J
JReducation
Guest
Hi Scylla
I would like to help with some of the points that you make here. I know they are serious to you. But let’s look at them in a more positive light.
What you say here is 100% correct.
For example, you will notice that the mendicant and the monastic orders such as Carmelites, Franciscans, Benedictines, Dominicans, Augustinians, Trinitarians, still wear habits. The habit was written into the rule of the order and could only be taken out by a Pope. This is not the same for other communities. The members had the authority to take the habit out. With the communities that I mentioned, the most that they could do was to ammend their constitutions to say that under specific circumstances approved by their major superiors, they could wear other clothing. The Holy Father approved this ammendment. We may wish that they wore a habit all the time, but the Holy Father didn’t think it was reasonable.
In my parish we have friars. They get two habits and are allowed to wash then only once per week. Can you imagine living with the “odor of sanctity” in a hot climate?
In other places the civil authorities would not grant the police protection. It was not worth the risk.
This is not a new custom. It’s new to the laity, not to the Church.
On a practical note, some parishes don’t have the time to insert space for private recitation of the rosary between masses. In my parish we have five masses back to back, not counting the Saturday and Sunday evening masses.
The time between masses is about 15 minutes. I don’t know how many masses you have in your parish.
Thank you for letting me share with you.
JR
The path to God is tough narrow and sometimes, like the path between a sea monster and a whirlpool.
I would like to help with some of the points that you make here. I know they are serious to you. But let’s look at them in a more positive light.
What you say here is 100% correct.
The traditions I am speaking of that have changed are essentially small traditions and can certainly be changed. There is nothing really stopping us from changing them, and this is why they have been changed.
The decision to have a habit and when to wear it or not is an internal affair of a religious community. Neither bishops nor laity have the authority to intervene here. Religious communities were asked to rewrite their constitutions and submit them for approval by the Holy Father, if they were Pontifical Communities or the to the local bishop if they were diocesan communities. Once these constitutions are appreoved, it is the responsibility of the competent authority who approved them to take up the slack.For example out here on the west coast (at least in my diocese) I have noticed that many of the Priests\Sisters rarely wear their habits. Now the Sisters never do, at least the ones I see here.
For example, you will notice that the mendicant and the monastic orders such as Carmelites, Franciscans, Benedictines, Dominicans, Augustinians, Trinitarians, still wear habits. The habit was written into the rule of the order and could only be taken out by a Pope. This is not the same for other communities. The members had the authority to take the habit out. With the communities that I mentioned, the most that they could do was to ammend their constitutions to say that under specific circumstances approved by their major superiors, they could wear other clothing. The Holy Father approved this ammendment. We may wish that they wore a habit all the time, but the Holy Father didn’t think it was reasonable.
In my parish we have friars. They get two habits and are allowed to wash then only once per week. Can you imagine living with the “odor of sanctity” in a hot climate?
One of the holiest group of women whom I have had the honour of working with are the Carmelite Sisters of Charity. They don’t have a habit. The Holy Father approved the elimination of the same. However, those who know them see poor women wearing clothes from Goodwil, hand-me-downs, thrift-store clothing and serving the poor, at prayer, doing great works of penance. They truly give witness to the Perfection of Charity. Religious are not called to announce to the world that they are religious. The Church does not expect that of them. The Church expects them to be examples of the Perfection of Charity. The habit is not going to make them more or less charitable.I am not sure how this reflects our Catholic faith as it did before when the tradition was to wear a habit and visibly express the faith to the public.
In some places the processions are still there. In other places they were taken out for practical reasons. The procession was harassed by hecklers. For example, bishops and religioius superiors did not want to expose the Blessed Sacrament to hecklers on the street during a Corpus Christi procession or worse, having eggs thrown at it. Things like this happened.This can also be said with public processions of the faith, Corpus Christi, stuff like that, in many places they have been replaced with sometimes nothing or maybe a car wash.
In other places the civil authorities would not grant the police protection. It was not worth the risk.
This came from religious communities such as Franciscans and Benedictines where the religious stood for communion as a sign of their equality with the priest. There was a tendency to put priests on pedestals. Benedict and Francis wanted to keep all of the Brothers as equals, while preserving the reverence to the Eucharist and the respect for the priesthood. In their religious houses they stood and bowed for communion.In our worship I see this too, in replacing kneeling with standing,
This is not a new custom. It’s new to the laity, not to the Church.
Good liturgy should have neither before mass. The rosary is a beautiful devotion. But the time before mass should be devoted to getting ready to celebrate the sacred mysteries. It should not be at time for reading the bulletin either.having the rosary before Mass to the liturgy of the bulletin, which is before Mass, and after Mass, and sometimes during Mass.
On a practical note, some parishes don’t have the time to insert space for private recitation of the rosary between masses. In my parish we have five masses back to back, not counting the Saturday and Sunday evening masses.
The time between masses is about 15 minutes. I don’t know how many masses you have in your parish.
Thank you for letting me share with you.
JR
The path to God is tough narrow and sometimes, like the path between a sea monster and a whirlpool.