Actually, I don’t believe he ever said it was wrong. He definitely said he doesn’t like it.
Does he come right out and use the word “wrong”. No, but he is pretty clear it is not a posture we are to have and says rather we are to be following the posture of the deacon.
Also right up front he said it doesn’t belong in the liturgy. He states there is a purpose in the liturgy and it is not a time for individual expression. He also says at the Our Father the priest has his hands extended but everyone else technically should not. It is the posture for the priest and not for us.
Both holding hands and raising hands during the Our Father usually go together. Most people holding hands are holding them together in the orans position, so it is good he combined the two issues.
I happen to personally like Father Ricardo and I know people other than him who do not like holding hands during the Our Father.
I think this kind of hits on the nail on the head pretty close. Father Ricardo is not the only priest who has instructed the laity not to do this and apparently the situation has come to the point where Archbishop Chaput felt the need to make an analysis of the matter. I haven’t read his analysis of the situation so I can not comment on what he has said.
Though what I see is, despite the requests of many good priests, adult Catholics are saying until Rome puts it’s foot down and makes a clear statement telling us to stop, we will ignore the instructions of the priests and continue.
In other words, as someone else said, just because we are not told explicitly we can’t do something, doesn’t mean we can do something or should do something.
Father Ricardo, or the number of laity who don’t like it need to let go and leave the issue alone
and lets include many other priests who have asked the laity to stop. And with that, I quite disagree with your sentiments here and hope for quite the opposite, that more priests and laity do not leave the issue alone but continue to instruct the laity on proper postures at Mass.
I wonder in the first place, where did this practice (of the congregation praying the Pater Noster in the orans posture and hands held together) originate from?
From what I understand it started after Vatican II with the ecumenical movement and much protestantism crept in to the Catholic church. After Vatican II there came a whole “we are one in the Spirit” attitude. Catholic theology teaches we are one in the Church under the Bishop of Rome and united because of the Sacraments.