Some of our readers will find these resources useful.
Please feel free to add to them in the comments.
Catholic musicians gathered to blog about liturgy and life
Some of our readers will find these resources useful.
Please feel free to add to them in the comments.
Much food for thought in this video. Even with good catechesis, will catechesis influence lives, without the concomitant formation of the imagination?
I remember talking with a 5th grader who said of the term transubstantiation “We’ve been haunted by that word for years!” I knew his good, teaching pastor well, and was glad and not too surprised to hear that the teaching had been passed along. But now I wonder. Five years have passed since that conversation. The boy is a teenager, starting his sophomore year in high school. How is he doing? How will he be in 10 years?
Thankfully, as is often the case, his good teaching pastor is also attentive to beauty in the liturgy. We really need both of these elements to be built back up for our people.
Many have said that the Pew study reflects a catechetical failure. I fear the opposite: it reflects a certain kind of catechetical success. It is the result of an unwritten catechesis that American Catholics have been slowly learning. Through a deracinated, spiritualistic, and emotivistic treatment of the Eucharist, many Catholics have learned their faith from a generation of pastors who stripped the altars, razed the bastions of reverence around the Lord in the sacrament, and who generally treated the Most Holy Eucharist itself as something to be passed out like a leaflet rather than received in awe, as people prostrate before the fire of divinity. Far too many have received this kind of unwritten catechesis.
Chad Pecknold writes much more here.
On this Feast day of St. John Vianney, Pope Francis has issued a beautiful letter to priests.
The prayer of a pastor is nourished and made incarnate in the heart of God’s People. It bears the marks of the sufferings and joys of his people, whom he silently presents to the Lord to be anointed by the gift of the Holy Spirit. This is the hope of a pastor, who with trust and insistence asks the Lord to care for our weakness as individuals and as a people. Yet we should also realize that it is in the prayer of God’s People that the heart of a pastor takes flesh and finds its proper place. This sets us free from looking for quick, easy, ready-made answers; it allows the Lord to be the one – not our own recipes and goals – to point out a path of hope. Let us not forget that at the most difficult times in the life of the earliest community, as we read in the Acts of the Apostles, prayer emerged as the true guiding force.
Much more here.
As a parish music director, I was able to accomplish many things that should have been impossible, given the limits of my abilities. I knew that the real powerhouse behind our parish programs was the Poor Clares monastery within our parish boundaries, where our priests said Mass.
On the occasion of her 25th jubilee, ESPN celebrates the life of one of the monastery’s nuns, a former basketball star.
But Pennefather did have the most beautiful shooting touch in all of women’s basketball. She scored 2,408 points, breaking Villanova’s all-time record for women and men. She did it without the benefit of the 3-point shot, and the record still stands today.
Much more here.
God is in His holy place,
God who unites those who dwell in His house;
He Himself gives might and strength to His people.