E
Elzee
Guest
Well, my eyes have been opened up to many new experiences lately, but this one tops it for me.
In my travels I had the opportunity to attend Mass in what is considered an extremely orthodox diocese. I was excited. However, as I walked into the church I had a hint of concern when I learned it was an ‘ecumenical Mass’. But, I still wasn’t all that concerned because of the very strong reputation of this diocese.
Here is what I witnessed and learned. Please tell me if I’m wrong or overreacting.
In my travels I had the opportunity to attend Mass in what is considered an extremely orthodox diocese. I was excited. However, as I walked into the church I had a hint of concern when I learned it was an ‘ecumenical Mass’. But, I still wasn’t all that concerned because of the very strong reputation of this diocese.
Here is what I witnessed and learned. Please tell me if I’m wrong or overreacting.
- “choir” - guitars, drums, and tambourines made up of the church’s choir and a Lutheran church choir, located in front of the congregation next to the tabernacle. Gum-chewing was the norm for the musicians all throughout Mass.
- Responsorial pslam - led by the wife of a non-denominational pastor - she isn’t Catholic.
- Homily - given by the priest, but a laywoman was presented with a gift and allowed to speak after the priest. This was very distracting. To me, it took me ‘out of the Mass’ and reminded me of a ‘this Mass is all about us’ mentality.
- Offertory - gifts brought up by both Catholics and non-Catholics
- Eucharistic prayer- the first 4 rows of people invited to stand around the altar - this included Catholics and non-Catholics.
- Consecration - Music is played throughout and the priest sings the words of consecration
- The “Our Father” - they did their ‘special’ Our Father as we were told. Some of you may remember it from the 70’s - the words 'hallowed be they name’ are repeated several times throughout the bubble-gum music style song. As the priest says ‘deliver us Lord from every evil….’ we were told to hum the tune of the song. It was horrid. But, it gets better - everyone standing around the altar is holding hands and swaying back and forth as they sing and hum.
- Sign of peace - yep, you guessed it. The ‘ecumenical assembly’ around the altar are all over the place - bumping into the altar, walking around the tabernacle to shake the gum-chewing guitar players’ hands, laughing, talking…can you say “it’s all about ME!” I don’t know how long it lasted, but it seemed like an eternity.
- Lamb of God - “Bread of Life’ was sung in place of the last 'Lamb of God”
- Communion - a madhouse. Because there are SO many people in the sanctuary it’s chaos. Lines are set up to receive behind the altar and to the side of it, and then in front of the altar for the congregation.
- After Communion, before the final blessing, a non-denominational minister walks to the ambo (directly passing in front of the tabernacle) and delivers a short meditation. This same man processed in and out of the church with the priests and altar servers. They gave him an alb to wear, similar to what the altar servers were wearing.
That about covers most of it. Are all of these things I witnessed wrong? I know some are - but for example, the Our Father and Lamb of God - are we allowed to alter the words? The priest told me that we were allowed to in the U.S. if it was part of the how the music was written.