He is not the first to state this, but it needs to be restated by many more IMO.The Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, he emphasized, should not be read with a “hermeneutic of rupture.”
:clapping:Cardinal Sarah recalled the Council’s teaching that the faithful should “be able to say or to sing together in Latin those parts of the Ordinary of the Mass which pertain to them,” and** said that the liturgy “must stop being a place of disobedience to the requirements of the Church." **
Spera in Deo, qouniam ad hoc confitebor illi: salutare vultus mei, et Deus meus!“It would be wrong to consider the extraordinary form of the Roman rite as coming from another theology,” he said. To manifest that the ordinary form and the extraordinary form are “in continuity and without opposition,” it would be “desirable” that there be an appendix in an upcoming edition of the Roman Missal that would permit celebrants in the ordinary form to use the penitential rite and the offertory of the extraordinary form.
I might be misunderstanding what the Cardinal is saying but, the liturgy is the action of the Father.“The liturgy is essentially the action of Christ,”
Question: How do we know that? Also, it was customary at that time to recline at table, so should the Priest also be laying down?I might be misunderstanding what the Cardinal is saying but, the liturgy is the action of the Father.
In the Mass, the Eucharistic prayers are not to Jesus, but to the Father and the priest is en persona, Jesus praying to the Father.
Also, God dwells in us all, so it is then fitting that Jesus i.e. the priest faces the people as Jesus faced the Apostles at the last supper and prayed to the Father for the bread and wine to be transformed into His body and blood.
Jim
Yes, it was customary to recline while eating. But during the consecration, we know that Jesus took bread and wine, gave thanks (to the Father) blessed it ( which was not done during the multiplication of the loaves) and distributed to His disciples. This would not have been done in a reclining position.Question: How do we know that? Also, it was customary at that time to recline at table, so should the Priest also be laying down?
Again, Jesus was facing his disciples. It was a horseshoe shape, so the head position Jesus occupied in the horseshoe, He was facing them all.Should The Priest not lead by Facing the same direction as the Faithful?
This document denoted that a commission be established and the directives of the Council be implemented. You may want to refresh your understanding by reading it here. Note the reference to authority in the Introduction, article 2.Sacrosanctum Continuum did not suggest the changes that we have seen in the Mass. I fail to understand why this is such a point of contention
Wouldn’t matter if they were reclining or sitting, the point is a matter of where Jesus was and where the Father was as is the case at Mass. God isn’t out in the cosmos, but omnipresent in each person and place. Jesus, is the Son and the priest does what the son did, which is face the people.Question: How do we know that? Also, it was customary at that time to recline at table, so should the Priest also be laying down?
The sacrifice is a living sacrifice, which the priest in the person of Christ offers to the Father.Do not misunderstand, I am not trying to be snippy, but the Priest, in Person Chisti, is leading us in worshipping the Father, and offering the eternal sacrifice to Him. Should The Priest not lead by Facing the same direction as the Faithful?
Sacrosanctum Continuum did not suggest the changes that we have seen in the Mass. I fail to understand why this is such a point of contention.
The Mass is not primarily a re-enactment of the Last Supper meal, but a re-presentation of the Sacrifice of Calvary.I might be misunderstanding what the Cardinal is saying but, the liturgy is the action of the Father.
In the Mass, the Eucharistic prayers are not to Jesus, but to the Father and the priest is en persona, Jesus praying to the Father.
Also, God dwells in us all, so it is then fitting that Jesus i.e. the priest faces the people as Jesus faced the Apostles at the last supper and prayed to the Father for the bread and wine to be transformed into His body and blood.
Jim
You are referring to #299.The instruction you find difficult is #91.
“The main altar should preferably be freestanding, to permit walking around it and celebration facing the people.”
Altare maius exstruatur a pariete seiunctum, ut facile circumiri et in eo celebratio versus populum peragi possit, quod expedit ubicumque possibile sit.
The main altar should be built separated from the wall, which is useful wherever it is possible, so that it can be easily walked around and a celebration toward the people can be carried out.
The Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments has been asked whether the expression in n. 299 of the Institutio Generalis Missalis Romani constitutes a norm according to which the position of the priest versus absidem [facing the apse] is to be excluded. The Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, after mature reflection and in light of liturgical precedents, responds:
Negatively, and in accordance with the following explanation.
The explanation includes different elements which must be taken into account. First, the word expedit does not constitute a strict obligation but a suggestion that refers to the construction of the altar a pariete sejunctum (detached from the wall). It does not require, for example, that existing altars be pulled away from the wall. The phrase ubi possibile sit (where it is possible) refers to, for example, the topography of the place, the availability of space, the artistic value of the existing altar, the sensibility of the people participating in the celebrations in a particular church, etc.
But Sirach is not quoting from the GIRM. You obviously did not follow the link provided.You are referring to #299.
This is what GIRM 299 really says:
I’m aware of what the GIRM says, and what the CDW defined, since it has been discussed often here at CA. However, the initial understanding came much earlier and is the root cause of the changes. The mass may be celebrated lawfully in either posture, but most likely, it will not be changed from what we now have in the OF…You are referring to #299.
This is what GIRM 299 really says:
Ahh, sorry I am posting from my phone and the link didn’t seem to be working! My bad. However, it appears evident in both the documents of the commission and the proper translation of the GIRM from the Latin emphasizes the permissibility of versus populum, not a universal mandate of it, as many believe to be the case.But Sirach is not quoting from the GIRM. You obviously did not follow the link provided.
Here it is again Inter oecumenici.
It was this document that came out of the commissions that were set up during/after the council, to implement changes.
You may need to note the dates of both the I.O.[1965] and the Notitiae at the bottom of your reference. It was initially believed to be a mandate until the CDW clarified it much later on.Ahh, sorry I am posting from my phone and the link didn’t seem to be working! My bad. However, it appears evident in both the documents of the commission and the proper translation of the GIRM from the Latin emphasizes the permissibility of versus populum, not a universal mandate of it, as many believe to be the case.
It’s both.The Mass is not primarily a re-enactment of the Last Supper meal, but a re-presentation of the Sacrifice of Calvary.
The Mass is the action of the Son offering Himself to the Father.
Hello,I might be misunderstanding what the Cardinal is saying but, the liturgy is the action of the Father.
…
Is it? If that is the case then why are clergy entirely free to celebrate any Mass Ad Orientem, should they wish to do so, without the need for permission from anybody? As far as I am aware the direction in which a priest says Mass is not determined by their respective Bishops’ conference.FYI
An example is Ad Orientem or Versus populum is set by the conference of Bishops, which for most parishes in the US, Versus Populum is the norm.
A diocesan priest needs permission to celebrate the Mass Ad Orientem from the Bishop of that dioceses. They usually get it, but few request it in the first place.Is it? If that is the case then why are clergy entirely free to celebrate any Mass Ad Orientem, should they wish to do so, without the need for permission from anybody? As far as I am aware the direction in which a priest says Mass is not determined by their respective Bishops’ conference.
Again, the GIRM is a General Instruction of the Roman Missal, not an absolute instruction.GIRM clearly states that, at certain points of the Mass, the priest actually turns to face the people: during the Greeting (GIRM 124); at the Pray, brethren (GIRM 146); before the Sign of Peace (GIRM 154); at the Agnus Dei (GIRM 157); at the Prayer after Communion (GIRM 165) and at the final blessing (GIRM 185).