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mercygate
Guest
Excellent post. Apostrophe: The oldest known ABOVE GROUND church in the world dates from about 245 A.D. (Dura-Europos). The altar is smack up against the wall.Then those that don’t think it was a big change won’t mind changing back. But the truth is, It actually is a big change. Psychologically and liturgically, the theological expression is different.
Most priests of all stripes will admit that being the “master of ceremonies” distracts the congregation from Christ and the brings it to the priest. This is why people gravitate towards the priests they like instead of Christ at Calvary.
That is extremely debatable.
Irrelevant. The Mass is more than the Last Supper. It is Calvary first and foremost.
Archeologism is not a reason to bring back an undeveloped form of liturgy.
Yes. And each time the priest kisses the altar he is commemorating the early martyrs.
No. He was leading the people to God. He didn’t turn his back on God in order to be the master of ceremonies.
That according to Msgr Klaus Gamber was the exception not the rule because of pagan Roman influences. And even in those circumstances, during the Eucharistic prayers, the congregation turned their backs to the priest.
How many?
Origen, Tertullian, Clement of Alexandria all stated that worship was Eastward.
What Seminary was that? Post conciliar seminaries are notorious for redacting the most Catholic of elements.
Actually it was the liturgical innovators of the 30’s that started the “facing the people” in light of their Fruedian, Marxist, Darwinian mentalities.
So you imagine. But it’s not. The priest in the Old Temple didn’t face the people when he approached the Holy of Holies.
Why??? The numbers in attendance, the orthodoxy and the liturgical abuse don’t seem to have been positively affected by priests facing the people.
The priest is supposed to become transparent during the Mass. Watch a TLM and the priest is almost anonymous. You see a cross on his back and you see Our Lord at the Elevation, not a priest’s face.