Last Monday week we sang a daily requiem mass for the dead (specifically for those who have died in war - it was Anzac Day the day before) during which a juvenile magpie (Gymnorhina tibicen) strayed into Ss Peter and Paul Garran (Canberra, Australia).
It was very distressed for a while, not being able to find its way out, despite our best efforts. Eventually, having given up, it settled down and, perching quietly on a pew, seemed to develop an interest in our proceedings (see photo attached).
Immediately after the consecration, it started singing away lustily, ... it was a glorious elevation motet!
After mass, we managed to coax it safely out an open window.
Note that it came dressed in the appropriate liturgical colors for a requiem. How thoughtful!
How really nice an experience for you. No doubt that day will be remembered as special. Such things should happen more often because we are far from the only inhabitants of this world. To the mediaevals this would seem quite normal. I have a few times seen a bird fluttering around the rafters trying in vain to find a way out.
I was once doing the Via Crucis in Fatima and a very friendly wild dog accompanied us for a good chunk of it. He clearly was a wild shepherding dog of some variety that had been living alone up in the hills; he was quite rugged (and wounded, bless his doggy heart). But I swear this dog smiled at us. I have a picture on an old hard drive somewhere. He was just content to be nearby while we prayed.
A stray dog participated in a Via Crucis I was following once. He took a spot right in the first row of folks and walked at our pace, keeping his place neatly. He seemed pleased to be part of the procession.
Anzac Day was originally devised to honour the members of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) who served in the Gallipoli Campaign, their first engagement in the First World War (1914–1918). Now it is a national day of remembrance in Australia and New Zealand that broadly commemorates all Australians and New Zealanders "who served and died in all wars, conflicts, and peacekeeping operations" and "the contribution and suffering of all those who have served".
We once had a stray bird that had gotten into the building. During mass, it would start flying when the organ started. During the processional for a rather unpopular priest the bird flew back and forth over the reverend priest. Many concluded it definitely was not the Holy Spirit descending.
MJO, "To the mediaevals this would seem quite normal."
Indeed.
I don't have my source in front of me but there's an entry in a letter of Fr Robert Hugh Benson in the early years of last century. It went something like this: "I went to mass at St Peter's (Rome) this morning. During Communion, there was a cat sitting quietly on the altar rail. Nobody seemed surprised."
Actually, MJO, I've unwittingly come up with a new argument (pat. pend.) against the Novus Ordo: how would a postlapsarian cat and magpie, actively participating, negotiate the Sign of Peace? :-)
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