Catholic nerd pilgrimage: St Ferdinand

Today’s saint is Saint Ferdinand, who, reading his biography, is kind of politically incorrect as saints go, being notable for “christianizing” Spain which largely consisted of military conquests on the Iberian peninsula. This is the guy who pissed off Osama Bin Laden so much, he felt obliged to mention him in his justification of the 9/11 attacks.

The parish itself is a mid-century building, and when I arrived, at first I thought, wow, a lot of people here for the feast of their patron (although not as many as St Rita had). Then I realized that the reason their daily mass on Fridays was at 8.15 instead of 8 was this was the school Mass. And the students were arranged with six foot gaps between students in the pews, which felt kind of weird and untrusting of the children to behave properly during Mass.

The parish is apparently a trilingual parish.

Two worship aids in the back of a pew. On the left, is a hardcover with a title of Śpiewnik Parafialny (Polish for “Parish songbook”). On the left is a paperback with a bilingual title of “¡Celebramos/Let us celebrate!”

My hearing continues to be ineffective at being able to understand a single word spoken at Mass, which is still partially a matter of acoustics but also something that I should probably address with my audiologist at my next appointment.

View of the interior of St Ferdinand church from the back The altar is visible straight ahead along with pews that are filled with spaced children from the parish school. The church itself is a rectangular floorplan, typical of mid-century Catholic church architecture.


Posted

in

,

by

Tags:

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.