The following comes from an August 23 story by John Buescher on the Catholic World Report site.
Ultimately the proper response to the question is probably: anywhere, anytime, because it is the same Mass, the same sacrifice of the Lord on the Cross at Calvary.
But having said that, try to consider where that eternal and cosmic sacrifice might mostly clearly shine through to you. I’m not referring to churches just as architectural works, but as places where the liturgy continues to be offered and is at home there.
I could imagine answering for myself that it would be the London Oratory (often called the “Brompton Oratory”), for the solemn Mass offered every Sunday at 11 a.m. The grandeur, integrity, and solemnity in the celebration of the Mass there must come very close to parting the veil. Also, even though the church there—the Church of the Immaculate Heart of Mary—is a magnificent neo-baroque edifice, it has certainly not become a museum of past glories, like many churches in Europe (and elsewhere) have been, but is the center of a thriving parish. That must surely affect the tenor of the liturgy as well.
I may or may not ever be able to attend Mass there, however. So I would like to offer two other possibilities, in the United States, which are places where I have in fact been. I offer them with the hope that others will volunteer their own suggestions in the comments. Think of this as a kind of church swap meet, which is really the purpose of this post.
(I have heard some great homilies, and have certainly had some singular experiences at Masses I have attended around the country and elsewhere, some wonderful and some not, but I am not focusing on that here, but rather on the place itself and on the ordinary conduct of the liturgy there.)
• The Sunday morning 6:30 Tridentine Mass at the Serra Chapel at San Juan Capistrano, California.
The Serra Chapel is not exactly isolated because it has troops of tourists in and out of it most of the week and is just a stone’s throw away from the basilica of San Juan Capistrano, where hundreds and hundreds of people attend Mass, but when I was there in the Chapel, it was positively cave-like, and the accumulated smell of centuries of incense and burning candles reminded me of the old monasteries on the high plains of Tibet. More than smells—when one walks in, the accumulated devotions of centuries of use become almost palpable and nearly overwhelming. And right outside the door is a splendid courtyard garden. It is a jewel.
• The Sunday afternoon 5:30 Tridentine Mass at Stella Maris Catholic Church at Sullivan’s Island, South Carolina.
Stella Maris was built after the Civil War with bricks from the ruins of Fort Moultrie next to it. The bell tower looks out across the bay to Charleston in the distance. After Mass, I remember clumps of smiling altar boys in starched cassocks standing under palmettos and blooming crepe myrtle to shield their eyes from the sun. The wide white beach is just across the park lawn. The dark and sometimes creaking wood inside is under a wooden dome rather like an overturned ship. The Mass attendance is large enough that people stand along the outer aisles, as I remember Masses from my young days. No tank tops or flip-flops. It is a very “Say the Black Do the Red” kind of place, and the parishioners are attentive and reverent during Mass and cordial and funny afterwards. As with the Serra Chapel, the weight of history over it feels profound, but sits lightly upon it….
To read original story, click here.
I have been to Mass at Brompton Oratory years ago. I recommend St. Mark’s and St. George Major (Venice) and St. Mary Major (Rome).
When I was much younger, perhaps 19 or 20, I went to a random weekday mass at my small home parish. The parish was poor, and the church itself looked much more like a generic community center than a traditional church. The weekday masses were held in the basement with an altar and tabernacle set up on the concrete floor. At this particular mass was myself, an older “church lady”, and the priest. To this day, it remains one of the most memorable masses I have ever been too. I think this is because it was perhaps the first time I experienced the liturgy as a living dialogue between myself, the tiny community, and God. I truly felt like we were all together with Christ at the table.
The decorum for the Mass is very important. Sure, a Mass offered by a priest who knows what he is doing, and obeys the rubrics is most important, but it is also essential that the congregation behave in a pious manner. The music must be God-centered, and it is also fitting that the church be clean and worthy of honoring Almighty God. With these factors in mind, the bases have been covered. Europe and the rest of the world have some beautiful churches, but there are also some real gems here in the United States and Canada. We must remember that we go to Mass to adore God, and if this is kept in mind and followed, then everything else should fall into place.
In Oceanside, CA, it is a joy to attend the traditional Latin Mass at St. Margaret, 7:00 p.m., Sunday. In Sacramento, I enjoy attending Mass at St. Stephen the First Martyr. There all masses, Sunday and weekdays, are said in Latin.
Sarah,
Where is the Traditional Mass offered in Oceanside? My sister lives there, and I am unaware of any such offering there.
God bless, yours in Their Hearts,
Kenneth M. Fisher
Kenneth, Sarah said the name of the church is St Margaret.
My neighborhood parish. Same Mass, same Eucharist.
Joe,
If you are insinuating that the Novus Ordo Mass is the same Mass, you really don’t know what you are writing about! Are you even familiar with the Rubrics of the Tridentine Mass?
Viva Cristo Rey!
God bless, yours in Their Hearts,
Kenneth M. Fisher
Rubrics won’t save your soul, Kenneth.
Jesus Christ will, whether you attend Mass in a poor chapel in Guatemala, or a magnificent cathedral in Rome.
Michael,
I have attended Masses served Masses in the poorest of poor parishes and some of the greatest Cathedrals.
Good Rubrics will lift your soul far more than will poor Rubrics!
Viva Cristo Rey!
God bless, yours in Their Hearts,
Kenneth M. Fisher
I meant for the above to read “I have attended and served Masses….”
Viva Cristo Rey!
God bless, yours in Their Hearts,
Kenneth M. Fisher
The Masses at the Serra Chapel are celebrated by priests from the nearby Norbertine Abbey.
They have Sunday Mass at 6:30am for the Latin….wow so so early…now that I am Anemic it’s harder to get up that early for me. I often visit Orange County too. : )
I enjoy visiting St. Mary’s in Escondido, they have a very solid and devout pastor there. It a big parish and a busy one and even then the pastor takes the time to welcome visitors. God bless him and all the good priests everywhere. I use to love St, Ephrem, its still a nice parish but it was far more reverent and traditional when Father Nabil was the pastor. Now they don’t say the rosary before Mass anymore nor do they say the St, Michael prayer after either, like they use to when Father Nabil was there. It’s changed a lot. I miss it the way it was. Now we just visit different parishes and have not found a home in a parish yet, every time we do settle in a parish, we bond with the pastor and appreciate the holiness in the way the pastor runs it then they move our priests and it’s not the same sometimes.
Well, of course, we are saying the Mass of Trent is the same Mass, everywhere, it is the Mass of Fr. Serra, the Mass of St Therese of Lisieux, the Mass of Fr. Damien, the Mass of Fr. Maximilian Kolbe or Fr. Titus Brandsma, or for that matter the Mass that decorated officer Col Claus Von Stauffenberg attended, after much searching of conscience, before he did his best to conclude Hitler’s reign and save hundreds of thousands of lives. The Novus Ordo Mass is a different matter entirely and was designed to be so, as Cardinal Ottoviani analyzed and differentiated far better than I could do so.
In the San Francisco Bay Area, my preference is the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite at St. Margaret Mary in Oakland. It is indeed extraordinary in ways its name never intended to imply.
When I attend the 12:30 pm, Sunday, Latin Mass at St John the Baptist in Costa Mesa with the priest facing the tabernacle, with all of us focused on the Person we are there to see….for one hour, there is no other Mass more beautiful or reverent. Although I love and care about people, I prefer to greet them and talk to them after Mass. Inside the Church, I don’t want to hold hands, shake hands, or greet them with peace. It’s not about the people attending. It’s about our Glorious God. I think the Church introduced holding hands, shaking hands, and greeting your neighbors, because so many people, even before Mass has ended, rush out to their cars and speed out of the parking lot. I hope and I pray more churches bring back the beautiful Latin Mass of my childhood. All praise and glory to our most loving and merciful God.
Sadly there is nowhere to attend Holy Mass in my Diocese, all are Novus Ordonarian, complete with altar girls, lay lectors, dancing girls, drums, guitars, hand holding during kiss of peace, felt banners, people’s table, rock, mariachi, and of course no Latin in sight. My bishop is an enemy of Tradition and of course the TLM is forbidden here. The only other choice is the S.S.P.X. chapel here in the desert called Sin City. Pray that we get a Tradition friendly bishop soon!!!
Janek try the Maronite Catholic Church parish, I think there is one near by in Las Vegas? That is if that is what you are speaking about? I think Father Nabil, a very holy Arabic priest, may have started a parish there too….I don’t recall but you can check.
“Kenneth Fisher” is absolutely correct. The TLM is a far superior Mass than the 50-year old N.O., the creature of Abp. Bugnini and misguided Vatican liberals and ecumenists (and how has that turned out, by the way?) Yes, the Pope says that the N.O. is licit, but it should not be the preferred Mass. And, except in Traditional circles, soon very few people anywhere will attend the N.O. The “Springtime” of Vatican II will be over (again, there will be Kumbiah holdouts in the sanctuaries of the Crystal Cathedral, the Oakland and LA cathedrals and the like, but the Angel of Death will have the final cleansing say). Of course, in Germany and Austria (and perhaps CA, too), there is already almost no Catholic Church in a way consistent with practiced Tradition; the post-apocalyptic Church will very soon be the norm. Just look at the ruined Faith described by “Janek” above. Where are our bishops, our shepherds at this time of crisis? Happily enjoying endless parties, trips, work sessions, paper-issuing exercises and the like; letting the wolf enjoy ravaging the flock (while saying, “I am OK, as long as I do not get too close to having to take a stand on anything happening in the outside world.”) Much better to be happy, well-fed, and popular than speaking the gospel — you might get hurt, after all, and isn’t it all about “Love” anyway!? Who am I to say otherwise?
Somebody up top wrote: “Sadly there is nowhere to attend Holy Mass in my Diocese…”
What nonsense.
The One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church has been celebrating the Divine Eucharist for 2,000 years, and it has ALWAYS been holy. In beginning, it was very simple (as described by St. Justin Martyr), then the language of the liturgy changed as the Church grew and spread, then there attempts to make it all the same (which the Irish Church fought against, being Irish, of course), etc., etc., etc.
The Neo-Catechumenate fans think THEIR Mass is the best, the Tridentine folks think theirs is, the Charismatic think theirs is, but each and every Mass belongs not to the people, nor to any particular group of people — it belongs to, and is presided over, by Christ the One, True High Priest.
This is why we Catholics says the celebrant of any Mass acts in persona Christi, is in fact an alter Christus, and that Christ “does” the Sacraments, not us. When the Church baptizes, it is Christ who baptizes; when someone goes to Confession, it is Christ who washes away sin — and so with all seven Sacraments.
Janek,
There is a wonderful traditional Roman Catholic Parish existing in Las Vegas for quite some time. It is St. Joseph’s Church at 131 N 9th St. Sunday TLMs are 8 and 10 am, noon and 7 pm. If you love authentic Roman Catholic tradition, check it out, you will be glad you did.
There is a wonderful parish in Sacramento that has the most “holy” masses you can imagine. St. Francis has a wonderful choir, the people in the pews participate with reverance and gusto in the singing and the prayers, the homilies are well prepared and well delivered and the entire liturgy is Christ centered. Try the 9:30 on any Sunday, and you will be blown away with the spirit filled liturgy.
For those who prefer to attend the beautiful and very reverent, centuries old Roman Catholic worship of the Tridentine Latin Mass, you are welcome to attend either time slot, (only come properly dressed out of respect for our loving and omnipotent God with no flip-flops, shorts, T-shirts, halter tops, tank tops, immodest mini-skirts and the like, rather dresses for young girls and ladies, shirts, ties; and dress slacks and shoes for men and boys) on Sundays at the NTC Chapel. Our Lord is waiting for those who seek Him, there in His infinite majesty!