I have read several remarks by many posters on CAF referring to liturgical abuses.
For the ones concerned about them have you done anything to address the issues you see as problems? Maybe joined the Liturgy committee, or taken the matter up with the Pastor or local Bishop?
If you have, have you had success in making a productive change? Has it helped your parish thrive?
I am not looking for a list of them or a gripe session about how they stink worse at anyone’s particular parish, OK?
For starters, I would like to compliment you on starting this thread. It is about time that someone “called out” the many posters who complain about liturgical abuses. It is a good idea to differentiate between those who are working to correct error and those who are just complaining.
I say this because I am one of the chief complainers. I like to believe that there are no more than ten posters (if that many) who abhor liturgical abuses as much as I do.
And so, I will do my best to answer your question, and I will answer any follow-up questions (from you or another poster) as well.
The answer is yes, I have done something to address these issues. On two occasions I have actually approached a priest and (very respectfully) brought his error to his attention.
Neither one of these confrontations yielded any good results. One priest kept on doing the same things, and the other corrected the abuses - but only when I was present at one of his masses. I really felt patronized by that.
Sometimes I use a more passive approach. If a liturgical abuse is severe, such that the mass comes to a screeching halt (like changing the words of consecration or leading the congregation in applause for some human achievement), I usually get up and walk out. Even though I do this without making a lot of noise, it is definitely something that gets noticed.
(Incidentally, we should get together on what a “liturgical abuse” is, in the first place. When I use that term I use it to mean anything in the mass that contradicts the liturgical laws; everything from wearing the stole over the chasuble to changing prescribed texts, even the Eucharistic Prayer.)
So yes, I have tried to do something about it.
Let me give you one more thought. Consider the possibility that many people will refuse to correct a priest, no matter how wrong he is. They believe it to be a heinous sin, no matter how respectfully it is done. This belief is presented, possibly among other places as well, in the Pieta Prayer Book (a.k.a. The Little Blue Prayer Book). In it, it claims to have divine revelations on this subject given directly to some person named Mutter Vogel. I do not know who this person is, nor do I have any reason to believe that Rome has accepted these “revelations” as actual.
And that’s the way it is, today, December 1, 2006.
MT