Aug 17, 2010
Being a native of Washington, DC, I say nice things about New York City only grudgingly. Damn Yankees is my favorite musical and in our house growing up, when we sang the title song, we meant it.
Nevertheless, over the weekend I took my 11-year-old daughter on a “just girls” trip to New York. We stayed with a beloved aunt and did touristy things tailored to the interests of a young girl making her first real visit to the city. As Sunday was the Feast of the Assumption, we treated ourselves to Mass in St. Patrick’s Cathedral.
I don’t have to tell you how splendid St. Patrick’s is, since Pope Benedict XVI did that beautifully in his homily there in 2008. In addition to being a joyful expression of the Christian message, that homily is a masterwork of rhetoric that repays careful study. In it, he compared the Church at large by turns to a stained glass window, the precision of Gothic proportion and the dynamism of a flying buttress.
Glorious was our liturgy Sunday morning, but the Holy Spirit can be capricious, so for me the most moving moment came not during Mass itself, but after. Behind the main altar is a famous statue of the Pieta (which I noted with amusement is “three times the size of Michelangelo’s.” New Yorkers have to outdo everyone at everything, I guess.) We made a visit in the “Lady Chapel” where the Blessed Sacrament is maintained.