S
stpurl
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Tested in the 1940s, maybe. Didn’t get implemented for a while, and still there is nothing about the ad orientem position needing to be abrogated, right?
What happened before my time is not my concern.With respect, I see an awful lot of, “I think this, I want this, I intend to choose this, you have to convince ME”.
How come you don’t ask for the same for the current 'facing the people?" Where is the evidence with 100% certainty that the decision to ‘turn to the people’ did not have a scintilla of influence from outsiders? Where is the teaching (authority) that ‘the direction the priest faces’ doesn’t make a difference beyond your personal opinion?
Abrogated?Didn’t get implemented for a while, and still there is nothing about the ad orientem position needing to be abrogated, right?
Yes i agree. In Mass i often picture what would happen if Fr suddenly abandoned the centre table and took himself up to the high altar.But, IMO, I think ad orientem is the middle ground between the OF and the EF.
But he might have listened to Cdl Sarah one of the holiest truest most faithful (run out of adjectives) prelates known who advocated for thisIf our bishop or priest or whomstever makes these decisions could convince me with 100% certainty (the kind of certainty that’s like papal infallibility) that the decision had not a scintilla of influence from outsiders, then I’d be o.k. with it.
You know what I guess that shows how things were failing even before V2.EF about this, and interestingly enough they said that they experienced the same: they either prayed the rosary or tried to stay awake until Holy Communion because they could barely see what the priest was doing or hear what he was saying, and if it was in Latin could barely understand it.
It’s not prohibited. The question is when it is appropriate. It doesn’t work so well with concelebration, for instance, such as at our abbey where about 15 monk-priests concelebrate around the altar.Tested in the 1940s, maybe. Didn’t get implemented for a while, and still there is nothing about the ad orientem position needing to be abrogated, right?
The other way to read this is that these three points are mandatory, but the orientation is otherwise optional and determined by the configuration of the place, form of celebration, etc.The rubrics presume the ad orientum position; it is the norm , not a variation. The rubrics prescribe three (?) points at which the priest turns to face the congregation .
This is definitely true but what could aid that would be explanations to parishioners as to why the priest is now saying Mass ad orientem.Having the priest face ad orientem is not going to resolve the issue of the lack of catechesis concerning True Presence.
It usually is said more reverent. I realize there can be times when priests offering the EF Mass can be disrespectful or rushed. That happens.If it is a perceived notion that ad orientem is somehow “more holy” or “more reverent”
I agree. I realize a lot of people say it would more reverent, which is a possibility, but I believe the reverence would come with ad orientem because it will take the attention off of the priest and give it back to God.It is a matter of the entire approach to the Mass, and both ways can be reverent. Or not.
Where in the documents of Vatican II was this idea (versus populum) brought forth? If not explicitly in the documents, I stand by my comment that it was “snuck in” in the aftermath of the Council.Not true my friend.
After the council, conciliums were set up to implement the visions/ideas brought forth.
In both pictures, the priest is facing Jesus on the altar.I once went to a liberal UCC church to watch a family member perform music and the minister turned around when praying to God. Plenty of Protestants do so too, not to mention the EOs. No one there has a problem with it.
I’ve said this before, but as a kid when my dad mentioned that the priest used to face the other way and Mass was in Latin, I didn’t get the point of Latin, but the priest facing the same way as us when praying seemed much more natural.
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I really liked the author’s gift-giving analogy.
Catholics who react with horror to traditional practices of the Catholic faith have issues. It should be natural for a Catholic to embrace tradition or at least be tolerant of it.