theEucharist

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Vocations: thoughts

Posted on 5:35 AM by Unknown


I am a bit anxious about our parish's liturgical future, we are loosing our Master of Ceremonies, he believes God is calling him to the religious life, I do too, or at least to be more accurate I believe that he is called to offer himself, because ultimately the Church will do the calling. Vocation is ultimately the objective call of the Church not the subjective opinion of the individual. Another of our servers, a university student studying here has already gone to off to the continent to do the same thing along with his younger brother. Pray for all three.

I am not sure how much influence I have had, not much I suspect but maybe they were suddenly struck by the thought, as I was during a particularly dull and painful Good Friday Liturgy and sermon, "If God can call this man as a source of Grace, he might just be able to use me to do the same." Good priests attract vocations but so, thank God, do the mediocre.

In both cases the young men concerned have been attracted more by the old rite than the new. Both were more than capable of guiding me and our servers through a High Mass; unless God in his wonderous providence sends us a new Master of Ceremonies we are going to be a bit stuck but if he wants it, he will do something about it.

Talking to a lay friend involved in seminary selection in one of the Metropolitan dioceses, he said he estimated half those of those who now apply to a seminary have had some involvement with the Traditional Mass. It would perhaps not be too much to speculate that those diocese who have a policy antagonistic towards the Traditional Mass are missing out on possible vocations. I heard of one ordinand recently who had his ordination delayed because of his interest in the Traditional Rites. In many parishes in the not too distant future Bishops will be faced with the problem of finding any priest to say any Mass.

The interesting thing is that seminaries which are the most antagonistic to "Tradition" seem to produce priests who within a few years of ordination are celebrating the Traditional Mass. The situation is made a bit difficult for them in that few seminaries actually teach Latin, despite what comes from Rome. Someone recently suggested that diocese were the bishop is less likely even to attend a Traditional Mass is likely to have more celebrating it. This could just be a bit of clerical contra agere, but without evidence one can't merely dismiss it as such.

For young men serving the Traditional Mass there is a cost; it involves study and practice, it also involves taking on a particular spirituality and making sense of the theology of the Mass, it involves an enculturation and a sense of thinking with the Church, and ultimately, I hope, discipleship. It certainly provides the framework for discipleship; silence that leads either to boredom or to prayer. In similar way the uncompromising nature of the rubrics demands obedience, which either leads to a stunting rubricism or to liberating abandonment of one's own will to the will of God.


As a footnote: Fr de Malleray of the FSSP is offering a vocations discernment weekend in July.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • 'Heirarchy' of truths
    A load of old nonsense is talked about the idea of "'heirarchy' of truths" by many who do not really understand Catholici...
  • A Jesuit Pope and the Two Standards
    "I will destroy the Church." "But the clergy have been doing that for the last two thousand years, and still they haven't...
  • Missing from the Synod: a Sign of Hope
    We have heard from the Archbishop of Canterbury, the President of the American Bible Society, the Patriach of Constantinople at the Synod on...
  • Processional Thoughts
    Holy Week begins, and ends, with a procession. Processions were very much more significant in the pre-concillior Rites than they are in the ...
  • Shard
    Compare and contrast
  • Change?
    One of those light bulb jokes going the rounds a few years ago: "How many Oratorians does it take to change a light bulb?" Had sev...
  • Moscow Partriarch visits Beijing
    The Patriarch of Moscow has just made an official visit to Beijing and was received by President, Xi Jinping. Metropolitan Hilarion of Volo...
  • SSPX's Problems
    Recently the SSPX Bishop Tissier de Mallerais revealed during a conference a letter written by Benedict XVI which says an agreement between ...
  • Falda Dependency
    The Orthodox would see a bishop con-celebrating Mass with his clergy as a sign that the bishop can do nothing without his his clergy, and th...
  • Dystopia and the destruction of language
    I watched the film of Ray Bradbury's 1953 "Fahrenheit 451" a classic from 1966, in it firemen rather than putting out fires, s...

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (206)
    • ►  September (11)
    • ►  August (13)
    • ►  July (29)
    • ►  June (32)
    • ►  May (21)
    • ►  April (17)
    • ►  March (33)
    • ►  February (35)
    • ►  January (15)
  • ▼  2012 (294)
    • ►  December (43)
    • ►  November (38)
    • ►  October (41)
    • ►  September (40)
    • ►  August (30)
    • ►  July (25)
    • ▼  June (25)
      • Music for St Peter and Paul: change at the Vatican
      • I had the rabbit
      • Arthur, Di Noia, Fellay and Williamson
      • Fr Alexander Sherbrooke Live at St Mary Magdalen
      • Vocations: thoughts
      • Hunwicke Events
      • John the Baptist is a Priest
      • Moore and Fisher: Two Thought Criminals
      • The Pope in St Mary Mead
      • New Evangelisation
      • A Few thoughts on Eucharistic Prayers
      • Dublin Eucharistic Congress
      • Dom Mark Kirby on Exposition
      • The Message to the Dublin Eucharistic Conference
      • I am not in favour of frequent Exposition
      • Blessed be God!
      • Forty Hours
      • Where Peter is there is the Church and there is God.
      • Brothers and Sister
      • Fr Aidan Nichols: The Future of the Church in England
      • Theology: the triumph of orthodoxy
      • Good Idea: send a postcard
      • Word Given
      • Now is the time to gather with Peter
      • Hunwicke News
    • ►  May (26)
    • ►  April (26)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile