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Rogation days

Rogation days are days of prayer and fasting in Western Christianity. They are observed with processions and the Litany of the Saints. The so-called major rogation is held on 25 April;[a] the minor rogations are held on Monday to Wednesday preceding Ascension Thursday.[1] The word rogation comes from the Latin verb rogare, meaning "to ask", which reflects the beseeching of God for the appeasement of his anger and for protection from calamities.[2][3]

Rogation days
Blessing the Fields on Rogation Sunday at Hever, Kent in 1967
Observed byChristians
Liturgical colorViolet
ObservancesFasting and processions
Date25 April (Major)
Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday preceding Ascension Thursday (Minor)
2023 date25 April; 15–17 May
2024 date25 April; 6–8 May
2025 date25 April; 26–28 May
Frequencyannual
Related toAscension Thursday

Rogation Sunday is celebrated on the 5th Sunday after Easter (also known as the 6th Sunday of Easter) in the Anglican tradition.[4][5] This day is also known in the Lutheran tradition as Rogate Sunday.[6]

Christian beginnings edit

The Christian major rogation replaced a pagan Roman procession known as Robigalia, at which a dog was sacrificed to propitiate Robigus, the deity of agricultural disease.[7][2] The practitioners observing Robigalia asked Robigus for protection of their crops from wheat rust.[2]

The minor Rogation days were introduced around AD 470 by Mamertus, bishop of Vienne, and eventually adopted elsewhere. Their observance was ordered by the Council of Orleans in 511, and though the practice was spreading in Gaul during the 7th century, it was not officially adopted into the Roman rite until the reign of Pope Leo III (died 816).[8]

The faithful typically observed the Rogation days by fasting and abstinence in preparation to celebrate the Ascension, and farmers often had their crops blessed by a priest at this time.[9] Violet vestments are worn at the rogation litany and its associated Mass, regardless of what colour is worn at the ordinary liturgies of the day.[2]

A common feature of Rogation days in former times was the ceremony of beating the bounds, in which a procession of parishioners, led by the minister, churchwarden, and choirboys, would proceed around the boundary of their parish and pray for its protection in the forthcoming year. This was also known in the northern parts of England as 'Gang-day' or 'gan week', after the old English name for going or walking.[10] This was also a feature of the original Roman festival, when revellers would walk to a grove five miles from the city to perform their rites.[7] Thomas Johnson (1633), speaking of the birch tree, mentions another name: Cross-week: "It serveth well to the decking up of houses and banquetting-rooms, for places of pleasure, and for beautifying of streets in the Crosse or Gang Week, and such like."[11]

In the British Isles edit

 
Woodcut illustration of Pre-Reformation processional order, c. early 16th century

The Rogation Day ceremonies are thought to have arrived in the British Isles in the 7th century.

The oldest known Sarum text regarding Rogation Days is dated from around 1173 to 1220.[10] In it, celebrations in the south of England are described, in which processions were led by members of the congregation carrying banners which represented various biblical characters. At the head of the procession was the dragon, representing Pontius Pilate, which would be followed by a lion, representing Christ. After this there would be images of saints carried by the rest of the congregation.[12] Many torches were present at each procession, weighing between 42 lb (19 kg) and 27 lbs (12 kg), which were bought by the church and parishioners jointly.[13]

Sarum texts from the 13th and 15th centuries show that the dragon was eventually moved to the rear of the procession on the vigil of the Ascension, with the lion taking the place at the front. Illustrations of the procession from the early 16th century show that the arrangements had been changed yet again, this time also showing bearers of reliquaries and incense.[12]

During the reign of King Henry VIII, Rogation processions were used as a way to assist crop yields, with a notable number of the celebrations taking place in 1543 when there were prolonged rains.

During the reign of King Edward VI, the Crown having taken much of the Church's holdings within the country, liturgical ceremonies were not officially condoned or recognized as an official part of worship. However, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I the celebrations were explicitly mentioned in the royal reformation, allowing them to resume as public processions.[14]

Rogation processions continued in the post-Reformation Church of England much as they had before, and Anglican priests were encouraged to bring their congregations together for inter-parish processions. At specific intervals, clerics were to remind their congregations to be thankful for their harvests. Psalms 103 and 104 were sung, and people were reminded of the curses the Bible ascribed to those who violated agricultural boundaries. The processions were not mandatory, but were at the discretion of the local minister, and were also ascribed more importance when a public right of way needed to be protected from agricultural or other expansion.[14]

The marches would follow prescribed routes, with York and Coventry being unique in their following royal entries.[15] On other routes, altars were erected at certain locations where antiphons were sung.[16]

Any Roman Catholic imagery or icons were banned from the processions. The then Archdeacon of Essex, Grindal of London, besought the church explicitly to label the tradition as a perambulation of the parish boundaries (beating the bounds), further to distance it from the Catholic liturgy. In the book Second Tome of Homelys, a volume containing officially sanctioned homilies of the Elizabethan church, it was made clear that the English Rogation was to remember town and other communal boundaries in a social and historical context, with extra emphasis on the stability gained from lawful boundary lines.[14]

For years after Rogation Days were recognized, the manner in which they were observed in reality was very different from the official decree. Even before religious sensibilities turned towards the puritanical, there were concerns about the lack of piety at such events.[17] While it was officially ordered that the entire congregation attend, bishops began urging their priests to invite only older and more pious men. This, they believed, would stop the drunken revelry. Royal Injunctions concerning the practice were reinterpreted to restrict and regulate participants of the festivities.[14] Robert Herrick penned a piece to capture the mood of the celebrations before their repression:

Dearest, bury me
Under that Holy-oak, or Gospel Tree
Where (though thou see'st not) thou may'st think upon
Me, when you yearly go'st Procession.[citation needed]

In London, Rogation Days, just like Easter or Hocktide, were times when begging was "legitimate" for the period of celebration.[18] Though not widely celebrated in the modern Church of England, the holiday is still observed in some areas.[19]

In the United States edit

Catholic edit

The reform of the Liturgical Calendar for Roman Catholics in 1969 delegated the establishment of Rogation Days, along with Ember Days, to the episcopal conferences.[20] Their observance in the Latin Church subsequently declined, but the observance has revived somewhat since Pope John Paul II allowed Rogation days as a permitted, but not mandated, observance.[19] For those Catholics who continue to celebrate Mass according to the General Roman Calendar of 1960 or earlier, the Rogation Days are still kept, unless a higher ranking feast would occur on the day.[21]

Episcopal edit

The new, Protestant version of the Rogation days became such a fixture in Church life that the tradition was carried over to the Americas by British colonists in Jamaica, Barbados, and South Carolina.[22] Rogation days are an optional observance in the Episcopal Church.[23] Although early associated with rural life, agriculture and fishing, the Book of Common Prayer has been expanded to include propers for commerce and industry and the stewardship of creation, as well as a fruitful season.[24]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In the rare circumstance of Easter Sunday falling on 25 April, the major rogation is transferred to the Tuesday after Easter (cf. Code of Rubrics of 1960, no. 80); this will next occur in 2038.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Reff, Daniel T. (2005). Plagues, Priests, and Demons: Sacred Narratives and the Rise of Christianity in the Old World and the New. Cambridge University Press. p. 100. ISBN 9781139442787.
  2. ^ a b c d Dues, Greg (1993). Catholic Customs & Traditions: A Popular Guide. Twenty-Third Publications. pp. 39. ISBN 9780896225152. Robigalia.
  3. ^ Mershman 1912.
  4. ^ Rogation Days: A Rookie Anglican Guide [1]
  5. ^ A Table of the Movaeble Feasts, www.churchofengland.org [2]
  6. ^ Sutton, J., What is Rogate Sunday?, Immanuel Evangelical Lutheran Church, Terre Haute, published 5 May 2018, accessed 24 September 2023
  7. ^ a b Burriss, Eli Edward (1928). "Some Survivals of Magic in Roman Religion". The Classical Journal. The Classical Association of the Middle West and South. 24 (2): 112–123. JSTOR 3289524.
  8. ^ Cook, Albert Stanburrough (1926). "Augustine's Journey from Rome to Richborough". Speculum. 1 (4): 375–397. doi:10.2307/2847160. JSTOR 2847160. S2CID 162451684.
  9. ^ Shepherd, John (1801). A critical and practical elucidation of the Book of common prayer, and administration of the sacraments, and other rites and ceremonies of the Church. Oxford University.
  10. ^ a b Houseman, Michael (1998). "Painful Places: Ritual Encounters with One's Homelands" (PDF). The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute. 4 (3): 447–467. doi:10.2307/3034156. JSTOR 3034156.
  11. ^ Brand, Ellis & Hazlitt 1905.
  12. ^ a b Liszka, Thomas R. (2002). "The Dragon in the "South English Legendary": Judas, Pilate, and the "A(1)" Redaction". Modern Philology. 100 (1): 50–59. doi:10.1086/493149. JSTOR 1215582. S2CID 161491639.
  13. ^ Pearson, Charles Buchanan (1878). "Some Account of Ancient Churchwarden Accounts of St. Michael's, Bath". Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 7: 309–329. doi:10.2307/3677891. JSTOR 3677891.
  14. ^ a b c d Davenport, Edwin (1996). "Elizabethan England's Other Reformation of Manners". ELH. 63 (2): 255–278. doi:10.1353/elh.1996.0015. JSTOR 30030221. S2CID 162365937.
  15. ^ Reynolds, Roger E. (2000). "The Drama of Medieval Liturgical Processions". Revue de Musicologie. 86 (1): 127–142. doi:10.2307/947285. JSTOR 947285.
  16. ^ Zika, Charles (1988). "Hosts, Processions and Pilgrimages: Controlling the Sacred in Fifteenth-Century Germany". Past & Present. 118 (118): 25–64. doi:10.1093/past/118.1.25. JSTOR 650830.
  17. ^ Stilgoe, John R. (1976). "Jack·o'·lanterns to Surveyors: The Secularization of Landscape Boundaries". Environmental Review. Forest History Society and American Society for Environmental History. 1 (1): 14–16 and 18–30. doi:10.2307/3984295. JSTOR 3984295. S2CID 147330346.
  18. ^ Hitchcock, Tim (2005). "Begging on the Streets of Eighteenth‐Century London" (PDF). Journal of British Studies. 44 (3): 478–498. doi:10.1086/429704. hdl:2299/33. JSTOR 429704.
  19. ^ a b Melton, J. Gordon (2011-09-13). Religious Celebrations: An Encyclopedia of Holidays, Festivals, Solemn Observances, and Spiritual Commemorations. Vol. 1. p. 749. ISBN 9781598842050.
  20. ^ Pope Paul VI, General Norms for the Liturgical Year and Calendar (PDF), p. 11
  21. ^ "Liturgical Calendar". Our Lady of Guadalupe Seminary. Retrieved 2021-05-12.
  22. ^ Beasley, Nicholas M. (2007). "Ritual Time in British Plantation Colonies, 1650-1780". Church History. Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Society of Church History. 76 (3): 541–568. doi:10.1017/S0009640700500572. JSTOR 27645033. S2CID 164181942.
  23. ^ Book of Common Prayer (Online), p.18
  24. ^ "Rogation Days", The Episcopal Church

Sources edit

  • Brand, John; Ellis, Henry, Sir; Hazlitt, William Carew, eds. (1905). Brand's popular antiquities of Great Britain.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  • Mershman, Francis (1912). "Rogation Days" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 13. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

Further reading edit

  • (in Italian) Vito Pallabazzer: Lingua e cultura ladina, Belluno 1985, p. 502 (about the rogation days in Ladin tradition)

External links edit

  • Rogation Days at liturgies.net
  • Catholic Encyclopedia article

rogation, days, rogation, redirects, here, other, uses, rogation, disambiguation, days, prayer, fasting, western, christianity, they, observed, with, processions, litany, saints, called, major, rogation, held, april, minor, rogations, held, monday, wednesday, . Rogation redirects here For other uses see Rogation disambiguation Rogation days are days of prayer and fasting in Western Christianity They are observed with processions and the Litany of the Saints The so called major rogation is held on 25 April a the minor rogations are held on Monday to Wednesday preceding Ascension Thursday 1 The word rogation comes from the Latin verb rogare meaning to ask which reflects the beseeching of God for the appeasement of his anger and for protection from calamities 2 3 Rogation daysBlessing the Fields on Rogation Sunday at Hever Kent in 1967Observed byChristiansLiturgical colorVioletObservancesFasting and processionsDate25 April Major Monday Tuesday and Wednesday preceding Ascension Thursday Minor 2023 date25 April 15 17 May2024 date25 April 6 8 May2025 date25 April 26 28 MayFrequencyannualRelated toAscension ThursdayRogation Sunday is celebrated on the 5th Sunday after Easter also known as the 6th Sunday of Easter in the Anglican tradition 4 5 This day is also known in the Lutheran tradition as Rogate Sunday 6 Contents 1 Christian beginnings 2 In the British Isles 3 In the United States 3 1 Catholic 3 2 Episcopal 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Citations 5 3 Sources 5 4 Further reading 6 External linksChristian beginnings editThe Christian major rogation replaced a pagan Roman procession known as Robigalia at which a dog was sacrificed to propitiate Robigus the deity of agricultural disease 7 2 The practitioners observing Robigalia asked Robigus for protection of their crops from wheat rust 2 The minor Rogation days were introduced around AD 470 by Mamertus bishop of Vienne and eventually adopted elsewhere Their observance was ordered by the Council of Orleans in 511 and though the practice was spreading in Gaul during the 7th century it was not officially adopted into the Roman rite until the reign of Pope Leo III died 816 8 The faithful typically observed the Rogation days by fasting and abstinence in preparation to celebrate the Ascension and farmers often had their crops blessed by a priest at this time 9 Violet vestments are worn at the rogation litany and its associated Mass regardless of what colour is worn at the ordinary liturgies of the day 2 A common feature of Rogation days in former times was the ceremony of beating the bounds in which a procession of parishioners led by the minister churchwarden and choirboys would proceed around the boundary of their parish and pray for its protection in the forthcoming year This was also known in the northern parts of England as Gang day or gan week after the old English name for going or walking 10 This was also a feature of the original Roman festival when revellers would walk to a grove five miles from the city to perform their rites 7 Thomas Johnson 1633 speaking of the birch tree mentions another name Cross week It serveth well to the decking up of houses and banquetting rooms for places of pleasure and for beautifying of streets in the Crosse or Gang Week and such like 11 In the British Isles edit nbsp Woodcut illustration of Pre Reformation processional order c early 16th centuryThe Rogation Day ceremonies are thought to have arrived in the British Isles in the 7th century The oldest known Sarum text regarding Rogation Days is dated from around 1173 to 1220 10 In it celebrations in the south of England are described in which processions were led by members of the congregation carrying banners which represented various biblical characters At the head of the procession was the dragon representing Pontius Pilate which would be followed by a lion representing Christ After this there would be images of saints carried by the rest of the congregation 12 Many torches were present at each procession weighing between 42 lb 19 kg and 27 lbs 12 kg which were bought by the church and parishioners jointly 13 Sarum texts from the 13th and 15th centuries show that the dragon was eventually moved to the rear of the procession on the vigil of the Ascension with the lion taking the place at the front Illustrations of the procession from the early 16th century show that the arrangements had been changed yet again this time also showing bearers of reliquaries and incense 12 During the reign of King Henry VIII Rogation processions were used as a way to assist crop yields with a notable number of the celebrations taking place in 1543 when there were prolonged rains During the reign of King Edward VI the Crown having taken much of the Church s holdings within the country liturgical ceremonies were not officially condoned or recognized as an official part of worship However in the reign of Queen Elizabeth I the celebrations were explicitly mentioned in the royal reformation allowing them to resume as public processions 14 Rogation processions continued in the post Reformation Church of England much as they had before and Anglican priests were encouraged to bring their congregations together for inter parish processions At specific intervals clerics were to remind their congregations to be thankful for their harvests Psalms 103 and 104 were sung and people were reminded of the curses the Bible ascribed to those who violated agricultural boundaries The processions were not mandatory but were at the discretion of the local minister and were also ascribed more importance when a public right of way needed to be protected from agricultural or other expansion 14 The marches would follow prescribed routes with York and Coventry being unique in their following royal entries 15 On other routes altars were erected at certain locations where antiphons were sung 16 Any Roman Catholic imagery or icons were banned from the processions The then Archdeacon of Essex Grindal of London besought the church explicitly to label the tradition as a perambulation of the parish boundaries beating the bounds further to distance it from the Catholic liturgy In the book Second Tome of Homelys a volume containing officially sanctioned homilies of the Elizabethan church it was made clear that the English Rogation was to remember town and other communal boundaries in a social and historical context with extra emphasis on the stability gained from lawful boundary lines 14 For years after Rogation Days were recognized the manner in which they were observed in reality was very different from the official decree Even before religious sensibilities turned towards the puritanical there were concerns about the lack of piety at such events 17 While it was officially ordered that the entire congregation attend bishops began urging their priests to invite only older and more pious men This they believed would stop the drunken revelry Royal Injunctions concerning the practice were reinterpreted to restrict and regulate participants of the festivities 14 Robert Herrick penned a piece to capture the mood of the celebrations before their repression Dearest bury me Under that Holy oak or Gospel Tree Where though thou see st not thou may st think upon Me when you yearly go st Procession citation needed In London Rogation Days just like Easter or Hocktide were times when begging was legitimate for the period of celebration 18 Though not widely celebrated in the modern Church of England the holiday is still observed in some areas 19 In the United States editCatholic edit The reform of the Liturgical Calendar for Roman Catholics in 1969 delegated the establishment of Rogation Days along with Ember Days to the episcopal conferences 20 Their observance in the Latin Church subsequently declined but the observance has revived somewhat since Pope John Paul II allowed Rogation days as a permitted but not mandated observance 19 For those Catholics who continue to celebrate Mass according to the General Roman Calendar of 1960 or earlier the Rogation Days are still kept unless a higher ranking feast would occur on the day 21 Episcopal edit The new Protestant version of the Rogation days became such a fixture in Church life that the tradition was carried over to the Americas by British colonists in Jamaica Barbados and South Carolina 22 Rogation days are an optional observance in the Episcopal Church 23 Although early associated with rural life agriculture and fishing the Book of Common Prayer has been expanded to include propers for commerce and industry and the stewardship of creation as well as a fruitful season 24 See also edit nbsp Christianity portalEmber days TriduumReferences editNotes edit In the rare circumstance of Easter Sunday falling on 25 April the major rogation is transferred to the Tuesday after Easter cf Code of Rubrics of 1960 no 80 this will next occur in 2038 Citations edit Reff Daniel T 2005 Plagues Priests and Demons Sacred Narratives and the Rise of Christianity in the Old World and the New Cambridge University Press p 100 ISBN 9781139442787 a b c d Dues Greg 1993 Catholic Customs amp Traditions A Popular Guide Twenty Third Publications pp 39 ISBN 9780896225152 Robigalia Mershman 1912 Rogation Days A Rookie Anglican Guide 1 A Table of the Movaeble Feasts www churchofengland org 2 Sutton J What is Rogate Sunday Immanuel Evangelical Lutheran Church Terre Haute published 5 May 2018 accessed 24 September 2023 a b Burriss Eli Edward 1928 Some Survivals of Magic in Roman Religion The Classical Journal The Classical Association of the Middle West and South 24 2 112 123 JSTOR 3289524 Cook Albert Stanburrough 1926 Augustine s Journey from Rome to Richborough Speculum 1 4 375 397 doi 10 2307 2847160 JSTOR 2847160 S2CID 162451684 Shepherd John 1801 A critical and practical elucidation of the Book of common prayer and administration of the sacraments and other rites and ceremonies of the Church Oxford University a b Houseman Michael 1998 Painful Places Ritual Encounters with One s Homelands PDF The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 4 3 447 467 doi 10 2307 3034156 JSTOR 3034156 Brand Ellis amp Hazlitt 1905 a b Liszka Thomas R 2002 The Dragon in the South English Legendary Judas Pilate and the A 1 Redaction Modern Philology 100 1 50 59 doi 10 1086 493149 JSTOR 1215582 S2CID 161491639 Pearson Charles Buchanan 1878 Some Account of Ancient Churchwarden Accounts of St Michael s Bath Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 7 309 329 doi 10 2307 3677891 JSTOR 3677891 a b c d Davenport Edwin 1996 Elizabethan England s Other Reformation of Manners ELH 63 2 255 278 doi 10 1353 elh 1996 0015 JSTOR 30030221 S2CID 162365937 Reynolds Roger E 2000 The Drama of Medieval Liturgical Processions Revue de Musicologie 86 1 127 142 doi 10 2307 947285 JSTOR 947285 Zika Charles 1988 Hosts Processions and Pilgrimages Controlling the Sacred in Fifteenth Century Germany Past amp Present 118 118 25 64 doi 10 1093 past 118 1 25 JSTOR 650830 Stilgoe John R 1976 Jack o lanterns to Surveyors The Secularization of Landscape Boundaries Environmental Review Forest History Society and American Society for Environmental History 1 1 14 16 and 18 30 doi 10 2307 3984295 JSTOR 3984295 S2CID 147330346 Hitchcock Tim 2005 Begging on the Streets of Eighteenth Century London PDF Journal of British Studies 44 3 478 498 doi 10 1086 429704 hdl 2299 33 JSTOR 429704 a b Melton J Gordon 2011 09 13 Religious Celebrations An Encyclopedia of Holidays Festivals Solemn Observances and Spiritual Commemorations Vol 1 p 749 ISBN 9781598842050 Pope Paul VI General Norms for the Liturgical Year and Calendar PDF p 11 Liturgical Calendar Our Lady of Guadalupe Seminary Retrieved 2021 05 12 Beasley Nicholas M 2007 Ritual Time in British Plantation Colonies 1650 1780 Church History Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Society of Church History 76 3 541 568 doi 10 1017 S0009640700500572 JSTOR 27645033 S2CID 164181942 Book of Common Prayer Online p 18 Rogation Days The Episcopal Church Sources edit Brand John Ellis Henry Sir Hazlitt William Carew eds 1905 Brand s popular antiquities of Great Britain a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link Mershman Francis 1912 Rogation Days In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 13 New York Robert Appleton Company Further reading edit in Italian Vito Pallabazzer Lingua e cultura ladina Belluno 1985 p 502 about the rogation days in Ladin tradition External links editRogation Days at liturgies net Catholic Encyclopedia article Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rogation days amp oldid 1176830796, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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