C
CommonWeal
Guest
Is it licit for the priest to briefly ask the congregants questions, in the form of question and answer, during the homily?
- The homily is part of the Liturgy and is strongly recommended,[63] for it is necessary for the nurturing of the Christian life. It should be an exposition of some aspect of the readings from Sacred Scripture or of another text from the Ordinary or from the Proper of the Mass of the day and should take into account both the mystery being celebrated and the particular needs of the listeners.[64]
I’ve seen priests ask questions at the opening of their homily in order to engage or setup what they are going to say and lead into their main point. It is just a technique some priests use, especially as one poster pointed out a children Mass at school. You are not very clear here but made a blanket statement with the obvious intent that you feel it is wrong. If you are so concern, you should ask the priest or call you nearest seminary and ask about it.Is it licit for the priest to briefly ask the congregants questions, in the form of question and answer, during the homily?
That is the true meaning of a homily, from its Greek origins.Is it licit for the priest to briefly ask the congregants questions, in the form of question and answer, during the homily?
I also doubt it is prohibited, but if I were a cleric, I’d personally err on the side of “just because it doesn’t say we can’t/shouldn’t, doesn’t mean that we can/should”.It is unusual, but I doubt if it is prohibited. Why do you ask?
The General Instruction of the Roman Missal states:
The quote from GIRM is a general guide and interpreted and applied in different ways. A priest opening his homily with questions and moves on to explain is following the above. The op isn’t clear nor did they clarify what they saw or are seeing with a particular priest. The best thing for anyone is that if they have a question, go to the priest and ask. Likewise, there are different ways of doing and teaching homiletics and if the OP is so concerned, they could easily contact the nearest seminar and talk to the homiletics professor about what they teach their seminarians concerning the homily and why. Instead they come on the internet and ask a bunch of non trained experts about what priests can and cannot do in their homilies.I also doubt it is prohibited, but if I were a cleric, I’d personally err on the side of “just because it doesn’t say we can’t/shouldn’t, doesn’t mean that we can/should”.