Quaere Verum:
I consider myself an Orthodox Catholic who longs for the traditional Church of old. I like that every “i” was dotted & “t” crossed. I like that everyone knew exactly what to do & expect and when to do it. It’s no longer that way, however.
While I truly appreciate the beauty and reverence of the traditional church of ‘old’, I would not want everything to go back to that day. Here’s why:
While every i was dotted, every t crossed and everyone knew exactly what do to, expect and when - I would venture very few people understood the
why behind it all. I know my father never wanted to know the why. He was more comfortable being a follower. Me? of another generation, I needed the why, following was not enough, I wanted to be an active part of everything I could. Comfort isn’t what our faith calls for though, is it? No. We are called to go outside our comfort zones in serving our Lord.
With the Novus Ordo, and particularly through the call for laity to become actively involved in their parish through the various ministries available, I believe there has been added to the appreciation for what Jesus did for us, the appropriate
response to that sacrifice - “to go in peace to love and
serve the Lord.”
It calls to mind the way Jesus scolded the Pharisees for being all about the letter of the law and appearances than the spirit of the law and the true condition of their hearts. Granted, paricipants in the Old Mass were not expected to do more so they weren’t ‘wrong’ not to do so, but the Church recognized they could be doing more to serve the Lord so She made changes which would encourage them toward that deeper relationship with Christ. I, for one, am eternally grateful for such opportunity. I’d much rather be a ‘doer’ than a ‘bystander’.
Are minor deviations from the GIRM really that important? Also, is it ever O.K., as a parishoner, to just put up with these so that the Sacrifice of the Mass can be celebrated without the extraneous concern of minor details?
Here’s my concern with these ‘minor’ deviations and how parishioners should respond:
Very few parishioners even know what a GIRM is. The majority of parishioners in any given parish believe the reason the EMHC wipes the chalice after offering the Blood of Christ to them is for health reasons - not to ensure none of His Blood spills, drips or is wasted.
Now some people
do know what the GIRM is, and as you’ve found on these boards, cite a particular GIRM passage and you’ll get 4 or 5 different interpretations of what it allows/prohibits. There’s a fine line between reading text, comprehending text, and applying text to particular situations. Most parishioners do not fall in the category of being able to do so well. All parishioners certainly can access the GIRM, read it and understand it.
But then you have the problem you raise. Once they recognize something is in the GIRM regarding a particular posture, word, action when they see something ‘different’ it becomes a distraction until they can get home, look up the passage and realize a) yes it was wrong or b) no it wasn’t…and if a) then they get all concerned about what they’re supposed to do about it. If they hadn’t read the GIRM they would not have had the distraction to begin with.
I’m under the impression the Church knew what She was doing when she wrote the GIRM and distributed it to a select group of people rather than issue a rulling that a copy must be distributed to every parishioner in every parish. I know the Church recommeneds every Catholic should own a Bible and a copy of the Catechism and I trust that’s because those were written specifically with the general parishioner as the end user in mind. All the other documents have a select audience and while we are certainly privileged to access the documents we should do so with humility and understanding that it’s directed toward another audience not us specifically.
For those who can read the GIRM and Canons, etc., understand them in the proper context and interpret them correctly, more power to them. Every parish should have at least 5 (one who attends each mass offered) so that there is some assurance the Masses are conducted properly. I believe, truly, that those members of the faithful are gifted by the Holy Spirit with wisdom and knowledge expressly for the purpose of protecting the Holy Sacrifice. So for those who have that gift :tiphat: We need you. Me? Having read the GIRM and other documents regarding Vatican II, I recognize I have not been blessed with such gifts and my call is not to be the watchdog of our parish. I will, however, support the chosen few who are, and I thank God for sending them to our parish for they have served Him well.
