P
phil19034
Guest
My two cents -I understand the Orans position to be arms open and bent forward, palms up. One of my fellow parishioners called that the Byzantine method. I find it a more open method of praying, that the body language is one of openly offering or openly receiving what God wants us to receive from the prayer, and nobody ever objected when I felt compelled to use it during congregational prayer at Mass. I never associate it with trying to imitate the priest. That never entered my mind. I just felt like praying in a more open manner to God.
It must not be strictly prohibited, or somebody would have said something. We have a few nitpicking folks in the congregation, so it surely would have been mentioned if it was objectionable.
BTW, when I say the blessing at meals during family gatherings, I use this open method of prayer giving thanks.
I agree that it should not be strickly forbidden. However, when I see people pray the Our Father during Vespers without using the Orans Posture but then the same people use the Orans Posture during Mass - it means they are simply copying the priest or doing what someone told them to do. If one prays the Our Father (and other prayers to the Father) all time (in and out of mass, both publicly & privately) using the Orans Posture, then I’m 100% cool with it.
But annoys me when people only use it when praying the Our Father during mass. It also annoys me (though less) when the only time they use it is when praying the Our Father and never during any other prayer.