RORATe cAEli — Drop down dew, O heavens

Coat of arms featuring a blue shield with a yellow fleur-de-lis, surrounded by green foliage and topped with a cross, along with the text 'DEUS CARITAS EST' and Latin inscriptions.

To the clergy and faithful of the Old Roman Apostolate,
and to all who seek the truth of Christ,
grace and peace in Our Lord Jesus Christ.

Carissimi, Beloved in Christ,

As the Church moves through the interior threshold of Advent, the Roman liturgy places upon our lips a prayer that is at once restrained, exacting, and luminous:

Rorate caeli desuper, et nubes pluant justum;
aperiatur terra, et germinet Salvatorem,
et justitia oriatur simul.
¹

“Drop down dew, O heavens, from above, and let the clouds rain down the Just One;
let the earth be opened and bring forth a Saviour,
and let justice spring up together.”

This text, heard with particular insistence in the days surrounding Gaudete Sunday and the Advent Embertide, establishes the governing grammar of this edition. Salvation descends; it is not produced. Justice arises together with the Saviour; it cannot be detached from Him. Yet the earth must first be opened—disciplined, cleared, and made receptive. The Church fasts before she rejoices, and she rejoices because the Lord is near.

The spiritual and liturgical articles in this edition return insistently to this realism. Our reflections on Gaudete Sunday emphasise that Christian joy is not optimism or emotional uplift, but the certainty of proximity: Christ already present in mystery, in the Church gathered, in the sanctuary, and in the sacramental life that renders Jerusalem visible on earth.² The rose vestments do not interrupt Advent; they intensify its meaning.

The Advent Embertide reflections deepen this formation by drawing attention to the Church’s deliberate use of fasting, extended prophetic readings, and liturgical restraint. Isaiah is allowed to speak at length. History is unfolded patiently. The faithful are trained to wait without improvisation or haste.³ In an age addicted to immediacy, the Embertide liturgy insists that restraint is not absence but preparation.

This discipline of waiting throws into sharp relief the contemporary liturgical crisis addressed elsewhere in this edition. Several articles examine how the Roman Rite has been destabilised not by organic development, but by rupture, managerial intervention, and a loss of confidence in tradition itself. The critique of postconciliar liturgical experimentation and the erosion of sacrificial, hierarchical, and transcendental elements of worship exposes a deeper problem: the attempt to generate fruitfulness without first opening the ground.⁴ When liturgy becomes expressive rather than receptive, heaven is no longer awaited; it is replaced.

The same disorder is traced in analyses of recent restrictions on the Traditional Latin Mass and the contradictions underlying their official justifications. These interventions are examined not as matters of taste or preference, but as symptoms of a modernist understanding of tradition as something to be managed rather than received.⁵ Advent stands as a rebuke to such instincts. The Church does not invent her worship; she consents to what she has received.

These liturgical failures are not isolated from the cultural and legal crises explored elsewhere in this edition. When courts cite authorities that do not exist and elevate sentiment above procedure, justice cannot “spring up.” Our examination of fabricated citations and emotive jurisprudence exposes the same displacement of objective authority by narrative assertion.⁶ The earth is sealed, yet justice is demanded to appear.

Likewise, when silent prayer is reclassified as harm and peaceful presence as intimidation, compassion itself stands accused. The analysis of abortion buffer zones reveals a society increasingly unable to distinguish coercion from witness, or conscience from threat.⁷ This is not merely a legal failure, but a spiritual one: a refusal to open the ground of moral reasoning.

Universities, too, are shown struggling under this same logic. Once dedicated to the formation of judgment, they now increasingly enforce ideological conformity through administrative discipline. Truth is no longer tested but managed.⁸ Gaudete joy does not soften this diagnosis; it sharpens it, because the nearness of Christ exposes the distance we have travelled from reason.

Dear readers, this edition of Nuntiatoria is offered as a work of Advent truthfulness. It neither denies the barrenness of our moment nor despairs of renewal. It refuses the illusion that salvation can be engineered from below—whether through policy, management, or innovation—while insisting that the earth must consent to be opened.

Rorate caeli desuper. Heaven must act.
Aperiatur terra. We must be made ready.

Only then does the Saviour emerge, and only then does justice arise with Him.

Yours in Advent vigilance, Embertide discipline, and Gaudete joy,

Haec est Via.

Text indicating a liturgical schedule for the week beginning April 5th, 2025, including notable feast days and rituals.

✠ Jerome Seleisi
Titular Archbishop of Selsey
Primus of the Old Roman Apostolate


Footnotes

  1. Isaiah 45:8 as used in the Roman Advent liturgy (Rorate caeli).
  2. Gaudete Sunday: joy at the nearness of the Lord in the Roman Rite.
  3. Advent Embertide: fasting, prophecy, and the discipline of waiting.
  4. Whither the Mass of Vatican II?
  5. The Schneider contradiction: Kazakhstan, liturgical relativism, and the unresolved fracture in modern Catholicism
  6. Fabricated quotations, selective authority, and the creep of modernism: a procedural, jurisprudential, and cultural analysis of Peggie v NHS Fife.
  7. The criminalisation of compassion: silent prayer, free speech, and the new UK abortion buffer zones
  8. Royal Holloway in the dock: campus discipline, free speech, and the new boundaries of political identity.

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