Posted on 09/23/2013 3:30:07 PM PDT by NYer
Ping!
BTTT!
I am about to put up a sign in our Adoration Chapel that says: “Silence. Prayer Only.”
Fair enough but before and after my older son’s wedding, our younger son, a talented musician was happily playing the grand piano in the sacred space. He got away with it before but Father Keith stopped him after. It was okay either way.
The building is not sacred.
and to Charlie the piano was a wonderful opportunity. I’m thinking Jesus enjoyed it and was okay with it. It wasn’t sacred music but it was not disrespectful.
bkmk
(I temporarily borrowed your smiley there.)
bump
Perhaps creating a deposit box for all cell phones, blackberries, I-whatevers and return them to the congregants after they leave. ;-)
The only time I wish there were silence is right after Communion.
It’s crowded and quiet in my Catholic Church except for the babies..............
The Infant choir? The wonderful sound of our future. Our RCIA director this evening, the father of three little girls ages 5, 3, and 1 1/2 says he hasn’t heard the gospel read in five years so he always reads it ahead of time.
Remember what Jesus said, “let the little come to me?”
At least in my parish buletin, a message was given asking parishoners with cell phones to shut them off.
Correction, “little children”.
CORRECTED VERSION:
Cardinal Donald Wuerl should be denied Communion until he changes his refusal to obey Canon 915, Cardinal Raymond Leo Burke said, according to the Western Center for Journalism.
Thats canon law, not opinion, he said. Canon 915 states that Catholics who are stubbornly contrary in manifest grave sin are not to be admitted to Holy Communion.
And Cardinal Burke said Cardinal Wuerl fits the definition.
Certainly this is a case when Canon 915 must be applied, he said, the Western Center for Journalism reported. This is a person who obstinately, after repeated admonitions, persists in a grave sin refusing to obey Canon 915 and still professes to be a devout Catholic.
The cardinal also said that Cardinal Wuerl is a perfect example of Catholics who separate their faith from day-to-day living.
This is a prime example of what Blessed John Paul II referred to as the situation of Catholics who have divorced their faith from their public life and therefore are not serving their brothers and sisters in the way that they must in safeguarding the Eucharist from sacrilege, in preventing grave scandal, and promoting the life of the innocent and defenseless unborn, in safeguarding and promoting the integrity of marriage and the family, he said.
The cardinal, an American, is the prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura in Rome, Life News reported.
Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/sep/24/vatican-court-head-no-communion-nancy-pelosi/#ixzz2fsa9icA9
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When Christ is present in the tabernacle, IT IS! If you want more on this read the Bible when Christ arrived in Jerusalem on the donkey and went to the temple.
Christ is present in all of us all the time if we accept him. We don’t need a building.
After I switched mass times, I now attend a mass where a number of senior citizens come about an hour early and can hear who is going for a colonoscopy and who is going to the eye doctor this week, etc...oh, and they’re in the last pew and I’m in the first pew...and the guy who does the most talking, is the first to quote church law and procedures.
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