The OP asked about “any other” parish activity that was cancelled.
I don’t mean to be a thread-buster, but you asked…
Yes, the parish activity cancelled was Bible study. First, the pastor dismissed my request for Bible study five years ago. He said nobody was interested.
This, in fact, was contradicted by the DRE in the parish who said people were interested.
I wrote him more than 100 letters (which I found out, have ended up in the ‘crazy’ file in the diocesan office) about his stubbornness about not having Bible study.
In contrast, he’s nuts about the charismatic stuff. He wrote an essay in the bulletin that when someone near him was speaking in tongues, that he said it “sounded like” scripture.
I wrote him, of course, that the charismatic meetings which “sounded like” scripture could be actually surpassed by Bible study, where you actually read scripture. There was no response from this priest.
In other issues of the bulletin more recently, he wrote two essays about starting scripture study. Get this. He was impressed about how a woman in some parish a thousand miles away wanted a Bible study, and pulled one together.
He was mocking me and the DRE, of course. Somehow, he got inspired by reading about this in a magazine, ignoring the people in his own parish who wanted it.
What’s more, our diocese has a ten-year goal (a real slow boat here) to get adult formation out in the parishes, and guess what?, it includes Bible study. So here’s the picture, the priest, as usual, is collecting money for the Catholic Services Appeal, which funds the diocesan effort for Bible study, but, at the same time, he is obstructing the same in his own parish.
In our diocese, there are a majority of women running the religious formation. I suspect that there was gender bias in the priest declining my offer to organize the Bible study.
Further, he did not tell me about the diocesan effort or encourage me in any way towards that, or even suggest that I enroll in the local master’s ministry program as a prerequisite for organizing the Bible study. Nothing, nada.
As I started to say, the priest seemed to relent and wanted to start up a lectionary-based scripture study conducted by the DRE, but this has died on the vine very quickly, for reasons unknown to me. Not the least reason for which, I’m sure, is that the priest has not promoted the concept of Bible study, which I feel is relevent for all people of all ages.
(Part of his reluctance, I"m certain, is his attitude of skepticism towards the Bible that was instilled in him during his seminary years. He says he “learned” that the opening chapters of Genesis, for example, are myths, just like the myths of Santa Claus [his words], notwithstanding that the Catechism of the CC says something different.)
The activities which the priest does promote are: fund-raising dinners, fund-raising casino bus trips, fund-raising card tournaments, and fund-raising craft shows in the gym.
When he announced the year-long activities for the parish’s 100 year anniversary, they were all pot-luck dinners. There was nothing special of a spiritual-orientation. I complained to him and to the Bishop, and, a week-long parish mission was announced and subsequently conducted before the anniversary date.
I don’t know if this helps in the context of the retreat that was discussed in the OP. Don’t hold back. Am I crazy, like they say?