Published September 12, 2009 11:52 pm - Catholics from parishes in Easton, Minnesota Lake and Wells gathered Saturday in a farmyard to pray for a safe and bountiful harvest.
Harvest Mass: Thanks for the bounty
Outdoor service draws Catholics
By Mickey Tibbits
Special to The Free Press
EASTON
—
Under the picture-perfect blue skies of a September afternoon, rural parishioners gave thanks for the bounty of the upcoming harvest in southern Minnesota.
Area Catholics gathered Saturday at an outdoor Harvest Mass on the Easton farm of Connie and Arnie Sonnek. The farm, set on a dusty gravel road between open fields of corn and soybeans, provided a natural setting for the mass.
“Farming always brings people closer to God, the creator of life and food,” Rev. Eugene Stenzel said.
“In this community, if people do not live on a farm, they have something to do with farming,” Stenzel said.
“What we have is a gift from God,” affirmed Deacon Gene Paul.
During the tri-parish mass and blessing for about 450 church members from Easton, Wells and Minnesota Lake, prayers were offered asking for good crops and the safety of those working the land.
“We pray every year for a safe harvest,” Paul said. He explained that this time of year, “farmers push hard” to get the crops in, increasing the chance of a farm accident.
A tabernacle, part of the tri-parish’s history from “the old church in Minnesota Lake,” was displayed on a covered folding table serving as an outdoor altar.
The assembly sat on metal chairs framed by maple and apple trees in Sonnek’s well-groomed yard. The farm setting was filled with God’s creatures — butterflies, bugs and cicadas.
Adding to the rural setting, a young heifer joined the choir, directed by Sue Johnson, singing praises of “Seed, Scattered and Sown.”
“In our area we have always been blessed with rain and sun shine and we have really good crops,” noted Cletus Rath, an Easton farmer.
“In all these years, I’ve had poor crops but, never a crop failure,” said Rath, who has farmed for 51 years. “When you have your whole livelihood setting out in the field and dark clouds approaching, you learn how to pray.”
In a companion seasonal mass celebrated every spring, Stenzel blesses both seeds and soil. “People bring seeds that they will plant in their gardens and farms to be blessed during the service,” said Paul. Others bring small bags or boxes of soil to be blessed that they return to their fields.
These traditional agricultural celebrations, Paul said, point out the dependence that all people, both urban and rural, have on the fruitfulness of the earth.
For years Rath has participated in both masses. “I believe in these blessings, it is part of my faith,” he said.