|
|
13. Interview with Johan vanParys
(Part 2)
Return to Johan Part 1
FF:
I noticed when I came to worship that there were a lot of people assisting,
your communion assistants were many and of varying ages. The same for
readers or lectors. Father Michael said he would never have guessed that
he'd have a 6th grade kid reading out of the lectern but he did and it
was good. How do you work that with the volunteers?
The theological backbone to this is that the primary celebrant of worship
is the assembly in its varied ways or incarnations - meaning it's children,
young people, young adults, people who are aged, it's people who have
lots of money, people who have no money, it's women, it's men, people
who hear and people who don't hear, it's people who can walk and people
who cannot walk. It's the entire body of Christ, which celebrates the
liturgy. When people come here and they recognize themselves at least
in one other person they also have to recognize themselves at least in
one of the ministers. Secondly, I would say
there was a period
of time in our church where we believed that we needed to have youth masses
and we needed to have children's masses and every sub- group of our community.
Rather than uniting, it's divisive. And Eucharist being the ultimate sacrament
of unity should not be divisive, but rather unity. So we refuse to have
a youth mass or a mass for gays and lesbians or a mass for newly married
couples - we just don't. Every mass is for everybody at all times. But
if we say that, then we also have to make sure that the ministers come
from all of these groups. It is much easier to say I will have 10 lectors
and train them well and that's it. And you never have to worry about it.
If you have 60-100 lectors
you know, every weekend we have about
400 liturgical volunteer ministers. So we try to allow the entire assembly
to really make the liturgy work. One time I remember sitting - we had
just prepared the church for Easter Vigil, and about 100 people had come
to help us - sitting there I remember being so moved by this, that the
only thing I have to do is just sit back and let people do their thing.
It's absolutely wonderful. The success of this place really relies upon
all of these volunteers, we have thousands of volunteers here without
whom we could not do what we are doing. And clearly when people become
members of this community it's not just a matter of fulfilling a Sunday
obligation, it goes much beyond that. People get involved.
FF: You were talking
about how you when first came there was catechesis, and then it became
lectionary-based and now it is liturgy-based. How did that movement happen?
I think the movement happened as all of us started to embrace more and
more the reality that worship is the source and summit of what we do,
who we are and who we hope to be. And as that embracing happened, in terms
of education we realized education needs to be about Catholic dogmas but
that should not be the driving force. The first step for us - maybe the
driving force should be the lectionary, the Word of God as it is given
to us every Sunday. And that is already quite worship-connected. The next
step was, it is lectionary-based but not just lectionary-based, it is
lectionary-based within the context of the entire liturgical year. So
it has become liturgy-based. So that on a Sunday of Advent we talk about
Scriptures on that day, but we also talk about the ethos of the liturgical
season. What is it we do during Advent? Lent, what are the three great
Lenten exercises - fasting praying and almsgiving. What do the readings
say about this? What does this mean for me during the week? One might
then need to look at specifically Catholic teachings on justice, have
a teaching on justice for instance. Or at the Feast of the Immaculate
Conception. What is it easier to do? To sit around a table with young
people and try to explain to the dogma of the immaculate conception. Is
it not easier to celebrate the mystery of the immaculate conception and
then from there say, well, what might this mean? What does church say
about this? Is there anything in Scripture? What do the apocryphal books
say? So it's really turning the whole system upside-down.
FF: I would guess
that creates a deeper understanding and desire for worship.
Yes. The three corners of this triangle - worship, education and life
- really need to continuously influence and feed one another. So that
in the liturgies, the celebrations of worship, we think of the educational
aspects and the ultimate life that it needs to reach, so that it leading
it does not become pretty turns around the altar. The other thing also
that this integrating has caused is for the entire parish to move through
the liturgical seasons and to move through the liturgical life of church.
Whereas it is somewhat of a joke but at the same time somewhat of a reality
that often you have liturgists on one side and you have catechists on
the other side, and never are the two to meet. Whereas here we have come
to a point, I think, where really there is an integration between education
and celebration.
FF: What do you
think caused this shift as a staff in embracing liturgy as the center,
the heart of what you are doing? How do you think that happened, what
caused that shift?
When I came here this church had had a tradition of celebrating the liturgy
well for a while. My predecessor was very much committed to making that
so. I stepped right into the rich fertile ground, so that made it much
easier. Celebrating the liturgy has made the change. It's not something
one can say, "from henceforth the liturgy will be at the heart."
You have to do it well in order for that to happen. This community does
the liturgy as worship very well. Very, very well. Of course, one can
always work to do it better and one does, but in this imperfect world.
And I think people are changed and by celebrating people do realize that
liturgy is the source and summit of everything. This line, source and
summit, in different translations, is on the lips of many of our people,
both staff and non-staff. They know it and can joke about it because they
know it. My deep belief is that worship changes people slowly but it does
change them. And that does not only happen in the head but it happens
in the heart. Worship depends upon the totality of the person to work.
Worship uses all of the human senses to do its work. Sometimes we get
complaints about incense. But incense is part of liturgy and is part of
how liturgy does its work. It smells like Mass. Just for example, it may
have happened to you that you walk by a counter at Daytons or Marshall
Fields and these people are rushing out to spray perfume on you. Well
it has happened to me that this ?-thing happened to be the cologne that
a friend of mine in Belgium has been wearing for many years. And when
I smell this I immediately am reminded of her and the conversations we've
had and I have visions of us sitting together at the little coffee shop
in Brussels. For that fact incense is very important. It smells like worship,
or it smells like Easter, or it smells like Christmas. The repetition
of that gives us imagery with which to interpret daily life and which
helps us cope with daily life. The repetition of the psalms for instance.
The monks in the Middle Ages recited the psalms over and over again. That
gave them vocabulary with which to interpret the world, so that when they
found themselves in an unhappy situation, rather than cursing, a psalm
erupted in mind. I don't have a moment in time, but I do believe that
the liturgy does it work. I always say liturgy, worship is never ecclesiologically
innocent. It means something. It either means something bad and it rehearses
people in something bad, or it rehearses them in something good.
FF: When we talked
with George (Barrett) he said that Catholics don't necessarily talk this
way, but how would you say that God has been at work in that process?
God is essentially at work in this process. Presumably everything we
do is hopefully inspired. I think that what George means to say is this:
that Catholics are hesitant to speak in personal terms. Catholics are
resistant to saying Jesus is my personal savior because we essentially
believe in corporate salvation, that as body of Christ we are saved. So
our liturgy is corporate worship. It is not me and my Jesus praying. Our
spirituality is corporate spirituality. Our belief in inspiredness, in
being inspired by the Spirit, is a corporate belief, as a community we
are inspired. That's why it is a wonderful comfort that at times I may
not be inspired., but thankfully the rest of my community is inspired
so that as a community we keep going in the right direction. Is God involved
in this? Well, I hope so. I surely pray for that.
FF: What I have
heard you say throughout is liturgy is at the heart and that happened
gradually ..
It has always been at the heart, we just haven't always known it.
FF: And now that
you know it, things have realigned in the parish to flesh that out. In
the light of that, and in my mind the ridiculous number of young adults
that come to this place for worship, do you see those things related to
each other?
I think there are a number of things. First of all, this motto, traditional
church and a modern message. I think if you're going to go to church you
may as well go to a church that looks like a church. Our unashamedly being
Catholic and yet being respectful and welcoming of those who are not.
Our embracing of diversity. No matter who you are you are welcome here,
we have a totally open door policy. That does not mean that we do not
tell everybody that these are the official teachings of the Catholic Church.
You are welcome here. But remember, these are the teachings, and if you
really want to belong here, you need to consider these. Ultimately we
will not say 'if you don't consider them you are not a member', because
ultimately we believe that a person's individual conscience goes above
any church authority, which is essential Roman Catholic teaching. I think
also the fact that our church is not just about prayers and ritual turns
but that it leads to something else, that we are concerned with God's
little ones. We worship in order to know and in order to change.
FF: Of all the
things that we have talked about, are there things that are the genius
of this that we haven't discussed, or that you want to highlight?
I believe that the commitment or, acceptance, embracing of the thought
that worship is the summit is the motor of this whole deal. Then of course
we do have a Block Party that attracts people. I think that helps us in
communicating our motto, traditional church with a modern message. What
cathedral church would allow for that sort of music to be played on its
campus? I may agree or disagree with serving beer and wine and having
rock music - I'm not a fan of rock music - but I cannot disagree with
the fact that it does breaks barriers. It's a first step for people in
reconnecting with the church. That's a good result of the Block Party.
FF: You get a chance
to demonstrate hospitality. In attending the Party, we were struck by
being welcomed into the Basilica building with a tour. People were really
friendly and my impression was that you can't walk into that place and
not encounter God there. (Tape stopped. Pause for thank yous, etc. Then
Johan had one more thing to say. Start tape.)
We make use of the media unashamedly. Some think that is wrong, that
you shouldn't do that, but St. Paul did it. Why should we not do it? Just
different media. We really try to keep a profile in the news and, as a
matter of fact, when anything happens, either in the Catholic Church or
in the world, this is a place where they come, to ask for opinions, to
film, whatever.
Quotables:
"Good liturgy happens when it is outward and sends people into world
to be Christ to the world."
"
we are called to be Eucharist to the world, to be the body
of Christ to the world for the salvation of the world."
"Catholics are hesitant to speak in personal terms. Catholics are
resistant to saying Jesus is my personal savior because we essentially
believe in corporate salvation, that as body of Christ we are saved. So
our liturgy is corporate worship. It is not me and my Jesus praying. Our
spirituality is corporate spirituality. Our belief in inspiredness, in
being inspired by the Spirit, is a corporate belief, as a community we
are inspired. That's why it is a wonderful comfort that at times I may
not be inspired, but thankfully the rest of my community is inspired so
that as a community we keep going in the right direction. Is God involved
in this? Well, I hope so. I surely pray for that."
|