R
Roman_Army
Guest
About a year ago I went to visit another parish in New Jersey (spanish mass and seemed charismatic) and there was this lady durring the mass comming up to the podium explaining each part of the mass, before each part happened. It seemed as if she were narrating. I thought it was a new invention from the charismatics, and a liturgical abuse.
**Recently I went on vacation to Puerto Rico. I went to mass there for the first time in a small parish in the more rural parts of the island. There again I saw a woman narrating the mass and explaining each part. I also noticed that they changed the “Lord hear our prayer” response to: “The Lord is my pastor, there is nothing I lack” (sung in spanish). All this was obviously alien to me. I thought that maybe it’s another liturgical abuse just like in that New Jersey parish. Then the next sunday I went to the old Cathedral of old San Juan, Puerto Rico. They had a beautiful children choir from Aruba there visiting and performing. Then again the mass started and again there was a female narrator. And the same changed prayer response. So then I figured, this is the old big Cathedral, does this mean that the entire island and all of Carribean and possibly Latin America is following this same liturgy? Then that would explain why that spanish mass in New Jersey was like that.:whacky: **
Now I’m not much of a liturgical expert. But, do these constitute liturgical abuse? Or am I going crazy? I don’t think I’m so stupid that I need to see a documentary durring the mass, lol. To me it seems that they misinterpreted Vatican II and went to the extreme. What do you think?
**Recently I went on vacation to Puerto Rico. I went to mass there for the first time in a small parish in the more rural parts of the island. There again I saw a woman narrating the mass and explaining each part. I also noticed that they changed the “Lord hear our prayer” response to: “The Lord is my pastor, there is nothing I lack” (sung in spanish). All this was obviously alien to me. I thought that maybe it’s another liturgical abuse just like in that New Jersey parish. Then the next sunday I went to the old Cathedral of old San Juan, Puerto Rico. They had a beautiful children choir from Aruba there visiting and performing. Then again the mass started and again there was a female narrator. And the same changed prayer response. So then I figured, this is the old big Cathedral, does this mean that the entire island and all of Carribean and possibly Latin America is following this same liturgy? Then that would explain why that spanish mass in New Jersey was like that.:whacky: **
Now I’m not much of a liturgical expert. But, do these constitute liturgical abuse? Or am I going crazy? I don’t think I’m so stupid that I need to see a documentary durring the mass, lol. To me it seems that they misinterpreted Vatican II and went to the extreme. What do you think?