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"Church-speak" – Strange Things Church People Say"
Archdiocese of Washington ^ | 02-03-16 | Msgr. Charles Pope

Posted on 02/04/2016 8:07:50 AM PST by Salvation

"Church-speak" – Strange Things Church People Say

February 3, 2016

2.3.blog

Many groups have a tendency to use words that make sense to their members but are unintelligible to outsiders. I have sometimes had to decode "Church-speak" for recent converts.

For example, one time I proudly announced, "RCIA classes will begin next week, so if you know anyone who is interested in attending please fill out an information card on the table just outside the sacristy door." I thought I'd been perfectly clear, but then a new member approached me after Mass to inquire about the availability of classes to become Catholic and when they would begin. Wondering if she'd forgotten the announcement I reminded her what I had said about RCIA classes. She looked at me blankly. "Oh," I said, "Let me explain what I mean by RCIA." After I did so, I mentioned that she could pick up a flyer over by the sacristy door. Again I got a blank stare, followed by the question "What's a sacristy?" Did I dare tell her that the classes would be held in the rectory?

I've had a similar reaction when announcing CCD classes. One angry parent called me to protest that she had been told by the DRE (more Church-speak) that her daughter could not make her First Holy Communion unless she started attending CCD. The mother, the non-Catholic wife of a less-than-practicing Catholic husband, had no idea what CCD meant and why it should be required in order for her daughter to receive Holy Communion. She had never connected the term CCD with Sunday school or any form of religious instruction.

Over my years as a priest I have become more and more aware that although I use what I would call ordinary terms of traditional Catholicism, given the poor catechesis (another Church word, meaning religious training, by the way) of so many, the meaning of what I am saying is lost. For example, I have discovered that some Catholics think that "mortal sin" refers only to killing someone. Even the expression "grave sin" is nebulous to many; they know it isn't good, but aren't really sure what it means. "Venial sin" is even less understood!

Other words such as covenant, matrimony, incarnation, transubstantiation, liturgy, oration, epistle, gospel, Collect, Sanctus, chalice, paten, alb, Holy Orders, theological, missal, Monsignor, and Eucharistic, while meaningful to many in the Church, are often only vaguely understood by others in the Church, not to mention the unchurched (is that another Church word?).

Once at daily Mass I was preaching based on a reading from the First Letter of John and was attempting to make the point that our faith is "incarnational." I noticed vacant looks out in the pews. And so I asked the small group gathered that day if anyone knew what "incarnational" meant; no one did. I went on to explain that it meant that the Word of God had to become flesh in us; it had to become real in the way we live our lives. To me, the word "incarnational" captured the concept perfectly, but most of the people didn't even really know for sure what "incarnation" meant, let alone "incarnational."

Ah, Church-speak!

During my years in the seminary the art of Church-speak seemed to rise to new levels. I remember that many of my professors, while railing against the use of Latin in the liturgy, had a strange fascination with Greek-based terminology. Mass was out, Eucharist was in. "Going to mass" was out, "confecting the synaxis" was in. Canon was out, "anamnesis" and "anaphora" were in. Communion was out, koinonia was in. Mystagogia, catechumenate, mysterion, epikaia, protoevangelion, hapax legomenon, epiklesis, synderesis, eschatology, Parousia, and apakatastasis were all in. These are necessary words, I suppose, but surely opaque to most parishioners. Church-speak indeed, or should I say ekklesia-legomenon.

Ah, Church-speak! Here is an online list of many other Church words for your edification (and amusement): Church words defined

At any rate, I have learned to be a little more careful when speaking so as to avoid too much Church-speak, too many insider terms, too many older terms, without carefully explaining them. I think we can and should learn many of them, but we should not assume that most people know them.

The great and Venerable Archbishop Fulton Sheen once said that he discovered early on that he often got credit for being learned when in fact he was merely being obscure. And for any who knew him in his later years, especially through his television show, he was always very careful to explain Church teaching in a way that made it accessible to the masses. It's good advice for all of us: a little less of the CCD and RCIA jargon and little more of the clear "religious instruction" can help others to decode our Church-speak.

I would not argue that we should "dumb down" our vocabulary, for indeed it is a precious patrimony in many cases. But we need to do more explaining rather than merely presuming that most people will know what some of our terms mean.

This video has a lot of gibberish in it, but it illustrates how we can sound at times if we're not careful!


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; History; Theology
KEYWORDS: catholic; msgrcharlespope
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To: SERKIT

I was thinking of “consubstantiation.”


21 posted on 02/04/2016 9:00:02 AM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: alexander_busek
I used the back of a 100 year old pew for the top of my bar in my basement man cave.
It's the back, not the seat. 100 years of church farts worried me.
It turned out really nice.
22 posted on 02/04/2016 9:03:21 AM PST by toast
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To: toast

I farted once in church on a pew. I was horribly embarrassed as a 10 year old kid, but one of the ushers came over to make things worse. He said “Did you fart?” I was so embarrassed I looked at him and said “No, sir. I always smell this way at 0900AM.” Years later we became friends because he laughed so loud the preacher chewed his ass out.


23 posted on 02/04/2016 9:11:41 AM PST by Safetgiver ( Islam makes barbarism look genteel.)
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To: alexander_busek
The term Church Speak brings back a fond memory. Sorry it gets so long-winded, it's hard to set the scene sometimes.

I once dated a very dear and sweet man who was Roman Catholic.

I was enthralled by the Catholic Church, though ignorant of its traditions and beliefs. I knew the Catholic Church only from movies such as "The Bells of St Mary's" and "A Nun's Story".

His parents were visiting and I was invited to attend Mass with them the upcoming Sunday. I was hesitant because I was not Catholic and would not know what to do, but they assured me all was OK, that lighting would not strike if a Baptist attended.

It was such a beautiful Church, carved pews and high arched ceiling, it was absolutely breathtaking. Each look around, revealed more beauty than the other.

I was seated isle side and after prayer, I could not resist feeling the carved flowers and swirls on the arm of the pew and without conscience thought, I left my arm lightly rested there.

A few moments passed and as the Church grew quiet and expectant, my friend leaned over and whispered in my ear:

"Kay, you have your arm on the holy hump".

What?, I thought. The holy HUMP?, I whispered back.

"Yes, the holy hump, it's very disrespectful"

I quickly removed my arm and asked forgiveness for the profane thought I had about the name and for the disrespect I had shown. I looked for lighting bolts through the entire service.

And no, there is no such terminology - but one who did not know believed it for awhile.

24 posted on 02/04/2016 9:14:04 AM PST by KittenClaws ( Normalcy Bias. Do you have it?)
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To: pgkdan; Salvation
I think by "new member" Msgr. Pope meant "new church-attender" or "new pewsitter."

Obviously, if she was not yet a member of the Catholic Church, she was not. yet. a. member. of. the. Catholic. Church.

25 posted on 02/04/2016 9:24:47 AM PST by Mrs. Don-o (Whatever is true, honorable, right, pure, lovely, excellent, worthy of praise: dwell on these things)
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To: Salvation
Did I dare tell her that the classes would be held in the rectory?

Yes, because turning away potential new church members with your sarcasm is a great thing.

26 posted on 02/04/2016 9:35:02 AM PST by IYAS9YAS (I got nothin'.)
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To: Salvation; cuban leaf
The Rev. Jerry Falwell, commenting on Jesus' statement that in this world Christians must be "salt" and "light," once told some journalists that working with the media should be a "salt" ministry.

This wad reported as... wait for it ... "ASSAULT MINISTRY"!!!

27 posted on 02/04/2016 9:35:35 AM PST by Mrs. Don-o (Whatever is true, honorable, right, pure, lovely, excellent, worthy of praise: dwell on these things)
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To: alexander_busek
What's a "pew?"

The sound a kid makes playing army. "Pew pew pew! I shot you, you're dead!"

"Did not, you missed!"

28 posted on 02/04/2016 9:36:22 AM PST by IYAS9YAS (I got nothin'.)
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To: Salvation

bookmark


29 posted on 02/04/2016 9:38:39 AM PST by GOP Poet
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To: Bloody Sam Roberts

Great post. #2 really hit home for me, and I suspect a lot of people are in the same boat.


30 posted on 02/04/2016 9:39:34 AM PST by FamiliarFace
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To: Carpe Cerevisi
"Those long things that you sit on."

In my younger, immature days, I overheard someone give that exact description of a pew and without thinking I said, "twiss." I was somewhat shocked that the "church-lady" knew exactly what that meant. The verbal beatdown she delivered right then and there, cussing me out in the dignified way that only a "church-lady" could, put me off crass jokes for at least a week.

31 posted on 02/04/2016 9:41:09 AM PST by Wyrd bið ful aræd (Don't Tread On Me)
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To: Salvation

That’s awesome!


32 posted on 02/04/2016 9:44:01 AM PST by FamiliarFace
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To: married21

“I was convicted, now I’m committed, but I’m not crazy and I’m not going to jail.”

From “Turning Christianese,” parody song by Mark Bradford, from his album “Righteous Pop Music Volume 5,” to the tune of 80’s hit “Turning Japanese.”

http://www.creativemin.com/product/343/righteous_pop_music Track 4


33 posted on 02/04/2016 10:08:21 AM PST by free-in-nyc (Freeping from the heart of the occupation)
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To: alexander_busek
What's a "pew?"

"At your service, monsieur!"


34 posted on 02/04/2016 10:08:27 AM PST by Bloody Sam Roberts (Why do we give our hearts to the past? And why must we grow up so fast?)
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To: free-in-nyc

That was kinda funny. I”m going to listen to the other songs, too, I think.


35 posted on 02/04/2016 10:17:41 AM PST by married21 ( As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.)
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To: Salvation
"confecting the synaxis"

That sounds illegal.... :p

36 posted on 02/04/2016 11:07:42 AM PST by GeronL (I remember when this was a conservative forum)
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To: marychesnutfan

“Those “inside” religion have no idea what a howling, cold wilderness it is outside of it”

Putting in my glossary of quotations.


37 posted on 02/04/2016 11:51:35 AM PST by dsc (Any attempt to move a government to the left is a crime against humanity.)
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To: Salvation

:)


38 posted on 02/04/2016 1:38:04 PM PST by Bigg Red (Keep calm and Pray on.)
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To: married21

Some friends introduced us to those parody albums and we’ve enjoyed them.


39 posted on 02/04/2016 3:30:30 PM PST by free-in-nyc (Freeping from the heart of the occupation)
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To: Genoa
Catholic or otherwise, all churches should ban the use of acronyms, especially in conversation. This is especially difficult in large denominations. Terms like “rectory” and “sacristy” are a challenge. Maybe they could be explained in a glossary left helpfully in the pew racks?

If those adults had attended Catholic schools (K-12) those words would be common and ordinary.
75% of public school students fail college entry exams so they have take the bonehead English classes starting with Dick anbd Jane; 95% of Catholic school students pass college entry exams.

How much more do parents have to think? Many work extra jobs to make sure that their children can go to a school that teaches reading, writing and math, NOT self esteem, self esteem, self esteem and knowing how to read, write and spell only at a second grade level.

If said parents don't live near a Catholic or private school...then they can move. They can plan ahead, knowing what their school districts are like. Why wouldn't parents want the best for their children? Seems to be a no-brainer for me.

40 posted on 02/04/2016 4:12:08 PM PST by cloudmountain
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