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Relearning a Mass
DVD Workshops Meet Demand for Traditional Latin Mass Training
BY Jeff Ziegler REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
March 1-7, 2009 Issue |
Posted 2/23/09 at 8:04 PM
ELMHURST, Pa. — There is significant
interest among priests and seminarians in how to celebrate the traditional
Latin Mass, judging from the response to several programs designed to teach it.
In 2007, Pope Benedict XVI allowed
nearly universal celebration of the older form of the Mass, popularly known as
the Tridentine Mass or traditional Latin Mass.
When provisions of the Pope’s
letter, Summorum Pontificum,
took effect, Eternal Word Television Network teamed up with the Priestly
Fraternity of St. Peter to televise a Latin Mass. The Fraternity is a Society
of Apostolic Life of Pontifical Right of priests founded in 1988 to offer the
traditional Latin Mass.
Following collaboration on the
televised Mass, “we became convinced of the need for a tool that would help
priests to offer the Mass in the extraordinary form,” Michael Warsaw, the
network’s president and CEO told the Register.
“It was EWTN’s desire to support the
Holy Father’s wish that the Church be able to recover the liturgical and
spiritual richness of the ancient form of the liturgy,” Warsaw said.
Now, the two have jointly produced a
DVD that offers step-by-step instructions on celebrating that form of the Mass.
The DVD is directed toward priests and seminarians.
A newer community based in Chicago
is also offering training, as are various diocesan seminaries.
Fathers Calvin Goodwin and Justin
Nolan, director and assistant director of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter
Priest Training Program, sent a joint e-mail to answer questions from the
Register on the DVD The
Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite: An Instructional Video for Priests and
Seminarians. Fathers Goodwin and Nolan explained that the fraternity
decided to produce the DVD after the response to their training seminars in
Nebraska became “truly overwhelming.”
“It soon became evident that the
most practical and useful tool for a thorough mastery of the extraordinary form
would be an instructional video which they could use for ongoing study and
practice,” they said. “We resolved to produce a video that would meet these
needs, be professionally produced, and provide a most complete and thorough
resource.”
“Numerous chanceries and seminaries
have requested copies of the video for distribution to priests and
seminarians,” they said. The Pontifical North American College’s “original
request for 40 copies soon grew to 100 and then 200 as it became apparent that
the interest on the part of the seminarians was much greater than had at first
been anticipated.”
In Parishes and Seminaries
The traditional Latin Mass was used
in the Church from the 16th century until 1969, when Rome introduced the Paul
VI Mass. Since Pope Benedict’s 2007 letter, it is now called the extraordinary
form of the Mass, and the 1969 Mass is known as the ordinary form. The
Tridentine Mass is also called the Mass of Blessed John XXIII because the last
revision of it took place during his pontificate.
In his introduction to the DVD,
Cardinal Dario Castrillon Hoyos, president of the Pontifical Commission
Ecclesia Dei, says that “the Holy Father wants this form of the Mass to become
a normal one in the parishes.”
“In parishes where there is a stable
group of faithful who adhere to the earlier liturgical tradition,” Pope
Benedict wrote in Summorum
Pontificum, “the pastor should willingly accept their requests to
celebrate the Mass according to the rite of the Roman Missal published in
1962.” Through the DVD and its training seminars, the Priestly Fraternity of
St. Peter is helping to make Pope Benedict’s vision a reality.
The Mass has already become normal
in the Church of St. John Cantius in Chicago. Now, the Canons Regular of St.
John Cantius, a Chicago religious community established by Cardinal Francis
George in 1999, is offering training for priests and seminarians, as well as
separate workshops on the traditional Latin Mass for laity.
The response has been “very good,”
according to Father C. Frank Phillips, the community’s founder and superior. He
told the Register that “some bishops [have] felt comfortable sending their men
to us because we do both the old and the new and could relate to questions,
problems, etc., when the ordinary and extraordinary forms are offered in the
same building.”
Seminaries are also offering courses
and workshops on the traditional Latin Mass. At Kenrick-Glennon Seminary in St.
Louis, all seminarians learn how to offer Mass in the older form. The Latin
Mass is offered at the seminary twice a month. A traditional Latin Mass was
offered at New York’s archdiocesan seminary in November.
And in December, all 150 seminarians
at Mount St. Mary’s Seminary in Maryland attended an on-campus Latin Mass that
included Gregorian chant and polyphony. “It was the first time many of them had
been exposed to the Latin Mass, and I wanted them to see it at its best,” Msgr.
Stephen Rohlfs, the seminary’s rector, told The
Washington Times.
One pastor said his parishioners
have reacted “very favorably” to the traditional Latin Mass, which he
reintroduced into his parish after Bishop Peter Jugis of Charlotte invited a
Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter priest to conduct a training workshop.
“To
have to learn a whole new ritual — and wanting to make sure that it is done
with attention, reverence and devotion — can be daunting and yet so very fulfilling,”
said Father Eric Kowalski of Holy Angels Parish in Mount Airy, N.C. “It hasn’t
been a turning back of the clock, but a rediscovery of a number of elements of
our identity which help give deeper meaning and purpose to our lives as
Catholics.”
Jeff
Ziegler writes from
Ellenboro,
North Carolina.
More Information
FSSPdvd.com
Canons-Regular.org
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