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EasterJoy
Guest
Hello. Officially, liturgical dance is not allowed in the Mass. Somehow I suspect that these recent words from Pope Francis will be misconstrued to support it:
"I wonder sometimes how many times we despise good people in our hearts, good people who praise the Lord as it comes to them, so spontaneously, because they are not cultured, because they do not follow the formalities? * despise [them]? The Bible says that, because of this, Michal remained sterile for the rest of her life. What does the Word of God mean, here? [It means] that joy, that the prayer of praise makes us fruitful! Sarah danced in the great moment of her fecundity – at the age of ninety! The fruitfulness that praise of the Lord gives us, the gratuity of praising the Lord: that man or that woman who praises the Lord, who prays praising the Lord, who, when praying the Gloria is filled with joy at doing so, and who, when singing the Sanctus in the Mass rejoices in singing it, is a fruitful person.”
Text from page en.radiovaticana.va/news/2014/01/28/pope_francis_at_daily_mass:the_fruitfulness_of_praise/en1-768047*
of the Vatican Radio website
How do we respond to this? Thank you.
As a general rule, I would say that we ought to have learned with Pope Benedict and surely ought to know with Pope Francis that he presumes that his listeners are trying to understand the total context of his preaching, rather than cherry-picking sound bites to suit them.
He was commenting on praising God with a spontaneous and heartfelt show of emotion–do we praise God in a heartfelt way? He was not referring to choreographies! He specifically referred to those who would object: But, Father! This is for the Renewal in the Spirit folks, not for all Christians!’ He was not referring to people who change the formalities, but people who pray beyond formality, who pray with spontaneous expressions of joy. He was asking “if you see someone who praises in a spontaneous way, why would that upset you? If you don’t praise God with heartfelt joy yourself, why not?” IOW, his comment has nothing to do with ignoring the rubrics that govern formal expressions such as choreographed dances. It had to do with letting our prayer penetrate us so that it will include and express and even develop our emotional connection with God. We should not reject spontaneous emotion in prayer, either in ourselves or in others, because that can make our prayer barren.
janeway529;11664918:
Actually, Canada, Australia, and Argentina are also “melting pots” with many ethnic groups well-represented among the citizenry. He probably has a great deal of experience with this broad set of issues among the faithful.The U.S. is unique in that it’s the only nation where almost exclusively its population is made up of immigrants who have brought their cultural traditions and customs with them to their new country, becoming a kind of “cultural missionary.” Due to the desegregation and integration of parishes from their once “national/ethnic parish” roots, we’ve begun to see a sort of “organic adoption” of “liturgical dance” unknown anywhere else in the world. Especially in large dioceses, like my own, you may see a “Celebration of Cultures Mass” like this one we have every year: youtube.com/watch?v=H5O9uVG-RWM