J
JReducation
Guest
I can’t answer for any other parish. But our parish has seven masses every Sunday. The church holds 800 people. The only mass that has empty seat is the 8:00 mass on Sunday morning. We also have confessions every Sat for an hour. There is always one brother and one secular priest hearing confessions, because the line is too long for one person.I watched the midnight Mass from Holy Name Cathedral last night. They sang Adeste Fidelis (in Latin), the Kyrie, and the Gloria (in Latin). I fell asleep after that.
Packed house there too. So why isn’t it like that every Sunday?
A Blessed Christmas to you.
It may have a lot to do with population. We have a very large Catholic population where we are: Irish, Italians, Haitians, Filipinos, and Latin Americans. Can’t get more Catholic than that group. We also have masses in Spanish, Latin (OF), English, Creole, and Tagalo. Plus we have a very large youth ministry, about 500 kids and anothet 600 little ones in religious education. As it usually happens, the kids drag their parents.
I know it’s not the only thing, but one thing that helps a parish become alive is the people who run it. We have two houses of brothers who are responsible for this parish. Together there are seven of us. Each of us does a little something. Two of our brothers are priests, but only one functions as a priest. The other is the maintenance man for the grounds. He does help out with mass and confessions on weekends. The other five, one is the superior, he runs everything. Since the superior is not a priest and the priest cannot be the pastor. So he’s the parrocial vicar. That would create an internal conflic of interest in the community. You can’t have two brothers in equal positions of authority. It’s like Fr. Francis and Br. Elias. Elias was a priest and Francis was not. So Br. Elias always had to be a vicar. The people love the brothers.
The parrochial vicar has done a great job at raising 37 ministries in the parish. This draw in many people. It’s wonderful to see that many people, of different backgrounds, working together to create a parish family. This will probably be my last year there. I’m going to miss it. I’m moving into Gospel of Life ministry full-time with the new community, the Franciscan Brothers of Life. That’s another story.
I bet you that parishes that have a vibrant life of ministry are healthy. That has been my experience with most Francisan parishes. There is an Oblate parish, not far from us, that has an even larger community of parishioners and is even more vibrant. The OMIs are an awesome group of missionaries. They bring their charism to their parish too. I think that’s the secret to a vibrant parish. It must have a charism. One of the diocesan priests here runs a great parish. He’s not a religious, but he has a missionary charism about him and it has caught on in his parish.
Got to run now.
Have a blessed Christmas!
Br. JR, OSF :christmastree1: