Home U.S. Church Archbishop Coakley celebrates annual Native American Mass at Blessed Stanley Rother Shrine

Archbishop Coakley celebrates annual Native American Mass at Blessed Stanley Rother Shrine

by OSV News

OKLAHOMA CITY (OSV News) — Facing east toward the altar of the Blessed Stanley Rother Shrine, Deacon Roy Callison burned cedar as his wife, Susan, recited the first of the four invocations in the Prayer in the Four Directions, a traditional spiritual practice rooted in Indigenous culture.

Using a shell and an eagle fan, Deacon Callison continued the Native American ritual of cedaring. As he turned to face south, the congregation mirrored his moves and Susan recited the second prayer. He continued the symbolic act of purification, using items found in nature, and recited the two remaining prayers facing west and then north.

Following the recitation of the Prayer in the Four Directions, and in his first major Mass since being elected president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Archbishop Paul S. Coakley of Oklahoma City processed down the aisle of the shrine as students from Riverside Indian School, and some adults, sang the processional hymn in Kiowa.

This was the third annual Native American Mass. It was celebrated on Nov. 23, the Solemnity of our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe, at the shrine in Oklahoma City.

Michael Dalby, along with his son Wyatt, participated in the procession in full Native American regalia.

“We are still here,” Dalby said. “We are participating, we are Catholic.”

Archbishop Paul S. Coakley of Oklahoma City delivers his homily during the third annual Native American Mass on Nov. 23, 2025, at the Blessed Stanley Rother Shrine in Oklahoma City, Okla. In his homily, Archbishop Coakley acknowledged Oklahoma’s 39 federally recognized Native American tribes, saying “All the tribes of the Earth will be blessed in him.” (OSV News photo/Chris Porter, Sooner Catholic)

Dalby recited the first reading in both Kiowa, his native language, and then in English. The second reading was recited in Cherokee and English by Harry Oosahwee.

Coakley was joined by concelebrants Benedictine Abbot Lawrence Stasyszen of St. Gregory’s Abbey in Shawnee and Benedictine Abbot Philip Anderson of Our Lady of Clear Creek Abbey in Hulbert in the Diocese of Tulsa. Assisting were Deacons Roy Callison and Craig Victor.

Both Michael and Wyatt, a day student at Riverside Indian School, recited prayers in Kiowa. Prayers were recited in Comanche by Dana Attocknie and Cathy Lonewolf, as well as in Potawatomi by Robert Collins.

In his homily, Archbishop Coakley acknowledged Oklahoma’s 39 federally recognized Native American tribes, saying, “All the tribes of the Earth will be blessed in him.”

The event, sponsored by the American Indian Catholic Outreach for the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City, incorporated facets of Native American culture while honoring the traditional manner of celebrating Mass according to the liturgical calendar.

In an interview with the Sooner Catholic, Oklahoma City’s archdiocesan news outlet, Dalby explained: “We’re just doing what we always do. It’s regular Mass, just in our native language. This just gives us a chance to get out there and show that we do walk in two worlds.”


Sally Linhart is a freelance writer for the Sooner Catholic, the news outlet of the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City. This story was originally published by the Sooner Catholic and distributed through a partnership with OSV News.

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