F
Fauken
Guest
It’s not the language used. It’s what the person going to Mass puts into Mass.
- There’s more to the TLM than Latin.
- Those homilies are in English. They’re just homilies.
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It’s not the language used. It’s what the person going to Mass puts into Mass.
Where to begin? Mass is not a performance, and the priest isn’t there to put on a show for you. YOU are responsible for your spiritual growth. Such growth does not happen in ten minutes, once per week. Whether or not you’re “getting anything” out of the homily, you should be reading, praying, and otherwise supplementing your education as a Catholic.Why are the homilies so boring and not meaningful. Seems like the priests do not care about our growth
They aren’t required, and some priests will skip them, but the vast majority of priests I encounter at daily Mass do say a homily. Some of them keep the daily Mass homilies very short (a couple of minutes), others do a fairly involved homily although it’s usually still shorter than the Sunday homily. It depends on the preference of the priest, who likely takes into account the time demands on his audience (is the Mass at 6 am with people rushing to work, or 6 pm when they have left work already).It is my understanding that homilies aren’t required at daily mass.
Someone looking to be bored can be bored by anything and anyone.My homilies are never boring.
-Fr ACEGC