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What do homosexual rights, spirit guides, etc. have to do with the OF vs. the EF?!!
Sorry, part of that is my fault. I tried to bring it back onto the topic with my last post.
What do homosexual rights, spirit guides, etc. have to do with the OF vs. the EF?!!
Your post reminds me of a pet peeve ~ clapping/applause. No part of Mass is entertainment. I cannot bring myself to clap at Mass, although many people do. I believe it is irreverent, even if it is meant as an expression of approval or praise. I endure it. I believe it should never occur.I am a convert and I prefer the EO Mass.
I agree with BrotherHRolf, the Council Fathers did get what they expected with Vatican II. While I will not speculate about specifics, I think the reasons are manifold and the solutions complex.
I believe both Roman Rite forms have benefits, but I would prefer to see a unification and a return to a single form of the Mass.
The current Ordinary Form is clearly not going to be a source of unity, and the current Extraordinary form is intimidating to many and disliked by those who think participating at Mass means being entertained. This is not caused merely by the abuses or styles in the OF MAss, but is a reflection of a change in society. In a world where people are bombarded by media, tv, radio, iPods, internet, email, video games, no one stops to read or think anymore; they are always âdoingâ something. THAT is why many people are intimidated by the EF, it is quiet, slow, unpretentious and requires them to do the one thing most people have forgotten (or never learned) how to do; contemplate and reflect. THAT is participating at Mass.
However, it is the Extraordinary Form which carries with it the centuries-old expressions of reverence and faith more fully than OF, thus it must be framework upon which a unified Roman Rite must be built on.
Sorry about that. http://bestsmileys.com/oneofakind/9.gifThis doesnât have to do with anything else except it âgets meâ
Hrolf is is the Norse equivalent of Rudolph, Rollo, Rolf.
It is my own old Society for Creative Anachornism (SCA) name - you know, those medieval reenactors. I am Brother Hrolf. You would probaly be floored at how many people know me down here in this neck of the country by that nameSo, it is not HRolf, it is Hrolf to be specific in SCA jargon - Lord Brother Hrolf Aethelstan of Cantwaraburh, Companion of the Dragonâs Eye, Order of the Rue. I could blazon my arms but that would bore you beyond measure.
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The Latin Masses you attend must be far different than those I attended for my first 35+ years.THAT is why many people are intimidated by the EF, it is quiet, slow, unpretentious and requires them to do the one thing most people have forgotten (or never learned) how to do; contemplate and reflect. THAT is participating at Mass.
One cannot participate interiorly? I would think interior participation, would be the most important of all, and the EF emphasizes this by creating a silent and prayerful atmosphere. Ironically, I would argue that a lack of outward participation leads to a deeper interior participation.Youâre also the first poster Iâve read to say âparticipating at Massâ in reference to the Latin Mass.
Interior participation is my goal when I attend Mass. I really pull into myself and focus on the prayers, readings, the homily (sometimesOne cannot participate interiorly? I would think interior participation, would be the most important of all, and the EF emphasizes this by creating a silent and prayerful atmosphere. Ironically, I would argue that a lack of outward participation leads to a deeper interior participation.
I believe you finally hit on an underlying issue of traditionalist. Is the mass a time for individual contemplation as you indicate or of a community that comes together to praise Christ. My issue with the TDL is that it lacks the communial aspect of worship. The time of the sign of peace is the start of the most communial part of the service, when we truely become what we recieve, the body of Christ. There is much deeper meaning than just shaking hands. Using your words, it reminds of that we are part of that universe the priest is holding, that each of us are about to share.Interior participation is my goal when I attend Mass. I really pull into myself and focus on the prayers, readings, the homily (sometimes) and, most of all, the Holy Eucharist. This is why I tend to eschew hand-holding and applause. I find the âsign of peaceâ disruptive because right then, while I am focused on the priest holding in his hand the very Creator of the Universe, people start grabbing my hands and shake me out of it.
Communities do not sin. Communities are not saved. Communities do not worship.I believe you finally hit on an underlying issue of traditionalist. Is the mass a time for individual contemplation as you indicate or of a community that comes together to praise Christ. My issue with the TDL is that it lacks the communial aspect of worship. The time of the sign of peace is the start of the most communial part of the service, when we truely become what we recieve, the body of Christ. There is much deeper meaning than just shaking hands. Using your words, it reminds of that we are part of that universe the priest is holding, that each of us are about to share.
In Christâs own breaking of the bread, the aposltes were not in thier own thoughts, they were part of community. The celebration of the mass was communial for centuries.
What I have seen here is not that those of us that are called âmodernistâ donât understand and appriciate the TDL and donât respect it as part of traditon, but many âtraditionalistâ who either do not want to understand are just do care to understand the ordinary mass.
Peace,
FAB
We are not united by shaking our hands, we are united by prayer and the Eucharist.I believe you finally hit on an underlying issue of traditionalist. Is the mass a time for individual contemplation as you indicate or of a community that comes together to praise Christ. My issue with the TDL is that it lacks the communial aspect of worship. The time of the sign of peace is the start of the most communial part of the service, when we truely become what we recieve, the body of Christ. There is much deeper meaning than just shaking hands. Using your words, it reminds of that we are part of that universe the priest is holding, that each of us are about to share.
In Christâs own breaking of the bread, the aposltes were not in thier own thoughts, they were part of community. The celebration of the mass was communial for centuries.
What I have seen here is not that those of us that are called âmodernistâ donât understand and appriciate the TDL and donât respect it as part of traditon, but many âtraditionalistâ who either do not want to understand are just do care to understand the ordinary mass.
Peace,
FAB
That is exactly right!We are not united by shaking our hands, we are united by prayer and the Eucharist.
I do not think that the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass is diminished in any way by handshaking or other physical contact with fellow believers. I imagine that Mary and the women and John the Beloved clung to each other and held not only hands, but embraced, supporting each other physically and psychologically throughout the awful crucifixion of the Lord Jesus. If I were to watch my children executed, I would need a whole crowd of people holding onto me. It would be interesting to see Mass done with all of us clinging to each other as we witness the Sacrifice. It would certainly be a more realistic reaction to a horrific Sacrifice rather than isolating ourselves inwardly and ignoring everyone else around us.We are not united by shaking our hands, we are united by prayer and the Eucharist.
Is another parish any less of the community because I have not shaken their hands?
The most profound union occurs under the bloodless Sacrifice of our Lord, the TLM focuses on that more profound unity.
Physics question. You and I are both standing in Place A holding hands. You prefer to go to Place B. I prefer to go to Place C. How can we both achieve our preferences without appearing to divide?5. ⌠We must never divide ourselves from each other based on our preference for either usage of the mass or for our preference for any other licit devotional practice.
Real-life question. Say we attend the same parish. Say you attend the EF. Say I attend the OF. We both happen to meet in the fellowship hall one Sunday for coffee and donuts.Physics question. You and I are both standing in Place A holding hands. You prefer to go to Place B. I prefer to go to Place C. How can we both achieve our preferences without appearing to divide?
And, I might add, the appearance of division is not actually division.Physics question. You and I are both standing in Place A holding hands. You prefer to go to Place B. I prefer to go to Place C. How can we both achieve our preferences without appearing to divide?
My preference is the EF because I find it more reverent, but I have nothing against the OF.I would like everyone to take a deep breath and calm down a bit. Then I would like you to read a few statements.
**1. Every Catholic has a right to enjoy the Extraordinary Form of the Mass, and to prefer it. **
2. Every Catholic has a right to enjoy the Ordinary Form of the Mass, and to prefer it.
3. Every Catholic must assent that both the Ordinary Form and the Extraordinary Form of the Latin Rite Mass are equally valid and licit.
4. There is only one Church, and those who prefer the Ordinary Form and those who prefer the Extraordinary Form, as long as they are in communion with the Bishop of Rome, are in communion with one another and with Christ.
5. While labels like âTraditionalistâ can be useful to denote belief or preference, they are only labels. We must never divide ourselves from each other based on our preference for either usage of the mass or for our preference for any other licit devotional practice.
What is going on here? Why do we war amongst ourselves? I understand why followers of SSPX criticize those who prefer the OFâthey hold it to be intrinsically evil, which those in communion with Rome cannot hold. But why are the rest of us fighting each other based on such a thing as âMass preferance?â
Saints help us! We are brothers and sisters! Why do we tear one another, as it were tearing the Body of Christ?
Getting in touch with our animal guides and praying to the spirits of the four winds of course should not be included in RCIA, but remember there are still cultures, ie. Native American, who have included rituals such as these in their religious ceremonies from time âbeyond the cloudsâ. These rituals also show a respect, love and understanding of the environment which sadly our culture has lost. I think our white society has taken enough away from them without also denigrating their religion.This is a classic example of that 2nd religion, and the war that is being waged.
Ahhhh. The hopes and dreams of illusioned youth.I disagree.
There can be no peace in the Church until the New Mass finally dies and we have complete restoration of the mass of all ages, the TLM.
Bishop Fellay got it right when he said that the death warrant for the New Mass was signed with Summorum Pontificum. That was not the Popeâs intention but it will be the result in the future.
While the New Mass is valid, many including myself, believe it is bad liturgy, not sacred, and in no way was under the guidance of the holy spirit.
My generation will lead the charge to kill the Novus Ordo within the next twenty years once everyone under forty flocks to the TLM.
The experiment failed. The Church should have listened to Pope Pius XII who believed the Church would commit suicide if it altered her liturgy.
âThe day the Church abandons her universal tongue {LATIN} is the day before
she returns to the catacombs.â Pope Pius XII
"A day will come when the civilized world will deny its God, when the Church will doubt as Peter doubted. She will be tempted to believe that man has become God, that His Son is merely a symbol, a philosophy held by so many others, and in the churches Christians will search in vain for the red lamp where God awaits them, like Magdalen weeping before the empty tomb, âWhere have they taken HIM?â â Pope Pius XII