Archbishop Prendergast Celebrates the Traditional Latin Mass

Ottawa Archbishop Terrence Prendergast celebrated Holy Mass in the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite in Dublin in conjunction with the 2012 International Eucharistic Congress that has been going on all week in Ireland.

As I never get tired of saying, we are extraordinarily blessed to have Archbishop Prendergast as our local bishop here.  A bishop is a sign of unity for his diocese; the bishop is the father of everyone.  He fills this role, abounding in God's grace.  I have seen him in settings where worship is done by a youth band playing rock music… in settings where people began singing in tongues… in settings where Aboriginal Catholics beat their drums.  When we were received into the Catholic Church, he made an effort to learn our Anglican Use liturgy, including the gestures and silent prayers.  I jokingly asked him, "Did you have to train so you could manage all those genuflections?"

He told me there are more when he celebrates the Traditional Latin Mass at St. Clement's, one of his parishes.

Over at his blog, he has posted some splendid pictures and his homily.  In it he explains the relationship between the two forms of the Mass.  I personally hope we in the Ordinariates will have as gracious a view of both forms as Archbishop Prendergast.  Here are excerpts of his post, including parts of his homily:

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Several weeks before the International Eucharistic Congress (ICE), I received a letter from the CEO of the ICE, Father Kevin Doran, inviting me in Archbishop Diarmuid Martin's name to preside at a Mass in the Extraordinary Form at St. Kevin's Church, Harrington Street, Dublin.

Father Gerard Deighan, Administrator of St. Kevin's and Chaplain to the those attending the Latin Mass, facilitated arrangements: I was to bring the miters and gloves, etc. and he would arrange for ministers (deacon and subdeacon), an MC who could guide us all in a Pontifical Mass on the Feast of the Apostle St. Barnabas (hence the red vestments) and well-trained servers.

The choir of the Parish sang beautifully and the church itself is very fitting for the Mass in the Extraordinary Form; somewhere around 400+/- were in attendance, and a friendly reception took place in the parish fall after the liturgy. The photographer, John Yung, who was very busy later returning home to Singapore from medical school studies, has just sent me a selection of photos he took, which are interspersed with the text of my homily that day.

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The Feast of St. Barnabas, Apostle–June 11, 2012

Mass in the Extraordinary Form—during the 50th IEC
St. Kevin’s Church, Dublin, Ireland

 

“THE EUCHARIST: COMMUNION WITH CHRIST
AND WITH ONE ANOTHER”
[Texts: Acts 11.21–26; 13.1–3; Psalm 18, 5, 2; Matthew 10.16–22]

-snip-

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Surely, Barnabas and Paul were agents of change. However, Luke goes to great pains to show that Peter introduced the Gentiles into the Church. In addition, Luke reminds us that James, who represented tradition, agreed with this new focus of evangelisation. In other words, the Holy Spirit was guiding the process of change within continuity, and that it was Peter who kept the Church together, even if at times he vacillated.

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This is an important point as we gather to celebrate the Mass in its Extraordinary Form during an International Eucharistic Congress when most of our fellow Catholics—and we ourselves—will celebrate in the Ordinary Form.

For, sometimes many in the Church make the mistake of thinking that the Roman Rite has two different Masses, and it’s a matter of taste, which one a person prefers. But the beautiful, profound truth is that we have only one, holy sacrifice of the Mass in two usages: the ordinary and extraordinary forms. This is perhaps one of the best examples of that most Catholic expression of “both/and” and not “either/or.”

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It can be a challenge, though, to explain to people who know little of the Church’s history, how we embrace as Catholic, valid, holy and beautiful, these two different forms of the Eucharist. The differences most often grab our attention. We can overlook the shared, fundamental basis of the sacrament of the Eucharist. Sadly, for some, a particular devotion to one form can result in a reluctance to appreciate the truth, goodness and beauty of the other. Tragically, the preferred form of celebrating the sacrament of the Most Holy Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ can divide Catholics. In our human weakness, we can become competing camps rather than a united Mystical Body of Christ.

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In his Apostolic Letter Summorum pontificum, Pope Benedict XVI, eloquently reminded us of the heritage of the Roman Rite for Latin Catholics. He praised Pope Pius V who, “sustained by great pastoral zeal and following the exhortations of the Council of Trent, renewed the entire liturgy of the Church.”

The Holy Father reminds us that throughout her history, the Church’s liturgy has undergone change and clarification. There are still Catholics alive today, for example, who can remember a time before 1952 when the Easter Vigil was celebrated at noon on Holy Saturday! Every Catholic can agree on the real pastoral need to present the Church’s faith with clarity, dignity and beauty, in harmony with the faith of our ancestors.

Both usages of the Roman Rite, when celebrated with attention, devotion, and full and conscious participation, are beautiful, dignified, and moving expressions of our Catholic Christian faith. The Holy Father expressed the hope that each form might have a positive influence on the other. There is a lot of speculation about what that might mean. What it does not mean is that we blend the forms together. We must celebrate each form according to its proper Rite. Instead, perhaps, we might see each one’s strengths enhancing the other.

From the Ordinary Form, for example, we might hope to see a more robust presentation of the texts of Sacred Scripture. We can include new saints whom the Church has declared since 1962, who themselves celebrated or attended the Mass of what we know today as the Extraordinary Form. St. Padre Pio, St. Maximilian Kolbe, and St. André Bessette—whose faith led to the building of St. Joseph’s Oratory in my home town of Montreal—immediately come to mind.

From the Extraordinary Form, we might hope to see the influence of a careful attention to the words and gestures. We also hope to see the sober, careful dignity so characteristic of the Roman Rite.

We are blessed in our Catholic faith to have two usages of the Roman Rite to nourish and sustain us in our Christian faith. As we lift our hearts and minds in worship, adoration, and praise of the Lord our God, we are conscious of our rich liturgical heritage. We take humble pride in expressing, with the same intent, the faith of those who have gone before us.

In the Ordinary and Extraordinary Forms of the Eucharist, we are united in the Mystical Body of Christ under Jesus, our One High Priest. And, in keeping with the theme of this 50th International Eucharistic Congress, we are called in all our celebrations of the Eucharist to discover Communion with Christ and with One Another.

All of the apostles, except St. John, gave their lives as martyrs. So did Barnabas, who, according to tradition, founded the Cypriot Church and died as a martyr at Salamis in the year 61. The gospel in our day, in promising persecutions, may be bracing us for future conflicts. The Church’s message runs counter current to our radically secularizing culture.

Take courage, then, brothers and sisters, in Our Lord’s pledge to strengthen us with the gift of the Holy Spirit. We are called to witness and persevere to the end. Let us be perseverant encouragers, like Barnabas. Take this as an added encouragement to find communion with all our brothers and sisters.

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Msgr. Steenson Visits Toronto and Ottawa

Msgr. Jeffrey Steenson visited Toronto yesterday, meeting with Cardinal Thomas Collins who has been the episcopal delegate for Anglicanorum coetibus in Canada.  Last night, he arrived in Ottawa.  Our former Anglican Catholic Church of Canada (ACCC) bishop Carl Reid picked him up at the train and brought him to Notre Dame Cathedral Basilica where the Diocesan Feast Mass had just been celebrated.  At the end of the Mass, a thunderstorm rolled in and brought a heavy downpour, forcing the closing of the cathedral's front doors and some windows.

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Carl Reid and Msgr. Steenson were downstairs at the reception where I caught up with them.  Interestingly, Fr. John Lowe of the Companions of the Cross, shown to the left, studied under Msgr. Steenson at the seminary in Houston and he's heading back to Houston soon to serve in the Companions' parish there.  Archbishop Terrence Prendergast is on the right.

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I found Msgr. Steenson warm, engaging, and charming.  He also has an easy laugh.  He apparently got on really well with Carl Reid and made a good connection with the archbishop as well.  Then, Christopher Mahon, of the musical Mahon family that is one of the anchors of the Toronto Ordinariate group, happened by, saw the cathedral was open and came in.  Thus he got a chance to meet the Ordinary as well and bring him up to date on what's going on in Toronto.

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We got a chance to hang out a bit afterwards and had a wide-ranging but light social conversation.  There is no news to report, except that the visit is a sign that steps are underway to create a Canadian Deanery of St. John the Baptist as part of the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter.  Today I know he had several more meetings and I think he flew out late this afternoon.

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Some Thoughts on Ascension Day

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Archbishop Terrence Prendergast came to our little Sodality of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary today to celebrate Mass for Ascension Day.

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It was such a joyous occasion for us and such a gesture of kindness and generosity from him.  How welcome he makes us feel and goes out of his way to make us feel.

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If we are Catholic now, it is because of his fatherly graciousness towards us, his solidarity with us when we were suffering and uncertain, his gift to us of Fr. Francis Donnelly to accompany us on our catechesis and look after us now as we wait in hope that our own former clergy will be accepted for ordination.  Archbishop Prendergast showed us a face of a true shepherd and spiritual father in the Catholic Church that made it easier to trust that She is the Church of Christ.

While we have been staying to positive stories here on The Anglo-Catholic in hopes that we don't do anything to undermine the Ordinariates, I  know there are people out there who are still suffering in uncertainty or facing impediments to their dreams for unity or who have abandoned hope altogether because the price seemed unreasonably high or it seems the one exacting the price perhaps did so in a heavy-handed way that discouraged rather than encouraged.

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The Generosity of Archbishop Prendergast

Some of you may have seen a few of the glorious pictures or listened to the audio of the wonderful welcome Ottawa Archbishop Terrence Prendergast gave us Anglicans here on April 15.  But the generosity has continued, first and foremost with the priest he has loaned to us, Fr. Francis Donnelly, who is a canon lawyer of all things — but I must say it was really helpful to have the combination of expertise in someone who could never be dubbed legalistic and who at the same time is deeply faithful when a number of us had to get marriage irregularities or questions about baptism or confirmation straightened out before being received into the Catholic Church.

On Saturday, when a group of us gathered at a restaurant after our first Eucharist with Fr. Francis, Carl Reid, our former bishop, told us how Archbishop Prendergast had accompanied him the previous Friday to the home of a shut-in parishioner and his wife.

When the archbishop was ready to confirm the couple and give them Holy Communion, he stood in their living room in a cope and mitre.  Carl Reid found it very moving that he would go to so much trouble.  To me it represents the splendor of Christ and His love for the least among us, the most humble, the most marginalized — the frail and the ill.

Also on Sunday we heard news that the Archbishop will come celebrate Mass at our humble little parish on Ascension Day, May 17.  Considering that it would take him more than two years to visit every one of his parishes if he visited one a week, it is extraordinary that he is coming to us.  Perhaps it helps that we will celebrate Ascension on the Thursday, while the Catholic Church in Canada has transferred the feast to the following Sunday.

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Love Draws Me to Become Catholic

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Cardinal Marc Ouellet and Deborah Gyapong in Quebec City

When I attended by first plenary of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) six years ago, I confess I found myself rather dismayed.  Of course, most of it was a blur. I did not know anyone.  It's easy to make snap judgments.

The bishops struck me as nice men, but tired, and perhaps a bit battered by political correctness. They seemed to be bending over backwards to be accommodating and inoffensive, especially to women.  I quickly realized the Catholic Church, in Canada anyway, is in as much internal disarray as say the Anglican or the United Churches, save for the Pope and the episcopal hierarchy.  There are liberal and conservative and traditional and charismatic and pr0-life and social justice and you-name-it factions sometimes warring within one fractious family.  That was my first impression.  Since then, the beauty and the love and the gleaming treasure within this family have come into focus.

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The Chicken or Egg Dilemma for the Ordinariates

Which comes first, the chicken or the egg?

Should we see how many people want to be part of an Ordinariate first?  Or should the Holy Father appoint an Ordinary, say for Canada, even if only a small number of people are ready right now to join it, and then allow it to grow?

One of my fears is this: Catholic bishops are used to such a huge scale when it comes to membership that our numbers — those of the TAC in Canada — pale in comparison.  The TAC, which is likely to produce the largest initial group, might equal, in numbers of communicants, a single Catholic parish in a major Canadian city.  Bishops have suppressed Catholic parishes with congregations ten times the size our our cathedral parish in Ottawa!  To their practiced eye, we may not look viable.  So why bother to establish an Ordinariate for a few thousand people?  Archbishop Collins is the shepherd of 1.7 million Catholics in the Toronto diocese.  Boy oh boy, are we small potatoes compared to that!

Yet I believe once we are grafted in to the Catholic Church, we will grow the way Our Lady of the Atonement parish in San Antonio grew from 18 people (including children) to the 500 families it ministers to today.

It's tough living in this time of unknowing, where rumors abound, where one rushes to discern the tea leaves and the entrails of the tiniest scrap of news.  When I look at our own little parish, we have these sudden flare-ups that seem to come out of nowhere and which die down as mysteriously as they arose, kind of like the tempest in a teapot in the Victoria parish that got blown all out of proportion on David Virtue's site.  It's as if we are under constant spiritual attack.

We have people that say they would come to us once the Ordinariate is established.  Almost every week, we have someone dropping by to check us out and deeply touched by what they see of our worship, our fellowship, and our teaching, but for a variety of reasons, they are unable to join us yet.  We are poor.  We don't have great programs for our growing group of Sunday School kids, who didn't quite understand the way Bishop Carl tried to relate the story of Pinnochio's growing nose to the log in one's eye of that week's parable; we have no young people's group.  We can't offer priests much of a livelihood.

I also fear this time of uncertainty and spiritual attack will see people abandon us.  Some may leave because they do not understand where the fear, uncertainty and doubt are coming from.  Thus they can't rise above it and decide to move on to where it is more comfortable or certain.  Others may leave because they now see how important it is to be in communion with the Bishop of Rome.  Many of us want to be in communion with the Holy See before we die and we're not getting any younger.  I have no more objections to becoming Roman Catholic and I could happily be under the Archbishop of Ottawa's spiritual authority.  The new translation of the English liturgy is coming soon.  It's much improved.  We have already seen several people come to our little parish, say from the Evangelical church world or from more liberal strains of Anglicanism, receive the excellent teaching our priests give, and decide to move right away to the Catholic Church– and with our blessing, we might add.

So, why do I stay?  Because I dearly hope the Personal Ordinariates will provide a way not only to preserve but revive everything that was beautiful, good, faithful and true in Anglicanism: our liturgy, including our daily offices, our hymnody, our reverence.  I hope the Ordinariates will become a bridge, not only for Anglicans but for others besides, to enter into the Catholic Church.

I stay because we need to keep a critical mass of Christ-centered, Catholic-minded believers to make the Ordinariates work when they are up-and-running.  I stay because I do not want to see the Holy Father disappointed that no one hung around long enough to avail himself or herself of his most gracious provision for us.

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Ottawa Archbishop Gives "The Anglo-Catholic" a Shout Out

The Archbishop of Ottawa, Terrence Prendergast, keeps a blog that is a daily stop for me.  It's called The Journey of a Bishop and it includes a mixture of homilies, reflections on saints, and lots of pictures and news of events around his bilingual diocese.

I think sometimes that maybe he might have been a journalist had not God called him to be a Jesuit priest.  I am often at the same events and sometimes he's up arranging folks for a photograph while I'm still lolling in my chair.  Sometimes he'll warn that blogging will be light as he's traveling to Rome or something, but then, sure enough, there will be pictures and commentary from Rome, like this post during his recent visit as a member of Vox Clara, when the committee presented the new English translation of the Roman Missal to the Holy Father.  It cracks me up. His youth ministry director, who set the blog up for him, told me he took to it like a duck to water.

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Sometimes I have been known to borrow the odd photo or bit of text from his blog and put it on mine.  Well, imagine my delight when he recently borrowed a little something from the Anglo-Catholic!  He also put up a picture of the Adoration chapel that I had written about here, though when I was there it was darkened, with light coming through the stained glass windows.  Here's an excerpt of what he used from this post about renewal in the Catholic Church and a homily by Cardinal Marc Ouellet, Archbishop of Quebec and Primate of Canada.

“Nobody is left out,” Ouellet said. “We all have a personal vocation to be with Jesus.”

“Some of us are called to be more publicly exposed,” he said, describing Peter as being called to be in front of the flock and to speak out for the flock.

“Others are behind. John is behind. Peter is the symbol of ministry; John is the symbol of love, pure love, the loving response to the love of Jesus.”

(Thanks to Deborah Gyapong for the photo and this blog she posted at www.theanglocatholic.com)

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 Ottawa Archbishop Gives The Anglo Catholic a Shout Out

Except when Mass was being offered upstairs in the cathedral basilica, Eucharistic adoration took place 24/7 in the lower-level Archbishops' Chapel during the Montee Jeunesse: here a group prays silently on Sunday afternoon

Yesterday, Archbishop Prendergast joined Cardinal Ouellet in Quebec City for a news conference on abortion.  This was a courageous move for two reasons.  First, the Cardinal has faced an unprecedented wave of vitriol, even having a popular Quebecois columnist wish he would die of a slow, painful illness for his defense of Catholic teaching on the sanctity of human life, even in cases of rape. The backlash has been so extraordinary that the Quebec National Assembly (that's what the province calls its provincial legislature) passed a unanimous motion last week, in effect calling on the federal government to assert some sort of inalienable right for women to free and accessible abortion.  Canada is the only western nation with absolutely no legal protection for the unborn child until after birth.  So, the good bishop was sticking his head up above the parapet in making that sign of solidarity with his brother bishop.  Second, Prendergast is bishop of Canada's capital city.  He can see the Parliament Buildings from the front door of his cathedral.  Ottawa is also home of the National Parliamentary Press Gallery, known for their feeding frenzies on controversial issues.  He has put himself in their sights.

And abortion is the hot topic these days in Canada.  Earlier this year, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced he would lead, as president this year of the G-8, a maternal child and health care initiative to help save the lives of the 900,000 women who die due to preventable complications of pregnancy or childbirth and the also preventable deaths of millions of children five and under due to malnutrition, malaria or unsafe water.  Opposition parties have insisted abortion be included in the package.  Harper has stood his ground and said no.  At the same time, he has also stood his ground against doing anything to "re-open the abortion debate," which means the legal vacuum, the horrific status quo that sees 100,000 abortions a year in Canada, and between 25,000 and 30,000 in Quebec, with a population between 8-9 million people.

The mainstream media have sometimes acted like shills for the Opposition stance that abortion is a right and somehow what's best for women in poorer countries is that we help them kill their babies before they are born.  The Holy Father, when visiting Africa, spoke of the danger of spiritual toxic waste being dumped there, and I can't think of a better example than this.

So please join me today in praying for this good bishop and for Cardinal Ouellet and for Canada.

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