I
Inisfallen
Guest
Yesterday was the Feast of the Assumption, so naturally I planned on attending Mass.
Usually I go to Mass in my home parish in Brooklyn (New York). Lately I’ve been driving into Manhattan and picking up my elderly and somewhat immobile father, since his parish church closed some time ago, and the nearest church is farther away than he is able to walk, and then driving back to my parish with my father. No problem, there’s not a lot of traffic on Sunday mornings, and parking is pretty easy.
However, I didn’t want to drive into Manhattan in the middle of a business day, since the traffic would be horrible and there would be no place to park when I went to pick up my father. So I decided that I’d take the subway to his place, and then we’d take a cab from there to the nearest church.
Which we did, all according to plan.
We got to the church a bit early, which was fine, and then the Mass began. I’d never been to Mass at this church before, so I don’t know if what happened then was normal procedure in this parish.
The priest addressed the congregation before starting the Mass, and told us that he’d be saying Mass ad orientem, facing away from the congregation, and that this was the way Mass was supposed to be celebrated. He then made some slightly disparaging remarks about what he called the Novus Ordo Mass, and began.
Mass was in English – I would have thought that, given his feelings about the current liturgy, he would have gone for Latin – and didn’t deviate at all from the usual Mass, except that during the Liturgy of the Eucharist, he faced away from the congregation, just as he said he would.
His sermon was a bit strange, though. He dwelt mostly on what exactly we are supposed to believe about Mary, and about the Assumption, without speaking at all about what Mary and the Assumption should mean for us. Okay, I guess, it’s his sermon, he can do it the way he wants. But then he went off on some weird digression about exorcisms and how important and necessary they are.
Then the Mass continued as planned. But at the end of the Mass, he delivered an unsettling exhortation about obedience and how we, as Catholics, were facing terrible hatred and oppression in the world today.
All in all, a bit unsettling.
But my question is – is this done commonly? To celebrate the vernacular Mass, according to the usual rite, but facing away from the congregation?
Usually I go to Mass in my home parish in Brooklyn (New York). Lately I’ve been driving into Manhattan and picking up my elderly and somewhat immobile father, since his parish church closed some time ago, and the nearest church is farther away than he is able to walk, and then driving back to my parish with my father. No problem, there’s not a lot of traffic on Sunday mornings, and parking is pretty easy.
However, I didn’t want to drive into Manhattan in the middle of a business day, since the traffic would be horrible and there would be no place to park when I went to pick up my father. So I decided that I’d take the subway to his place, and then we’d take a cab from there to the nearest church.
Which we did, all according to plan.
We got to the church a bit early, which was fine, and then the Mass began. I’d never been to Mass at this church before, so I don’t know if what happened then was normal procedure in this parish.
The priest addressed the congregation before starting the Mass, and told us that he’d be saying Mass ad orientem, facing away from the congregation, and that this was the way Mass was supposed to be celebrated. He then made some slightly disparaging remarks about what he called the Novus Ordo Mass, and began.
Mass was in English – I would have thought that, given his feelings about the current liturgy, he would have gone for Latin – and didn’t deviate at all from the usual Mass, except that during the Liturgy of the Eucharist, he faced away from the congregation, just as he said he would.
His sermon was a bit strange, though. He dwelt mostly on what exactly we are supposed to believe about Mary, and about the Assumption, without speaking at all about what Mary and the Assumption should mean for us. Okay, I guess, it’s his sermon, he can do it the way he wants. But then he went off on some weird digression about exorcisms and how important and necessary they are.
Then the Mass continued as planned. But at the end of the Mass, he delivered an unsettling exhortation about obedience and how we, as Catholics, were facing terrible hatred and oppression in the world today.
All in all, a bit unsettling.
But my question is – is this done commonly? To celebrate the vernacular Mass, according to the usual rite, but facing away from the congregation?