From Sacrosanctum Concilium. Bold is my emphasis.
- To ensure that adaptations may be made with all the circumspection which they demand, the Apostolic See will grant power to this same territorial ecclesiastical authority to permit and to direct, as the case requires, the necessary preliminary experiments over a determined period of time among certain groups suited for the purpose.
This is not a citation that supports the destruction and removal of altar rails. First, you are pre-supposing that removing the altar rails in parish churches throughout not only the United States, but the world, was a “
necessary experiment”. How were these removals a “necessary experiment”?
Also, there was no evolution. Kneeling before the altar rail was a pious practice of the people. Altar rails were removed quite swiftly. In what way does an evolution of the Mass include a call to destroy and remove altar rails?
Again, there were many experiments in the wake of the Second Vatican Council, but which experiments were necessary? When you say the bishops were given the authority to experiment, it might as well have been a
carte blanche experimentation, period. Was it a necessary experiment that leavened bread be introduced apart from intinction? Was it a necessary experiment that the laity come forward to a table to self-commune, or pass the Chalice to each other in succession? And finally, was it a necessary experiment that altar rails be removed?
Let’s grant, for argument’s sake, that such removal
was a necessary experiment. At what point do we determine that this experiment failed or succeeded? Because if it succeeded, then we could suppose that the same amount of (or more) Catholics in America believe in the Real Presence of the Eucharist from the 1960’s to the 2010’s, right? That something holy and life altering happens in the sanctuary at the altar?
Unfortunately that’s not the case, as
45% of Catholics deny the doctrine of the Real Presence. Then you take into account the vast anecdotal evidence, as presented by Usige in
post #20, and we can see that such an experiment hasn’t really contributed to the reverence due the Holy Sacrifice and the Eucharist.
The altar rail (and iconostasis) have a deep theological meaning that many have overlooked. To say that it was “necessary” to experiment with its removal is something that needs to be proved. In my experience, I would say that this particular experiment was not only a “practice that disfigured” the Council, as Pope Francis said, but that this experiment was wholly unnecessary and was a complete failure in pointing the laity’s mind towards heavenly things; especially as I have seen several parishes in my area
restore their altar rails that were removed 40-50 years ago.