C
CatholicELATeacher
Guest
I nod and smile to those left and right, and anyone who turns around. No handshaking. I don’t care if others do, and they shouldn’t care if I don’t.
You forgot a key element of that quote, that it " signifies peace, communion and charity "I think it is important to emphasize this point. It is, IMHO the real reason this happens just before communion,
There’s really nothing wrong with abstaining for personal devotional reasons. In fact, our Archbishop commanded that the shaking of hands at the Sign of Peace be discontinued back during the H1N1 scare. The majority of the people stopped for the one Sunday it was announced, but it started up the next Sunday the same as always. The Archbishop has never lifted the prohibition that I know of.Hi. I just don’t like this and stopped participating in it about a year ago. I just stand stoic and view the altar. I felt like it takes my attention off the sacrifice of the mass personally.
I hope people don’t think I’m rude because of it and I at times think that is a problem that I even should have to be worried about that when that moment liturgically is all about Christ.
The Sign of Peace or Kiss of Peace during Mass was traditionally reserved to the clergy. It is not a necessity that the laity participate. It’s a novelty.Thomasbradley312:![]()
It’s not about making friends. It’s about being in communion with the entire Body of Christ, which includes His Church’s members.I’m not there to make friends.
According to the GIRM (in the United States), it it not optional on the part of the laity. If the priest directs us to offer each other a sign of peace, we follow his instructions.It is not a necessity that the laity participate.
If by “novelty”, you mean “something that is illicit or need not be followed”, that’s not correct. It’s a lawful part of the Mass as stated in the Roman Missal.It’s a novelty.
If a person refuses to offer any sign of peace after being directed to do so by the priest, yes it is disobedience.Are you really trying to say that if a person does not do something at Mass (no matter his or her own state of health, stressors, illnesses, etc) that he is disobeying the priest?
Is it the same with “Let us pray”? Is it ok to just sit and ignore the priest?"Let us offer’ is not the kind of imperative on the order of, “you must do this action, or say this word” especially since there is no specific ‘sign’ that is mandated.
That is an odd question. Why do we go to Mass? for the Sacrifice of Christ. I understand what you are saying that we need to recognize that the people around us are part of the Body of Christ worshipping with us, but that can be done without shaking their hands or even the sign of peace. I have been to Masses where the priest skips it. In the TLM it only happens at the altar and from what I understand not all Divine Liturgies have the sign of peace either.and if you do not want to participate, what is the point of being there? If you cannot discern the Body of Christ that is worshipping with you,
You are not acknowledging the people…the members of the Mystical Body of Christ who are around you.You just are not acknowledging the stuff going on around you.
Exactly. If we are not going to participate in the sacrifice of Christ, why are we going? This is the way it is being done, why absent yourself from a, b, c or d? If you have a good reason, don’t participate. But the point of going is to participate.Why do we go to Mass? for the Sacrifice of Christ.
I agree, you are seeing only one facet. The service is not a sequence of unrelated events. There are a thousand options, but the particular ones chosen for the day are the ones for that day. If you come to participate, participate. If you want it to be exactly what you want it to be, join the liturgy committee, get ordained, or do whatever it is you have to do to change it. You can even tell gruesome stories of mangled arthritic hands and recalcitrant misanthropes if it helps.See, now this is an example, to me, of seeing just one facet of Mass.
A priest can offer Mass ‘all by himself’ and it is still a valid Mass. Mass can be offered to a community of one, one hundred, one thousand; still Mass.