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Maximilian75
Guest
How are Saint Faustina and the Divine Mercy Chaplet/Devotion regarded by more traditional circles and, (separately) sedevacantists?
As UpUpAndAway noted, last Sunday was Low Sunday in the EF calendar. Basically, Divine Mercy Sunday and Low Sunday were combined.Her feast day, and also the Divine Mercy Feast, are on the calendar for the Latin Rite - regardless of what you think of the private revelations. I wonder how they handle this in TLM circles, that are not sede?
As explained in one of the articles I shared earlier:Her feast day, and also the Divine Mercy Feast, are on the calendar for the Latin Rite - regardless of what you think of the private revelations. I wonder how they handle this in TLM circles, that are not sede? For instance, the Church calendar was occasionally modified in the decades prior to V 2, with the addition of this or that newly canonized saint.
The Feast of Christ the King was added less than 100 years ago. I am guessing the SSPX, and TLM groups unified to the Church, all include this “recent” addition in their calendars. Do they then acknowledge still more recent saints and feast days, like Faustina?
Consequently, every year on the Sunday following Easter, which is called Low Sunday - in Latin it is called Dominica in Albis, Sunday in White - I am asked this question, “Father, why don’t we celebrate the Divine Mercy Sunday?”
Now, the easy answer would be, “We don’t do it because it’s not in the traditional calendar.” But, then, the feast of Padre Pio also is not in the traditional calendar, but we celebrate it. We do it as prescribed in the Common of the Missal, which allows us to honor recently canonized saints.