Holy Trinity in Boston, MA: Losing a Space to Soar
By Yvonne Abraham | June 11, 2008
It's not what you expect to see when you step into a Catholic church these days.
Demurely dressed women in lace mantillas. A priest with his back to the congregation: In nomini Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti, Amen. Bells ringing. Gregorian chant floating down from the choir loft.
But here it all is at Holy Trinity German Church , on Shawmut Avenue in the South End, at the start of a sweltering Sunday.
About 100 people from Bourne and West Roxbury and all over come for the 9 a.m. Latin Mass. They are men and women of all ages, Catholics convinced that their church made a big mistake when it did away with the Latin Mass.
"I don't get anything out of the [English] Mass," says Kathleen Stone, 59, of Hull . "There is a lack of reverence. This is my time alone with God."
This grand church is the perfect setting for a Latin Mass.
Incongruous in one of the few unprettified parts of the South End, its puddingstone and granite exterior is impressive enough.
But walking through Holy Trinity's doors will take your breath away. Light filters through huge, deeply hued, stained, etched, and painted glass windows. Enormous, hand-carved statues of the Twelve Apostles look down from the walls. Immense pillars hold up impossibly high, sky-blue gothic arches.
Parishioners say it was mostly working people who scraped together the money to turn the church, which opened in 1877 to serve thousands of German immigrants, into a place resembling the ornate cathedrals they left behind, by cramming it with paintings and statues.
But Stone and the others have just three Sundays left at Holy Trinity. The Archdiocese of Boston is closing the church June 30, partly because its congregation is too small to sustain it, officials say.
Parishioners at Holy Trinity, like those in many of the churches that have been closed, are mighty angry. They are probably going to appeal the archdiocese's decision. But the church closing isn't the end of the Latin Mass in these parts. In fact, the Latin Mass is having a resurgence.
The parish of Mary Immaculate of Lourdes in Newton offers Latin Masses now, and that is where some of Holy Trinity's worshipers have already gone, reluctantly.
Last year, Pope Benedict XV loosened the rules, allowing any church with enough support to offer Masses in Latin. Four other local churches now have them, too, so the Latin Mass will survive this closing.
Less certain is the future of that lovely church itself, designed and built to outlast all of the transformations within it.
The Archdiocese has closed about 60 parishes since it began its consolidation four years ago. A few churches have been sold to other denominations. Some have been turned into housing, including condominiums. In the happiest cases, their windows have been pulled out and sent to other parishes, their statues and pulpits and stations of the cross scattered across the country. It's too soon to know what will happen here.
Susan Long saw her old church, the parish of Saints Peter and Paul on Broadway in South Boston , turned into condos, and she can't bear the thought of the same thing happening at Holy Trinity, where she says the Latin Mass gave her a spiritual reawakening.
"I was baptized there," she says. "Now there are people sitting at a holy place smoking cigarettes."
We have paid a lot of attention to the communities like this one, broken apart by church closings, and rightly so.
But sitting in Holy Trinity for an hour, imagining this beautiful place sectioned off for granite countertops and walk-in closets, you realize there are other casualties in this whole painful process.
Like so many other churches representing the highest aspirations of long-gone Catholics, this grand, transcendent place may ultimately not transcend at all.




Comments (5)
Why!!!
For what possible reason on Gods green earth would Cardinal O'Malley close this aweome church?
Holy Trinity was the church that brought the Christmas tree into America.
It also offers the Unbloody Sacrifice of Calvary every day....O thats why its being closed!
Posted by Dan Hunter | June 11, 2008 3:41 PM
Posted on June 11, 2008 15:41
It's ironic too because the number of people attending the TLM has slowly been creeping up over the past month or so and we've really getting comfortable with each other.
Everything happens for a reason.
Posted by Lynne | June 13, 2008 10:27 PM
Posted on June 13, 2008 22:27
One good crime deserves another. According to the Wanderer (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-religion/2030362/posts), Holy Trinity has $242,000. That would buy 3 years of Latin Masses in Maine. But its property value, being in downtown Boston, is probably incredible. We know the faggot problem is not over, so they have to prepare for the next round.
Cdl. O'Malley is also closing St. Casimir's in Brockton, another historical church. Along with closing HT, this continues the destructive program of Cdl. Law and his predecessors. Commies all.
O'Malley also signed over control of 6 Catholic hospitals to a lay board which reports to the state. I'm sure they'll start providing human pesticide, like the CT "Catholic" hospitals.
So Lynne, the reasons are dollars and destruction.
Posted by Cyprian
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June 14, 2008 9:02 AM
Posted on June 14, 2008 09:02
I'm just sick about the closing of Holy Trinity! What would Fr. Francis X. Weisner (prior pastor) say?
I don't think God has His reasons. I think it is a terrible mistake. Once Holy Trinity and all the history it represents is gone, we can never get it back. It's a terrible loss. A terrible miscalculation.
Posted by staff
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June 15, 2008 11:50 PM
Posted on June 15, 2008 23:50
In the big picture, the reason is obvious. The good God is punishing us. Recall that Our Lady warned us about the punishment of World War II. We are under a worse punishment now because we will not turn from our ways. The clergy threw off the yoke of Ven. Pius IX and St. Pius X at Vatican II. They imbibed the liberty of the world, gave it to us, and we drank with glee. As Our Lord called Israel a harlot, He can say the same of us today.
Holy Trinity is lost. Worse, the souls of millions of Catholics are lost. And unless we do penance ...
Posted by Cyprian
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June 16, 2008 10:51 AM
Posted on June 16, 2008 10:51