However you choose to observe Michaelmas, the feast of St. Michael and All Angels Sept. 29, the Norbertine priests of St. Michael’s Abbey will possibly be enjoying it more.
Their new Church of Our Lady of the Assumption in Silverado, California, completed in June 2021 along with a new abbey built 10 miles away from an area prone to landslides, has a special stained-glass window at the back of the nave.
If the weather cooperates, as it did last year, the window will — as it was designed to do by architect Jean-Louis Pagès — flood the altar with evening sunlight at the beginning of the vespers service at 5:30 p.m. That’s how precisely the church’s location was calculated relative to the autumnal equinox, which always occurs about a week prior to the feast day.
Father Ambrose Criste, director of formation at the abbey, calls it “one of those beautiful ancient things,” and said there were gasps last year as the Magnificat was sung and the sun came through the window right on schedule.
The abbey community has 58 priests and 42 seminarians, most of them teachers in grade and high schools in the area. The abbey’s own school closed in 2020.
The community evolved from a small group of Hungarian priests who fled communist oppression in 1950, at first settling in De Pere, Wisconsin. Los Angeles Cardinal James F. McIntyre invited them to teach at Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana, California, in 1957, and they’ve been in Orange County ever since.
Michaelmas is typically celebrated with lavish meals — in Britain, the tradition is to eat a fattened goose — and sometimes school plays to mark St. Michael’s slaying of a dragon in the great cosmic battle recounted in the 12th chapter of the Book of Revelation.
St. Michael’s Abbey holds its feast in the courtyard outside the church, with the added attraction of home-brewed beer, which Father Ambrose notes is “an old, old Catholic tradition.”
Full story at CatholicNews.com.
It is beautiful and gives glory to God. The Vatican will find a way to cancel it.
Attended the beautiful Vespers last night as I do on occasion. The deep traditional workings of the Holy Spirit are evident in so many fruitful ways by the Norbertines in the canyon. Do stop in for a visit, you won’t be disappointed.
https://www.italianartsociety.org/2015/09/the-feast-of-saint-michael-archangel-is-celebrated-today-29-september/
Beautiful. Thank you for posting this. And, it’s great to see a growing religious community. We know a young man who recently visited them as he discerns a priestly vocation in a religious community.