Posted on 08/10/2006 11:15:52 AM PDT by Pyro7480
'Packed House' Welcomes Latin Mass to Front Royal
By Gretchen R. Crowe
HERALD Staff Writer
(From the Issue of 8/10/06)
The choir loft at St. John the Baptist Church in Front Royal offered the best view of the delicate black and white head coverings, the newly installed Communion rail, and the tall candles on the ornately adorned altar. Each served as a telling sign that the parishs first Latin Mass was no ordinary eucharistic celebration.
A large group of altar boys assisted Father Ed Hathaway, pastor, in celebrating the Mass last Sunday. Attending in choir were Fathers Paul deLadurantaye, director of the Office of Sacred Liturgy; Chris Pollard, parochial vicar; and Jerome Fasano, pastor of St. Andrew the Apostle Church in Clifton. Eager parishioners and curious visitors filled the pews and flooded out the back of the church into the vestibule.
It was a packed house, said Father Hathaway, who said the Latin Mass is an expression of our tradition that fills in a piece of our heritage.
While the Latin Mass was familiar to older parishioners, it was the first introduction for many younger ones. Following the Mass, Ellen Kelly signed a thank you scroll for Arlington Bishop Paul S. Loverde, who expanded the option for the Latin Mass to be celebrated in the diocese in March. The Latin Mass also is celebrated every Sunday at St. Lawrence Church in Alexandria.
Holding son, Peter, 1, Kelly said that she and her husband enjoyed teaching our boys what a truly reverent Mass can be like.
They werent the only ones teaching their children the older traditions of the Church. Bayard and Kimberly Keller filled up the vestibule with their 10 children. The family is moving to Front Royal from Westminster, Md., where they currently attend the Latin Mass in Baltimore.
Its something that weve evolved into, Bayard said, as he continuously adjusted the white veil on top of his 4-year-old daughters head.
Celebrating the Latin Mass is more reverent and pleasing to God, said Therese DeClue, 17. DeClue said she used to attend a Latin Mass with her family in Michigan.
Catherine Jerge, sitting in the front row with daughter Emma on her lap and daughter Jessica by her side, said she used to attend the Latin Mass as a child.
I love it, she said. Its just a good experience.
Lord it is good for us to be here, said Father Fasano, echoing the days Gospel reading of the Transfiguration in his homily. Some of us have waited 37 years to be able to say this. It is good for us to be at this Mass that we love so much. The one language reminds us of the universality of the Church.
Kurt Poterack, director of Christendom Colleges choir and adjunct professor, played the organ and led a schola in the Latin chants, which served as a guide for the congregation that tried its best to keep up with the unfamiliarity of the service.
Regina Hines, a parishioner from Sacred Heart Parish in Winchester, said the two-hour Mass was a lot longer, a lot grander, a lot more solemn than what she was used to. She particularly was touched by the reverence given to the Eucharist through kneeling while receiving Communion.
Its not a Mass that I would want to go to every Sunday, she said, but added that it was valuable to get hold of the old tradition, to reach back into what used to be. She said she might make the 30-minute drive from Winchester once a month.
Not every Sundays Latin Mass will be two hours long, said Father Hathaway. The high sung Mass, which was celebrated last Sunday, will be held on the first Sunday of the month, with a low Latin Mass to be celebrated every other week.
Parishioner Michelle Catellan said she hopes that she and her family will attend the Mass regularly. It really draws your mind and your heart into heaven.
Gretchen R. Crowe can be reached at gcrowe@catholicherald.com.
Fr. Chris Pollard distributes communion during the first Latin Mass celebrated at St. John the Baptist Church in Front Royal. (ACH Photo by Gretchen R. Crowe)
Catholic ping!
Ping!
Maybe I'll start bugging my pastor, "The other kids have one, how come we can't have one?"
It's modern and up to date! A sign of unity.
Last weekend we did sing Let All Mortal Flesh Keep Silence for the Offertory hymn. Maybe things are stirring under the surface.
It's quite thorougly possible for priests who didn't attend a "traditionalist" seminary, and are not members of a "traditionalist" order to offer the Tridentine Mass.
So beautiful!
(I must resist the temptation to whine and say, "I feel cheated!")
Our bishop turned 75 last month. Praying that his resignation will be accepted and that the Lord will send us someone holy and reverent who will undo decades of "wreckovation" in our diocese.
This a little far for me to travel (living in the countryside, north of Charlottesville, VA an hour or so away) but I had heard about this and was thinking about making the trip once in awhile.
We desperately need to recover a sense of reverence and awe at Mass.
FYI, Front Royal is home to Seton homeschooling, the largest Catholic homeschooling group, with over 10,000 children enrolled.
One thing this reminds me of is too many Latin Masses have become too long. For certain occasions, they are supposed to be longer, but I have noticed that some are very long on a regular basis. It is my understanding that back when, even high Masses didn't take so long. The once-a-month Mass in my diocese is on Saturday night at 7:30, and it usually runs until 9:30. I wouls say at earliest it gets out about 9:10, and on occasion goes has gone to 10:00. (It used to be a dicosean priest, but is now served by the FSSP)
I know I've been cheated. It's the whining that's the sin, instead of praying about it.
Wonderful! May St. John be richly blessed and may vocations spring forth.
My parish in DC has a monthly Solemn High Mass on the second Sunday of the month, except for July and August. The priest who normally offers that Mass, a monsignor who is the pastor at another parish in DC, is infamous for his long homilies. But I haven't heard anyone complain out the length of his homilies or the length of the Mass. They usually go for about an hour and 20 minutes.
And also the home of Christendom College. BTW, I highly recommend the one-volume "best of Triumph magazine" issued by Christendom Press (now being sold through ISI); there are many great articles in it, but the one about Fritz Wilhelmsen, Brent Bozell and the Sons of Thunder doing the first abortion mill invasion, in DC in 1970 (yes, pre-Roe), is worth the price of the book itself.
In that article there is a reference to the Sons wearing red berets. When I finally met Fritz in 1990 at a conference at Steubenville, I asked him whether those berets had anything to do with Carlism, and he said "Of course, I'm an honorary Requete [the Carlist militia], you know."
"Faith and Reason" from Christendom, has the best memorial to Fritz as well. RIP.
ISI handles the orders for Christendom Press books, which doesn't surprise me, given that ISI definitely leans towards the Catholic traditionalist part of the conservative movement.
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