Mary Immaculate of Lourdes
The
Tridentine Latin Mass
and a 2000 year tradition
alive and well in Boston

Mary Immaculate of Lourdes, Newton, MA
Father Charles J. Higgins, Pastor
The Catholic Latin Mass of 2000 years
is alive and well in Boston --- and flourishing!
(see the photo gallery below)
15 minutes from down town Boston and just a couple of miles from
route 95 (route 128) lies a spiritual treasure for Catholics of
greater Boston --- Mary Immaculate of Lourdes where the Mass is
celebrated in the ancient language of the Catholic Church --- Latin
---
according to the Roman Missal of 1962 ... in other words, as the
Mass had been celebrated for the better part of 2000 years before
the devastating liturgical changes following the Second Vatican
Council.
After Vatican II, the Church had, "flung open the doors", allowing
the world to rush in ... as the Faithful rushed out. The "ever
ancient, ever new" had completely discarded the former and left the
latter as the only iteration of an identity bereft of its history.
Since the notion of identity implies history (my own identity
necessarily incorporates a history of who and what I have been
in any attempt to understand who I presently am, and this is
what I understand as a sense of my own "identity"), the vast
and sweeping changes in the liturgy and life of the Church
following the Second Vatican Council left Catholics reeling and
uncertain about the one remaining and most vital certainty they once
possessed: the Church ... as "ever ancient and ever new" --- and
which had become, with breathtaking celerity, "ever new and ever
newer."
Holy Ground
The Church was always the one copula to every generation past,
regardless of any other changes around them. It was the rite, the
ritual, the language that had baptised their living and buried their
dead for 2000 years. It was a single, unbroken continuity with a
past by which they understood the present; indeed, for many, by
which they deeply understood themselves. More than any given
building, it was a soil, a single and sacred soil that subtended
every Church in every city of every nation, binding each through an absolutely common
and holy ground.
And suddenly ... it was swept from under their feet. Practices,
devotions, and rituals, even beliefs, that in many ways had defined
the Church as a singular and unique institution apart from all
others, became ... irrelevant, "incorrect" or simply "wrong". In so
many ways, "The Faith of Our Fathers" was no longer our own. We
practiced, prayed, lived, worshipped, and in some significant ways,
believed, what was vastly different from our forbears. Many had lost
a "sense of identity" largely through the absence of something
cogent to "identify with". Indeed, what had historically been
cherished as uniquely Catholic had been the very things first
jettisoned by the flurry of changes following Vatican II. We need
not catalog them, although we could (language, liturgy, devotions,
theology, architecture, statuary, art, catechesis, etc.)
Summorum Pontificum
Then came Summorum Pontificum. Finally, a vinculum to all
that had been lost, discarded, jettisoned, and disdained or
ridiculed by the more "progressive" and "enlightened" Catholics who
cherished a pseudo-clerical power invested in them through endless
"Ministries" of this and that, and quarrelsome "Parish Councils".
The progressive laity hijacked the Sanctuary even as the priests
ventured farther and farther out into the pews. Summorum
Pontificum did not put the brakes on this ... but it offered a
more than viable alternative to much of the liturgical
experimentation, innovation and nonsense that has plagued and
divided the Church for over 50 years. It brought back to us,
incorrupt, "The Faith of Our Fathers" --- as our fathers had known
and practiced it. The patrimony that had been lost had been
reacquired. The Catholic longing for the beauty and solemnity of the
Tridentine Mass had the stigma removed of being a Latin-Rite Leper
--- a pariah among his own people --- even to the episcopacy which
grudgingly acceded to what it could no longer forbid. Pope Benedict
XVI, well aware of the controversy and reluctance that his
encyclical would engender, wisely circumvented the College of
Cardinals by issuing it as a Motu Proprio (of his own
personal accord). A Catholic could pray --- even worship --- in
Latin with impunity. What is more, he could worship and pray free of
distraction by so many personalities competing for his attention
during the Most Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. He could focus on
Christ; be totally present to the Sacrifice being enacted before
him. Free of drums, cymbals, trap sets, and banging pianos by a
troupe of performers eager to solicit his applause at the end of
Mass, he could enter the Church with one sole purpose: to worship,
rather than to be entertained.
This is what you will find at Mary Immaculate of Lourdes in Newton,
Massachusetts: worship of God, rather than adulation of man. This is
heady stuff; the stuff of dreams. The dreams of so many Catholics
for so long. Solemnity, dignity, ecclesiastical beauty, the organ
... Gregorian chant! The Angelus!
In English, as Well
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes also celebrates the Mass in the
vernacular English found at most parishes, but with this significant
difference: whether in the vernacular or in Latin, the Most Holy
Sacrifice of the Mass is always celebrated with great reverence,
solemnity, and dignity. In this sense, it the Mass in the vernacular
as the Second Vatican Council had envisioned and intended ... which
is to say, not what has been widely implemented in America and
elsewhere. Here we find that the Mass can be experienced as
profoundly sacred even in the vernacular. Christ ---
not the anecdotal priest as entertainer, not the pianist, the
drummer, the lector, or the "Music Ministers" --- is the center of
the Mass, the Mass understood and enacted as a Sacrifice --- the
very Sacrifice on Calvary before which we stand, in which we
ourselves participate, not as spectators before from distant and
remote drama, but as participants actually standing at the foot of
the Cross. Drums, cymbals, trap sets, pianos, divas ... where were
they on Calvary? And were they there, could they really do aught but
stand and tremble?
Now that you know the waking reality, what drive could be so long,
what journey so arduous, that you would conscionably excuse yourself
and demur from this tremendous, this inestimable gift? The Faith of
Our Fathers" ... yes. It is here. Bring, then, the children, that
they may know the beauty of the worship due the true and living God
--- and to bequeath it to their own children from generation to
generation.
Faith of Our Fathers! Ita est!
Geoffrey K. Mondello, Ph.D.
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DIRECTIONS:
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ADDRESS:
Mary Immaculate of Lourdes
270 Elliot Street,
Newton, MA 02464
Phone: (617) 244-0558
Email: miol@parishmail.com
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LATIN MASS SCHEDULE
Sundays: 12 Noon
Daily Low Mass:
Mon. & Sat. 9:00 a.m.
Tues. & Thurs. 5:30 p.m.
Wed. & Fri. 12:30 p.m.
Holy Days: as announced in
bulletin: |
Large Scale
Map and Directions

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Detailed Map
and Directions

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Google Earth
Map and Directions

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Written Directions:
From the Mass Pike and points North:
- Take Rt. 95 (128) South to Exit 20A Rt. 9 (East) toward
Boston.
- Drive approximately 1 mile to first set of lights and
gas station, and take a sharp (hairpin) right at these
lights onto Elliot Street.
- Follow this winding road for about 1 mile and Mary
Immaculate of Lourdes is on your left.
- Parking is behind the Church and on the street.
(click any image to expand it)
Photographs courtesy of Mary Immaculate of
Lourdes, Newton, MA
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