Posted on 05/11/2009 1:53:32 PM PDT by Pyro7480
After more than a year of assisting exclusively at Extraordinary Form Masses on Sundays, a Mass I have come to love, I had two occasions last summer to revisit the Roman Rite in its Ordinary Form in a large suburban Catholic parishthe same parish on both occasions. The following are my observations.
I begin with the positive. The church operates a Catholic school. Together they form a large, sprawling physical plant. The Masses are well attended. When you walk into the church, you are greeted by holy water fonts at the entrance, a prominently displayed crucifix above the altar, candles, an identifiable Tabernacle, baptismal font, and pews with kneelers....
I proceed, next, not to the negative, but to the ambiguous. One question that keeps recurring to me is this: What about this religious rite and ritual would be recognizably Catholic to someone who didnt know what it was beforehand?...
I proceed, finally, to the negative. If nothing else identified this place and this event as recognizably Catholic to someone already familiar with contemporary American Catholicism, all doubt would be banished by the withering ugliness of the architecture, the sloppiness of dress, the sheer shabbiness of the half-improvised liturgical form, the hideous banality of hymns, the utter lack of decorum and unmistakable note of tawdry casual chumminess struck throughout the event. For better or worse, this is what the vast majority of contemporary Catholics call home....
...Throughout the Mass I find that my focus is constantly diverted....I just want to "see God." I want to witness the Sacrifice of Christ, and to receive Him. Yet in countless ways, the elements of the Mass conspire to divert my attention away from Him, and towards incidentals....
(Excerpt) Read more at pblosser.blogspot.com ...
Some folks think the Liturgy belongs to them (personally) ... and they can do whatever they want with it.
The Church teaches that the Liturgy belongs to the Church ... and even the Local Ordinary hasn't the right to monkey with it.
I’d say, not that Novus Ordo invites abuse but that the the modern esthetics (I use the word loosely) is the abuse. One can tighten the rubrics, ban the Orans and hand-holding in the pews, ban sneakers, ban beach attire, give everyone voice lessons and electric-shock the faithful into singing, and the external signs will improve. But still, so long as the congregation comes to celebrate themselves such as they are, as modernity teaches them to do, the Sacrifice of the Mass is obscured.
If I were to change one thing in the Novus Ordo, I would turn the priest eastward.
BTW, read paragraphs 7,8,9 of the original Blog ... what he’s complaining about (and rightly so) is far worse than hand-holding at the Our Father. There are clear violations of the rubrics, alterations of the liturgy (beyond any “allowed options”), and a general disrespect for the Mass and for the reserved Blessed Sacrament.
I believe facing eastward is the normative position in the OF, and facing the congregation is an indult. But, in practical terms, that has been superseded.
< snicker >
Something which isn't mandated in the "Novus Ordo" in the first place. (And yes, it should be changed ... or rather that the change of the priest's orientation should be reversed.)
**Except that the abuses are universally found in the ordinary rite **
This is not true at all.
Sadly, I know exactly what the author is talking about. His description of the liturgy would fit nine tenths of the parishes around here, except the one I attend, which has a halfway decent and moderately traditional music program as well as a pretty orthodox young pastor.
It's all I can do to tolerate the unmitigated crap that passes for hymns; don't expect me to join in the caterwauling.
THE TEN MOST COMMON LITURGICAL ABUSES And Why They're Wrong
>>Some folks think the Liturgy belongs to them (personally) ... and they can do whatever they want with it.<<
True, true.
And some of the laity think it’s their own little slice of Broadway. From the soloist to the Cantor who feels a need to “raise up” the congregation (as if we can’t look in the missal or listen for the organ to cue us), it’s a giant show.
We even went to a Parish in Ft Lauderdale that had the church darken and a spotlight on the altar for the consecration. Help me.
You can imagine what I'd like to toss it at.
LOLOL!!!!
Now every time we camp this summer and I slice off a bit a Purgatory time at one of “those” parishes, I’ll be thinking of that!
Excellent point! The "abuses" stem from novelties introduced by a more progressive mindset. They took VCII documents and "interpreted" them to suit their whims.
Here in Albany, we are still heavily entrenched in these novelties and the bishop is now moving into his final 5 years to complete the process he began 30+ years ago. Interestingly enough, this diocese has no monsignors! The bishop does not believe in acknowledgement with titles. There are parishes now run by lay ecclesial ministers (mostly women). Priests have been reduced to "sacramental ministers", stripped of their parishes. I am encouraged by the arrival of Archbishop Dolan. He has begun his visit if the vicariates. It is just a matter of time before he makes his way up here to Albany. I feel confident he is already aware of the situation here and in Rochester.
Were you around when we had to fast from midnight?
We’ve developed a little tradition among our choir during the peace. We turn to each other, hold out our hands, and bow. It was funny at first, now it seems like a nice way of passing the peace in a dignified way, to wit, the way HH does it in Rome. Course, we’re a very orthodox parish. Anglican Use. We don’t even have that bit at the beginning about “The love of God, and of His son Jesus Christ and the Friendship of the Holy Spirit...” No, we have the “Hear the words of our Lord Jesus Christ as he said ‘Come unto me all ye who travail and are heavy laden and I will refresh thee’” followed by the Summary of the Law.
Even still, I have trouble with our liturgy sometimes as we use the words of the heretic bishop Thomas Cranmer even as we venerate the memory of St. John Fisher, and St. Thomas More.
See, the fact that they felt the need to do that demonstrates how the congregation's attention has been diverted in so many different directions that it isn't where it is supposed to be. The mass alone, nothing added, attracts the attention to the consecration just like that spotlight.
Why, you might ask?
Because if a gesture makes no sense if the celebrant is facing in the same direction as the people, there is no place for that gesture when the celebrant is facing toward the people.
When I lived in the Orient the norm was to bow to one’s neighbors at the sign of peace at the Chinese language masses at least. All in all I think it a more dignified way to handle things than the gladhanding free for all that we have here normally.
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