P
Peter_M
Guest
I came across an article in the Jesuit magazine “America” titled “55 years after Vatican II, the task remains the same” by father Robert Imbelli. Here is a link to the article if you care to read the whole thing:
https://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2017/09/29/55-years-after-vatican-ii-task-remains-same
After a romanticized review of rather mundane events surrounding Vatican II and the celebration of its 50th anniversary, Father Imbelli then leads us to his idea of what is still needed 55 years later - he calls it “mystagogy” and “mystagogic catechesis”. I’m not quite sure what he means, but it seems that he is referring to a kind of “personal encounter with Jesus” (to use a cliché).
What bothered me most about his argument was, from his perspective, we should not be overly troubled by poorly done liturgy.
The post Vatican II church has lost touch with the dual aspect of worship - inner and outer. I agree with Father Ambelli that arguing over the particular words of the liturgy is a pedantic exercise. But, are we so poor that our outer worship - as expressed in the liturgy, and our general surroundings - are of little importance? I dread to attend mass in a church that looks more like a decorated gymnasium, or to hear a priest say the mass as though he just woke up from a nap. Both “mystagogy” and a beautiful Eucharist are essential, and to think that Vatican II was meant to do away with the beauty of the liturgy and replace it with a dry, lifeless, and abbreviated shell is a shame.
https://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2017/09/29/55-years-after-vatican-ii-task-remains-same
After a romanticized review of rather mundane events surrounding Vatican II and the celebration of its 50th anniversary, Father Imbelli then leads us to his idea of what is still needed 55 years later - he calls it “mystagogy” and “mystagogic catechesis”. I’m not quite sure what he means, but it seems that he is referring to a kind of “personal encounter with Jesus” (to use a cliché).
What bothered me most about his argument was, from his perspective, we should not be overly troubled by poorly done liturgy.
Apparently, we should think of ourselves as Father Delp, confined to a Nazi prison cell where we need to take comfort in the mystery of contemplation afforded to us. This is not to belittle Father Delp’s sufferings, but are we really in the same position where we cannot ask for better liturgy and homilies? Are we prisoners that we must sustain ourselves with our inner life alone?Now I do not deny that words have their importance. But even the most poetic of renderings cannot replace the experiential appropriation of the Gospel. The power and authenticity of the words we employ in the liturgy stem from the living encounter with the Lord Jesus whose love reorients our lives… Nor am I an advocate of ill-prepared homilies; and I am as averse to sentimental hymnody, ineptly performed, as the most punctilious liturgical musician. But are we so bereft of contemplative capacity and mystagogical imagination that even in less than inspiring surroundings, we cannot enter into the saving mystery that nourished and sustained Alfred Delp, S.J., in the dankness of a prison cell?
The post Vatican II church has lost touch with the dual aspect of worship - inner and outer. I agree with Father Ambelli that arguing over the particular words of the liturgy is a pedantic exercise. But, are we so poor that our outer worship - as expressed in the liturgy, and our general surroundings - are of little importance? I dread to attend mass in a church that looks more like a decorated gymnasium, or to hear a priest say the mass as though he just woke up from a nap. Both “mystagogy” and a beautiful Eucharist are essential, and to think that Vatican II was meant to do away with the beauty of the liturgy and replace it with a dry, lifeless, and abbreviated shell is a shame.