Walter Reed Medical Center Terminates Catholic Services Contract Beginning Holy Week

Just when you think this administration cannot step one step lower they manage to achieve it. Anything to destroy the morale of our service members. In this case, they pick the very beginning of Holy Week, ending services on March 31. This for the vulnerable and need for spiritual care very likely in the military.

WASHINGTON, DC – Walter Reed National Military Medical Center has issued a “cease and desist order” to Holy Name College, a community of Franciscan Catholic priests and brothers, who have provided pastoral care to service members and veterans at Walter Reed for nearly two decades.

The government’s cease and desist order directed the Catholic priests to cease any religious services at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. This order was issued as Catholics entered Holy Week, the most sacred of days in the Christian faith, in which they participate in liturgies remembering Jesus’ passion, and leading the Church to celebrate the Resurrection on Easter morning.

Archbishop Timothy Broglio (center) celebrates Ash Wednesday Mass at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, MD, on March 2, 2022.

The Franciscans’ contract for Catholic Pastoral Care was terminated on March 31, 2023, and awarded to a secular defense contracting firm that cannot fulfill the statement of work in the contract. As a result, adequate pastoral care is not available for service members and veterans in the United States’ largest Defense Health Agency medical center either during Holy Week or beyond. There is one Catholic Army chaplain assigned to Walter Reed Medical Center, but he is in the process of separating from the Army.

……

Walter Reed National Military Medical Center is one of many medical centers within the Department of Defense and Defense Health Agency whose pastoral care lies within AMS jurisdiction. The refusal to provide adequate pastoral care while awarding a contract for Catholic ministry to a for-profit company that has no way of providing Catholic priests to the medical center is a glaring violation of service members’ and veterans’ Right to the Free Exercise of Religion. Especially, during Holy Week, the lack of adequate Catholic pastoral care causes untold and irreparable harm to Catholics who are hospitalized and therefore a captive population whose religious rights the government has a constitutional duty to provide for and protect.

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How we got here?

Pentagon Chaplain Nominee? Called Christians with ‘Twisted Policies’

Bunkerville

One can only wonder how Brenda Sue Fulton with such extreme viewpoints was ever nominated to oversee the Pentagon’s chaplain program. What qualifies someone to move from the New Jersey DMV to overseeing chaplains? About the same as Kamala Harris.

Palm Sunday – Moravian Holy Week

 

Palm Sunday. Holy Week was a special time as Moravians. Special memories of the Hymn “Hosanna, Blessed Is He That Comes” sung at the beginning of the Palm Sunday service and the concluding moving hymn “Ride on Ride on in Majesty.” I include both hymns in the post.

Holy Week, the week before Easter, often referred to as “Passion Week” by Moravians, is intended to be a full week of profound reflection, reverence and prayer.  The word passion comes from the noun translation of the verb pascho appearing in the gospels, where Jesus showed “himself alive after his passion by many infallible proofs” (Acts 1:3). There, the word passion means “to suffer,” particularly in reference to Christ’s sufferings and death.

Moravians gather every evening of Holy Week to read out loud from a harmony of the gospels, beginning with Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem and ending with the burial. There are no sermons during Holy Week – just readings and congregational singing. A single hymn verse is sung in response to each passage read from the Bible – but, sometimes – there is silence.

Palm Sunday: The sixth Sunday in Lent is Palm Sunday, the beginning of Holy Week. Greeted by cheering crowds waving palm branches and proclaiming Him the Messianic King, Jesus made his triumphal entry into Jerusalem riding on a donkey as prophesized in Zechariah 9:9. (Matthew 21:1-11)

The Hosanna Anthem is based on the phrase Hosanna and is a traditional Moravian Anthem written by Christian Gregor, a Moravian Bishop in 1765. It is sung Antiphonally or Alternately, and is, “a call and response song”. Traditionally, it was sung between boys and girls, or the entire congregation between men and women, where the men would call and the women would respond. For example, the men would call: ‘Hosanna, blessed is He that comes’. The women would respond ‘Hosanna, blessed is He that comes’.

 

 

From the Album Elohim 2 Chronicles 7:14

If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.

Mathew 23:37-39

37 “Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who kill the prophets and stone those sent to you, how often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, and you were not willing. 38 Look, your house is left to you desolate. 39 For I tell you, you will not see me again until you say, ‘Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord.’[a]

 

Ride on, ride on in majesty, hymn with words by Henry Hart Milman (1791 – 1868) and music by John Bacchus Dykes (1823 – 1876). Sung by the choir of St Michael and All Angels, Bassett, for Palm Sunday

 

One can join the Moravian Holy Week Services on line and via YouTube and also where they are archived,

The Home Moravian Church. Established in 1771, our church is located in Winston-Salem, N.C., in the historic district of Old Salem, a restored 1766 Moravian settlement.

All are welcome to join us in person or online.

The public is invited to attend all services, which will also be live-streamed.

Special music is always planned for Holy Week and Easter.

Read about our Lenten and Easter traditions.

Home page.

 

Have a wonderful day.

 

Moravians: ‘Hosanna, Blessed is He That Comes’

Palm Sunday. This coming week, Holy Week was a special time for my family as Moravians. Special memories of the Hymn “Hosanna, Blessed Is He That Comes” sung at the beginning of the Palm Sunday service and the concluding moving hymn “Ride on Ride on in Majesty.” I include both hymns in the post.

Holy Week, the week before Easter, often referred to as “Passion Week” by Moravians, is intended to be a full week of profound reflection, reverence and prayer.  The word passion comes from the noun translation of the verb pascho appearing in the gospels, where Jesus showed “himself alive after his passion by many infallible proofs” (Acts 1:3). There, the word passion means “to suffer,” particularly in reference to Christ’s sufferings and death.

Moravians gather every evening of Holy Week to read out loud from a harmony of the gospels, beginning with Jesus’ triumphal entry into Jerusalem and ending with the burial. There are no sermons during Holy Week – just readings and congregational singing. A single hymn verse is sung in response to each passage read from the Bible – but, sometimes – there is silence.

Palm Sunday: The sixth Sunday in Lent is Palm Sunday, the beginning of Holy Week. Greeted by cheering crowds waving palm branches and proclaiming Him the Messianic King, Jesus made his triumphal entry into Jerusalem riding on a donkey as prophesized in Zechariah 9:9. (Matthew 21:1-11)

The Hosanna Anthem is based on the phrase Hosanna and is a traditional Moravian Anthem written by Christian Gregor, a Moravian Bishop in 1765. It is sung Antiphonally or Alternately, and is, “a call and response song”. Traditionally, it was sung between boys and girls, or the entire congregation between men and women, where the men would call and the women would respond. For example, the men would call: ‘Hosanna, blessed is He that comes’. The women would respond ‘Hosanna, blessed is He that comes’.

Hosanna, Oak Grove Moravian Church, Winston-Salem, NC

Now the conclusion: “Ride On, Ride On in Majesty” | Graham George

Sung each year as the closing hymn for the Palm Sunday Service at Central Moravian, this stirring hymn captures the essence of the day; from the procession, with its “Hosannas” and palm branches, to the “approaching sacrifice.”

This is the Graham George version of the hymn, a bit different and darker than the Moravian version. Performed by the PlymouthChurch DSM

“Ride On, Ride On in Majesty” | Graham George

Wishing everyone a wonderful and Blessed Palm Sunday.