A
Andreas_Hofer
Guest
I think we’re on *roughly *the same track, but I think I’d always come down on a more rigorous push for extreme rarity than the impression I’ve gotten from you. I’ll always favor education over adaptation unless pushed to a desperate last resort. I just think the identity of the liturgy as a gift to rather than creation of the community is most meaningful, and would rather not tie it to a particular culture if at all possible (I know its roots are particular, but it’s been transformed into a universal).Actually, you and I are on the same track. I think that exceptions (defined as those liturgical changes that require permission from teh Bishop or Rome) need to be rare and adaptations (accommodation for different cultures or age groups within a diocese) need to be carefully scrutinized for their application. My reaction is that so many who advocate more traditional Masses want it applied across the board with virtually no accommodation to the worshippers. For instance, I occassionally attend Mass at my daughter’s high school as I did yesterday for All Saints Day. In their Mass, their joyful expression thru their music to them was more reverrent than chants and organ music. We need to look at some things thru the eyes of others rather than applying our particular preferences to them.