D
DL82
Guest
It doesn’t matter how well we study the rubrics, how careful the priests are in following the norms, how ‘traditional’ the congregation, how much attention is given to historical detail, there is one thing about the Extraordinary Form of the mass that will NEVER be like a pre-Vatican II mass.
That one thing is its’ universality. In 1950, people didn’t go to Latin mass because they were ‘Traditional’, they went to Latin mass because they were Catholic! It was just the mass, the one parish mass that everyone goes to.
I’ve recently been reading Catherine Pickstock (an Anglican, but very close to Catholicism in her liturgical understanding) on the liturgy. Pickstock’s view is that liturgy doesn’t just bring the community together in an ordinary event, liturgy CREATES the community. Without liturgy, there is no Church, no congregation. This is key, the people of God comes from the Body of Christ, which is imparted to us through the liturgy.
This community is, after the Eucharistic consecration itself, the most important aspect of the mass. Looking at it this way has really made me think again about the whole Latin mass movement. Like it or not, the only place we will find this universality in worship today is in the Ordinary Form, celebrated in the ordinary parish church.
Pickstock is especially critical of the ‘polity of death’ which she sees in the increasing reliance on the ‘dead letter’ rather than the living Word. Our need to tie everything down, bring it out of a book, pick up an old book (a 1962 missal?), reprint it, reproduce it, ‘pretend’ it’s still the way things are, is a disconnect from a fundamental aspect of our embodied humanity. In this context, I can understand why defunct rites, like the Sarum Use for example, no matter how beautiful they might be as a spectacle, are not properly ‘liturgical’ for us today, they are historical artefacts, learned from a book not from a human person. Learning the mass from an old book or an old film reel, no matter how authentic a reproduction, will always be reproduction, not the ongoing production of the living community.
OK, I’m guessing this is going to be a controversial post on here. Tell me why I’m wrong? I honestly want to know.
That one thing is its’ universality. In 1950, people didn’t go to Latin mass because they were ‘Traditional’, they went to Latin mass because they were Catholic! It was just the mass, the one parish mass that everyone goes to.
I’ve recently been reading Catherine Pickstock (an Anglican, but very close to Catholicism in her liturgical understanding) on the liturgy. Pickstock’s view is that liturgy doesn’t just bring the community together in an ordinary event, liturgy CREATES the community. Without liturgy, there is no Church, no congregation. This is key, the people of God comes from the Body of Christ, which is imparted to us through the liturgy.
This community is, after the Eucharistic consecration itself, the most important aspect of the mass. Looking at it this way has really made me think again about the whole Latin mass movement. Like it or not, the only place we will find this universality in worship today is in the Ordinary Form, celebrated in the ordinary parish church.
Pickstock is especially critical of the ‘polity of death’ which she sees in the increasing reliance on the ‘dead letter’ rather than the living Word. Our need to tie everything down, bring it out of a book, pick up an old book (a 1962 missal?), reprint it, reproduce it, ‘pretend’ it’s still the way things are, is a disconnect from a fundamental aspect of our embodied humanity. In this context, I can understand why defunct rites, like the Sarum Use for example, no matter how beautiful they might be as a spectacle, are not properly ‘liturgical’ for us today, they are historical artefacts, learned from a book not from a human person. Learning the mass from an old book or an old film reel, no matter how authentic a reproduction, will always be reproduction, not the ongoing production of the living community.
OK, I’m guessing this is going to be a controversial post on here. Tell me why I’m wrong? I honestly want to know.