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Faith in Public Life Series
The Thomas Mass
Richard Rohrs catholicism By Stephanie Block
While Jim Wallis was launching his new
political movement to co-opt the Catholic vote, Fr. Richard Rohr was
there to co-opt the Catholic faith.
One reporter gushed with enthusiasm over
a very powerful ecumenical Communion service known as the Thomas
Mass on Sunday morning. It was a tangible and credible example of
what the Holy Spirit can do when allowed to flow through us. When
together we sang They Will Know We Are Christians by Our Love, my
heart overflowed with the possibilities. I wondered, what if all our
actions as Christians led others to Jesus because they were
performed with love rather than with moral judgment, arrogant
certitude or required duty? What if we were truly recognized by our
genuine love for one another? How much good could be accomplished
then? [Pauline Hovey, Conference Brings Gospel Message into Public
Arena,
Catholic Herald,
Diocese of Arlington,
1-19-2006]
What is this Thomas Mass?
At the
Emerging Worship
website
for the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), Office of Theology and
Worship, Rev. John Wesley explains his experiences while on
sabbatical in Finland. He had earlier met people who were extolling
the St. Thomas Mass as a European model for postmodern worship,
claiming this worship service was having a significant impact on
worship in northern Europe. Wesley wanted to see for himself.
Since the St. Thomas Mass community
began in Helsinki, at the Lutheran cathedral, thats where he headed
as part of his sabbatical itinerary. The pastor of the cathedral
community had been frustrated by a worship attendance that was only
ten percent of church members. His church was drowning in a sea of
Enlightenment rationalism. He did not believe Fins were antagonistic
toward God, but they were not being moved by the sterile ritual of
the church. With about forty others, he wondered
what worship
might need to look like were it to speak to the post-enlightenment
person.
The group consisted of persons from
Lutheran, Orthodox, Free Church and Pentecostal backgrounds. For a
year they met, prayed and allowed the holy chaos to work as they
discussed and then began to structure a worship service. Each
tradition brought gifts from their church to the formative process.
Lutherans brought their deep appreciation for ancient worship
patterns and order. The Pentecostals brought their love of prayer
and their expectation of the Spirit's presence in worship. The
Orthodox in the group brought a love of symbolism, a respect for
living in the mystery and a tradition of movement that could
transform the frozen chosen in the pews into a living body.
The group settled on the name St Thomas
Mass because of their desire to host a worship service where
doubters, like the disciple Thomas, and other sinners could
encounter that which was holy in their lives and in the world and
could experience the free gift of God's grace.
The first service was held on April 10,
1988 in Helsinki. No one knew what to expect, but over five hundred
people came to that first service. Many had been away from the
church for a long time. Some were agnostic. Some were from other
churches. Some were professors at the university and some called the
street their home. No particular age group seemed to be predominant.
They were invited to experience God's grace in word, prayer and
table. It was the beginning of an experience that has continued to
develop and grow in that city and throughout Finland, Germany,
Sweden and other parts of northern Europe. In Helsinki St Thomas
Mass continues to be celebrated every Sunday evening from 6-8:00
p.m. The average attendance is between eight hundred and a thousand
people. [Rev. John P. Wesley, St Thomas Mass: Ancient, Post-modern
Worship,
www.emergingworship.org/st-thomas-mass.htm
]
Of course, it wasnt a
real
Mass.
It was a creative service
fresh and innovative planned
week-to-week by different ministers and varying groups of about
forty to seventy lay people. Theres a list of about two hundred
musicians who can be called on to lead the gathering in different
musical styles - for compensation.
The structure of this worship service is
Mass-like at the beginning. Theres an entrance hymn and a large
processional of robed clergy and laity, following an iconic cross.
A time of confession includes a public confession, the singing of
Kyrie, the prayers of two representatives of the congregation
offering a more personal confessional prayer and an absolution
pronounced by the celebrant. Having experienced the grace of
forgiveness a joyful hymn of praise is sung.
A period of personal prayer and meditation
follows, either from the pew or at various altars or stations set up
around the sanctuary, after which worshipers are brought back to the
Mass-like structure for scripture readings, a sermon, recitation of
a creed (as opposed to
the
Creed), offering, Sanctus, a
Eucharistic consecration, the Lords Prayer, a sung Agnus Dei, a
communion
For a Presbyterian minister, this must have been rich
fare, indeed.
Their method of offering communion was to
give the communicant a wafer and then pour wine into a small chalice
for each person. There were not enough small chalices for the crowd
of 800 or so that were there, so a group of volunteers was
constantly taking a tray of chalices to the kitchen to wash them and
bring them back. It gave a very earthy feel to the table, a sense
that you were using something that had a place in someones cabinet.
It was a very different feel from the plastic cups used in my church
each week.
The table is not restricted. No one
determines who can come. The celebrant declared that we cannot do
for ourselves what God can do for us. The table is a gift to us from
God, a sign of Gods grace freely given. It is not earned by right
action but by humble and joyful reception.
. modern seekers are
more vagabonds or nomads than pilgrims. They dont seem to have a
final destination. Vagabonds don't know how long theyll stay where
they happen to be today. There are those who are searching for
something more in life and he believes rituals have a way of
conveying or expressing the central focus of ones life. That is
why
the Eucharist is so important. Vagabonds attraction and love
for the Eucharist underlines the importance of ritual to postmodern
culture. Rituals connect microcosm to macrocosm. They connect a
creature with the Creator. They connect the past and the present.
They connect me with my inner self and psyche, with my neighbor,
with all creation. [Ibid.]
Mass at the
Politics and
Spirituality
Conference
Fr. Rohrs St. Thomas Mass at the
Washington DC
Politics and Spirituality
Conference had an
ordained Catholic priest presiding (Fr. Richard Rohr) and an
evangelical minister (Jim Wallis) as homilist. Conference
materials explained the services Helsinki creation by people who:
wanted to create a prayerful service that would again fill their
cathedral, but with seekers, searchers, and believers alike.
.
After an initial attempt to create an ecumenical and new liturgy,
they realized that it basically had the structure of the historic
Catholic Mass. It immediately began to spread across Europe, and
both Jim Wallis and Richard Rohr have participated in the Thomas
Mass in Munich and other cities. The Thomas Mass avoids the usual
denominational turf, arguments, and leadership, while still offering
a deeply sacramental structure where disparate groups can gather in
a faith-filled way. It retrieves the historic meaning of the very
word liturgy as a collective work of the people.
We will be using
elements of grape juice and bread for Communion. ALL are invited and
encouraged to partake at the table. [Thomas Mass Program, available
in the post-conference section of Rohrs
Center for Action and
Contemplation
website,
www.cacradicalgrace.org/conferences/politics/post-conf//Thomas_Mass_Program.pdf
]
One blogger, fresh from the conference
experience and breathless with excitement, gushes: Does nobody else
realize the significance of the confluence of Rohr
and Wallis?
Yes, actually, some of us do. When
Father
Rohr tells his audience, this time at the September
Politics and Spirituality
conference in Pasadena, that St.
Francis didnt waste time opposing the Roman Catholic Church, he
just went to the edge of the Church, practicing soft prophesy,
hes talking about himself and what
he
hopes to accomplish.
When he tells the story of Moses and the
burning bush and the Voice telling Moses to confront Pharaoh, he
speaks of the church of Leviticus and Numbers, concerned with
priestly questions, as if that were not also given by God. In the
false remnant of the burning bush people, who seek the experience of
salvation on their own terms, he is mostly speaking of what
he
,
Richard Rohr, seeks.
Unfortunately, as a spiritual midwife -
presiding over a play-acting mass, offering revisionist scripture,
trying to democratize and politicize religion, particularly among
fellow Catholics his gift to the world is only so
much
Rohring ego-vision.
Thats pretty miserly for a fellow who might have brought them to
God.
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