S
slewi
Guest
Funny, but prior to Vatican II we never had problems like these…
Actually, “everything” is not prescribed. It might be somewhat so for the priest celebrant and occasionally is for the laity, but not everything. And in this particular case, not the posture during the Lord’s prayer.…But for the Mass, EVERYTHING is
prescribed…
Sure it’s clear - on postures that have been established as common postures and gestures, i.e., Standing, kneeling, sitting, bowing, signing, etc. This citation has no bearing on situations where no common posture has been established.It seems the lack of an ‘official document’ has been brought up a bit much, but reading the USCCB page on the matter of posture seems quite clear:
“The Church sees in these common postures and gestures both a symbol of the unity of those who have come together to worship and a means of fostering that unity. We are not free to change these postures to suit our own individual piety, for the Church makes it clear that our unity of posture and gesture is an expression of our participation in the one Body formed by the baptized with Christ, our head. When we stand, kneel, sit, bow and sign ourselves in common action, we given unambiguous witness that we are indeed the Body of Christ, united in heart, mind and spirit.”
If one hasn’t already made up one’s mind that is…
It seems odd that you quote the USCCB website, then attack someone else as “legalistic” who rightly defends what the USCCB says here: nccbuscc.org/liturgy/q&a/mass/orans.shtmlNevermind, it’s clear that you want to make the Mass about you, not about ‘us’. Your legalism in reading that makes it clear you missed the ultimate point of the document-- the Mass isn’t about you. This is the classic Protestant error, about which I am a fair bit knowledgeable…
Is only one person who looks at the website and interprets what it says a “legalist”? It makes it sound like it’s really about *you * and your preferences and that everyone should get in line behind those or they are a “legalist” for finding their closeness to God in some other form.Many Catholics are in the habit of holding their hands in the “Orans” posture during the Lord’s prayer along with the celebrant. Some do this on their own as a private devotional posture while some congregations make it a general practice for their communities.
Is this practice permissible under the current rubrics, either as a private practice not something adopted by a particular parish as a communal gesture?
No position is prescribed in the present Sacramentary for an assembly gesture during the Lord’s Prayer.
Easy there, teddy. I never said the Mass was about me, and if you had read this or the countless other threads that have been posted on this topic in the past you would know that such a thought is the furthest thing from my mind. So spare me the attitude. The Mass isn’t about you either.Nevermind, it’s clear that you want to make the Mass about you, not about ‘us’. Your legalism in reading that makes it clear you missed the ultimate point of the document-- the Mass isn’t about you…
Never having been a Protestant, I wouldn’t know.…This is the classic Protestant error, about which I am a fair bit knowledgeable…
During a Mass, no, considering that the GIRM is prescriptive in that regard (GIRM 43) requiring the congregation to stand during the Lord’s Prayer.John
…One more question: If I wanted to lie prostrate on the floor during the Our Father, would that be OK with you?
I agree with you completely regarding congregational hand-holding. My points were related ONLY to the use of the orans during the Lord’s Prayer.…I feel the same way about enforced joinng of hands in prayer…
Actually Bill, you did accuse us of disobedience, both directly and implicitly. Directly hereJohn
you speak of charity, but your comments to me were not very charitable.
I did not accuse anyone of disobedience. I simply re-printed instructions from the Vatican and indicated that they were quite clear.
If you’re waiting for Benedict XVI to make a ruling on this, then you’ll likely wait in vain.
One more question: If I wanted to lie prostrate on the floor during the Our Father, would that be OK with you?
and indirectly here and in your first postIf you read a very clear instruction from the Vatican and then choose to follow your own preference instead, then you are failing to obey. It is quite simple.
I apologize if I seemed uncharitable, which I might have been a little bit. I have to chalk it up to great frustration at continually being referred to as disobedient and having irrelevant and misinterpreted passages cited.…who exercise their own opinions and preferences rather than paying attention to the well documented instructions…
To begin with, the laity do not have hosts in their hands, so there is nothing to hold up. And no, I am not confused. I am simply saying that the referenced material was to the priest of bishop, not the laity. As is noted after your post, there is only a bit of information given to the laity as to their postures, essentially as to sitting, standing, kneeling, or bowing. I may have missed something the last time I read the GIRM, but I don’t recall any directions at all as to where one’s hands are to be or in what position at any point of the Mass.Dear OTM
You wrote “The difficulty in attempting to prove your point here is that it does not address what the laity should or should not do, but only the priest or bishop.”
Are you suggesting that everytime the rubrics indicate what a priest should do, they also ought to say (perhaps in parentheses) whether it also applies to the laity? When the rubrics say that the priest raises the host at the consecration, are you confused because the rubrics don’t say whether you should or should not be raising the host too? I think not.
If you were to accept your arguement, then you would have to extend it to any directions given to the priest of bishop - which includes hands folded - as “proper” to them. At which point you have just put yourself in a box that would not allow you to put your hands palms together, as that is not “proper” to the priest or bishop. I suspect that you don’t want to go there, but you are the one referencing the definition of “proper” as being any direction of the priest or bishop’s posture in the GIRM, and especially as it relates to his hands.Second, if the rubrics say that a bishop or priest prays with hands extended and then later refer to what is “proper to the priest celebrant,” then it is pretty clear that the orans posture is “proper.”
Again, it doesn’t tell you to fold your hands. As to eating ice cream, most of us would agree that act has no religious connotations; most of us would agree that hnads held palms together, and in the orans position generally are a sign of prayer (whether for laity or not). Eating ice cream is a red herring, just as most of the other suggestions of actions or postures that have no connection to prayer are red herrings.The Roman Missal is not responsive to the issue??? I agree that there are almost no directions to the laity other than standing, sitting or kneeling (and bowing during the Creed), but rubrics are generally affirmative. They do not list everything we are NOT supposed to do. The rubrics do not tell us that we should NOT eat ice cream during Mass. But since they do not affirmatively tell us to eat ice cream during Mass, we do not do so. They tell us what we should do, not what we should not do.
However, you are equating unity with uniformity. I am not convinced that the two words are completely synonomous. Further, if the majority are, for example, holding hands, and a few are not, who is it that is being devisive?Whenever I have these types of discussions, I always think of the importance of unity. If this issue is as divisive as it appears to be, based on the multiple posts on this subject, then it indicates to me that perhaps we ought to focus less on what we want as individuals and instead focus on showing our unity not only in what we believe, but also in how we pray, at least during Mass.
Remember that for private prayer, any posture, words, gestures, etc. are fine. But at Mass, we ought to be exhibiting unity in word and gesture.
No, actually, there is almost nothing prescribed as to what the laity is to do with their hands.John and OTM
Please read this below before replying to the previous posts. Thanks!
Bill
But for the Mass, EVERYTHING is
prescribed, because the liturgy is the prayer of not just one person, one
family, or even the local community of priest and congregation. It is the
prayer of the entire Catholic community, the entire Roman Catholic Church,
the entire Mystical Body of Christ.
To which, for the majority of what you say, you and I do not disagree. I am all for reverence. You may find that the orans posture, or holding hands during the Our Father is not a sign of reverence, and on that we would disagree.The liturgy is, most assuredly, about more than rules; it is about communion
with the Father through the saving mystery of Christ in the Holy Spirit,
effected by means of sacred words and sensibly discernible sacred signs. But
it is precisely for this reason that the Church takes liturgical norms
seriously.
Rubrics, the directive precepts or liturgical directives found in the
Missale Romanum (Roman Missal), including the sacramentary and lectionary,
and in the Roman Ritual, an official authorized book of the Holy See, are
real laws. They are prescriptions for the good order of external worship in
the Catholic Church and they emanate from the highest authority–the
sovereign pontiff.
Rubrics are not intended to stifle personality or creativity; on the
contrary, they provide the parameters within which one can make the liturgy
truly come alive for God’s people. Rubrics protect the liturgy from
banality, the imposition of idiosyncrasies and material heresy, ensuring
that it does not become the private possession of any one person or group of
persons, but remains the treasure of the entire Catholic community.
Amazing. Are you implying that I’m being disobedient to the church? Have you not read what I posted before? Our bishops, when asked directly, DID NOT prohibit holding hands during the Our Father. Since they didn’t mention anything about the orans, common sense tells me that they also DO NOT prohibit the orans posture. Even the Holy See granted the Italian bishop’s request to allow the laity to adopt this posture during the Our Father!Regardless of whether you are from the Philippines, Mayberry, New York City or anywhere else, it seems to me that the right response is:
“I did not realize the Vatican taught against this. But now that I do realize it, I will do as my church teaches.”
It is hard to understand why everyone wants to defend his or her practices.
To be catholic is to be obedient.
They could be clear enough to issue something that says what the posture should be if they want something specific.To: Need More Light
I am NOT saying you are being disobedient.
But I would ask you to read the text below and then indicate whether obedience means listening to your bishops in the case:
Even a bishop does not have the authority to change the postures of the people. The gestures and posture of the faithful require a decision by the Conference of Bishops and the approval of the Apostolic See (General Instruction on the Roman Missal #390).
**
How much clearer can the Vatican be on the issue of posture?
**
Care to explain to me then what you meant by the last sentences on your recent post to me? You’re saying I’m not disobedient but then you ask me if I should follow my bishops?To: Need More Light
I am NOT saying you are being disobedient.
But I would ask you to read the text below and then indicate whether obedience means listening to your bishops in the case:
Even a bishop does not have the authority to change the postures of the people. The gestures and posture of the faithful require a decision by the Conference of Bishops and the approval of the Apostolic See (General Instruction on the Roman Missal #390).
**
How much clearer can the Vatican be on the issue of posture?
**
ncjohn said:**
**How much clearer can the Vatican be on the issue of posture?
They could be clear enough to issue something that says what the posture should be if they want something specific.
Yeah, that was kind of a “duh” statement. I could be more clear with one sentence, so I am sure the Vatican has people equally capable. The mere length of this thread shows that clarity is lacking.