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ProVobis
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Like learning Latin or being a Cub fan, it builds character.Fifteen inches of snow six months a year? I don’t think so.
Like learning Latin or being a Cub fan, it builds character.Fifteen inches of snow six months a year? I don’t think so.
The summers are to die for.Like learning Latin or being a Cub fan, it builds character.![]()
I will meet you half way and eat both. I could never live where the shrimp weren’t fresh and the Tex-Mex wasn’t more Texan than Mexan. I grew up here and am the last son living here with my aging mother. In a word, I am stuck.Give up crawfish and move up to his big brother, the lobster
It’s a start but you might try this:I will meet you half way and eat both. I could never live where the shrimp weren’t fresh and the Tex-Mex wasn’t more Texan than Mexan. I grew up here and am the last son living here with my aging mother. In a word, I am stuck.
I will try and smile more. Does this count?![]()
The EF Mass was recently celebrated at St. Pete’s and it was celebrated versus populum!No JR Wrong!. The Ordinary Form can have both, with the ad-orientum preferred. The Extra-Ordinary Form only has ad-orientum. It is the liberal Bishops who only want ad-orientum in the Extra-Ordinary Form and not the Ordinary Form.
Forget facing east. The whole idea behind the the versus populum Mass is so that people can hear the priest better. Not easily done with his back towards you. Our society doesn’t like people turning their backs on you and then speaking. I really don’t think we should read too much into this. Since Vatican II and the introduction of vernacular, the Mass has become more secularized and it seems that in some parishes the altar/table is placed in the middle of the church so that you can see it from all sides. Is this really a problem?The EF Mass was recently celebrated at St. Pete’s and it was celebrated versus populum!
Further ad orientum is not “preferred” for the OF Mass.
I moved away from he great State of Texas about 11 years ago and have been itching to get back every since. Where I live now is nice (very peaceful), but its just not the same. Maybe when I’m driving “home” on vacation you’ll catch me speeding on 59 and we’ll get to meet. You are somewhere off 59, right?I will meet you half way and eat both. I could never live where the shrimp weren’t fresh and the Tex-Mex wasn’t more Texan than Mexan. I grew up here and am the last son living here with my aging mother.
The idea of the altar in the middle of the sanctuary is a recovery of a very old monastic custom. In the Cluniac Reform the altar was moved away from the wall to the center of the sanctuary and there was no pulpit. They placed a podium in the center aisle of the monastic church, but at the opposite end. Since the monks faced each other, it made no difference, because you were always looking at either the altar or the lectern from sideways. The reason for moving the altar was to establish balance in the architecture. The distance betweent the altar and the wall and the distance between the lectern and the opposite wall was exactly the same. The Cluniac reform was an attempt to restore balance to monastic life. The liturgy had to reflect the balance that the monks saught.Forget facing east. The whole idea behind the the versus populum Mass is so that people can hear the priest better. Not easily done with his back towards you. Our society doesn’t like people turning their backs on you and then speaking. I really don’t think we should read too much into this. Since Vatican II and the introduction of vernacular, the Mass has become more secularized and it seems that in some parishes the altar/table is placed in the middle of the church so that you can see it from all sides. Is this really a problem?
It is from the Eastern Churches that the Cluniac movement borrowed the idea of two tables, the one where the sacrifice is offered and the other where the Word is proclaimed. In the Cluniac tradition they are called: Table of the Eucharist and Table of the Word. The monks of Cluny taught their novices that God feeds us with both Word and Eucharist. They never downplayed the sacrifice. This was not the deal. The idea was the remind the monks that Christ fed them daily so as to keep going along their spiritual journey. The idea of sacrifice was well engrained in them. What they needed was the idea of being nurtured by God. The great saints of the Cluniac reform, especially St. Bernard and St. Romulus shifted their attention to Christ feeding.\it seems that in some parishes the altar/table is placed in the middle of the church so that you can see it from all sides.\
**In the Byzantine tradition, the Altar (properly, Holy Table) is always free standing in the midst of the Sanctuary (proerly, Altar).
As far as seeing what the Priest is doing, except for pointing and making the sign of the Cross a few times, can anyone, except perhaps a very great mystic, REALLY see the really important thing that happens: the transformation of the bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ?
St. Theophilus, the Fool for Christ of Kiev, would frequently see fire fall from heaven upon the Gifts, but he’s one of the exceptions.**
I think this is an important point. Almost always, reforms and changes come about because there is some need that isn’t being met - maybe because someone is no longer filling the need, or because of a change in people or society.It is from the Eastern Churches that the Cluniac movement borrowed the idea of two tables, the one where the sacrifice is offered and the other where the Word is proclaimed. In the Cluniac tradition they are called: Table of the Eucharist and Table of the Word. The monks of Cluny taught their novices that God feeds us with both Word and Eucharist. They never downplayed the sacrifice. This was not the deal. The idea was the remind the monks that Christ fed them daily so as to keep going along their spiritual journey. The idea of sacrifice was well engrained in them. What they needed was the idea of being nurtured by God. The great saints of the Cluniac reform, especially St. Bernard and St. Romulus shifted their attention to Christ feeding.
In the Franciscan tradtion the focus was always on the cross and the Trinity, because that was the need of the time. People didn’t understand the whole concept of incarnation, cross, redemption, resurrection and Trinity all as one reality.
Each movement served to supply for a need of the time and place.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF![]()
This is the reason that the Holy Spirit raises up charismatic men and women during different times in history. They are meant to be teachers, because they have that unique quality of seeing real need, rather than fickleness.I think this is an important point. Almost always, reforms and changes come about because there is some need that isn’t being met - maybe because someone is no longer filling the need, or because of a change in people or society.
What is tricky though is that it is easy to confuse such needs with the wants and biases of society.
If you get a missal, you can follow along just fine. Also, we’re not speaking to each other, we’re speaking to God. The priest is interceding on our behalf, all in the same direction towards God. It’s awkward that the priest has his back to God as is done in the OF.Forget facing east. The whole idea behind the the versus populum Mass is so that people can hear the priest better. Not easily done with his back towards you. Our society doesn’t like people turning their backs on you and then speaking. I really don’t think we should read too much into this. Since Vatican II and the introduction of vernacular, the Mass has become more secularized and it seems that in some parishes the altar/table is placed in the middle of the church so that you can see it from all sides. Is this really a problem?
:byzsoc:There’s an obscure saint: St. Julian the Gout Sufferer, 27 February. He was so crippled from it he could neither stand nor walk. He was brought on a stretcher to his trial for being a Christian, and martyred by being burned on a pyre in Alexandria during the reign of the Emperor Decius.
I agree with you, I’d like to have all Masses with the priest facing the crucifix, but let’s be realistic. How many people want to follow the Mass in the missals or pew missalettes? The Church knows what people have a tendency to do so they have to speak facing them in order to get the message across. The priest, the readers, the cantors, even many sanctuary choirs have their backs to the cross most of the time and it’s probably not going to change.If you get a missal, you can follow along just fine. Also, we’re not speaking to each other, we’re speaking to God. The priest is interceding on our behalf, all in the same direction towards God. It’s awkward that the priest has his back to God as is done in the OF.
With all respect, Brother JR, I don’t know of many trads who sit around wishing that the Ordinary Form was more like the Extraordinary Form. In fact I don’t know of any, off the top of my head. There are some who’d like the OF to go away entirely, but I think what most of us wish for is simply that the Extraordinary Form will be made more widely available. This is in no way an unreasonable wish, and wishing for this and working towards it doesn’t preclude also spending time in contemplative prayer and/or in works of mercy. Traditional Catholics are some of the most prayerful and devoted religious people I have had the privilege of knowing in my whole life.It’s very important to understand the concept of norm. We can love the EF and we can go to EF as often as possible. But we must accept that the OF is the norm and move on. To sit around wishing tha tthe OF were so much more similar to the EF is almost a waste of time that can be spent in contemplative prayer or in works of mercy.
These are not the people of whom I speak. The desie to see the EF more available is a good thing. I was referring to the many people who come to these posts wishing the OF were facing the wall, had more Latin, didn’t have communion in the hand, didn’t have EMHC, etc. Someone once posted that they didn’t eve want deacons giving communion because deacons are lay men, which is not true. Deacons are clerics. A lay man or woman is anyone who is not ordained. Even religious are canonically lay people, since more than half of religious men and no religious women are ordained.With all respect, Brother JR, I don’t know of many trads who sit around wishing that the Ordinary Form was more like the Extraordinary Form. In fact I don’t know of any, off the top of my head. There are some who’d like the OF to go away entirely, but I think what most of us wish for is simply that the Extraordinary Form will be made more widely available. This is in no way an unreasonable wish, and wishing for this and working towards it doesn’t preclude also spending time in contemplative prayer and/or in works of mercy. Traditional Catholics are some of the most prayerful and devoted religious people I have had the privilege of knowing in my whole life.