Archbishop Vigneron celebrates Mass for Pardon to bring about transformation of hearts in Archdiocese of Detroit




Bishop Arturo Cepeda, Bishop Michael Byrnes, Archbishop Allen H. Vigneron and Bishop Donald Hanchon lay prostrate before the altar during the Litany of Pardon. (Dan Meloy | The Michigan Catholic) Bishop Arturo Cepeda, Bishop Michael Byrnes, Archbishop Allen H. Vigneron and Bishop Donald Hanchon lay prostrate before the altar during the Litany of Pardon. (Dan Meloy | The Michigan Catholic)


DETROIT– As Archbishop Allen H. Vigneron, Bishops Michael Byrnes, Arturo Cepeda and Donald Hanchon solemnly processed down the nave of the Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament, the congregation stood silent.

The four men lay prostrate before the altar, humbling themselves before God, and in view of the flock they are called to shepherd.

Then the Litany of Pardon began, with the sins and transgressions of the Archdiocese of Detroit read aloud, recalling instances in the Church’s history when it failed to live up to God’s calling. All the while the clergy and laity remained kneeling, calling to mind their own part in the transgressions.

“For ignoring the Word of God, living and effective, and hiding behind policies and procedures.” “For our failures to take to heart the Lord’s condemnation of those who scandalize ‘the little ones,’ and for failing to protect children from sexual abuse.” “For all the times we have not welcomed others to our parishes, especially for the times we have refused to allow African American Catholics into our parish communities.”

Each invocation was answered with “Kyrie eleison” – Lord have mercy.


Members of the clergy kneel during the Litany of Pardon at the Mass for Pardon at the Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament in Detroit on Oct. 7. (Dan Meloy | The Michigan Catholic) Members of the clergy kneel during the Litany of Pardon at the Mass for Pardon at the Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament in Detroit on Oct. 7. (Dan Meloy | The Michigan Catholic)
The Mass for Pardon on Oct. 7 at the Cathedral is a step on the archdiocese’s path to “Unleash the Gospel,” Archbishop Vigneron explained, saying how the Mass was a necessary step on the road to being a “band of joyful missionary disciples.”

“We have been summoned by Pope Francis to do what it takes to be a band of joyful missionary disciples,” Archbishop Vigneron said. “And that is what tonight is about. We have been summoned in a very particular way.”

Before a packed cathedral, Archbishop Vigneron addressed in his homily the necessity for the Mass for Pardon, linking repentance as an inseparable part of the Gospel message.

“Repent and believe in the Good News, this is an inseparable prayer,” Archbishop Vigneron said. “In this computer age, you may call it a binary prayer. The two is really one. As we share in the mission of Jesus Christ, we can never syphon these truths. We can never proclaim the Good News without calling for repentance. And we can never call for repentance without the invitation of the Good News. That’s what tonight is about.”

Archbishop Vigneron said the Mass wasn’t a time for Catholics to beat themselves up for past transgressions or forget sin has occurred within the Church.

Rather, the purpose of asking for and receiving pardon is to prepare the Church to become the group of evangelizers God is calling it to be.

“We’re repenting so that we can receive the Good News and share the Good News,” Archbishop Vigneron said. “To be a band of joyful missionary disciples, we must first be evangelized. And to be evangelized, we must first repent.”

During the buildup to the Mass for Pardon, Archbishop Vigneron related how a reporter asked him what he most anticipated from the Mass for Pardon. The archbishop admitted he was taken aback from the question at first, but then replied he most anticipated Jesus being present in the cathedral in the form of the Blessed Sacrament.

“I most anticipate what will happen when I receive your gifts of bread and wine and are prepared and placed on the altar, when the Holy Spirit comes down upon them and takes the form of the Body and Blood of Christ,” Archbishop Vigneron said. “I anticipate offering the Holy Sacrament, because here, the Holy Spirit, our true high priest is present.

The Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament was full on Oct. 7 for the Mass for Pardon, with members of the congregation kneeling in the side aisles during the Litany of Pardon. (Dan Meloy | The Michigan Catholic) The Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament was full on Oct. 7 for the Mass for Pardon, with members of the congregation kneeling in the side aisles during the Litany of Pardon. (Dan Meloy | The Michigan Catholic)


“Present in his body, present in his blood. Offered with the sins we have confessed and will still confess again. To offer our prayers, with His oneself, to the Father. So I tell you, I know, I am certain, that our sins are expiated, because we have a high priest who has risen from the dead and pleads for us at the right hand of the Father.”

Archbishop Vigneron concluded his homily with a summarization of what the Mass for Pardon – and indeed reconciliation itself – is all about. Not an erasing or forgetting of sin, but the transformation that is offered through the healing power of faith in Jesus Christ.

“It’s about transforming those faults in our sins, the wounds we bear that bear death, and transforming those wounds into new sources of life,” Archbishop Vigneron said. “That’s what pardon is in the Kingdom of God. It’s not about forgetting, it’s about transformation. Transforming our lives though Jesus Christ, now and forever.”
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