Looking at the Friday night liturgy (not in depth, just scanning key moments):
- There was liturgical dance (including the priest). From Notitiae
snip)
However, the same criterion and judgment cannot be applied in the western culture.
Here dancing is tied with love, with diversion, with profaneness, with unbridling of the senses: such dancing, in general, is not pure.
For that reason it cannot be introduced into liturgical celebrations of any kind whatever: that would be to inject into the liturgy one of the most desacralized and desacralizing elements; and so it would be equivalent to creating an atmosphere of profaneness which would easily recall to those present and to the participants in the celebration worldly places and situations.
Neither can acceptance be had of the proposal to introduce into the liturgy the so-called artistic ballet[2] because there would be presentation here also of a spectacle at which one would assist, while in the liturgy one of the norms from which one cannot prescind is that of participation.
(snip)
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.
2. The use of multiple incense bowls throughout the liturgy. According to the
GIRM, there is to be one thurifer carrying one thurible. Then the celebrant is to incense the altar, the crucifix, the gospels, and so on and so forth, as prescribed. Nowhere is it called for a bunch of lay people to be prancing about carrying bowls of incense. Further, though they made the decision to use incense, I saw no evidence of it being used properly at any place during the Mass.
- The altar was not dressed with the cloth until the Liturgy of the Eucharist. This, too, is a violation of the GIRM. This question was specifically asked in Notitiae back in 1999:
Whether at the offertory, the altar linens with candles can be brought to the altar in the procession with the gifts?
℟ In the negative.
Those are just three things I saw with a really fast glance. I’m sure there are more. None of the points I am pointing out are within the competence of the Diocesan Bishop or even the Bishop’s Conference to change. (Elements of the liturgy, such as posture, translations, etc., must be approved by the Holy See before being implemented, anyway)
Frankly, most of these liturgies fall into the category of what Joseph Ratzinger called “religious titillation” (from his book, the
Spirit of the Liturgy)