For your brick by brick file…
I have written about Madison’s bishop, Most Rev. Robert Morlino before (for example here and here).
Pro-abortion activists, aging-hippie liturgy types, and proponents of wymynprysts really dislike this guy.
All the more reason to support him in prayer and with notes of encouragement.
Bp. Morlino is taking fire in the press for his decision to staff more parishes with priests from a traditional institute of men called the Society of Jesus Christ the Priest (based in Spain and not to be confused with the Institute of Christ the King).
This group roused the ire of some liberals in one parish when they properly phased out service at the altar by altar girls and by recuperating the use of – wait for it – LATIN in our Latin Rite worship.
They are accused of [CLICHE WARNING] trying to turn back the clock.
There is an article on Bp. Morlino’s latest efforts to staff parishes … would the alternative be to close them? ... with members of the Society of Jesus Christ the Priest in the Wisconsin State Journal:
Bishop Morlino criticized over plan to bring in conservative priestsI am sure things will work out, given time, good will and common sense.
DOUG ERICKSON
Posted: Monday, June 21, 2010
The effort by Madison Bishop Robert Morlino to staff several Catholic churches in the diocese with priests from a conservative Spanish society has met resistance in another community.
About 200 members of St. Mary’s Parish in Platteville met with Morlino at the church Monday night to question his decision to bring in three priests from the Society of Jesus Christ the Priest to lead the church. [I would like to know the mean age of the people who came.]
A diocesan official and parishioners who attended the 90-minute meeting described it as largely civil but occasionally heated, with Morlino apologizing toward the end for having raised his voice earlier in the meeting.
“It was a tough evening for everyone,” said diocesan spokesman Brent King.
The society, based in Murcia, Spain, is known for a staunch, traditional approach to Catholic practice. There are now eight society priests at seven parishes in the diocese.
At other churches where they serve, the priests have prohibited girls from being altar servers, dispensed with the common Catholic practice of using trained lay people to assist with Communion and added Masses celebrated only in Latin. [To be clear: male service is the norm, Extraordinary Ministers of Communion should not be used unless there is real need, and Latin is the language of the Church’s worship.]
Morlino invited members of the society to begin serving in the diocese in 2006, primarily in the Sauk City area. Some parishioners praise the priests for deepening their faith and bringing discipline to wayward Catholics; others have left the church, saying the priests’ approach is regressive and too rigid. [bzzzz]
“To me, it seems like a step backward,” said Fay Stone, a St. Mary’s member. The priests’ approach is “quite different than we have become accustomed to,” she said. [When the earthquake hit the Church in the ‘60’s and ‘70’s people weren’t used to the changes then either. But no one cared about the people who didn’t like the changes back then.]
The parish has about 700 families.
Monsignor James Bartylla, the diocese’s second in command, [probably means Vicar General] said in an interview Monday the priests are a good fit for Platteville because their gifts align with aspects of the parish.
Priests from the society are known as good school administrators, Bartylla said, and St. Mary’s has a K-8 parochial school. The society has a special mission to encourage young men to enter the seminary, and the priests will lead St. Augustine University Parish, the campus ministry at UW-Platteville, in addition to St. Mary’s.
“It’s a great blessing in this time of a priest shortage to have these priests here,” Bartylla said. [Or… the diocese could just start closing places. Would the people want that too? Or do they simply want a Church which conforms to them?]
[...]
Some parishioners say the timing is bad. The congregation is in the midst of a capital campaign to buy the building it currently rents for its parochial school. The school also is in the process of hiring a new principal.
“With the more conservative priests arriving and a change in the principal, there’s just some unease with the amount of change at one time,” member Lee Eggers said.
Some parishioners also are miffed that the new principal may end up being the father of a society priest. [That’s interesting.] A parish search committee wasn’t aware of that possibility and had verbally offered the position to someone else.
[Read more about that issue on the linked website… let’s stick to the liturgical issues here.]
[...]
Member Barb LeGrand said she went into the meeting very worried that trained lay people such as herself would no longer be allowed to offer Communion to the homebound, a ministry the church has offered for 20 years. [It is not a right.]
After the meeting, LeGrand said she was feeling slightly upbeat because Pascual had agreed to meet with her and others about the ministry’s future. “He seems like a very nice man,” she said of Pascual, whom she met for the first time Monday.
King said he does not anticipate the bishop will change his mind on the new priest appointments. The message from the bishop to parishioners was to get to know the priests and give them a chance to explain why they make the decisions they do, King said.
“It’s our hope that, given the opportunity, the parishioners will grow to love the priests and the priests will love the congregation,” King said.
More kudos for Bp. Morlino!
3 comments:
Badger Catholic, r u holding back? Don't you remember Mass at St. Norbert's?
http://www.saint-norbert.org/
You might find this interesting.....especially the comments.
http://blog.beliefnet.com/deaconsbench/2009/09/Society-of-Jesus-Christ-the-Priest-divine-or-divisive.html
YEeeeees, I should note that the Bad(ger)Catholic has heard Mass from these priests. And that we will be again this August.
It was a weekday Low Mass so not too much to report, although St. Norberts was very peaceful, a country setting with a few large families there early(was it 6:30?)
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