K
kellyanne
Guest
Hello Deidre,
I really appreciated the excerpt you provided and I am interested in saving a copy for my reference. Could you please give us the source?
It is so unfortunate that many try to mold the entire Catholic community into their concept of what constitutes worship. Trads are prone to this, which illustrates their complete lack of understanding.
We only need to look at the infinite array within any of God’s creations to recognize God’s immense pleasure, and seeing this variety as “good.” (Gen. 1:31). Do you remember the nursery rhyme, “Mary, Mary, quite contrary, how does your garden grow? With silverbells and cockleshells and pretty maids all in a row.”
I think that would be an ugly garden, stark, with every plant in a row identical to the other. There are plants which only grow in the shade, and others tower majestically like the sunflowers. To expect every plant to remain in the shade like theTLM and deny fuller expression in worship like the sunflowers (who would never thrive in the shade!) is to fail to appreciate the Church’s wisdom in permitting diversity.
:twocents:
I really appreciated the excerpt you provided and I am interested in saving a copy for my reference. Could you please give us the source?
This is so beautifully expressed, and the choices provided should enable many of God’s people to participate in the liturgy which helps them express their worship in the manner of their personality. Not every adult, or teen, is going to be comfortable with classical Gregorian chant, or a silent spectator-type of liturgy.In addition, ample flexibility is given for appropriate creativity aimed at allowing each celebration to be adapted to the needs of the participants, to their comprehension, their interior preparation and their gifts, according to the established liturgical norms. In the songs, the melodies, the choice of prayers and readings, the giving of the homily, the preparation of the prayer of the faithful, the occasional explanatory remarks, and the decoration of the Church building according to the various seasons, there is ample possibility for introducing into each celebration a certain variety by which the riches of the liturgical tradition will also be more clearly evident, and so, in keeping with pastoral requirements, the celebration will be carefully imbued with those particular features that will foster the recollection of the participants.
It is so unfortunate that many try to mold the entire Catholic community into their concept of what constitutes worship. Trads are prone to this, which illustrates their complete lack of understanding.
We only need to look at the infinite array within any of God’s creations to recognize God’s immense pleasure, and seeing this variety as “good.” (Gen. 1:31). Do you remember the nursery rhyme, “Mary, Mary, quite contrary, how does your garden grow? With silverbells and cockleshells and pretty maids all in a row.”
I think that would be an ugly garden, stark, with every plant in a row identical to the other. There are plants which only grow in the shade, and others tower majestically like the sunflowers. To expect every plant to remain in the shade like theTLM and deny fuller expression in worship like the sunflowers (who would never thrive in the shade!) is to fail to appreciate the Church’s wisdom in permitting diversity.
:twocents: