javelin:
I still don’t understand what problem people have liturgically or spiritually with the congregation holding hands during the Lord’s Prayer… Simply assuming… that everyone just simply mechanically grabs a hand offered them and doesn’t at some level place significance on the gesture is unfair. I would say there are just as many people who mindlessly recite the prayer with their hands to themselves as there are that may mindlessly take a hand and say it. If you want to take it to an extreme, why recite the prayer out loud even? Why not just have silence while everyone says the prayer to God themselves? (I don’t really believe this, just pointing out the exteme
I personally feel that it is a beautiful gesture of unity and community, not detracting from the perfect communal form of the Eucharist, but enhancing the congragation’s proclamation of oneness in preparation for the Eucharist. The prayer begins “Our Father…” after all. What is wrong with being united not only verbally and spiritually, but physically as well? I also have no problem with people “opting out” for whatever personal reasons.
What I actually find very telling about this issue is how quickly and completely it has spread in my area. Over the last 15 years, I went from never seeing it to seeing it in almost every parish I’ve been in (we’ve moved a lot, too). When something spreads that quickly, with obviously no direct encouragemet from the Church leadership, the gesture must be striking a chord in the congration and raising their feeling of participation in the Mass and the pinnacle of the Mass, the Eucharist.
Those are just my thoughts. It honestly distresses me somewhat that the Church is making such an issue of this when there are much larger problems to deal with. I wonder how much of it is really only a power show.
I hate feeling that way, because I love my faith.
javelin
Javelin, thank you for your post. And your well-considered concern. Although I don’t agree with it, I appreciate your point.
The reason why it’s “such an issue” with me is that I know the statistics of how many Catholics standing there holding hands actually know that it’s the taking of the Eucharist that is THE sign of community –
Last numbers… it’s less than half of the people in the pews who actually KNOW that.
There is SUCH a need for us to have “community” and show it that is why, I think, folks are jumping on the “hold hands to show we’re united” bandwagon.
If I didn’t KNOW, myself, that the hand-holding at the Lord’s Prayer is not THE sign of community (the Eucharist, which is required of us), but A sign of community –
only then would I jump on that holding hands at the Lord’s Prayer bandwagon.
I do NOT mean to be disrespectful of you or your point, Javelin.
I’m just offering my post here as a description of why those of us who get pressured into holding someone’s hand as if it’s REQUIRED are pretty gun-shy of it at this point.
Especially when you can barely hear the responses in Mass… but you SURE can hear EVERYBODY saying the Lord’s Prayer.
Next in volume is the Allelulia.
When there’s a music group who leads us in the responses, then it’s MUCH LESS likely that you’ll hear the people in the pews sing that response. At least, our Archbishop finally put out a notice that we are NOT to applaud the music group at the end of Mass… as if their ministry is a performance that calls for applause because we don’t applaud the lector or the ushers or the Extraordinary Ministers of the Eucharist for how THEY perform THEIR ministries. Our Archbishop encourages us to, instead, if we feel like we want to thank the people in the music group that by all means, walk up to them AFTER Mass and tell them so.
Each of our responses have just as much importance and application as the Lord’s Prayer… otherwise, we wouldn’t be having those responses, at all.
Hope that helps?
