Thursday, 26 February 2009

Making a "Hash" of Wednesday


Yesterday, Ash Wednesday, after the 9.30 Mass I took Holy Communion to my regular group of housebound parishioners. As I was about to begin the prayers with one elderly lady her home-help came in and, in a loud whisper, said, "Do you want your corn beef hash today?"
It reminded me of a story told by my housekeeper of how she had met a lady, in the supermarket I think, who told her that her family had always kept "Ash Wednesday" and always ate "Ash" for lunch. Some Yorkshire people still drop their "aitches" - for "Ash" read "Hash".
Later that day at the primary school, I asked the children what a hypocrite is (we had the reading from the church Lectionary). They did not know. I then asked them what Jesus meant by their "secret room" and I asked them what their secret place was. One little boy said, "the dining room". I told the teachers to keep an eye on him! Another boy volunteered that he always hid in the closet (from what, we ask!). Eventually I got "mind" and then, "heart". I applauded, but no one joined in.
Ah well, another Lent begins.

Thursday, 19 February 2009

The Extraordinary Rite and Me (and Fr. Finnegan)


When I was in Bradford (at the magnificent - and now defunct - St. Mary's), I was approached by the Diocesan rep. of the Latin Mass Society to consider learning the Old Latin Rite. There were not enough priests able or available to celebrate it, and the bishop had given his permission for a search of likely volunteers.
To begin with I was not really interested, but I said "yes" because it seemed the thing to do. I have an idea that a Catholic priest is supposed to be a servant, and if a request seems reasonable I will consider doing what I can to help. My Latin was almost "gone". I had studied Latin (half-hearted, I must admit) but hardly used it. I say this although when I was at Harrogate we had a monthly full-blown Latin Mass (Ordinary Rite), and I took my turn and enjoyed it immensely.
I kept putting off learning the Tridentine Rite, but when Summorum Pontificum was published I began to think again, and it was when I was watching a televised Latin Mass (Extraordinary Rite) on EWTN that I decided I must do something about it. I contacted the priest designated as an instructor. He was watching the same programme.
Since learning the Old Rite, and celebrating the Mass of the 1962 Missal, I have learnt more about myself and about the Mass. This may seem strange to some since I have been a priest for 33 years, but there is always something else to learn - always another step to take. I can't remember the exact quote from Newman about change and growth, and if I attempt it I will get it wrong, but I have always believed that we must progress, spiritually and intellectually, in this life, and that sometimes in order to go "forward" we need to retrace our steps. I'm sure historians will agree.
I have been celebrating the Extraordinary Rite for some time (but not quite a year). I have found it both challenging and enlightening. It has increased my sense of priesthood, and what I mean by that is my sense of being a servant. It has affected the way I celebrate the Ordinary Rite, and as I say this, I am also conscious of the point made elsewhere that both rites should be informed by each other. There are aspects of the 1962 Rite which need to be "tuned" by reference to the Ordinary Rite, and the Ordinary Rite certainly needs the reverence and silence of the Tridentine Rite.
I have found celebrating the 1962 Rite both difficult and moving, and I am profoundly grateful for the gift of being able to celebrate it. The sacrificial aspect of the Mass is more accessible (at least to the priest) and the biblical roots of the Liturgy are more obvious (though I admit this is purely my experience). However, there are some other points I need to make.
I recently attended a conference on the new English translation of the Ordinary Rite. I am impressed with the new version of the Common of the Mass - very impressed, and I believe it will do much good. It may, in fact, revolutionize the way most of us celebrate the Mass in English. I do not believe - and have never believed - that the answer to our liturgical problems is a complete return to the Tridentine Rite. However, I have come to believe that, in line with the original intention of Pope John XX111 and the original intentions of those who drew up the Vatican 11 Document of the Liturgy, that Latin should have been kept as the normal language of worship, with the vernacular allowed as an alternative at the discretion of Bishops and Parish Priests. The English Liturgy up to this point has been less than satisfactory, and in some cases, its practise has been disastrous. We have lost a great deal because of it. So much came in with it that was not necessary and has been damaging. Let me give an example; the manner of receiving Holy Communion.
This morning I attended an Anglican Eucharist. It was a simple form, with only one hymn, and the priest did not wear a chasuble. He obviously believes in the Real Presence, judging from his reverence and his actions. I was impressed by the prayerfulness of the rite, the priest and the congregation. I was also impressed with the language - much better than the English Roman liturgy. I was also impressed by the reverence with which the congregation received Holy Communion, in both kinds, kneeling. (Why did Catholic liturgists and bishops insist on people standing? The idea that you cannot receive from the chalice on your knees is just false)
Having said all that, I offer my poor opinion on the controversy affecting Fr. Finnegan and his parishioners. First of all, I think it was a mistake on his part to make the main Sunday Mass the celebration of the old Latin Rite. This runs the risk of signalling that it has precedence. We have to avoid doing that if we are going to avoid unnecessary complaints and confusion. Secondly, we need to be patient - both priests and laity - and allow ourselves more time to accept the resurgence of the Tridentine Rite. Thirdly, we must work with our bishops and with our fellow priests and laity. There are already enough factions around - and more may be in the offing. We do not need any more. We should strive to maintain unity in peace, and if this means celebrating the Latin less often than I, as a priest, would like, so be it.
We need time, patience, tolerance and understanding. In my view it is too early to start making the main Sunday Mass a celebration of the 1962 Missal. It is clear that there are many Catholics who still do not understand why the Latin Rites (both of them) are important. Let's take a deep breath and more measured steps.
A final point. The New Latin Missal is brilliant (in my opinion). If too much emphasis is being put on the 1962 Missal, it is likely that the riches of the New Latin Missal will be missed, if not entirely lost. We surely need to celebrate the Ordinary Rite in Latin now and again otherwise this will hardly be used outside Rome. To me this would be a serious error. We need to take a wider view of what is going on and avoid taking opposing sides. I would hate to be in Fr. Finnegan's position at this time, but if I was, I would retrace my steps, take a deep breath, and try again (with respect).

Sunday, 15 February 2009

Renewal of Marriage Promises



Today we had a form of renewal of Marriage Promises after the Homily at the 10.00 am Mass.

I began the Mass by reminding the congregation that we were going to do this, and since no one made for the door...



We had some resources sent through the Diocese but the forms of renewal were either too sickly sweet or "boring". I found an excellent page on the WWW from a Spanish priest. It included a fairly good homily, the Renewal of Baptismal Promises (instead of the Creed) and a simple form of Marriage Renewal taken from the Marriage Rite. I had quite a few coming deliberately to the 10.00 Mass for this (I announced it last week). It was wonderful to see so many standing together, hands joined, smiling faces, saying "I do". A great witness in these days when so many - Catholics included - are choosing to live without the Sacraments.



The picture above is not from my parish. The couple are Greek Orthodox/Catholic who were married during a TLIG Pilgrimage on the Island of Patmos. The wedding was Greek Orthodox. It was a wonderful celebration with a packed church of Christians of different denominations. On one wall there was a magnificent fresco/icon of the Marriage Feast at Cana.



Wednesday, 4 February 2009

SSPX and Vatican 11


The Catholic News Agency (CNA) has a report that the Vatican Secretariat of State has made a public statement which includes the insistence that the Levebvrists must accept Vatican 11 ("Full recognition"). This is what I suspected would happen. The euphoria over the lifting of the excommunications was premature; the key to full reconciliation is the acceptance of the Second Vatican Council. The statement was published by Osservatore Romano and includes this clarification:

"The lifting of the excommunication has freed the four bishops from a very grave canonical penalty, but has not changed the juridical status of the Society of St. Puis X, which currently does not enjoy any canonical recognition in the Catholic Church. In addition, the four bishops, while they are no longer excommunicated, do not have a canonical role in the Church and do not licitly exercise a ministry in her"

Pope Benedict has opened the door to full reconciliation. The Society of Pius X should now respond with equal generosity for the sake of unity. However, entrenched positions are no so easily relinquished.

One of the things I note in these last few weeks is how generously the Traditional Anglicans have expressed their acceptance of the Catholic Catechism and their willingness to move towards full unity with Rome whilst the Lefebvrists have actually expressed nothing except acceptance of the lifting of excommunication. This is not enough. They must now take the initiative and move towards the Holy See. At the moment it seems they are not ready to do this.

New Web Site for Christian Unity

Click on the icon of the Sacred Heart or on the title, "Christian Unity" on the Blog List on the right, for the new Marionite Web Site for Christian Unity.

Monday, 2 February 2009

The "Reigning" Icon of The Mother of God


The "Reigning" Icon of The Mother of God is not well-known outside Russian Orthodox circles, yet it is of great historical importance. It was found on the same day on which the last Csar, Nicholas 11, abdicated the throne (March 2 1917). When the icon became known Orthodox believers understood that the care of Russia had passed to the Mother of God.


The story of its discovery is like the stories connected with other famous icons. On February 13, 1917, Our Lady appeared to a peasant girl called Eudocia Adrianova and spoke these words: "There is a large, dark icon in the village of Kolomenskoe. It must be taken from there; the people must pray". Later, in a second dream, the girl saw a white church and the figure of a majestic lady inside it. Eudocia decided to search for the church and on March 2, in the village of Kolomenskoe, not far from Moscow, she found the Church of the Ascension. She told the priest about her dream and the icon. They searched the church, but it was only when they went into the basement that they found a large, dark, icon of The Mother of God. The girl recognised the icon.


The icon was hung in the church and quickly came to be reagrded as miraculous. Many copies were made (The photo above is of a copy. The one below is of the original.) and it found its way into many villages, churches, monasteries and even factories throughout the Moscow area.


The Theotokos is represented as the Queen of Heaven and Earth. She is dressed in a green gown and a red mantle. She sits on a throne and carries a sceptre in her right hand, her left hand resting on an orb. On her head is a crown circled by a golden halo. The Infant Jesus sits on her knees, His right hand raised in blessing, His left hand pointing to the orb.


One of the phenomena associated with the icon concerns the red mantle. Although it was obviously dusted and carefully cleaned, no paint was applied to the original icon and yet the mantle became redder after the death of the Csar and his family. In iconography the colour red means passion, love, life and suffering, and is commonly used as a sign of the Resurrection - the triumph over death. The redness of Our Lady's mantle suggests that she has taken on the sufferings of Russia and, because it is an icon, this promises a "resurrection" through the intercession of the Mother of Christ.


It is thought that the icon, painted in the 18th century, was earlier placed in the Ascension Convent of the Kremlin. It was taken from there to Kolomenskoe during the Napoleonic invasion of 1812. After the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, the village church was closed, and the icon, along with other holy objects, was taken to the storage rooms of the State Historical Museum where it remained for seventy years. At the end of the 1980's the icon was quietly removed from the Museum and taken to the publishing house of the Moscow Patriarchate. There it remained for several years in the altar of the house church dedicated to St. Joseph of Volokolamsk.


On July 27, 1990, at the blessing of the newly elected Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia, His Holiness Alexei, Orthodox clergy and faithful of Moscow carried the icon in procession to Kolomenskoe and placed it in the Church of Our Lady of Kazan which was not closed. Since that time, every Sunday, the akathist hymn which had been especially composed in honour of the icon has been read before the miraculous image of The "Reigning" Mother of God.


"There's no Business like Snow Business" (theme song of the wellie factory)

Since it seems the thing to do, I took some photos of the snow here. Heckmondwike in the snow! (or part of it). If you want to know how important Heckmondwike is, visit the parish web site and read what Chesterton wrote about it. These are photos of the Presbytery garden and church grounds.