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eagle_eye222001
Guest
Is it proper and licit for a layperson to give a short reflection during adoration?
Hello eagle_eye222001,Is it proper and licit for a layperson to give a short reflection during adoration?
I appreciate your concern however I was checking to see if there were any laws against it and not whether it should happen at all.Why would a person would give a reflection when God is there really present and we owe our full attention to him? I understand that people read and listen to music but that does not make any sense to me either. Adoration is done not because Jesus is there alone and He needs people or He gets bored.
Thank you, this answers my question.Hello eagle_eye222001,
If you are in the USA, you can check the following link for an answer and some guidelines:
usccb.org/beliefs-and-teachings/what-we-believe/canon-law/complementary-norms/canon-766-lay-preaching.cfm
Dan
You know, some people go to Adoration other than perpetual Adorations, and as such don’t have an opportunity to properly dispose themselves for worship. Often times a reflection or quiet music (such as the litany of the saints) playing in the background can encourage focus and worship.Why would a person would give a reflection when God is there really present and we owe our full attention to him? I understand that people read and listen to music but that does not make any sense to me either. Adoration is done not because Jesus is there alone and He needs people or He gets bored.
I understand what you are saying but I think that it is really an apple to oranges comparison. Adoration is not really a meditative practice. I think that some actions are independent from our predisposition or how we feel. Again, it is only my opinion and it does does not gate the liceity of the actions at all.You know, some people go to Adoration other than perpetual Adorations, and as such don’t have an opportunity to properly dispose themselves for worship. Often times a reflection or quiet music (such as the litany of the saints) playing in the background can encourage focus and worship.
Where do we see this mirrored? In the meditative practice of the Rosary… the words and the external actions can dispose one to more proper reflection and worship.
Like a witness statement or testimony? Not a bad idea; it can help you to focus your attention and give you something to reflect on.Is it proper and licit for a layperson to give a short reflection during adoration?
I disagree entirely that Adoration is not a meditative practice. Conversely, the Eucharistic mystery is one which requires great meditation, and we must not forget that meditation itself can be a form of worship (caveating, of course, that I’m not referring to the sort of new age or buddhist “transcendent” meditation which seems to have hijacked the word from Christian use).I understand what you are saying but I think that it is really an apple to oranges comparison. Adoration is not really a meditative practice. I think that some actions are independent from our predisposition or how we feel. Again, it is only my opinion and it does does not gate the liceity of the actions at all.