I have
never witnessed, in person, applause used explicitly to show appreciation to God for His works through man. If this is how the situation is presented to the faithful and they understand it that way, my opinion would change dramatically. I acknowledge that at times it may be acceptable if this is really the underlying purpose. I have simply never been present for one of those situations.
Wow!
That is all I have been present for. Celebrating 50 years of the Sacrament of Marriage, Ordinations, Celebrating the Sacrament of First Communion, and the most recent, when a young man, thanked the congregation for the opportunity to go to the National Catholic Youth Conference. (And the last one was completely of God! We are a small congregation and I the Youth director was responsible for raising this money. I had so many prayers of “I can’t do this Lord. What have I done Lord. Help me Lord.” That I KNOW this was God’s doing. And the Holy Spirit was so completely visible in this young man, it brought more than one person to tears.)
By the way, I was referring to
Michelle Arnold’s responses in the “Ask an Apologist” forum. Father Vincent Serpa’s reply is in regard to an ordination ceremony, which is a truly special circumstance. (In other words, it was
not a birthday!)
But Father Vincent Serpa was one of my links. And I do not believe we were just discussing whether or not it is okay to clap for Birthdays, but clapping in general with special circumstances. I do not think a birthday, unless it was Christ’s should fall under that heading.
Before dismissing the point about the homily at the Funeral Mass, understand that it was made in order to clarify that just because we see it in one special circumstance, it does not give license to everybody else to do the same. The fact that Cardinal Ratzinger did not halt the applause was being interpreted by some to mean that the Church fully condoned the practice.
Okay, let’s talk about the Funeral Mass. The Church does condone clapping under special circumstances. Funeral Mass for our last pope would certainly qualify as a special circumstance.