M
mcliffor
Guest
A group of elderly women in my parish thought it might be appropriate to have at least on Eucharistic adoration before the end of JPII’s year of the Eucharist. The pastor gave them the OK, but in advertising the event, he wrote a short letter in which he basically said the practice was a relic from the past, and is no longer important because we now understand that Christ is present in the congregation. We no longer need to adore him in the Blessed Sacrament, but he would let people do it anyway.
I’ve also been told that devotions outside of mass were how people compensated for an exclusive and remote liturgy, so now that we have active participation in the liturgy, people don’t need them. Do you think this is true?
I was wondering though why this devotion has practically disapeared. Could it be because this is what liturgical reforms implied and what seminarians were taught? Why have devotions become so unpopular in general? I can’t remember ever having seen a novena or adoration advertised before this one, and I was crushed to see the pastor talk about it the way he did.
Does anyone know of any articles or books which discuss the topic? Somehow I get the feeling that the explanations mentioned above are more of an attempt to justify the decline in devotions for ecumenical purposes than to actually find out the truth.
I’ve also been told that devotions outside of mass were how people compensated for an exclusive and remote liturgy, so now that we have active participation in the liturgy, people don’t need them. Do you think this is true?
I was wondering though why this devotion has practically disapeared. Could it be because this is what liturgical reforms implied and what seminarians were taught? Why have devotions become so unpopular in general? I can’t remember ever having seen a novena or adoration advertised before this one, and I was crushed to see the pastor talk about it the way he did.
Does anyone know of any articles or books which discuss the topic? Somehow I get the feeling that the explanations mentioned above are more of an attempt to justify the decline in devotions for ecumenical purposes than to actually find out the truth.