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Melanie01
Guest
We have penitential kneelers and penitential pews…that is they are plain wood and too close to the next row…in a word horribly uncomfortable!!!
The hardest kneelers I have ever experienced are at the St. John’s Abby Church. Very hard wood with no padding.We have penitential kneelers and penitential pews…that is they are plain wood and too close to the next row…in a word horribly uncomfortable!!!
I had to kneel on a marble floor a couple weeks ago. I offered it up as mortification.We have penitential kneelers and penitential pews…that is they are plain wood and too close to the next row…in a word horribly uncomfortable!!!
I can totally sympathised. I had to do that for a year as a cantor and really screwed up my knees (as a 25 year old at the time) that I couldn’t kneel anymore without major pain and had trouble walking/running until they finally got little cusions for me and the altar servers. It took me about three to four months to heal my knees.I had to kneel on a marble floor a couple weeks ago. I offered it up as mortification.
If you don’t mind – which diocese?But I can tell you, my fathers parish has no intention of installing any. And believe me, here in the Great Lakes area, there is no concern over the issue.
A couple points: * No kneelers by itself isn’t really a good reason. However, the lack of space in churches without kneelers often is - the more limber members of the congregation could surely kneel, but the people weighing 300 lbs or more would probably start knocking over the individual chairs. In such a setting, I think respecting uniformity of posture is the best course, even though I’m one of those who could probably kneel without too much chair movement.* The GIRM you cite is the current one, which was not in place when most of these churches were built. I’d be interested in hearing what the previous GIRM said about this issue - it may not have addressed this as explicitly.See, the excuse they give is that GIRM 43 says “In the dioceses of the United States of America, they should kneel beginning after the singing or recitation of the Sanctus until after the Amen of the Eucharistic Prayer, except when prevented on occasion by reasons of health, lack of space, the large number of people present, or some other good reason.” Then, they build a church with no kneelers. Then they say: “Oh! No kneelers! We won’t kneel, then, and we have a good reason!”
See, abandoning pews for individual chairs makes the kneeler problem easier to come by. And why would you build a church that was too small to begin with?No kneelers by itself isn’t really a good reason. However, the lack of space in churches without kneelers often is - the more limber members of the congregation could surely kneel, but the people weighing 300 lbs or more would probably start knocking over the individual chairs. In such a setting, I think respecting uniformity of posture is the best course, even though I’m one of those who could probably kneel without too much chair movement.
I’ll check my 1985 Sacramentary on Friday and let you know.The GIRM you cite is the current one, which was not in place when most of these churches were built. I’d be interested in hearing what the previous GIRM said about this issue - it may not have addressed this as explicitly.
The GIRM, fourth edition, 27 March 1975, which is prepended to the Sacramentary (from 1985) says the following:The GIRM #44] you cite is the current one, which was not in place when most of these churches were built. I’d be interested in hearing what the previous GIRM said about this issue - it may not have addressed this as explicitly.
Brian,I’ve got a bit of a different problem at my parish. We’re undergoing a rennovation of our church building. In the meantime, we’ve been having mass in our activity center (read gym). Now, we are all about kneeling in our parish. But since we’ve been temporarily relocated, our pastor has told us it’s okay for us to sit instead of kneeling. Well, pretty much the entire parish with the exception of a few die hards at each mass sits now instead of kneeling or standing (something we never did). I’m just terrified that when we go back into our remodeled church that everyone is going to continue sitting. I’m hoping, though, that since our renovation was all about returning from a 1976 post V-II contemporary design back to a more traditional worship space that the more reverent church will inspire folks to quickly return to our previous liturgical routine.