O
otjm
Guest
I think that you narrow it down too much.While the legality of the changes is clearly established, I’ve taken the Holy Father’s words about obstinacy (which requires opposition to reason) to heart and reflected on changes, using reason as my guide.
Obviously literal cleanliness is not the point of this ritual as performed today or by Jesus. The actions of Jesus were meant to symbolize something, and the rite today is meant to symbolize something. There are basically two mutually exclusive options about what this new rite means:
**Option A: The new rite is a symbol intended to convey *the same ***meaning as Jesus’ symbolic actions after the Last Supper.
If this is true, then the change implies that we consider ourselves superior to Jesus in our ability to construct symbols that convey the mind of Jesus. Jesus had extremely holy women in his company, and the Eternal Logos was not subject to peer pressure from anti-woman attitudes of His time. He voluntarily chose to exclude them from this ritual. To say the change is an improvement is to say that Jesus’ own choices can be improved by man’s (name removed by moderator)ut.
**Option B: The new rite is a symbol intended to convey *a different ***meaning than Jesus’ symbolic actions after the Last Supper.
If this is true, then the new rite has the priest publicly wash the feet of a group of 12 people (men and women), to symbolize something to somebody. The question is, what and to whom?
Obviously, Option A is prideful and offensive, and Option B means we’ve introduced a novel ceremony into the liturgy that symbolizes a novel idea. Both are problematic and that is why, with no trace of obstinacy, I find this change problematic.
It was done to the Apostles, who were to be the bishops of the Church. But it was first and foremost an act of extreme humility and extreme charity, if one has any understanding of Jewish culture at the time of Christ. In fact, there are profound messages in many of the scenes in the Gospels, which, if one has no understanding of Jewish culture, don’t even “go in one ear and out the other”; they simply do not go in the ear.
Over time (and this is a ritual which has been done at some times in Church history, and not done at other times), the connection of this being done to the Apostles, and then only to men, has moved away from the focus of humility and charity, and focused on ordination and priesthood.
So if it was really about ordination and priesthood, then it would seem, to be accurate, that it would only be done by the Pope, and only to bishops. I don’t know the history enough to say if that was ever the case, but certainly that case could be made if the focus is on ordination (and particularly the Apostles’ ordinations).
Or it could be that only a bishop would do the washing, or selected priests of his diocese. Again, it appears it was not limited to a bishop being the only person washing feet.
At the point that it gets to the parish, a priest washing the feet of only men loses a major connection to Christ and the Apostles, if such washing is to be about priesthood.
And arguably, as it is done and has been done for some period of time by parish priests, then the symbolism of the Apostles is being turned into at best a weakly connected symbolism, far removed from the issue of ordination, and restricted only to males - why? Because of the ordination? If that was such a central meaning of the act, then it should have only been done, either by the Pope and no one else, or at least limited to an act to be carried out by the bishop (presumably in the cathedral).
Which loops us back to the issue - what was the primary symbolism? And it appears that the Pope is telling us that the primary symbolism is first and foremost, an act of humility and charity, and secondarily related to priesthood in that it is done on Holy Thursday.
Which may be another way of saying that the humility and charity which Christ showed to his Apostles was a message, less about the Apostles being ordained bishops, than it was that those He chose to lead his Church were to treat all - not just bishops, and not just priests, but all - with that same profound attitude of charity and humility.
I don’t see the issue as being either/or; but rather both/and. However, it would appear that while it can be both/and, the primary message is that of humility and charity. There is no need to see the two symbols as mutually exclusive.