B
Brother_John
Guest
Sanity rulesâŚat least for tonightâŚ:twocents:
Do I hear six?![]()
Sanity rulesâŚat least for tonightâŚ:twocents:
Do I hear six?![]()
Why would you say that the priest is facing " the wall?". You know that isntâ true. You know he is facing God in the Tabernacle.=JReducation;3399155]I can believe that some people are afraid of seeing some things return, such as communion rails or the** priest facing the wall instead of the people**. To be honest, when I attended a TLM it bothered me. I tried at another church and it bothered me again, so I never returned.
The reverence in the Traditional Mass versus the Novus Ordo will always be debated. Sorry, but the differences are enormus.I have no problem with anyone who wants to celebrate liturgy using the TLM format, as long as they donât tell me that my participation in the NO is less reverent and less Catholic. After all, both were given to us by the Church for our sanctification, not to debate over.
.This is what both sides of liturgical debate must emulate, this kind of love and respect between both groups of worshippers
.also am uncomfortable when many of the traditionalist (I hate that word) even refuse to quote Vatican II or any of the popes from Vatican II to the present Itâs as if the Church stopped in 1963. This is a wrong attitude to take. Just as wrong as limiting yourself to Vatican II and not looking at what Vatican II used as its basis to make the changes they did or to produce the documents that they produced
He also has God on the altar. It was never the Churchâs intention to have adoration of the Blessed Sacrament in the tabernaacle simultaneously with the Eucharistic celebration. There is nothing wrong with the tabernacle there. I didnât like looking at the priestâs back.Why would you say that the priest is facing " the wall?". You know that isntâ true. You know he is facing God in the Tabernacle.
No one ever said there wasnât a difference. The point is, whether or not it has to be debated. The mysticism of the Eastern Rites is mind-boggling, but Catholics donât spend their time debating the merits of the Eastern rites over the Western rite. The differences exist to enrich the Church, not to divide the Church.The reverence in the Traditional Mass versus the Novus Ordo will always be debated. Sorry, but the differences are enormus.
There is no denying that this debate has caused a division./quote]
Agreed and thatâs why I say that it is an unfortunate debate. Each person should worship in whatever forms the Church provides. It you like Western tradtiion by all means celebrate the TLM, if you like the NO, which after more than 40 years is no longer a new concept, by all means celebrate that, and if you want the height of mystical eschatology, celebrate in the Eastern rite.
. Look at the footnotes. Pre-Vatican Popes are ignored except for token references. Pope John Paulâs writings quote Vatican II and rarely any Pre-Vatican II writings.That is the problem I see with the Vatican II documents like Religious Liberty
The fact that there are few citations does not mean theyâre being ignored. The Council Fathers didnât need to reference them. If they felt that it served the purpose of what they wanted to say they would have. You make it sound as if they deliberately through them out the window, which is not true. We see many references to older and ancient documents all over the Cathechism of the Catholic Church, which John Paul II also approved.
Would you not agree that despite his frequent references to Vatican II writings and less references to older writings that his writing are deeply mystical and that they show a depth of holiness in the man that few of us have?
Why the preocupation that we have to cite pre Vatican II writings to be prove our fidelity to Tradition?
JR![]()
I have no idea. I checked the Catechism and what popped up is very much the same as what I recall having learned from the Catechism in the early 1950s, way before Vatican II.Why the preocupation that we have to cite pre Vatican II writings to be prove our fidelity to Tradition?
JR![]()
The bottom line is that nothing that Vatican II or the post Vatican II popes or the Catechism of the Catholic Church have said on the sacraments is new. They have reworked some of the wording and added or deleted what they felt had pastoral purpose, but the dogmatic part has not been changed.I have no idea. I checked the Catechism and what popped up is very much the same as what I recall having learned from the Catechism in the early 1950s, way before Vatican II.
The altar only represents Christ. In the tabernacle Christ is physically present, body and blood. Big difference.=JReducation;3402431]He also has God on the altar. It was never the Churchâs intention to have adoration of the Blessed Sacrament in the tabernaacle simultaneously with the Eucharistic celebration.
You are not looking at the Priestâs back. You are looking with him facing God.There is nothing wrong with the tabernacle there. I didnât like looking at the priestâs back.
This must really confuse you. I never read of these types of testimonials concerning the Novus Ordo.No one ever said there wasnât a difference. The point is, whether or not it has to be debated.
.Agreed and thatâs why I say that it is an unfortunate debate. Each person should worship in whatever forms the Church provides
.The fact that there are few citations does not mean theyâre being ignored. The Council Fathers didnât need to reference them. If they felt that it served the purpose of what they wanted to say they would have. You make it sound as if they deliberately through them out the window, which is not true
Because pre-Vatican II is Tradition. It canât be ignored.Why the preocupation that we have to cite pre Vatican II writings to be prove our fidelity to Tradition?
The Eucharistic celebration is not about adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. It is about the sacrfice of Calvary and the Paschal mystery. Check your Catholic Catechism. The Lord will be present on the altar through the consecration.The altar only represents Christ. In the tabernacle Christ is physically present, body and blood. Big difference.
We are also looking at him holding God when he consecrates. You sound as if this is the only way to do this. Have you forgotten that the Byzentine rite has nevver faced the tabernacle during the liturgy of the Eucharist? They cover it up. They have been doing this since apostolic times. The priest has always focused on the elements of bread and wine on the altar until he pronounces the words of consecration and the deacon proclaims the mystery of faith to the community. This has also been part of our Catholic tradition. A much older part of the Churchâs tradition than the Tridentine mass. What Iâm saying is that there is more than one perspective to how one should celebrate mass.You are not looking at the Priestâs back. You are looking with him facing God.
Donât make assumptions. Iâve been a professor of Philosophy of Theology for many years and a professor of Mystical Theology before that. For many more years, a Director of Pastoral Care. This does not confuse me at all. What saddens me is the fact that many who love the Tridentine mass feel it is their mission to convince everyone else that this is the right thing to do for everyone. It makes me wonder why this group canât worship in the TLM and pay homage and respect for all of the other rites in the Catholic Church.This must really confuse you. I never read of these types of testimonials concerning the Novus Ordo.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=223852
Bishops have an obligation to provide for all of the faithful. Also, you must remember that not every priest may want to celebrate in the TLM. As I have often posted on this thread, a large number of priests are religious. The local religious superior must also authorize it. Itâs not always up to the Bishop. For example, if the Marianist superior says that he will not run a parish with the TLM, the bishop is in a jam. He cannot force the Marianists to run a parish for him. He is not their superior and he does not have enough secular priests.But Bishops continue to refuse to provide the TLM or they only allow it in a small chapel in an out of the way place one or twice a month.
If the Magisterium believes that it is necessary, it will do so. If it believes that what it is teaching is self-explanatory, it will not use the references. There is no hidden agenda.Check out the absence of footnotes from previous teachings in NOSTRA AETATE or the footnotes in the Decree on Ecumenism. { why isnât *MORTALIUM ANIMOS * cited?
Not quoting something is not the same as ignoring it. The Constitution of a nation cannot be ignored. However, not every law cites it. The legislators cite it when itâs necessary to support a point. If the point can stand on its own merit, they donât use the citations. This is no indicator that they ignore the Constitution. The same happens with the scripture or previous documents. The old Baltimore Catechism hardly cited any scritpure. It didnât mean that its authors were ignorant of or disregarded scripture.Because pre-Vatican II is Tradition. It canât be ignored.
Traditionalists donât argue about Dominican, Eastern, or Byzantine rites because the ultimate issues are about reverence, verticality, doctrinal expression, and organic development. The other rites you mention are not inadequate on those counts.The bottom line is that nothing that Vatican II or the post Vatican II popes or the Catechism of the Catholic Church have said on the sacraments is new. They have reworked some of the wording and added or deleted what they felt had pastoral purpose, but the dogmatic part has not been changed.
As I said when I stated this thread, the Church is not a democracy. We canât decide what she does or does not do. We can respectfully agree or disagree. We can make requests and suggestions. In the end, we are expected to love and obey.
These debates over the mass and how the priest celebrates the mass donât always show a great deal of love for the Church that preserved the mass for us for 2000 years or for those who love the mass.
Itâs almost a childish competition. âMy mass is holier than your mass.â
We forget that we have had many rites in the Church. Up to Vatican II, we had more than the Tridentine mass in the Western Church. We also had the Dominican, the Franciscan and the Benedictine mass. Because they were in Latin, mot people didnât realize that the prayers were different and even the readings for certain days were different.
They are no longer called rites, but the Dominicans, Franciscans and Benedictines do not use the same sacramentary or lectionary as the universal Church, nor do they follow the same liturgical calendar to the letter. Many holy days are different. What is a memorial or feast for the universal Church may be solemnity for these orders and in their parishes they are celebrated as such. They even change the saints around. The saints of each order take priority over the saints of the universal Church except for the major holy days. For example, the Solmenity of St. Francis bumps out any other saint that may be celebrated on Oct 3. In the Universal church itâs the memorial of St. Francis and itâs on Oct 4. The Dominican Saints bump the other saints if the days coincide. The readings and prayers are changed and the same happens among the Benedictines.
If you are a religious, the rite of ordination is slightly different. In an ordination mass the candidate to the priesthood kneels before the bishop, placing his hands in the hands of the bishop, he promises the bishop obedience. This is deleted in the ordination of religious, becaue all orders make a solemn vow of obedience to their religious superior long before ordination. Another difference in the ritual is that the bishop does not approve the candidates presented to him for ordination. He asks the religious superior, whether he be a priest or not, if the religious superior has found them worthy. Then the liturgy continues. The ordaining bishop must use the sacramentary and the lectionary of the religious order, if the Order has one of its own. These readings and payers donât always match those in the sacramentary and lectionary of the universal Church word for word.
My point is, that there are always going to be differences, even in Latin celebrations. If the priest is secular he follows certain norms and customs and if the priest is a Brother, he follows the norms and customs of his order. For example, the Marianists never wear a cassock. They are an order of Brothers. They only allow some members to be ordained. They never wore cassocks and are not allowed to wear them. They wear an alb over their street clothes, because they never had a habit since the 1700s. I realize this is minor, but someone may find this surprising.
If you attend mass in a Franciscan Friary, even in Latin, the Brothers all receive the host in their hands and then say the âLord I am not worthy . . .â This was a practice instituted by St. Francis, who was not a priest, to preserve the unity of the Fraternity during the liturgy. What they do maintain is that the presider distributes the hosts. But, if there is a Brother Deacon, he does it.
There are subtle diffences and theyâre going to be there in English or Latin.
Weâre always going to find slight differences, if we pay close attention. They are no reason to debate.
JR![]()
I want my children to be able to worship in the most reverent way possible. The Novus Ordo doesnât achieve that goal.They are being denied the experience of worshiping God as He deserves to be worshiped. Changes need to be made. It is not about having the Mass in Latin. The options that are available to the Priest in the Novus Ordo are ridiculous.My mass is more reverent than yours.
My mass is holier than yours.
More people like my mass than yours.
My mass is older than yours.
Where is all this taking us and to what purpose? Are we not at mass the celebrate the Holy Eucharist? So you have a preference? Why is your preference better or holier than mine. Someone earlier hit the nail on the head. They said it appears that we are like a bunch of children, trying to pull a oneupmanship on the other. Wherever you go or whatever kind you prefer, concentrate on the why you go. The why is not a feeling, the Why is to adore.
Deacon Ed B
My mass is more reverent than yours.
My mass is holier than yours.
More people like my mass than yours.
My mass is older than yours.
Where is all this taking us and to what purpose? Are we not at mass the celebrate the Holy Eucharist? So you have a preference? Why is your preference better or holier than mine. Someone earlier hit the nail on the head. They said it appears that we are like a bunch of children, trying to pull a oneupmanship on the other. Wherever you go or whatever kind you prefer, concentrate on the why you go. The why is not a feeling, the Why is to adore.
Deacon Ed B
This is exactly what I mean. So now you are in a position of judging the sacredness of the NO Mass. And judging whether God is being worshiped properly. What is your position in the Magisterium that enables you to make such a statement. Absent that position, one biblical verse comes to my mind at this time. *** âJudge not lest you be judgedâ. *** The Novus Ordo mass imparts the same infinite merit of the Latin Mass. You are still free to worship in the Latin Mass, that if your right. But do not degrade the Novus Ordo Mass or those who prefer it..They should not be denied the experience of worshiping God as he deserves to be worshiped.
I pray that Pope Benedict brings back the sacredness to the Mass by making necessary changes but it wonât be easy. There are âwolvesâ in his midst that do not want this.
Sorry, but they are not the same. Both are valid. But they are not the same. One only needs to be aware of all that has been removed or supressed to see the difference.This is exactly what I mean. So now you are in a position of judging the sacredness of the NO Mass. And judging whether God is being worshiped properly. What is your position in the Magisterium that enables you to make such a statement. Absent that position, one biblical verse comes to my mind at this time. *** âJudge not lest you be judgedâ. *** The Novus Ordo mass imparts the same infinite merit of the Latin Mass. You are still free to worship in the Latin Mass, that if your right. But do not degrade the Novus Ordo Mass or those who prefer it.
Deacon Ed B
Are you saying the Latin Mass imparts more grace and merit than the Novus Ordo Mass. Be careful here, as this could put you on a very slippery slope.Sorry, but they are not the same. Both are valid. But they are not the same. One only needs to be aware of all that has been removed or suppressed to see the difference.
Consider the following prayer said in the TLMAre you saying the Latin Mass imparts more grace and merit than the Novus Ordo Mass. Be careful here, as this could put you on a very slippery slope.
Deacon Ed B
Yes I believe that the TLM is more efficacious. That doesnât mean that the OF is not efficacious for some .But the TLM is simply more reverent and it will have a greater impact on the religious life of those that attend reguarly=Deacon Ed B;3404335]You still have not answered my question. Are you saying that one is more efficacious than the other? If not what is the problem?
No, the absolution is not in the pentinetial rite. First of all the pentential rite **is optional **so it may not be said at all. Here is the penitential portion in the New Mass. There is no absolution.And yes, my parish has the Novus Ordo mass and believe it or not the absolution is contained in the penitential rite.
Deacon Ed B
The first point I would make is that if the merits of the mass are infinite, ergo, they are equally efficacious. The Eucharist, which is the purpose of the mass and the reenactment of the sacrifice of calvary is equally efficacious. The next point is that since the penitential rite deals with venial sins only, the wording is equally meritorious. It also removes venial sin, ergo, equally efficacious.Yes I believe that the TLM is more efficacious. That doesnât mean that the OF is not efficacious for some .But the TLM is simply more reverent and it will have a greater impact on the religious life of those that attend reguarly
No, the absolution is not in the pentinetial rite. First of all the pentential rite **is optional **so it may not be said at all. Here is the penitential portion in the New Mass. There is no absolution.
âMay almighty God have mercy on us, forgive us our sins, and bring us to everlasting life.â (NOM, Penitential Rite}
TLM
âMay almighty God have mercy on you, forgive you your sins, and bring you to life everlasting. [Amen] May the Almighty and merciful Lord grant us pardon, absolution he blesses the people with the sign of the cross], and remission of our sins.â (TLM Absolution}