The Mass - worship service or community gathering?

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On the other hand, my limited exposure to the Extraordinarily Form has left me with somewhat the same impression, that of the priest doing his own thing (silently) and the people doing theirs (silently), with no obvious connection between the two. Perhaps I’m as wrong about the Extraordinary Form as you are about the Divine LIturgy.
It’s called contemplative prayer and non-verbal communcation. I disagree strongly with your no obvious connection between the priest’s prayers and the people’s prayers. It seems more education is needed in this area. And perhaps the DL as well.
 
It’s called contemplative prayer and non-verbal communcation. I disagree strongly with your no obvious connection between the priest’s prayers and the people’s prayers. It seems more education is needed in this area. And perhaps the DL as well.
No, I understand intellectually. I have studied the EF and know that there is a connection, it has just failed to connect with me on an emotional level. It is how I feel while there. I have no problem at all with the EF, it is just so different from the Divine Liturgy. It is not how I was formed, not how I learned to worship God.
 
It absolutely HAS TO be BOTH.

The worship of God is to not starve the widows and orphans (it repeatedly says in the Old Testament) - to not stunt the growth of our fellow servants as Jesus put it. He is coming to ask us questions about this!

The quote Babochka gives in post 15 refers to Eph 4 which is exactly what it is all about. Some had “fallen asleep” for not discerning this.

This is the talents, the sower, the four horsemen, the seven lampstands.

The readings and homily should catechise all present. All year round. For our lifetimes.

Is your church discipling you to disciple your fellows so they can in turn be even more fruitful than you?
 
I was always made to believe it is a holy sacrifice. It is not a “service” or community gathering as some people would like to put it to make it more “friendly” to non-Catholics
Why do we go to mass? We call it the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. A ritual worship of God. There are some Catholics who stress the community more than the worship. Is it possible to combine both aspects?
 
I was always made to believe it is a holy sacrifice. It is not a “service” or community gathering as some people would like to put it to make it more “friendly” to non-Catholics
How does it being a holy sacrifice preclude it being a service or a community gathering? The community gathers for a service, which is the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass.
 
I have no problem at all with the EF, it is just so different from the Divine Liturgy. It is not how I was formed, not how I learned to worship God.
Okay but I’m wondering if the entire thread isn’t pitting the introverts vs the extroverts, for the lack of better categorization.
 
Okay but I’m wondering if the entire thread isn’t pitting the introverts vs the extroverts, for the lack of better categorization.
For the record, I’m an introvert. Strongly an introvert. An ISTJ, if you’re familiar with Myers-Briggs. 😃

Keep in mind that I don’t regularly attend the EF or the OF. Of the two, I prefer the OF, but I don’t go in for all the “extras”. Just give me the Mass.

I am terribly uncomfortable holding hands with strangers during the Our Father. God forbid they should try to hug me during the sign of peace! I sometimes attend Mass at one of those churches where they “turn and greet each other” before Mass. I purposely arrive late and I hate to be late. But I’d rather be late than have to have a conversation with a stranger before Mass. I sometimes even dread extended family gatherings because they are exhausting, even though I love my family very much.
I once read a protestant blog about how to build community in a church, and they listed “parking lot greeters” as “essential”. If I went to a church with parking lot greeters, I wouldn’t get out of the car. Seriously, I would just keep driving. It would feel so incredibly invasive to have to speak to a stranger before I could even get my bearings in a new place. It feels like an assault. When I arrive at my own parish, with just 20 families, all well-known to me, I’ve been known to sit in my car until other people have gone in, so that I don’t have to greet them immediately. (I do eventually greet them, as we have a community meal after the liturgy and I always stay. I just need time to warm up.) Before I found a regular confessor and built a relationship with him, Confession was torturous. I had literally bare my soul to a stranger. Yikes!

My introvert children and I confuse my extroverted husband daily. I get it. Really.

I still stand by the idea that Mass is communal by its very nature, but I don’t mean the sort of “forced” community, where you’re greeted at the door, asked to hold hands, hug people during the sign of peace, etc. Even I, as introverted as I am, understand that we need each other as human beings. We are born into a community, a family. We know that deprived of any sort of community, human beings suffer serious psychological damage. God himself is a Community. We are part of the communion of saints. Baptism, in addition to its effects on original sin, makes us part of a community of Christians. We cannot escape this fact of our nature. We need real community, not this fake, forced community that some call community.
 
Can you post a link to this? I would like to share it on Facebook, with appropriate credit. Very beautiful story.
I would say that it is not possible to separate both aspects.

The Mass is communal worship, even if only the priest is present. In the East, the priest cannot say the Divine Liturgy without at least one other person present. The community aspect of the worship is that critical. In the West, this is not the case, but it is understood that the body of Christ is invisibly present in the saints.

Here is a wonderful, chill-inducing story that I love:
 
It’s called contemplative prayer and non-verbal communcation. I disagree strongly with your no obvious connection between the priest’s prayers and the people’s prayers. It seems more education is needed in this area. And perhaps the DL as well.
A priest celebrating Mass in the extraordinary form is no more engaged in contemplative prayer than the priest who celebrates Mass in the Ordinary Form. Mental prayer is the necessary preparation for the** gift **of Contemplation. " Mental prayer, (in the view of St. Teresa of Avilla), is nothing but friendly intercourse, and frequent solitary converse with Him Who we know loves us.” (Way of Perfection)
 
For the record, I’m an introvert. Strongly an introvert. An ISTJ, if you’re familiar with Myers-Briggs. 😃

Keep in mind that I don’t regularly attend the EF or the OF. Of the two, I prefer the OF, but I don’t go in for all the “extras”. Just give me the Mass.

I am terribly uncomfortable holding hands with strangers during the Our Father. God forbid they should try to hug me during the sign of peace! I sometimes attend Mass at one of those churches where they “turn and greet each other” before Mass. I purposely arrive late and I hate to be late. But I’d rather be late than have to have a conversation with a stranger before Mass. I sometimes even dread extended family gatherings because they are exhausting, even though I love my family very much.
I once read a protestant blog about how to build community in a church, and they listed “parking lot greeters” as “essential”. If I went to a church with parking lot greeters, I wouldn’t get out of the car. Seriously, I would just keep driving. It would feel so incredibly invasive to have to speak to a stranger before I could even get my bearings in a new place. It feels like an assault. When I arrive at my own parish, with just 20 families, all well-known to me, I’ve been known to sit in my car until other people have gone in, so that I don’t have to greet them immediately. (I do eventually greet them, as we have a community meal after the liturgy and I always stay. I just need time to warm up.) Before I found a regular confessor and built a relationship with him, Confession was torturous. I had literally bare my soul to a stranger. Yikes!

My introvert children and I confuse my extroverted husband daily. I get it. Really.

I still stand by the idea that Mass is communal by its very nature, but I don’t mean the sort of “forced” community, where you’re greeted at the door, asked to hold hands, hug people during the sign of peace, etc. Even I, as introverted as I am, understand that we need each other as human beings. We are born into a community, a family. We know that deprived of any sort of community, human beings suffer serious psychological damage. God himself is a Community. We are part of the communion of saints. Baptism, in addition to its effects on original sin, makes us part of a community of Christians. We cannot escape this fact of our nature. We need real community, not this fake, forced community that some call community.
Points well-taken, except maybe for that communion of the saints part, which I’ve often objected to. But that’s me.

The thing is that I seem to recall my dad’s short experience at a nursing home, where supposedly the “community” was supposed to help him rehabilitate among other things. I feel this, however, damaged him psychologically. So much so that he begged my brother never to be so committed again for any reason.

You say this may be different because the Mass is not forced. Yet the obligation to attend is still there. Has to make a difference; otherwise there is no need for this thread or discussion in the first place.
 
Having posted the original question and reading the answers I am beginning to think that perhaps a follow-up question would be of some use.

We attend church for different reasons, as is evident from the wonderful responses here.

Is the Mass supposed to be a form of worship of God by a set of prayers and rituals, or is it more of a communal meal/gathering? (What comes to mind here is the movie Bebette’s Feast.)

What are we “supposed” to be attending each Sunday morning?
 
I still stand by the idea that Mass is communal by its very nature, but I don’t mean the sort of “forced” community, where you’re greeted at the door, asked to hold hands, hug people during the sign of peace, etc. Even I, as introverted as I am, understand that we need each other as human beings. We are born into a community, a family. We know that deprived of any sort of community, human beings suffer serious psychological damage. God himself is a Community. We are part of the communion of saints. Baptism, in addition to its effects on original sin, makes us part of a community of Christians. We cannot escape this fact of our nature. We need real community, not this fake, forced community that some call community.
This. at mass, we participate in the sacrifice of the eucharist not as individuals by as members of a community - hence communion (“with one”). When we are baptised, we are baptised into a faith community and, for infants, it is the faith of the community which is most important. Thus, the parish is a community of faith in which all the faithful are one body, meaning that “union with Christ is also union with all those to whom he gives himself” (to quote St JPII).
Is the Mass supposed to be a form of worship of God by a set of prayers and rituals, or is it more of a communal meal/gathering? (What comes to mind here is the movie Bebette’s Feast.)

What are we “supposed” to be attending each Sunday morning?
Both and but, more than this, it’s a participation in Christ’s sacrifice - the sacrifice of the mass in which Christ is really, truly, and substantially present
 
Points well-taken, except maybe for that communion of the saints part, which I’ve often objected to. But that’s me.
What is your objection to the Communion of Saints part? I know you’ve mentioned your objection before, but I don’t think I really understand what you are objecting to.
 
What is your objection to the Communion of Saints part? I know you’ve mentioned your objection before, but I don’t think I really understand what you are objecting to.
Glad you asked that, as I was wondering too why someone who seems to be a devout Catholic would object to a teaching of the church.
 
What is your objection to the Communion of Saints part? I know you’ve mentioned your objection before, but I don’t think I really understand what you are objecting to.
Simply because it’s a presumption.

And why do we state it as a belief (in the Apostles Creed) if we know and see it to already be factual?

Seems to me a real community is composed of people of all types, religions, morals, languages, cultures, ages, and sizes. I suppose for Papal Masses…
 
Simply because it’s a presumption.

And why do we state it as a belief (in the Apostles Creed) if we know and see it to already be factual?

Seems to me a real community is composed of people of all types, religions, morals, languages, cultures, ages, and sizes. I suppose for Papal Masses…
Do you mean that it is a presumption that we are a part of the Communion of Saints, or a presumption that the Communion of Saints exists? Or that the Communion of Saints is a community?

I think we have been hung up in this thread by differing definitions of community, as well.
 
The first/former. We haven’t been judged yet.
Maybe this will help:
The Church, the Mystical Body, exists on this earth, and is called the Church militant, because its members struggle against the world, the flesh and the devil. The Church suffering means the souls in Purgatory. The Church triumphant is the Church in heaven. The unity and cooperation of the members of the Church on earth, in Purgatory, in Heaven is also called the Communion of Saints. When St. Paul uses the word “Saints” in opening an Epistle, he does not mean they are morally perfect. He has in mind Hebrew qadosh, which means set aside for God, or coming under the covenant. Being such means of course they are called to moral perfection. But of course, not all have reached it in this world.
Source: ewtn.com/faith/teachings/chura1.htm
 
The first/former. We haven’t been judged yet.
I just found this, from the Baltimore Catechism.

170. What is meant by “the communion of saints” in the Apostles’ Creed?
By “the communion of saints” is meant the union of the faithful on earth, the blessed in heaven, and the souls in purgatory, with Christ as their Head.
 
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