R
rien
Guest
I generally agree. The lack of Scripture knowledge/availability in the Catholic Church is inexcusable. That may be changing with the new evangelical converts. let’s hope so.When one is down to nothing, anything is a leap and a bound. When there is NO Tridentine Latin Mass, (like here in St. Louis a few years ago), and then one is added and a church dedicated to TLM (Tridentine Latin Mass), then that’s a 100% increase.
The Latin Mass never went away, it is the Tridentine Mass that is “extraordinary.” Most of the differences between NO and TLM are, the priest faces away from the congregation during the Eucharistic Prayer and Consecration. Also, the old rite had limited readings from the Bible: a one year vs three year cycle. The daily readings were the Sunday readings - EVERY DAY. Now that’s stagnant. The Bible is the Catholic Church’s word to the world. Why would we not want to read as much as we can?
Why would I want the priest to face away from me? Jesus was WITH his Apostles, he did not have his back to them.
We worship as a Community of believers at mass. I remember not being allowed to even look at other people in the TLM, much less utter a whisper in the aisle after mass. I think it’s wonderful that we have fellowship, and the sign of peace. Talking in front of the Blessed Sacrament is not a sin. There is a time and place for private worship and meditation (Eucharistic Adoration). Are we only allowed to talk prescribed words in front of the Blessed Sacrament?
I don’t know what “indult” means, but I do believe that it is the Sacredness, the Reverence with which we Catholics treat our Lord in the mass which draws non Catholics to the Catholic Church.
I’d like to read about an Indult congregation which has actively gone to its neighborhood and preached the Good news, worked to bring in converts. Have a focus on Bible study. There may well be one - I am simply unaware of any.
Now we disagree on the priest facing the congregation. Historically the priest and congregation faces East. That is how Christian churches were designed for centuries. The sanctuary facing East so priest and congregation faces East in prayer.
Christians have prayed facing East for centuries and centuries. The East, where the sun rises, is a reminder of the celestial providence of God and symbolizes going forward in the Light of Christ. Churches were designed that way until relatively recently because of that. Its a “tradition” that, IMO, should never have been lost.
Happily several new large church projects - Our Lady of Clear Creek Monastery in Oklahoma and the Chapel of Our Lady of The Holy Trinity among others - are returning to the historic, “primitive” Chritian sense of building churches.
I don’t see the priest facing the congregation as an advance. As I read it, and I may be wrong, the notion of both priest and congregation facing another same direction - towards the East say - has a significance that many Cathoilics today don’t realize IMO. The focus during Mas should not be on one another but somethone other. The congragation and priest all facing “away” really captures this IMO. I prefer the NO, but this is one change I’d like to see made to the NO.
I heard one priest condemn the Extraordinary form cause priests would face away from the people. He does not get it. During Mass the priest and congregation are not about facing each other but, IMO, facing a common symbolic direction towards God.