I don’t see how the orientation of the priest can salvage an otherwise sloppy liturgy /…/
It would be far more beneficial in my opinion, to work on taking the rough edges out of the liturgy (better music, better attention to detail in particular the rubrics, smoother flow).
That is of interest to others is their business. /…/
If I may add my agreement.
I’m a priest of many years. I’ve offered Mass in the
vetus ordo and the
novus ordo…with the altar
ad absidem as well as
versus populum. I’ve offered Mass in churches built in a semi-circle & in the round…with the altar in the architectural center of the church and in configurations with people at 360 degrees. I’ve yet to see a liturgical positioning that I’ve not found myself in…either as a celebrant or a concelebrant or a master of ceremonies…so I have practical experience to draw upon
If you see the discussion as silly and irrelevant then it shouldn’t matter to you that it is of interest to other people, some of whom see it as an important issue (including the Cardinal). Not everyone has access to a Mass as you describe, and these “silly” matters become all the more crucial
To Fuerza: as a priest, I do find aspects of the discussion – and most especially the way it is being discussed and the conclusions that are being extrapolated from it – as “silly” and also “irrelevant.” Indeed that is of interest to me as a retired professor of liturgy & sacraments precisely because many of both said premises and conclusions are not solidly grounded in either truth or reality. That is critical
In the United States & Canada, I had occasion to offer Mass at altars not facing the people. Granted, they were exceptional instances as it is evidently unusual in North America
A cloistered convent chapel comes to mind where the Sisters were behind the grill and would have been looking at the altar from the side in whatever possible configuration in attempting a post-conciliar modification. An altar that faced “the people” (that is externs coming into the public part of their monastery’s chapel) would have not changed that orientation: the Sisters would have been looking at my right side instead of my left side, since their part of the chapel was within the monastic enclosure and the whole purpose of the chapel was after all for them; moving the altar made no sense. The architecture simply wouldn’t allow any other disposition
I once celebrated Mass at the old high altar in the historic chapel of Notre Dame du Cap in Quebec. It was a private Mass and no one was present. I think it may have even been outside the chapel’s normal opening hours and so my orientation was irrelevant; there was no one else there. Otherwise, celebrations in North America as I remember rarely admitted of any departure from a norm of Mass celebrated
versus populum
That is not the case in Europe. We have chapels & churches where the architecture did not lend itself readily to having a
versus populum celebration because a freestanding altar could not be erected or otherwise made no sense. Thus, on a given Sunday, I’ve gone from celebrating a Mass in a parish with a freestanding altar and offered the Mass oriented
versus populum to offer a second Mass in a chapel where the orientation of the altar was
ad absidem to then offering a third Mass with a
versus populum orientation
The second Mass did not have…neither for me nor those assisting…a remarkably different air about it
It is important to point out that the rubrics prescribe where it is ideal for me to be at each part of the Mass. The introductory rite concluding with the opening oration is to occur at the Presider’s Chair, all else being equal. It would require an alteration of rubrics for this to occur preferentially at the altar – there is a provision now that it can be done but it is not the favoured option. I do it when I offer Mass privately as one retired…just as I use an altar that does not face the people since there are no people
The heart of the matter transcends which direction the altar is facing. The
novus ordo can be said not facing the people just as the
vetus ordo can actually be said (and was at times said before the Council) facing the people
What troubles me is there are people who seem to think that the direction that the priest is facing during the anaphora has profound impact on the ambience of the liturgy. I’ve certainly not found that to be true
More troubling to me is the concept of a “symbolic East”. East does have a significance in our patrimony…that is unquestionable and from early days. However, it was honestly not something pervasive in the conscious thought of the ordinary people of my youth – that is to say neither before the council nor after the council. The concept that we were so aware of facing “a liturgical east” then and that has been lost is not true
Saying that, no matter what the actual physical orientation of the church or chapel building may be, we are all going to pretend that the apse is the east (or that the narthex is the east for that matter) is simply bizarre to me. The apse is either in the east or it isn’t
If we want to say that all altars should henceforth be oriented to the east, that can be enacted in law…but creating a pretense that is foreign to verifiable reality – to my perspective as a professor as well as a priest – is to go against one of the most important witnesses that the Church is staking today: truth is an objective reality; it is not subjective nor is it relative
East is a directional absolute, as every compass will attest. I “identify” this direction as East or, just as bad, “this is my east even if it is not your east – and it is okay that your east and my east are not the same or even mean the same thing” is really rather counter-intuitive and counter-productive