Catholic officials in Detroit have created a new parish at a historic
downtown church that will be operated by a Chicago-based traditional
religious community.
Detroit Archbishop Allen Vigneron announced that the first
Traditional Latin Mass will be held Sunday at St. Joseph Oratory, the
new name for the St. Joseph Church site and parish.
St. Joseph had been one of three church buildings that were part of
Mother of Divine Mercy Parish. That parish will continue operating
Sweetest Heart of Mary and St. Josaphat.
The archdiocese’s arrangement with the Institute of Christ the King
Sovereign Priest includes holding an English-language mass on Saturdays.
Officials say the institute operates parishes at a dozen other U.S.
churches and aims to revitalize and restore historic churches.
Founded in Gabon, Africa, in 1990, the Institute of Christ the King
Sovereign Priest remained a diocesan reality until 2008, when it was
granted official Vatican recognition.
There’s also a women’s community,
the Sisters Adorers of the Royal Heart of Jesus, and a lay group, the
Society of the Sacred Heart, associated with the main group.
Cardinal Raymond Burke, patron of the Knights of Malta and former
head of the Vatican’s Apostolic Signatura, has been a promoter of the
institute and ordained priests for the group while he was still the
archbishop of St. Louis.