriateness or severity of the responses taken in different places, there is no doubt that this situation has had tremendous effects in all spheres of life. Certainly the Church has had to adapt to very unusual circumstances in order to continue her mission at the service of souls. We will not soon forget Holy Week of 2020 when most places celebrated the Easter Triduum under difficult restrictions and in the absence of the faithful. Although in Mexico the situation has not yet become as grave as in the United States, here too we have had to cope with frustrating realities.

To date the official infection and mortality rates are still much lower than they are in the United States. Nevertheless, what happens in the United States invariably has its effect south of the border. In most places in Mexico, stay-at-home orders are still voluntary for most people. In Guadalajara, they just recently began to order the closing of non-essential businesses. The Church in some places, understanding how important the Faith is for the fabric of society, has tried to avoid closures. In Guadalajara we were first instructed that there would be two weeks without public Masses. Later that order was extended for another month and most are now expecting that the situation will continue at least until the end of May. Thanks be to God, the decrees have insisted that the churches shall remain open.

The fear is that the effects of a full-fledged pandemic in Mexico could be catastrophic. All admit that the Mexican healthcare system is woefully inadequate. The majority of people are on a government insurance program that is notorious for delays, poor quality of services, inadequate facilities and equipment, and unsanitary conditions in the public hospitals. Just the other day I met with a woman who was scheduled for an emergency heart surgery but had her appointment postponed two months because all the resources are being reserved for COVID-19 patients.
Economically the consequences will likely be disastrous. A large portion of the population live on what they are able to earn each day working in informal business such as roadside food stands. For them the option to stop working simply does not exist. At Casa Cristo Rey in recent weeks we have seen an increased number of people knocking at the door asking for work. They bring their small children with them because the schools have been closed and beg not only for food but also the most basic sanitary items. In our parish, San Pedro en Cadenas, many of our parishioners have responded generously and provided donations of food and other necessities that we have been able to deliver. On the other hand, others of our parishioners are likewise being severely impacted economically.

We visited several homeless shelters and an orphanage with these gifts and the directors confessed how much in need they are because their normal donations have not been arriving (probably due to a combination of fear and economic shortfalls). At one such shelter we met a family of seven that live in a single apartment that is only about four feet by five feet with one mattress. They live in a building with thirty other families in similar conditions. Upon entering the building, one immediately notices that there are no face masks and no anti-bacterial gel. The place is filthy. The roof of the building is incomplete. Most of the people don’t even have shoes. One gets the impression that in these places it is very hard to worry about catching a virus because life is already simply a struggle to survive.

Our arrival with the food delivery was greeted with great joy. First we gave lollipops to the children which they received with exuberance. That was not surprising. What was astonishing is that when we began to divide the bags of oatmeal, the children were equally overjoyed. It was painfully evident that material poverty was not their only ailment. I began to ask the children who could tell me what Easter was. No one knew. I asked them if they knew who Jesus was. There were a few responses, but mostly silence. I tried to lead them in a few basic prayers. A few of them knew a little bit, but no one could recite them in their entirety. I then asked the parents if their children attended catechism, and they all bashfully avoided making eye contact.

Here in Mexico and in many other places in the world, the coronavirus is going to generate an enormous humanitarian crisis that comes on top of one that really already exists. Feeding the spiritual hunger is even more urgent. This is a need that in many places has sadly not been filled and the current crisis will only exacerbate the problem. We have continued offering confessions, and the lines have been very long. Many who came were not parishioners, but came because they could not find any other place to confess their sins. The Church is trying to urge people to stay connected to Mass and catechesis through social media, but technology is not a feasible answer for many people who live in poverty. At one house we visited to deliver food I suggested to the family to follow the Triduum on our Facebook page. They had to admit that most of the time they didn’t have enough money to buy data on their phones and they certainly did not have WiFi in their house. In that moment it dawned on me what an enormous challenge the Church has to not lose contact with these people during this time of quarantine. This is especially important considering that the news media is eager to report that various Protestant groups are making house visits and tending to the material needs of the people.

There is not an easy answer to these problems, and, sadly, the root causes of weakening faith go back well before the appearance of the coronavirus. We cannot simply throw caution to the wind, especially because there is a grave possibility that the consequences of pandemic in poorer parts of the world can be far worse than what has been witnessed in more developed countries. There is no doubt that this pandemic has caused and will continue to cause widespread suffering. I pray that in the midst of our hardships we do not forget that some people will be hit much harder. We can hope that these trials will provide an impetus for spiritual renewal as we look for ways to continue to preach Christ, especially to those most in need of reasons to hope. When one comes face to face with people whose existence is already quite fragile, one cannot help but realize that, while health and material needs are no doubt important, what is of greatest value is that which is capable of giving meaning to life in spite of whatever hardships one has to endure. +
April 23, 2020

A Holy Week to Remember
Most of us have never experienced a Holy Week quite like this one. Someday when a generation yet unborn asks us about these strange and difficult days, perhaps the most striking thing that we will remember is the fact that, during the most sacred time of the year, most of us were forced to stay far away from the liturgies we as Catholics love so dearly. It was certainly an unexpected and heavy cross to carry, to enter into the Passion to the extent that we were imitating Our Lord even in His isolation, His solitude.

But when a priest offers his life to God, he is obliging himself to care for God’s flock in both feast and famine, the good times and the bad. As the coronavirus closed their parishes, FSSP pastors all over the globe sprang into action to bring Christ to their faraway sheep, opening churches for prayer, hearing Confessions within distancing parameters, giving Communion where it was permitted, and setting up livestreams of Masses, Stations of the Cross, Rosaries and spiritual talks. FSSP Minneapolis celebrated Mass in a large parking lot as the faithful participated from their cars; on Palm Sunday, the attendees received palms from gloved hands through their rolled-down windows. Other parishes saved palms to be given to the faithful later. FSSP Tacoma conducted Easter House Blessings from porches and front yards.

FSSP Maple Hill also utilized their parking lot space, offering liturgies where an FM transmitter enabled the faithful to tune in via their car radios. Maundy Thursday’s Altar of Repose was set up in an open garage where the adorers could spend time with Our Lord from afar. On Holy Tuesday, assistant pastor Fr. Martin Adams, holy water in hand, took to the skies in the passenger seat of a Cessna Skyhawk piloted by a parishioner to bless the houses of the faithful far below!

During the liturgies of the Triduum, the doors of most churches were closed. But behind those doors, their voices echoing through empty naves, clergy, servers and skeleton-crew choirs carried on the holy minutes of those most holy hours, the Church’s liturgical life moving forward even when the whole world seems to have ground to a halt. And though the pews may have been empty and the Communion lines non-existent, Catholics across the world were watching and praying – LiveMass offered no less than 12 streams of the Triduum, apostolates with their own streaming setup offered many more, and most of these streams are continuing now. Liturgies, celebrated across hemispheres, timezones, state and country borders – with homilies in English, Spanish, French, Italian, even Polish – were heard loud and clear thousands of miles away. During Holy Week 2020, in the midst of near-universal lockdown and separation, never was it more evident that our Faith knows no border, no constraint of time or space.
We thought we’d give you a head start on our accustomed Easter photopost with some of the photos we’ve received thus far from this most unusual Holy Week. We’ll post more as they come in. +
FSSP Minneapolis
Church of All Saints
Palm Sunday
Photos by Lucas Brown
FSSP Maple Hill
St. John Vianney Chapel
Holy Tuesday Aerial House Blessings, Holy Thursday, Good Friday
FSSP Kraków
Church of St. Lazarus, Kraków, Poland
Palm Sunday, Holy Thursday, Good Friday, Easter Vigil (pre-1955)
Photos by Tomasz Mróz
Priesterseminar Sankt Petrus
Wigratzbad, Germany
Palm Sunday, Tenebrae, Easter Vigil
FSSP Guadalajara
Nuestra Señora del Pilar
Good Friday, Easter Vigil (pre-1955)
FSSP Rome
Santissima Trinità dei Pellegrini
Good Friday, Easter Vigil (pre-1955)
Photos courtesy of SS. Trinità dei Pellegrini
April 17, 2020

Live Tomorrow! Fr. Daniel Heenan Interview w/TAN
TAN Books is currently featuring a series of interviews with various priests, including FSSP priests! The segments, part of TAN’s “Wisdom from Our Fathers” series, are being streamed live on TAN’s Youtube channel and are also available there for later viewing. Fr. Daniel Heenan, pastor of FSSP Guadalajara, will appear tomorrow, April 17th, at 12 noon EST.
Fr. Zachary Akers, the FSSP’s Director of Development, appeared yesterday, April 15th, discussing the topic of fallen-away Catholics, what we can do to keep our kids in the Faith, and how to talk to relatives and friends that have fallen away. Viewers also had a chance to “Ask Father” and submit questions that Fr. Akers answered on the air. See that video here!
Fr. Heenan will also be appearing on the show this Tuesday, April 21st and one week later on the 28th. +
April 16, 2020

Sound the Trumpet of Salvation

We at the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter wish you a most blessed Easter! Today is the most glorious and joyful feast of the year, when the Church joins with all the angels and saints in exalting her risen Lord and declaring His victory over sin and death. The joy that is ours today is eloquently expressed in the first words of the Exsultet, the proclamation made by the Deacon during the Easter Vigil after the blessing and procession of the Paschal Candle, the symbol of the risen Christ:
Let the angelic choirs of Heaven now rejoice; let the divine mysteries rejoice; and let the trumpet of salvation sound forth the victory of so great a King. Let the earth also rejoice, made radiant by such splendor; and, enlightened with the brightness of the eternal King, let it know that the darkness of the whole world is scattered.

We invite you to join us via livestream for the liturgies of this glorious day. You can watch on LiveMass or on one of the many parish livestreams listed here. Or perhaps you have already joined us for the Vigil, a liturgy which is truly one of the most beautiful in the Church’s calendar. If you did not see it last night, many parishes keep their recordings posted on their channels for later viewing.
May the peace and joy of Our Risen Lord dwell in your hearts this day and always! +
April 12, 2020

Good Friday
What more ought I to have done for thee, that I have not done? I planted thee, indeed, My most beautiful vineyard: and thou hast become exceeding bitter to Me: for in My thirst thou gavest Me vinegar to drink: and with a lance thou hast pierced the side of thy Savior.
– the Third Reproach, sung during the Adoration of the Cross
Today is the most sorrowful and somber day of the year. On this day the Church recalls the Death of her Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, Who sacrificed Himself on the altar of the Cross for the sake of us sinners. It is difficult to know what to write or what to say on this day, but silent adoration is, perhaps, the most profound homage we can give to our crucified King, and the Church moreover guides us through the solemn hours of Good Friday by means of its beautiful liturgy.

Most parishes preface today’s ceremonies with the praying of the Stations of the Cross earlier in the day. The Solemn Afternoon Liturgy usually begins at 3pm, the hour of Our Lord’s Death, and is divided into four parts. The first features readings from the Old Testament foretelling the future Messiah, including the passage from Exodus containing instructions for the sacrifice of the Passover lamb before the Israelites’ flight from Egypt. The lamb is a clear figure of the future Paschal Lamb Who will be sacrificed for sinners, and Whose Blood will save us from God’s wrath. Having heard the first three Passion accounts earlier in Holy Week, we then listen to that of St. John, the lone Apostle to accompany Our Lord to the foot of the Cross and to witness today’s events.
The second part is the Great Intercessions, prayers of ancient origin that the priest and the people offer to God for all the needs of the Church and the world. The third part is the Adoration of the Cross; the statues and crucifixes in the church having been veiled since Passion Sunday, the crucifix is uncovered and adored in stages before being venerated by all present. The choir sings at this time the Improperia, the Reproaches, a series of piercing lamentations for the bitterness that God received from His people in return for His love and care for them. The video above shows the Adoration of the Cross and other moments from the pre-1955 Good Friday liturgy at Santissima Trinità dei Pellegrini, our parish in Rome, in 2018.
The fourth part is called, in the 1962 Missal, the Communion of the Priest and the People; in the pre-1955 Holy Week, it is called the Mass of the Presanctified. In both cases the Mass is not a Mass proper since it lacks a Consecration, the hosts for Communion being taken from those reserved from Holy Thursday. In the newer rubrics, both the priest and people receive; in the pre-1955, only the priest.

Of course, our minds, both limited in capacity and hampered by sin, inevitably have a hard time sounding the depths of these mysteries. The sorrow that we feel is always inadequate when we consider the scale of the tragedy, that mankind should kill its own God. Our gratitude falls flat when faced with the knowledge that Christ bore these sufferings to save us and to show us how much He loves us. How little we have to give, it seems! But the Mother of Sorrows is with us as we pray and meditate today. It was, in fact, as He hung upon the Cross that Christ gave her to us as our Mother, and St. John stood for all of us when he accepted her as his own. Let us ask this Mother, then, to allow us some part in her sorrow, and to fill us with an everlasting remembrance of everything her Son did for us. +
Follow all the liturgies of the Sacred Triduum on LiveMass, or on the streaming sites of the many FSSP apostolates live-broadcasting their ceremonies.
April 10, 2020

In Cœna Dómini
Before the festival day of the Pasch, Jesus knowing that His hour was come, that He should pass out of this world to the Father, having loved His own who were in the world, He loved them unto the end.
– John 13:1, from the Gospel for Holy Thursday

Today is Holy Thursday. This evening marks the beginning of the holiest time of the year, the Sacred Triduum, in which we commemorate the Passion, Death and Resurrection of Our Lord Jesus Christ. On this day we especially recall the institution of the Holy Eucharist and the Sacred Priesthood, when Our Lord celebrated the first Mass and gave His Apostles and their successors the power to transform ordinary bread and wine into His own Body and Blood.

After the Gloria of today’s Mass, the bells and organ fall silent until the Easter Vigil, as the Church enters into a time of profound sorrow for the sufferings of her Divine Spouse. As Our Lord allowed Himself to be taken away on the first Holy Thursday, so does He gradually withdraw from us today: the Blessed Sacrament is removed from the high altar after Mass and taken in procession to the Altar of Repose, and the other altars stripped of all decoration.

Though many of us will be without the Holy Eucharist today, and have indeed been suffering separation from Our Lord for some time now, the restrictions of the coronavirus have given us an opportunity to reflect on just what a gift the Blessed Sacrament is. When we have daily access to Holy Mass, it is easy to take for granted Who it is that comes to us every time we kneel at the altar rail. What an extraordinary, incomprehensible thing that He should choose to remain with us in such a lowly form, to entrust Himself to our sinful hearts that we might partake of His Divine Life! As St. John Vianney once said, “If we really understood the Mass, we would die of joy.”
So let us thank Our Lord today for the profound gift of the Mass, the Blessed Sacrament, and the Holy Priesthood through which He comes to our altars. May our love for Our Eucharistic Lord grow ever stronger and deeper as we venerate Him from afar and steadfastly await His return. +
Follow all the liturgies of the Sacred Triduum on LiveMass, or on the streaming sites of the many FSSP apostolates live-broadcasting their ceremonies.
April 9, 2020

30+ FSSP Apostolates to Livestream Triduum
As we wait and pray for an end to the coronavirus pandemic, many of us will rely on livestreaming as a way to participate in the upcoming liturgies of the Sacred Triduum. LiveMass has been a helpful hub for many of you in recent weeks, our online apostolate bringing you regular livestreams from five of our apostolates. And now, with the St. Corona Project in place, LiveMass also offers livestreams from seven locations not on its usual schedule: Our Lady of Guadalupe Seminary, FSSP Coeur d’Alene, FSSP Dayton, FSSP Little Rock, FSSP Rapid City and two of our international apostolates.
That’s already 12 Fraternity livestreams. But did you know there are even more? That’s right. Many parishes are producing their own livestreams, and we have been amazed at how the Fraternity world has suddenly become a bit smaller as accessible streams pop up all over the District. We’ve compiled a comprehensive list of all those in the North American District below, complete with links. We invite you to take a cross-country – a cross-continent – tour of the liturgies of Holy Week, and perhaps it will be a pleasant introduction to parishes and apostolates you’ve never met before. Altogether, there are 30 streams! Actually, there are 31, because we happened to find out that our apostolate in Lyon, France – featured on your Fraternity calendar this month – is also livestreaming from its Youtube channel! And our apostolate in Kraków, Poland is streaming the pre-1955 Triduum on its channel…well, there are probably more but we can’t list them all!
We wish you a blessed and holy Triduum! +
FSSP Baltimore – The National Shrine of St. Alphonsus Liguori, offering the Holy Week liturgies: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCItp3GIpTS67DvqOLuWuWig
FSSP Chesapeake – St. Benedict Parish, offering daily Mass and the Holy Week liturgies:
https://www.facebook.com/StBenedictsParish/live
FSSP Dallas – Mater Dei Parish, offering daily Mass, the Holy Week liturgies and other devotions: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC79ktoYUSocT2Bdt_LVnPLQ
FSSP Denver – Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish, offering the Triduum liturgies and Tenebrae:
https://www.olmcfssp.org/index.php/olmc/post/holy_week_live_stream
FSSP Harrisburg – Mater Dei Latin Mass Community, offering the Holy Week liturgies, Tenebrae, devotions and talks:
https://www.facebook.com/materdeipa/live
FSSP Houston – Regina Caeli Parish, offering daily Mass and the Holy Week liturgies:
https://www.facebook.com/reginacaeliparish/live
FSSP Joliet – St. Joseph Parish, offering daily Mass and potentially the Triduum liturgies: https://venue.streamspot.com/a98d61a9
FSSP Lincoln – St. Francis of Assisi Chapel, offering Sunday Mass and the Holy Week liturgies: https://www.facebook.com/StFrancisLincoln/live
FSSP Nashua – St. Stanislaus Parish, offering daily Mass, Tenebrae on Wednesday and the Holy Week liturgies:
https://www.latinmassnashua.org/live
FSSP Ottawa – St. Clement Parish, offering the Holy Week liturgies: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-k7cYplIu_EGCi7iKsLwig
FSSP Pequannock – Our Lady of Fatima Chapel, offering daily Mass, Tenebrae and the Holy Week liturgies:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvjC3Rw7R4q4OtMPvKiBcnA
FSSP Phoenix – Mater Misericordiae Mission, offering daily Mass and the Holy Week liturgies: https://www.facebook.com/MaterMisericordiaePhoenix/live
FSSP Providence – St. Mary’s Church on Broadway, offering daily Mass, Divine Office, Tenebrae and the pre-1955 Holy Week liturgies: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKyyBg-7STnPDO_-oEQWY0g
FSSP Richmond – St. Joseph Parish, offering daily Mass and the Holy Week liturgies:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrQvMYTBEZG7YkDhxVf1Ong
FSSP Sacramento – St. Stephen the First Martyr Parish, offering the pre-1955 Holy Week liturgies and talks:
https://www.youtube.com/c/FSSPSacramento
FSSP Seattle – North American Martyrs Parish, offering daily Mass, Stations of the Cross, Rosary, Divine Office and the pre-1955 Holy Week liturgies: https://vimeo.com/northamericanmartyrs
FSSP Tacoma – St. Joseph Parish, offering the Holy Week liturgies and other Lenten events: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGphbd3fgXviaxp5DjscYkw
FSSP Vancouver – Holy Family Parish, offering daily Mass and the Holy Week liturgies: https://www.facebook.com/HolyFamilyParishVancouver/live
April 8, 2020
