Cuba Libre?

Cuba’s Catholic have more freedom since the mid 90s, but that doesn’t mean the faith is alive and well there.

After a boom following the constitutional change and papal visit, church attendance has leveled off. Of the indicators used to measure church participation in Cuba’s largest archdiocese of Havana, only the number of baptisms exceeds numbers in a comparable U.S. diocese. And though Havana’s 34,000 baptisms in 2004 represented a sizable number, Becerril noted the special circumstances.
“Most people who bring their children for baptism are not practicing Catholics. They say to me, ‘I don’t want what happened to me to happen to my child.’ They want to be ready if there is another period of repression.”
The problem is that only 10 percent of baptized Catholics in Cuba are believed to attend Mass regularly, and, as the priest added, “the older they get, the less they participate.” The number of confirmations bears him out: only 740 in all of Havana in 2004, this in an archdiocese of 85 parishes spanning three provinces with a population of over 3 million. The city’s 413 Catholic marriages in 2004 was the lowest since 1993. …full article

Late to the party

I was out of town last week when Bishop Loverde of Arlington conducted the greatest manuever in public relations ever. EVAH!
First, he announced that individual parishes would be permitted to have altar girls as long as the pastor, other clergy & pastoral council can come to a consensus about their desire to have them.
Then, he announced that two parishes would have permission to celebrate the 1962 Latin Mass. (press release here)
Reactions have been predictable:
Conversatives went “Yay!” then “Boo!”
Liberals went “Boo!” and then “Yay!”
Bishop Loverde and everyone at the chancery gave each other high fives and are still chortling about dodging the bullet with these two hot topics.
Some Arlington parishes already had altar girls at last Sunday’s Masses and rushed to proclaim that “We’re no longer gender-restricted.” I’m sure I’ll hear some misguided talk about women priests in the next several months (in which case I’ll send them here.)
For another blogger perspective, visit Father Jim “Dappled Things” Tucker.
My reaction – altar girls have been inevitable since the Vatican ruled on the issue. The interesting issue with Arlington is there will be a divide among most parishes who allow them, and the several that won’t. Letters will be written. Acrimonious pastoral council meetings will last late into the night. Some pastors will hold the line and not allow any sway. Most pastors will go with the flow.
The Tridentine Mass will be similar – the folks who want that will flock to the two parishes that celebrate, the rest of us will do latin and greek sparingly, or the more popular option: never. A “Kyrie” and “Angus Dei” here and there won’t really add up to using chant and latin in the way that Church liturgy documents extol them. The divide will be greater, and the perennially discontented will continue to write letters, protest and generally disrupt life for the rest of us.
So who’s going to have more latin at their standard Masses? Who’s going to do more chant and sacred polyphony? Who’s going to make sure altar servers are better trained and present themselves properly for their sacred work?
I’m sure for the vast majority of parishes it will be business as usual.
Still – changes in discipline (and both these items are related to Church disciplines and practices, not doctrinal items) are a good time to revisit what’s really important and what needs to change.
Hopefully we can use this moment to make all Masses in Arlington more prayerful and sacred.

Bring on the “re-elaborating”!

Pope Benedict’s liturgies to change, says papal master of ceremonies

Archbishop Marini said each pope is different in his approach to the liturgy, particularly the large international celebrations he is called to lead.
“With John Paul II, I was a bit freer; we had an implicit agreement because he was a man of prayer and not of liturgy,” the archbishop said.

[irony]I guess we can say good bye to those loosey-goosey liturgies that Pope JPII was famous for[/irony]