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St
Stephen
Catholic Church
Ladies Altar Society
Officers
President: Sonja Davis
Vice President: Nancy Klein
Secretary: Betty Mendenhall
Treasurer: Mary Louise Dugosh
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EVENTS AND ACTIVITIES
Please join us for the next Altar Society Meeting on Monday,
November 7th at 10:00 AM in Country Club Room. The Altar Society
meets regularly on the first Monday of each month
She's coming back again!
Judi Byrd, Food Editor for the "Fort Worth Texas" magazine
will be doing a fabulous Christmas cooking and decorating demo
Tuesday evening, November 15th.
The Ladies' Altar Society will be providing a dinner in addition to
the presentation with door prizes and
a special gift for ALL who attend. Tickets are $10 now and $12 at
the door. For more info or tickets call Sonja Davis (817)443-3870 or
Betty Mendenhall (817)596-0259.
The Ladies’ Altar Society Annual Basket Sale will be held during the
Craft Fair here at St. Stephen on November 12 all day in the Holy
Spirit Center. Come by and see us.
Fr. Pio of the Franciscan Friars of the Renewal will give a talk on
Padre Pio on Tuesday, November 29th at 7:00 PM in Country Club Room.
Mark your calendar for DECEMBER 3 & 4, 2011 for the BAKE SALE. Buy
several homemade items and freeze them for the
Christmas Holidays.
An Invitation from the Ladies Altar Society
The Ladies Altar society does
much more than just taking care of the Altar, which includes the flowers,
linens, vestments, altar server albs, and candles. We need your help to
continue our efforts. We ask you to consider the following…
Serving your Faith by
helping with the hosting of the Parish breakfasts once a month, luncheons
for bereaved families following a funeral, dinners for the Rectory, Gift
basket Sales , Bake Sale where the proceeds go to benefit important causes,
and creating a Parish Cook book, OR…
Enriching you Faith with
spiritual Studies such as the Lives of the Saints, Journey Toward God, Story
of a Soul by St. Therese, and other guest speakers, OR…
Sharing Your Faith by
helping support the Youth Group, Mothers and Unborn baby care, and the land
purchase. We have given financial help for the restoration of the Chapel
and the stained glass windows. OR you can…
Show your Faith by helping
with decoration the Altar and the Church for Christmas in anticipation of
the birth of our Lord and Savior.
There are a vast array of things
we do to serve the Church and our community. The best part is the
friendships created the quality time spent together, and the laughter shared
among all. Won’t you consider becoming an active participant in one or more
of the Altar Society endeavors?
Our Dear Lord’s blessings on you
and those you love.
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What is the
Catholic Altar?
Altar (in
Liturgy)
In the New Law
the altar is the table on which the
Eucharistic Sacrifice
is offered. Mass may sometimes be celebrated outside a sacred place, but
never without an altar, or at least an altar-stone. In ecclesiastical
history we find only two exceptions: St. Lucian (312) is said to have
celebrated Mass on his breast whilst in prison, and Theodore Bishop of
Tyre on the hands of his deacons (Mabillon, Praef. in 3 saec., n. 79).
According to Radulphus of Oxford (Prop. 25),
St. Sixtus II
(257-259) was the first to prescribe that Mass should be celebrated on an
altar, and the rubric of the missal (XX) is merely a new promulgation of
the law. It signifies, according to Amalarius (De Eccles. Officiis, I,
xxiv) the Table of the Lord (mensa Domini), referring to the Last
Supper, or the Cross (St. Bernard, De Coena Domini), or Christ (St.
Ambrose, IV, De Sacram. xii; Abbot Rupert, V, xxx). The last meaning
explains the honour paid to it by incensing it, and the five crosses
engraved on it signify His five wounds.
Position
In the ancient
basilicas the priest, as he stood at the altar, faced the people. The
basilicas of the Roman Empire were, as a rule, law courts or meeting
places. They were generally spacious, and the interior area was separated
by two, or, it might be, four rows of pillars, forming a central nave and
side aisles. The end opposite the entrance had a semi-circular shape,
called the apse, and in this portion, which was raised above the level of
the floor, sat the judge and his assessors, while right before him stood
an altar upon which sacrifice was offered before beginning any important
public business.
When these
public buildings were adapted for
Christian
assemblies, slight modifications were made. The apse was reserved for the
bishop and his clergy; the faithful occupied the centre and side aisles,
while between the clergy and people stood the altar. Later on the altar
was placed, in churches, in the apse against, or at least near, the wall,
so that the priest when celebrating faced the east, and behind him the
people were placed. In primitive times there was but one altar in each
church. St. Ignatius the Martyr, Cyprian, Irenaeus, and Jerome, speak of
only one altar (Benedict XIV, De Sacr. Misssae, no. 1, xvii). Some think
that more than one altar existed in the Cathedral of Milan in the time of
St. Ambrose, because he sometimes uses the word altaria, although
others are of opinion that altaria in this place means an altar.
Towards the end of the sixth century we find evidence of a plurality of
altars, for
St. Gregory the Great
sent
relics for four
altars to Palladius, Bishop of Saintes, France, who had placed in a church
thirteen altars, four of which remained unconsecrated for want of
relics. Although
there was only one altar in each church, minor altars were erected in side
chapels, which were distinct buildings (as is the custom in the Greek, and
some Oriental Churches even at the present day) in which Mass was
celebrated only once on the same day in each church (Benedict XIV, Ibidem).
The fact that in the early ages of
Christianity only
the bishop celebrated Mass, assisted by his clergy, who received Holy
Communion from the bishop's hands, is the reason that only one altar was
erected in each church, but after the introduction of private Masses the
necessity of several altars in each church arose.
Material of
Altars
Although no
documents are extant to indicate the material of which altars were made in
the first centuries of
Christianity, it is
probable that they were made of wood, like that used by Christ at the Last
Supper. At Rome such a wooden table is still preserved in the Lateran
Basilica, and fragments of another such table are preserved in the church
of St. Pudentiana, on which St. Peter is said to have celebrated Mass.
During the persecutions, when the
Christians were
forced to move from one place to another, and Mass was celebrated in
crypts, private houses, the open air, and catacombs, except when the
arcosolia were used (see below, FORM OF AN ALTAR), it is but natural
to suppose that they were made of wood, probably wooden chests carried
about by the bishops, on the lid of which the Eucharistic Sacrifice was
celebrated. St. Optatus of Mileve (De Schismate Donatistarum)
reproves the Donatists for breaking up and using for firewood the altars
of the Catholic churches, and St. Augustine (Epist. clxxxv) reports that
Bishop Maximianus was beaten with the wood of the altar under which he had
taken refuge. We have every reason to suppose that in places in which the
persecutions were not raging, altars of stone also were in use.
St. Gregory Thaumaturgus
in the third century built a vast basilica in Neo-Caesarea in which it is
probable that more substantial altars were erected.
St. Gregory of Nyssa
speaks of the consecration of an altar made of stone (De Christi
Baptismate). Pulcheria, sister of Theodosius II, presented an altar of
gold to the Basilica of Constantinople; St. Helena gave golden altars
ornamented with precious stones to the church which was erected on the
site where the Cross had been concealed for three hundred years; the Popes
St. Sixtus III
(432-440) and St. Hilary (461-468) presented several altars of silver to
the churches of Rome. Since wood is subject to decay, the baser metals to
corrosion, and the more precious metals were too expensive, stone became
in course of time the ordinary material for an altar. Besides, stone is
durable and, according to St. Paul (I Cor., x, 4), symbolizes Christ --
"And the rock was Christ". The Roman Breviary (9 November) asserts that
St. Sylvester (314-335) was the first to issue a decree that the altar
should be of stone. But of such a decree there is no documentary evidence,
and no mention is made of it in canon law, in which so many other decrees
of this Pope are inserted. Moreover, it is certain that after that date
altars of wood and of metal were erected. The earliest decree of a council
which prescribed that an altar which is to be consecrated should be of
stone is that of the provincial council of Epeaune (Pamiers), France, in
517 (Labbe, Concil. tom. V, col. 771). The present discipline of the
Church requires that for the consecration of an altar it must be of stone.
Form of an Altar
In the primitive
times there were two kinds of altars:
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The arcosolium
or monumentum arcuatum, which was formed by cutting in the tufa
wall of the wider spaces in the catacombs, an arch-like niche, over a
grave or sarcophagus. The latter contained the remains of one or several
martyrs, and rose about three feet above the floor. On it was placed
horizontally a slab of marble, called the mensa, on which Mass
was celebrated.
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The altar
detached from the wall in the cubicula, or sepulchral chapels
surrounded by loculi and arcosolia, used as places of
worship in the catacombs or in the churches erected above ground after
the time of Constantine. This second kind of altar consisted of a square
or oblong slab of stone or marble which rested on columns, one to six in
number, or on a structure of masonry in which were enclosed the
relics of
martyrs. Sometimes two or four slabs of stone were placed vertically
under the table, forming a stone chest. In private oratories the table
was sometimes made of wood and rested on a wooden support. Within this
support were placed the
relics of
martyrs, and in order to be able to expose them to view, folding doors
were fixed on the front.
The Liber
Pontificalis states that St. Felix I decreed that Mass should be
celebrated on the tombs of martyrs. This no doubt brought about both a
change of form, from that of a simple table to that of a chest or tomb,
and the rule that every altar must contain the
relics of martyrs.
Usually the altar was raised on steps, from which the bishop sometimes
preached (see ALTAR-STEPS). Originally it was made in the shape of an
ordinary table, but gradually a step was introduced behind it and raised
slightly above it (see ALTAR-LEDGE). When the tabernacle was introduced
the number of these steps was increased. The altar is covered, at least in
basilicas and also in large churches, by a canopy supported by columns,
called the ciborium (see ALTAR- CANOPY), upon which were placed, or from
which were suspended, vases, crowns, baskets of silver, as decorations.
From the middle of the ciborium, formerly, a gold or silver dove was
suspended to serve as a pyx in which the Blessed Sacrament was reserved.
Veils or curtains were attached to the columns which supported the
ciborium. (See ALTAR-CURTAIN) The altar was often encircled by railings of
wood, or metal, called cancelli, or by low walls of marble slabs
called tranennae. According to the present discipline of the
Church, there are two kinds of altars, the fixed and the portable. Both
these denominations have a twofold meaning, i.e. an altar may be fixed or
portable either in a wider sense or in the liturgical meaning. A fixed
altar, in a wider sense, is one that is attached to a wall, a floor, or a
column whether it be consecrated or not; in the liturgical; sense it is a
permanent structure of stone, consisting of a consecrated table and
support, which must be built on a solid foundation. A portable altar in a
wider sense is one that may be carried from one place to another in the
liturgical sense it is a consecrated altar-stone, sufficiently large to
hold the Sacred Host and the greater part of the base of the chalice. It
is inserted in the table of an altar which is not a consecrated fixed
altar.
The component parts
of a fixed altar in the liturgical sense are the table (mensa), the
support (stipes) and the sepulchrum. (See ALTAR-CAVITY.) The
table must be a single slab of stone firmly joined by cement to the
support, so that the table and support together make one piece. The
surface of this table should be perfectly smooth and polished. Five Greek
crosses are engraved on its surface, one at each of the four corners,
about six inches from both edges. but directly above the support, and one
in the centre. The support may be either a solid mass or it may consist of
four or more columns. These must be of natural stone, firmly joined to the
table. The substructure need not, however, consist of one piece, but
should in every case be built on a solid foundation so as to make the
structure permanent. The support may have any of the following forms:
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at each corner a
column of natural stone, and the spaces between the columns may be
filled with any kind of stone, brick, or cement;
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the space between
the two columns in front may be left open, so as to place beneath the
table (exposed) a reliquary containing the body (or a portion of the
body) of a saint;
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besides the four
columns, one at each corner, a fifth column may be placed in the centre
at the front. In this case the back, and if desired the sides also, may
be filled with stone, brick, or cement;
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if the table is
small (it should in every case be larger than the stone of a portable
altar), four columns are placed under it, one at each corner and, to
make up the full length required, frames of stone or other material may
be added to each side. these added portions are not consecrated, and
hence may be constructed after the ceremony of consecration;
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if the table is
deficient in width, four columns are placed under it, one at each
corner, and a frame of stone or other material is added to the back.
This addition is not consecrated, and may be constructed after the
consecration of the altar.
In the last two
cases the spaces between the columns may be filled with stone brick, or
cement, or they may be left open. In every case the substructure may be a
solid mass, or the interior may remain hollow, but this hollow space is
not to be used as a closet for storing articles of any kind, even such as
belong to the altar. Neither the rubrics nor the Sacred Congregation of
Rites prescribe any dimensions for an altar. It ought, however, to be
large enough to allow a priest conveniently to celebrate the Holy
Sacrifice upon it in such a manner that all the ceremonies can be
decorously observed. Hence altars at which solemn services are celebrated
require to be of greater dimensions than other altars. From the words of
the Pontifical we infer that the high altar must stand free on all sides (Pontifex
circuit septies tabulam altaris), but the back part of smaller altars
may be built against the wall.
(from the
Catholic Encyclopedia at
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/)
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