Hispanics love Mother Mary (something positive about my parish)

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Duesenberg

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I went to Mass tonight and it was nice – the PV did a fine job. It would have been better if the sanctuary had been tarted up a bit for such an important feast, but it was OK.

Mass ended, I put on my headphones, turned on my MP3 player and settled in for some after Mass prayers. Even through the music, something was going on in the sanctuary and I was in the first row so I looked up. The Hispanic contingent of our parish was overrunning the sanctuary!

The first thing I noticed were two large altar angels (each holding a large candle), with one being placed at each end of the altar. They were made by the Daprato Company of Chicago many years ago. NICE! Where the heck did those come from? They’re not in our parish inventory. Apparently one of the Latino members of our parish bought them at auction and had them restored in Mexico.

Then came the FLOWERS! More and more FLOWERS! At least 50 vases of flowers all artfully arranged and placed. I’ve been on location before for the filming of a movie and the transformation of the sanctuary reminded me of how they yell “cut!” and a huge number of people go into well-coordinated action. Everyone was working together very smoothy and it was just happening. It was awesome to witness.

The (Anglo) parish “liturgy coordinator” (who had been an EMHC at the earlier Mass) attempted to give some (name removed by moderator)ut (it was sort of painful to watch), but they just gracefully ignored her and kept working – they enjoy complete independence from Anglo meddling which was won many years ago. The coordinator kept pushing (apparently she was concerned that the altar cloth could be harmed as they were preparing their altar cross and 6 candles for the top of the altar ala Benedict.)

No worries, the fairly cheesy altar cloth was carefully stripped off the altar, replaced by a gold damask altar frontal that said “SANTO SANTO SANTO” on it. The parish liturgy coordinator left the building at that point, thanks be to God.

The real treat was the Marian side altar (dedicated to Our Lady of Guadalupe of course) they screwed together while I watched. The guys were running the screw guns like union master carpenters on a Disney sound stage – only better.

I couldn’t take it. I had to touch one of the altar angels (made by DaPrato of Chicago a LONG time ago) and the altar frontal (hand sewn in Monterrey, Mexico.) A few were surrounding the credence table so I walked over for a look and I got some goosebumps. THEIR planners had beautifully sketched the entire sanctuary showing the locations of all the additions – it was their detailed working plan. THAT’S why they were so coordinated! THAT’S why everything looked so good! I sure wish that level of talent existed on the Anglo side of the parish.

I think God wanted me to see this tonight – people working as a gleeful (and able) team without being bogged down by politics, turf wars or other hideous parish toxicities. I hope the sanctuary remains set up for a while. I am going to go to their Mass on Monday – then end of their “Novenario Y Fiesta A La Virgen de Guadalupe.”
 
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Moderators, how do I report a hacked account? this can’t be Duesenberg.

🙂 🙂

And yes… a lot of Hispanics have quite the knack for liturgy 🙂 thanks for sharing
 
Why can’t it be? He is still listening to his MP player so I am convinced! Peace
 
Ah, tis a blessing to witness true devotion to Our Lord’s Mother, the Blessed Virgin. I, too, on wondering why one parish in our tiny town was empty on her feast day, found the faithful at Our Lady of Guadalupe parish, where Our Lady’s image was bedecked with flowers overflowing and special music in her honor resounding. Thanks for bringing this special memory to mind.
 
Someone who uses the term Anglo knows the US census definition of Hispanic Latino. I have to like this post just for that.
 
I am not sure I understand all the ironies here :relaxed:but what the OP describes is very beautiful.
May God bless these Mexicans and your parish and Virgin Mary protect you all.
Whenever I listen to Missa Creolia I feel like looking at the Heavens. This is what I know about South American devotions and why they make me feel like Spanish is a spiritual language in Christianity and I wish to learn it. Just what I feel.
 
I am not sure I understand all the ironies here :slight_smile:but what the OP describes is very beautiful.

May God bless these Mexicans and your parish and Virgin Mary protect you all.

Whenever I listen to Missa Creolia I feel like looking at the Heavens. This is what I know about South American devotions and why they make me feel like Spanish is a spiritual language in Christianity and I wish to learn it. Just what I feel.
Not just “Mexicans.” In addition individuals that were born in: Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Peru and yes, Spain and probably other countries make up the Hispanic segment of my parish.

Spanish is a Romance language. I agree that is seems to have an inherently more “spiritual feel” than Germanic languages like English.
 
It’s a Latin language that is easy to recognize as such. It’s not as obvious as Italian, that is so close to Latin. Portuguese is stranger in sound, even if it’s Latin also.
I think Spanish as romantic language is more of a Modern brand.
When I said spiritual I was thinking of Spain and its role within the Catholic Church. Including the… harsher times.
 
Spanish is a Romance language. I agree that is seems to have an inherently more “spiritual feel” than Germanic languages like English.
Ah, but Christianity speaks a language of love, whether Spanish, German, Italian, English, Latin, Vietnamese, Russian, Polish, Chinese, Korean, Swahili…(you get the point), and only the language of love has an “inherently more ‘spiritual feel’ than” others.
 
Ok. I thought I was helping. I didn’t want to see a flag for use of word “those”.

I don’t think the positive meaning of your thread was affected but I can understand u didn’t appreciate that it was edited without your knowledge.
 
Yes, African-Americans can be amazing and blessed Catholics, but the devotion the Hispanic community shows our Blessed Mother is something special.
 
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