A
ASimpleSinner
Guest
I know that the alb represents a liturgical garment that is proper to all the baptized. If and when different lay ministers wear them in different functions it always tends to cause me to bristle a bit.
I often find that the folks most prone to adopting the alb and cincture seem to be drawn from the same ranks of the highly-clericalized laity that (if the truth were to come out and be plain) generally are of the opinion that they themselves should be ordained.
I attended a parish one Sunday when I was in San Diego and when communion time came around, 8-10 lay adults sauntered out of the sacristy in albs, cinctures and pectoral crosses.
It struck me as a fine example of the clericalization of the laity. Some of the super-laity I have known (some of which are in my own family) have a pride about them over their various and sundry certifications for lay ministry that they have collected from workshops, conferences, and diocesan offices and training programs over the years that rivals some of the more prideful *monsignori *I have known… One of whom took great pains to make sure every last piece of clerical attire he owned had red piping on it.
ISTM that at the same time and in the same places the laity look to don albs for their “lay ministerial duties” choir dress, clerrics and even full canonical vestments often go by the wayside. Am I way off the reservation for thinking that there could be a correlation in the de-emphasis of clerical dignity in the externals and elevated sense of need for externals among the non-ordained?
Are there any rules or writings generally dealing with when it may or may not be appropriate for the laity to don albs for different ministerial functions? While the alb-wearing EEMs might in fact not be breaking liturgical laws, something about the practice of EEMs, Lectors and the like all wearing albs seems inappropriate if not exactly “illegal” or illicit.
Thoughts?
I often find that the folks most prone to adopting the alb and cincture seem to be drawn from the same ranks of the highly-clericalized laity that (if the truth were to come out and be plain) generally are of the opinion that they themselves should be ordained.
I attended a parish one Sunday when I was in San Diego and when communion time came around, 8-10 lay adults sauntered out of the sacristy in albs, cinctures and pectoral crosses.
It struck me as a fine example of the clericalization of the laity. Some of the super-laity I have known (some of which are in my own family) have a pride about them over their various and sundry certifications for lay ministry that they have collected from workshops, conferences, and diocesan offices and training programs over the years that rivals some of the more prideful *monsignori *I have known… One of whom took great pains to make sure every last piece of clerical attire he owned had red piping on it.
ISTM that at the same time and in the same places the laity look to don albs for their “lay ministerial duties” choir dress, clerrics and even full canonical vestments often go by the wayside. Am I way off the reservation for thinking that there could be a correlation in the de-emphasis of clerical dignity in the externals and elevated sense of need for externals among the non-ordained?
Are there any rules or writings generally dealing with when it may or may not be appropriate for the laity to don albs for different ministerial functions? While the alb-wearing EEMs might in fact not be breaking liturgical laws, something about the practice of EEMs, Lectors and the like all wearing albs seems inappropriate if not exactly “illegal” or illicit.
Thoughts?