A
AugustTherese
Guest
Fine, then maybe they should not call their ‘services’, Mass; it will only confound Lutheran parishioners in contrast with Catholic/Eastern Church Masses. If Lutheran ministers want to borrow that term and use it colloquially, sure, I guess. But, perhaps they should refer to their services as Lutheran Masses, because, as mentioned before, the liturgical elements needed for a Mass to be what it is in the Apostolic and Catholic understanding, viz. the Sacrifice of the Mass, are entirely missing; not void, or empty, or a generic replica, but completely non-existent.I suspect Lutherans are not moved by the opinion.
I see, again and again, Protestant denominations trying so hard to cherish and implement Christian orthodoxy and antiquity by borrowing terms and actions from the Catholic Church (which is not inherently wrong) without knowing why those terms and actions are used, especially in the liturgy of the Mass. For example, if you are a Protestant minister and you wear priestly garments and ‘consecrate’ over an altar, but do not believe in the Eucharistic sacrifice, then you have no idea what you are doing and why you are performing those liturgical actions and words; those Protestant ministers are either ignorant to their intentions or they are performing a near-sacrilegious parody of the Holy Mass. Either way, the Holy Mass is not some mere term used to ‘send forth’ the faithful after giving a sermon and singing a few hymns; rather, it is the actualized, realized, and re-presented Paschal Mystery of the life, death, resurrection, and ascension of Our Blessed Lord in which we have the privilege to share in its fruits - which can only be offered through valid rites by validly ordained priests. And when you (not you personally), such as Luther did, reject the Sacrifice of the Mass you are left with minimal amounts of truth and sanctification.