S
Sarpedon
Guest
It’s often said that people can make an “idol” out of intrinisically good things- like money, relationships, sex, and entertainment. This happens when the focus of a person is shifted from God onto one of these things.
Does it not seem as if this same phenomenom happens with the liturgy? People become so fixated on it that they leave the Church (quite ironic). They spend all their time thinking about (and bashing) the liturgy rather than God in the Eucharist- which is the point of the mass. They spend all their time combating an approved form of the mass rather than spreading the faith and hope of the mass itself. It seems to me that all of these things are distractions from what we really should be doing- worshipping God with all our heart, mind, and soul and bringing that joy to the world.
Of course, the pendulum swings the other way too. If I spend all my time focusing on trying to right the problem above and not on God, that’s not good either. I have to be on guard to have a proper balance as well.
Does it not seem as if this same phenomenom happens with the liturgy? People become so fixated on it that they leave the Church (quite ironic). They spend all their time thinking about (and bashing) the liturgy rather than God in the Eucharist- which is the point of the mass. They spend all their time combating an approved form of the mass rather than spreading the faith and hope of the mass itself. It seems to me that all of these things are distractions from what we really should be doing- worshipping God with all our heart, mind, and soul and bringing that joy to the world.
Of course, the pendulum swings the other way too. If I spend all my time focusing on trying to right the problem above and not on God, that’s not good either. I have to be on guard to have a proper balance as well.