T
tee_eff_em
Guest
[hijack]AWall, down in the lower left corner of the message there is a button labeled “quote.” Click on that and reply from the window that pops up.
Is that your left or my left?
[/hijack]
tee
[hijack]AWall, down in the lower left corner of the message there is a button labeled “quote.” Click on that and reply from the window that pops up.
tee_eff_em said:[hijack]
Is that your left or my left?
[/hijack]
tee
WOW!!! Thank you for taking the time to put this together. I really appreciate it. The St. Thomas site has a LOT of info. And I loved this…Welcome home!
I don’t live anywhere near Seattle, but I ran “Archdiocese of Seattle” in Google, and came to this kind of “40 years of progress” report at
seattlearch.org/FormationAndEducation/Progress/Vatican+II-Liturgical+Changes+11-3-05.htm
It might help, it might make things worse, I hope not.
Then I went to the parish locator and clicked on Lewis County:
seattlearch.org/Archdiocese/Templates/Internal/ParishLocator.aspx?NRMODE=Published&NRORIGINALURL=%2fArchdioceseWorking%2fParishLocator%2f&NRNODEGUID=%7b1337CAFA-00A2-47EE-AF28-D12F021F5589%7d&NRCACHEHINT=NoModifyGuest
I think it is a hoot that Centralia, IL and Centralia, WA both have a parish named St. Mary.
Anyway, it looks like ALL the parishes in Lewis County are served by exactly three priests.
So- I went to the map and pulled up Pacific County, and found a parish where they pray the Rosary- a good sign! It is St. Lawrence in Raymond.
seattlearch.org/Archdiocese/Templates/Internal/ParishLocator.aspx?NRMODE=Published&NRORIGINALURL=%2fArchdioceseWorking%2fParishLocator%2f&NRNODEGUID=%7b1337CAFA-00A2-47EE-AF28-D12F021F5589%7d&NRCACHEHINT=NoModifyGuest
Then I went to - Cowlitz County, did I read that correctly?- and found St. Philip in Woodland, which has exposition of the Blessed Sacrament AND Bendiction.
seattlearch.org/Archdiocese/Templates/Internal/ParishLocator.aspx?NRMODE=Published&NRORIGINALURL=%2fArchdioceseWorking%2fParishLocator%2f&NRNODEGUID=%7b1337CAFA-00A2-47EE-AF28-D12F021F5589%7d&NRCACHEHINT=NoModifyGuest
Also, St. Rose of Viterbo in Longview didn’t look too bad:
stroselongview.catholicweb.com/
Our Lady Star of the Sea in Stevenson and St. Thomas in Camas looked really promising, esp. since St. Thomas has a proper attire and etiquette disclaimer, and Star of the Sea has an explanation of how to go to confession:
ourladystarofthesea.org/
http://www.st-thomascamas.org/
st-thomascamas.org/holymass/etiquette.htm
ALL THIS BEING SAID- I don’t live in Washington. I live in Illinois, where Catholic churches abound and almost every small town has two. I have no idea what the roads are like in Washington, or how long it will take you to get to any of these places. But you have to have somebody pulling for you when you’re new to something, and I guess that’s what I’m trying to do.
Thanks for the suggestion. We haven’t tried St. Mary’s yet, mainly because Mass starts at 8:30 am, and that’s awfully early for getting the kids up and going. Maybe we’ll try on a Sat. We’re not against driving, but don’t want to go too far out so that we can still be involved in the church.I’m not at all surprised by the rain stick comment. Based on what little I know about the area I’d recommend St. Mary’s in Chehalis. Hopefully that will approximate for what you’re looking for. If not, there is no alternative that I am aware of that doesn’t involve lots of driving.
I could get you in communication with orthodox Catholics in the area if you so desire…
Personally I do not support parish-shopping but it’s hard not to be sympathetic to converts.
AWall said:WOW!!! Thank you for taking the time to put this together. I really appreciate it. The St. Thomas site has a LOT of info. And I loved this…
LOL! That’s what I thought when attending Mass at my parish plus watching EWTN everysingle day for a year!I hope this is the right place to post this… We are in RCIA and have been attending Mass at our local parish. When we first went, we really expected something similar to what we see daily on EWTN. However, it’s nothing like it, and we are getting really discouraged.
The music has a very folksy feel to it, complete with someone strumming a guitar. The altar servers just wear white robes with jeans and sneakers…the whole atmosphere is almost too laid back. So much so that some people even ignore the tablernacle. I love to sing, and so I sat in on one of the choir practices. One of the songs had rain in the title and the director said, “Oh good! I need to bring my rain stick!” I did a double take and had to snap my mouth shut. A rain stick? At Mass? And even though things are laid back, the service is so rushed! It’s almost like parts overlap because they are going so fast.
Combine that with the RCIA instruction we are getting…and we are feeling kind of down.
In our area there are other parishes, which we haven’t tried yet, but we are not holding out too much hope as the same priests and deacon serve them all.
I’m sorry-I guess this really has no point except to allow me to vent a little about something that has discouraged us, as we really have no one else with whom to discuss this. Maybe we’re making too big of a deal out of it.
Andrea
You are so right about daily Mass. I leave daily Mass with a smile on face, full of the grace of Christ. Then I go to Sunday Mass and kicked on the leg by the screaming kid next to and have to put up with people chatting, banging drums, holding hands, you name it. I either go really early Sunday or to the Saturday night Mass, just to keep my cool.I just stumbled into this thread. Gosh, looks like I have found a bunch of people who think the same way that I do!!
I have found that Daily Masses tend to be more … politically incorrect … [right word??] and more properly oriented to the correct rubrics than Sunday Mass. Sunday Mass seems to have been turned into a form of entertainment. So for years I willingly suffered through Sunday Mass and offered up my suffering. And for the “pleasure” of participating in a more “rigorous” Mass, I would go to daily Mass. The priest has to get people in and out, because they need to get back to work. And he isn’t under pressure to be an entertainer. The daily homilies are meat and potatoes. And once you get to know the priests you can ask them questions before Mass and they may (if they are knowledgeable) weave an answer into their brief and pithy (always wanted to use that word) homiies.
Daily Mass is also a great way to meet like-minded people. In fact, that is eventually how I got “volunteered” into doing Communion Services. [After years of daily Mass, I started at a new church near a new job and the one priest was on the hook to say about 20 Masses a week. Really short handed. ETC, ETC, ETC.]
RCIA has me puzzled somewhat. BEFORE the Church started up the RCIA programs, it was sort of normal for each pastor to bring in 50 or 100 new Catholics into the Church each year.
Then… I don’t know the year … when they started with coloring at Sunday School and making banners for the church … they started RCIA and it seems that they BRAG about bringing in six new Catholics.
There is a disconnect in there somewhere.
Hope I explained this ok. Haven’t my second cup of coffee yet this Saturday morning.
Anyway, my advice FWIW, complete the RCIA program and then embark on a program of active self-education. Catholic Answers is super because they have re-published a lot of Catholic “reference” books. On a semi-secular level, visit Human Events on-line and subscribe to the paper copy; it reads as if it were written by serious Catholics. And also subscribe to the Wanderer. Also Accuracy in Media.
But there I go AGAIN!!
It took me years to find out about these publications and organizations.
What an odyssey!!!
Too bad it has to take so much effort to find the Truth.
Seattle Diocese eh?
I’m from the east side of the state an visit the wet, er west side on occasion and feel your pain. I’ve experienced see-through chalices, standing during the Eucharistic prayer (when kneelers were present), etc. and such. But I have seen other signs of hope. I was suprised at the entire congregation at one west side parish bowing (with me) during the Nicene Creed. That surprised me.
So have hope, and lead by good example.
God Bless,
SG257
I don’t know a link, but it should be in your missallettes. OR, if your parish doesn’t have them, surely one of the parishes you have visited does. The translations should all be the same. Hope that helps.I’m a recent convert and the three Catholic churches in my area all recite the Creed differenlty - one seems to add things from the Apostolic Creed not usually found in the Nicene. Can you direct me to a site online that has it posted as it is supposed to said durning Mass? Thanks!!
It’s unfortunate that your parish isn’t following the GIRM. The only thing my parish priests to that they shouldn’t, but I love, is stepping off of the pulpit for the Homily.I hope this is the right place to post this… We are in RCIA and have been attending Mass at our local parish. When we first went, we really expected something similar to what we see daily on EWTN. However, it’s nothing like it, and we are getting really discouraged.
The music has a very folksy feel to it, complete with someone strumming a guitar. The altar servers just wear white robes with jeans and sneakers…the whole atmosphere is almost too laid back. So much so that some people even ignore the tablernacle. I love to sing, and so I sat in on one of the choir practices. One of the songs had rain in the title and the director said, “Oh good! I need to bring my rain stick!” I did a double take and had to snap my mouth shut. A rain stick? At Mass? And even though things are laid back, the service is so rushed! It’s almost like parts overlap because they are going so fast.
Combine that with the RCIA instruction we are getting…and we are feeling kind of down.
In our area there are other parishes, which we haven’t tried yet, but we are not holding out too much hope as the same priests and deacon serve them all.
I’m sorry-I guess this really has no point except to allow me to vent a little about something that has discouraged us, as we really have no one else with whom to discuss this. Maybe we’re making too big of a deal out of it.
Andrea