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Mysty101
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Sorry, I won’t liighten up when it comes to ridicule of others.Mysty,
We aren’t your 5th grade students… lighten up!
Sorry, I won’t liighten up when it comes to ridicule of others.Mysty,
We aren’t your 5th grade students… lighten up!
Swiss Guard said:I feel sorry for her 5th grade students.
You’re right, it’s not nice, but it’s the sentiment I feel for her students, unless she uses a different approach than she does here.That’s not nice…
Originally Posted by dumspirospero
*… During the Mass, the Orans posture by anyone other than the Priest is not in the Rubrics and therefore is a private gesture…and therefore in some cases conflicts with the gestures and signs the rubrics are supposed to protect…which is also a problem because the Mass is not a private ceremony. Even the Pope has stated that The Orans Posture has created confusion within the Mass…
*
Not really. If we follow that line of reasoning, we can not use any prayer gesturers or even the sign of the Cross.Back on topic…
I think this already says it all…:yup:
Gestures too involve our bodies in prayer. The most familiar of these is the Sign of the Cross with which we begin Mass and with which, in the form of a blessing, the Mass concludes. Because it was by his death on the cross that Christ redeemed humankind, we trace the sign of the cross on our foreheads, lips and hearts at the beginning of the Gospel. Fr. Romano Guardini, a scholar and professor of liturgy wrote of this gesture:
When we cross ourselves, let it be with a real sign of the cross. Instead of a small, cramped gesture that gives no notion of its meaning, let us make a large, unhurried sign, from forehead to breast, from shoulder to shoulder, consciously feeling how it includes the whole of us, our thoughts, our attitudes, our body and soul, every part of us all at once, how it consecrates and sanctifies us … (Romano Guardini, Sacred Signs, 1927)
None of these are in the GIRMBut there are other gestures that intensify our prayer at Mass. During the Confiteor the action of striking our breasts at the words through my own fault can strengthen my awareness that my sin is my fault. In the Creed we are invited to bow at the words which commemorate the Incarnation: by the power of the Holy Spirit he was born of the Virgin Mary and became man. This gesture signifies our profound respect and gratitude to Christ who, though God, did not hesitate to come among us as a human being, sharing our human condition in order to save us from sin and restore us to friendship with God. This gratitude is expressed with even greater solemnity on the Feast of the Annunciation of the Lord and on Christmas when we genuflect at these words.
Swiss Guard said:You’re right, it’s not nice, but it’s the sentiment I feel for her students, unless she uses a different approach than she does here.
Do you want to get this thread closed? 'cause it probably will be if I answer you.
Do you care to rethink this irreverence toward a legitimate prayer posture?
This would be a valid discussion without the childish ridicule. We all have an opinion, and I don’t think anyone uses any gesture that he feels is “looney” It is very immature and unkind (possibly even sinful) to ridicule someone’s prayer posture.You are missing the point Mysty…there is no malice in that statement…and we are not denying Orans as a legitimate posture during prayer…however, we are denying its validity within the Mass by anyone other than the Priest…The use of the Orans Posture is strictly a private gesture and should not be used in the Mass, because the Mass is not a private function…
No comment on my apology?Not really. If we follow that line of reasoning, we can not use any prayer gesturers or even the sign of the Cross.
Fron the USCCB “Postures” bulletin
None of these are in the GIRM
Bottom line is that if we cannot use the orans position, we also cannot fold our hands.
Now this definitely implies that if you use the orans posture you are a “bad” girl.This weekend there were four babies being baptized at our parish. This means lots of visitors.
In front of us was a man and his teenage son. At the Our Father, the man did the Football Catch. My five-year-old had never seen this before so she decided to try it.
I said to her, “Don’t do that. Fold your hands like a good girl!”
The man’s son suppressed a laugh and he put his hands down immediately.
Oh, sure – we have the scoopers – complete with deep knee bends.Do you have the people who “scoop”?
I don’t even remember the point of the Holy Mass they do it. I think it’s when we respond, “…We lift them up to the Lord.”
I’m not really sure because we have the EWTN type Holy Mass. No one does any of those innovations.
If they do, they are visitors and stop when they see that they are the only one’s doing it.
LOL, what’s with that, anyways???We also have readers who process the book of Gospels (the Evangeliary) as if they were carrying a surfboard overhead…