Precisely! Very well stated.
Yours in Christ.
I agree.
I have been looking into the TLM, and I found it hard to understand why there is almost no participation on the part of laymen. I thought it was taking away from the community, from being part of a congregation.
In my search for answers I came across this article:
latin-mass-society.org/dietrich.htm
I highly recommend it.
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The depersonalizing “we experience” is a perverse theory of community.
The communion in Christ has nothing of the self-assertion found in natural communities. It breathes of the Redemption. It liberates men from all self- centeredness. Yet such a communion emphatically does not depersonalize the individual; far from dissolving the person into the cosmic, pantheistic swoon so often commended to us these days, it actualizes the person’s true self in a unique way. In the community of Christ the conflict between person and community that is present in all natural communities cannot exist. So this sacred community experience is really at war with the depersonalizing 'we-experience" found in mass assemblies and popular gatherings which tend to absorb and evaporate the individual. This communion in Christ that was so fully alive in the early Christian centuries, that all the saints entered into, that found a matchless expression in the liturgy now under attack-this communion has never regarded the individual person as a mere segment of the community, or as an instrument to serve it. In this connection it is worth noting that totalitarian ideology is not alone in sacrificing the individual to the collective; some of Teilhard de Chardin’s cosmic ideas, for instance, imply the same collectivistic sacrifice. Teilhard subordinates the individual and his sanctification to the supposed development of humanity. At a time when this perverse theory of community is embraced even by many Catholics, there are plainly urgent reasons for vigorously insisting on the sacred character of the true communion in Christ. I submit that the new liturgy must be judged by this test: Does it contribute to the authentic sacred community? Granted that it strives for a community character; but is this the character desired? Is it a communion grounded in recollection, contemplation and reverence? Which of the two – the new mass, or the Latin mass with the Gregorian chant evokes these attitudes of soul more effectively, and thus permits the deeper and truer communion? Is it not plain that frequently the community character of the new mass is purely profane, that, as with other social gatherings, its blend of casual relaxation and bustling activity precludes a reverent, contemplative confrontation with Christ and with the ineffable mystery of the Eucharist?
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Now look, I’m not trying to bash the NO mass, I still attend the NO mass and think it to be a valid mass. But what I want to get out of this article is the what the author is talking about regarding community.
The so called “problem” is the nature of the mass. It isn’t focused on bringing about community in the normal everyday sense. Rather it is a much deeper experience.
My own thoughts is that the NO mass seems to be a hybrid. It still has the valid communion, but it seems to be placing in aspects of the everyday community into the Sacrifice of the Mass. So I disagree with the author because I feel our current mass still provides that sense of communion. The only problem is people are emphasizing the other everyday sense of community that the NO mass now provides somewhat. But don’t focus on that aspect, focus on what the Sacrifice of the Mass really is, communion. We can see from the OP what problems happen when we lose sight of what Communion truly means.
When many Catholics go to mass, they are seeking the above. The problem with people who go to Protestant Churches is that they are seeking the normal conception of community when Church is ment to provide an extra-ordinary supernatural sense of community as described in the article.
Perhaps we fail to create the more Earthly sense of community after Mass, but for many Catholic they already have this sense of community elsewhere. It is because the Protestants don’t have our deeper sense of communion that they try to fill in that void with normal sense of community. Sometimes they do a good job of it and provide a very strong community, but they are still missing the higher sense of community that the Mass offers. We should have that other sense of community, but it isn’t necessary IMHO.
Just some thoughts I had. Throwing it out there to see what y’all think.