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Quebec Awakes (Minor Seminary Will Follow Eucharistic Congress)
NCR ^ | June 24, 2008 | John Burger

Posted on 06/24/2008 2:01:34 PM PDT by NYer

Reuters

Cardinal Marc Ouellet faced a daunting task when he became archbishop of Quebec, Canada, in 2003.

The province of Quebec, once thoroughly Catholic, with roots in the rich history of French missionaries, had become thoroughly secularized.

The 49th International Eucharistic Congress was held in his city June 15-22, coinciding with the 400th anniversary of Quebec’s founding, with hopes that it would provide a way to rekindle the spark of faith there.

The cardinal, who is also primate of Canada and was once a missionary in Colombia, took advantage of the opportunity. He set out on a program of pastoral renewal centered on the Eucharist. He spoke with Register news editor John Burger in Quebec on June 18, the fourth day of the Congress.

You have some 11,000 pilgrims here from all over the world, listening to talks by cardinals and well-known lay apostles. The event seems to be going well.

Yes, it is going well — the response on site, the participation of the people coming from all over the world. We see the enthusiasm and great receptivity among the people. And they learn something. The liturgy today, for example, the oriental, Byzantine liturgy, was an extraordinary experience for everybody.

I hope there will be a follow-up, and we are thinking to continue to gather the youth and help build the culture of the Eucharist.

It is a fact that there is a rupture in our cultural tradition in Quebec and we need to really catechize anew parents and children, and foster the sense of Sunday rest and Sunday Eucharist. That’s a big need of our society.

This event, with the long preparation and with what will follow, is a seed of renewal or renaissance of Catholicism in Quebec. That’s my hope and conviction.

Is it too early to gauge whether there is any effect yet outside of this congress, on greater society?

I can tell you, for example, that I have decided to reopen the minor seminary of Quebec City in order to have priests for the future.

It is from the awareness of the need for priests and the gift of the Eucharist that brought us to this decision that was not in the plan. But bringing families together and hearing their availability to give their young adolescent of 12, 13 for a deeper Christian formation, we decided to go forward and to open a new minor seminary for adolescents between 12 and 17 years old, precisely to foster vocations for the future in a context where secularization has penetrated very deeply into our school system. So we need to reorganize the teaching of the faith to facilitate the support of these young people who have had some good Christian experience in the family or in some movement, but need a sort of context to grow in their faith and to cultivate their vocation.

Some bishops are opposed in principle to minor seminaries because you take boys so young out of the family.

I think a minor seminary is a community to foster good Christian life, fundamentally, and to accompany young people who have had in mind the idea of possibly becoming a priest.

So there is no decision made at 12 or 13 or even at 17, but there may be a decision to enter the major seminary afterwards, and it is during the specific formation that the last decision is made.

I agree we have to protect the freedom of the individual, but at the same time to offer him a real context where he will have all the elements to make a decision that is enlightened by all the spiritual experience and good teaching and fraternity in a Christian atmosphere.

And, you know, [they have] a permanent link to the family — we do not withdraw seminarians from their family. On the weekends, they will go and visit and be with their families, but they have the heart of the week together to get a good formation.

Have you had a chance to converse with some of the pilgrims at the congress about their experience here, and what that’s doing to them or for their faith in the Eucharist?

I wish I had time just to spend more time with them, but people come to me spontaneously to say “Thank you! Thank you!” And you see in their face that their heart has been touched deeply, and they are discovering anew their faith.

And these are good Catholics, practicing Catholics, most of them. But the experience is so positive that, really, there is a new flame in the heart, and I think they will be also better witnesses afterwards, at home or at work.

Archbishop Piero Marini, the longtime master of papal ceremonies under Pope John Paul II, has been here, concelebrating some of the daily liturgies and leading Eucharistic adoration in the adoration chapels set up around the grounds. He is president of the Pontifical Committee for International Eucharistic Congresses. Was he involved in any of the planning of the liturgies?

At the end, because he was appointed some months before the Eucharistic congress, and Cardinal Jozef Tomko was head of the committee, most of the work had been done with Cardinal Tomko as head of the congregation. But when he was appointed we completed the organization and some details, and he was very cooperative and we were very satisfied with his help, his presence and giving also good advice.

But he left us very free because the main responsibility is from the local organizations, and he has the sense of respecting the local community and the sensitivity of the people, so there is something to be taken into account, and he is very respectful of that.

Would you discuss the rationale behind some of the liturgical choices: the use of liturgical dance; enhanced, narrated offertory processions, with people bringing up things like maple trees to represent Canada, Eskimo symbols, etc.; the use of Latin some days for the Eucharistic Prayer; the celebration today of the Byzantine Divine Liturgy; the decision to not include the Extraordinary Rite of the Latin Mass.

As you can see, we have tried to be sensitive to different sensibilities because the Eucharist is the source of unity in the Church.

We try to respect diversity and keep the focus on what builds unity. I think there was nothing extreme in one or the other sense. Yes, the liturgical procession was developed, maybe for some people a little too much, but liturgical dance is a big word for what happened there — some ladies who had incense in the hands; I do not call that very much liturgical dance. It was very discreet.

And the fact that we included a Byzantine liturgy is a way to let people know there are many rites in the Church. We are from the Latin tradition here.

Most of the people had never experienced a Byzantine liturgy; it was an extraordinary discovery for them. I think it has helped them realize this is a moment of wedding between heaven and earth; the presence of the angels and the singing from the beginning to the end, and the very sacred sense of the liturgy with the rituals.

We made decisions with the focus on unity and respect for different sensitivities.

In your homily at the Mass on Monday, you spoke of the global food crisis and related that to the Church and the Eucharist. Are there any particular policies or remedies that you would embrace?

This question has to be addressed at the highest level.

For example, there is a G-8 meeting in some weeks during the summer, so the chiefs of states of the Western world have to address that very seriously together, keeping in mind those who are starving in Africa, in Latin America, and there are more and more. We have seen the protests.

This is not a small need; it is a very serious need, and I think if there is something to adjust in terms of using corn for oil and not having enough to feed people, some decisions have to be made somewhere to make sure people will not be starving.

For us Christians, who are sensitive to the food we receive from God in order to share it with our brothers and sisters, if we don’t do everything we can, how can we really be in communion with God and our brothers and sisters?

I’m not an economist; I’m not a politician; I don’t know. But my cry was a sort of moral one, and I know that others have to respond at a different level, so I don’t know how exactly, but others may have solutions.


TOPICS: Catholic; Prayer; Worship
KEYWORDS: canada; quebec; seminary

1 posted on 06/24/2008 2:01:35 PM PDT by NYer
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To: Salvation; narses; SMEDLEYBUTLER; redhead; Notwithstanding; nickcarraway; Romulus; ...
Rocco Palmo at WITL blog reports ....

On this patronal feast of the place founded four centuries ago as New France, the True North's Fr Raymond deSouza recaps the Eucharistic Congress in the context of a stirring renaissance for the long-beleaguered church in Quebec:

It has been oft-remarked — and oft-celebrated, to be sure — that Quebec’s faith seems to be a thing of the past, an obstacle to development and progress best left behind without nostalgia. The result has been the spectacular dismantling — sociologically speaking, overnight — of what was once perhaps the most Catholic corner of the world. For many observant Catholics in Quebec, the rapid and aggressive secularization of the culture has been a cause of discouragement and even despair. For the Church, the pain of souls turning away from Christ was compounded by an internal crisis of confusion about the faith itself. Was there room in Quebec for a confident Catholic voice?

That confusion and fear was left behind last week. There is nothing more fundamental to the Catholic faith than the Eucharistic — the belief that Jesus Christ is truly present in the sacrament under the appearance of bread and wine. During the congress, Catholics from around the world joined the Church in Quebec to proclaim that faith. And on Thursday evening, when 20,000 pilgrims filled the streets of the Old City in a Eucharistic procession, the Church in Quebec proclaimed her faith with serenity and confidence, unapologetic about taking her place in the culture that she did so much to shape.

The exuberance of the congress, especially with young people from across Quebec and Canada as key participants, hinted that something new was on the horizon in Quebec. On Friday evening, when twelve men were ordained priests at the hockey coliseum, the 12,000-strong congregation broke the constraints of normal liturgical practice, applauding and cheering as if, well, they were at a hockey game.

“Twelve new priests — like the twelve apostles — for a new foundation for the Church in Quebec!” said Father Stéphane Pouliot, who had invited me to the ordination. He is himself a young, vibrant priest from south of Quebec City.
“I feel as if I was raised from the dead,” said Cardinal Marc Ouellet, Archbishop of Quebec, demonstrating that it was not only the young who were deeply affected by the week-long congress. “I believe that we have reached a turning point in the history of the Catholic Church in Quebec.”

Cardinal Ouellet is not customarily a man of extravagant rhetoric, so his words indicate that something important is afoot. The quadrennial Eucharistic congresses are planned years in advance, so when it was announced in 2004 in Guadalajara, Mexico, that Quebec would be the next host, no one could have known that Quebec society was about to begin a contentious conversation about its culture and identity....

In the history of cultures and nations it is usually only possible to identify a turning point well after the fact. And so it will not be possible to know what the impact of Quebec 2008 will have on the future. But for those who were here last week, it seemed that a corner was turned. And for that, this year will mark a very happy St. Jean Baptiste indeed.
PHOTO: Emanuel Pires/Archdiocese of Toronto

2 posted on 06/24/2008 2:03:12 PM PDT by NYer ("Ignorance of scripture is ignorance of Christ." - St. Jerome)
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To: NYer
I was fortunate enough to be able to attend the Congress, and even to meet Cardinal Ouellet very briefly. I'll just pass along some thoughts:

-The Cardinal is very down-to-earth, but also seemingly very clever and brilliant. He has had a hard fight with the French Canadian media, and (if I understood correctly) some of the other Canadian bishops. Yet he has fought this fight well.

-The minor seminary project sounds like it has legs already... I'm not sure that it was something that just So there is no decision made at 12 or 13 or even at 17, but there may be a decision to enter the major seminary afterwards, and it is during the specific formation that the last decision is made. appeared because of the Congress (though it could have been). It sounds like my seminary's staff will be in contact with the Cardinal and his staff to provide some insights on the program; in my (admittedly slightly biased) opinion, I think this will bear good fruit. The minor seminary seems to be intended as a house of discernment, and hopefully a feeder to the major seminary there.

-The Extraordinary Form was excluded from the main liturgies (much to my dismay personally), but the FSSP was running liturgies at a parish within walking distance from the rest of the Congress. They even had a Pontifical High Mass on the Saturday of the Congress. It was very much present there, even if it was not present 'officially' and it sounds like the Cardinal had been generous with allowing the EF in the diocese in general.

-In all, I was quite pleased

-At the closing Mass, it rained as hard or harder than it seems in that picture.

3 posted on 06/24/2008 7:36:37 PM PDT by GCC Catholic (Sour grapes make terrible whine.)
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To: All
The World Gathers in Quebec {49th International Eucharistic Congress]

The Ark of the New Covenant: Eucharistic Renewal is Seeded in Canada! [Ecumenical]

The Hour of the Eucharist (Part 1) [Ecumenical]

Cardinal: If They Understand the Mass, They'll Come

Tens of thousands accompany Eucharist through streets of Quebec

Holy Father says Eucharist is a ‘mystery of alliance’ not a ‘meal among friends’

Papal Homily For Quebec Congress: "The Eucharist Is Not A Meal Among Friends"

Quebec Awakes (Minor Seminary Will Follow Eucharistic Congress)

4 posted on 06/24/2008 9:05:05 PM PDT by Salvation (†With God all things are possible.†)
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To: GCC Catholic

Thank you for that report.

I thought it was interesting that they had a Byzantine rite liturgy at the Congress.

I read a very obnoxious letter from a bishop in the Quebec area, denying the TLM to people who had requested it in his diocese, and saying essentially that the Pope was far away, didn’t know what he was talking about, and it was his (the bishop’s) decision to make. He told them there was a mass celebrated in Quebec City, 125 miles away in another dioceses, that they could attend if they wanted to, but he was not going to permit it in his diocese.

I think Cardinal Ouellet is really going to have his hands full dealing with his fellow bishops, who are the ones who have presided over the death of the Faith in Canada. One by one, of course, they will retire and be replaced, hopefully with better ones, but they’re not going to go quietly. Prayers for him! I think the minor seminary idea is great, btw.


5 posted on 06/25/2008 1:42:11 AM PDT by livius
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To: GCC Catholic

You : “The Extraordinary Form was excluded from the main liturgies...”

Me: Your choice of words (”EF was excluded”) connotes a victim mentality (though I assume you don’t have such a mentality). It seems that the ordinary form was offered because that is the universal norm for the Church’s liturgies. Your phrasing is akin to a feminist activist saying “women were excluded from the pulpit”. While the norm is that women do not speak from the pulpit, at times they can licitly do so. To stick to the norm is not a deliberate choice to “exclude”. I will assume you did not intend to sound like an angry perpetually victimized femininst, but wanted to point out that most readers would get that impression from your wording.

Lest you think bad things about me I will cose noting that
I AM TRULY GLAD THAT YOU ENJOYED THE CONGRESS, AND AM HAPPY THAT THE EF MASS IS NOW OFFERED UNIVERSALLY. IN FACT I ATTENDED AN EF MASS LAST SUNDAY.


6 posted on 06/25/2008 5:51:53 AM PDT by Notwithstanding ("You are either with America in our time of need or you are not" - Hillary from Senate well 9/12/01)
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To: Notwithstanding
No offense taken. Thank you for pointing that out; I'll have to be more careful with wording in the future.

I carelessly forgot to re-check the article when I mentioned it and was using "not included" and "excluded" interchangeably (the article says "not included"). I was grateful that the EF could be offered so close to the Congress for the entire week even though I couldn't attend it every day (I was there with a group).

I would imagine that if it becomes more prevalent, it will be included in future years.

Thank you again.

7 posted on 06/25/2008 8:57:47 AM PDT by GCC Catholic (Sour grapes make terrible whine.)
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To: GCC Catholic

I think even among those who don’t embrace it for every day use, it will become the beloved and revered form brought out for the most special occasions.

It will also become the benchmark and yardstick - to which any innovations will always be compared.

In this way B16’s goals will be accomplished.

It is amazing that what was destined to be (in the eyes of the innovators) scrap wood for burning and an embarassing reminder of our silly past is now destined to be widely known as the creme de la creme of liturgy.


8 posted on 06/25/2008 9:07:01 AM PDT by Notwithstanding ("You are either with America in our time of need or you are not" - Hillary from Senate well 9/12/01)
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