18 December 2014, The Tablet

Midnight Mass: the vanishing ritual

by Joanna Moorhead , Liz Dodd , Katherine Backler

With the church ablaze with candles, the Christ Child in the crib and the choir singing their carols at perfect pitch, Midnight Mass is at the heart of Christmas. But according to a Tablet survey, it is on its way to becoming a thing of the past.

Priests at more than 50 deaneries across England and Wales contacted this week confirmed that there has been a decline in the number of churches offering a Mass that ushers in Christmas Day on the stroke of midnight. In some, it will not be offered at all; in others, it is scheduled for as early as 5 p.m. on Christmas Eve.

Many priests report problems with drunks infiltrating services that begin just as the pubs close. Ageing congregations have made earlier Masses more popular; and the declining number of priests, and subsequent reorganisation of parishes, mean that increasingly Midnight Mass is only celebrated in one parish per deanery.

Mgr David Hogan, parish priest of St Bernadette’s, in Nunthorpe, Middlesbrough, estimated that fewer than a quarter of parishes now offer Midnight Mass. “Last time we had it, we ended up with a drunk trying to get the doors off the church,” he said. “So we’ve made the decision not to have Mass when people are pouring out of the pubs sloshed.”

The roots of the decline, said Fr Hogan, went back to the 1970s and the introduction of an evening vigil Mass to fulfil the Sunday or holy day obligation. “There has never been any significance in cele­brating Mass at midnight at Christmas beyond the fact that it used to be the first opportunity there was to have it,” he added.

Other parishes have experienced bizarre interruptions over the years. Canon Alan Sheridan, of St George’s, in York, said the service was moved to 8 p.m. after a streaker caused havoc: “We are on the main drag into town so people are coming straight from the pub and it can make Mass very difficult.”

Canon Peter Turbitt, now a priest in Wantage, in Portsmouth Diocese, recalled an incident at St Michael and All Angels, Havant, when police were called three times after drunks attacked his church. “It is not nice being showered with bricks by drunken yobbos when you’re trying to pray,” he said. “A lot of people were frightened to walk home.”

According to a parishioner at Holy Rood, Barnsley, in Hallam Diocese, his church ensures there are men standing near the door to act as informal bouncers during Midnight Mass.

Where priests have consulted parishioners over the timing, most have opted for an earlier liturgy. Fr John Gott, of the Good Shepherd, Mytholmroyd, in Leeds Diocese, said the popular vote had led to a change to 8.30 p.m. “We reckon that’s about midnight in Bethlehem,” he said. Fr John Minh, priest in charge of St Luke’s, Peterborough, in East Anglia Diocese, said parishioners had voted three to one in favour of a move to 10.30 p.m.

At St Mary’s Church, Pembroke, in Menevia Diocese, Carmelite priest Fr Patrick Fitzgerald-Lombard said he worried about a 5 p.m. Mass becoming a substitute for Christmas Day Mass for children. “We have turned our practice of the faith into a matter of convenience rather than a ­matter of commitment,” he said.

Many priests spoke of their sadness that Midnight Mass was becoming a rarity. “Going to Midnight Mass used to be a hallmark of being a Catholic; it is sad if that is changing,” said one.


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