In 2013, Rutler was reassigned to a parish on the other side of town, in Hell’s Kitchen. The incoming pastor at Our Saviour told Rutler that he would keep the Latin Mass. A few weeks into his term, he discontinued it, without notice. Last summer he started removing the icons — again, without notice.
...Shortly after his arrival in 2013, the new pastor invited a man who
was a server at the Latin Mass at Our Saviour to leave the parish. He
left. By now, most parishioners of a more conservative or traditional
sensibility have probably moved to parishes they find more congenial. If
Our Saviour has been distilled to a core who are mostly okay with the
new tone, what’s wrong with that?
One possible answer is “Nothing.” We might shrug and say, “Let people sort themselves out. The Ancients are no longer welcome at Our Saviour, but the Moderns are. Good for the Moderns. Bad for the Ancients. They can go to Holy Innocents.” At that point, we’ve accepted that the Church is riven. It is, but we shouldn’t accept it.
To the chancery at the Archdiocese of New York, a parish touched by traditional Catholicism, rooted in the Latin Mass and the preconciliar Church, may seem analogous to the immigrant ethnic parish of a century ago: Old World, un-American, unassimilated, non-English-speaking, embarrassing. They see “phase me out” written all over it. To those who assumed that Latin and all the foul dust that floated in its wake were disappeared two generations ago, it must seem like nasty, stubborn mold. “Eww, I thought we painted over that.”
Read the rest here.
4 comments:
Typical and frustrating.
Let's try and keep the heated rhetoric in check. If you want to call the Pope the anti-Christ, or a servant thereof, please do so elsewhere. See the posting guidelines if you haven't already perused them.
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