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CatholicSooner
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wow man just wowSay that then instead, and if you had to google Mantilla definitely say no more
wow man just wowSay that then instead, and if you had to google Mantilla definitely say no more
Yes! That is it ! And I " stole" my mom’ s which was white and cute ti try it on. It was simple and …She gave it to me!We used “chapel veils” for the small beanie type lace and my mother wore a mantilla. If I recall correctly, only adult women wore the mantilla, and the kids wore chapel veils.
We had uniform beanies for week-day mass. Or a Kleenex if you forgot your beanie.![]()
No official Vatican document should be ignored. Nor should it be twisted or misinterpreted. I believe those who question translations act in good faith and shouldn’t be shown the door because they simply seek the Truth. English is a powerful analytic tool but in no way does it set new standards for our faith. Why not Polish or Spanish?Well, you should. Catholics on this site constantly chant that this or that direction from the Vatican or the Pope is “not infallible” as if that means that it may be ignored.
Well, you aren’t wrong.I’m puzzled by both. I realise that the semantics can seem unimportant but I would just say that at no point up until the last couple of years have I heard the term ‘to veil’ about catholic lay women. It seems to me to be a term that is being used by groups of co-religionists who would like us to remember a time which actually never existed. No one talked about ‘veils’ in the days when no female would walk into church without her head covered, so why are we now. It seems to me to be some form of inverted snobbery.
I don’t believe that the change to versus populum is the result of a mistranslation or a misunderstanding. To believe that would be to believe that the vast majority of bishops misunderstand the Church’s teaching, and that the Pope and the Vatican allow that misunderstanding to persist.No official Vatican document should be ignored. Nor should it be twisted or misinterpreted. I believe those who question translations act in good faith and shouldn’t be shown the door because they simply seek the Truth. English is a powerful analytic tool but in no way does it set new standards for our faith. Why not Polish or Spanish?
I believe you’re missing something here. As has been pointed out by OraLabora and others that versus populum isn’t something new and had been practiced on more than one location, in fact many depending on how the congregation seating was configured. It seems with the proper translation, one can see the emphasis was on future altars, to make them freestanding wherever possible so to make them visible from all sides. Personally I don’t have a problem with that. One translation had versus populum as the focal point of the directive and it seems it stuck, never mind in some cases it actually puts the priest with his back to the cross or crucifix. I asked for a theological justification for it and have not yet heard of a sound one.I don’t believe that the change to versus populum is the result of a mistranslation or a misunderstanding. To believe that would be to believe that the vast majority of bishops misunderstand the Church’s teaching, and that the Pope and the Vatican allow that misunderstanding to persist.
Still, you are saying that most or all of the bishops have misunderstood or misapplied the Church’s own documents for fifty or so years. Do you think it reasonable the Church does not understand its own teaching? That the Latin words carry some import that evades even those who wrote them?I believe you’re missing something here. As has been pointed out by OraLabora and others that versus populum isn’t something new and had been practiced on more than one location, in fact many depending on how the congregation seating was configured. It seems with the proper translation, one can see the emphasis was on future altars, to make them freestanding wherever possible so to make them visible from all sides. Personally I don’t have a problem with that. One translation had versus populum as the focal point of the directive and it seems it stuck, never mind in some cases it actually puts the priest with his back to the cross or crucifix. I asked for a theological justification for it and have not yet heard of a sound one.
What teaching exactly?Do you think it reasonable the Church does not understand its own teaching?
Sorry,Patrick,I just found this post.Exactly you had a mantilla (an so did a lot of Irish women) and you stuck it on. Did you consider yourself ‘veiled’ I know my mother and sisters never did
I have never had an issue with having my back facing the crucifix. In many churches where I have celebrated Mass, there is a Calvary behind the altar of sacrifice. The true focus and the focal point is to be on the altar where the synaxis occurs. It is the center of the assembled liturgical community. The reserved Sacrament is to be in a most worthy place with the greatest honour…but the altar is the center of the community.Now it seems the Pope has solidified the norms. What bishop would start changing the norms now, without raising a turmoil? Never mind if the priest turns his back on the crucifix if he has to.![]()
Perhaps your mother did not speak of it…mine certainly did. The last place she ever wore a hat and dress was to Mass. She did not like head coverings…although she used scarves when she was going to be out of doors and they were practical as, for example, in winter. She had a sort of babushka that she wore with certain household tasks.I wish I had written that! It just seems to be harking back to a day that never existed. I’m sort of sorry I mentioned it but I couldn’t believe the terminology. It’s not something I recognise as traditionally Catholic. My mother shoved on a hat or a headscarf and never ever mentioned it. And then she also stopped doing it and never ever mentioned it. She moved in concert with the church traditions.
And by putting on a suit, would you state that you engaged in “suiting” or that you “suited” in order to attend Mass? You could speak of the benefit of being “suited” and that it helped you in some way to “suit.”I’m not sure that putting on a suit to go to a church full of ‘veiled’ women with the priest facing liturgical east is my idea of an ideal trip to mass on Sunday at all.
seems kind of minuscule to be arguing over verbiage and semantics doesn’t it?And by putting on a suit, would you state that you engaged in “suiting” or that you “suited” in order to attend Mass? You could speak of the benefit of being “suited” and that it helped you in some way to “suit.”
Are we going to play word games now? The issue we are discussing. You are saying that the Church is misinterpreting its own guidance on the conduct of the Mass because of a mistranslation of the Latin. I think that it is ridiculous to believe that the Church does not understand its own documents, and has been implementing them incorrectly for 50 years.What teaching exactly?
I do not think Pro plays with words,it is not his style.Are we going to play word games now? The issue we are discussing. You are saying that the Church is misinterpreting its own guidance on the conduct of the Mass because of a mistranslation of the Latin. I think that it is ridiculous to believe that the Church does not understand its own documents, and has been implementing them incorrectly for 50 years.
seems kind of minuscule to be arguing over verbiage and semantics doesn’t it?
why? what impact does it have if someone says veiling vs putting on a manilla, considering they are the same thing?
- The modern phenomenon surrounding the term “veiling,” as it is being bandied about by certain Catholics, is not a phenomenon that I consider minuscule.
then what is it?
- It is not an issue of verbiage and semantics.
Just curious, have you ever celebrated Mass ad orientem in the Norvus Ordo??I have never had an issue with having my back facing the crucifix.
Well…as I have said elsewhere, I only use the term ad orientem when I am, literally, facing East. But, yes, I could not begin to tell you how many times I have celebrated Mass ad absidem over the decades. Now that I am retired, the daily Mass chapel altar is free standing but pushed against the wall, if only because it is more convenient. There is no great purpose in facing people who, in fact, are not there.Just curious, have you ever celebrated Mass ad orientem in the Norvus Ordo??
Thank you and God bless Father!