This past weekend in Perth, WA (Feb. 3-7), Australia’s National Liturgical Council sponsored a National Liturgical Conference for diocesan liturgy representatives to discuss the implementation of the new translation of the MR3 (Missale Romanum editio tertia). The gathering heard addresses by Archbishop Mark Coleridge and Monsignor Bruce Harbert (both involved with ICEL) and various others about the current status of the MR3 translation, the task of the translator, and where we go from here.
As part of the conference we were privileged to have a sneak-preview of a DVD-ROM that is currently in final preparation in Melbourne under a mandate from ICEL. This DVD-ROM will serve as a formational and informational resource for the Catholic English-speaking world not only on the MR3, but also as a comprehensive catechetical resource on the Eucharist. Some very prominent theologians and Church leaders have been interviewed as part of this resource, e.g., Monsignor Kevin Irwin, Monsignor Bruce Harbert, Archbishop Mark Coleridge, Fr. Paul Turner, Sr. Julie Upton, Sr. Janet Baxendale, Fr. Paul McPartland and a range of others, along with bishops and liturgists from many English-speaking countries (the range of accents is delightful!). Among an extensive range of materials, the DVD-ROM will contain videos of the experts interviewed, and MP3 files of the chants of the MR3, written resources and footage of liturgies from around the English-speaking world, printable music files of the chants, comparisons of the current and new translations of the Missal and a range of other useful teaching and explanatory tools. From what we heard, it became clear that this DVD resource is going to be a very comprehensive and useful addition to the local expertise available to aid the English-speaking countries as we work to implement the MR3 and engage fruitfully in the opportunity for liturgical renewal and education that the introduction of the MR3 will offer. Some information on the ICEL DVD-ROM resource can be accessed here.
While a wide variety of perspectives on the MR3 was represented at this conference (from those who do not want anything to do with it to those who are eagerly awaiting its’ implementation), by the end of the conference the majority of delegates seemed to have reached a point of recognition that the transition to the MR3 is going to happen, it is going to happen soon, and as the ones who are going to have to implement and explain the MR3 in our dioceses and parishes, we need to begin now to prepare ourselves adequately to undertake what is clearly a large and somewhat daunting task. A date of April 2010 was suggested as the possible date for reception of the recognitio from the CDWDS. Forecasters estimated a further year for printing and distributing of the MR3 before implementation could begin.
I presented a closing address on ‘Managing Liturgical Change’ in which we considered the psychology of change; and how people react to change when it is imposed on them without consultation compared with how differently people react to change when they are invited to become a part of making it happen. It was suggested that helping people to become a part of the decision-making process regarding how the MR3 is to be implemented would be one way to help them to ‘own’ it somewhat more as they transition away from the Missal of Paul VI and into full use of the MR3.
Things are going to move very quickly in terms of the transition to the MR3 once the recognitio is granted, and that date looks to be not too far off. The better prepared we are with practical strategies that will help our assemblies to move to its usage, the less traumatic the change we must face will be.

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