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JackieMom
Guest
People do get it, but as someone pointed out above there was a period of time where Latin Rite priests truly believed that we were going to move toward a universal posture of standing at the consecration. Churches built during this time often lack kneelers because, to be frank, someone guessed wrong. They were surprised with the GIRM was updated and required kneeling. Many of these parishes still do not have kneelers because they are expenive or the current layout could not possibly accomodate them.I dont think YOU get it JakieMom…there is an intentional move within the Latin Rite (and some of the Eastern ) Catholic Churches to move farther and farther away from Traditional Catholic practice…kneeling at the appropriate times in church being one of them…nobody is saying the old and infirm need to be kneeling when this is not within their means… that said…kneeling is the TRADITION of the LATIN CHURCH during the Eucharistic prayer at Mass and at other times…by not installing kneelers someone is trying to make a point…dont kneel …even though the Church teaches otherwise…People in the Latin Rite should be kneeling! Why don’t people get it?![]()
The bishops have given these churches, built in the late 80s and 90s, time to get back into compliance. In the meantime, reverent standing (not whistling and twiddling to whoever suggested that) and profound bowing works for now. The reason many parishes have not mandated kneeling on the floor is because most parishes (ours included) are made up of more than 50% senior citizens. Our priest (yes, I just asked) did not feel it was very Christian to institute a new rule that such a huge portion of parishioners could not obey. He said it would be divisive and be a cause of embarrassment for them, and look silly as half the parish did one thing and another half something else. Instead, we ALL stand reverently as a parish, bow deeply at the miracle of the consecration, and wait for the day that kneelers can be installed. Since Mass is a community worship situation, this is our community’s temporary solution to the issue. There is no conspiracy theory or subtle attempt to undermine the Mass. It was simply thought that more unity with the East was going to be the norm, and in the end it wasn’t.
Respect for the Lord is not dependent on whether someone is kneeling or standing, but on their focus and state of mind. Would I feel comfortable being that person who kneeled on the stone floor in a Mass where 1,000 others were standing? No. I do not wish to draw attention or come off as self-righteous. I might do it in private prayer, but not at Mass. Additionally, I obey my priest and follow our parish’s norms. If I felt kneeling was central to my Mass experience, or that for some reason I could not properly worship Jesus unless I could kneel, then I would simply go to another parish. As it is, I feel cofident that my love and respect for Jesus in the Eucharist is properly oriented whether I stand, sit, kneel, lay down, whatever.