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Illini
Guest
See…I would reverse the question, because most of the time, when people seek to “reclaim our lost traditions” they are speaking of 50 years ago, not 2000 years ago.
I have a problem when the debate around these issues is framed to say something like “these liturgists are trying to innovate too much, I want things how they USED to be”. And that is an unfair argument, because how things USED To be is probably closer to what the liturgical scholars are saying.
I agree that the church is an organic, living, breathing thing. It should adjust and change with the times. But part of allowing for that train of thought is to allow yourself to believe that the times continue to change and the spirit continues to move us in new directions to see new things and open our eyes to new facets of our beliefs.
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The debate in this thread is not about reclaiming "lost traditions" of 50 years ago. Indeed, many have not been changed at all. The Holy Father has emphasized as recently as 2002 (Rosary) and 2003 (Eucharistic Adoration) that older traditions remain quite vital in our Church today. Why do some ignore that?
Crucifixes and limiting the gospel and homily to the ordained is not just tradition that can be abandoned at whim by an individual parish; it remains the law of the Church. In my parish, I saw a crucifix and a priest homilist as recently as Sunday. Even during vocations week a deacon gave a thorough homily on the meaning and obligations of our baptism before introducing a seminarian to discuss his vocation. Rather than honor the traditions, Church law, and the teaching role of both, many parishes in Saginaw and elsewhere are abandoning them just to be different.
As for your last sentence…I’d be curious to know why “Rome knows what she is talking about”? The dicasteries in Rome are so disjointed that often they end up saying opposite things about the same issue. And why is there a monopoly on truth in Rome? I have a hard time with that.
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Jesus answered Peter: "Blessed are you Simon Bar-Jona! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father who is in heaven. And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of the netherworld shall not prevail against it. I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven." Matthew 16:17-19.
The Successor of Peter has bound on the issue of liturgical abuses: "Priests who faithfully celebrate Mass according to the liturgical norms, and communites which conform to those norms, quietly but eloquently demonstrate their love for the Church." *Ecclesia de Eucharistia* 52 (2003). A wise person would take this line as an order, even without the tougher language elsewhere in the encyclical and especially in *Redemptionis sacramentum*, the order to cease specific liturgical abuses prepared at the request of the Holy Father himself.
And I don't think the dicasteries are disjointed at all. They certainly have not been disunited on crucifixes or homilies. The disjointedness comes not from Rome but from bishops, priests, and laity who drag their feet on communicating and implementing the Holy See's directives.