G
gurneyhalleck1
Guest
I think you’re right, Meghan. The Orthodox are extremely, extremely closed to innovation and change. To make a change of anything in Orthodoxy is tough. The Catholics are open to “development doctrine” and in that openness there is room for fascinating discussion and honing down ideas. For example, I think transubstantiation and mortal vs. venial sins, etc. are actually fine and somewhat helpful to me. But as they became “open” to innovation and development doctrine, enter the Novus Ordo Mass. And it’s this openness that allowed for things like the filioque to enter into the scene in Spain. The pope tolerated it amongst certain groups in the West and for a while felt it was bad doctrine. Then after a while the popes were ok with it and later imposed it even on Easterners worshipping in the West. This openness has led to guitar-strumming in the church, tabernacles stationed at odd places in the building, priests oriented away from the altar and instead toward the people, a loss of things like incense that are pious, holding hands during the Our Father, liturgical dancers (gag), eucharistic ministers pawing over the Host and trying to “bless” people, bad Protestant-style music and Amazing Grace, a laid back style that really resembled a Baptist experience more than Catholic.
While I found the Divine Liturgy frustrating to follow, a bit lacking in the homily portion, tough to stand so long, and a little rushed, I know 100% that none of the forementioned things that bug me would be a concern. They’d never happen, period.
Like I said, I went to a funeral for a dear co-teacher of mine who died of cancer. The funeral was at a Baptist church. No joke, after I left there I had to rush home to help my dad who fell and ruptured ligaments in his leg, took him to the emergency room. Then hours later, went to Mass. The Mass wasn’t exactly that far off from the Baptist church in music and tone/tenor. It was so laid back. After the DL Orthodox experience, it really opens ones eyes to the need for liturgical reform in Cathoicism.
I know they’re updating the liturgical language, cleaning it up. But the Mass needs more than a language repair, it needs the priest to turn the other way, get that Holy Smoke back, it needs the gestures to return on the part of the laity, it needs more Latin used at least in some parts like the Agnus Dei and Confiteor, Gloria, etc. perhaps, it also needs to drop the hand-holding kumbaya stuff.
While I found the Divine Liturgy frustrating to follow, a bit lacking in the homily portion, tough to stand so long, and a little rushed, I know 100% that none of the forementioned things that bug me would be a concern. They’d never happen, period.
Like I said, I went to a funeral for a dear co-teacher of mine who died of cancer. The funeral was at a Baptist church. No joke, after I left there I had to rush home to help my dad who fell and ruptured ligaments in his leg, took him to the emergency room. Then hours later, went to Mass. The Mass wasn’t exactly that far off from the Baptist church in music and tone/tenor. It was so laid back. After the DL Orthodox experience, it really opens ones eyes to the need for liturgical reform in Cathoicism.
I know they’re updating the liturgical language, cleaning it up. But the Mass needs more than a language repair, it needs the priest to turn the other way, get that Holy Smoke back, it needs the gestures to return on the part of the laity, it needs more Latin used at least in some parts like the Agnus Dei and Confiteor, Gloria, etc. perhaps, it also needs to drop the hand-holding kumbaya stuff.
I think that your logic is correct, it is two mindsets and they could potentially, both be ok. The problem is the “so long as the end result from each view is the same”.
Because the Orthodox don’t see that to have been the case. Apart from the original cultural and political aspects, they see the result of the schism has led the West to things like the Protestant Reformation, humanism, or the kinds of problems we see in modern Catholic liturgy, the way they approach things like confession, or all the hullabaloo over private visions, or even methods of prayer the East thinks are actually dangerous.
So they look at this stuff and say “I’m not sure the abstract mindset here is really a good thing, and maybe we should just stay away from it”.
A fair number of Orthodox I talk to find their biggest worry is not so much the particular theological language and method, it is the things that seem to have resulted from it.