Countercultural San Francisco parish attracts growing congregation

  • Thread starter Thread starter johnnyc176
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Personally, I wish that each parish could have at least ONE mass each Sunday that used sacred music, sang the antiphons, psalms and other prayers and used Mass settings created before the 20th century. Doesn’t have to have any Latin… just use a traditional mass setting, the Confiteor and Eucharistic Prayer #1

I guess I just miss how reverently the Mass was celebrated at my parish when I was a child in the 1980s. My pastor was awesome… and he didn’t use any Latin. I often have to visit the Cathedral to witness what I had every week as a child (though my current parish does a pretty decent job too)
Well, according to the book “The Rhine Flows Into the Tiber,” vernacular was perhaps the most discussed and spirited subject in the Vatican Council II SC. The “conservative” side inserted the clause “Latin is to be retained in the Latin Rite.” The “liberal” side fought for vernacular to the limits the bishops permitted.

Guess which side won?
 
Well, according to the book “The Rhine Flows Into the Tiber,” vernacular was perhaps the most discussed and spirited subject in the Vatican Council II SC. The “conservative” side inserted the clause “Latin is to be retained in the Latin Rite.” The “liberal” side fought for vernacular to the limits the bishops permitted.

Guess which side won?
Again, I don’t mind vernacular (esp when done reverently). But I’ll be honest, the bi-lingual and tri-lingual masses drive me crazy.

Instead of trying to sing hymns in Spanish, Vietnamese, French, etc.; I wish parishes would use these opporunities to use the Latin.

We once had a Rosary that was done in 5 different languages (the last being Latin), but it was very difficult. I really could only follow along in the English and Latin. It wasn’t even announced that they were going to do that. I did my best to pray the Rosary in my head, but it wasn’t easy.

I honestly think it’s great to want to make people of other langues feel at home. And that can easily be done by have masses and devotions in their native tongues at the Parish. But when trying to bring all of them together and, using Latin would be the best unifier.

According to Pope Paul VI in his 1974 letter, Jubilate Deo, every Latin Rite Catholic should be able to do the Sanctus & Agnus Dei in Latin.

ewtn.org/library/CURIA/CDWPLAIN.HTM
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jubilate_Deo
 
Well, according to the book “The Rhine Flows Into the Tiber,” vernacular was perhaps the most discussed and spirited subject in the Vatican Council II SC. The “conservative” side inserted the clause “Latin is to be retained in the Latin Rite.” The “liberal” side fought for vernacular to the limits the bishops permitted.

Guess which side won?
Yes, exactly. It’s easy to guess who won. That little phrase was held up by conservatives for years but for 90% of the bishops and priests it made no sense and they probably thought it was just a printer’s error. :rolleyes:
 
Again, I don’t mind vernacular (esp when done reverently). But I’ll be honest, the bi-lingual and tri-lingual masses drive me crazy.

Instead of trying to sing hymns in Spanish, Vietnamese, French, etc.; I wish parishes would use these opporunities to use the Latin.

We once had a Rosary that was done in 5 different languages (the last being Latin), but it was very difficult. I really could only follow along in the English and Latin. It wasn’t even announced that they were going to do that. I did my best to pray the Rosary in my head, but it wasn’t easy.

I honestly think it’s great to want to make people of other langues feel at home. And that can easily be done by have masses and devotions in their native tongues at the Parish. But when trying to bring all of them together and, using Latin would be the best unifier.

According to Pope Paul VI in his 1974 letter, Jubilate Deo, every Latin Rite Catholic should be able to do the Sanctus & Agnus Dei in Latin.

ewtn.org/library/CURIA/CDWPLAIN.HTM
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jubilate_Deo
Good point. It would be quite simple to do the Rosary in Latin when there are multiple languages. With so much repetition just about anyone would eventually get it right - and it’s a great chance to learn and have everyone praying in a common language.
 
  1. In many Episcopal churches I know around here, while the parish might have their own “personality” each liturgy is done differently. For example: if they have 3 on Sunday, one will use traditional music, one contemporary, and the other whatever is unique that that church.
I actually like that approach. It an opportunity for people to attend the time this is most aligned to their spirituality, while remaining a member of the local church.
  1. For Catholics (esp priests) the difficulty is because like bishops, pastors are in charge of all the souls (Catholic and non-Catholic) who live in the geographic boundaries of their parish. Also many dioceses in the Northeast and Great Lakes Region used to have a number of Personal Parishes which were established based on national origin. This was PRIMARY done because people from different countries often had different devotions they were accustom to. For example: Polish people have a devotion to Our Lady of Czestochowa, while the Irish have devotions to St. Patrick, etc. These Personal Parishes had a lot of positive and negative affects. However, many clergy today believe that the negative affects out weigh the positive ones, so a lot of Bishops are very hesitant to create new Personal Parishes. Furthermore, territorial parishes need to be focused on the people who live there, and should not morph themselves into a Personal Parish.
I pray I’m making sense.

God bless.
Yes, that does make sense. And the Church of England is somewhat (not totaly) of a national Church, at least in comparison with the Catholic Faith which is found at the heart of so many cultures and languages. Yes, the personal parishes had their purpose for a time. But at least in the U.S., assimilation has reduced that need.
 
I think I can agree with this.

Personally, while I do sometimes attend the Extraordinary Form of the mass, I much rather prefer the Ordinary Form of the mass when celebrated using sacred music and antiphons are sung instead of hymns.

While I personally, I prefer some use of Latin in the OF, like during Sanctus & Agnus Dei; (and the Kyrie in Greek) but I’m totally fine with English.

For me, I personally prefer a very solemn mass and I think using a little Latin and chant helps me with that.

Basically, what I’m saying is that if every Ordinary Form of the mass was done like it is at my Cathedral, I would be very happy.

I personally do not like the music from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s (church music nor secular music). I while I have some favorite songs from the 1990s (which I consider the best era for rock music), prefer to listen to Gregorian Chant and Classical Music (even outside of Church).

To be honest, I really think the 20th century was overall, horrible for music (not just church, but secular too). But that’s just me… People love the Beatles… I don’t understand why, besides a couple of songs… most of their music doesn’t resonate with me. Same with Elvis.

But again, that’s me.

My preferred Pandora stations consist of Mozart, Beethoven, Brahms, & Chant. And I often listen to the “Sacred Music” channel on the Immaculate Heart Radio app when driving.

I love Opera, Ballet too… so perhaps that’s why I like Solemn High Masses in the Extraordinary form (but I couldn’t attend them every week).

Personally, I wish that each parish could have at least ONE mass each Sunday that used sacred music, sang the antiphons, psalms and other prayers and used Mass settings created before the 20th century. Doesn’t have to have any Latin… just use a traditional mass setting, the Confiteor and Eucharistic Prayer #1

I guess I just miss how reverently the Mass was celebrated at my parish when I was a child in the 1980s. My pastor was awesome… and he didn’t use any Latin. I often have to visit the Cathedral to witness what I had every week as a child (though my current parish does a pretty decent job too)
Yes, I agree wholeheartedly with you on how Mass should be. At Fordham University, where I attend, the morning Mass is done in a traditional setting (but in English) and I love it more than any other Masses I have ever been to.

May God bless you all! 🙂
 
Yes, but they didn’t concelebrate. Thus “side altars”, which we can find in old Benedictine monastery churches offered the priest-monks the opportunity to celebrate their daily Masses
Yes I am aware of that, I’ve visited monasteries around Europe. However going even further back there was no daily Mass in a Benedictine monastery (I’m talking around the 6th-7th Century) and few monks were priests. However that’s all sort of irrelevant. Today monasteries of men using the Ordinary Form, which is the majority of them, do concelebrate (those of women usually have only one priest, the chaplain though sometimes visiting priests will concelebrate with the chaplain). Some configurations work better for that, some not so much. The church at our abbey was consecrated in 1994 and thus was configured with concelebration in mind. However I’ve also been to some older churches where it works well too, but at some, like Monte Cassino, I felt it didn’t work so well.
Those would not be strictly, “ad orientem” since they’re on the side facing north and south. But as some would say they’re “ad deum” (facing the altar or tabernacle) or not facing the people.
Not all side altars had tabernacles!!! Only the altar of the Reserved Eucharist! The priest would say his daily Mass and consume all of the Host and the Precious blood, that wasn’t where the Eucharistic reserve was kept.

From a 1935 Ceremonial I have (French, my translation)
Nota: the tabernacle is not a necessary accessory at the altar. A tabernacle is required at the altar of the Blessed Sacrament. But elsewhere, as the Blessed Sacrament can only be reserved at one altar, and the tabernacle only being used for reserving the Blessed Sacrament, it is useless and contrary to tradition and liturgical principles to overload with a tabernacle all the altars of a church or oratory.
Moreover, no matter which way the priest faces at an altar he is facing God present on the altar after consecration. The Mass was celebrated facing the altar away from the people (if there were any) at the side altar, simply because the altar was built up against the wall, and it was not possible to celebrate the other way. Moreover most of these Masses were without the faithful, who more generally would attend the daily conventual Mass with chant, etc.
We do hear about how St. .Peter’s Basilica main altar always had Mass facing the people, but that was to preserve facing the East. Plus, the numerous side altars at St. Peter’s even today have priests offering Mass turned towards the altar, not towards the people. I’ve attended several there, even with fairly large congregations at side altars.
It was common elsewhere as well. I have a 1935 Ceremonial to prove it. In some cathedrals or monasteries, the altar was between the nave and the choir. The Ceremonial gives instructions on how to celebrate the Mass facing the people (ad orientem for the choir, but versus populum for the people) and the opposite: versus populum for the choir and ad orientem for the people. In that configuration, someone, either the choir of monks (not all priests but likely all choir monks thus destined to become so), or the people, saw the priest facing towards or away from them.
So, that was envisioned as the norm.
No, the norms covered all possibilities, even if in parishes, one configuration was the most common. That was most certainly not the case in monasteries and cathedrals.

People have to understand that what was common at their parish was by no means the norm. The Church also consists of cathedrals with chapters of canons, religious congregations, and regulars (monks, friars) who all have their own traditions and are still common around the world, and were even more common before the before the decline in vocations.
 
Not all side altars had tabernacles!!! Only the altar of the Reserved Eucharist! The priest would say his daily Mass and consume all of the Host and the Precious blood, that wasn’t where the Eucharistic reserve was kept.
True but many did have tabernacles where a ciborium could be kept during Mass for the distribution of Communion to the faithful. Symbolically the priest would face that direction.
Just curious, have you ever heard of or seen a side altar oriented towards the people?
It was common elsewhere as well. I have a 1935 Ceremonial to prove it.
Just curious - how common do you think it was? I mean in terms of overall population of churches? 40%? 10%? 3%?
In all of North America, for example, how many Masses were offered facing the people prior to Vatican II? We know it was done at St. Peter’s all this time. You’re also saying it was “common” - but in the 4,000 (not sure how many?) Churches in the U.S. and Canada, how many do you think offered Mass facing the people?
People have to understand that what was common at their parish was by no means the norm. The Church also consists of cathedrals with chapters of canons, religious congregations, and regulars (monks, friars) who all have their own traditions and are still common around the world, and were even more common before the before the decline in vocations.
The Church consists of Eastern Rites as well and the ad orientem position is the norm there.

Side note, if we consider any local tradition to be part of the norm, then it’s good that includes the use of the EF liturgy in the Church today - which would necessarily be part of the norm of the Roman Rite today. Some people find that hard to accept.
 
True but many did have tabernacles where a ciborium could be kept during Mass for the distribution of Communion to the faithful. Symbolically the priest would face that direction.
As noted from the Ceremonial, this was strongly discouraged and could be no means be considered the norm. The priest would face that direction because the altar was against the wall and the only place for him to stand and consecrate the Eucharist was facing the wall.
Just curious, have you ever heard of or seen a side altar oriented towards the people?
No, but generally side altars were not for public Masses, though the public could attend if present. They were intended for the priest to say his daily Mass as concelebration was forbidden except in very limited circumstances, and the priest had an obligation to offer Mass daily. Both are no longer the case, so side altars have lost their relevance (other than artistic or devotional) in most places except those that still use the Extraordinary Form.
Just curious - how common do you think it was? I mean in terms of overall population of churches? 40%? 10%? 3%?
I have no idea, but consider that each diocese had a cathedral, and many of not most had choirs and chapters of canons so you can see that the number is not insignificant. Then add all the monasteries with similar layouts. I was born in 1958, so in the period of flux just before and after Vatican II and I don’t remember paying any attention to such matters in my childhood in the '60s.
In all of North America, for example, how many Masses were offered facing the people prior to Vatican II? We know it was done at St. Peter’s all this time. You’re also saying it was “common” - but in the 4,000 (not sure how many?) Churches in the U.S. and Canada, how many do you think offered Mass facing the people?
Again I have no idea. What matters is that it was licit and provided for in the rubrics. In Canada, Mary Queen of the World Cathedral has the same layout as St. Peter’s, in fact it’s a scaled-down version of St. Peter’s.
The Church consists of Eastern Rites as well and the ad orientem position is the norm there.

Side note, if we consider any local tradition to be part of the norm, then it’s good that includes the use of the EF liturgy in the Church today - which would necessarily be part of the norm of the Roman Rite today. Some people find that hard to accept.
The Eastern Churches are not relevant to the discussion IMHO. They have their traditions. As for the EF, Benedict XVI removed obstacles to making it more widely available. It was his prerogative as Pope and our opinions of it matter little, he acted within his authority and thus we are all bound in obedience to accept that decision.

I would add, nowhere in the Ceremonial will you find the words “ad orientem”, or it’s French equivalent (the Ceremonial is written in French). Nor versus populum.

Perhaps Fr. Ruggero would chime in here and correct me where I’m wrong and offer his own insights on the orientation of the Mass.
 
I have no idea, but consider that each diocese had a cathedral, and many of not most had choirs and chapters of canons so you can see that the number is not insignificant.
Choirs are positioned at the side, not in front of the altar.
But I’m just noting that what you’ve called “common” is something you really don’t have an idea about.
Again I have no idea. What matters is that it was licit and provided for in the rubrics.
I’ll suggest that what matters is you’ve called something “common” but when asked how common it was, you really don’t know. Less than 1% of all Churches in North America (or the Americas in general)? That would be my guess.
So, no - not common.
The Eastern Churches are not relevant to the discussion IMHO.
They’re ancient churches and teach us something about liturgical tradition.
As for the EF, Benedict XVI removed obstacles to making it more widely available.
Pope Benedict explained his reasons for making that decision.

In the U.S., we have a newly constructed seminary filled to capacity which ordains a fair number of priests each year who only offer the EF of the Mass - so it continues to have a positive impact on those who choose that form. I know adults who have participated at Mass every Sunday since childhood and have never been to a Sunday OF liturgy.

So, people grow up with the EF and it forms their liturgical sensibility.
 
Choirs are positioned at the side, not in front of the altar.
But I’m just noting that what you’ve called “common” is something you really don’t have an idea about…
I don’t appreciate the ad hominem. The Ceremonial I am talking about is complete with diagrams of the different configurations. Choir stalls are alongside the walls, either ahead of, or behind the altar. Sometimes in a U shape.

When the stalls are behind the altar towards the apse, the altar is in on a centreline between the two rows of stalls. If the priest is at the altar, he may either be looking towards the choir stalls, or towards the nave, depending on his orientation. In one configuration he will celebrate facing the people, in the other, facing the clerics or religious in the stalls. Both are allowed and detailed in the rubrics.

Here’s an example:

c1038.r38.cf3.rackcdn.com/group4/building35013/media/05tpnj6.jpg

It’s the abbey church at Sant’ Anselmo in Rome (where I have stayed several times). The altar and sanctuary is between the stalls (the wooden structures either side) and the nave.
I have been to many monasteries in Europe, and to more than one cathedral. I have seen these arrangements with my own eyes. I’m not pulling this out of thin air.

Another example with the same arrangement, Douai abbey in England:

4.bp.blogspot.com/-rG1xPnKfLaA/Toi1RuWh2WI/AAAAAAAAArA/SLkm8LlnXKo/s1600/StNicholasoftolentino.png

Here we have the arrangement where the altar is near the apse and the choir between the sanctuary and nave:

abbayedesolesmes.fr/sites/default/files/styles/718x369/public/dscf0011.jpg?itok=YsJ5N5HT

You can’t see the choir stalls on account of the columns, but they are alongside the walls between the altar and nave.

The abbey I’m associated with is also similarly arranged, but very modern:

c1.staticflickr.com/9/8097/8600551706_fb08e5e776_b.jpg

Lastly, the cathedral where our schola regularly sings:

quebecoriginal.com/en/listing/images/master/721ba8e6-1d4c-489c-87ca-8ffbf352581b/basilique-cathedrale-saint-michel-et-chapelle-de-larcheveche-de-sherbrooke-vue-interieure-de-la-basilique-cathedrale.jpg

The choir is arranged in an U-shape around the altar, with the altar between the choir and the nave. This cathedral was built in the '50s to replace one destroyed by fire.
I’ll suggest that what matters is you’ve called something “common” but when asked how common it was, you really don’t know. Less than 1% of all Churches in North America (or the Americas in general)? That would be my guess.
So, no - not common.
Common enough to mention in the rubrics. Common enough to be found in many monasteries and cathedrals around the world. Please note that the Church is not limited to North America and the rubrics are for all.

I would also respectfully suggest, that you too, by your own admission, are guessing that this applies to only 1% of churches so your guess at “uncommon” is as good as my guess of “not insignificant”. And even if your number were accurate, given that they’re usually cathedrals, basilicas or monasteries, they are very prominent churches in the areas the are located and the cathedrals in particular, cover a large population basin.
They’re ancient churches and teach us something about liturgical tradition.
But they don’t preclude us from evolving our traditions in our own way. I don’t mean that their traditions are insignificant, but they are theirs.
So, people grow up with the EF and it forms their liturgical sensibility.
And people have grown up with the OF and it has formed their liturgical sensibilities. Blessed as I am to have a nearby OF in Gregorian chant done with monastic sensibility to the Liturgy, a monastery of the Solesmes congregation, I can appreciate that the OF has its own inherent beauty when done with care and love.
 
I don’t appreciate the ad hominem.
When I asked you stated you had no idea. I then replied by stating that you had no idea. I apologize if that came across as an ad hominem.
I would also respectfully suggest, that you too, by your own admission, are guessing that this applies to only 1% of churches so your guess at “uncommon” is as good as my guess of “not insignificant”.
Let’s put it this way, if it was common you’d have an abundance of references to show me. I can show you an abundance already - namely all the churches in North America I’ve ever visited, as well as those in South America and 99% of what I’ve visited in Europe. So, no - I think you should back away from the idea that versus populum altars were “common”. But I’d also think the burden is on you to show it.
But they don’t preclude us from evolving our traditions in our own way. I don’t mean that their traditions are insignificant, but they are theirs.
You may be right - it depends on how liturgists view the overall liturgical tradition of the Church, East and West. That’s why some of the leaders of the liturgical change at Vatican II sought insight from Eastern Christianity (and the OF reflects that).
Blessed as I am to have a nearby OF in Gregorian chant done with monastic sensibility to the Liturgy, a monastery of the Solesmes congregation, I can appreciate that the OF has its own inherent beauty when done with care and love.
Yes you are blessed - keeping in mind you’re not in a geographical parish but going to a monastery which most people cannot do (and do not have access to).
I’ll suggest that EF liturgies are far more accessible than places that have OF Masses offered in the excellent style as your monastery does.
I mention that just for context and to show that the EF, while you may not prefer it, does provide help for people who want a more traditional liturgical expression.
 
Pope Benedict explained his reasons for making that decision.
One of the unfortunate things, as I see it, is that the changes in the liturgy caused (and still cause) a lot of arguments and actually division between good Catholics.
Pope Benedict was pointed in blaming the reform process itself (and by implication some of the reformers). His granting access to the EF liturgy was an attempt to bring some healing to the division.
I think he was successful to a very large extent.
I don’t think a further marginalizing and hostility towards those attached to the older liturgical form would have helped at all.
Just speaking for myself, I was one who was quite upset with the OF as it was offered in my parish and I did find some beautiful peace at the EF where I attend now. That helped my overall attitude and I see it as God’s way of healing things.
As for why the Church went through this divisive time, God has good reasons and it has been a test for everyone on all sides.
Hopefully, Catholics will no longer need to take sides on such things and can act more as a unified body once again.
 
As noted from the Ceremonial, this was strongly discouraged and could be no means be considered the norm. The priest would face that direction because the altar was against the wall and the only place for him to stand and consecrate the Eucharist was facing the wall.

No, but generally side altars were not for public Masses, though the public could attend if present. They were intended for the priest to say his daily Mass as concelebration was forbidden except in very limited circumstances, and the priest had an obligation to offer Mass daily. Both are no longer the case, so side altars have lost their relevance (other than artistic or devotional) in most places except those that still use the Extraordinary Form.
I have seen side altars that were free standing and permitted Mass facing the people. The reform prefers that there be one lone altar because of the sign value for the liturgical assembly
I have no idea, but consider that each diocese had a cathedral, and many of not most had choirs and chapters of canons so you can see that the number is not insignificant. Then add all the monasteries with similar layouts. I was born in 1958, so in the period of flux just before and after Vatican II and I don’t remember paying any attention to such matters in my childhood in the '60s.
Again I have no idea. What matters is that it was licit and provided for in the rubrics. In Canada, Mary Queen of the World Cathedral has the same layout as St. Peter’s, in fact it’s a scaled-down version of St. Peter’s.
It was in many places.
The Eastern Churches are not relevant to the discussion IMHO. They have their traditions. As for the EF, Benedict XVI removed obstacles to making it more widely available. It was his prerogative as Pope and our opinions of it matter little, he acted within his authority and thus we are all bound in obedience to accept that decision.
I would add, nowhere in the Ceremonial will you find the words “ad orientem”, or it’s French equivalent (the Ceremonial is written in French). Nor versus populum.
Perhaps Fr. Ruggero would chime in here and correct me where I’m wrong and offer his own insights on the orientation of the Mass.
Indeed the Eastern Churches are not relevant as they are their own reality, apart. There are, however, Eastern Churches with the Synaxis facing the people…I have concelebrated at such liturgies and attended others in choir.

You have done very well indeed, OraLabora. Father Abbot should be very proud and pleased.
I don’t appreciate the ad hominem.
You will frequently find the interaction with those attached to the vetus ordo unpleasant. That has been my experience going all the way back. How the Blessed Paul VI was incredibly abused by such – and that should always be remembered.

As you know from your study of Sacrosanctum Concilium, there was no aspect of the liturgy that the world’s bishops found was not in need reform and revision. None.
 
Father, I have frequently seen members on this forum criticize the use of these terms as you have. However, I have not heard a good counter proposal for how one should talk about different approaches within the Church.

Do you have any suggestions for how to compare (to take a fairly non-controversial topic) John Paul’s approach to beatification and sainthood to that of Benedict?

I suppose one could accurately, but quite callously, say one was fast and loose while the other was stingy. But I think it much simpler and not at all perjorative to describe one as more liberal in his approach to this issue, and the other as more conservative.
Oh good! I found this question. I had wanted to answer it and then I could not find it.

Pope John Paul II saw as intrinsic to his mission as Successor of Peter his apostolic trips and his solicitude for the Particular Churches.-- and one aspect of that was the recognition of their saints. The workload of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints increased from previous pontificates.

Pope Benedict wanted to underscore the difference between beatification and canonisation. They are theologically distinct…but the distinction can be lost when the Pope actually does both ceremonies and they look so much alike. He yielded back to the Cardinals the carrying out of beatifications that he judged should occur.

That said, in less than eight years, he promulgated the beatifications of 871 people. By contrast, Blessed Pope Paul VI beatified a mere 145 people in 15 years. Pope John Paul II beatified 1327 people in just over 26 years…if anything Pope Benedict would have surpassed the number of John Paul II in far less time.

Relative to canonisation, the numbers under Pope Benedict are smaller but it was not a matter of playing fast and loose as opposed to being stingy. It was a decision that was, ultimately, Ecclesiological focusing on the distinction between beatified and canonised.

Canonisation of a Blessed is directed, not to a Particular Church or grouping of Particular Churches as Beatification, but to the Universal Church. Beatification raises the person to the altar and establishes a public cultus focused on a particular area.

An important question is: Is this person such that the Church’s honour of them should be extended definitively to the whole Church because he or she is truly significant to the members of the Church everywhere? For Blessed Paul VI, I would say yes. He was Pope of the Universal Church, after all. Like Pope John Paul II, Mother Teresa was a truly global figure who had circled the globe and impacted people in every corner of the world and was being honoured everywhere even when the were Blessed and before being canonised. In both cases, everyone can rightly claim them…and that will be true for the Blessed Paul VI, too.

On the other hand, shortly, there will be the beatification in America of Father Solanus Casey as, a couple of years ago, there was of Blessed Miriam Teresa Demjanovich. Their respective spheres of influence – and the interest of the faithful – has been quite local. This is a wonderful gift for the Church in the United States…but probably not terribly immediate to the Particular Churches of Vanuatu or Burkina Faso or the Archdiocese of Tokyo.

I don’t think the minds of either John Paul II or Benedict on this issue could in any way be characterised by words like “conservative” or “liberal” or by terms like “stingy” as opposed to “generous”. John Paul had very valid – and correct – reasons for doing what he did. Benedict the same in his era. There is a wisdom in the thought of each for that moment in which they occupied the Chair of Peter.
 
You will frequently find the interaction with those attached to the vetus ordo unpleasant. That has been my experience going all the way back.
Yes, I have also found the hostility and opposition to the traditional rite to be a very unpleasant thing to encounter. It’s unfortunate that so often, those attached to the novus ordo have little knowledge of the Church’s liturgical tradition.
How the Blessed Paul VI was incredibly abused by such – and that should always be remembered.
I have done my best to forgive and forget how so many people abused the Church’s past, as if it was something evil.

As Pope Benedict stated:

What earlier generations held as sacred, remains sacred and great for us too, and it cannot be all of a sudden entirely forbidden or even considered harmful. It behooves all of us to preserve the riches which have developed in the Church’s faith and prayer, and to give them their proper place.

It’s unfortunate that the Holy See had to correct the previous directive from 1971 which made it appear as if the 1962 Missal had been forbidden. As Pope Benedict XVI explained:

As for the use of the 1962 Missal as a Forma extraordinaria of the liturgy of the Mass, I would like to draw attention to the fact that this Missal was never juridically abrogated and, consequently, in principle, was always permitted.

He went on to explain also that those attached to the traditional rite perhapw were those who already had been formed with a deep appreciation of the Mass by the liturgical movement prior to Vatican II:

Afterwards, however, it soon became apparent that a good number of people remained strongly attached to this usage of the Roman Rite, which had been familiar to them from childhood. This was especially the case in countries where the liturgical movement had provided many people with a notable liturgical formation and a deep, personal familiarity with the earlier Form of the liturgical celebration.

Pope Benedict apologized for the implementation of the Novus Ordo:

… in many places celebrations were not faithful to the prescriptions of the new Missal, but the latter actually was understood as authorizing or even requiring creativity, which frequently led to deformations of the liturgy which were hard to bear.

He also spoke about the abuse that many suffered at the hands of those who reformed the liturgy:

I am speaking from experience, since I too lived through that period with all its hopes and its confusion. And I have seen how arbitrary deformations of the liturgy caused deep pain to individuals totally rooted in the faith of the Church.
As you know from your study of Sacrosanctum Concilium, there was no aspect of the liturgy that the world’s bishops found was not in need reform and revision. None.
Interesting. If you and OraLabora accept that point of view (as many priests I know do) then I would expect to find very little similarity between your version of the novus ordo and that of the EF. I would expect to find every aspect of the traditional liturgy having undergone a modern reform with nothing (your “None”) of the past preserved.
 
… in many places celebrations were not faithful to the prescriptions of the new Missal, but the latter actually was understood as authorizing or even requiring creativity, which frequently led to deformations of the liturgy which were hard to bear…
This is the crux of the matter. This is what led so many to fall from their faith, not the new Missal itself. This, to the admittedly lesser but still significant extent that it still goes on, is a big part of what drives young people with no memory of the Vetus Ordo, towards it.

And I think resolving this issue is what a lot of people understand by ‘reform of the reform’, even if many others seem to understand the term as meaning top-down liturgical change to the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite - which isn’t actually necessary as a wonderful, reverent, traditional and solemn liturgy is demonstrably possible under the current rubrics and without contradicting Sacrosanctum Concillium. For me I always understood it as organic, responsible reform (well, de facto ‘reform’) by the means of making more widespread what is already permitted within the rubrics

With ‘reform of the reform’ now loaded and tainted, perhaps ‘reform of the implementation of the reform’ is the better, albeit clearly doomed to never catch on, title.
 
This is the crux of the matter. This is what led so many to fall from their faith, not the new Missal itself. This, to the admittedly lesser but still significant extent that it still goes on, is a big part of what drives young people with no memory of the Vetus Ordo, towards it.
Agreed. In the early years, the experimentation was permitted - so some believed it was the lack of boundaries given in the liturgical reform that caused the problem. Over time some discipline came in, and yes as you say it’s a lesser extent, but that kind of thing still goes on. In some cases, the experimentation and violation of the liturgical norms (altar girls) led to actual changes in the liturgical rules itself (as altar girls were later permitted). But I encounter young Catholics all the time who simply do not like the free-style liturgy in their parish and when they encounter the sacred form of the traditional rite they find a home there.
I also agree that many people lost their faith when the radical changes to the liturgy occurred - and Pope Benedict speaks about that with sadness. He says here that the Church has a share in the blame for the divisions that occurred and that a “reconciliation” (perhaps the “reform of the reform”?) is needed.

It is a matter of coming to an interior reconciliation in the heart of the Church. Looking back over the past, to the divisions which in the course of the centuries have rent the Body of Christ, one continually has the impression that, at critical moments when divisions were coming about, not enough was done by the Church’s leaders to maintain or regain reconciliation and unity. One has the impression that omissions on the part of the Church have had their share of blame for the fact that these divisions were able to harden.
And I think resolving this issue is what a lot of people understand by ‘reform of the reform’, even if many others seem to understand the term as meaning top-down liturgical change to the Ordinary Form of the Roman Rite - which isn’t actually necessary as a wonderful, reverent, traditional and solemn liturgy is demonstrably possible under the current rubrics and without contradicting Sacrosanctum Concillium. For me I always understood it as organic, responsible reform (well, de facto ‘reform’) by the means of making more widespread what is already permitted within the rubrics
With ‘reform of the reform’ now loaded and tainted, perhaps ‘reform of the implementation of the reform’ is the better, albeit clearly doomed to never catch on, title.
True - it’s something like a re-interpretation of Sacrosanctum Concilium that could bring about a “return to the sacred” and more reverence.
 
Interesting. If you and OraLabora accept that point of view (as many priests I know do) then I would expect to find very little similarity between your version of the novus ordo and that of the EF. I would expect to find every aspect of the traditional liturgy having undergone a modern reform with nothing (your “None”) of the past preserved.
This is a logical non sequitur. Review and reform can be anything from minor tweaks to major reforms. A good example of a minor reform is in Gregorian chant. Prior to the reforms, the Kyrie was nine-fold. Post-reform, it is 6-fold except on the major solemnities. Yet the melodies are identical and the resemblance very obvious. Some reforms added options, such as the Eucharistic prayers. New options were added without removing the Roman Canon. Many reforms removed gestures and accretions that were, if anything, distractions for the priest. I could pull numerous examples out of that 1935 ceremonial. I’m at the abbey at the moment but if you want examples I could post them this evening.

Still, with all the reforms the Mass remains recognizable and the similarities are more than skin-deep. It does not follow that reform means wholesale destruction.

Of course the Liturgy is more than just the Mass. the Liturgical year and Divine Office were also reformed and simplified. The latter opened the Divine Office more widely to the laity so all could participate in the public prayer of the Church, even privately.

The old Office was too long and complex for most laity. Moreover until simplification of the liturgical year, one was too often in the festival psalter so that the notion that all 150 psalms were said in a week was theoretical at best. It could take weeks to go through the psalter.

Finally the need for liturgical reform was recognized long before Vatican II. The reforms actually gathered steam under Pius X who reformed Gregorian chant with the help of Solesmes, codified with the release of the Vatican Edition of the Roman Gradual in 1908, and a very radical reform of the Divine Office in 1910 which caused as much controversy then as the LOTH now, as it was a significant further departure from Monastic practice and tradition. Pius X recognized that secular and religious clergy had different needs.

The reforms continued through Pius XII and John XXIII, eliminating Octaves, condensing classes of feasts, rubric changes, and the Holy Week reforms of 1955.

In spite of these major changes, the Divine Office is still recognized as such and the Mass is still recognizably the Mass. The 1962 Missal and Breviary are in fact a snapshot in time.
It’s unfortunate that so often, those attached to the novus ordo have little knowledge of the Church’s liturgical tradition.
I find the I opposite equally true, many attached to the EF and 1960 Breviary know little about how we got there. Most attached to the 1960 Breviary, for instance, do not know that it only goes back to 1910 and was itself a radical reform. It only had 60 years as the “ordinary” breviary. Hardly a “tradition” in a 2000 year old Church. Few know that by the late 1800’s, Gregorian chant was thoroughly denatured and had to be reformed. The Gregorian chant of today is the product of the late 1800’s reforms of Solesmes, reforms that continue to be debated among scholars today, with different schools of interpretation.
 
True - it’s something like a re-interpretation of Sacrosanctum Concilium that could bring about a “return to the sacred” and more reverence.
That’s not necessary. SC provided guidelines for the reforms, which led to the Editio Typica of the Roman Missal in 1970. The missal is fine as it is. What is needed is better formation of priests in liturgy, and better discipline and supervision.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top