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Texas Pastor Removed Over Latin Masses
Seattle Catholic ^ | July 4, 2003 | Peter Miller

Posted on 07/04/2003 9:27:18 PM PDT by Land of the Irish

For a Catholic priest in a small Texas town, it has been a particularly eventful week.

Over the course of three days, Fr. Stephen Zigrang JCL, pastor of St. Andrew's Church in Channelview, has been called into his bishop's office, threatened with suspension, removed from his parish and even forced to defend his mental health to his own father. These unfortunate events have taken place because Fr. Zigrang did something new during last Sunday's Masses — or, more accurately, did something very, very old.

Before each Mass on the morning of June 29th, Fr. Zigrang announced that he would no longer be offering Mass according to the revised missal of Pope Paul VI, instituted in 1969. He proceeded to offer the Mass according to the Roman Missal of 1962 (also called the "Latin", "Traditional" or "Tridentine" Mass). Parishioners who were used to attending a Mass in English, with the priest facing the congregation, witnessed a priest offer a Mass almost entirely in Latin, while facing the altar. Guitar bands and sing-along hymns were replaced by chants and reverential silence. Rather then standing up to receive Holy Communion in their hands, congregants were instructed to kneel and receive the Blessed Sacrament on their tongues. One of the three masses was a sung mass, also called a Missa Contata.

The Diocese Reacts Fr. Zigrang is a priest of the Diocese of Galveston-Houston, under Bishop Joseph Fiorenza. Upon hearing of the weekend's events, the diocese reacted immediately. Unable to reach him for most of the day Monday, the chancery sent word to Fr. Zigrang that the bishop would like to meet with him the following morning, July 1st.

Despite advice from others suggesting he be accompanied by a lawyer, Fr. Zigrang went to see the bishop on his own. He was told that he would be suspended and had until the next day to vacate the St. Andrew's rectory. He was provided a letter signed by Bishop Fiorenza and the diocesan Chancellor, Monsignor Frank Rossi, admonishing him for his actions and informing him that failure to "follow the liturgical directives of the Holy See in the celebration of the Eucharist and the other sacraments … is a grave disobedience and threatens the unity of the Church within the parish committed to your pastoral care."

First thing the following morning, the Director of Communications for the diocese, Mrs. Annette Gonzales Taylor, responded to an inquiry from the night before with an email claiming that, "…your inquiry is a bit premature in that Fr. Zigrang has not been suspended. At this time, Bishop Fiorenza and Fr. Zigrang continue to be in conversation."

When reached by phone to clarify the matter, Mrs. Taylor reiterated that Fr. Zigrang was not suspended, is still the pastor of St. Andrew's and no action has been taken against him. She said that she did not know whether he was at the parish today as priests take some days off. When asked why Fr. Zigrang would be (as witnesses claimed) in the process of moving out of the rectory if no action had been taken against him, she did not know.

At some point that same morning, as he was moving out of the parish rectory, Fr. Zigrang was called by Bishop Fiorenza, who recommended that he take a two month leave of duty. It was further suggested that Fr. Zigrang may want to seek psychiatric counseling during this time.

The following day, June 3rd, parishioners found a note on the St. Andrew's church door explaining that there would be no daily Mass or Eucharistic adoration. The note also referenced the name and number of another priest to contact.

Finally, Fr. Zigrang's elderly father was contacted this week by Chancellor Monsignor Frank Rossi, who expressed to him concerns about Fr. Zigrang's psychological well-being.

Past Efforts Fr. Stephen Zigrang has been a priest in the Diocese of Galveston-Houston for over 25 years and pastor at St. Andrew's for the past six. He is a former seminary instructor and has a licentiate in canon law. He was previously a member of the diocesan marriage tribunal where his lack of lenience toward annulment applications brought him into conflict with his peers.

Prompted by years of liturgical research and studies which drew him toward the Traditional Latin Mass, Fr. Zigrang had requested on multiple occasions for the opportunity to offer a public Tridentine Mass in a parish. His most recent request came in January of this year when he sent a letter to Bishop Fiorenza requesting permission to convert St. Andrew's parish in to a traditional parish (dedicated to the practice of the Tridentine Mass and other sacraments) or start such a parish in another location. Six months later, he had still not received a reply.

For the past couple years, Fr. Zigrang has been offering the Latin Mass privately in the rectory at 6:30 each morning. When he attempted to offer a single Latin Mass for his congregation on Sunday mornings, he was ordered by Bishop Fiorenza to stop.

In 1988, responding to Catholics attached to the Traditional Mass and sacraments, Pope John Paul II called for the "wide and generous application" of Latin Masses throughout the Church, but the decision was left up to each bishop on whether or how to implement those directives. Many bishops have refused to allow any such Masses, while some have allowed only limited access.

In the Diocese of Galveston-Houston, home to 1.5 million Catholics and the largest diocese in Texas (eleventh largest in the United States), there is a single Latin Mass offered on Sundays in downtown Houston. Not all believe that these accommodations are adequate to meet their spiritual needs, or in the "wide and generous" spirit alluded to by the Holy Father. Catholics who need to travel great distances with families have requested that the early Mass time be moved or another Mass be added for more reasonable access. Some have requested daily Masses; others Masses on Holy Days of Obligation; and still others a traditional parish, going so far as to locate property and priests available for such an arrangement. These requests to Bishop Fiorenza have reportedly been ignored or denied. The attendants of the Mass also are under certain restrictions, including a prohibition from promoting or advertising the Mass.

Critics point out that this diocese, which prides itself on promoting and celebrating diversity, particularly in liturgical matters, has demonstrated a clear and disturbing exception when it comes to the Tridentine Mass. Although hundreds of Masses are said throughout the diocese in a multitude of languages from Spanish to Chinese, and in a multitude of styles from "Country Music" to "Gospel Spiritual" with little to no concern from the bishop, requests for Traditional Masses are ignored and attempts to offer Masses in Latin quickly and definitively put to a stop.

Parishioners Respond The parishioners' responses to Fr. Zigrang's Latin Masses have been varied. Many were surprised but respectful of their pastor's decision, but there were also some notable negative and positive reactions. Some were openly hostile toward the move, storming out of the church at the beginning of Mass. Members of the musical band which performs at the 10:30 Mass were particularly dismayed (having no role during a Latin Mass), as were lectors and extraordinary ministers. After one of the Masses, a regular guitar player was particularly vocal about the complaint that would be forthcoming to the bishop.

On the other end of the spectrum, other parishioners were greatly appreciative of the opportunity afforded to them. Some old enough to remember when the Mass was in Latin were given a reminder of how much had changed and some of what was lost. Others who had never experienced such a Mass were struck by its simplicity and beauty. At least once attendant commented on the contemplative rather than "entertainment" focus, and another described it as "absolutely beautiful".

Several congregants came up to Fr. Stephen Zigrang after Mass to personally thank him. In what now appears to be his last Sunday at the parish, he gave them the rare opportunity to experience a Latin Mass in their parish, and allowed them to witness firsthand the reason for which their pastor was willing to risk the consequences which would soon follow.

***

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TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Theology; Worship
KEYWORDS: catholiclist; fiorenza; tridentinemass
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To: sitetest; Desdemona
No, the act need not be "intrinsically evil" to be resisted and disobeyed. You are raising the bar unnecessarily--which is telling to say the least. Interesting how the same people who proclaim the rights of conscience and of dissent are the first ones yammering about obedience when it's their own ox being gored.
161 posted on 07/05/2003 8:41:37 PM PDT by ultima ratio
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To: ultima ratio
Dear ultima,

LOL. My ox isn't getting gored. But if it does, could we at least try to get a couple of steaks out of it for the grill??

"Interesting how the same people who proclaim the rights of conscience and of dissent are the first ones yammering about obedience when it's their own ox being gored."

Nope, that's not MY ox for sure, as I've never proclaimed that any Catholic has a right to dissent from binding church teaching.


sitetest

162 posted on 07/05/2003 8:47:00 PM PDT by sitetest (Still prayin' for ya, ultima! ;-) ***)
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To: sitetest
I never said what you claim I said. I never said the New Mass was "intrinsically" harmful to souls. I said it was harmful to souls. There's a difference. One may attend the New Mass and not be harmed if one is sufficiently grounded in Catholicism and Catholic theology. But many--perhaps most ordinary Catholics--are not. So it's not "intrinsically" harmful--but can be harmful just the same for most ordinary Catholics--as we know from the rising data showing a loss of faith among Mass attendees in general, particularly regarding key dogmas such as the Real Presence.
163 posted on 07/05/2003 8:52:46 PM PDT by ultima ratio
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To: Land of the Irish
If Fr. Zigrang had been telling the bishop some of the things you and your ilk have been saying on this thread, such as the NO being intrinsically evil, then the bishop was right to question his mental health.

Seattle Catholic is way too sympathetic to the schismatic cause to be taken seriously. There is probably more to this story than what their myopic viewpoint would be able to see.

164 posted on 07/05/2003 8:53:42 PM PDT by St.Chuck
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To: sitetest
Oh, really? Do you agree with Church teachings that Christ died in expiation for our sins and that the Mass should therefore be propitiatory in nature? If so--what are you doing defending the Novus Ordo?
165 posted on 07/05/2003 8:57:54 PM PDT by ultima ratio
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To: Hermann the Cherusker
I see the SSPX has a new Priest ...

Hopefully so. May many more good, holy priests follow in Father Zigrand's footsteps.

166 posted on 07/05/2003 8:58:22 PM PDT by Land of the Irish
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To: Desdemona
When I sung in the choir for a Low Tridentine Mass (Offertory and Communion Hymns), I didn't find this distracting from attending Mass - I also winged it since I knew the songs. Same for serving Mass as an Altar Boy. When singing, it helped to be up in the choir loft looking at the Altar, rather than in the sanctuary performing to the people.
167 posted on 07/05/2003 9:03:12 PM PDT by Hermann the Cherusker
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To: ultima ratio
Dear ultima,

Okay, heck, that's fine.

How about we replace it with "generally, usually harmful to souls"?

The rest of your post, I don't agree. I don't credit the surveys that you think you cite, I don't credit the methodology used by many of them, and I think that you confuse correlation with causation.

But in this thread, I don't have any argument with you. You, at least, come right out and say it: the new rite is bad. And yes, you do believe it is inherently bad, very bad, even, if not intrinsically evil (the latter phrase having a more technical meaning in terms of moral theology, and I was wrong to use it so sloppily).

You believe that the very structure of the new rite tends to take people away from Catholic faith. If that's what you believe, then it is a good idea for this priest to disobey his bishop. And if he thinks it, he is more intellectually honest to join the schismatics in the SSPX.

But most of the non-schismatics here acknowledge the validity, and inherent goodness and worthiness of the new rite, even if they prefer the old rite, and even if they believe the old rite is objectively superior to the new.


sitetest
168 posted on 07/05/2003 9:04:19 PM PDT by sitetest (Still prayin' for ya, ultima! ;-) ***)
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To: St.Chuck
Again, you and sitetest have a penchant for getting it wrong. I never said the Novus Ordo was "intrinsically evil." I don't use such terms loosely. I said it was harmful to the faith--and this is provable statistically. Even Card. Ratzinger attributes Church reversals to its advent. And I have said it was seriously deficient--which it is, since it does not affirm Catholic doctrines. If one is schooled in the faith, no harm need happen by attending. But there are many subtleties in text and rubrics which undermine the Catholic faith and render attendance dangerous.
169 posted on 07/05/2003 9:05:34 PM PDT by ultima ratio
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To: ultima ratio
non sequitur
170 posted on 07/05/2003 9:06:23 PM PDT by sitetest (Now right this moment to bed I must go, so fresh I may be for the morn's Novus O. ;-))
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To: ninenot
"There's a serious temptation to blame all ills on the Novus Ordo--which temptation makes fools of those who do so." You are correct. Those with such a temptation should pray and learn.

There might be a few other factors--rampant materialism, faithless Bishops and priests, luxurious lifestyles (in comparison with the 1940's)---but don't think about those things. Again, I agree. There are of course many factors.

171 posted on 07/05/2003 9:13:52 PM PDT by cpforlife.org (Abortion? The spirit in the schools of one generation, is the spirit in the Government of the next.)
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To: St.Chuck
If Fr. Zigrang had been telling the bishop some of the things you and your ilk have been saying on this thread, such as the NO being intrinsically evil, then the bishop was right to question his mental health.

I'll get back to you later, the nurses here at St. Elizabeth's have just injected me with my final med's for the night. I'm getting very sleepy.

yes,yes Sizter Greenjeans, i love novus ordo, i hatehate trad..please no more shoks

172 posted on 07/05/2003 9:16:18 PM PDT by Land of the Irish
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To: sitetest
There never was a schism--but I don't expect somebody like you to admit this to yourself. It would involve conceding that not even a pope may declare something is black when it is white. But who are the schismatics, anyway--those who follow the Catholic faith--or those who create novelties? Does the side with the pope get to win simply by virtue of that fact? I don't think so. Faith trumps an unfaithful papacy in the final analysis.
173 posted on 07/05/2003 9:20:08 PM PDT by ultima ratio
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To: ultima ratio
I never said the Novus Ordo was "intrinsically evil."

And I never said you did. Nevertheless, the post by LandoftheIrish, to which I referred, used the term "intrinsically harmful to souls", which may not mean precisely the same thing as intrinsically evil, yet is equally insane if that is what the priest told his bishop as I conjectured.

174 posted on 07/05/2003 9:22:15 PM PDT by St.Chuck
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To: Land of the Irish
Bishop Fiorenza learned his lessons well from the KGB Manual for Suppression of Dissent.

The psychiatric hospitals of the old Soviet Union were filled with dissidents who obviously had to be mentally ill, because they did not support the new order of society.

(Incidentally, was Fiorenza ever involved with liberation theology? He might have encountered Soviet agents through the movement, given its close ties to various Marxist groups in Latin America.)
175 posted on 07/05/2003 9:24:24 PM PDT by Loyalist (Keeper of the Schismatic Orc Ping List. Freepmail me if you want on or off it.)
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To: sitetest
Sure it follows. You wrote,"I've never proclaimed that any Catholic has a right to dissent from binding church teaching." Yet Trent was binding. What do you suppose inspires such animus against the Old Mass, if not Trent itself and its admonishments against Protestantism? You, of course, defend these same bishops--as you do the New Mass.
176 posted on 07/05/2003 9:30:30 PM PDT by ultima ratio
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To: sitetest
No, I was making a generic comment. I actually misread your comments, I thought you said you were thinking of attending an Indult Mass.
177 posted on 07/05/2003 9:33:12 PM PDT by narses ("The do-it-yourself Mass is ended. Go in peace" Francis Carindal Arinze of Nigeria)
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To: St.Chuck
You don't think turning Catholics into Protestants is harmful?
178 posted on 07/05/2003 9:36:13 PM PDT by ultima ratio
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To: cpforlife.org
The answer isn't as simple as a yes or a no, but I hope I helped. BTW, Card. Ottovanni later restated his issues in a less confrontational manner and the Campos priests, just last year, regularized their relationship with Rome, never really addressing these points. They faced the death of their Bishop and that may have played a role.
179 posted on 07/05/2003 9:36:16 PM PDT by narses ("The do-it-yourself Mass is ended. Go in peace" Francis Carindal Arinze of Nigeria)
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To: Loyalist
Bishop Fiorenza learned his lessons well from the KGB Manual for Suppression of Dissent.

Ya'll are terrible.

Maybe the bishop didn't feel a compelling need to change the rite at St. Andrew's for the sake of the handful of people that supported Fr. Zigrang's desire. Instead, he told the priest that if he wanted, he could say the Tridentine privately, and suggested to the parishioners that if they wanted, there was an indult at the Church of the Annunciation, in downtown Houston, a beautiful church, worth driving to every Sunday, in my estimation. Why inconvenience the many, for the sake of the very few?

You guys have a vastly different understanding of the Church than most Catholics, and your bias causes you to say some pretty bizarre and even vicious things. The KGB manual. At least that is a new one.

Bishop Bruskewitz has allowed the Tridentine to be siad in his diocese, anytime, and anyplace. I would be interested in learning how widespread the old mass is there. My hunch is that most church going Catholics and most priests aren't very inerested in it. Even in Lincoln.

180 posted on 07/05/2003 9:50:44 PM PDT by St.Chuck
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