Is it considered Liturgical Dance

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Detroit_Sue

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If it takes place after the Mass? Today’s Mass honoring Our Lady of Guadalupe featured dancers in “Aztec” dress in the church after the conclusion of Mass. Am I being to scrupulous? Or should I be on the lookout for other little things being “introduced?”
 

Cardinal Responds to Questions on Liturgy

Has liturgical dance been approved for Masses by your office?

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				There has never been a document from our Congregation for Divine   Worship and Discipline of the Sacraments saying that dance is   approved in the Mass. 
				
				The question of dance is difficult and delicate. However, it   is good to know that the tradition of the Latin Church has not   known the dance. It is something that people are introducing   in the last ten years -- or twenty years. It was not always so.   Now it is spreading like wildfire, one can say, in all the continents   -- some more than others. In my own continent, Africa, it is   spreading. In Asia, it is spreading. 
				
				Now, some priests and lay people think that Mass is never complete   without dance. The difficulty is this: we come to Mass primarily   to adore God -- what we call the vertical dimension. We do not   come to Mass to entertain one another. That's not the purpose   of Mass. The parish hall is for that. 
				
				So all those that want to entertain us -- after Mass, let us   go to the parish hall and then you can dance. And then we clap.   But when we come to Mass we don't come to clap. We don't come   to watch people, to admire people. We want to adore God, to thank   Him, to ask Him pardon for our sins, and to ask Him for what   we need. 
				
				Don't misunderstand me, because when I said this at one place   somebody said to me: "you are an African bishop. You Africans   are always dancing. Why do you say we don't dance?" 
				
				A moment -- we Africans are not always dancing! [laughter]
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Sue,

Since it does not involve the liturgy specifically, I would guess it is just simply “dance”. I suppose the bright side of this is that this event took place after the conclusion of the Mass. However, like you I would feel very uncomfortable with it.

Canon Law states:
Can. 1210 Only those things which serve the exercise or promotion of worship, piety, or religion are permitted in a sacred place; anything not consonant with the holiness of the place is forbidden. In an individual case, however, the ordinary can permit other uses which are not contrary to the holiness of the place.

By the way, is this still the same parish as before? Would your previous pastor have permitted this?
 
Detroit Sue:
If it takes place after the Mass? Today’s Mass honoring Our Lady of Guadalupe featured dancers in “Aztec” dress in the church after the conclusion of Mass. Am I being to scrupulous? Or should I be on the lookout for other little things being “introduced?”
Since it was after the conclusion of the Mass, it was not part of the Mass.

Saying thay, would I like see this? No. Have it as a special event later in the day.
 
From “Dance in the Liturgy”
If the proposal of the religious dance in the West is really to be made welcome, care will have to be taken that in its regard a place be found outside of the liturgy, in assembly areas which are not strictly liturgical.
Moreover, the priests must always be excluded from the dance.
 
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