This response is to Buffalo’s answer to his own questions. Please refer to his post below as the size of post doesn’t allow me to include his original post.
- I still don’t have any accurate picture of what he describes here. Thus I am unable to respond on whether I agree his interpretation of it being an abuse is correct. Also, I don’t know what the reference to “teen Masses” mean. Is he saying that teen Masses are an abuse? What makes a teen Mass an abuse?
2-5) Based on the description Buffalo provided, the backup he provided or my own understanding, I concur that these are abuses.
- I concur at minimum that this is discouraged. I don’t know if there are special circumstances that would allow it. However, considering that the Real Presence has been consecrated, I doubt it.
- This is allowed according to Buffalos post: “psalms arranged in metrical form”. Does anyone know what arranged in metrical form is? Is this what would appear to be a song/hymn? If so, what I described in my post may not be an abuse and Buffalo’s characterization of it being an abuse may be misleading. If not, he may be correct.
- We concur
- I’m not sure that this would be characterized as changing the Mass. There are specific directions that certain prayers/processes are to be followed exactly (ie the Eucharistic Prayer) because of the importance of the words are critical to the “form and substance” while in other places the words are not quite so critical (i.e. the invitation/preamble to praying the the Confiteor). However, I think that adding the words “The Mass never ends” (which is a Teaching of the Church as per my earlier post) at the end of the dismissal may not be an abuse. I’d have to see something to the effect that the exact words are specifically spelled out.
- We concur
- I don’t know for sure what Buffalo observed so I don’t know if his application of the USCCB instruction is appropriate. In our Church, the choir is to the side of the sanctuary. Our parish is responsible for ministering to the deaf community in our city. The different choirs in our parish try to at least sign the refrain of most songs and have now learned to sign the Gloria and Holy Holy in an effort to communicate welcome to this special community. Is this a prohibited liturgical gesturing? Or how about when a deaf member signs the epistle readings with the interpreter providing vocal?
I do find Joysong’s post stating that the RS has over 295 footnotes such that for ANYBODY to feel sufficiently confident they are making an accurate interpretation to have at least read through these references. And even if they did, I’m still not sure that a lay person can fully grasp the full intention of the GIRM due to a lack of training and knowledge in the genesis and intracacies of the Mass.
Additionally, I do find the USCCB’s Committee on the Liturgy GIRM’s Chapter IX- Adaptations Within the Competence of Bishops and Bishops’ Conferences an interesting read on this matter and specifically paragraphs 395-399.
usccb.org/liturgy/current/chapter9.shtml
I specifically refer to the following:
“Once these proposals have been duly approved by the Apostolic See, experiments should be carried out for specified periods and at specified places. If need be, once the period of experimentation is concluded, the Bishops’ Conference shall decide upon pursuing the adaptations and shall propose a mature formulation of the matter to the Apostolic See for its decision.”
In other words, what we think we see as an abuse might actually be an approved experiment.
Finally, if you read Chapter 9, it talks about how Bishops are allowed to introduce adaptations for the benefit of the faithful under a defined approval and vetting process. Throughout the document there are clear indication that it is the Bishop charged w/ determining what is for the benefit of the faithful in that culture.
Now I have a question: If a Bishop properly follows the defined vetting and approval process for an adaptation and recieves approval from the Vatican for the adaptation, will the change be footnoted in the USCCB’s GIRM or will we have to find it in another place?
This is a critical point. If we don’t know if there might be an approved adaptation, how can we judge if what we see is for sure an abuse or not?