D
deogratias
Guest
- Active and Conscious Participation - how often do we hear people talk about active participation and think it limited to hand clapping, singing and other external actions.
Does this mean that there is only one way or several ways to partake of the Mass? I think it means both. But those differences have to be allowable and spelled out by Rome and not the innovation or creative changes made by individual priests or liturgists.[36.] The celebration of the Mass, as the action of Christ and of the Church, is the center of the whole Christian life … “For the common priesthood of the faithful and the ministerial or hierarchical Priesthood, though they differ in essence and not only in degree, are ordered to one another, for both partake, each in its own way, of the one Priesthood of Christ”.[91]
[39.]… the celebration will be carefully imbued with those particular features that will foster the recollection of the participants.Still, it should be remembered that the power of the liturgical celebrations does not consist in frequently altering the rites, but in probing more deeply the word of God and the mystery being celebrated.[100]
,[40.] Nevertheless, from the fact that the liturgical celebration obviously entails activity, it does not follow that everyone must necessarily have something concrete to do beyond the actions and gestures
I have long said why does everybody “gotta have a job”. It seems to have been interpreted that this is so and so we have an abundance of high profile jobs, EMHC’s, Readers, Liturgists, etc. but probably not too many offering to polish the pews and clean the toilets
… Instead, catechetical instruction should strive diligently to correct those widespread superficial notions and practices often seen in recent years in this regard, and ever to instill anew in all of Christ’s faithful that sense of deep wonder before the greatness of the mystery of faith that is the Eucharist, in whose celebration the Church is forever passing from what is obsolete into newness of life: “in novitatem a vetustate”.[101] For in the celebration of the Eucharist, as in the whole Christian life which draws its power from it and leads toward it, the Church, after the manner of Saint Thomas the Apostle, prostrates herselfin adoration before the Lord who was crucified, suffered and died, was buried and arose, and perpetually exclaims to him who is clothed in the fullness of his divine splendour: “My Lord and my God!”[102]