A leading bishop in Wisconsin is voicing his support for a tradition-minded group of priests who are now running a cluster of parishes — and sparking some controversy:
At a recent Mass at St. Aloysius Catholic Church, the Rev. John Blewett urged parishioners to emulate their savior and stand firm on matters of church doctrine.
“Jesus does not back down,” he said.
The same could be said for Blewett and his fellow members of the Society of Jesus Christ the Priest, a religious group based in Spain. Beginning in 2006, Bishop Robert Morlino invited priests from the society to serve in the Madison Catholic Diocese, and in the ensuing years, they have thrilled some and dismayed others with their staunch Catholicism and tough-love approach.
Five of them now lead a five-parish cluster in the Sauk City area, with three more priests from the society expected this fall. They have brought considerable change in the way the parishes approach worship services.
The priests no longer let girls be altar servers, and they have dispensed with the common Catholic practice of using trained lay people to assist with Communion. They have greatly increased opportunities for confession – some complain they nose around too much – and added many Masses celebrated only in Latin, which some parishioners find divine and others alienating.
Supporters say the priests have brought richness to the faith and much-needed discipline to followers who too often water down church teachings.
“They tell us what we need to hear, not what we want to hear,” said Kay Ringelstetter, a St. Aloysius member who calls the changes beautiful. “We see their love for Jesus Christ and the joy in everything they do, and we desire it.”
Others are upset over what they consider a hard-line approach that leaves little room for shades of difference.
“You get the impression they only want to be a shepherd for the people who agree with them,” said Troy Jacobson, who left St. Barnabas Parish in Mazomanie last year over his disappointment with the priests. “It’s almost like they’ve restricted access to God.”
Critics contend that scores of parishioners have left, but others disagree and say new members have filled any voids. The Rev. Jared Hood, a society priest and the administrator of the five-parish cluster, said membership numbers were not available.
Morlino said any time parishes change priests, some upheaval is inevitable. He said the priests follow a different course from many in the diocese, but that diversity is good and everything the priests do falls within the accepted practices of the church.
“They are not in any sense renegades,” he said.
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PHOTO: First Communion at St. Norbert’s in Roxbury, WI. The priests (and deacon!) are from the Society of Jesus Christ the Priest.