Showing posts with label Holy Week 2007. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holy Week 2007. Show all posts

Monday, April 9, 2007

Easter Sunday 2007 - Post 2

I still have much work to do before I can post many more photos. But, I would like to share these two - which was the idea of a parishioner standing in the back of the church with his young son. He had a good eye.

This is from the noon Mass, as a priest of Opus Angelorum delivers his Easter Sunday homily. Each of the pillars has a spray of yellow flowers attached to it and the row of decorated pillars, perfectly framed the shots.




Easter Sunday Photo Post 1

Easter Vigil Note with Paschal Candle Photo

Good Friday Tre Ore Service - Photo Post

Holy Thursday Photo Post

Commentary on Confession

  • Additional note on Confession Schedule for upcoming Divine Mercy Sunday: Confessions will be heard at the usual time on Saturday, so try to make it between 2:30 and 3:30, especially earlier when few people are there. On Divine Mercy Sunday - April 15, there will be Benediction following the Noon Orchestral Mass, followed by Confessions until the last is heard.

More Easter photos to come....


As you might imagine - if you know me, I have much editing to do before I can upload more photos. Even the photo above will be "straightened" as it is not always possible to get a photo leveled before the shot.

I couldn't take photos during the 9:30am Latin Novus Ordo because I was singing in the choir. But, I did hang around for the first part of the Noon mass, before having to depart to help with dinner that I was making for my mother, and my brother's family.

There are many talented people who freely use their God-given gifts at Assumption Grotto. We are very blessed to have our dear friend, Maureen, and her eye for decorating. Thanks be to God for the army of volunteers that worked tirelessly along with her after the Good Friday Service and before the Easter Vigil. Like the woman who annointed our Lord with oils, God certainly appreciates all the love and attention He receives through the kinds of labor so visible in the arrangements of our Easter decorations.


PARTING SHOTS FOR EASTER DAY....in Michigan!

It was announced on the news last night that it was colder on Easter Day than it was on Christmas day here in Southeast Michigan. These were taken just as I left around 12:30pm.


Sunday, April 8, 2007

Easter Vigil at Assumption Grotto



I have no pictures to offer for this years Easter Vigil (the above photo of the Pascal candle was taken Easter Sunday). There will be more opportunities in years to come, no doubt. I had a valid excuse for letting go of picture-taking.....really!

Saturday morning, as I was preparing for my family to come on Easter for dinner, the telephone rang. On the other end of the line was Fr. Perrone asking me if I was planning on being there for the vigil. That's like asking if a duck has feathers, but I gave him a simple, affirmative answer. He then told me that someone wanted to talk to me. That someone was a man that had been going through Fr. Perrone's Tuesday Night Catechism, which I was also attending in order to record. He and his wife had become more familiar with Assumption Grotto through this blog and inquired about RCIA. On the morning of this Easter Vigil, as the man took the phone from Fr. Perrone, he asked if I would be his sponsor.

I could not think of a more joyful excuse to set my camera down for one evening. So, without hesitation, I told him I would be honored. Also (don't tell anyone), it felt wonderful to take in Holy Mass from down in the pews.

After a deep discernment, the man's wife did not join him in coming into the Catholic faith, but the manner in which they support each other on the paths that they have chosen has been an inspiration to me. While they will worship in different houses each Sunday, they give me reason to ponder many virtues, chief among them - charity. Religion can be a testy thing in a marriage and sometimes people err in trying to force a spouse to go one way or the other. It takes courage and very strong love to follow one's own conscience while allowing others to exercise the God-given free-will all have to follow theirs.

It was love for her husband that brought his wife to Assumption Grotto to support him in his decision. My new found friends told me that this experience has made their marriage even stronger. I believe it. This practice of virtue - of love, charity and respect for each other extends to their adult children who also discern the paths before them.

I rejoice with all of those received into the Catholic faith at Assumption Grotto this year, as well as those who came home in parishes around the world. Deo Gratias! We must keep all converts and discerning people in our prayers.

Note: I have purposely left out details that would deprive this couple of their anonymity in cyberspace.

Edit: With her permission to point this out, the man's wife has a blog called, Haunted by the Holy Ghost. You will note in the sidebar, that she has a deep affection for Assumption Grotto, as revealed in the many links and references she has among other, non-Catholic links. There, she talks about her and her husband's decisions.

Friday, April 6, 2007

Holy Week 2007: Good Friday

I can only imagine what it was like for people in the pews, in a mode of deep reflective prayer as the Passion was sung over an hour long period of time. Active participation begins with interior participation - the lifting of our hearts and souls in deep meditation. This deep meditation opens us for the contemplative dimension of prayer should God will that we experience it.

In this post I will show some of the photos taken during the Good Friday Service at Assumption Grotto in Detroit, which began with Sext.



All bow during the "Gloria Patri" at the end of one of the Psalms



Altar boys, arranged by height, process in for the Liturgy of the Word, with Fr. Perrone and Deacon Jim taking up the rear.


Altar boys split - one to the right and one to the left as they process into the Sanctuary




In sorrow and humility, priests lay prostrate at the beginning of the service. This sign of humility is one where the priest considers himself unworthy to lift his face on account of how Jesus died on the cross for our sins.




During the singing of the Passion, Fr. Perrone (center) takes the part of the Narrator. The man dressed in white to the right sings the part of Pontius Pilate.



Fr. John is at the pulpit, singing the part of Jesus




The choir, in the loft, sings the parts of the crowd, among other appropriate verses.


Fr. Perrone delivering a riveting homily on the topic of shame - the shame to which Our Lord was subjected on account of our sins.


The next part of the service begins: Veneration of the Cross


Altar boys line up to venerate the Cross - first genuflecting, then kissing the figure of Our Lord crucified.


Fr. Perrone and Deacon Jim prepare to take the Blessed Sacrament back to the Sacristy, where Our Lord is reposed during this time.

The Crucifix at the steps of the Sanctuary following the praying of the Divine Mercy Chaplet - around 3:15pm.

MORE HOLY WEEK 2007 POSTS:

Holy Week 2007: Holy Thursday

Holy Week 2007: Confession Schedule and Reflections on Confession

Orchestra Mass Schedule - Easter and Divine Mercy Sundays

Te Deum Laudamus! Home

Holy Thursday 2007

I won't spend too much time blogging over these next few days, but I will try to post a few pictures. I will probably continue making photo posts well past Easter with what I get, but I would like to show a little of each of the days first. This also minizes my blogging during these sacred days.

Holy Thursday was grand. I got to Assumption Grotto at 6:30 and got one of the last parking places in the lot behind the Church. Within minutes, the lot next to the Rectory was filling quickly. The Church was packed by 7:00 with a few open seats near the rear.



Assumption Grotto Knights of Columbus and Altar Boys

Altar boys wait to escort the Deacon with the Word of God to the Pulpit

Fr. Perrone, in a Roman Chasuble, waits as altar boys incense the people


The Elevation of the Chalice

After Mass, Fr. Perrone, cradling the Blessed Sacrament, processes through the church to the Altar of Repose, seen in the second photo below off to the left. After Fr. Perrone and the altar boys quickly and silently strip the Sanctuary of everything not bolted down, there is an opportunity to remain quietly with the Lord until Midnight.







More to come for Holy Week 2007

Orchestra Mass Schedule for Easter and Divine Mercy Sunday



OTHER HOLY THURSDAY MASSES:

Photo Post of Holy Thursday at Westminster Cathedral

Photo Post of a Chrism Mass at the Archdiocese of Falls River (Southeastern Massachusetts) by Bishop George Coleman