Hundreds of worshippers packed into the parish church of San Carlos Borromeo after the three priests there refused to bow to an order from their archbishop closing the parish down.
More worshippers spilled on to the streets of the traditionally working-class district as the priests, followers of liberation theology, defied a threat from the church to punish them if they continued to celebrate mass here as they have done for almost three decades.
"The church hierarchy does not want churches for the poor," said parishioner María Martínez before the Easter Mass began with guitar music.
"The church hierarchy does not want churches for the poor," said parishioner María Martínez before the Easter Mass began with guitar music.
Placards reading "Solidarity with the parish of San Carlos Borromeo" and "The hierarchy can close premises but not a church" were hung outside the small one-roomed strip-lit church.
The so-called "red church" of Entrevias has become a cause celebre in Spain since Madrid's archbishop, Antonio Rouco Varela, announced its closure a week ago.
While the closure was explained as an attempt to reduce the number of parishes in Madrid by merging some, it has been taken as a direct attack on the priests and their forthright stance against church customs and the Vatican's hierarchy.
The priests, famous for conducting services in street clothes, were told to hand over the keys to the parish church and stop celebrating mass.
They could, however, continue to carry out their work with the neighbourhood's poor, with former prisoners, drug addicts and the 180 homeless people who use the church as their registered address.
"We are not going to separate our social work and help for the destitute from our way of celebrating liturgy," said Enrique de Castro, one of the priests.
A member of the archbishop's staff, Father Joaquín Martín, said: "First they will get a warning, and then, if they continue to disobey, there will be a serious punishment. We cannot just say whatever we feel like during Mass, but have to follow the dictates of the church."
Parishioners have called in graffiti artists to cover the church with messages from the Bible, and actors and other celebrities were among those who turned up at the church yesterday to offer their support.
Local politicians from the prime minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero's Socialist party have also been backing the priests against the Spanish church hierarchy, which has openly fought the current government on several fronts.
The three priests, all over 60 years old, belong to the tradition of "worker priests" or "red priests" who emerged under the dictatorship of Franco.
One of the three, Pepe Díaz, said he had first rebelled against the church hierarchy when it was supporting Franco.
"We did things our own way then, and did not bother with the ecclesiastical powers or follow religious tradition," he said.
"There were clandestine meetings of all kinds, especially about social and political matters. That was what they disliked about us back then. Of course, even then we were celebrating mass dressed in ordinary clothes."
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Disclaimer
No responsibility or liability shall attach itself to either myself or to the blogspot ‘Clerical Whispers’ for any or all of the articles placed here.
The placing of an article hereupon does not necessarily imply that I agree or accept the contents of the article as being necessarily factual in theology, dogma or otherwise.
Sotto Voce