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Originally posted by Dr John: Two, it is coming from a priest? Don't think that either. Even the dumbest poorly educated RC priest knows that his ass would be on the line for disposing of an altar stone. His bishop would ream his butt and probably laicize him. I'm not so sure. I know one RC priest who rescued 4 or 5 altar stones from his brother clergy who literally threw them away. He later mounted them on the walls of the chapel in his church where the Blessed Sacrament is reserved. And I have heard numerous horror stories of what priests will dispose of from churches... Dave
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I find that just incredible. I would hope that the bishop(s) would monitor the renovations that are going on and make appropriate inquiries as to the disposal of sacred elements.
And, if the priests are indeed 'disposing' of altar stones, what the he..... are they teaching them in seminary? There are canon laws about this stuff and even the looniest priest should have at least HEARD about sacred objects.
If there are any bishops who get this message, I would hope that they make appropriate inquiries. And I've got two friends in New Jersey, who for $200 bucks, and no questions asked........ will "explain" the matter.
Blessings!!
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Dear Dr. John and Dave, I don't know about altar stones, but I do know that a few years ago a Greek Orthodox priest that I know told my husband that he had recieved calls from some surrounding RC clergy asking him if they would like their church's holy relics which they no longer wanted. Modernism? Alice
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I've heard similar stories Alice.
Spasi Khristos - Fr Mark.
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I can testify firsthand that this type of thing has been common in the Latin Church as part of what many thought was mandated by the Second Vatican Council. Unfortunately, many of us learned the truth many years later that this type of thing was not, indeed, mandated.
I personally rescued three altar stones with the relics intact as part of a parish renovation. I was told that I could have them as paving stones for my patio. They rest in the altar tables of three small Orthodox parishes near me that did not have relics enshrined beneath their altar tables.
I witnessed similar altar stones being sent to the dump when I was in high school. No one told the bishop and no one seemed to ask. The latest liturgical directives do not require relics to be part of the altar table, so it seems that no one has given a thought to how we moved from old to new and had such an important part of the parish church become lost in the process.
In the parish in which I was baptized and raised, our baptismal font (marble) was given to someone who took it for a "birdbath" (I feel your pain, but this is the truth) during the renovations following Vatican II in the late 1960s. I thought at the time that the whole world had gone mad because it was happening in all the parishes around us, too.
That's why I have drawn strength from my Byzantine Catholic and Orthodox brethren. You still understand that reverence for God and the things that represent or remind us of God, and that are blessed, is part and parcel of what it means to be part of the Communion of Saints--part of who we ourselves are.
BOB
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Dear Bob, What sad, sad decades for the Roman Catholic Church these have been. The convert Roman Catholic historian Warren Caroll, who has written two or three great volumes on the history of Christendom, refers to these times as the 'Modernist Heresy'. If only my RC brethren knew how much in awe the rest of the Christian world looked at their beautiful traditions, pageantry, and objects, which fortunately still exist in the most part in European churches and the great Cathedrals of the U.S., perhaps they wouldn't have been so quick to become like their Protestant brethren. The reverence I feel when I enter St. Patrick's Cathedral here in NYC is almost next to none. There is still a font for Holy Water, and shrines, and mahogany confessionals, and votive (real, not electrified!  ) candles, and chapels, and everything which is quintessentially Latin, and it is BEAUTIFUL. I can only hope that sanity is now being restored, and that there is or will be a return to the traditional glory and beauty that the whole world has come to associate with the Roman Catholic Church. We lost inumerable treasures of the time in the East during the iconoclast period, I hope that this will not be the equivalent for the Roman Catholic Church. In Christ, Alice
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Dear Alice, One of my fondest memories is of St Patrick's cathedral which we visited on a trip to NYC. We dropped in on a Thursday afternoon, no Mass being served, BUT there were hundreds and hundred of people there. I think every, every votive candle was lit. It was very moving, I couldn't speak for trying to hold back the tears. It was so unexpected, my reaction to seeing all those people and candles. I still get choked up thinking about it. And one of the most beautiful things were the old, beat up kneelers. I could only imagine the thousands and thousands of pairs of knees that had knelt over many years in that awesome church. We knelt ourselves at Sunday Mass 8 a.m. I didn't think any Catholic church could affect me the way St Patrick's did, I am so used to modern creations down here in the south. denise
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Dear Denise,
Yes, I know what you mean. I cannot tell you what dimension that church adds to the fast paced, and often secular and cold world that NYC can be. I have been to masses there, (and I am Orthodox) in the middle of a chaotic day, and I especially love the chapel dedicated to our Lady in the very front of the church behind the altars.
What is MOST moving, is to see New Yorkers, from ALL walks of life, the poor and the rich, men and women, black, white and brown, business suits and jeans, come and kneel and pray at all hours of the day. I never cease to leave having felt tears in my eyes. Prayer is ALWAYS going on in those pews, despite the tourists and the lookers.
Sadly, recently when I visited some beautiful Cathedrals in Montreal, I may have been the ONLY person who took the time to stop and pray in Church. I also felt the same sadness in Rome and Venice in the beautiful churches...I stopped, made the sign of the cross, and actually prayed. I don't think that I saw anyone else do that. People tend to forget that these are consecrated CHURCHES, or people just don't care to spend any time with God today...so uncool and politically incorrect, who knows.
Anyway, as a born and raised girl of the city of New York, the Holy Spirit filled atmosphere of St. Patrick's makes me VERY, VERY proud.
God bless! Alice
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The destruction still goes on: http://www.wokr13.tv/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=7647A3F3-867B-49DF-85FF-2AD4BDA3875F The ruling means that the Rochester Roman Catholic Diocese is one step closer to making renovations to the church.
The diocese wants to make several changes in- and outside the church including a new baptismal font, altar, and parking lot. While the diocese says changes will put the cathedral in line with modern standards, those opposed say the renovations will ruin the church's character
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