Hypocrisy in the Pews

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Ham1:
Brendan,

I think I follow you on this…

So, I guess then the question becomes what is a faithful Catholic to do? It seems the choices are A. pick whichever posture he personally likes or B. defer to the posture preferred by his Bishop. Which is the more prudent choice?
C. Pick the one preferred by the Pope?
 
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AltarMan:
Because it’s still the norm, despite the legal slithering.
That’s totally circular reasoning.

Why did they approve it? because it’s the norm. Why is it the norm? because they approved it. Why did they not revoke it? because it’s the norm. Why is it the norm? because they didn’t revoke it. Why did they change the previous norm? because it’s the norm. Why is it the norm? because they changed it.

It is the norm, but it was approved not because it is the norm but because the USCCB requested it. The Congregation for Divine Worship seems to have thought that this request was strange, but granted it with the caviat that people can choose to still receive kneeling.
 
AltarMan, I have a question for you:

The Society of Saint John Cantius uses an altar rail. Are you opposed to that?
 
I think Michelle Arnold hit the nail on the head with:

“…For a communicant at a standard Roman-rite liturgy to deliberately ignore the just instruction from a priest to receive Communion while standing, instruction given in accord with the liturgical rubrics approved by the Vatican for use in the United States, would be problematic indeed. We are called to be faithful to all just instruction given by the Church through its ordained ministers, not only to those instructions we like or understand…”

Available here in its entirety.
 
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totustuusmaria:
It (standing to receive Holy Communion) is the norm, but it was approved not because it is the norm but because the USCCB requested it. The Congregation for Divine Worship seems to have thought that this request was strange, but granted it with the caviat that people can choose to still receive kneeling.
Precisely.
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Ham1:
Then why did Rome not change the norm? Why did they approve it and later when questioned still not change it?
The Vatican has allowed the Diocesan Bishops to establish norms for Communion under both kinds. The subsequent USCCB document states:The norm for reception of Holy Communion in the dioceses of the United States is standing. Communicants should not be denied Holy Communion because they kneel. Rather, such instances should be addressed pastorally, by providing the faithful with proper catechesis on the reasons for this norm.

Neither this wording, nor that of the GIRM, allows the abolition of kneeling. While (some) Bishops considered kneeling Communicants to be disobedient, the Vatican clarification of their original intent settled that debate and proved those Bishops wrong.

Nevertheless, if the norms themselves are to be modified, the burden lies on the USCCB to do so. The GIRM gives them that responsibility. For the Vatican to revise the norm directly would require that they rescind the original permissions.
 
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Brendan:
AltarMan

what is your take on this

From Prot. n. 1322/02/L

So if a person kneels for Communion, is there disobedience involved? Are Vatican instructions being violated?

Yes or No?
That’s axiomatic. Of course they are. Refer to the GIRM.
 
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msproule:
Precisely.

The Vatican has allowed the Diocesan Bishops to establish norms for Communion under both kinds. The subsequent USCCB document states:The norm for reception of Holy Communion in the dioceses of the United States is standing. Communicants should not be denied Holy Communion because they kneel. Rather, such instances should be addressed pastorally, by providing the faithful with proper catechesis on the reasons for this norm.

Neither this wording, nor that of the GIRM, allows the abolition of kneeling. While (some) Bishops considered kneeling Communicants to be disobedient, the Vatican clarification of their original intent settled that debate and proved those Bishops wrong.

Nevertheless, if the norms themselves are to be modified, the burden lies on the USCCB to do so. The GIRM gives them that responsibility. For the Vatican to revise the norm directly would require that they rescind the original permissions.
"The norm for reception of Holy Communion in the dioceses of the United States is standing. Communicants should not be denied Holy Communion because they kneel. Rather, such instances should be addressed pastorally, by providing the faithful with proper catechesis on the reasons for this norm."

And it would be horribly wrong for someone to continue kneeling once they had received said catechesis. One has to wonder what the next level of excuse is after one’s pastor has shown them the GIRM and provided counseling on the matter?

Do we then regress to the “conscience” argument - the very one invoked by those who demand to hold hands during the Lord’s Prayer, stand during the consecation or assume the orans position?
 
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AltarMan:
And it would be horribly wrong for someone to continue kneeling once they had received said catechesis.
What wrong is being committed?
 
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Brendan:
Really?? the Vatican say they are not being disobedient.
Yes, and why should there even by a Curia if everyone is free to disregard their authority?
 
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AltarMan:
That’s axiomatic. Of course they are. Refer to the GIRM.
Read the actual instructions in the Bishops’ document. I already placed it in my previous post, but here it is again:
The norm for reception of Holy Communion in the dioceses of the United States is standing. Communicants should not be denied Holy Communion because they kneel. Rather, such instances should be addressed pastorally, by providing the faithful with proper catechesis on the reasons for this norm.
This directs the priest to take the following actions should a Communicant choose to kneel:
  1. Offer the Sacrament to the Communicant
  2. Explain why the USCCB has chosen standing as the
    norm
    Nowhere does it provide for the priest to demand a particular posture. Should he do so, this instruction should (at first) be heeded. Nevertheless, the Communicant does have recourse with the Diocesan Bishop and then with the Vatican. I believe that is what has occurred here. The Vatican has responded with a clarification of how the law may be applied, and as a result Communicants may kneel without fear of being denied the Sacrament nor of being treated as disobedient.
 
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msproule:
Read the actual instructions in the Bishops’ document. I already placed it in my previous post, but here it is again:
The norm for reception of Holy Communion in the dioceses of the United States is standing. Communicants should not be denied Holy Communion because they kneel. Rather, such instances should be addressed pastorally, by providing the faithful with proper catechesis on the reasons for this norm.
This directs the priest to take the following actions should a Communicant choose to kneel:
  1. Offer the Sacrament to the Communicant
  2. Explain why the USCCB has chosen standing as the
    norm
    Nowhere does it provide for the priest to demand a particular posture. Should he do so, this instruction should (at first) be heeded. Nevertheless, the Communicant does have recourse with the Diocesan Bishop and then with the Vatican. I believe that is what has occurred here. The Vatican has responded with a clarification of how the law may be applied, and as a result Communicants may kneel without fear of being denied the Sacrament nor of being treated as disobedient.
You have underscored my thesis perfectly. Just read posting #25. It’s not always easy to follow the Church in place of one’s ego but it’s certainly possible.
 
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AltarMan:
Incorrect.

In brief, that’s not your call. That’s up to the Church. You may have trouble with being selctively obedient, but that does not suggest that your selective disobedience is the correct road to take.
Correction, it is up to the Church in its competant authority. Some issues are not within the authority of the Church to modify or change. Matters that apply to the Sacra Doctrina or the Sensus Fidei cannot be changed by any Ecclisiastical authority including the Holy Father or the Bishops is Solemn Council.
 
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Ham1:
I have to say I agree with Altarman’s last post. We can’t follow the Church’s rules only when we like them and other times step around them with the excuse of “tradition.” If the Church sets a norm, we are to submit and follow it. Even if we don’t like it and even if it appears to us to be without precedent.

Look at it this way…I think many of us can agree that the current translation of the Mass is not a good one. But nonetheless it is THE english translation of the Mass. Ask yourself: would you support it if your priest commanded his congregation to begin saying “And with your spirit.”? After all, this would be a more traditional response. Sure the Vatican approved text doesn’t say it that way, but hey this is closer to the Latin and to tradition, right? The answer of course is that No we wouldn’t prefer it because even though it is less traditional it is the official wording and must be followed.
No, but the pastor of souls could opt to use the official Latin of the Novus Ordo which is the norm of the Church as opposed to the permitted vernacular.
 
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Ham1:
Of course, it goes for the USCCB. Is there an instance where they defied Rome? I wasn’t aware.
The USCCB is not a competant authority. Rather it has a purpose of collegiality among the local bishops. No bishop is bound by a statement of the local conference unless Rome dicates otherwise by making particular law. Yet, even in the case of particular law a Bishop can exempt his See from the particular law by appeal to the Holy See.
 
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mosher:
Correction, it is up to the Church in its competant authority. Some issues are not within the authority of the Church to modify or change. Matters that apply to the Sacra Doctrina or the Sensus Fidei cannot be changed by any Ecclisiastical authority including the Holy Father or the Bishops is Solemn Council.
So the Catholic Church (AKA The Holy See) is not competant to define liturgical postures for the laity? Further, the Catholic Church does not have the authority to modify said postures? In a word you gotta be kidding
 
Once again, I ask the question:

What about altar rails? Has the use of them in the United States been forbidden? How does this fit in with the norms?
 
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AltarMan:
So the Catholic Church (AKA The Holy See) is not competant to define liturgical postures for the laity? Further, the Catholic Church does not have the authority to modify said postures? In a word you gotta be kidding
Not is some instances. One point is that the Church does not have the right to mandate standing in the latin rite for the consecration just as She cannot mandate kneeling during the consecration duing the Byzantine Liturgy at the consecration because of the Apostolic nature of the liturgies. However, she does have the right to mandate standing during the Eucharistic Prayer which was done in the revison of the GIRM. However, US particular law was made to retain the kneeling during the Eucharistic Prayer and after the Angus Dei. The Church herself determines what is movable and what is immovable. This is the reason for the dubiums which are a necessary method of formal clarification on what is movable and what is immovable.
 
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AltarMan:
More slithering. Just read posting #25.
I am quite familiar with Michelle Arnold’s response. That is why I stated that the priest’s instructions should be followed until proper recourse is taken and affirmed. That has happened already. See post #12.

I would not be so quick to discount proper legal procedure as “slithering”.
 
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