How To Bring Life To The Mass

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santaro75

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Food is food. But sometimes I feel like we are being fed dry white bread. I mean yes it will feed us and sustain us, BUT…I go to mass and a lot of the time I see people bored out of their craw until the liturgy of the Eucharist. And I have to admit i am one of them.

What can we do to make the message really hit home with the parishioners and make the mass more interesting?
 
Surely you must notice people around you who aren’t bored out of their craw. Why don’t you ask yourself what those folks are bringing to the Mass, that you apparently aren’t?

The Mass does not take place for your entertainment.
 
This is some great stuff by Benedict XVI on the Liturgy. I think it might help you appreciate more what is going on:) :

The Christian faith can never be separated from the soil of sacred events, from the choice made by God, who wanted to speak to us, to become man, to die and rise again, in a particular place and at a particular time. . . . The Church does not pray in some kind of mythical omni-temporality. She cannot forsake her roots. She recognizes the true utterance of God precisely in the concreteness of its history, in time and place: to these God ties us, and by these we are all tied together. The diachronic aspect, praying with the Fathers and the apostles, is part of what we mean by rite, but it also includes a local aspect, extending from Jerusalem to Antioch, Rome, Alexandria, and Constantinople. Rites are not, therefore, just the products of inculturation, however much they may have incorporated elements from different cultures. They are forms of the apostolic Tradition and of its unfolding in the great places of the Tradition.
Unspontaneity is of their essence. In these rites I discover that something is approaching me here that I did not produce myself, that I am entering into something greater than myself, which ultimately derives from divine revelation. This is why the Christian East calls the liturgy the “Divine Liturgy”, expressing thereby the liturgy’s independence from human control.

Dancing is not a form of expression for the Christian liturgy. In about the third century, there was an attempt in certain Gnostic-Docetic circles to introduce it into the liturgy. For these people, the Crucifixion was only an appearance. . . . Dancing could take the place of the liturgy of the Cross, because, after all, the Cross was only an appearance. The cultic dances of the different religions have different purposes - incantation, imitative magic, mystical ecstasy - none of which is compatible with the essential purpose of the liturgy as the “reasonable sacrifice”. It is totally absurd to try to make the liturgy “attractive” by introducing dancing pantomimes (wherever possible performed by professional dance troupes), which frequently (and rightly, from the professionals’ point of view) end with applause. Wherever applause breaks out in the liturgy because of some human achievement, it is a sure sign that the essence of liturgy has totally disappeared and been replaced by a kind of religious entertainment. Such attraction fades quickly - it cannot compete in the market of leisure pursuits, incorporating as it increasingly does various forms of religious titillation.

This action of God, which takes place through human speech, is the real “action” for which all creation is in expectation. The elements of the earth are transubstantiated, pulled, so to speak, from their creaturely anchorage, grasped at the deepest ground of their being, and changed into the Body and Blood of the Lord. The New Heaven and the New Earth are anticipated. The real “action” in the liturgy in which we are all supposed to participate is the action of God himself. This is what is new and distinctive about the Christian liturgy: God himself acts and does what is essential.

The Cross is the approbation of our existence, not in words, but in an act so completely radical that it caused God to become flesh and pierced this flesh to the quick; that, to God, it was worth the death of his incarnate Son. One who is so loved that the other identifies his life with this love and no longer desires to live if he is deprived of it; one who is loved even unto death – such a one knows that he is truly loved. But if God so loves us, then we are loved in truth. Then love is truth, and truth is love. Then life is worth living. This is the evangelium. This is why, even as the message of the Cross, it is glad tidings for one who believes; the only glad tidings that destroy the ambiguity of all other joys and make them worthy to be joy. Christianity is, by its very nature, joy – the ability to be joyful.
 
Oh, one more thing that has really helped me a ton. Pope St. Pius X said, “don’t pray during the Mass, pray the Mass.” For me, it’s like I am engrossed in one big prayer.
 
You are right. Scott Hahns book “the lambs supper” really sets the scene for the mass where we become the mass and not attending it.

thanks.
 
The Mass is the Perfect Prayer of the Church. I know at times I struggle with my mind wandering since I cannot hear the priest’s homily most of the time as I have variable hearing loss. But, I always pray for the Grace to focus on the Mass, and I have heard that Thomas Howard’s book “If Your Mind Wanders at Mass” is good. Just a thought. Another I would look at would be Sheen’s “Cavalry and the Mass.” (short but excellent).Thanks and God Bless.
 
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santaro75:
You are right. Scott Hahns book “the lambs supper” really sets the scene for the mass where we become the mass and not attending it.

thanks.
This book really opened up my eyes. Now when I’m at mass, no matter how bad the homily or the music, I know that I’m actually in heaven along with all the angels and saints who are doing the same thing up there.

The only way you can be bored at the mass is if you do not truly understand the mass. The first step is to educate yourself on all its parts and underlying meanings. When you discover the richness and beauty, you will never feel “bored” again.
 
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santaro75:
What can we do to make the message really hit home with the parishioners and make the mass more interesting?
the Mass is inherently interesting, it makes us participants in the most gripping, exciting, emotional, challenging story in history. Boredom comes from not knowing and understanding what is going on, why we do it, where it comes from, and from not listening and participating.

having said that, a lot of the peripherals they way they are allowed to happen in many parishes seem to work deliberately against the drama of the Mass. If the talented lay people cannot or will not provide good instrumental and sung music, there should be no music. Bad music is worse than no music, and is the single biggest offense against good liturgy that is perpetrated. The second biggest offense is badly trained lay ministers and sad to say even deacons. Each diocese should make it mandatory for all ministers, even and especially those who have been serving for a long time, to be properly trained.

Also mandatory for all liturgical ministers, not only lectors but especially lectors and readers, should be weekly session before Sunday where they meet and pray and study the Sunday readings.
 
You only get out what you put in. If you go there to be entertained, you will be bored, but if you go their to pray and send up your prayers with the prayers of the priest, you will have a richer experience.
 
my brother reminds me of an outstanding book by our new pope, Spirit of the Liturgy. read it and you will never again be bored at Mass.
 
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Genesis315:
Oh, one more thing that has really helped me a ton. Pope St. Pius X said, “don’t pray during the Mass, pray the Mass.” For me, it’s like I am engrossed in one big prayer.
AMEN!!!
 
If your parish does not include the readings for the next week in the bulletin, ask your pastor to start including that. (Alternatively, you can look it up–I’m sure there are lots of places on the net that do include the readings in advance.) Read them over the course of the next week–it really does help to be prepared that way.

The Mass really is not about entertaining us, and coming prepared to worship is the only way that one brings life to the Mass–it’s not a jouncy, bouncy, razzle-dazzle shot in the arm of enthusiasm–there’s a feast for the soul, but it’s found in the quiet, the silences, and the recognition of the Presence we are before.
 
Maybe if people would actually sing when they are supposed to it would sound cooler. Try going to the Vatican for Mass and it will be amazing because of the singing alone.
 
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santaro75:
Food is food. But sometimes I feel like we are being fed dry white bread. I mean yes it will feed us and sustain us, BUT…I go to mass and a lot of the time I see people bored out of their craw until the liturgy of the Eucharist. And I have to admit i am one of them.

What can we do to make the message really hit home with the parishioners and make the mass more interesting?
I have to admit,i have been bored quite a few times,until,i really started actually listening to what was being said,i used to just be there but not take much notice,until i was taking in what was being said,then my interest grew!
It can be a little dry at times,but youll find that youll like it if you listening carefully!
 
I can say I was one who used to be really bored with mass, and I now love it.

I think the reason was that I had no idea what was going on. I didn’t understand what each part of the mass meant. Now that I do, it all has so much meaning, that I really look forward to it.
 
Does anyone remember who had the tape/cd called “I’m not being fed.” subtitled something like “the great Catholic eating disorder” ?

I used to have it, it was really good. I can’t remember if it was Cavins, Keating, or Madrid. I know it wasn’t Hahn. Anyway it did a good job of explaining our role of offering ourselves with Christ, much the way Hahn does in The Lamb’s Supper.

We are given the great opportunity to be ‘present’ at Calvary, stepping outside of time. Whoa. What is not exciting about that? Talk about riveting science fiction and drama.

My suggestion would be to remember to get engaged during the readings, and during the offertory make a prayer of what you have to offer up to the Lord. Your heart, your suffering, your joy, your labors, etc…and it will be placed at the altar, taken up to heaven and blessed. Then you’ll get his very body and blood, soul and divinity. You will be truly fed.

Learn from some of these sources that have been offered. You won’t regret it. God Bless, Paula
 
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JackmanUSC:
Maybe if people would actually sing when they are supposed to it would sound cooler.
Another person looking for an “entertainment factor” at Mass.

A mass without singing (which I prefer - the mind doesn’t wander as much) is just as authentic as a mass with singing.
 
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rcn:
A mass without singing (which I prefer - the mind doesn’t wander as much) is just as authentic as a mass with singing.
This is so true. You’d think more “active” stuff like singing would have the opposite effect, but I also find my mind wandering during the singing. I’m sure it’s different for everyone though.
 
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Melissa:
The Mass really is not about entertaining us, and coming prepared to worship is the only way that one brings life to the Mass–it’s not a jouncy, bouncy, razzle-dazzle shot in the arm of enthusiasm–there’s a feast for the soul, but it’s found in the quiet, the silences, and the recognition of the Presence we are before.
Making sure that the silences are there is a sure fire way to add “life” to the Mass. Many priests seem to be afraid of silence these days. A few moments of quiet after the homily as well a some time for stillness (without the music) after Communion would do wonders for rekindling peoples’ attentiveness and/or couteracting boredom - especially if the pastor did a series of teachings/homilies on the value and place of silence and stillness during the Mass.
 
I don’t understand that comment. If we really know what happens at every Mass, what else could be brought into it? We can’t take for granted that we have Our Lord Jesus Christ present Body, Blood Soul & Divinity in the Eucharist. Isn’t that AWESOME?!
 
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