Notre Dame de Rouen. The façade of the Gothic Church in France. Photographer: Hippo1947. Licence: SHUTTERSTOCK.

15 March, 2026

Lætare Sunday. The Fourth Sunday In Lent. Rose Vestments.



Peterborough Cathedral.
© Chel @ Sweetbriar Dreams
www.sweetbriardreams.blogspot.co.uk


Saint Rose of Lima.
Illustration: CATHOLIC ONLINE



The above Text is from The Lenten Lessons from

The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

Lætare Sunday is the Fourth Sunday of Lent, in the Western Christian Liturgical Calendar.

Traditionally, this Sunday has been a day of Celebration, within the austere period of Lent. This Sunday gets its name from the first few words (Incipit) of the Traditional Latin entrance (Introit) for the Mass of The Day. “Lætare Jerusalem” (“Rejoice, O Jerusalem”) is Latin from Isaiah 66:10.

This Sunday is also known as Mothering Sunday, Refreshment Sunday, Mid-Lent Sunday (in French “Mi-Carême”), and Rose Sunday (either because the Golden Rose (sent by Popes to Catholic female Sovereigns) used to be Blessed at this time), or because the use of Rose-Coloured (rather than Violet) Vestments was permitted on this day).

The Station Church at Rome for this day is Santa Croce-in-Gerusalemme, one of the seven main Basilicas; the Golden Rose, sent by Popes to Catholic female Sovereigns, used to be Blessed at this time and for this reason the day was sometimes called “Dominica de Rosa”.






Whilst the word “Rose” is appended to today’s Vestment colour, here is a brief resumé of Saint Rose of Lima (Feast Day 30 August).

Saint Rose of Lima (20 April 1586 – 24 August 1617), was a Member of the Third Order of Saint Dominic, in Lima, Peru, who became known for her life of severe asceticism and her care of the needy of the City.

A Lay Member of the Dominican Order, she was declared a Saint by The Catholic Church, being the first person born in the Americas to be Canonised as such.

As a Saint, Rose of Lima was designated as a Co-Patroness of The Philippines, along with Saint Pudentiana; both Saints were moved to Second-Class Patronage in September 1942 by Pope Pius XII, but Saint Rose remains the Primary Patroness of Peru and of the local people of Latin America.

Lætare Sunday. Divine Holy Mass For The Fourth Sunday In Lent. Sainte Messe Du Quatrième Dimanche De Carême. Rose Vestments.



Lætare Sunday.
Divine Holy Mass for the Fourth Sunday in Lent. 
Church of Saint-Eugène-Sainte-Cécile, Paris.
Sunday, 30 March 2025.
Sainte messe du quatrième dimanche de Carême.
Available on YouTube


The Mass Booklet can be found

“Perfect”. By: Andrea Bocelli And Ed Sheeran.



“Perfect”.
Sung by: 
Andrea Bocelli and Ed Sheeran.
Available on YouTube

Thanksgiving After Mass And Holy Communion.



From The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless stated otherwise.

Offering Of All Masses In The World.

I unite myself with every Mass
which at this time is being offered throughout the World.


I place them in the hands of Mary, Mediatrix of All Graces,
that she may obtain, by this presentation of The Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity, of Christ to The Most Holy Trinity,
the deliverance of Souls from Purgatory, relief for the sick,
and the dying, the conversion of infidels and sinners,
and the perseverance of all The Faithful.


The Fourth Sunday In Lent (Lætare Sunday). The Lenten Station Is At The Basilica Of The Holy Cross-in-Jerusalem. Rose Vestments.



Peterborough Cathedral.
© Chel@SweetbriarDreams
www.sweetbriardreams.blogspot.co.uk


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless otherwise stated.

The Fourth Sunday in Lent
   (Lætare Sunday).

Station at the Church of The Holy Cross-in-Jerusalem.

Indulgence of 10 Years and 10 Quarantines.

Semi-Double.

Privileged Sunday of the First Class.

Violet, or Rose, Vestments.



English: Basilica of The Holy Cross-in-Jerusalem.
Italiano: Basilica di Santa Croce-in-Gerusalemme, Rome.
Latin: Basilica Sanctæ Crucis-in-Hierusalem.
One of the masterpieces of the “Barochetto Romano”,
by Pietro Passalacqua and Domenico Gregorini, from 1743.
Photo: February 2006.
Author: Anthony M. from Rome.
(Wikimedia Commons)




During this week, the history of Moses is read by The Church in the Divine Office, in which two main lines of thought are summarised. On the one hand, we see Moses rescuing God’s people from the bondage of Egypt and bringing them safely across the Red Sea. On the other, we see him nourishing them with Manna in the desert; foretelling to them that God will send “The Prophet” (Gospel), in other words, the Messias; giving them the Law of Sinai; and leading them towards the Promised Land, flowing with milk and honey.

There, one day, Jerusalem (Communion) will rise from the ground with its Temple made after the pattern of the Tabernacle in the desert, and thither will the tribes of Israel go up to sing of what God has done for His people (Introit, Gradual, Communion). “Let my people go, that they may sacrifice to Me in the desert,” said God to Pharao, through Moses.

In today’s Mass, we see how these types have been fulfilled. For the true Moses is Christ, Who has delivered us from the bondage of sin (ibid.); and made us pass through the Waters of Baptism; Who feeds us with His Eucharist, of which the multiplication of the loaves is a type, and Who has brought us into the true Jerusalem, The Church, Figure of Heaven, where we shall sing forever the “Canticle of Moses and of The Lamb” (Apocalypse) in thanksgiving to The Lord for His Infinite Mercies to us.

It is, therefore, quite natural that the Station, today, should be made in Rome at the Church of The Holy Cross-in-Jerusalem. For Saint Helena, the mother of Emperor Constantine, who lived on Mount Coelius, in a Palace known as the Sessorian Mansion, with the purpose of placing there some Relics of The True Cross, converted it into a Sanctuary, which in some sense represents Jerusalem in Rome.


Basilica di Santa Croce-in-Gerusalemme, Rome.
Photo: September 2006.
Source: Own work.
Author: Lalupa
(Wikimedia Commons)



The Introit, Communion, and Tract, speak to us of Jerusalem, compared to Mount Sinai by Saint Paul in the Epistle for today. There, will the Christian people best raise their song of joy, “Laetare” (Introit, Epistle) on account of the victory won by Our Lord on The Cross at Jerusalem, and there, most easily, will be roused the memory of the Heavenly Jerusalem, whose gates have been opened to us by the Death of Christ.

It is for this reason, that, formerly on this day, it was the custom, in this same Church, Solemnly to Bless a Rose, the Queen of Flowers. For, as we are reminded by the forms used for the Blessing, in the Traditional practice of Christian iconography, Heaven is usually represented by a garden, beautiful with flowers. For this Blessing, Rose-Coloured Vestments were used, and on this day a Priest may Celebrate Mass and The Office in Vestments of this colour.


Formerly on this day, it was the custom, in this same Church (Basilica of The Holy Cross-in-Jerusalem), Solemnly to Bless a Rose, the Queen of Flowers. For, as we are reminded by the forms used for the Blessing, in the Traditional practice of Christian iconography, Heaven is usually represented by a garden, beautiful with flowers. for this Blessing, Rose-Coloured Vestments were used, and, on this day, a Priest may Celebrate Mass and The Office in Vestments of this colour. Lætare Sunday (Fourth Sunday in Lent) and
Gaudete Sunday (Third Sunday in Advent).
Image:




Hence, this custom was extended to the Third Sunday of Advent, “Gaudete”, or, “Rejoicing” Sunday, which, coming in the middle of Advent, stimulates us with a Holy Joy, to continue with courage our toilsome preparation for the Coming of The Lord. And, in its turn, “Lætare”, also “Rejoicing” Sunday, is a halting place in the midst of the Lenten Observance.


English:
The Ceiling, Basilica of The Holy Cross-in-Jerusalem.
Italiano: Santa Croce-in-Gerusalemme (Rome).
Painting by Corrado Giaquinto, from 1744,
“The Virgin presents Saint Helena
and Emperor Constantine to The Trinity”.
Photo: February 2006.
Author: Anthony M. from Rome, Italy.
(Wikimedia Commons)



Here, in the Church of Calvary at Rome, that is, of The Cross, our hope, The Church, sends a Ray of Light upon our Souls to stir us up to persevere in the struggle against the World, the flesh and the devil, until the Great Feast of Easter is reached.

“Rejoice, rejoice with joy,” we are told in the Introit, for, having died to sin with Our Lord during Lent, we are shortly to rise with Him by the Paschal Confession and Communion. The Gospel speaks at one and the same time of the multiplication of the loaves and the fishes, symbols of The Eucharist and of Baptism, which were formerly received on the same occasion at Easter, and, in the Epistle, allusion is made to our deliverance by the Sacrament of Baptism, which the Catechumens formerly received at this Season.

And, if we have had the misfortune to grievously offend Almighty God, we shall recover our freedom by means of our Easter Confession. In the Epistle, the story of Sara and Agar becomes thus an allegory, reminding us that Christ has freed us from the bondage of sin.

Every Parish Priest Celebrates Mass for the people of his Parish.


Mass: Lætáre, Jerúsalem.
Preface: Of Lent.






Pope Lucius II (1144 - 1145)
restored the Basilica of The Holy Cross-in-Jerusalem.
(Wikimedia Commons)



The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

The Basilica of The Holy Cross-in-Jerusalem (Latin: Basilica Sanctæ Crucis in Hierusalem, Italian: Basilica di Santa Croce in Gerusalemme) is a Roman Catholic Parish Church and Minor Basilica in Rome. It is one of the Seven Pilgrim Churches of Rome.

According to Tradition, the Basilica was Consecrated around 325 A.D., to house the Passion Relics brought to Rome from The Holy Land by Saint Helena of Constantinople, mother of the Roman Emperor, Constantine I.

At that time, the Basilica floor was covered with soil from Jerusalem, thus acquiring the Title “in Hierusalem” - it is not dedicated to the Holy Cross, which is in Jerusalem, but the Church itself is “in Jerusalem” in the sense that a “piece” of Jerusalem was moved to Rome for its foundation.

The Church is built around a room in Saint Helena’s Imperial Palace, Palazzo Sessoriano, which she adapted to a Chapel, around the year 320 A.D. Some decades later, the Chapel was turned into a true Basilica, called the Heleniana or Sessoriana. After falling into neglect, the Church was restored by Pope Lucius II (1144-1145). It assumed a Romanesque appearance, with a Nave and two Aisles, a Belfry and a Porch.

The Church was also modified, in the 16th-Century, but it assumed its current Baroque appearance under Pope Benedict XIV (1740-1758), who had been the Titular of the Basilica, prior to his elevation to the Papacy. 

New streets were also opened to connect the Church to two other Major Roman Basilicas, San Giovanni in Laterano and Santa Maria Maggiore

The façade of Santa Croce, designed by Pietro Passalacqua and Domenico Gregorini, shares the typical Late-Roman Baroque taste with these other Basilicas.


Archduke Albert. Archduke of Austria, Albrecht der 
Fromme, Erzherzog von Österreich München, Duke of LothierBrabantLimburgLuxemburg and GueldersCount of FlandersArtoisCount Palatine of BurgundyHainaut and Namur. Peter Paul Rubens, who arrived in Rome in 1601, was commissioned by Albert of Austria to paint an Altarpiece for the Chapel of Saint Helena.
Source: Alte Pinakothek.
Author: Juan Pantoja de la Cruz (1553 - 1608).
(Wikimedia Commons)




The Relics at Santa Croce were once in the ancient Saint Helena’s Chapel, which is partly under ground level. Here, the founder of the Church had some earth from Calvary dispersed, whence the name “in Hierusalem” of the Basilica. 

In the Vault, is a mosaic designed by Melozzo da Forlì (before 1485), depicting Jesus Blessing, histories of The Cross and various Saints. 

The Altar has a huge statue of Saint Helena, which was obtained from an ancient statue of Juno, discovered at Ostia. Mediæval Pilgrim Guides noted that the Chapel was considered so holy, that access to the Chapel by women was forbidden.

The Apse of the Church includes frescoes telling the legends of the True Cross, attributed to Melozzo, to Antoniazzo Romano and Marco Palmezzano

The Museum of the Basilica houses a mosaic icon from the 14th-Century. According to the legend, Pope Gregory I had it made after a vision of Christ. Notable is the tomb of Cardinal Francisco de los Ángeles Quiñones, by Jacopo Sansovino (1536).

Peter Paul Rubens, who had arrived in Rome by way of Mantua in 1601, was commissioned by Archduke Albert of Austria to paint an Altarpiece with three panels for the Chapel of Saint Helena. Two of these paintings, Saint Helena with the True Cross and the mocking of Christ, are now in Grasse, France. The third, the elevation of The Cross, is lost. Before his marriage, the Archduke had been made a Cardinal in this Church.



Our Lady Of The Atonement Cathedral,
Baguio, Philippines.
Photo: 29 March 2024.
Source: Own work.
This File is made available under the
Author: Galaxiaria
(Wikimedia Commons)



Wells Cathedral.
Photo: August 2006.
Source: Own work.
This File is licensed under the
Author: Steinsky
(Wikimedia Commons)

14 March, 2026

Patsy Cline: “Crazy”. “I Fall To Pieces”.



“Crazy”.
Sung by: Patsy Cline.
Available on YouTube


“I Fall To Pieces”.
Sung by: Patsy Cline.
Available on YouTube

“I Will Always Love You”. Dolly Parton.



“I Will Always Love You”.
Dolly Parton.
Available On YouTube

A Blast From The Past: “Islands In The Stream”. Dolly Parton And Kenny Rogers.



“Islands In The Stream”.
Dolly Parton and Kenny Rogers.
Available on YouTube

“Wichita Lineman”. “Dreams Of The Everyday Housewife”. Glen Campbell.



“Wichita Lineman”.
Glen Campbell.
Available on YouTube


Dreams Of The Everyday Housewife”.
Glen Campbell.
Available on Youtube

Saturday Of The Third Week In Lent. The Lenten Station Is At The Basilica Of Saint Susanna-At-The-Baths-Of-Diocletian (Santa Susanna-Alle-Terme-Di-Diocleziano). Violet Vestments.



Peterborough Cathedral.
© Chel@SweetbriarDreams
www.sweetbriardreams.blogspot.co.uk


Text from The Saint Andrew Daily Missal,
unless otherwise stated.

Saturday of the Third Week in Lent.

Station at Saint Susanna’s.

Indulgence of 10 Years and 10 Quarantines.

Violet Vestments.



Basilica of Saint Susanna
(Santa Susanna-alle-Terme), Rome.
Photo: May 2010.
Source: Own work.
Author: LPLT
(Wikimedia Commons)




The Station is at the Basilica of Saint Susanna, a Roman Virgin who was Martyred under Emperor Diocletian. This Sanctuary was one of the twenty-five Parish Churches of Rome in the 5th-Century A.D. The analogy between the circumstances of the Martyrdom of Saint Susanna (Feast Day is on the 11 August), and the account of the test of the chaste Susanna of the Old Testament, has decided the choice of the Epistle of The Mass for today.

As is often seen in the Lenten Liturgy, both Epistle and Gospel illustrate the same thought.

Today, both the Epistle and Gospel recall an accusation of adultery which falls back upon its authors. The Epistle speaks to us of the chaste Susanna, who is innocent, and the Gospel of a woman who is guilty. God avenges the rights of justice, with regard to the first, by rewarding her virtue, whilst He opens the treasures of His Mercy, towards the second, by pardoning her because of her Repentance.

Moreover, the choice of the Gospel is explained by the fact that the Stational Procession must pass through one of the most infamous Quarters of Rome, i.e., the Vicus Suburranus.

Mass: Verba mea.
Preface: Of Lent.



English: Basilica of Saint Susanna, Rome.
Français: Église Sainte-Suzanne, Rome.
Photo: September 2010.
Source: Own work.
Author: Tango7174
(Wikimedia Commons)



The following Text is from Wikipedia - the free encyclopædia.

The Church of Saint Susanna at the Baths of Diocletian (Italian: Chiesa di Santa Susanna alle Terme di Diocleziano) is a Roman Catholic Parish Church located on The Quirinal Hill in Rome

There has been a Titular Church associated with this site as far back as 280 A.D. The current Church was rebuilt, from 1585 to 1603, for a Monastery of Cistercian Nuns, Founded on the site in 1587, which still exists.


High Altar, Saint Susanna-at-the-Baths-of-Diocletian.
Interno di Santa Susanna alle Terme di Diocleziano.
Date: Prior to 1976.
Photographer:
Henry A. Millon (1927–2018).
(Wikimedia Commons)

The Church has served as the National Parish, for residents of Rome from The United States, since that was established at the Church, in 1921, by The Paulist Fathers, a Society of Priests Founded in The United States. They have continued to serve at Santa Susanna since then.

About 280 A.D., an Early-Christian House of Worship 
was established on this site, which, like many of the earliest Christian meeting places, was in a house (Domus Ecclesiæ). According to the 6th-Century A.D. Acta of Susanna, the 
Domus belonged to two brothers, named Caius and Gabinus, prominent Christians.

Caius has been identified both with Pope Saint Caius and with Caius the Presbyter, who was a Prefect and who is a source of information on Early-Christianity. 

Gabinus, or Gabinius, is the name given to the father of the semi-legendary, Saint Susanna. Her earliest documented attestations identify her as the Patron of the Church, not as a Martyr, and, previously, the Church was identified in the earliest 4th-Century A.D. documents, by its title “of Gaius”, “by the Baths of Diocletian”, or as “Ad Duas Domos” (“near the two houses”). It is mentioned in connection with a Roman Synod of 499 A.D.


The Coffered Ceiling, designed by Carlo Maderno (1556 - 1629), who created the façade of Saint Peter’s Basilica.
Photo: April 2007.
Author: Addictive Picasso from England.
(Wikimedia Commons)




The Church of Santa Susanna is one of the oldest “Titulii” in the City of Rome. The Early-Christian Church, built on the remains of three Roman villas, still visible beneath the Monastery, was situated immediately outside the wall of the Baths, built by Diocletian, and The Servian Wall, the first walls built to defend the City.

According to Tradition, the Church was erected on 
Susanna’s House, where the same Saint was Martyred. In the 4th-Century A.D., it was marked with the designation “ad duas domos” (“at the two houses”). This first Three-Aisled-Basilica was almost certainly built under the Pontificate of Pope Leo III (795 A.D. - 816 A.D.).

Pope Sixtus IV (1475-1477) proceeded to rebuild the Church, probably a single Nave with two Side Chapels. 

In 1588, it became the last great rebuilding effort of Cardinal Girolamo Rusticucci, Cardinal Protector of The Cistercian Order, with construction running from 1595 to 1603. One of the objectives pursued with greater commitment from Rusticucci, as The Vicar General of Pope Sixtus V, was to renew the life of the Religious Orders.

A reflection of that action can be seen in a figurative programme decorating the walls of the Church. The main themes are: Defence of Chastity, against corruption of morals, and the victory of the True Faith over any temptation to idolatry and heresy. They were joined by the exaltation of the Virginal choice of Saint Susanna and her Prayerful attitude. 

Rusticucci wanted to highlight and connect these themes to the inseparable bond that his Church had with the Cistercian Nuns, whose Monastery occupied the site.


Pope Sixtus IV rebuilt the Church of Saint Susanna.
Title: Pope Sixtus IV (1414-1484).
Date: Circa 1473 - 1475.
Current location: Louvre Museum, Paris.
Source/Photographer: cartelen.louvre.fr
(Wikimedia Commons)



Rusticucci, a lover of “Tradition”, chose from the best of that time, which came from the fruitful artistic outpouring from The Counter-Reformation. Consequently, he gave the assignment to Carlo Maderno (1556-1629) for architectural renovations made to the Church. It was he who was the designer of its Travertine facade.

The frescoes of the Central Hall (six scenes from the life of the chaste Susanna) are by Baldassare Croce of Bologna (1563-1638). To Cesare Nebbia, a native of Orvieto (1536-1614), can be attributed the frescoes in the Dome and Apse, in which are reproduced some scenes from the life of the Saint.

The Altarpiece of The High Altar, depicting the beheading of Saint Susanna, is by Tommaso Laureti of Palermo (1530-1602). 

Camilla Peretti, sister of Pope Sixtus V, was a great benefactor of the Cistercian Nuns, and helped build their residential quarters, including the Chapel of Saint Laurence, whose frescoes are the work of Giovan Battista Pozzo (1563-1591).




The painting of the Altar, depicting the Martyrdom of the Holy Deacon (Saint Laurence), is also by Nebbia. Large statues of the major Prophets, and two of Saints Peter and Paul, are attributed to Giovanni Antonio Paracea, called Valsoldo.

In the Sacristy of the Church, you can see, through the glass floor, part of the Early-Christian Church and the remains of the Roman house, which is said to be the home of the father of the Saint. 

A Roman sarcophagus with fragments of painted plaster 
was discovered in modern times. The excavations also unearthed a Tympanum, depicting: The Lamb of God on a Blue background and flanked by Saints John the Baptist and John the Evangelist; a Madonna and Child between Saints Agatha and Susanna; plus five beautiful busts of other Saints.


Isaac Hecker, Founder of the Paulist Fathers.
Photo: 1890 (approximately).
Source: Paulist Fathers Archives.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)



Behind The Chancel, separated by an iron grating, is located the splendid Monastic Choir, a large rectangular room. 

It was built in 1596 by Cardinal Rusticucci, as attested by the Coat-of-Arms in the centre of the Choir’s rich, carved, wooden-coffered, floor. The Choir Stalls were donated by Pope Sixtus V and are repeatedly mentioned in the old guides as one of the finest Choirs extant in Roman Monasteries.

The walls are adorned with frescoes depicting Saints and scenes from The Old Testament. The artist who created these paintings was Francesco Di (1676-1702). 

Also in the Choir, in the four branches of the two Niches that preserve the Reliquaries, appear Saint Benedict of Nurcia and Saint Scholastica (on the Left) and Saint Bernard and Saint Susanna (on the Right). all by the Umbrian painter Avanzino Nucci (1599). Filippo Fregiotti painted the frescoes in a Chapel inside the Enclosure in 1719.

According to Tradition, the structure became a Church around 330 A.D., under the Emperor Constantine I, when the Basilicas of numerous House Churches came to be adapted for Liturgical use. 

The Basilica was T-shaped with a central Nave with twelve Columns on each side, flanked by Side Aisles. All that is left of these two Side Aisles, after the Late-16th-Century rebuilding, are the two Side Chapels of the Basilica Church.

In the Synod of 565 A.D., the Church is first referred to by the Title of Susanna; the Church has been dedicated to her Veneration ever since. In the “Acta”, Susanna is Martyred with her family, when the girl refuses to marry the son of Emperor Diocletian; the occasion of Susanna’s Martyrdom is a literary Trope that is familiar in other “Passions” of Virgins in The Roman Martyrology.


English: Pope Benedict XVmet
the Superior General of the Paulist Fathers in 1921.
Français: Photo de Benoît XV prise vers 1915.
Date: Circa 1915.
Source: Library of Congress.
Author: Unknown.
(Wikimedia Commons)




After World War I, The Paulist Fathers, Founded in New York City in 1858, had grown to such an extent that they felt the time had come to seek approval of their Religious Institute, from The Holy See, in order to be able to work throughout the Worldwide Church. 

They also wanted to establish a Procurator-General, in Rome, to co-ordinate their work with the Vatican.

To this end, The Superior General of the Society, the Right Reverend Thomas Burke, C.S.P., went to Rome in January 1921 to meet with Pope Benedict XV. During this trip, they noticed the Church of Santa Susanna, as it was adjacent to the American Embassy to Italy at the time. Its location made it of interest to the Americans.

The Paulists opened the Office of the Procurator-General, in the City, the following Spring, headed by Thomas Lantry O’Neill, C.S.P. 

In the meantime, Burke’s brother, also a member of the Society, had approached President Warren Harding, to make him aware of their interest in making use of the Church to serve the growing American population of Rome. 

Harding made a request for this to The Apostolic Nuncio to The United States, Archbishop Giovanni Bonzano, during the course of a meeting they held that June. Bonzano transmitted the request to the Vatican Secretary of State, with the recommendation that it be granted as a gesture of goodwill to The United States.

Accordingly, in December 1921, Pope Benedict XV authorised The Paulist Fathers to administer Santa Susanna as the National Church in Rome for the American Residents of Rome and visitors from The United States of America.

The Abbess of the Monastery gave the Keys of the Church to the new Pastor on 1 January 1922. Cardinal William Henry O’Connell of Boston presided at the first Public Mass for the American Community of the City on 26 February 1922.



His Eminence, Cardinal [William Henry] O’Connell, Archbishop of Boston. Presided at the first Public Mass at Saint Susanna’s in February 1922.
Photo: Date unknown.
Source: Library of Congress.
Author: Bain News Service.
(Wikimedia Commons)



Some controversy arose from the establishment of the Parish. The first was the fact that the Cardinal, who held the Title to the Church, had died during the Summer of 1921, leaving the Church with no legal owner according to Italian Law. Another, was the installation of electrical lights in the Church, to which Americans were accustomed, but was shocking to the Roman People.

Further, there was a claim on the Church, by the Ambassador of Romania, for use as a National Church for the people of his Country. The ownership issue was not settled until the end of 1924, when Bonzano, the former Apostolic Nuncio, and now a Cardinal, requested a Transfer of his Title to this Church. Once in his hands, he formally appointed O’Neill as the Rector of the Parish.


The High Altar frescoes,
Basilica of Santa Susanna, Rome.
Photographer: Dave Dwyer
Illustration: FLICKR




Since 1958, the Post of Cardinal Priest, with the Title “Sanctæ Susannæ”, has been given to the Archbishop of Boston, upon his creation as a Cardinal. The most recent such appointment was that of Bernard Francis Law, who, in 2002, resigned the Archbishopric but kept the Title of “Santa Susanna”. He died in 2017.

Pope Sergius I restored the Church at the end of the 7th-Century A.D., but Pope Saint Leo III, the fourth Pope who had been Pastor of this Church, rebuilt it from the ground in 796 A.D., adding the great Apse and conserving the Relics of the Saints in the Crypt. A vast mosaic of Christ, flanked by Pope Saint Leo III and Emperor Charlemagne and Saints Susanna and Felicity, was so badly damaged in the 12th-Century, by an earthquake, that the Interior was plastered over in the complete renovation that spanned the years 1585–1602 and frescoed by Cesare Nebbia.


Pope Saint Leo III (750 A.D. - 816 A.D.) was the fourth Pope who had been Pastor of Saint Susanna’s. He rebuilt the Church in 796 A.D. These Mosaics of Pope Saint Leo III are in the Hall (Triclinium) of the Lateran Palace (798 A.D. - 799 A.D.)
(Wikimedia Commons)



A façade, in Travertine, remained to be constructed. The present Church of Santa Susanna, on its ancient foundations, was the first independent commission in Rome for Carlo Maderno, who had trained as an assistant to his uncle, Domenico Fontana, the Chief Architect of Pope Sixtus V. In 1603, Maderno completed the façade, a highly influential Early-Baroque design.

The entrance and roof are surrounded by Triangular Pediments. The windows are replaced by Niches. The statues of the higher level (Pope Saint Caius and Saint Genesius of Rome) are by Giovanni Antonio Paracea, those of the lower level (Saint Susanna and Saint Felicitas of Rome) are by Stefano Maderno.

The Church of Santa Susanna was accounted so successful that, in 1605, Pope Paul V named Maderno architect of Saint Peter’s Basilica, where he completed the Nave and constructed the great façade.

The Church consists of a single Nave, with a circular Apse forming two Side Chapels. The frescoes of the Central Nave, by Baldassare Croce, represent six scenes from the life of Susanna, found in the Book of Daniel.

The frescoes, on the curved side of the Apse, show Saint Susanna being threatened by Maximian, but defended by the Angel of God and, to the Right, Susanna refusing to worship the idol, Jupiter. Nebbia’s frescoes, of the Dome of the Apse, depict Saint Susanna flanked on either side by Angels with musical instruments. Behind The High Altar, the Painting, depicting the Beheading of Saint Susanna, is by Tommaso Laureti.



A 17th-Century replica Church of Santa Susanna in LvivUkraineThe Carmelite Convent was established in Lvivby Jakub Sobieski. Many particulars of its design  (decorative vasesAndreas Schwaner’s statues) were patterned after the Roman Church of Santa Susanna. Its construction, commenced in 1642, was greatly delayed by the events of The Deluge. The Carmelites departed from the Nunnery in 1792. It was later used as a Metrology Office. The Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church recently re-Consecrated the Church to Christian Worship and Dedicated it to the Presentation of Our Lord.
Photo: June 2007.
(Wikimedia Commons)




The Chapel of Our Lady of Graces (a former Painting on
the Altar) has, on its walls, two recent frescoes of Saint Benedict and Saint Bernard.

Domenico Fontana constructed the second Side Chapel to the Left, Dedicated to Saint Laurence, commissioned by Camilla Peretti, sister of Pope Sixtus V. The Paintings are by the Milanese artist, Giovanni Battista Pozzo (1563–1591). The Altar Painting, by Cesare Nebbia, depicts the Martyrdom of Saint Laurence. In this Chapel are Venerated Saint Genesius of Rome, Patron of actors, in the act of receiving Baptism, and the Bishop, Pope Saint Eleuterus.

The Presbytery is decorated with two frescoes. To the Left, Baldassare Croce depicts the Martyrdom of Saint Gabinius, while, to the Right, Paris Nogari shows the Martyrdom of Saint Felicitas of Rome and her seven sons.



Rev. Fr. Greg Apparcel, CSP.
Rector of the Church of Santa Susanna.
Illustration: SANTA SUSANNA



The valuable Ceiling of the Nave and of the Presbytery is made in polychromed gilt wood, carved to the design of Carlo Maderno.

Entombed in the Church are five Early-Church Martyrs and Saints: Susanna; her father, Gabinius; Saint Felicitas of RomePope Saint Eleuterus; and Genesius of Rome.

The Commemoration of Saint Susanna has been linked in the Roman Calendar with Saint Tiburtius, 11 August (See Saints Tiburtius and Susanna).

Among the previous Cardinal Priests of Santa Susanna is Pope Nicholas V (1446).



Our Lady Of The Atonement Cathedral,
Baguio, Philippines.
Photo: 29 March 2024.
Source: Own work.
This File is made available under the
Author: Galaxiaria
(Wikimedia Commons)



Wells Cathedral.
Photo: August 2006.
Source: Own work.
This File is licensed under the
Author: Steinsky
(Wikimedia Commons)
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