"Take a Deep Breath. Not You -- Me."

But more than any of these, the day belonged to the cathedral.
Salt Lake's Cathedral of the Madeleine has long been respected far and wide, both as a historic treasure and for its latter-day, top-shelf program of worship. An artistic marvel, the US' sole diocesan seat where daily Lauds and

Not bad for a parish of around a thousand families.
With chops of said grade consistently on display, the framework for a stellar installation is already well in place long before the event's final run-up. Even so, however, the Utahns outdid themselves, channeling thousands of hours of preparation into a liturgy that offered precision and emotion, prayer and enrichment, the best of old, new and the magic that happens when a cathedral church lives and breathes its mission as a sacrament in the world. Just a day after Benedict XVI held up the Eucharist as a mystery that is to be believed, celebrated and lived, a local church comprised of a small minority in a place founded by the pioneers of another religious tradition known for its zeal and works of education and charity showed the rest of the Catholic world that not only is it possible to do an exemplary job of it amid circumstances some might find daunting, but that the keys to the task lie not in building up grandiose institutions or hoarding vast pools of resources, but in those simple things that, sometimes, can be even harder to muster: faith, vision, cooperation and commitment.
Luckily, thanks to the wonders of the age, you can see it all for yourselves. The Intermountain Catholic -- brilliant website, they've got -- is keeping the installation up as an on-demand stream, every Sunday Mass from the Madeleine is similarly streamed and archived, and a live feed of Wednesday's liturgy was watched by over 1,100 net-dwellers the world over.
...and all that comes courtesy of a staff of three.

Every installation is a celebration of the church's life in a particular place, and that community's place in the life of the body universal. Each one shows the best of what each is and what makes it unique. That said, armed simply with a webstream and several accounts of the day, this one was clearly one to remember, and one to exalt.
So take a bow, Salt Lake -- Greg Glenn, first of all. Not just on installation day, thanks for showing the rest of us the way through what you do and how you do it: from liturgy and technology, to outreach and spirit.

SVILUPPO: A number of readers have checked in to note the presence of not one, but two other choir schools in the US -- the archdiocese of Boston's at St Paul's in Cambridge, and another at St Cecilia's Cathedral in Omaha.
...and while we're at it, continued props to the eminent choir school of St Michael's Cathedral in Toronto, which played a key part in making TC's installation such a beautiful experience, and a luminous, uplifting window onto the New Jerusalem.
PHOTOS 1-2: AP/Douglas C. Pizac
PHOTOS 3-4: Robert Johnson/The Standard
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