J
Jon_Mallory
Guest
So I’ve been reading Scott Hahn’s book, “The Lamb’s Supper: The Mass As Heaven On Earth” and I have a few question. Hahn writes, “At Mass, we’re already in heaven! That’s not just me saying so, or a handful of dead theologians. The Catechism says so”. This is Magisterial teaching, not to be questioned by Catholics (I am not Catholic so I have the luxury of questioning for now until I have arrived at a position beyond all doubt).
My question is this: If mass is truly Heaven on earth, then how can it exist alongside the apathy, sinfulness, and sometimes irreverence of the laity and priests? Some people even swear during mass or whisper to one another. That doesn’t seem to be consistent with “the worship of Heaven” unless the presence of heaven is truly independent of man. How can Heaven intermingle with the elements of Hell? Maybe I don’t have a solid understanding of Heaven or Hell.
Whenever I go to mass, I do not sense that I am in the presence of Heaven. Instead, I struggle with boredom. Please, understand that I am not insulting the Mass. I am just relating the experiences of one individual for whatever its worth. Perhaps you might be thinking, “emotion does not matter in worship, only the will and the intellect” to which I respond: Worship encompasses the whole person. Emotions are valuable too. Pious affective responses such as reverence are necessary for worship. Emotions should not be dismissed to the realm of the “purely subjective”.
My question is this: If mass is truly Heaven on earth, then how can it exist alongside the apathy, sinfulness, and sometimes irreverence of the laity and priests? Some people even swear during mass or whisper to one another. That doesn’t seem to be consistent with “the worship of Heaven” unless the presence of heaven is truly independent of man. How can Heaven intermingle with the elements of Hell? Maybe I don’t have a solid understanding of Heaven or Hell.
Whenever I go to mass, I do not sense that I am in the presence of Heaven. Instead, I struggle with boredom. Please, understand that I am not insulting the Mass. I am just relating the experiences of one individual for whatever its worth. Perhaps you might be thinking, “emotion does not matter in worship, only the will and the intellect” to which I respond: Worship encompasses the whole person. Emotions are valuable too. Pious affective responses such as reverence are necessary for worship. Emotions should not be dismissed to the realm of the “purely subjective”.