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Oklahoma archbishop calls Holy Hour 'a powerful witness of

faith'
Oklahoma City's archbishop called the overflow crowd at a Sept. 21 eucharistic Holy Hour "a
powerful witness of faith."
More than 600 people filled St. Francis of Assisi Church for the prayer service led by Archbishop
Paul Coakley. Another 1,400 people stood in overflow areas and outdoor prayer gardens to listen to
his homily over loud speakers.
The Holy Hour was celebrated as a response to a Satanic "black mass" held the same day in a
downtown arena.
The more than 2,000 Catholics at St. Francis of Assisi also participated in a eucharistic procession
through the streets of Oklahoma City, led by Coakley carrying a monstrance with the Blessed
Sacrament.
"I was very grateful for the overwhelming support and prayers we received from all over the
country, in fact, from all over the world," he said in a statement afterward.
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"The Holy Hour and procession at St. Francis of Assisi Parish was a very public and positive witness
to the beauty, truth and goodness of our Catholic faith in the face of an unexpected challenge. No
doubt great fruit and many graces will come forth as result of this ordeal," he added.
In early August, Coakley asked Catholics to offer prayer and penance to prevent the Satanic group
Dakhma of Angra Mainyu from holding the "black mass," which took place in a conference room at
the Civic Center Music Hall.
Despite a petition and repeated requests that city officials keep the Satanic ritual from going
forward because it would be an affront to Oklahoma's more than 250,000 Catholics, officials said the
event was protected by the First Amendment and would not be canceled.
The crowd at St. Francis of Assisi included laypeople, priests, deacons and men and women religious
from the archdiocese and from around the country.
Joining Coakley as concelebrants were retired Archbishop Eusebius Beltran of Oklahoma City and
Bishops Edward Slattery of Tulsa and Carl Kemme of Wichita, Kan.
"Your presence is a powerful witness of faith in the midst of what has been a particularly challenging
time for our community," Coakley told the congregation in his homily. "We gather today in the
presence of our eucharistic Lord, who is the source of our unity, imperfect though it might be, and
our bond of charity."
He emphasized that those assembled were not there to protest.
"Let us put aside, for the moment, our outrage. We are here to praise and to adore," the archbishop
said. "We are here to give thanks for the gift of our faith and the priceless treasure of the Lord's
abiding presence with us in the sacrament of his body and blood.
"We are gathered before our eucharistic Lord to listen to his holy word and open ourselves to the
promptings of his Spirit so that we might become more faithful and authentic witnesses of his love
and mercy in the midst of our broken and suffering human family."
He added: "We are also here to offer our petitions to the Lord, that he might deliver us from the
power of sin and, yes, from all demonic influences."
Coakley told the congregation that the Catholic faith "is not meant to be -- and cannot remain --
contained within the walls of this beautiful church."
The eucharistic procession that would follow the Holy Hour, he said, was "a reminder that we, the
church, are present in the world as light, as salt and as leaven to bring hope and the offer of Christ's
salvation to all we meet."
"Let us pray that we might embrace our mandate to live as missionary disciples in the midst of the
world so that we might draw all people to Jesus Christ and to safe harbor in his church," he said.
News reports said the "black mass" was "sold out." The Christian Post reported that 88 tickets were
sold -- at $17.50 each -- and only 43 people showed up.
Outside the civic center, hundreds held a mostly peaceful protest.
Video footage posted on the website of Oklahoma's Channel 9 TV station showed the group's leader,
Adam Daniels, wearing a black robe trimmed in red, similar to a bishop's cassock. He told reporters
that the point of mocking items used by the Catholic church was to destroy fear he said people have
of the church.
In late August, a stolen consecrated host was at the center of a lawsuit filed by Coakley against
Daniels' group. The host was intended for use at the "black mass." But the archbishop dropped the
suit after the host was returned.
[Diane M. Clay, editor of the Sooner Catholic, newspaper of the Oklahoma City archdiocese,
contributed to this story.]
http://ncronline.org/news/faith-parish/oklahoma-archbishop-calls-holy-hour-powerful-witness-faith
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