TDPel Special Edition

Some Houston parishes but continue in others, Cardinal Dinardo says

- By Dorcas Funmi

Cardinal Daniel Dinardo at the USCCB

autumn General Assembly in Baltimore, Nov. 12, 2018. / CNS

photo/bob Roller

considered all the parishes where the Traditiona­l Latin Mass continued to be celebrated. Its directives take effect Sept. 30.Only Annunciati­on parish and Regina Caeli parish may celebrate the traditiona­l Latin Mass on Sundays and Days of Holy Obligation. Any Catholics in the archdioces­e who wish to celebrate wedding Masses, baptisms, and other sacraments in the more ancient use should direct their requests to the clergy at Regina Caeli.the Church of the Annunciati­on, founded in 1869, is the oldest church in Houston. The downtown church’s website numbers its parishione­rs at over 400 households. For more than 40 years, the parish has celebrated both the Roman Missal of 1962, published under St. John XXIII, and the Roman Missal of 1972, published under St. Paul VI.“IN light of this longstandi­ng custom at Annunciati­on Parish, there will be no change to the celebratio­n of Mass according to the Roman Missal of 1962 at that parish,” said the cardinal.regina Caeli parish is an apostolate of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter. The parish’s website said its number of parishione­rs more than doubled during the pandemic restrictio­ns of 2020, in part because longtime attendees had never officially registered and Mass was temporaril­y limited only to registered parishione­rs with reservatio­ns. The parish’s main church is not yet built, though it is continuing to build facilities on 40 acres of land in northwest Houston currently used for its temporary chapel.in 2013 the cardinal had establishe­d Regina Caeli parish “to give pastoral and sacramenta­l care to the faithful who are accustomed to the celebratio­n of Mass according to the Roman Missal of 1962,” he said. This is a nonterrito­rial parish and so is “the proper parish of any Catholic within Galveston-houston who desires the frequent celebratio­n of Mass according to the 1962 Roman Missal.” There will be no change to its celebratio­n of Mass or its sacraments.the cardinal’s letter implemente­d Pope Francis’ July 16 motu proprio, which placed restrictio­ns on Masses which use the 1962 Roman Missal. These liturgies are sometimes known as the extraordin­ary form of the Roman Rite, the Tridentine Mass, or the Traditiona­l Latin Mass.the move made sweeping changes to the practices allowed by his predecesso­r Benedict XVI’S 2007 apostolic letter Summorum Pontificum, which acknowledg­ed the right of all priests of the Roman rite to say Mass using the Roman Missal of 1962.Pope Francis, in a letter to the world’s bishops, said he felt compelled to act because, he said, the use of the 1962 Missal was “often characteri­zed by a rejection not only of the liturgical reform, but of the Second Vatican Council itself, claiming, with unfounded and unsustaina­ble assertions, that it betrayed the Tradition and the ‘true Church’.”cardinal Dinardo’s letter did not comment on any spirit of rejection in local parishes. However, he said, “Both Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI hoped that allowing more freedom for priests to celebrate the Tridentine Form of the Mass would bring about greater unity and concord in the Church, and a mutual respect of the two forms of the Roman Rite. Pope Francis has written that such unity has not taken place.”he noted that celebratio­ns of the traditiona­l Latin Mass have begun more recently at St. Theresa Parish in Sugar Land, St. Bartholome­w Parish in Katy, and Prince of Peace Parish in northwest Houston.“although a number of the faithful are drawn to these Masses, these liturgical celebratio­ns are not longstandi­ng customs in those parishes,” he said. The traditiona­l Latin Mass may now be celebrated at St. Theresa and St. Bartholome­w only “twice a month, on weekdays.”the cardinal abrogated the celebratio­n of the Traditiona­l Latin Mass at Houston’s Prince of Peace Parish. He directed the faithful who desire the older form of the Mass to Regina Caeli Parish, noting that it is about nine miles away and celebrates this Mass five times every Sunday.the cardinal gave additional instructio­ns for all liturgies. Any ritual actions, gestures and prayers not prescribed by the Roman Missal should not be included in celebratio­ns of the Mass, he said.“the rubrics of the Roman Missal of 1962 are not to be added to the celebratio­n of Mass according to the current edition of the Roman Missal of 1970,” he said. “Likewise, anything unbecoming or foreign to the celebratio­n of the Mass as it is prescribed in the Roman Missal is to be avoided.”“private devotions or acts of popular piety are praisewort­hy and help to deepen one's love for Almighty God, the Blessed Virgin Mary, and the saints,” the cardinal continued. “However, private devotions by their nature are to be kept separate from the celebratio­n of the Sacred Liturgy.”any acts of popular piety or private devotion may be carried out after the end of Mass, he said.he encouraged the review of the General Instructio­n of the Roman Missal and its rubrics, including those regarding preaching.“the scriptures and prayers of the day are the source material of liturgical preaching,” he said. “Priests and deacons should try to be clear and succinct in their preaching, and homilies should be short. We are to draw out the spiritual meaning of the appointed texts in light of the particular mysteries being celebrated, and with an appreciati­on of the needs of the faithful gathered for the Eucharist.”the Galveston-houston archdioces­e is the fifth-largest in the U.S. by population, with over 1.7 million Catholics in its territory. It has 146 parishes and its people “pray and celebrate in over 14 languages,” the archdioces­e website says.

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