C
Catholic29
Guest
Look where the spirit of Vatican II or that of the age has gotten one parish, they must be in real need of money, thats all I can say.
**
December 18, 2005
To fundraisers at Nativity of Our Lord Catholic Church in St. Paul, front-row seats at a Christmas Eve mass have become the spiritual equivalent of arena skyboxes. For about $1,000 per pew, well-heeled parishioners have bought the divine luxury of a reserved seat at the Rev. Peter Christensen’s 4 p.m. standing-room-only service.
The practice isn’t unheard of in the United States, and the money goes to Nativity’s populist-minded elementary school. But some religious scholars wonder if the auctioning of tickets to a celebration of the First Noel is more in the spirit of taking than giving.
“It smacks of a mindset that is not Christmaslike,” said Jim Beilby, associate professor of theology at Bethel University in Arden Hills. “The more we focus on money, the more it pulls us away from God.”
Full article startribune.com/dynamic/mobile_story.php?story=5788657
**
**
Tony Kennedy, Star TribuneO come, all ye (well-heeled) faithful
December 18, 2005
To fundraisers at Nativity of Our Lord Catholic Church in St. Paul, front-row seats at a Christmas Eve mass have become the spiritual equivalent of arena skyboxes. For about $1,000 per pew, well-heeled parishioners have bought the divine luxury of a reserved seat at the Rev. Peter Christensen’s 4 p.m. standing-room-only service.
The practice isn’t unheard of in the United States, and the money goes to Nativity’s populist-minded elementary school. But some religious scholars wonder if the auctioning of tickets to a celebration of the First Noel is more in the spirit of taking than giving.
“It smacks of a mindset that is not Christmaslike,” said Jim Beilby, associate professor of theology at Bethel University in Arden Hills. “The more we focus on money, the more it pulls us away from God.”
Full article startribune.com/dynamic/mobile_story.php?story=5788657
**