| In
support of the victims of terrorism
Liturgical music’s
Big Three — GIA, OCP, and WLP — combined forces to produce a benefit album.
With Faith, Hope, & Love: In Support of the Victims of Terrorism,
already in release, features many well-known liturgical songs. All production
costs and royalties have been donated, meaning that every dollar of the
$16 purchase price will benefit victims served by Catholic charities. The
initial pressing of 5,000 may have sold out, but give the websites of the
publishers a try.
New
norms … but what do they mean?
The Vatican approved
new U.S. norms for receiving communion under both forms. The promulgation
of the new Roman Missal (which itself expands opportunities for receiving
from the cup) means that “This Holy and Living Sacrifice” (USCC 1984) is
rendered obsolete. American bishops approved new norms last year before
sending them to the Vatican for its approval. The new guidelines will address
church teaching on communion under both forms, give directives for sacred
vessels and liturgical roles and outline procedures for distributing communion.
What will actually change from last year? Probably not too much.
Slip
in the back pew and make yourself comfortable
Catholic University
professor D. Paul Sullins’ sociology class studied people arriving
in church: when they came and where they sat. He related, “People who arrive
earlier tend to sit up toward the front, much more than those arriving
later. The stereotype of the person who arrives just in time and slips
into the back has some foundation to it.”
Teaching
tolerance
If you can read Italian,
this may be an interesting volume to acquire: Directory on Popular Piety
and Liturgy, prepared by the Congregation for Divine Worship and the
Sacraments. A press conference earlier this spring introduced the book.
Cardinal Jorge Medina Estevez noted that “just because an expression
of popular piety may seem ‘a bit strange’ in another culture, it does not
mean that it is not an expression of Christian faith.” So even if you do
not understand practices such as home altars, kneeling your way through
a pilgrimage or reenacting Christ’s passion with nails through an actor’s
hands, be generous toward those who express their piety in these ways.
The document also underscores the primacy of the Sunday Eucharist for Catholics.
No devotion, no matter how beloved or traditional, is to replace the centrality
of the celebration of Sunday Mass.
Sermon
of the year … and the winner is …
Like your pastor’s
homilies? Ever wonder how your favorite preacher would stack up against
the best? Encourage him or her to enter the second “Sermon-of-the-Year”
competition and see. Laypeople are also invited to enter the contest, run
by Sunday Sermons, a periodical from Voicings Publications, which
has served preachers since 1970.
According to Rev.
Eugene Zimmers of the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, this
resource contains “a veritable treasury of stories, and gentle humor that
provide immeasurable assistance to preachers’ efforts to inspire their
congregations. The entire 32-year collection might well be the most formidable
and effective body of sermons ever published.” Print, computer disk, and
e-mail formats are available, and the resource is based on the three-year
lectionary cycle shared by many Christian churches.
Editor
James F.
Colaianni, Sr. describes the contest: “[It] represents an effort to
encourage preachers to be ever-mindful of their responsibility to regard
preaching not only as an awesome duty but also as a source of tremendous
joy and personal fulfillment. The serious preacher needs to recognize,
in all humility, the need to draw upon the best available resources for
encouragement support and inspiration.”
For further information
concerning the competition’s guidelines and awards, write Voicings Sermon
Competition, PO Box 3102, Margate, NJ 08402. Telephone 1-800-827-9401.
E-mail sermons@voicings .com. Entries can also be sent via the internet:
www.voicings.com /sermonentries.html.
If
you pave it, will they come?
The first idea was
to solicit tens of millions of dollars, then pave about four square miles
of a dried lake bed on the outskirts of Mexico City. Buses would bring
in pilgrims by the millions for the canonization Mass of Juan Diego.
After a few weeks of media scrutiny, the plan was scrapped. The July 30
liturgy will instead be held in the city at the Basilica of Our Lady of
Guadalupe. Pope John Paul II plans to fly there from the World Youth
event in Toronto.
Early speculation
was that the number of worshipers would surpass the estimated four to five
million who celebrated with the pope at World Youth Day in Manila in 1995.
Apparently, church officials had second thoughts about a run at the record
books. You have to wonder what they’d do with the leftover parking lot
after everybody went home.
Cell
phone problems at Mass? You are not helpless.
“I ensure that the
celebration of the religious service will unfold within the parameters
of prayer,” says Father Francisco Llopis of the Church of the Helpless
in Moraira, Spain. He has overseen the installation of an electronic jamming
system to be sure that cell phone calls do not interrupt the Mass. The
system is turned on just as liturgy begins and then is turned off afterward.
As the first parish in Spain to use such a system, one can certainly not
say they are helpless.
Liturgical
reformer dies
This past February,
Father Godfrey Leo Diekmann, a Benedictine liturgist, died in Collegeville,
Minn. The 93-year-old priest and editor was a leading proponent of the
use of vernacular and the revision of sacramental rites prior to Vatican
II. He was a leader behind the drafting of the council’s
Constitution
on the Sacred Liturgy.
Better
late than never?
Liturgists worldwide
are asking why it took almost two years between the promulgation of the
new Roman Missal and the publication of the actual book. Printing difficulties,
especially with music, caused the holdup. Pope John Paul II received
the first bound copy of the Missale Romanum on March 18 this past
Lent. Now the work begins to translate the Latin original into vernacular
languages, a process that is likely to take several years as bishops’ conferences
around the world tackle the task.
The new Roman Missal
features few dramatic changes over the 1975 edition. Nineteen feasts have
been added, some new and some returnees from the pre-conciliar liturgical
calendar. One returning votive celebration is a “Mass for Sinners.”
A
little translation lubrication
Apparently not trusting
the competency of English-speaking bishops to develop their vernacular
of the newest Roman Missal, the Congregation for Sacraments and Divine
Worship will reportedly set up a special body to monitor the Latin-to-English
translation process. ICEL will likely do the detail work with the Latin
originals, and then the new committee, Vox Clara (“clear voice”) will collect
additional input before forwarding the work to the CDWS. A similar process,
though not without controversy, helped move the English-language lectionary
through a final stage before it was accepted by the CDWS in 1997.
More than one official
English translation may see the light of day. According to Cardinal
Jorge Medina Estevez of the CDWS, the Vatican may be ready to accept
a separate translation of the Roman Missal if an English-speaking country
wished to submit its own work. Among Spanish-speaking Catholics, there
are five separate translations of the 1975 missal available at present.
ML
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