Pergolesi Stabat Mater on Monday of Holy Week
Pergolesi Stabat Mater on Monday of Holy Week, 14th April 2025
Pergolesi Stabat Mater on Monday of Holy Week, 14th April 2025
On Monday 17 February at 7:30pm the Cathedral's Schola Cantorum will perform a hope-filled concert of choral music at Our Lady of Loretto and St Michael Church, Musselburgh (17 Newbigging, EH21 7AJ).
Proceeds will go towards helping the choir to sing at Scots College Ordinations in Rome in May 2025. Why not come along to lend your support to the Schola Cantorum as it goes out on the road!
Tickets are £10 / £8 concession, available from Eventbrite or on the door: https://tinyurl.com/hopeschola
Rorate Masses at the Cathedral and St. Andrew’s, Ravelston
Our beautiful Rorate Masses begin the first week of Advent. These are candlelit Masses and are the perfect way to prepare spiritually for Christmas.
Rorate Mass (Cathedral)
7:00pm, Thursdays 5th, 12th, 19th December
7:00pm, Monday 23rd December
The Cathedral bookshop will also stay open until 8:00pm on the evenings of the Cathedral Rorate Masses.
Rorate Mass (Ravelston)
6:00pm, Mondays 2nd, 9th, 16th December
Come join us for a night of music for a good cause as Barbara Dickson, along with Nick Holland and Anthony Toner, put on a concert to raise funds for a new roof for the Cathedral. Tickets are also available for some pre-concert canapes at 6pm in Coffee Saints.
Bring along a friend for an evening of good music, socialising and fundraising! Doors open 7:00pm. Tickets £30.
As part of this year's Edinburgh Festival of the Sacred Arts, the Schola Cantorum choir will perform an innovative concert of sacred jazz music in the Cathedral. This uplifting clip from a rehearsal gives a taster of what’s in store.
The performance will feature Scottish jazz legend Richard Michael, and young jazz pianist Ben Shankland, winner of the BBC Scotland Young Jazz Musician of the Year 2023. Music will include Bob Chilcot’s 'A Little Jazz Mass' and Richard Michael’s swinging 'Jubilate Deo' and 'Te Deum'. Save the date for what is sure to be an unforgettable evening! Tickets are available now from Eventbrite or at the door.
Archbishop Cushley will ordain Deacons Peter Shankland and Paul Henderson to the sacred priesthood on the Feast of St Peter and St Paul. The mass will be at 12noon in the Cathedral and will be attended by priests and people from around the Archdiocese.
As both Peter and Paul are former Cathedral parishioners, it would be good for as many of us as possible to attend the ordination to pray for them and to show them our support. Please make every effort to attend.
Join the Schola Cantorum choir for a concert of summer music. The performance will feature Vivaldi's famous Gloria in D, accompanied by a chamber orchestra — a first for the choir! The evening will conclude with a drinks reception in the Octagon. Tickets are £10 (including a glass of prosecco) and are available from Eventbrite or on the door Book at https://bit.ly/CathedralSummerMusic2024
Fr Mark Vickers will talk about his book, God in Number 10: The Personal Faith of the Prime Ministers from Balfour to Blair, in Coffee Saints on Tuesday, 21 May.
Join Friends of the Cathedral to hear about the influence of faith in the lives of those who have occupied the highest political office in the land and on the role of faith in the public sphere.
Fr. Mark Vickers is a priest of the Diocese of Westminster. Having read History at the University of Durham, he worked for a law firm in the City of London. He initially felt called to politics, but God had other plans. Fr. Mark studied for the priesthood in Rome and was ordained in 2003. He has written a number of books on Church history;God in Number 10 was published in 2022. Fr. Mark is currently a parish priest in West London.
Join Friends of St Mary’s Cathedral for a talk by Sir James MacMillan, one of the world’s most successful living composers, and Scotland’s best known Catholic musician.
Sir James MacMillan has managed to bring his deep-rooted Catholic faith, and the overt Catholicism in his music, into the secular realm in a uniquely successful way. As a globally acclaimed composer, and as the pre-eminent Scottish composer of his generation, his concert music is broadcast and performed throughout the world. As a conductor, he travels the globe working with some of classical music’s top ensembles. In 2014 he founded The Cumnock Tryst arts festival in his childhood town, and he was awarded a knighthood for services to music in 2015. In 2021 he was named Patron of Music of our own St Mary’s Catholic Cathedral in Edinburgh.
In his talk, Sir James will explore how chant, as the music of Faith, has influenced the history of music. It’s a rare opportunity to hear insights from one of the world’s most acclaimed classical music composers, and one of the Church’s great musicians.
Join Fr Patrick to meditate on the Passion of Christ as written in the Gospel of St John. This Zoom event takes place at 6:00pm on Palm Sunday (24 March).
This is a good way to start Holy Week in a spirit of reflection and to discover some insights into Christ’s Passion.
Alternatively, if you would like to come along and watch the presentation live in the Parish Rooms at St. Andrew’s, Ravelston, please email cathedralhouse@stmarycathedral.co.uk by Friday, 22 March.
The Old Testament is full of stories of remarkable women, join Friends of the Cathedral on Wednesday, 21st February, 7.30pm in Coffee Saints to hear Prof Stephany Biello talk about their courage.
Please contact ppccathedral@stmaryscathedral.co.uk to let Friends know you would like to come. You can find out more about and join Friends of St Mary's Cathedral at https://www.stmaryscathedral.co.uk/friends.
After his excellent series of talks on the Gospels of Mark, Prof James Edwards will speak to Friends of the Cathedral on the life and death of the German theologian, Ernst Lohmeyer.
Prof Edwards is the author of Between the Swastika and the Sickle: The Life, Disappearance, and Execution of Ernst Lohmeyer. We are delighted to hear him speak about Lohmeyer’s fight against Nazism and Communism.
Friends are asked to RSVP to book their place. There are some tickets available on a first-come-first-served basis to non-members
Please reply by Monday at 5pm to ppccathedral@stmaryscathedral.co.uk
Lohmeyer was a distinguished theologian in the 1930s and 40s in Germany. He spoke out against Nazism and antisemitism and was critical of post-war Communism in East Germany, where he lived and worked.
Lohmeyer was arrested by the Soviet secret police when re-establishing the University of Greifswald in East Germany in 1946. He was executed and anyone who mentioned his name in public in the ensuing years of Communist rule in East Germany would be imprisoned for doing so.
Prof Edwards is the author of Between the Swastika and the Sickle: The Life, Disappearance, and Execution of Ernst Lohmeyer. He has spoken on Lohmeyer in the United States and we are looking forward to hear him tell Friends about Lohmeyer’s moving story of principle and courage that is rooted in his Christian faith.
In order to help all of us to come to know Jesus better through the Gospel, we are delighted that Prof. James Edwards will come from the USA to present a short course on the Gospel of Mark in October.
The “mini course” is taking place each evening of the week 23-27th October in the Cathedral from 7-9pm.
These events are open to all and are a wonderful opportunity to get to know the Scriptures better, and hopefully to get to know Jesus better. Why not book onto an evening's course, or all five!
In order to help all of us to come to know Jesus better through the Gospel, we are delighted that Prof. James Edwards will come from the USA to present a short course on the Gospel of Mark in October.
The “mini course” is taking place each evening of the week 23-27th October in the Cathedral from 7-9pm.
These events are open to all and are a wonderful opportunity to get to know the Scriptures better, and hopefully to get to know Jesus better. Why not book onto an evening's course, or all five!
In order to help all of us to come to know Jesus better through the Gospel, we are delighted that Prof. James Edwards will come from the USA to present a short course on the Gospel of Mark in October.
The “mini course” is taking place each evening of the week 23-27th October in the Cathedral from 7-9pm.
These events are open to all and are a wonderful opportunity to get to know the Scriptures better, and hopefully to get to know Jesus better. Why not book onto an evening's course, or all five!
In order to help all of us to come to know Jesus better through the Gospel, we are delighted that Prof. James Edwards will come from the USA to present a short course on the Gospel of Mark in October.
The “mini course” is taking place each evening of the week 23-27th October in the Cathedral from 7-9pm.
These events are open to all and are a wonderful opportunity to get to know the Scriptures better, and hopefully to get to know Jesus better. Why not book onto an evening's course, or all five!
In order to help all of us to come to know Jesus better through the Gospel, we are delighted that Prof. James Edwards will come from the USA to present a short course on the Gospel of Mark in October.
The “mini course” is taking place each evening of the week 23-27th October in the Cathedral from 7-9pm.
These events are open to all and are a wonderful opportunity to get to know the Scriptures better, and hopefully to get to know Jesus better. Why not book onto an evening's course, or all five!
James Edwards is a native of Colorado Springs, Colorado, where he enjoyed mountaineering and skiing, and was active in Young Life. He is a graduate of Whitworth University (1967), Princeton Theological Seminary (M.Div, 1970), University of Zürich (1971), and Fuller Theological Seminary (Ph.D. 1978). He chaired the department of Religion and Philosophy at Jamestown College (1978-97), and joined the faculty at Whitworth in 1997, where he taught as Bruner-Welch Professor of Theology until 2015. He is currently Bruner-Welch Professor Emeritus of Theology. His sabbatical studies included Tübingen, Germany (1988), Tyndale House, Cambridge, England (2000), the Center of Theological Inquiry, Princeton (2007), and the Geheim Staatsarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz in Berlin-Dahlem, Germany (2016).
Edwards served as Minister of Students at First Presbyterian Church in Colorado Springs (1971-78). He has been a short-term translation consultant for Wycliffe Bible Translators in Colom¬bia, he was a translator with Berlin Fellowship for church visitations to former East Germany, and he has led study tours to Germany, Greece, Turkey, and Israel. He continues to speak in church, university, and conference settings. He has published numerous articles in scholarly and popular journals, and he has authored three New Testament commentaries for Community Bible Study. His published books include Romans (Baker Books, 1992), The Divine Intruder, NavPress, 2000; Wipf & Stock, 2017), The Gospel According to Mark (Pillar Commentary Series, Eerdmans, 2002), Is Jesus the Only Savior? (Eerdmans, 2005 [received Christianity Today’s book of the year award in 2006 for apologetics and evangelism]); and The Hebrew Gospel and the Development of the Synoptic Tradition (Eerdmans, 2009); The Gospel According to Luke (Pillar Series, Eerdmans, 2015); Between the Swastika and the Sickle. The Life, Disppearance, and Execution of Ernst Lohmeyer (Eerdmans, 2019); From Christ to Christianity. How the Jesus Movement Became the Church in Less than a Century (Baker, 2021). He is currently writing a commentary on the Book of Genesis (to be published by Eerdmans).
Jim’s wife Janie is an artist and is active in children’s and women’s ministries. They have two grown children and five grandchildren. In 2003 Jim and his son Mark climbed the Mittellegi Ridge of the Eiger in Switzerland
We are delighted to celebrate the choral music of Paul Mealor, Welsh musician of international acclaim and composer for the Royal Wedding and the Coronation of King Charles IlI.
Join Paul Mealor, one of the world's most performed living composers, and the Schola Cantorum of St Mary's Catholic Cathedral, for a unique performance of Mealor's choral music. During the concert Paul will talk to director of music Michael Ferguson about the sources of inspiration for his music, and the process of composing his acclaimed works.
Tickets are £16 and available from the Fringe Box Office, Eventbrite, and on the door. Friends of the Cathedral are invited to a post-concert drinks reception with Paul Mealor and the Schola Cantorum.
This event is part of the Sacred Arts Festival 2023. Proceeds from the concert are in support of the Festival of the Sacred Arts and the musical life of St Mary's Catholic Cathedral.
The presentation looks at the history of the shroud and its journey across Europe from the 14th Century onwards, as well as earlier sightings that are rarely heard of. This gives us the opportunity to consider how early observers of the shroud would have interpreted the cloth prior to the onset of scientific analysis. Henry will then discuss the scrutiny of the shroud under scientific methods and photography.
Although very extensive analysis exists, especially the infamous ‘carbon test’ of 1988, Henry simplifies the controversy using newly published data from the test. The presentation concludes by considering Henry James Creechanthe probability of whether or not the shroud is that of Jesus Christ.
Tico Seifert will share new insights on how Van Dyck’s famous Portrait of the Lomellini Family came to Scotland. Letters by the Scottish painter and agent Andrew Wilson, who purchased the group portrait on behalf of the Royal Institution, the predecessor of the National Galleries, in 1830, reveal fascinating details of the transaction, including bribes and the shipping arrangements from Genoa to Edinburgh. The talk will finish with a note on a lost Lamentation by Van Dyck, a copy of which is in the octagon of St Mary’s Cathedral.
Tico Seifert is a parishioner here at St Mary’s Cathedral and has been Senior Curator of Northern European Art at the National Galleries of Scotland since 2008. He received his PhD from Freie Universität Berlin, where he taught art history from 2003. Tico has published and lectured widely on German, Dutch and Flemish art from the 1500s to about 1900 and has organised exhibitions on themes ranging from Dürer’s Fame to Vermeer and from Rembrandt to nineteenth-century Norwegian and Swiss landscape paintings.
This event is free for Friends of St Mary’s Cathedral. Friends should email this address to attend the event.
A Sister from the Poor Clares, Italy showing a prayer card of Our Lady of Peking
Many Christians across East Asia live under dictatorial or oppressive regimes which squash their human rights. State-sponsored persecution has led to events such as the destruction of churches, the arbitrary imprisonment without trial of the faithful, and even the killing of Christians. Asia continues to be the continent where religious freedom is violated the most, and in the east the long shadow of communism and militant atheism are still responsible for the repression of millions of believers on spurious charges such as “threatening the good of society”. This talk will explore not only the pressing challenges facing Christians in East Asia, but how the faith continues to flourish despite daily violations of their human rights and religious freedom.
The talk will be given by Dr John Newton, who has worked for 15 years in Aid to the Church in Need (UK)’s Press and Information department, which oversees various areas of the charity’s work including PR, research and parliamentary outreach. Dr Newton is the co-author of the charity’s keynote Persecuted and Forgotten? report on the oppression of Christians. His Religious Freedom Today: The Catholic View which summarises the Church’s teaching on religious liberty was printed by CTS, and The Eastern Catholic Churches: A Short Introduction was published by ACN earlier this year.
This event is free to Friends of St Mary’s Cathedral. Friends should email this address to reserve a seat for this event.
Melanie McDonagh is an Irish journalist working in London. She is a columnist with the Tablet, arts critic of The Evening Standard and contributor to the Telegraph, Times and Spectator.
Melanie will talk about the book she is researching on Catholic converts, from Oscar Wilde to Edinburgh's very own Muriel Spark, to be published by Yale University Press.
The Religious Sisters of Mercy, based at St Andrew's, Ravelston, accompanied the Cathedral pilgrimage to the Holy Land this summer. We are delighted that on Tuesday, 13th September, 7:30pm, in Coffee Saints, Sr Mary Pierre, RSM, Sr Miriam Fidelis, RSM and Sr Anna Marie, RSM will give a talk about the pilgrimage open to the whole parish. To be sure of your place, please RSVP by Sunday, 11th September to cathedralhouse@stmaryscathedral.co.uk or phone the office. The pilgrimage was a wonderful spiritual experience and was blessed with the Sisters’ companionship, knowledge and good humour. Join us for the talk as they take us on a journey back to the Holy Land, with insights, anecdotes, and pictures from the trip. There will be a chance to socialise with the pilgrims afterwards.