[Magdalen] Christmas Day

Lynn Ronkainen houstonklr at gmail.com
Fri Dec 25 19:51:51 UTC 2015


In my dio copes are worn more and more at parish and dio events. +Andy is very fond of them and has quite a few. I've never seen anyone "assist" priest or bishop with cope- coming, going or during the service.  Just an observation from here.
Lynn, headed out to mom's care home for Christmas dinner ; )

Sent from my iPhone

On Dec 25, 2015, at 11:11 AM, Scott Knitter <scottknitter at gmail.com> wrote:

Last Sunday we had no deacon of the Mass, so our celebrant wore a
chasuble throughout, and we "left him alone" for censings and the
eucharistic prayer.

One thing I'm wondering about is holding the cope, which in the past
couple of years seems to have become an entirely practical
consideration in our parish: "No, I don't need you to hold the cope;
it's not one of the long ones." I had thought the deacon and subdeacon
were to hold the cope always, not depending on whether the celebrant
"needs" the help. It's what you do with a cope. Seems like it's
something that needn't be decided every time. The upside is that if
the celebrant doesn't "need" assistance with the cope, we can proceed
in single file, which is simpler and doesn't require the deacon and
subdeacon changing sides when we turn around. That's what was done
last night...single file for all processions, entrance, and exit. A
bit easier.

On Fri, Dec 25, 2015 at 10:40 AM, Marion Thompson
<marionwhitevale at gmail.com> wrote:
> Last night's service went as well as we could make it, but, geez, our P-i-C
> has the liturgical sense of a turnip and will not be moved.  Who else would
> refuse to wear a cope on these occasions? So when we accompany him around
> the altar when he censes it at the start, there is no reason for us to
> traipse around with him, although we do, fufilling the now-nominal roles of
> deacon and sub-deacon.




-- 
Scott R. Knitter
Edgewater, Chicago, Illinois USA


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