This is the kind of liturgy we often experienced at St Mary’s Seminary in Baltimore, Maryland in the 1970’s, especially the early 70’s. This Jesuit priest, Fr. Joseph Rossi is skewed in the St. Mary’s Seminary way of doing liturgy during its most corrupt period, between 1972 and 74.
Watch the video provide by the Baltimore Sun by pressing the ”Read it all” at the end of this article I post from the Deacon’s Bench.
This is truly a caricature of some of the liturgical crap that occurred in the Church in the late 60’s and 70’s and beyond. I can’t believe that Pizza and Beer weren’t used for the Eucharistic elements.
From the Deacon’s Bench:
Gospel and Gorillaz: Pop-themed Mass featuring memes and YouTube a potent draw for Loyola University students
This is fascinating stuff — and I was pleased and impressed to see that one of the students involved in this is from my parish in Queens.
From The Baltimore Sun:
It’s late on a cold Sunday night at Loyola University Maryland, and with most of its students apparently ensconced in the warmth of their dorm rooms or library carrels, the North Baltimore campus seems as dark and still as the inside of an empty cathedral.Inside the small lounge of one freshman dorm, though, a celebration is coming to life.Young men and women steam in by the dozen, faces illuminated by glowing candles. The strains of U2’s “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” thrum off the walls. And a priest in collar and dark jeans takes his place at a makeshift altar up front.“Guys, we’re starting with a classic rock song, and it deals with the theme of hope,” the Rev. Joseph Rossi, 69, tells the nearly 200 people now filling the incense-filled space. “Listen to the line, ‘I believe in Kingdom Come.’ That’s what’s giving them hope. That’s what their faith is holding onto.”And the most talked-about weekly gathering on campus, the Hopkins Court Mass, has begun.In an era in which attendance in the Catholic Church remains in decline, particularly among young adults, the 10 p.m. Mass Rossi celebrates draws more than 150 a week, at least the equivalent of its more conventional counterparts. And it generates a buzz on campus that other activities can’t touch.Some say it’s that the service spotlights rock and pop music, YouTube videos, internet memes or film clips alongside the core elements of a traditional Mass. To others, it’s that students work with Rossi to devise, promote and carry out each one, generating a rare sense of ownership.And many regulars cite the lack of formality, the location outside the confines of church buildings, and the sense of community that develops among those who attend.Julia Scapp, a junior from New York who was raised Catholic, has been attending the Hopkins Court Mass regularly since her freshman year.The 21-year-old says her commitment to the faith had been flagging — “I wasn’t feeling a connection to my home church,” she says — but the 10 o’clock Mass has brought it back to life.“Even though the readings and the Gospels were the same ones, the way Father Rossi connected them to things that matter to me gave me a new outlook on church,” she says. “It was suddenly so relevant, so relatable. It meant a complete 180 for me.”
7 comments:
I think it’s a shame that all of these “modern” priests hate Vatican II. If they really believed in Vatican II they would faithfully follow the missal of Vatican II. They don’t trust the liturgy as reformed by St. Pope Paul VI. And the document on the liturgy from the Council clearly states “no one, not even a priest may add or remove anything in the liturgy of their own accord”. That priest is clericalism with a capital “C”. And it makes me think if he is doing that what else is he doing that isn’t above board.
Well, I for one won't be happy till I start seeing Amazonian faces and little wooden idols.
I think one of the Episcopal parishes here in Atlanta occasionally has a "U-2 Eucharist." No plans to attend that!
The article says he performs the Mass at 10 Sunday nights? Heck, that is practically Monday---in the Eastern Orthodox Church, that would be considered Monday, as their ecclesiastical day runs sundown to sundown. And I don't think Baltimore has a sunset that late in the year, and certainly not in winter! Maybe Mass should involve some sacrifice, like getting up before noon on Sundays?!?
From his Loyola Bio:
“Research interests...Research interests...Theology and Cinema (American and International).”
That alone should give you a clue. Not to mention he is a Jesuit at Loyola. Even in my day that was suspect, and I’m older than dirt,
Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered.
Is it just me, or does anyone else hear their inner gay-meter scream "flaming" as they look at this priest's photo?
Father, where was the top photo taken with the requiem Mass? That is such a beautiful church and it looks familiar.
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