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Guest
I agree. Different Strokes for different folks. It is the name of the game.
I was, quite obviously, referring to constant and frequently unwarranted criticism, with little regard to whether those practices are allowed by the GIRM.Were you not alluding to criticism of priests for certain liturgical practices?
Most of what was listed was an option – not an abuse. But I concur about finding another parish. Two of the parishes nearest me have switched to all organ music, a lot of Latin, Mass ad orientem. I’ve had to start driving about 30 minutes to a parish where I feel genuinely and prayerfully engaged in the celebration of the Mass.or 20 years, instead of seeking out one without the listed abuses?
The pastor has to set a policy and then enforce it. There is a parish here locally where the pastor simply locked the door from the sacristy to the sanctuary. The set-up was done using a cart. The sacristans didn’t mind. It saved them trips. They would set up the cart, push it outside and then back in the church and then into the sanctuary.Sadly our sanctuary gets used as a passageway to parts of the Church also.
You say that, yet more than once you have called your priests motives and intentions into question.It’s sad to see some being so defensive here. This was meant to be a positive thread.
You arre clearing inferring that the priest had negative reasons for choosing the perfectly licit options that he did. In short, you are casting aspersions on him.All axiomatic… It takes a real toll however when a pastor clearly does his best to “optimize” the Mass in terms of keeping it as short as possible. Disheartening actually. Terrible.
No, it is simply good Christian charity to assume someone is doing something legitimate for the right reasons.That’s clericalism: that a layman shouldn’t question the motives and intentions of priests, just because they are priests.
And that people are being driven from the church because of it.To go around saying that a priest is choosing X or Y option because he wants to shorten the Mass, is simply calumny.
I agree that amateur “liturgists” should not try to “improve” on the prescriptions laid down by the Church for the arrangement of churches, the choice of furnishings, or for the celebration of the Holy Mass.Ensuring at least 2 candles are immediately next to altar. No more games of having one candle near the altar and one near the ambo – which some here called the “altar of the word.”
I remember my dad loved this story: A young priest took his first assignment as associate at a large parish. He was surprised when he first used the ambo to see that it had a whiskey jigger on it. He asked the pastor about this, and the pastor said, “It pays to have a reminder that a good homily is like good whiskey. You don’t want to be stingy with it, but there does get to be a point where pouring out more is just a waste of really good stuff.”I disagree. For 90% of parishes optimizing for brevity is going to be the single best “optimization” one can make. Its far easier to deliver a good 3 minute sermon than a good 20 minute one. For most people it’s easier to immerse onself and focus for 45-50 minutes than for 60-75.
A couple of your dislikes ( liturgical dancing & congas) are also typically eliminated (thankfully) by a short mass.
Not opposed to a long Liturgy, but most would be more efficacious if shorter.
No, I said posts don’t need to be psychoanalyzed to find non-existent “hidden” meanings. It’s right there in my post.Sounds a bit pedantic: I’m talking about priests getting criticized, and you’re also talking about priests getting criticized, but there’s a distinction somewhere that lots of people get, but I shouldn’t psychoanalyze your post in order to find the distinction…
I think we need to give up here. 0331 is determined to find things in our posts that aren’t there.I never said one shouldn’t question. One should if there is a legitimate reason to.
What I did say is one should not call into question the intentions or motives of the decision -maker when the decision maker is making decisions that are valid and licit.
20 minute homily is too long, always in my opinion. For a Sunday mass, 10 minutes is the longest it should be. A deacon told me once they are told that 8 is optimal in their training.Having said that, writing remarks that cover three readings in three minutes is actually more difficult to accomplish than having a somewhat longer time to develop the thoughts being delivered. That leaves a lot of real estate, however, between three minutes and 20 minutes.