Can one question liturgical decisions without being “disobedient?”

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Once again I am ashamed at the tone of those who supposely so spiritually and ardently advance a liturgical cuase:

*"Apparently Sherlock Holmes has joined the discussion!

Yes, I “lifted” the quote from a man named Alcuin Reid. Do you know who Alcuin Reid is? He knows more about liturgy than you or I could ever hope to."*

You should go to confession and confess your lack of charity.
By the way, the Sherlock Holmes comment was made in jest. It’s generally not wise to assume to know the state of another’s soul.
 
Yes, I “lifted” the quote from a man named Alcuin Reid. Do you know who Alcuin Reid is? He knows more about liturgy than you or I could ever hope to. He is one of the Church’s foremost experts on liturgical history. So please excuse me if I trust his judgment. Actually, Cardinal Ratzinger wrote a preface to one of his books as well: The Organic Development of the Liturgy.
No, I don’t know who Alcuid Reid is; I’ve only read his review at Amazon, after I went there to see if I could read any of Cardinal Ratzinger’s preface to the Gamber book online.

But what you did was dishonest and wrong. You “lifted” someone else’s words without giving them proper credit, and even left the quotes off part of the comments, which gives the impression that another person’s words are yours. No matter how legitimate your question may be, people will not take your seriously if they realize that you are passing off others’ writings and/or opinions as your own.

As to your original question, I don’t mind if someone questions litugical reform, as long as it is done with charity and intellectual honesty.
 
Yes.
Alluding to the composition of the New Mass, Father Duggan states: "It is enough to compare the text of this Missal (the Missal of 1570) with the Novus Ordo of 1969 to see that there has been a revolutionary change (November AD2000).
Fr Duggan’s contention that the liturgical change is revolutionary is corroborated by Father Joseph Gelineau SJ whose credentials for commenting on the New Mass could scarcely be more authoritative. Fr Gelineau was one of the most influential of Archbishop Bugnini’s Consilium which was charged with composing the New Mass after Vatican II. He was described by the Archbishop as one of “the great masters of the international liturgical world” (The Reform of the Liturgy, page 221). Archbishop Bugnini, it will be recalled, was the principal architect of the Novus Ordo.
In his book Demain la Liturgie (The Liturgy Tomorrow), Fr Gelineau observes: “Let those, who, like myself have known and sung a Latin Gregorian High Mass remember it if they can. Let them compare it with the Mass that we now have. Not only the words, the melodies, and some of the gestures are different. To tell the truth it is a different liturgy of the Mass. This needs to be said without ambiguity: the Roman Rite as we knew it no longer exists (Le Rite Romain tel que nous l’avons connu n’existe plus). It has been destroyed (il est détruit)” (pages 9-10).
Monsignor Klaus Gamber agrees with Fr Gelineau that the Roman Rite has been destroyed. Monsignor writes: “[A]t this critical juncture the traditional Roman Rite, more than one thousand years old, has been destroyed” (The Reform of the Roman Liturgy, page 99).
Father Kenneth Baker SJ, who is editor of the Homiletic & Pastoral Review, concurs with Fr Duggan that the liturgical changes have been revolutionary. Lamenting the numerous changes imposed on the people which they scarcely had time to digest, Fr Baker wrote: “We have been overwhelmed with changes in the Church at all levels but it is the liturgical revolution which touches all of us intimately and immediately” (February 1979).
Cardinal Ratzinger claims that our ecclesial malaise is attributable, at least in part, to the condition of the Liturgy. He writes: “I am convinced that the crisis in the Church that we are experiencing is to a large extent due to the disintegration of the Liturgy” (Milestones, page 148).
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Perhaps you should read the title of the thread.
Following the comments posted from the outset it is not at all clear that what is being proposed is not a wholesale disavowal of liturgical reforms since the Second Vatican Council. One need only look at the references made to such things as Paul VI weeping at night in order to call into question the entire project of the Second Vatican Council, which I believe is ‘disobedient.’ Such an attitude to me does not equal the quetion proposed in the tile of the thread.

That said, generally speaking one can question liturgical decisions proposing arguments for or against a certain course of action, historical perspective, etc. Yet, I am a firm believer that the worship of the Church is goverened by the Editio Typica of the liturgical books. One worships “by the books.” The reform of the Council as it stands, whether one disagrees with it or not, is enshrined and codified in the books. At the same time, some liturgical directives are established by national bodies of bishops or the local bishop. These directives are to be obeyed as well. In short, disobedience begins when one starts to act contrary to the established liturgical norms. One is not justified in acting contrary to liturgical norms becuase one judges that they came about erroneously, or by the ingenious plot of fringe looney-left liturgists. It might be argued however, borrowing from moral theology, that one seeking to be in union with the church should seek to understand it as it is and not in the manner one thinks it ought to be: to develop a moral habitus. That would suggests one seeks to understand liturgically normative nature of the books and the liturgy therein, rather than trying to pick them apart or second guess them - hence the disobedience of action strongly connected to one’s thinking.

It is true that the current Roman Rite, as many in this thread have been at pain to show via quotations from other sources, is substantially different in form than that codified by Pius V in his Missale Romanum. The current General Instruction of the Roman Missal however, confirmed by Paul VI, and John Paul II goes out of its way to indicate that difference in form notwithstanding the essential nature of the Sacrifice of the Mass is preserved, and in fact clarified. Indeed structural analysis shows, for instance, that the current structure of the Mass alligns clearly with the oldest ordines known to attest to the Eucharistic practice of Rome around the time of Pope Sergious I to Gregory II. In a sense it is more truly Roman than the Romano-Frankish-Germanicum hybrid liturgies which formed the missal of Pius V.
 
I am constantly baffled by the repeated claims that Church leaders somehow changed the whole Catholic world, unbeknownst to Rome and the others in charge of things.

We didn’t have the internet back then, but it wasn’t exactly Pony Express days either.

How are we to believe that a group of “renegade bishops” somehow hoodwinked Rome?

And, that being said, if what was done was so awful, why didn’t Rome step in and squish it like a bug, as is her right and duty?
I agree with ethelzguy. Whenever I read posts like some in this thread, all I can think is what do such supposedly faithful Catholics think of our Popes, especially our present Holy Father and our beloved John Paul II?

If all these dastardly changes were introduced by “renegade bishops” who hoodwinked Rome, have all Popes afterwards been so ignorant that they haven’t noticed? Are they all so spineless as to not have banned such changes? Are they all so faithless that they practice such changes themselves?

If that is how some posters feel about our Popes, why remain in the Church?

Oh, that’s right - the Eucharist… they want to receive the Body of the Lord, who founded the Church upon the rock of Peter, even though they sin by disrespecting his most current successors.

Am I missing something here?
 
If, as some of the progressives on this forum would have us believe, a person is “disobedient” when they question the liturgical reforms of 1970; then how do they explain the fact that Cardinal Ratzinger wrote the Preface to “The Reform of the Roman Liturgy” by Klaus Gamber?

In this book Gamber stated the following:

"Obviously, the reformers wanted a completely new liturgy, a liturgy that differed from the traditional one in spirit as well as in form; and in no way a liturgy that represented what the Council Fathers had envisioned, i.e., a liturgy that would meet the pastoral needs of the faithful" (p. 100).

Gamber is clear and unequivocal: a large mistake has been made with regard to the liturgy, unprecedented in the Church’s history.

Was Cardinal Ratzinger “disobedient” in supporting Gamber’s work?
This fellow sure saw what was coming…

"“In recent times, even in materialist North America, the growth of the Church was magnificent with the liturgy being kept in Latin. The attempts of the Protestants have failed, and Protestantism uses the vernacular. We ask again: Why the change, especially since changes in this matter involve many difficulties and great dangers? All of us here at the Council can recall the fundamental changes in the meaning of words in common use. Thus it follows that if the Sacred Liturgy were in the vernacular, the immutability of doctrine would be endangered.
The introduction of the vernacular should be separated from the action of the Mass. The Mass must remain as it is. Grave changes in the liturgy introduce grave changes in dogmata.”

-James Cardinal McIntyre addressing the Second Vatican Council
 
Not true. The Council was kept in the dark about how radical the changes would be. Read the dialogue from the Council floor that is presented in the book The Rhine Flows into the Tiber. and you will see that there were statements made by individuals about major changes but none of that was put into the Constitution on the Liturgy
Monsignor Klaus Gambler was there and as he says in his book Reform of the Roman Liturgy

“ One statement we can make with certainty is that the new Ordo of the Mass that has now emerged would not have been endorsed by the majority of the Council Fathers.”-

The Council was never told of the changes that were going to be introduce by a group of theologians after the Council was over.
The priest facing the people was never discussed.

"
Not at all true. The Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy was the first constitution approved. The Bishops returned to Rome for the remaining Council sessions and it was their presence and the requests for changes by groups of national Bishops that helped drive the changes which were opposed by the Congregation of Rites and some in the rest of the Curia. The majority of the new liturgical books had been approved before the Council ended. Pope Paul VI approved of the new liturgical directions, rules etc. so no one was ever kept in the dark. A minority of Cardinals and Bishops were opposed from the get-go and it was a small minority. Some, the Dutch Bishops and Belgians wanted to go even further, but were rebuffed by the Pope and newly minted Congregation for Worship; a congregation that was replaced by another in I think 1969.

The TLM and other historic liturgical practices were suppressed, , probably by the national Bishops groups, but remained valid as almost any rite once approved and used could hardly be called invalid except by dissenters.
 
It was not five theologians who worked on the New Mass, Breviary, etc. but almost 400 people, including liturgists, bishops, and cardinals who worked on various aspects of the liturgy, which by the way encompasses much more than the Mass. The French Bishops were the earliest to urge that the reform begin and who pushed for the vernacular. Interesting also that it was a French Bishop who refused to change. The early versions of the new liturgical books were circulated to the national bishops groups and one change in practice was that vernacular translations and some of the changes originated with the world’s bishops rather then the central authority in Rome. I believe that is still the practice today with Rome being used to deny or confirm the requests and suggesting what Rome sees as fixes for problems.

The conspiracy theory of liturgical reform is pure rot. Was the change revolutionary and discontinuous with some if not much of the past, yes, but certainly the idea of Mass being a communal meal and the new emphasis on the Liturgy of the word did not at all prevent it from still being a sacrifice.The sacrifice remained and the Mass was made even richer by the new enhancements.
 
It was not five theologians who worked on the New Mass, Breviary, etc. but almost 400
I agree. My comment regarding “5” was a hyperbole in response to the “great deception” theorists. :rolleyes:

As you accurately point out, there is plenty of documentation pointing out the awareness on the part off bishops regarding the changes the concillium was working on. Many bishops were present for the experimental liturgies being carried on the in sistine chapel. Moreover, for the minorities who protested the changes, they would have had to know that the changes were being made to protest them anyway.

Nor has it been said in this thread, that the liturgical movement which was alive and well since the late 1800’s had been well disseminated in journals, congresses, etc. Word bishops, their theologians, priests and many laypeope were well aware of the principles of liturgical renewal. In fact many bishops in Germany had celebrated liturgies “versus populum” since the early 1900’s.
 
Ok, fine…so you drove 50 miles round trip Sunday, to attend a TLM…received on the tongue at a rail, and listened to Gregorian Chant, complete with altar BOYS…

But, now what? You’re home now. How do you live your faith? How is your participation in the above manifested in your daily life?

Since you drive so far on Sunday to attend Mass, how do you actively participate in parish life outside of Mass?
👍
 
I agree with ethelzguy. Whenever I read posts like some in this thread, all I can think is what do such supposedly faithful Catholics think of our Popes, especially our present Holy Father and our beloved John Paul II?
It is possible Pope John Paul II, beloved as he may be, was misled about certain things concerning the liturgy. In his 1980 Letter Dominicae Cenae, n. 9, he wrote: “All this should fill us with joy, but we should also remember that these changes demand new spiritual awareness and maturity, both on the part of the celebrant - especially now that he celebrates ‘facing the people’ - and by the faithful.” (It is possible that the Latin he wrote meant “especially when he celebrates ‘facing the people’”; however, the other translation I’ve seen favor translating cum as meaning “now [that]”.)
 
It is possible Pope John Paul II, beloved as he may be, was misled about certain things concerning the liturgy. In his 1980 Letter Dominicae Cenae, n. 9, he wrote: “All this should fill us with joy, but we should also remember that these changes demand new spiritual awareness and maturity, both on the part of the celebrant - especially now that he celebrates ‘facing the people’ - and by the faithful.” (It is possible that the Latin he wrote meant “especially when he celebrates ‘facing the people’”; however, the other translation I’ve seen favor translating cum as meaning “now [that]”.)
I’m no longer amazed at what lengths folks will go to, to twist and manipulate things to fit their view.

sheesh :rolleyes:
 
The point of the thread was to show that one could question the wisdom of the liturgical reforms of 1970 without being “disobedient” or schismatic. So I would ask progressives on this forum to stop levelling such charges against Traditionalists.
I can see how one can question the wisdom of the reforms of 1970 without being disobedient or even disrespectful. Of course that is possible! If it weren’t, then the process by which the TLM was re-examined would itself have been disrespectful, would it not? To question whether the NO should have been instituted, or that the way it was instituted could have been improved could easily degenerate into a kind of pointless Monday-morning quarterbacking at this point, but not necessarily disrespectful or disobedient. There might be some very worthwhile lessons in the exercise.

Admit the converse, though, too: that there are disobedient, disrespectful, and outright anti-authoritarian ways to re-examine those reforms, too.

If you can stand up to the bishops because you think they’re in the wrong, then surely another lay person has the standing to stand up to you, right? 😉
It’s simple, we had an extremely weak Pope and a weak man in Pope Paul VI.
I rememeber hearing stories that Pope Paul VI spent nights in his room crying because he didn’t know what to do.

Pope Paul VI was also mislead with ecumenism. He believed the lies that were told to him about ecumenism and the liturgy. He honestly believe the New Mass would attract the Protestants to the Church in massive numbers. There would an ocean of conversions.
Sadly, the conversions went the other way as massive numbers of Catholics exited the Church.
You “remember hearing stories”, and that makes it a fact by which you belittle a dead pontiff to make a point? And what would the point of this be, for that matter?
It is possible Pope John Paul II, beloved as he may be, was misled about certain things concerning the liturgy. In his 1980 Letter Dominicae Cenae, n. 9, he wrote: “All this should fill us with joy, but we should also remember that these changes demand new spiritual awareness and maturity, both on the part of the celebrant - especially now that he celebrates ‘facing the people’ - and by the faithful.” (It is possible that the Latin he wrote meant “especially when he celebrates ‘facing the people’”; however, the other translation I’ve seen favor translating cum as meaning “now [that]”.)
Misled? Misled by whom?

He was made a bishop in 1958…so yes, he would of course write “now that”. The Mass was not so when he was ordained a priest, nor even when he was made a bishop. He’d been around the sun a few times by the time that the NO had been instituted.

He was also at Vatican II. He was made a cardinal in what? 1967? He wasn’t exactly an academic slouch, either. He had probably read the documents of Vatican II. in their original Latin (not to mention several other languages, knowing him), not to mention scholarly commentaries criticizing them, more times than you’ve read the CCC.

John Paul II was a brilliant scholar, a master of many languages, and had a titan will. Nobody led that one around by the nose, or pulled the wool over his eyes. Say, if you like, that he refused to believe how things were on the ground here or there, because he could not be everywhere. Say that he made his decisions on grounds that you don’t agree with–that he was “pastoral” when he should have been “authoritarian” if you like. Don’t try to tell me that the man could be hoodwinked about the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. I don’t buy it. Disagree with him if you like, but with regards to the liturgy, don’t indulge in any silly patronizing. He knew what he was about. We should know what we are about so well as he did.
 
My point was that Pope Paul VI was a weak Pope that allowed the the Novus Ordo mess into the Church. A strong Pope like Pius IX and Puis X would have told Bugnini to get lost and completely rejected the brand new revolution. Pope Paul VI also had chances to stop all the abuses but did not.

As far as Pope John Paul II, I would honestly state that he was a blockhead when it came to liturgy. Liturgy was his biggest weakness. This was because Pope John Paul II was really a philosopher and not a theologian.

I think I have had a better grasp of liturgy than he did. Men like Michael Davies have wrote volumes about the problems in liturgy and Pope JPII did nothing. He would make paper attempts by putting out instructions, but they were ignored because he attached no penalties and disciplined no one in decades.
 
It is possible Pope John Paul II, beloved as he may be, was misled about certain things concerning the liturgy. In his 1980 Letter Dominicae Cenae, n. 9, he wrote: “All this should fill us with joy, but we should also remember that these changes demand new spiritual awareness and maturity, both on the part of the celebrant - especially now that he celebrates ‘facing the people’ - and by the faithful.” (It is possible that the Latin he wrote meant “especially when he celebrates ‘facing the people’”; however, the other translation I’ve seen favor translating cum as meaning “now [that]”.)
I’m no longer amazed at what lengths folks will go to, to twist and manipulate things to fit their view. sheesh :rolleyes:
Misled? Misled by whom? He was made a bishop in 1958…so yes, he would of course write “now that”. The Mass was not so when he was ordained a priest, nor even when he was made a bishop. He’d been around the sun a few times by the time that the NO had been instituted. He was also at Vatican II. He was made a cardinal in what? 1967? He wasn’t exactly an academic slouch, either. He had probably read the documents of Vatican II. in their original Latin…
ethelzguy, I humbly request you show me how I have “twist[ed] and manipulat[ed] things to fit [my] view”.

EasterJoy, not necessarily misled by someone, but simply misled by the prevailing practice at the time.

Perhaps I had not made my point clear in my first post. Pope John Paul II, very early in his papacy, wrote the Letter Dominicae Cenae. In n. 9 of this letter, he writes about the Eucharist as, first and foremost, a sacrifice. At the end of that part, he mentions that the recent changes to the liturgy regarding the Eucharist – the audible Eucharistic Prayer, the acclamation of the faithful in the middle of it, and the participation of people in the offertory procession, to name a few – “demand new spiritual awareness and maturity” on the part of the priest and the faithful. He names the priest and then qualifies it with these words: “especially now that he celebrates ‘facing the people’”.

To me, that phrase is supposedly describing the practice of all priests, but as has been pointed out numerous times since the versus populum celebration became commonplace, the liturgical books presuppose an ad orientem celebration! But the Pope didn’t write “especially if he celebrates ‘facing the people’”, but instead used a phrase that (to me, again) implies this is the new standard practice.

That is what I meant by my comment. Simply that Pope John Paul II had taken the versus populum stance for granted, when neither Vatican II nor the liturgical texts suggest such a thing.
 
=rwoehmke;3735937]Not at all true. The Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy was the first constitution approved
.

Who wrote the Constitution?
The Bishops returned to Rome for the remaining Council sessions and it was** their presence and the requests for changes **by groups of national Bishops that helped drive the changes which were opposed by the Congregation of Rites and some in the rest of the Curia
.

What changes were made to the Constitution at the Council. Be precise.
The majority of the new liturgical books had been approved** before the Council ended**.
The Council ended in 1965. The Concilium writing the New Mass finished in 1969. How could the majority of liturgical books have been written when the Mass had not been finalized?
Pope Paul VI approved of the new liturgical directions, rules etc. so no one was ever kept in the dark
.

Experimental Masses took place between 1964-1967. Bishops were making up their own prayers and rubrics without approval.
Some, the Dutch Bishops and Belgians wanted to go even further, but **were rebuffed by the Pope **and newly minted Congregation for Worship
;
The Dutch started communion in the hand and eucharistic lay ministers without approval from the Pope. They ignored Pope Paul.
 
My point was that Pope Paul VI was a weak Pope that allowed the the Novus Ordo mess into the Church. A strong Pope like Pius IX and Puis X would have told Bugnini to get lost and completely rejected the brand new revolution. Pope Paul VI also had chances to stop all the abuses but did not.
Was it the will of God that Paul VI be Pope at that time, rather than someone else? Was the Holy Spirit thwarted by the selection of John XXIII, Paul VI, or any other Pope in our time?
 
John Paul II was one of the bishops who worked on Gaudium et spes.
We’re talking about Sacrosanctum Concilium, unless I’m mistaken. I’m not entirely sure why the issue of who wrote it was brought up, though.

Suffice to say, Sacrosanctum Concilium, the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, does not envisage many of the changes made in the following years. Some of those changes were specifically warned against by Pope Pius XII in Mediator Dei, and some were condemned in 1794 by Pope Pius VI, through a congregation established to investigate the heretical (Jansenist) Synod of Pistoia.

It appears that there is a disconnect, then, between the liturgical reform called for by Vatican II, and the liturgical reform the produced the (now) Ordinary Form of the Mass.
 
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