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From its founding, St. Luke’s has been a church that was closely aligned with the 19th century Oxford Movement that sought to renew Catholic thought and practice in the Church of England. As such, before converting to Roman Catholicism, St. Luke’s emphasized the Catholic rather than the Protestant heritage of the Anglican Communion, with great devotion to the Eucharist and our Blessed Mother. Like St. John Henry Newman, one of the major leaders of the Oxford movement, the people of St. Luke’s made a profession of Catholic Faith on his feast day, October 9, 2011 and have retained that Catholic liturgical tradition. Much of this practice is readily recognizable by many of the Catholic faithful who long for the traditional expressions of the Mass.
For example, our order of Mass includes the Asperges me and Vidi Aquam (seasonally), the prayers of preparation and confitior at the foot of the altar, and chanted propers. While Divine Worship: the Missal provides for Mass in a Pro Populo posture, St. Luke’s, like the overwhelming majority of the Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter, celebrates Mass ad orientem.
St. Luke’s has always put great emphasis on the sacredness of the Mass by emphasizing the beauty of holiness found in music, vestments, gestures, incense, chanted Epistle and Gospel, and prayers in a liturgical English set aside for the sacred. St. Luke’s is particularly fond of the Roman Canon as translated into “Book of Common Prayer” English as well as the traditional prayers of preparation at the offertory and the practice of proclaiming the Last Gospel at the end of Mass.
The Prayer of Humble access, a part of the Anglican Patrimony prayed with the congregation prior to the Ecce Agnus Dei, also puts particular emphasis on the true presence of the full Body, Blood and Divinity of Christ in the Eucharist.
We invite you to join us on any given Sunday to experience the Mass in our Liturgical tradition. Alternatively, we celebrate Solemn Mass with Deacon and Subdeacon on the principal feasts and solemnities of the Church.
The Divine Worship Missal includes all of the liturgical texts for the celebration of the Saints, either in proper prayers or in a series of Commons. The Calendar of the Missal follows the General Roman Calendar. Because of the geographic distribution of the Ordinariates, the Calendar also makes provision for the national calendars of Australia, Canada, England, the United States, as also the particular calendars of the three Ordinariates.