Ship of Fools: St Cecilia Parish, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Ship of Fools: St Cecilia Parish, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
A creative approach to music – much to admire
Read the full Mystery Worshipper report here
Ship of Fools: St Cecilia Parish, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
A creative approach to music – much to admire
Read the full Mystery Worshipper report here
Comments
Back to the report. boston-irish, do you have any comment on the make-up of the congregation please? The MW describes it as "(a) diverse congregation in every way except race" by which I gather it is almost entirely white.
I note a lot of selective thinking on the part of them as challenges the orthodoxy of their fellow-Christians, in particular with an undue preoccupation with other people’s sex lives.
You’ve strayed into Dead Horse territory, you have.
Now back to Mystery Worshipping….
@Amanda B Reckondwyth
Lead Editor, Mystery Worship
We'd allow 10 minutes - a bit of time at the start to say how they did (or did not) fit together and to explain any unfamiliar words/allusions. Then 8 minutes or so on the Gospel passage, what it says and what message and lesson can we take from it. Then a minute to wind up. A sermon should not be a display of Bibliology.
This very much depends on the church tradition and what is expected of the sermon in various traditions, as well as expectations of the worshippers in a given community. Sermons of approximately 20 minutes are very much the norm in my tradition, and there are very many preachers who are quite capable of sustaining decent and often excellent sermons for that period of time.
@Amanda B Reckondwyth
Lead Editor, Mystery Worship
Back to the MW Report, and what would turn me off this church far more than a long sermon (even if most of it was of good quality) is the priest's habit of *interpolating* his own bits into the liturgy.
Such *interpolation* is An Abomination Before The Lord. We get it at Our Place, with several mini-sermons scattered throughout the service, making a wordy liturgy even wordier. And loooooooooooooonger...
(But not during Mass, if you please).
Loving the irony.
I assume nobody actually believes the Holy Spirit dictated the Roman Missal, therefore it is a human construct and theirs to change.
At the greeting the priest and people recognise each other’s presence and so constitute the church in that place. That is why it is said before anything else, priest and people equally participating.
To precede the greeting with lots of “Hello campers!” stuff reduces it to mere mumbo jumbo. It means a passive congregation is dependent on a didactic priest. The effect is clericalist and patronising, although I expect most people won’t notice and it is the opposite of what the priest intends with his efforts to be friendly.
I’m sure he’s a lovely man.
The Greeting is preceded by a mini-sermon and welcome, and followed by the first hymn, during which FInC (a lovely man, and a prayerful pastor) marches in for the second time...
🙄
I agree.
At ours there is the official greeting as dictated from the Holy Spirit via a white dove bearing a golden quill, and then we get the other stuff (theme for the day, any special mentions etc)
So all is fitting and seemly just as Our Lady of the Blessed Tabernacle Key would have it.
Any further mention of the practices at other churches will make you-know-who do you-know-what. And the Holy Spirit, having taken the form of a dove, will do what all birds do in abundance.
[Ending said invocation by intoning Veni Sancte Spiritus]
@Amanda B Reckondwyth
Lead Editor, Mystery Worship
@Amanda B Reckondwyth
Lead Editor, Mystery Worship