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Boys Will Be Altar Boys
Parishes With All-Male Altar Service Corps Tout the Benefits
BY Joseph Pronechen
January 25-31, 2009 Issue |
Posted 1/16/09 at 8:04 AM
The altar servers at Holy Family Catholic Church in
St. Louis Park, Minn., are a sight to behold. In their white surplices and
black cassocks — red for special feasts like Christmas and Pentecost — six
carry candles, while others process in with the cross, Sacramentary and incense
thurible and boat. Between 12 and 20 altar servers assist at every Mass, every
Sunday. On special feasts, the head count jumps to more than 30.
And
the most astonishing facet of the scene: All of the altar servers are boys.
It’s
a sight that must put a smile on the heavenly face of St. John Bosco
(1815-1888), the great priest-mentor who promoted the banding together of boys
in religious activities. The Church celebrates his feast on Jan. 25.
Holy
Family Church is one of a number of parishes that, after deciding to go with an
all-boy corps of altar servers, have seen a notable increase in the number of
boys participating in the life of the parish.
At
Holy Family, the decision was made 10 years ago, when only a few boys were
servers. The surge was on immediately. Today, more than 60 boys stand at the
ready.
“What’s
happened is: The younger boys can’t wait to get on the altar,” says parishioner
Bob Spinharney. “And the older boys, to their great credit, stay on even beyond
high school age. So the younger boys always have role models to look up to.”
Spinharney
and fellow parishioner Mark Rode got the approval of their pastor, Father
Thomas Dufner, for the altar boy program. Then they built key elements, like a
hierarchy of services and names for each position.
Starting
at age 10 as “leads” (beginners who observe from the altar), boys can stay as
servers into their early 20s. Along the way, they progress to “torchbearer,”
holding one of six candles for processing and during the Gospel reading and
consecration; “mains,” serving the priest and ringing bells; “cross” and “book”
with Sacramentary duties; and “thurifer” and “boat,” assisting with the incense
during consecration. At each Mass, an older boy is designated “master of
ceremonies” to lead and supervise the “troops.”
What
drove the two men to suggest the experiment a decade ago? Two observations.
One:
“When boys and girls are mixed on the altar, the boys tend to be less
participative. They defer to the girls,” explains Spinharney. And two: “Many
priestly vocations come from the altar. We’re trying to drive new vocations.”
Father
Dufner expounds on those points. “Girls tend to be more reliable and get jobs
done more effectively,” he says, “so the boys tend to drop out.” At the same
time, he notices that boys are excited about being part of an all-male group
that is hierarchical and advancement-oriented.
“And,
clearly, reverent worship of God the Father through Jesus Christ in the liturgy
is a calling card for vocations,” adds Father Dufner. In fact, one of the two
current seminarians from this parish — from which four men have been ordained
in the last 10 years — was an altar server. Both seminarians come back often to
help the youngsters on Sundays, as do server alumni like Spinharney’s
college-age son Jordan. The alumni become mentors.
“Boys
7 and 8 are glued to the Mass, watching their friends and brothers,” says Rode.
“They can’t wait.”
According
to Spinharney, no parent has complained about the absence of female altar
servers. Instead of a dramatic immediate shift, the girls were allowed to phase
out by age and were reminded of the many other services they could provide.
“The
last two girls became some of our finest lectors,” points out Father
Dufner.
Altar Apprenticeship
St.
Michael Parish in Annandale, Va., also has an all-male server corps. Father
Jerry Pokorsky, the pastor, says that when altar girls were permitted, they
became the norm. The boys stopped volunteering.
“Lay
readers and extraordinary ministers serve the people,” he says. “The altar boy
serves the priest. He’s the hands of the priest. He would be an apprentice,
either in a real or symbolic way, for the priesthood.”
When
parents ask why their daughters can’t become altar servers, “they may not
agree, but they do understand,” Father Pokorsky says.
With
help from the parish’s Immaculate Heart of Mary Sisters, this new pastor is
working on a Helpers of Mary ministry for girls to visit nursing homes.
When
discussing the question of female altar servers, “It is important not to [use]
political categories such as rights, equality, discrimination, etc., which only
serve to fog the issue,” wrote Legionary Father Edward McNamara, professor of
liturgy at the Pontifical Athenaeum Regina Apostolorum, on the Zenit news
service website. “We are dealing with the privilege of serving in an act of
worship to which nobody has any inherent rights.
“The
question should be framed as to what is best for the good of souls in each
diocese and parish. It is thus an eminently pastoral and not an administrative
decision, and this is why it should be determined at the local level.”
The
Church opened the altar service position to girls in 1994 in a letter from the
Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments. “The Holy See’s
recommendation is to retain as far as possible the custom of having only boys
as servers,” explains Father McNamara. “But it leaves to the bishop the choice
of permitting women and girls for a good reason and to the pastor of each
parish the decision as to whether to act on the bishop’s permission.”
Positive Peer Pressure
At
Holy Family, Jean Prather sees nothing but positive effects in her son and
daughters from the all-boy altar-service policy. Nick is 16 and has risen
through the ranks. Oldest daughter, Emily, also in high school, has been a
lector since fourth grade.
“They
both have their place to contribute in the Mass. Emily wanted to do that after
she saw an older teenage girl lector. It really is a positive peer pressure
thing.”
“I
always like to tell Nick what a special job he has to be so close to Jesus and
serve him,” continues Prather. “He has learned such reverence. He really
listens and brings things up that Father talks about in his homilies.”
Prather,
too, believes participating in the liturgy can open boys’ hearts to hearing a
call to a priestly or religious vocation.
But
she stresses what the change has done for the parish as well as the servers in
lifting people’s hearts to God. The surplices, cassocks and reverential pageantry
are “what King Jesus deserves,” she says. “The reverence and beauty and example
brings people into the reverence and glory of the Mass by having these altar
boys not only as servers but as examples.”
As
young as they are, says Rode, they understand there’s something really special
going on at the altar: “We truly have the Real Presence.”
Staff writer Joseph Pronechen is based in Trumbull,
Connecticut.
Father Edward McNamara, professor of liturgy at the
Pontifical Athenaeum Regina Apostolorum, was asked about the Church’s position
on female altar servers. The following is excerpted from his response.
A 1994 letter from the Congregation for Divine
Worship and the Sacraments [clarified] that girls may serve at the altar. But
bishops are not bound to permit them to do so, nor could the episcopal
conference limit the bishop’s faculty to decide for himself.
The letter states: “It will always be very
appropriate to follow the noble tradition of having boys serve at the altar. As
is well known, this has led to a reassuring development of priestly vocations.
Thus the obligation to support such groups of altar boys will always continue.”
The letter also recommends to bishops to consider
“among other things, the sensibilities of the faithful, the reasons which would
motivate such permission and the different liturgical settings and
congregations which gather for the holy Mass.”
Among the pastoral factors to be weighed is the
obvious yet often forgotten fact that boys and girls are different and require
different motivational and formative methods.
Preteen boys … tend to reject sharing activities
with girls. They also tend to have a greater need for such structured
activities than girls, who are usually more mature and responsible at this
stage of life.
It is also true that groups of boy servers have
fostered vocations to the priesthood. But to be fair, this usually happens
within a broader culture of openness to a vocation in which other elements come
into play, such as the example and spiritual guidance given by good priests
and family support.
It is very
difficult to lay down precise rules in a matter like this since the situation
may vary widely between parishes.
Zenit
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