J
JimG
Guest
Yes, pretty much, except for the 7am. I didn’t mention that there are also Saturday vigil Masses at 5pm and 7pm.
So, when the priest addresses Jesus, he’s addressing Jesus as present in the congregation? C’mon, man… tell that to the marines.Jesus is also present in the people.
That’s not what I said. (Maybe that’s how you took it, but that’s not what I said.) All I said is that, when someone proposes something that existed in the pre-Vatican-II days, often the wail goes up “I don’t want to go back to those days!”You make it sound like I said no one wants anything pre-VII
Only in your dreams. You seem not to be aware of the impact world wide of Mass in the language of the people. In fact, in some areas of the world, Latin was one more sign of colonization and the multitude of issues that went with it.Wait till the generation who remembers the “old days” are gone; at that point, this particular sensitivity (and resistance to reversion) will be gone, too. Maybe the generations who follow us will “sing a new church into being” …and do it in Latin. Maybe not. Who knows…![]()
I would invite you (and I suspect OraLabora would join me) in discovering the document(s) which set this forth. Please elucidate.You’d find it in liturgical documents, not magisterial ones.
Doesn’t make a difference to me, one way or the other. You seem more worked up about it than I am.Only in your dreams.
Yep. No emotional investment there. You really are proving my point, brother: the very mention of Latin makes you cry out “clericalism!” and “the people are being oppressed!”The Church endured centuries of the Mass and sacraments being clericalized.
And I object to your use of the word “many”. Even after Ppe Benedict opened up the EF, the results were that very few people either by parish or by diocese wanted - and to this day want - the EF. I have a parish within about a 15 minute drive that has 11 Masses on a weekend; 4 are in Spanish; one in Vietnamese, 5 in English and one in Latin. Yes, that happens to be at 6:45 in the morning on Sunday, and there are about a 100 or less who attend. The rest of the Masses vary between 80%+ attending in terms of seating(with the exception of the Vietnamese, which is around 250), to at least one which is literally standing room only. The “presumption” that the EF would even double in size to maybe 200 has no historical evidence to support it whatsoever. It is a courtesy to the very small minority of the parish who wish to have the EF.Many pre-Vatican II era people felt that their bishops had lied to them when it became widespread knowledge that the Latin Mass had, in fact, not been abrogated, because they definitely had been led to believe that Latin Masses were no longer possible.
As were Protestants 400+ years earlier.And the vast majority of people I grew up knowing - meaning those my age and older, were overjoyed with the use of the vernacular.
Considering 70+% of Catholics attended Mass at the time, that was the only way to fit in their needs.Most Masses my mom grew up with were 30-40 minutes. Sounds pretty rushed to me.
It is my understanding in the first picture that the priest is facing “Liturgical East” and in the second picture he is facing the people. It is from the East that the Lord will return and so we look towards His coming/turned towards the Lord. It isn’t so much that Jesus is in the Tabernacle (if on the High Altar) or facing the crucifix, or that from the consecration onwards Jesus is present on the Altar before the priest - it is about facing Liturgical East. And yes, in times past if the land allowed it, Churches were built with the Altar facing East, so with the EF still in use then, we were all facing East from whence the Lord will come again. But as some land situations did not permit this, then some were built facing other compass points - which is why it is Liturgical East we face.(Please Note: This uploaded content is no longer available.)
I don’t understand the tizzy, honestly. If the focus is on the altar, it is on God. God doesn’t have a seat on the easternmost wall or something. If everyone is faced in one direction, including the priest, people can still usually hear what he’s saying because he usually has a microphone on. Not everybody in a typical church can see the priest, anyway, no matter which way he stands. So you want to pray like our grandparents did–great!! So you want to pray the way you grew up praying–great!! It isn’t as if most places cannot accomodate both, since so many parishes have more than one Mass every Sunday. Try to give Catholics what edifies them. We are a rich Church, we can do more than one thing. Holy Mother Church has provided that. No bickering over it, though. Try to put the needs of others at least on an equal footing with your own.I like it I went to a novus ordo that was ad orientem once it was nice I get the reasons for doing it either way but I prefer ad orientem
You must not think much of indulgences, then?no encouragement at all to read Scripture
I try…Oh, you are so funny!
I wonder about that, too. My best guess, though, is that the fact that it’s a change – as well as the fact that, as you say, it has visual impact – will provide an opportunity for catechesis. And, if poor catechesis is what’s gotten us into the mess we’re in right now (with respect to numbers), then anything that has the potential for catechizing the younger generations – such that this better catechesis might lead to better retention past Confirmation – really does have to be seriously considered, I think.And frankly I think it on the order of a fools errand if anyone actually thinks that ad orientem is going to have a scintilla of impact on the issue of catechesis (which actually was where this thread started).