L
Lux_et_veritas
Guest
Roberta,Do you mean because the length of time for the sign of peace is very long in some churches, there are those who want to get rid of it entirely?
Now, THAT IS throwing the baby out with the bathwater. Why not just instruct the folks?
The sign of peace during Mass goes back to the Apostles time.
It has less to do with the kind of time they take, than it does with the length of time the grand circus takes us away from the Lord. You completely missed, and twisted my point. I said that lenghtening the time of the Mass*** is not an issue*** based on the fact that many of us who object to the chaotic version of the sign of peace are more than glad to extend the Mass in order to receive Holy Communion on our knees at a Communion rail. How you are getting this idea that I am concerned with extending the Mass is beyond my comprehension.
It comes in the midst of the Eucharistic Prayer which in it’s entirety is addressed to whom? God and God alone. Can we not take the 20 minutes or so that it takes us to get through the Eucharistic Prayer and give it entirely to God? Must we focus on creation around us during that twenty minutes or can we reserve it for what a piece of heaven will be like - pure adoration of God and nothing else?
All I am suggesting (or supporting), is to move this gesture to the beginning of Mass some place and get it out of the Eucharistic Prayer where people have gone on abusing it. The vatican just pronounced that the sign of peace should be limited to those immediately around you, not on the other side of Church (the exact wording was to either side, which I took to include those in front or back, as well).
My Pastor addresses the issue of it having been a practice early on and why it was ended, and when. In part, he says…
Now, at this point in the old solemn high Mass there was given what was called The Pax, that is, a very formal, stylized gesture wherein the priest placed his hands on the shoulders of the deacon and then subdeacon and, inclined towards them, said, “peace be with you” to which the other answered, “and with your spirit.” At one time the people also did the same until then 13th century when the Pope ordered it to be discontinued on account of a decline of morals. In its place, a an image of Jesus crucified was passed among the church for all to kiss. When the Missal was reformulated after Vatican Council II, someone thought to reintroduce the sign of peace among the people. Thus was inserted this directive in the Missal: “if it is opportune, the deacon or priest may add, ‘Extend to yourselves the peace.’” We want to have a word about this.
The so-called ‘kiss of peace’ has roots in the NT (cf. Rm. 16:16). In the Church of long ago, and in cultural soil very different from ours, this gesture was certainly both meaningful and natural. In our modern American way, the kiss is a sign generally reserved for more intimate settings than public worship. In some other cultures the kiss is a more common sign of friendship, publicly given. What has become customary in our country in the rather cold, prim and proper handshake for this gesture at Mass falls momentously short of expressing the true significance of this gesture and may in fact miss the point entirely; the same might be said for the more ostentatious and somewhat mawkish ‘hug.’ What the congregation is asked to do–and this is a beautiful thing–is to wish each other the peace which is of Christ. This was not meant to become what is has nearly always come to be, namely, a sudden eruption of chaos into the otherwise orderly assembly of worshipers who ought to stand wholly riveted on the divine presence before them in the most Holy Eucharist. The sign of peace, as it is currently positioned and practiced, has been, according to my estimation, among the most significant factors to have eroded the sacredness, silence and indeed the practice of adoration that was once common in all Catholic churches. How ironic that at the very moment when the Lord is invoked to grant peace there results such disturbance and Eucharistic distraction among the people and that, as a further consequence, our Lord in the Blessed Sacrament is ignored, or worse, treated sacrilegiously. I am reluctantly led to recall the infamous kiss of Judas Iscariot.
You can read the entire sermon he has on it here, to get all of this that I pasted in full context:
assumptiongrotto.com/Sermons/mass_talks_18.htm
Somehow, I get the impression by your posts that you seem to think that if people don’t express the sign of peace at Holy Mass, during the Eucharistic Prayer, and with all out hugs and chaos they so desire, then the people do not love their neighbor.
