Posted on 02/28/2004 5:03:12 AM PST by NYer
A layman told of a priest who addressed his congregation before Mass started, saying, How many people believe that what were going to do today will bring God out of Heaven? There was a show of hands, and the priest replied, Well, its not going to happen.
After that incident, people stopped toing to Masses that priest was scheduled to celebrate and when the parish stopped printing the times of the Masses he would celebrate, people called up because they didnt want to go to his Masses. When the parish wouldnt give out that information, people just stopped going to Mass,, siad the layman.
I told a Cardinal in Rome about this incident, the layman continued, and he just sat there with an expression of unbelievable horror on his face. How can he say Mass? the Cardinal asked. I said, Its simple. His whole reason for being a priest is to destroy faith. The layman asked that his name be withheld, saying the Bishop would destroy me>
The use of invalid altar breads has been a problem in the Diocese of Albany since the Installation Mass of Bishop Hubbard in 1977; that Mass used invalid altar breads. That fact caused such an uproar in the diocese that the scandal even broke into the secular newspapers and was debated in letter to the editor for some time after.
The bread at the Installation Mass contained, in addition to wheat flour and water, honey and baking soda, as admitted by a now deceased staff member of the Diocese Office of Religious Education. Her defense in a secular newspaper of the recipe utilized left many believing that it was the unofficial reply of the diocese.
Two months after the Sacred Congregation for the Sacraments and Divine Worship published Inaestimabile Donum (April 1980), which described unnecessary outdoor celebrations of the Eucharist as a serious abuse, Bishop Hubbard celebrated a Polka Mass on the Fonda Fair Grounds for Amsterdams Annual Polka Fest 80.
The noon mass at the fairgrounds was celebrated barely 500 feet from St. Cecilias Church, in the open sided shed of a picnic grove, with the congregation sitting at picnic tables.
There have been ecumenical services where Protestants and Catholics receive Communion, services which are advertised as a valid mass for Catholics while retaining th emeaning of Holy Communion for participating Protestants. There have been Masses concelebrated with protestant ministers who receive Communion with the priest.
The radicals think they have a mandate to do whatever they want, said one priest, and you cant tell me this isnt allowed to destroy the Church. In his view, Bishop Hubbards support for women priests stems from a drive to humiliate his priests.
The priest told of an event held in the cathedral where the Bishop was in the sanctuary, completely surrounded by women who helped him concelebrate Mass, and then distributed Communion. Packing the first four pews were diocesan priests, reduced to spectators.
In 1976, the Diocese of Albany began an effort to bring altar girls into every parish. Fr. Richard Vosko, then director of the Diocesan Liturgy Center (now a priest that operates his own architecture firm), told the Times Union that, while altar girls were a problem in some areas of the US, its not a real issue with us in the Albany Diocese. In 1976, he also said that the American Bishops had petitiioned Rome to allow them to use altar girls.
In 1978, women were being trained as acolytes as a preliminary to Confirmation in the Albny Diocese. The liturgical norm that women may not serve at the altar was interpreted by Fr. Cotugno as meaning women may not wash the hands of the priest.
In 1980, Inaestimabile Donum stated that girls may not perform the roles of altar boys, and may not be candle bearers, cross bearers, incense bearers and the like.
In 1989, the Albany Diocese stated that the issue of altar girls is still being studied by the Vatican, but that parishes that employ altr girls have the Albany Dioiceses blessing. Chancellor Fr. F explained: The question of whether girls officially can be altar servers is still under study by the Vatican. And so the debate goes on. Yes you can, because the Vatican hasnt said no, or no you cant, because the Vatican hasnt said yes. And it depends on which side of the question you want to come down on.
In 1991, Chancellor Fr. P, attempting to deflect criticism that Bishop Hubbard wasnt loyal to Rome on the specific issue of altar girls, replied that the local Bishop has the right to decide whether girls may be altar servers. In his push for the ordination of women, the feminization of the liturgy was a primary goal, a layman said, and thats why altar girls are so important.
In May 1987 Capital Region magazine published an article The Boy Bishop Comes of Age by Jeremy Bloom, marking the 10th anniversary of the Bishops installation. One of the bishops favored priests was introduced and quoted by Bloom:
Hogan, who has known Bishop Hubbard since their days together at St. Josephs Seminary in Dunwoodie on LI, articulates a theme with which Hubbard and most of the American Bishops would probably agree. Im very loyal and affectionate toward the Pope, he says. Im not terribly loyal to the Vatican State and its bureaucracy. That has very little to do with the dying and rising of Jesus, the Eucharist, and love; it has to do with power, and like all bureaucracies, it tends toward evil. That view, say catholics in Albany, epitomizes the chancery view of Roman liturgical directives.
He says he doesn't join committees because in his experience they take a bishop's time away from "minding the store." I like him a lot.
I will remember these board members in my prayers because I did my fair share of trashing them this whole time and I was wrong. Bob Bennett was on the money, Justice Anne Burke was on the money and that psychiatrist from Johns Hopkins was brutally honest about homosexuals. Plus their recommendations center on formation in the seminaries, better and stricter admission policies, stronger religious formation and stronger teaching of living the gift of celibacy and chastity. No talk at all and no suggestion that a married priesthood would solve this problem. They blame the crisis on a culture (in the Church) of laxness and permissibility.
One of the commenters (I thought this was interesting - one of the bishops said this, D'Arcy maybe) said that at one point there was almost the idea that it wasn't right (for a bishop or seminary director) to question who God calls to the seminary - and so everyone was let in.
I think Bishop D'Arcy and Bishop Burke are similar in their personalities and understanding of the role of a bishop.
I do too. Unfortunately he had that one badly documented case which ended up diminishing his book in the eyes of many. I want to say that both of the priests he mentions as being homosexuals are in Albany somewhere? Maybe Rochester, I am not sure. Plus I have not heard good things about Louvain. Either way, for me the book is a valid expose of what went wrong. I bought many copies and passed them around.
The use of girl altar boys is just another abuse aimed at destroying the priesthood.
:-)
Too bad. Camel's nose under the tent lesson (as I am sure was intended all along).
How interesting that you should bring this up! On the topic of Albany's Priest Shortage: Was It Planned From The Beginning?, Likoudis has a section entitled "Deceiving Souls". He writes:
He especially ridiculed Pope Pius X. "For example, in 1906 in his encyclical Pascendi, Pius X wrote: "The Church is essentially an unequal society, that is, it is a society formed by pastors and flock - as far as the multitude is concerned, they have no other duty than to let themselves be lead' (sic).
"We know that Pius X was canonized by the Church, but I suspect it was not precisely for that statement ... these particular uses and interpretations (of 'pastors and flock') are not necessarily valid."
As one Albany Catholic layman pointed out in a letter to Edouard Cardinal Gagnon (which letter also advised the Cardinal of the recent appearances of Charles Curran, Mary Hunt, and Bishop Francis Murphy in Albany), Hubbard's quotation from Pope Pius X's Pascendi does not exist in the encyclical.
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