S
semper_catholicus
Guest
This an abuse. Perhaps you might like to bring it up to him?
He made a slip up. The church would be better if you ran out and got him a coffee or whatever he needed rather than going on an internet forum about if it was valid. You know him enough to know it was an accident and even if it was (which it isn’t) that wouldn’t change a thing as it’s in the past.A curious thing happened today at the Sunday Mass I attended. The celebrant omitted an important part of the mass. I think because he misread the wording or something has been omitted. It wasn’t intentional since I know this priest has been saying Mass for over 20 years. He was saying the prayer leading up to the part where the proper begins with the words Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of Hosts - something that is usually sung. He then went immediately to the Consecration holding up the Bread and then the wine. He skipped the prayer that says, "Lord let your spirit come upon these gifts like the dewfall ……
Some people were wondering if the Consecration was valid and if the bread and wine were really transformed due to the slip up. Opinions???
I’ve had two posts flagged and removed so far on this post. It has been a real good learning experience as to the attitudes of a lot of the members of this forum. It certainly will influence my desire to continue contributing anything.Yea, a priest has been faithfully serving the church for 20 years, one time he makes a mistake, and the OP goes up and tells him it was an abuse of the liturgy. Great idea…
Who is not an American?You’re not American so I’m going to give you an ignorance pass on this one. American priests are currently worked to the bone. It’s an absolute miracle that they can tie their shoes, nevermind be presentable and say (several!) Sunday Masses.
Diaconia:![]()
???Not if the epiclesis was omitted.
Catholicism makes me feel stupid, all the time.
Not sure to what you are referring. If it is the word epiclesis, I simply googled it and got a good definition that seems correct and consistent with the Catholic prayer of Eucharist institution.I looked it up and couldn’t say for sure exactly what it is.
From post #7, I gather that the epiclesis is the passage which is the OP subject, ie. “Lord let your spirit come upon these gifts like the dewfall ……”I looked it up and couldn’t say for sure exactly what it is.
It is also a total surprise to me that this is part of the minimal requirement for a valid consecration. Glad to have learned that.…
The questioner asked if the priest changed the bread and wine; which he did not. The epiclesis (calling down of the Holy Spirit) is required.
In The Divine Liturgy the consecratory words occur before the epiclesis. Without both, the gifts are not changed.
Adam is from Ireland. From my understanding, the priest stress situation is nowhere near like what Americans face.Xanthippe_Voorhees:![]()
Who is not an American?You’re not American so I’m going to give you an ignorance pass on this one. American priests are currently worked to the bone. It’s an absolute miracle that they can tie their shoes, nevermind be presentable and say (several!) Sunday Masses.
Thanks XV. I wasn’t sure who you were referring to. I’ve made it known in many posts I live near Pittsburgh in western PA. Thought maybe something I posted gave the impression my response was consistent with another culture.joeybaggz:![]()
Adam is from Ireland. From my understanding, the priest stress situation is nowhere near like what Americans face.Xanthippe_Voorhees:![]()
Who is not an American?You’re not American so I’m going to give you an ignorance pass on this one. American priests are currently worked to the bone. It’s an absolute miracle that they can tie their shoes, nevermind be presentable and say (several!) Sunday Masses.
East and West have disagreed about whether the words of institution or the Epiclesis is the necessary prayer for the consecration of the Eucharist. The Western view has been that the words of Christ invoke the action of Christ, while the East held the coming of the Holy Spirit is what effects the change.It is also a total surprise to me that [the epiclesis] is part of the minimal requirement for a valid consecration.
No… an abuse is a subjective assertion – it requires intent.Looking at it objectively, an abuse happened.
Which kind of gives the ‘stress’ suggestion some merit.I’ve made it known in many posts I live near Pittsburgh in western PA.