TLM At the National Shrine

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Did you know that in the 4th/5th century Saint John Chrysostom radically cut, edited, abridged the Divine Liturgy of Saint Basil, which itself was a radical cut, editing, and abridgment from the Divine Liturgy of Saint James. Yet, that Liturgy has been praised and used for nearly 1600 years now.
Because a Saint edited a rite 1500+ years ago does not mean that Cardinal Bugnini’s Mass is comparable. I do not see any calls for the beatification of Cardinal Bugnini. His Mass is bland; it is not an improvement on the rite which preceded it. I have not heard much praise for Cardinal Bugnini’s Mass. It has mostly been defence against criticisms.

Indeed, the Church has only recently got around to changing the text in key parts to resemble the old rite.
 
Re: JREd’s posts:
  1. I did not know that priests did not share in the Apostolic Succession. That’s interesting. I know that Bishops have a lot of autonomy and, post-Vat II, Bishop’s Conferences can ignore the Pope if they want to.
When a priest works for a diocese he receives his succession from the local bishop. However, the priest himself is not an Apostle. The bishop is.

Bishop’s Conferences only have as much authority as the bishops themselves want to give it. The bishops within the conference write their statutes which define the authority of the conference. Bishops’ Conferences cannot ignore a mandate by the pope. They can ignore a commentary or an opinion by the pope. They are not the same thing. A mandate is binding under obedience. Normally, Conferences do not ignore anything that the pope says, not even commentaries or opinions. That’s rude.
Are there any effective measures a Pope can bring against a rebellious bishop nowadays? How did they handle it in the past (guessing by force)?
Excommunication is the strongest disciplinary measure that a pope can use. Not only is the bishop outside the Church, but he is stripped of his faculties to preach, witness marriages and absolve. However, excommunication must be exercised with great care, because the objective is to discipline and bring back the individual. If it does not have the desired effect, the pope can lift it and try something else. He always had the authority to strip a bishop of all canonical authority and strip him of his title and faculties, which is the current status with the bishops of the SSPX. They have no canonical status; therefore, they have no authority and the faithful are not bound to obey them. They have no faculties to preach in any diocese, wtiness marriages or absolve. In other words, they’re suspended. They exercise the ministry without permission. That becomes a moral issue between them and God. It is not for us to judge one way or another. We can simply judge the external and say that they are violating the law. That’s all. This has been the practice for disciplining bishops since the early Church. When the Church had civil authority, they often sentenced them to jail time.
I reckon the Pope should risk schism if a Bishop is taking the mickey.
I have no idea what a mickey is.
I’d say the pederast scandals have tipped Catholic opinion his way. Also, the experience of Abp Lefebvre is instructive: when you’re out, you’re invisible, I think. You can rant and rave in the wilderness. You’ll not be heard by most of the flock thereafter.
The sexual abuse scandals have nothing to do with this. Sexual abuse is not an excommunicable offense. Ordaining bishops without the permission of the pope is excommunicable. It’s a much higher moral crime, because it’s an act of wilfull disobedience. and an ilegal use of the sacrament.
  1. Re: reception in the hand in Eastern Catholic Rites (Melkite, Chaldean, Coptic): a) Is there any accompanying purification of the hands? b) Do they let laypeople distribute?
I have never seen any purification of hands. But remember, deacons don’t purify their hands either. That’s an act for the priest. It goes with the priest’s prayer to be cleansed so that he can confect the Eucharist with dignity. Purification of the hands is not tied into distribution of communion, it leads into the canon of the mass. So there would be no logical reason for deacons or other to purify their hands.

They have different ways of distributing communion. As Brendan has said, there are several Churches that have CITH as an option. It’s up to the Patriarach or the local Metropolitan.

As to lay people distributing communion, I do not know how they distribute communion to the homebound and hospital bound. That was the original idea of the EMHC in the Roman Church.

In religious houses you don’t have to be ordained to distribute communion, not even in the Eastern Churches. That’s a perrogative of the Abbot.
It looks like the Chaldeans only do CITH as we do it? The others by intinction or COTT(?)
Read above. They are not the only ones. It is more common among them. But there are other Churches who allow it. They don’t have an indult, because they don’t need it since it was never abrogated. They have come back and forth on that according to local customs. You have to remember that there are five rites in the Eastern Churches and 21 Churches. Besides the Chaldean Church, there are other Churches that use the Chaldean rite. One of them is the Syro-Malabar. Among the Orthodox, there are several Churches that use the Chaldean rite.

The Orthodox are united to Rome in sacris.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
No one can see your inner reverence. It’s a public rite. Other people are present. So to represent and encourage what we hope will occur internally, we have opulence and beautiful, ornate language. Also as a sign of respect to a King and as a mirror of Heaven.

Symbols are important. They carry meaning.
I agree that symbols are very important as is language (meaning the use of words, not Latin vs Eng). That being said, we cannot make the mistake of saying that the symbols and language of the Tridentine mass are the only one that convey the meaning of mystery. That is not the case. This is one of many forms, not the THE form.

I believe that what all of us are sensing is that you’re trying to lead us to believe that the Tridentine Form is THE form and everything else that we have or have had pales next to the Tridentine form. That’s why you’re getting resistance.

If you backed off and accept the beauty of the Tridentine Form as one of the many Forms in the Church and accept that they all have meaning for different people, even if they don’t move you, not one would care. Not everyone is moved by the same symbols and choreography.

To say that the Tidentine Form must be adopted by everyone, because it is the only Form that has meaning, solemnity and beauty, etc is an insult to other forms that have been around longer than the Tridentine form and are very simple. A Carthusian may take you out and hang you by your thumbs if you said that to him. Their rite is older, very austere, the environment is very sterile (no statues, no colors, no choirs unless they celebrate a common mass). The O’Carm would be very offended too. They have their own form. The Franciscans did not have Gregorian Chant until Vatican II gave them permission to do so. The Dominicans have their own rite. The Jesuits use the Roman Rite, but have some a lot of clericalism in their mass, as opposed to the mendicants who avoid clericalism at mass, because it’s against their rules.

All of these practices have meaning and move people spiritually It is unfair to assume that only one form can move people.

As to bringing the best to liturgy, you won’t get an argument on that from anyone. However, you may get a debate on what constitutes the best. Again, if you ask a Franciscan, the best is the plainest and most simple celebration in the most simple church with as few gestures as possible so as not to disrupt the contemplative prayer taking place.

If you ask a Carthusain, the best is chant, not distractions from statues, paintings, excessive objects and books on the altar and no laity present. They deliberately avoid having llay people at their monastery mass on Sundays.

To the Dominican the best is a very coreographed liturgy with many gestures, a very elaborate church with statues, paintaings etc.

To the Carmelites the best is a very austere mass with very little to focus on except the celebrant and the altar, no tabernacle and not other elements present in the sanctuary. The best is the silence and contemplation of a hermit.

There are different definitions of the best.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂

.
 
So, we have established that some Eastern Catholic rites do have CITH. What, then is the spiritual benefit to us, as Roman Catholics, in our Mass, in changing from COTT, kneeling, from a priest, to CITH, standing, from a laywoman? We know permission has been given, but what’s the benefit compared to the old way?

[Answers - The Most Trusted Place for Answering Life's Questions](Taking the mickey), e.g., kicking up a fuss about about the appointment of a conservative bishop..
First of all, communion on the knees was only for laity in secular parishes. It was never a question of benefit. It was a point of custom

Second, communion is the benefit, not the person who gives it to you. I find it interesting that you keep insisting on communion from a priest. What about deacons? Is that less beneficial?

What about a religious brother, friar or monk? They’re not ordained. Is that less beneficial?

The benefit is in the sacrament, not the minister or the posture.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
Because a Saint edited a rite 1500+ years ago does not mean that Cardinal Bugnini’s Mass is comparable. I do not see any calls for the beatification of Cardinal Bugnini. His Mass is bland; it is not an improvement on the rite which preceded it. I have not heard much praise for Cardinal Bugnini’s Mass. It has mostly been defence against criticisms.

Indeed, the Church has only recently got around to changing the text in key parts to resemble the old rite.
That’s actually incorrect, since the Ordinary Form’s missal has not been changed; the English translation of that Missal has been changed to more closely resemble not the Extraordinary Form but rather the actual text of the OF Missal.

The actual Ordinary Form missal and its translation are seperate issues.
 
So a consecration occurring is of benefit. How about hymns, vestments, statues, symbolic gestures and the like?

A High Mass is the norm, at least in the old rite. The standard. If God is making Himself present then all the reverence you can muster, inner or outer, is surely pertinent.
A High Mass is the theoretical norm. The typical Mass for the typical parish was more commonly the missa cantata; not everybody assisted at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City, and many of the parishes in the city itself were of smaller size.
 
First of all, communion on the knees was only for laity in secular parishes. It was never a question of benefit. It was a point of custom

Second, communion is the benefit, not the person who gives it to you. I find it interesting that you keep insisting on communion from a priest. What about deacons? Is that less beneficial?

What about a religious brother, friar or monk? They’re not ordained. Is that less beneficial?

The benefit is in the sacrament, not the minister or the posture.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
Only Consecrated hands should touch the Host though. Not our hands or anyone else’s. We don’t benefit from receiving Communion as much if we don’t even receive it the right way.
 
I agree that symbols are very important as is language (meaning the use of words, not Latin vs Eng). That being said, we cannot make the mistake of saying that the symbols and language of the Tridentine mass are the only one that convey the meaning of mystery. That is not the case. This is one of many forms, not the THE form.
It was the only form available to most Roman Catholics. Introducing Eastern Catholic rites as an excuse is a red herring. Most Roman Catholics have never heard of them, even now. To use them as an excuse to further de-sacralise the RC rite is a bad argument.
I believe that what all of us are sensing is that you’re trying to lead us to believe that the Tridentine Form is THE form and everything else that we have or have had pales next to the Tridentine form. That’s why you’re getting resistance.
Who is all of us? The ‘Tridentine’ Mass is ‘The’ form? I never said that. What I’m arguing for is consistency in a mystic rite called ‘The Holy Sacrifice Of The Mass’, Latin version, wherein Christ is invoked into a host and seers tell us the denizens of Heaven appear by our altars when it is said.

If our God is present at Mass then why pull sacred things out and insert mundane ones? By sacred I mean symbols, objects and texts which emphasise the set-apart and other-worldly nature of what’s being being essayed. Things which remind us of the Divine have been removed and earthly things inserted.
If you backed off and accept the beauty of the Tridentine Form as one of the many Forms in the Church and accept that they all have meaning for different people, even if they don’t move you, not one would care. Not everyone is moved by the same symbols and choreography.
We’re in the Roman Catholic church. Our symbols and their meaning have being pretty consistent for the past 500+ years. The ‘other rite’ argument is just an excuse for whatever the lovers of change want to insert into the ‘Latin’ rite. Same as using St. Cyril, David etc.
To say that the Tidentine Form must be adopted by everyone, because it is the only Form that has meaning, solemnity and beauty, etc is an insult to other forms that have been around longer than the Tridentine form and are very simple.
Never said that.

We have austerity now, however, all right. An absence. I remember reading of one parishioner bringing back to a Church a statue of the BVM a new priest had put out in the rubbish.
A Carthusian may take you out and hang you by your thumbs if you said that to him. Their rite is older, very austere, the environment is very sterile (no statues, no colors, no choirs unless they celebrate a common mass). The O’Carm would be very offended too. They have their own form. The Franciscans did not have Gregorian Chant until Vatican II gave them permission to do so. The Dominicans have their own rite. The Jesuits use the Roman Rite, but have some a lot of clericalism in their mass, as opposed to the mendicants who avoid clericalism at mass, because it’s against their rules.
I understand the Carmelites don’t say their old rite any more. I’ve heard it’s beautiful. Dunno about the other orders. That their austerity should be applied across the Church is wrong.

That churches that had ornate decor and a beautiful rites should now host minimalist rites and decor is wrong. We are lay people and at a time of unprecedented immorality and antagonism towards our religion need more reminders of its symbols and their meaning, not less. Be austere in your dress, behaviour and consumption if you want to, but to turn on a mystic rite and gut it, making a banal, new rite, then insert mundane elements to chase after straying Catholics? Perverse.

Also, religion is not an intellectual tinker-toy. There are powerful beings invoked by our rites. We desire their favour. Mass has been turned into a closed-circle of mortals facing each other, in churches that look like school halls and Masses that are more like recitals.

Here’s a thought: Why don’t the Eastern Catholics, who use CITH, adopt our mode of reception. It’s patently reverential. What’s that? Impossible? Not part of their culture? A ‘Latinisation’? Well, CITH wasn’t part of ours until some Dutch priests decided some archeolgism was in order. “It’s what Jesus did …etc”.
 
Only Consecrated hands should touch the Host though. Not our hands or anyone else’s. We don’t benefit from receiving Communion as much if we don’t even receive it the right way.
The Church has said otherwise. They have the authority to do so – you do NOT.
 
It was the only form available to most Roman Catholics. Introducing Eastern Catholic rites as an excuse is a red herring. Most Roman Catholics have never heard of them, even now. To use them as an excuse to further de-sacralise the RC rite is a bad argument.
It most certainly is not a red herring. It is to counter the argument that wants to have the only form of Liturgy in the entire Catholic Church be the EF. That is just patently false. There has NEVER been uniformity in the Liturgy throughout the Church, not even in the era of Trent in the Latin Church.
 
find it interesting that you keep insisting on communion from a priest. What about deacons? Is that less beneficial?
I say that because the priest is there. At a Mass I attended, in a Franciscan church, he sat out the distribution and let the lady EMHCs do it. It’s one more mundane element added to a mystic rite, and in this instance, it looked kind of comical; like he was having a rest.
 
It most certainly is not a red herring. It is to counter the argument that wants to have the only form of Liturgy in the entire Catholic Church be the EF. That is just patently false. There has NEVER been uniformity in the Liturgy throughout the Church, not even in the era of Trent in the Latin Church.
I can’t recall anyone seriously making that argument. That’s just silly. The Eastern Catholics are invoked to excuse CITH, that’s my experience on here. Also, the Last Supper. That’s a popular one.
 
So a consecration occurring is of benefit. How about hymns, vestments, statues, symbolic gestures and the like?
Some hymns, vestments, statues, and gestures are certainly of spiritual benefit.
A High Mass is the norm, at least in the old rite. The standard. If God is making Himself present then all the reverence you can muster, inner or outer, is surely pertinent.
The High Mass is the norm in the EF, according to the Church’s definition of “norm”. Someone who doesn’t know that definition would certainly think that a Mass that is only celebrated one out of seven times a week cannot possibly be a “norm”. Noting that God making Himself present in the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass deserves all the reverence you can muster, can you present any principled reason for a Low Mass to be offered?
I say that because the priest is there. At a Mass I attended, in a Franciscan church, he sat out the distribution and let the lady EMHCs do it. It’s one more mundane element added to a mystic rite, and in this instance, it looked kind of comical; like he was having a rest.
That is an abuse, save for some health reason on his part. It is not the norm.
 
Yet again, what Church? The true, Traditional Church or the one that is around today?
There is only ONE, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church. The Church founded by Jesus Christ on the rock of Peter, lead today by Pope Benedict XVI the successor of Saint Peter.
 
Only Consecrated hands should touch the Host though. Not our hands or anyone else’s. We don’t benefit from receiving Communion as much if we don’t even receive it the right way.
A deacon’s hands are never consecrated. But the deacon is the ordinary minister of Holy Communion in the Roman Church since the time of Steven the first deacon.

The hands of the priest are consecrated because he consecrates, not because he distributes communion. Every priest is first a deacon. By the time he’s ordained a priest he has been distributing communion at least one year. That’s the minimum requirement for ordination to the priesthood.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
I say that because the priest is there. At a Mass I attended, in a Franciscan church, he sat out the distribution and let the lady EMHCs do it. It’s one more mundane element added to a mystic rite, and in this instance, it looked kind of comical; like he was having a rest.
But you have to understand the custom here. Franciscans were not founded as an order of priests. The focus among Franciscans has always been to be friars or in English, Brothers. Since the time of Francis the ordaind brothers have always been expect to avoid singularizing themselves, but to blend in with the rest of the brotherhood.

Long before there were EMHC there was always a strong reminder given to any of our ordained brothers that they must avoid all forms of clericalism.

This friars is coming from that tradition. Normally, if a friar celebrates a mass he distributes communion and may have other friars (ordained or not) help him. It could have been that the friar was not feeling well or he was an older person. I don’t know, because I was not there. Even in the Franciscan tradition, the presider distributes communion.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
I can’t recall anyone seriously making that argument. That’s just silly. The Eastern Catholics are invoked to excuse CITH, that’s my experience on here. Also, the Last Supper. That’s a popular one.
The Eastern Catholics and the orders came into the conversation because you called CITH a sacrilege. I said that if it were a sacrilege, it would not be allowed in any religious order or any of the 22 Catholic Churches.

You have not backed down and accepted that it’s not a sacrilege.

Fraternally,

Br. JR, OSF 🙂
 
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