Deacon Ed,
It is when the body tells the toe that he is no longer a toe just part of the body is what I am getting at.
Ah, but the Church tesll us this is not what we are saying! The problem comes when we put our own theology ahead of that of the Church. Communal singing is, indeed, a way in which we, as a body, speak to Christ and the reality of Him present among us in a very special way – as Pope Paul VI puts it, a “presence
par excellence!”
decn2b:
Redemption is PERSONAL. I am Certain that I am only accountable for MY sins. I am not big into cooporate sin.
You might want to discuss this with your spiritual director. Corporate sin is real, and is something that we need to be aware of. However, the Church still teaches that we are saved “in community” and not, as the Protestants claim, individually. Redemption is not personal. In fact, such a claim is heretical! Redemption is the act of Jesus in His death and resurrection that makes
possible salvation for all. (Note that I am not advocating universal salvation – the apokatastasis – but rather the offer of salvation that is made to all). In the Deacon’s great chant at the Easter Vigil, the Exsultet, we recall the sin of Adam: “O happy fault, O necessary sin of Adam, which gained for us so great a Redeemer!” Note it did not gain “me” a Redeemer but “us.”
decn2b:
Jesus the pascal Lamb was not sacrificed for all of our sins thrown into a big pot together…his sacrifice is applied to our individual sins (which may or may not make up corporate sin).
Again, not so. Jesus died, as Scripture tells us, “once for all” (Heb 7:27). This is made even more explicit here: “By this ‘will,’ we have been consecrated through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all.” (Heb 10:10)
decn2b:
My relationship with Jesus is the first step I can take…that has to be a personal step. If I do not make that personal step then I am really not part of the community. I agree this is not an either or but it does seem like when we reduce the worship ( remember lex orandi lex credendi) to a mere communal gathering shoving off any personal essence of it, we are reducing the sacrificial nature of the Mass. Which is the whole core of its existance. The sacrifice is applied to our INDIVIDUAL SINS.
In a sense you are correct – the sacrifice is applied to us
as members of the Body! That’s what St. Paul tells us in Romans: “Or are you unaware that we who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were indeed buried with him through baptism into death, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we too might live in newness of life. For if we have grown into union with him through a death like his, we shall also be united with him in the resurrection.” (Rom 6:3-5) We are the Body of Christ and it is only as members of the Body that we can be saved! It is not as individuals (unless, of course, you are forgiving your own sins).
decn2b:
When we have over-emphasis of the coroporate in our worship…it tends to move us laterally and horizontally in our focus. And that focus is subordinate to the vertical nature Mass. The focuse is on God, and his relationship to us as individuals first and displayed by our relationships with others. The spectacular gift of uniqueness is in every human being. We are made in the image of god and given the gift of individuality. This the greatest aspect of our individuality is the free will of each and every human being. This free will is a personal matter first and it relates to Jesus in our individuality first… which then may or may not affect others directly. Remember Jesus died for our individual sins and our particular judgement is alone and personal.
But it is the Church who regulates the Liturgy (which term comes from the Greek words
laos meaning “people” and
ergon meaning work – that is, the “work of the people”). When we follow the directions of the Church we are working in harmony with the Body – when we reject them, when we fight them, when we refuse to go along with them – then we are outside the Body and our salvation is at risk!
Deacon Ed