I have. We didn’t kneel at Consecration in our parish for about 13 years. We got a Pastor around 2000 who didn’t like confrontation. He’d do anything to avoid it. He got bullied by a few people who thought we should be following the Council of Nicea’s rule on kneeling and he eventually told me to put a piece in the bulletin to the effect that we would no longer be kneeling at any time during Mass. It was to go in the first bulletin in September at a time when he would be on holidays.
I knew what that meant: Because I was chair of the liturgy committee everyone would think I’d used his absence to promulgate this new thing in the parish and I would be vilified. Knowing that, I told him that he was to either announce it before he left and then I’d put it in the bulletin or I was waiting until he got back to make the announcement. He made the announcement and left town. I still got blamed for it.
Fast forward 3 pastors. Picture it, Phemie’ s parish, 2013. A new Pastor arrives who can’t understand why nobody, or at least very few, people kneel at the Consecration. He stews for a year and then finally mentions it at a Parish Council meeting. We tell him that we were told not to kneel. He asks how he can reverse that and is surprised when we say, “Father, next Sunday just announce that from now on we’ll be kneeling after the Sanctus and everyone will kneel. We can guarantee it, they’ve just been waiting for the priest to tell them to.” Sure enough. We now kneel for the entire Eucharistic Prayer.