B
baltobetsy
Guest
I find this to be true about myself, and I wonder about others. In the case when a priest changes the words of the Mass in such a way that it is “more reverent” than the Missal (I have those words in quotations because disobedience can never really be more reverent!), I find that I put up with this more easily than I do with a change that indicates a lack of belief, a liberal/heterodox viewpoint, etc. We have a priest in our parish who treats the Mass as if it were his own personal, private devotion. It’s a glimpse into his own very rich spirituality, but at the same time, it’s wrong. One small example: When we pray for the Pope, he’ll call him “our most beloved Holy Father, John Paul.” This kind of thing is sprinkled thoughout the Mass, along with some of his own favorite prayers that are definitely not in the Missal, but very beautiful prayers. You never know what he’ll do next, but it’s all obviously out of love. The people just eat it up! And although it drives me nuts in one sense, I tend to go along with it, too.
I’m not looking for advice here, but rather your thoughts on whether you would be more patient with this kind of abuse than the kind of thing we regularly complain about on this forum - carelessness in handling the Holy Eucharist, inclusive language, etc. * I also don’t want us to get into ripping this priest to shreds. * We all know the roots of disobedience. Let’s limit our discussion to whether or not YOU put up with this stuff more easily than with irreverent stuff.
Thanks for your thoughts,
Betsy
I’m not looking for advice here, but rather your thoughts on whether you would be more patient with this kind of abuse than the kind of thing we regularly complain about on this forum - carelessness in handling the Holy Eucharist, inclusive language, etc. * I also don’t want us to get into ripping this priest to shreds. * We all know the roots of disobedience. Let’s limit our discussion to whether or not YOU put up with this stuff more easily than with irreverent stuff.
Thanks for your thoughts,
Betsy