- Rerum Deus Tenax Vigor
"Rerum
Deus Tenax Vigor" is the daily hymn for None in theRoman Catholic Breviary . It comprises (like the hymns forTerce andSext ) only two stanzas ofiambic dimeters together with adoxology , varying according to the feast or season. As in the hymns for Prime,Sext andCompline . The theme is found in the steady march of the sun, that defines the periods of the day (and provided the basis of Roman and monastic chronology): :"Rerum, Deus, tenax vigor":"Immotus in te permanens",:"Lucis diurnæ tempora" :"Successibus determinans" '. which translates (not literally, nor strictly by verse)::'O God, whose power unmoved the whole of Nature's vastness doth control,Who mark'st the day-hours as they run by steady marches of the sun'.The moral application is, as usual, made in the following stanza: :"Largire lumen vespere" 'O grant that in life's eventide':"Quo vita nusquam decidat", etc. 'Thy light may e'er with us abide', etc.
The authorship of the hymns for Terce, Sext and None is now ascribed only very doubtfully to
St. Ambrose . They are not given to the saint by the Benedictine editors (seeAmbrosian Hymnography ), but are placed byLuigi Biraghi amongst his "inni sinceri", since they are found in all the MSS. of the churches of Milan. Daniel (I, 23: IV, 13, 17) thinks that much longer hymns for the hours were replaced by the present ones. Pimont disagrees arguing that the saint may well have composed two sets of hymns for the hours. However, the researches of Blume (1908) show that the primitive Benedictine cycle of hymns, as attested by the Rules ofCæsarius andAurelian of Arles , did not include these hymns, but assigned for Terce, Sext and None (forEastertide ) the hymns: "Jam surgit hora tertia", "Jam sexta sensim volvitur", "Ter hora trina volvitur"; the earliest MSS. of the cycle give for these hours, for the remainder of the year, the hymns: "Certum tenentes ordinem", "Dicamus laudes Domino", "Perfectum trinum numerum"; while other MSS. give as variants for Lent: "Dei fide qua vivimus", "Meridie orandum est", "Sic ter quaternis trahitur". This Benedictine cycle was replaced throughout Western Christendom by a later one, as shown by Irish and English MSS. which give the present hymns for the little hours.ource
*CathEncy|wstitle=Rerum Deus Tenax Vigor
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