Liturgy and Ritual

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Make sure you read to the bottom. Check this one out…
In the end, eager participants in self-consciously “modern” liturgies want to hear only echoes of themselves, confirming Emile Durkheim’s claim that religion is finally the community objectifying and worshipping itself.42
The studied casualness of so much contemporary liturgy is itself an expression of fragmentation, because rituals of “solemn grandeur” must be performed in order to command the adherence of the entire community,43 whereas casualness expresses the prevailing zeitgeist and severely weakens the binding power that the ritual ought to have. If the prescribed liturgy of the Church is scrupulously observed in even the smallest communities, the worshippers are thereby united to the entire Communion of Saints.<<
Dear netmil(name removed by moderator),

As St. Augustine has said, “You stir man to take pleasure in praising you, because you have made us for yourself, [O God,] and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Therefore, when the focus is on the horizontal community such that the vertical praise and worship due to God is missing, it’s no wonder that some innovators restlessly spin their wheels while constantly running after the newest “new” thing that they hope might bring a sense of fulfillment.

St. Augustine could easily have been describing liberal or modernist innovators when he said, “What tortuous paths! How fearful a fate for ‘the rash soul’ (Isa. 3:9) which nursed the hope that after it had departed from you, it would find something better! Turned this way and that, on its back, on its side, on its stomach, all positions are uncomfortable. You alone [God] are repose.” (VI.26).

Above quotations from St. Augustine were taken from the following website:

enteuxis.org/nathan/portfolio/writing/fall98/confessions_reflections.html

~~ the phoenix
 
. .

Now I’m from a very traditional heritage, even with all the above (my mother’s father was from a small Bavarian town not too far from Pope Benedict!) so I had a lot of family customs, books (lovely old Latin missals etc.) to help sustain me, but until the Internet came along there was so much liturgical abuse going on that it really was almost impossible not to experience it and *not know it was abuse. * Now we can go right onto the vatican web site, we can download the real documents from Vatican II, we can go to sites like this. But from 1970 to (in my case) 2000 when I finally had fairly regular Internet access, and living in small towns with tiny libraries, it was nearly impossible to get real information! Hard to believe because we’re looking back for a longish period now, and ‘hindsight is always 20/20’ but it is true, and it’s one of the reasons why some of us have real concerns. We’ve ‘been burned’ and we don’t want other people to have to suffer!

You know Tantum—what you stated above–I believe is what bugs many people. That the Church has provided and we have access to such documents. That we can now have the real information vs. the false “spirit of Vat. II” info. We have access to documents like RS 2004 and others to guide us in repelling the false “spirit”.
 
When my uncle was dying my aunt had masses said at her home so he could attend, so is there really something wrong with saying Mass in an office?
The Law is always compassionate in matters of necessity. I recall reading the story of a saint who had Mass said in her room because she was too sick to venture out. Masses were said in homes in England during their protestant revolt because a priest would be executed if found.

There are legitimate reasons for having Mass said in private quarters, but the norm is to have Mass in a church, oratory or chapel set up for that purpose. When you have priests that want to have Mass in a home because “that’s what they did in the Early Church…” or a common table in a refrectory because “we need to emphasize the meal aspect of the Mass…” then we have problems.

And yes, these things do happen with some regularity. Not so much anymore, nor all over the place but I have eyewitnesses for an example of the first instance and documentation for the second.
Thanks for the attempt, but I don’t believe everything I read on the internet.
One shouldn’t, but you learn what can be trusted and what cannot be. That major abuses happen is really not in question, although I certainly don’t buy everything on traditio.
You know Tantum—what you stated above–I believe is what bugs many people. That the Church has provided and we have access to such documents.
Amen. I have a copy of the Vatican II documents printed in 1966 with a price of 95c so it was available at a popular level to some degree but one wonders what sort of readership really grasped as such things. I would bet that most folks just trusted what they were told Vatican II said as opposed to reading it.

The modernists turned the “oppresive” relationship of priest to people into their own tool. Everyone was used to asking Father or Sister any Church question they had. So when Fr. Freelove comes in saying that Vatican II “said” that we need to ditch Latin and you can “come in as you are”-who was going to question?

The filial relationship between the laity and the priests/religious was seriously harmed by this abuse of trust. The only thing wrong with the “pre-Vatican II” attitute was that when it was perverted, the laity had no defense.
 
This is why I find it amusing as well. Anyway, I don’t think we need to get all upset over these things. No one is going to take away our mass. Our Church is too strong to be taken in by such things. I have faith. 🙂
D’Nile is also a river in Egypt.

For some, liturgical committees have already taken it away. With even a question of whether or not it’s licit.
 
Now this was the accepted practice at the “Catholic” college I attended in the late 1970s as well as in two parishes I attended in the early 1980s. We even sang along at the Doxology, stood around the altar and held hands throughout the Mass from the beginning to the end and the sign of peace took nearly 10 minutes to complete.

As an 18 year old I found it exhilarating and I really felt important. As (ahem) an older person, I find that (speaking personally) a lot of the difficulties I found with seeking God’s will in my life were affected at least partially with having been subtly conditioned to make the Mass into “my” Mass and to make me feel more ‘important.’ In fact, I have to say that for some years, while I was trying desperately to live my Catholic faith, the Masses I carefully attended were always illicit and often invalid–with the words of the consecration altered and the hosts often homemade ‘sweet bread’. IOW, when I most needed the spiritual food and the participation in Christ’s sacrifice, I was being given not even an inferior or imitation of it–I was getting a flat out fake!

Others may have had different experiences but this was mine.
Tantum,

I had an almost exact experience at my Catholic college…although in a daily afternoon mass setting. It made me feel empowered too and made it “my mass”. It wasn’t until I went from judaism to evangelicanism and now(thank God) home to realize that all of this need for community and personal worship and thumbing my nose at tradition was the real result all of this innovation and poor catechetical teaching and learning.
 
I forgot to mention that I too have been involved in a home mass or two. The premise was a dinner party and the priest was invited so he celebrated mass. Not sure is it was out of place or not but looking back it doesn’t seem that it was out of necessity. I have seen many of the abuses in my own home parish and recently I found another local parish that is much more traditional and have made that my daily home.
 
Does any one have further commentary on the original article initiating this thread?
 
Does any one have further commentary on the original article initiating this thread?
JMJ + OBT​

Thank you for bringing us back on track. The intention of my OP was to invite forums members to read the article in its entirety, and then to discuss it, as a whole and in its finer points.

The weekend crowd here at CAF seems to be especially active; hopefully over this Sat. and Sun. more people will weigh in on the contents of the article (that’s my personal hope).

In Christ.

IC XC NIKA
 
After having read the article, I find the argument rather compelling for the most part. I think in a few specific instances the author goes a bit too far out on a limb, but in general is on target. I think it takes a pretty balanced view. The focus on ritual is a take that is not often seen, and I think perhaps it deserves further consideration.

While the focus of this thread seems to be liturgical abuses, that isn’t the point of the article. The real content of this article is far more interesting than another thread griping about what Sr. Mary Pat the parish liturgist cooked up last month. (Though I do find value in learning what the liturgy should be. After all, it isn’t like anyone bothers to teach on that topic.)

I wish I had something more to say, but the brain is too tired to think deeply enough to add anything to what the author of this article has written.
 
After having read the article, I find the argument rather compelling for the most part. I think in a few specific instances the author goes a bit too far out on a limb, but in general is on target. I think it takes a pretty balanced view. The focus on ritual is a take that is not often seen, and I think perhaps it deserves further consideration.

While the focus of this thread seems to be liturgical abuses, that isn’t the point of the article. The real content of this article is far more interesting than another thread griping about what Sr. Mary Pat the parish liturgist cooked up last month. .
What do you think is the focus of the article? I’m truly asking.
I found that it’s not really about individual abuses, but rather the culture of humanism that has been brought to our liturgies.
Is that what you’re seeing?
 
What do you think is the focus of the article? I’m truly asking.
I found that it’s not really about individual abuses, but rather the culture of humanism that has been brought to our liturgies.
Is that what you’re seeing?
The culture of humanism or individualism is what I took from the article too. Perhaps some of this is regional in nature?
 
The culture of humanism or individualism is what I took from the article too. Perhaps some of this is regional in nature?
You may well be right.
I think you might be hard pressed to find as much of the problem in Lincoln, Nebraska.
 
These principles are enumerated and developed in Hitchcock’s book “Recovery of the Sacred.”
I highly recommend it- though written in 1974 it still resonates with me today.

A few of the chapter titles:

“The Chimera of Relevance”
“The Cult of Spontaneity”
“The Loss of History”
 
*For some Catholics the past of the Church has thus come to be a mere burden, even something shameful, and the seemingly irrational reactions of some people against anything traditional in liturgy — the compulsion to destroy old churches, for example — is an expression of that sense. Such things as Latin prayers, Gregorian chant, baroque polyphony, and gothic architecture arouse unease and even antagonism among some people, precisely because they speak of things that are mysterious, transcendent, and divine, demanding awe and reverence.

Authentic ritual has something about it that even appears archaic, which is not the equivalent of dead,28 because such ritual is the experience of sacred time, of timelessness inside time.29 While experimental liturgies purport to express human creativity — control over the world — in reality they reflect man’s unfree place in that world because, in freeing themselves from the burdens of the past, modern men simply deliver themselves to the tyranny of history, often acting as though they have no right to live other than in accordance with the spirit of the times. Among other things, ritual embodies the deepest sense of order — the order of the cosmos itself — and when the rituals are in disarray the universe is experienced as disordered and man as trapped by the vagaries of chance and history.

The severing of continuity with tradition, whether deliberate or inadvertent, has had the result of throwing self-consciously modern Catholics entirely back on their own spiritual resources, which is a terrible kind of spiritual impoverishment. There is a direct link here to the heresy of Modernism, so named by Saint Pius X because it is the only heresy in the history of the Church to impose a temporal obligation. All previous heresies laid claims to eternal truth; only Modernism demanded submission to the spirit of the age.

The experience of chaos is close to the heart of modernity, and the governing spirit of the broad cultural movement called Modernism can be defined as precisely the necessity of doubting even the possibility of ultimate transcendence, which makes the very idea of “modern” worship problematic. Many highly praised modern church buildings, for example, strike people as cold and empty. However impressive as architecture, they seem to speak not of God but almost of God’s absence, of man as disoriented and embarked on some vague quest for “meaning”. History shows that some ages are more creative than others, and it is inherently improbable that a self-consciously secular — in many ways even irreverent — culture like that of the present can create new religious forms of lasting value. Thus until new forms of authentic liturgy reveal themselves, Catholics will of necessity look to the past, albeit not in that spirit of “restoration” or “retro” that substitutes for authentic tradition in our culture.*

I think this says a lot about the way in which the Church develops things like the Sacred Arts and architecture.

It’s not merely a matter of doing something that’s traditional for tradition’s sake. There’s a reason behind certain traditions. The traditional shape of a Catholic Church is a cross shape - specifically the Latin cross (like the lowercase letter “t”). These kinds of things actually matter. Many parish churches are just big rooms or have no resemblance to a church at all.
 
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