x2 on the vocations. Please pray for them. We need more in Canada too. We’re down to 27 monks in choir, and a few others in assisted living facilities. When I became an oblate back in 2003, there were 42 monks in choir. The average age has crept up to 70 and the youngest monk is in his mid-30s, though we have a couple of fairly serious prospects in their 20s who have been hovering around the abbey of late. The Benedictine women near Montreal have their first two new postulants in years, though one of them will have to finish her university before she can be permanently admitted. Deo gratias! And these women are FANTASTIC liturgists!
I myself never fully understood the concept of “liturgical committees”. what can they do besides limiting themselves to deciding what licit choices in the Missal they prefer for the parish? I’ve seen one thoroughly wrecked liturgy where the penitential rite was plainly removed so they could have some corny little ceremony at the start of Mass. Given that the Kyrie is one chant the faithful know well enough to sing along with us… it was tragic. Fortunately that parish has been taken over by a new young religious community made up of former Dominicans, that has the archbishop’s support. They are much more orthodox and learning liturgy from… of all places… our abbey. I’ve been asked if I’d consider going to teach Latin psalmody to them. You can guess my answer though they haven’t gotten back to me yet.
Elsewhere in the archdiocese though, I’m happy to report that of all the parishes we chant at, all are thoroughly orthodox in their liturgies. My favourite parish was particularly excellent… and the pastor there was recently ordained bishop and took over the diocese of Bathurst in New Brunswick. He has asked the Communauté St-Martin to establish a seminary there (they produced an excellent Latin/French antiphonary, noted for Gregorian chant, for the current Liturgy of the Hours, which I use). Google them. They are a remarkable group of seminarians and young priests in France, trained in liturgy, faithful to the Holy Father, living in Community inspired by Benedictine spirituality. When they take over a parish, they send THREE priests to the parish, to avoid the loneliness and isolation that has led to so many tragedies in the Church, and to create a micro community to pray the Hours together, etc.