U
USAFwife
Guest
@Theo2 thank you!
Just in case you’re referring to my post, please note that I said in my post that whatever went on between you and your priest that knows you is just fine, before I went on to explain that Catholic churches generally characterize this as receiving a “blessing”.I really was not surprised by the first couple of responses I got. I will definitely listen to my priest over faceless online liturgy police.
There’s nothing saying the priest can’t allow this.Well… it’s not yet been formalized , I’ll grant you that. However, it is something that was never formally approved of to begin with!
I appreciate the encouragement, everyone.
Actually… there is. It comes to us from the documents of the Second Vatican Council.There’s nothing saying the priest can’t allow this.
the sacred Council establishes the following general norms:
A) General norms
- Regulation of the sacred liturgy depends solely on the authority of the Church, that is, on the Apostolic See and, as laws may determine, on the bishop.
- In virtue of power conceded by the law, the regulation of the liturgy within certain defined limits belongs also to various kinds of competent territorial bodies of bishops legitimately established.
- Therefore no other person, even if he be a priest, may add, remove, or change anything in the liturgy on his own authority.
The article does not refer to this specifically. There is nothing that specifies this is not allowed. The only answer, years ago, said the issue was under review. You took that letter to mean the Vatican is “leaning” in a certain direction, and you are certainly entitled to your opinion. However, you claim more than the Church does on this topic.There’s nothing saying the priest can’t allow this.
People here need to trust their priests on these type of issues, not the posters here.
What? I’ve never seen that.(and since we usually cross ourselves on the forehead before receiving, unobtrusively,
Maybe it doesn’t say “priests can’t do blessings”, but then again, it doesn’t say “priests can’t dance a jig on the altar” or “priests can’t say the words of institution backward” or “priests can’t omit every other word in the eucharistic prayer.” That’s because it would be silly to assert that there must be a distinct prohibition for each and every possible change to the Mass. Instead, they issued a blanket statement:The article does not refer to this specifically. There is nothing that specifies this is not allowed.
In other words, it doesn’t exist in the rubrics, and the Vatican is reviewing it. That means it’s not part of the Mass as it exists today. If you want to take that to mean “… and therefore, it’s ok”, that would also mean that it’s ok for the priest to say the prayers in Klingon, while acting out a scene from The Wrath of Khan. (See how silly the assertion is, when we push it to its logical extremes?The only answer, years ago, said the issue was under review.
No – I claim precisely what the Church claims: it’s not part of the Mass, and priests aren’t allowed to change the Mass.However, you claim more than the Church does on this topic.
And that this constitutes such a change as is not permissible. It is the in between premise that matters.No – I claim precisely what the Church claims: it’s not part of the Mass, and priests aren’t allowed to change the Mass.
Sorry – it’s been a long day. I’m not getting at what you’re claiming, here.And that this constitutes such a change as is not permissible. It is the in between premise that matters.
That bishops do not consider this adding something to the Mass.What are you claiming, then?![]()
That flies in the face of what’s been claimed here, however. Folks have claimed that it’s really just a “spiritual communion”, not something new.That bishops do not consider this adding something to the Mass.
Apples and oranges. In fact, these other blessings are found in the Church’s “Book of Blessings”. In that ritual book, these blessings exist – and they often have two or three forms: one in the context of Mass, one in the context of a Liturgy of the Word, and one as a simple blessing, outside these other two contexts. Therefore, these are accounted for in the liturgical traditions of the Church. Communion blessings, on the other hand… are not.I have seen other blessings, like an anniversary, graduates, teachers, mothers, etc., a Mass.