Cleveland Mass Mob [click, and here]
finished their third year with their twenty-fifth mobbing on the 13ᵗʰ
of November 2016 at St. Emeric, which was the last of the eleven parish
churches ordered to be re-opened by Roman decrees. It has become,
practically, de jure for any religious affiliated thing to have a
foundation statement. Of course, after announcing our existence, we had
to explain who?, what?, and such. So: We wish to attract people to come
for a Mass, a celebration of Liturgy and Eucharist, in a parish
community of an historical, and beautiful church.
In Buffalo [click, and here],
four friends wanted to help St. Adalbert Basilica. St. Adalbert's was
the first basilica in the United States. Buffalo's ordinary had closed
the parish and church. Parishioners appealed to Rome, they made note of
its status. The diocese denied it was a basilica. The documents showed
it was. The diocese reluctantly obeyed Rome, and opened the church for
worship (i think one day a year). So the first mass mob was on All Souls
Day 2013. Buffalo Mass Mob II made a national Associated Press story [click].
Buffalo was the first to form, and nearly two dozen locals announced thereafter. The Parable of the Sower
is an apt metaphor. The seeds were distributed about, and some plants
grew well, and others not. Buffalo continues. Some locals did little
more than make an announcement. Detroit's [click, and here]
has done marvelously. Since their second mobbing, the local daily had a
story before and after each and often with several photographs. Local
television and radio have had stories, and interviews. Detroit has
larger churches than Cleveland, some seat fifteen hundred, and at least
one seats two thousand. Most mobbings produced no empty seats.
Something happened in Buffalo. The environment of conditions, and the spark in a few people's minds gave us this 'Buffalo idea'.
The spirit we wanted to promote is appreciation that leads to
rejuvenation. The United States has relentlessly promoted a disposable
culture of immediate reward. So many of our societal problems are
children of this philosophy. Community has been attacked for
convenience, and for the desires of the aggressively ambitious and
selfish. We need to celebrate and cherish something more important and
valuable. Mass Mob is a form of popular evangelism. Other than religious
aspects, there are community, historical, architectural,
anthropological, and sociological aspects to this phenomena.
"For where there are two or three gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them."
These
are the red letter words from the mouth of Jesus as recorded by the
evangelist Matthew. This is the charter for the parish, a group of
people in physical communion with the actual presence of Jesus with
them. This is why a parish is so important. An hundred years ago, and
more, people crossed the ocean and came to a new country. Their pennies,
and dimes (for that was their wages) built edifices to house their
community in dignity and respect befitting what they believed honored
God. Often, these newcomers, 'greenhorns', were not welcomed by
the greater community. These churches were bulwarks aiding them to keep
the faith. Now, the progeny of some of these people are the
establishment, they are integrated in the general community; but they
hold a similar disregard for those who started those parishes, and built
those churches. There are bishops, and other Catholics who prefer large
homogenised,
bland, interchangeable, indistinct units of the suburban sprawl which
have large Sunday collections. These old parishes are our legacy, they
are our culture, they are part and parcel of our faith.
Our goal
was to, at least on occasion, flood the naves with the faithful. We
wanted a greater audience to hear the invite. The genius of this Buffalo
idea was to invite the public by social media. The chief, and most
frequent social media organ than promotes the movement is facebook. The
secular press and media, where it has given notice, has been unanimously
positive, and the press has increased the invitation beyond the circle
of social media available to the local organisers. Here in Cleveland,
one reporter at the local daily told the city [click],
and the paper [in the physical copy, or at least on line] made notice.
And so did an AM radio news station. One television station came to our
first mobbing, and it was linked to by an Italian publication.
Of
the several locals, the first distinguishing factor was between organic
and clerical. Cleveland as Buffalo was organic, and started and
remained in the hands of the laity. In Detroit, there were four people
who individually wanted to follow Buffalo's lead, and coalesced together
with institutional support. The public enthusiasm of their local
bishopry has been complete (the archbishop recorded a commercial [click],
and has presided over three masses i think; and auxiliary, and retired
bishops have said masses), and it is has to be believed it has added to
the success there. The bishop of Ft. Wayne and South Bend asked for two
mobs, the Knights of Columbus organised South Bend. In Kansas City Mo.,
and Memphis Tenn., it was organised by young adult ministries. A new
seminarian organised in Bridgeport. The opinions of people employed
professionally as Catholics, and the 'official' church's
reception has been on a continuum of acceptance. Some places have
skeptical critics, or have been loathe to say anything publicly. There
has been expressed a worry of 'poaching' parishioners. An old teevee cartoon had various characters say something uncomfortable about "...those meddlesome kids".
I know of words that have circulated to me, that, the chancery on East
Ninth does not like Cleveland Mass Mob. Some priests were timid when
approached about having their parish mobbed.
The press early on
was interested in this novel (and perhaps gimmicky nature of this
evangelisation, and several liked to example "twitter", which use was
scant and sparse) approach; and pooh-pooing critics (outside of the
press, and with very small reach) looked dismissively on the movement.
We made the Sunday New York Times [click]. The reporter, Michael Paulson, used the term 'Rust Belt Catholicism'.
Yes, that captures the situation. Here we are in the battered
industrial engine that helped create America; and here we still have
great beauty, and the churches and parishes our immigrant forebears
created are still here giving witness. The reporters i have talked to,
and those who have talked to others elsewhere were universally positive.
Many of these reporters are either active, or disenchanted, Catholics;
and they like the concept, and the goals. Many people do see the Church
as a community of believers that can gain members.
The call to
mob is an anonymous opportunity to explore or revisit a parish, a
church. A member of the mob can be incognito, and comfortable about it.
The people who regularly attend that mass, are pleased to see that
others want to see their church, their parish, their community. I was
told after Cleveland Mass Mob III, that the mobbing confirmed the parish
in its decision to appeal to Rome.
Some people object to the
terminology. I remember, a Scottish folk musician say that 'mob' was the
English word for a Scottish committee. Our beloved Pope Francis said,
in Rio de Janeiro at World Youth Day, to make trouble in the diocese.
Keep Massing and Mob On!
—Stanislav
From 2003 to about 2006 I provided an electronic newsletter which helped keep together about 50 members of Voice of the Faithful in Cleveland, letting them know when and where we were meeting.
ReplyDeleteI also provided them with links to articles of interest nationally as well as with events that we could attend and network (a very mini version of mobbing).
Around 2010 when the parish closings occurred I was at one of their organizational meetings. The group heard from a Boston representative since Boston had gone through the same process of closure and appeal. His advice to group was to stay grassroots, let each parish know what each other is doing, encourage one another, get your own canon lawyer, but don’t develop a strong centralized group against the diocese and especially don’t get involved with national groups like FutureChurch and VOTF and their agendas. He though Rome appreciated grassroots parish based complaints but did like larger lay organizations.
The parishes won their cases. Stanislav’s work documents the grassroots efforts that made them succeed where many other parishes and organizations have failed.
In VOTF I advocated that networking, talking to each other and supporting each other, was the most important and foundational thing. I see that as the purpose of this blog, too.
Stanislav and I know each other through e-mail. We are infrequently copied on other people's e-mails. We discussed mobbing in an e-mail or two early on. We had probably been to at least one, perhaps more large group meetings earlier on.
ReplyDeleteThis is all new to me, perhaps because I haven't been to church for years. The church I went to was small and was always pretty crowded so I can't imagine how a mobbing could happen. Maybe it's different in the east coast? Here's a pic I took of my church's doors ... http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_drqO7qJ_y4o/TH8vCOXagDI/AAAAAAAAF7A/xn5uZzix8ew/s1600/doors.jpg
ReplyDeleteIs there anyway to format this site so that one can simply click on a link and open it? Now one has to copy and past it elsewhere. Or is it somehow just me?
DeleteCrystal..go to www.detroitmassmob.com under the news tab are 5 minute videos of almost all of our masses..
DeleteI don't quite get it. Do you organize a flash mob type of event: Everybody show up at 10 a.m. here for mass? Then ... what happens? Does the mob attract the curious and you sweep them into mass with you? I'm guess someone could get caught up in the spirit of the thing and have a good time, but but does it really evangelize?
ReplyDeleteJean...go to www.detroitmassmob.com under the news tab are 5 minute videos of almost all of our masses..
Deleteand yes it does evangelize.....and help raise much needed funds..with 29 Masses we have helped raise over $350,000
DeleteThanks for the link, Thomas. I see where it could help raise funds--you give your weekly contribution to an historic church--but now sure how it evangelizes other than that it encourages people to see the sights. Parking is sometimes notoriously difficult around these old churches in downtown areas, but nice to see people appreciating the history/heritage.
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ReplyDeleteLooks like Facebook plays a big role in getting the people. Most of us are here because we did not like the idea of commenting on Facebook.
ReplyDeleteTo start our fourth season the Detroit Mass Mob XXX. will be attending the beautiful and historic Our Lady of the Scapular Parish-Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Roman Catholic Church located at 976 Pope John Paul II Avenue in Wyandotte, MI 48192.
ReplyDeleteYou won't want to miss this one. Be sure to invite your family and friends. https://www.facebook.com/events/1939594742944917/
link to the event page https://www.facebook.com/events/1939594742944917/
ReplyDelete