R
RBushlow
Guest
They are never run in our parish and I miss it.Do you think Sanctus bells should be rung during the Mass as allowed by the GIRM?
They are never run in our parish and I miss it.Do you think Sanctus bells should be rung during the Mass as allowed by the GIRM?
I suppose the others are correct in advising that you go through your pastor, but what a CCD director! I’m guessing that this isn’t the only issue that the children (or adults) need work on…If you’re successful in getting this implemented, perhaps your parish can do a mini-course on the liturgy and explain the bells, etc…This would be very helpful at my parish for sure!Do you have a good source for this? I am about to take this cause on within my church and already know I am going to get some flak from some within the educational realm. In discussing this with our CCD director, she commented that bringing the bells back would require education to the kids on what they meant as if that was some sort of reason not to. I responded with “Well that will be your job!” and she wasn’t too pleased.
I just don’t understand what the apprehension is
Thanks.
Stu.
I had planned to go to Father all along using the GIRM to make my case. I had only mentioned it to the CCD director in passing conversation after Mass over coffee and donuts.Stu;
Keep in mind that the use of sanctus bells during the Mass is seen as extremely retrogressive by some “progressive” (albiet ignorant) Catholics. Conversely, the bells are also viewed as a good housekeeping seal of sorts by some of the more traditional crowd.
To many (particularly those on either fringe) the bells’ symbolic value is important. The manuevering to bring-back or trash the bells can be quite harsh in some parishes.
I once did some statistical sampling at my parish and about 94% of the parishioners said they wanted the bells back. Make sure your ducks are in a row before you ask your pastor…
General Instruction of the Roman Missal #150. "A little before the consecration, when appropriate, a server rings a bell as a signal to the faithful. According to local custom, the server also rings the bell as the priest shows the host and then the chalice."
Certainly mine. I have actually also proposed a weekly apologetic/liturgy/rubrics column for the bulletin to cover this area as well. Still waiting for an answer.I suppose the others are correct in advising that you go through your pastor, but what a CCD director! I’m guessing that this isn’t the only issue that the children (or adults) need work on…If you’re successful in getting this implemented, perhaps your parish can do a mini-course on the liturgy and explain the bells, etc…This would be very helpful at my parish for sure!
That’s an awesome story…Here’s a cute story for you:
I invited my Morman friend to Mass one evening as we were going out to have coffee afterwards.
I was standing in the back of the Chapel, as the sacristan this is where I stood. My friend was in the back row and just followed everyone’s postures etc.
We had a wonderful associate at that time who used the bells and sung the Agnus Dei in Latin.
She had her head bowed down in prayer and when the bells rang, her head popped rather quickly.
After Mass she asked me about the bells and said she knew there was something very important going on but didn’t know what it was. Her curiosity on this alone led her to Christ.
1.) LA is an archdiocese – by far the largest in the USA.I was on vacation this past week and yesterday attended Mass at SanBuenaventura Mission in Ventura, Ca. I must say knowing I was in the Los Angeles Diocese, I anticipated the worst.
What a pleasant surprise I had. For one thing there were sanctus bells - horrah. Other things that thrilled me was to see the altar rails still in place, though not used for communion. I saw nuns in full habits - horrah. There was no hand holding during the Pater Noster. The choir sang in the choir loft.
A few people actually knelt on the floor to receive communion.
Communion by the way was offered in one species only - how much simpler that is.
The Mass was well conducted in every way.
There were all female altar servers and readers but they were all young women from the Catholic School associated with the mission - in uniforms except for the altar servers who were dressed as traditional altar boys would be. Maybe it is an all girl’s school, I don’t know. But they knew when to ring the santus bells.
Your posting is a perfect example were a self-described “traditional Catholic” chooses his own desires over that of the Church. Very heterodox.So I doubt that this priest ran up to the persons who knealt, and cuffed them by the collar and told them “don’t kneel to receive communion again”. It did not seem this kindly old priest would do that. Probably a good many of those there were, like me, visitors to the beach. If those persons were regulars, then I am sure it would not be the first time they knealt. Interestingly, one was an old lady, more likely to be a regular there and the other was a young man with a braided beard and a pigtail down his back. Quite the contrast.
Yes, they ring them at every Mass – right at the epiclesis, at the elevation of the Host and chalice and as the celebrant consumes the Precious Blood.I can’t really answer this question. I never heard “sanctus bells” before. Do they have them on EWTN when they do the daily mass show? If that is what we are talking about, I would say no, they are too annoying sounding. But maybe they are differant in real life so who knows?
Whenever I see that excuse, the entire statement becomes suspect.How wonderful it would be to hear the bells again, but alas the liberal church I attend doesn’t even any bells to ring if they wanted too. I was told the bells were no longer required “In the spirit of Vatican II” :banghead:
On Holy Thursday families are encourged to have their children bring bells to ring during the celebration of the last supper …:crying:
In His peace!
Sanctus bell were (and in some cases still are) large tower bells – typically the largest bell in the belfry.I understand that people may think that the bells are no longer necessary in today’s modern churches and with the vernacular liturgy They claim that the bells were used to indicate to those who did not know Latin when transubstantiation was taking place. I personally think this argument is bunk because there are people who have no clue as to the when, what, and why of transubstantiation.
I think that churches should go *beyond *just letting the congregation know when the Lord is present. They should use the main church bells to let the whole neighborhood know that the Lord is present.