Tis_Bearself
Patron
How is anyone “victimized” by a priest taking 1 minute out of the homily for us to ask our neighbors their prayer intentions?Way to blame the victims, so to speak.
How is anyone “victimized” by a priest taking 1 minute out of the homily for us to ask our neighbors their prayer intentions?Way to blame the victims, so to speak.
No, starting your homily with “ask the person around you what prayer requests they have.” Po-tay-to, po-tah-to.Stopping the Mass and asking everyone to start talking to the people around them isn’t a change?
Umm… ok.if this happened in my parish on Sunday I’d be looking for another parish on Monday
@DIERM beat me to it, but: nor is it yours to define what’s a “change in the Mass”.as I heard Msgr. Pope say an EWTN Radio this morning, “Father, this isn’t your Mass.”
From which rubric would you say he deviated in this case?endure a priest deviating from the rubrics?
Again: what’s the deviation that you perceive?So a priest deliberately deviates from the rubrics, but we’re the one’s who are wrong if we recognize it as a deviation from the rubrics?
The obvious implication was (since he was responding to another poster who said this :With the awesome responsibility to attend Mass, comes the responsibility to be in the proper disposition to receive the free grace from God. . .when we make it so difficult that we have to sit in the pews with a scorecard to keep track of our perceived liturgical abuses, we become not a participant, but a mere observer.
The implication was that Mike (the poster above) in his responsibility should be ‘not in the pew with a scorecard’. . .as if simply commenting made him a liturgical Nazi.My responsibility as a lay Catholic is to attend Mass, the priest’s responsibility as a priest is to follow the rubric.
Since I said it, I will respond. The Mass is not a social hour, and the purpose of the homily is not for everyone to start talking to each other. If the pastor is this relaxed in celebrating the Mass than I would assume he is relaxed in many other areas of his ministry. I’m blessed to have several churches within 20 minutes of my house so I could easily find another church, I’m not sure what I would do if it meant driving to the next state.I think the issue we’re having in this case is that the priest’s action that people are complaining about seems like it might not be a deviation from the “rubrics” at all and is something very short, done in a spirit of good fellowship. For someone to get so bothered by it that they say they’d find a different parish to attend immediately if it happened at his parish, seems to be making a mountain out of a molehill.
From your link. Please show me the part where it says, “now ask the parishioners to stand, greet and interact with each other for a few moments.” And I’m sorry, just because something is not specifically proscribed does not mean it is allowed.The Homily
On Sundays and Holydays of Obligation there is to be a Homily at every Mass that is celebrated with the people attending, and it may not be omitted without a grave reason. On other days it is recommended, especially on the weekdays of Advent, Lent, and Easter Time, as well as on other festive days and occasions when the people come to church in greater numbers.[65]
- The Homily is part of the Liturgy and is highly recommended,[62] for it is necessary for the nurturing of the Christian life. It should be an explanation of some aspect of the readings from Sacred Scripture or of another text from the Ordinary or the Proper of the Mass of the day and should take into account both the mystery being celebrated and the particular needs of
the listeners.[63]- The Homily should ordinarily be given by the Priest Celebrant himself or be entrusted by him to a concelebrating Priest, or from time to time and, if appropriate, to the Deacon, but never to a lay person.[64] In particular cases and for a just cause, the Homily may even be given by a Bishop or a Priest who is present at the celebration but cannot concelebrate.
It is appropriate for a brief period of silence to be observed after
the Homily.
and inversely, because something is not specifically prohibited does not mean it is not allowed…if so, we would be belly aching that the priest coughed during the Eucharistic Prayer, and the Rubrics do not authorize a cough.And I’m sorry, just because something is not specifically proscribed does not mean it is allowed.
That’s actually in there, enacting the Lord’s words that He would not drink of the fruit of the…wherever that stuff comes from…until He drinks in new, in the kingdom.lets all pass around a bottle of moonshine and take a swig right after communion
Right there. The priest obviously feels that there is a need for his parishioners to pray for one another.and the particular needs of
the listeners.[63]
It seems you have to find out more before considering what “recourse” you might have. See where this idea comes from, what its purpose is, how its really supposed to work, what other options have been considered, what the justification is, have the rubrics been kept in mind, etc.Therefore, I am uncertain as to whether this new addition to the Mass is the priest’s idea or the bishop’s (I will find out more at an upcoming meeting.)
It’s not about having a Mass to my liking or to the priest’s liking, or to liking to most of the assembly or anybody’s liking. It’s about the Mass — the most sacred liturgy of the Catholic Church — conforming to the General Instructions of the Roman Missal (GIRM). The GIRM has rules of what the homily should contain and who may say it (a priest or deacon). No where in the GIRM does it allow a priest to improvise as the priest did as described by the original poster (OP).Well, I’m a busy person and it’s more important to me that I find a Mass on Sunday and every other day of the week that I can fit into my schedule, than having the Mass operated perfectly to my liking. I’m willing to bet that a lot of Catholics are not that concerned if the priest takes 1 minute of homily time to have people talk to their neighbor or say an extra prayer. It either doesn’t bother them, or even if it does, it’s not worth it to them to drive 15 miles or even 5 miles to a different church. If they get that wound up about it, the odds are they aren’t even at the parish church, they’re already driving a half hour or an hour to go to the TLM.