St. Clement Catholic Church (Ottawa)
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St. Clement Catholic Church (Ottawa)
St. Clement Parish (french: Paroisse St-Clément) is a bilingual Roman Catholic parish community located in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada and entrusted to the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter. After the replacement of the liturgical norms of the 1962 Roman Missal by the post-Vatican II Mass in the 1960s, St. Clement Parish was the first community in the world to be authorized to celebrate the Mass and other sacraments in Latin only, according to the older liturgical norms. Since June 3, 2012, St. Clement Parish operates out of Ste-Anne Church in Lowertown. History In 1968, Ottawa Archbishop Joseph-Aurèle Plourde authorized a small group of Catholics who remained attached to the Church's traditional liturgical heritage to continue to use the Latin Tridentine Mass. This group found an older priest who agreed to serve them in this desire, and they received permission to use the chapel of the Monastery of the Sisters Adorers of the Precious Blood on Echo Drive in Ottawa for Mass. Th ...
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Ste-Anne Catholic Church (Ottawa)
Ste-Anne is a Catholic church (building), church located at 528 Old St. Patrick Street in the Lower Town, Lowertown neighbourhood of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Built in 1873 by architect J.P. LeCourt, it is one of the few examples of traditional Québécois church architecture in Ontario. Ste-Anne is the home of St. Clement Parish (Ottawa), St. Clement Parish, a bilingual Parish (Catholic Church), parish community served by the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter, which celebrates the Mass (liturgy), Mass and other Sacraments of the Catholic Church, sacraments in Latin according to the liturgical norms of the Tridentine Mass, 1962 Roman Missal. History Bishop Joseph-Bruno Guigues was responsible for the creation of the church, as by the 1870s Ottawa's French Catholic population outgrew the Notre-Dame Cathedral (Ottawa), Notre-Dame Cathedral. Pierre Rocque worked as the contractor and assisted LeCourt in the construction. Bishop Guigues laid the cornerstone on May 4, 1873. In April ...
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