TE DEUM
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Added: 3 years ago
From: InChristoRege
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  • ¡¡que belleza!!, ¿SON ANGELES .........? LO DIGO REALMENTE POR LA BELLEZA DE LAS VOCES

    

  • @dami9989 FSSPX is the Fraternity of the Society of St.Pope Pius the X (the tenth). They have taken this saintly pope's name because, as did Pope Pius X, they see the evils and errors of modernism. Pope Pius X had many enemies because of his anti-modernist stance and so too does FSSPX. I, for one, cannot but think of Our Lord's words in the Beatitudes..."Blessed are ye when they shall revile you, and persecute you, and speak all that is evil against you, untruly, for My sake". St.Matt 5:11.

  • It's sad that so much division occurs over something so irrelevant to salvation, Communion.

  • @OneHolyTrinity "so irrelevant to salvation"...in your sadness of seeing division, how have you been taught about the passage from St.Matthew, chapter 10, verses 35-42? Nothing in this life is more important than salvation. Our Lord instructed and warned us of just how important salvation is even to the point of such "division". If you are rewarded heaven and I am rewarded hell, will you join me so that there is no division?

  • @captainmorgan757 There are way more verses by the apostles in which they deliberate separated themselves from false teachers. I would have no issue with bad doctrines on the nature of Communion except when churches worship Communion rather than Christ. Taking worship away from Christ is one of the worst things we could possibly do. And I have no knowledge of any verse where Christ tells us to permit bad doctrine.

  • @OneHolyTrinity what do you think communion is if not Christ? Holy communion, the Blessed Sacrament, the Eucharist. This IS Christ! Are you of the camp that thinks that the Last Super was merely a going-away-party? Do the words of Our Blessed Lord mean nothing to you? "Take ye, and eat. This is My body." St.Matthew 26:26. These words are not mine! They are God's (as in the second person of the Blessed Trinity, Our Lord Jesus Christ).

  • @captainmorgan757 I think Communion does the same thing as Baptism (something else that doesn't save you) which is give the church physical things to REMIND us of our faith. Many churches have made the reminders BECOME the faith. That's wrong. No sane person alive at the time thought that eating a meal together specifically to remind each other of Christ's sufferings would mean they would be eating Jesus' flesh. It was a dinner, not a wine+bread only menu. Worshiping Communion insults Christ.

  • @OneHolyTrinity "No sane person"? It's sad that you don't consider other people being sane most of all Our Lord Jesus Christ for instituting the sacrement of Holy Communion. As St. Thomas Aquinas said, "discuss nothing with those who will not acknowledge facts". I end this discussion. Peace be to you!

  • @OneHolyTrinity Baptism is more than just reminding us of our faith...

  • @OneHolyTrinity: My dear brother, do you read your Bible? Have you not read John: 6.:34-59: "Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood shall have eternal life." Christ did not say whoever eats this symbol of my flesh or drinks this symbol of my blood. ..What could be clearer than that?

  • The funny thing is, they say this Chanting is 'too old fashioned'. I believe that more and more young people, like myself, are much more attracted to the age old traditions of the Church. Leave Protestant liberalism where it always belonged, in a protestant church.

  • FSSP is in communion with the Pope, right? I love this music, but I hate Sedevacantism.

  • @Glorthac Yes they are in communion with Rome. The SSPX (FSSPX) are not in communion.

  • @assasincomedy

    It's not true. Canonical status FSSPX is unclear but they are in communion with Rome. Sedevacantist, sedeprivationist, conclavist is something else.

  • @Monthion The SSPX are not in communion with Rome, they are not sedevacantist, but they are not in communion with the Holy See

  • @croc17

    Why? Because?

  • @croc17 "are not in communion with Rome" is an interesting way to phrase it. SSPX objects to the modernist ways that the Church has taken since the Second Vatican Council, so "not in communion" would be correct in that regard; however, if one takes the Latin definition of communion, then the SSPX is definately "in communion" with Rome. Some of the members (parishoners) of the SSPX are sedevacantist; however, the SSPX, as a group, does not subscribe to the idea of sedevacantism. God's blessing!

  • EL TE DEUM LAUDAMUS ES LA PARTE MAS IMPORTANTE Y QUE MAS ME GUSTA DEL RITUAL DE LA ADORACION NOCTURNA ES UNA MARAVILLA ES LO MAXIMO ADORAR POR LAS NOCHES AL SEÑOR DE LOS SEÑORES AL REY DE REYES BENDITO SEA POR SIEMPRE

  • !!!!!!! <3

  • I'm reading some of these comments and I just want to tell everyone.

    I am 15 years old, and me and all of my friends agree, rock music and the mass just DON'T FIT! It feels very awkward to us! Bring back this music! Please!

  • DIO LAUDAMUS!

  • Very nice, God bless from California

  • no sabia de la existencia de este canto y me alegra que exista me gusta  Dios mio bendice a mis hermanos catolicos y a los hermanos esperados (separados) que bella letra en español a ti mi Dios saludos desde PANAMA

  • @eliesyizai este musica es la mas antigua de la santa iglesia. este cancion es del siglo cinco. muy temprano en la historia de la iglesia.

  • Lovely.

  • Beautiful...

  • I attend Our Lady Help of Christians in Garden Grove, California. All Latin Mass all the time...WONDERFUL! I don't have to attend that noisy, irreverent  Novus Ordo Mass anymore. Absolute heaven!!! It's like going from McDonald's to dining at Maxim's of Paris!

  • I miss the Latin Mass so much, I wish we srill had it. You flet so close to God with the Gregorian chants.

  • one of the biggest catholic "songs"

  • TE DEUM!!!!!!! Thank you for a wonderful 2009 hopeful for an even better 2010.

  • One solution to this change is that maybe a group of the faithful could remain after mass to pray in Latin to demonstrate its popularity among some folks. At my church now, I start to see more people stay to pray a rosary after a noon mass. It used to be just after a Spanish mass that I would see them praying. :)

  • I remember when Priests used to actuly do such things as devotions in Latin. Now these young priests of today... you are lucky they even give a hoot about anything! Amen for the traditional ways!

  • I disagree... the young priests that are being ordained now are enthusiastically returning to traditional liturgy and devotions, including Latin. It's often the older priests who object to traditional ways.

    Look at the FSSP, and many other new communities encouraging the usus antiquior... predominantly young priests.

  • My pastor is 38 years old and is a C.S.s.R.  the three we have hardly do anything latin! Claim no one speaks it. Well I do! I love it!

  • Both Hudak and Glorious Praises have a point.

    While it is true that younger priests are inclined to prefer or more easily accept authentic traditions and gregorian chant both in latin and well translated english; it is also true that many of the 60s generation are stifling their progress and slowing down any immediate or full return to this mysticism. In the end it is the bishops who have the power. How high or how low the local bishops set the standard of liturgy is the true solution.

  • I think there's some truth when people say that we have to wait for the 60s generation to die off before we really see a serious change. Time will tell. The introduction of the 2008 translation liturgy in 2010-2011 should give us some clue as to the future In the meantime change toward authentic traditions is going at a snails pace. If there were an influx of traditional anglicans that would most certainly help, though that is unlikely as many of them prefer the western rite antiochian orthodox

  • true! The bishop here doesn't agree with the whole traditional ways and thinks there aught to be more modern ways of doing such things.

  • Now I totally agree with you. The church I attend is so very lenient that I can see men in shorts and sandals! I know that God would not mind that as long as we come to Him, but to see hairs on legs is so distracting during prayers. Besides, I don't think it wold hurt to dress up a bit to be present before the King at His tabernacle.

  • Why does one not pray for such priests instead of criticizing them? Besides, what would be the cause for such "leniency" in traditions if it is not because the faithful become less devoted. Like flying a kite, one needs to know when to let go so that it may fly higher. Again, it is better if one makes good suggestions to those priest if one doesn't like what is done, rather than criticizing. Nothing good comes out of it, don't you think? Pray for priests and talk to them. They are also human.

  • I have sat with them and spoke to them as to why they would do such a thing. The priests feel that no one speaks the traditional Latin anymore. Why use something no one understands is what they feel. They feel that Latin is a... "dying language so let it rest in peace".

  • I understand your point and theirs, honestly. I have never had a chance to participate in Latin mass, converted in my sixteens on my own (16 years ago). I feel the unfortunate because Latin is such a beautiful language. My major were English Language Art, so I wish Latin was still in use too. But, the majority of people are not compelled to speak or use Latin. Why would then priests offer mass in the language where most don't understand if their goal is to reach out to those people?

  • Correction: My major "was" ELA, amongst other languages I studied.

    Additional: I think for those priests, Latin is a vehicle of prayer, like English, German, and other languages. The main idea is to praise God and commemorate our Lord's sacrifice. Language should be a barrier, although Latin mass should be revived at least for some special occasions, I believe. But, one thing I'm thankful for is that despite different languages, I can see uniformity of catholic mass everywhere I go.

  • sorr, there should be "of"...

  • Yes, I agree. Many famous people/scientists were priests. For example Johann G. Mendel (father of genetics) was an abbot of czech monastery of Order of st. Augustine...

  • Yes... and beleive it or not Jesuit poriests invented Chocolate! Cocoa plants always existed but it was the Jesuits who added several ingedients to the powder and made it into bars and cook it. And thanks to them we have some delicious addictive chocolate, like Kitekat and snickers and Galaxy or a nice dairy milk :)

  • And Capuchino was named after Capuchins, as I heard...in their times people drank some kind af "weak coffee"

  • could be, never heard of that, but it sounds highly likely.

  • Capuchins were named after their specific hood, capuccio (Italians, please forgive me :-) ), it was on Wikipedia, that thing with the hood

  • Well, actually capuchino comes from the colour of the Capuchins' cloaks.

  • Thanks, good to know :-) but as I wrote above, the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin (aka Ordo Fratrum Minorum Capuccinorum in Latin :-) ) was really named after their hood, I am not kidding

  • I think you're right. Now, thinking about when I studied Italian, I think that was how I encountered the word capuchino, along with its legendary.

  • You can speak Italian? I would like too, in the last summer I wanted to start with learning, but...you know :-)

  • God said you must take it up the wrongen?

  • Wonderfull!!!!!!!

    God bless you for this nice video!

  • Heavenly sounding, music that calls to the Angels..Nothing will replace it...Young people love it and it should be reclaimed in Mass..

  • Amen, friend in Christ. Gregorian chant is not music or singing, the rock music in Churches Today is just that, a sensible object. Chant is much more, Chant is speaking back to God in a voice that transends all created matter, it is beautiful in its essence.

  • Indeed. Let's pray for the traditions of the Church.

  • Amen Amen!

  • Yes, brother. Many people think GC is "only" singing, but in it monks express their unity with our Father. I admire all monks who know sing Gregorian chant (except from that German band, but this is something else). I tried to sing "Dies Irae". Beautiful but hard to remember :-)

  • @SanLUZARDO definitely.

  • OK, I might be a peasant retard with a PHD; so was St Augustin, Bede the Venarable, St Ambrosius, and Gregory the great, just to name a few with whom I'm very proud to share company and faith. But why are you listening to this Te deum then?

  • Great video. The candles in the altar appear to have different colored flames. Is this an optical illusion?

  • It seems to be an optical effect on the lens, or possibly coloured glass behind the flames reflecting the light .

  • you are a despicable person, may God have pity on you.

  • That is just populistic and very easy hatespeech. If you have nothing better to say, you had best shut your mouth instead of showing you have been badly raised.

  • ahah just remember how the Church began scientific studies in Europe and how some of the greatest scientists (and all fields in that big category) have been priests/devout Catholics. God is rational, and it is through our human intellect that we can come to know the universe as best we can. You are the fool for not believing what is right in front of you.

  • Yes, this is St. Francis of Assisi, the FSSP Chapel in Lincoln, NE

  • Hi, That Mass must be close to what it's like in heaven. Well i have a question. I belong to the eastern orthodox church, but i moved recently to canada, and where I am, there ain't any orthodox churches. So i wanna go to a catholic church, i was wondering about if i should wear anything special, like formal, because all my pants are jeans and i don't have like formal clothes. And should i do anything special before going, or is it just like my orthodox church ? Any replies are appreciated.

  • It depends on the type of Catholic Church. While there is only one Roman Catholic Church, its practice varies widely both between bishop's jurisdictions as well as within. The traditional dress for a Catholic parish is slightly more formal than in Orthodoxy, but in many parishes the dress is often sloppy or casual. As you hunt around for a solid traditional parish (like in this video) I suggest business clothes - khakis, long skirts, polos, nice blouse.

  • I'm Orthodox and I have never seen Orthodox wear jeans or the like to Liturgy. Perhaps this person belonged to a lax parish. That type of dress is very much so frowned upon in our churches.

  • Here's the weird thing - it's not a lax parish at all! I went the first time dressed in slacks and a tie, but not a suit - I was the most dressed up person there! The Georgians, in particular, seemed to favor jeans over slacks. Maybe it's a cultural thing. I don't know enough to comment further.

  • Good point...It probably is a cultural thing, especially when the ethnic group comes from a culture in which jeans are considered status symbols. Most of our 2nd and 3rd generation Slavic Orthodox in the US don't venture in the church dressed so informally, but I have heard of new Ukrainian, Serbian, and Russian immigrants wearing that type of attire to Liturgy.

  • Go to an Anglican High Church instead.

  • why

  • go to each to find out.

  • The above poster is making an allusion, I think, to the generally poor quality of Catholic church services. They're making a bad comparison, though: the Anglicans have as much abuse as Catholics, and some of their particular abuses are quite worse than anything the Catholics have done. That is why I suggested you visit a traditional parish. The Church is having a bit of a power struggle right now between traditionalists and modernists.

  • This didn't post as intended. It was meant as a reply to SocialismCross's post below here.

  • I would love to be able to give my life to God like this even as a parish priest perhaps but I am not sure if God has it in the cards for me to go this route so to speak. I have soo much that seperates me from true holyness, but not from understanding the truly sacred that I see,

    pray for me, for the priests and for the movement, that we have this as a more widespread option for those who want to see this form of the mass, The true mass of the ages, amen.

  • Knowing our unworthiness IS a step holiness. Pray about your possible vocation.

  • I do maybe just not enough about it, though going to a Tridentine Latin Mass yesterday I finaly met some seminary student that was younger then I was, and closest in age to me of all the seminary students I have met. He is 24 and comes from a large family of about 8 kids, very much the old style catholics with the whole family attending the daily latin mass and his two other brothers always serve the mass.

  • Is this in Lincoln, NE?

  • Incredible! We as Catholics should refuse and renounce the alse teachings of Vatican II.

  • We are indeed witnessing the restoration of Traditional Catholicism--Thanks be to God. I believe it will happen in the next 30-50 years, the liberals are a dying breed, or so says my priest, Father Saguto, FSSP.

  • A perfect reminder to fellow Catholics of the sacred path we lost by following  the Novus Ordo. All thanks to the FSSP and youtube member InChristoRege for posting this clip.

  • Ciebie Boga Wyslawiamy ,

    tobie Panie Wieczna Chwala...

  • I think that the instument at the start is (or is reflective of the Lahuta!

  • I believe that this hymn was written by an Albanian Christian!

  • it's credited to St. Ambrose of Milan.

  • GRATIAE VOBIS AGO PRO TE DEVM

  • The Tridentine mass being offered at our church through the Moto Proprio gets very little support. There is sadly no interest or support for it. Novus Ordos and Traditionalists are on two different planets.

  • There is though a light of Hope:

    1. The will of His Holyness B XVI

    2. The Fraternity of St. Peter (born from the FSSPX), strong traditionalist BUT in Communion with the Holy See..

  • Good points!

  • The episcopate has indeed little support for it, let alone support. So yes, they are two different planets, the NO Mass being on the secular planet. But I have to say that it is also clear where the Catholic heart is: not in the NO Masses.

  • Amen, amen dico vobis

  • I'm glad that lots of mainstream Catholic orders and groups, not just the break-away Society of Saint Pius the Tenth, are keeping the Gregorian Chant and the Tridentine Mass alive.

  • since BXVI's motu proprio, this is becoming more popular again, and all of the mass parts at my parish (on sundays) are chanted in latin. regrettably though, the te deum is not sung...

  • At my parish I was lucky to get one line of the Gloria in latin today, although even that was sung with guitars, tambourines and clapping after the word "gloria". :(

  • How can they do that? It cheapens the Catholic Mass.  Clapping and tambourines! Oh dear!

  • I am a "high church" Episcopalian who believes that guitars and tambourines should be reserved for the Salvation Army services...

  • I am a "traditionalist" Catholic who believes the same...

  • The question naturally is who the real "break-aways" are. FSSPX or the way Catholicism was mutuated into some secular circus after 1965? It's not hard to guess. Just the problem was that Rome no longer had control. The FSSPX is fiercly loyal to Rome, a thing that cannot be said about the various "anarchist cells" inside the parishes of the church all over the world.

  • Laudatur Iesus Christus in Sæcula—Praised be Jesus Christ, now and four-eva!:)

  • W FSSPX

  • I am sorry, I

    confused FSSP with the FSSPX.

    Sorry.

  • This beautiful, indeed great. It shows the greatness and holiness of The God we worship; The Lord God of Host, The King of all creation. Blessed be God forever. Amen.

    Thanks for sharing.

    Welldone and God bless †

  • As a former traditionalist Catholic turned Eastern Orthodox, this is truly beautiful for me. A shame that Rome has sacrificed a jewel in the crown of Western civilization.

  • just curious if it was the post V2 watered down novus ordo that turned u away? i saw your videos and congratulations to u on coming back to christianity. i grew up with several greek friends. they have a beautiful culture and history, and i always had a fond respect for the greek orthodoxy. God bless u.

  • It was. Your liturgy expresses your theology.

  • couldnt agree more.

  • It saddens me because it is like looking at a familiar friend dying. But I think the damage has been done and is for the most part, non-repairable.

    Very nice video. Brought back a lot of good memories of me and my grandpa going to mass. God bless you.

  • thank u friend. the concerns u expressed are becoming more aparent, and especially after pope benedict XVI's Summorum Pontificum, which is spelling out the return of the latin rite.  more catholics are embracing the traditional mass. and thank God we have a pope thats pulling back on the reigns a bit from some of the V2 nonsense.

  • Qbears ..."especially after pope benedict XVI's Summorum Pontificum, which is spelling out the return of the latin rite" ... The only problem with this thinking is that Ratzinger himself has said that the Church is NOT returning to the pre-vatican II liturgy. It's just the bait to keep the last orthdox leaning catholics in the Novus Ordo until the kids can be brainwashed by the likes of Fr. Stan Fortuna and the WYD fiasco's. Do a search and see what our children are being taught by the NO.

  • as someone who exclusively attends the tridentine mass, i know what is taught by the NO. and why i refuse to attend the NO mass. besides the gutting of the liturgy and rubrics...you're preaching to the choir on this topic.

  • Comment removed

  • actually they came back to Holy Mother Church......they were members of the sspx when the Holy Father Pope John Paul II wrote Ecelesia Dei and started the FSSP some Joined from the sspx

  • nice.

  • Beautiful! Thanks for posting. Gratias ago tibi.

  • This is amazingly beautiful. I love the FSSP. Thanks for keeping tradition alive and communion with Rome at the same time.

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