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DominvsVobiscvm
Guest
Pax tecvm, gang.
I find myself lately having a hard time explaining to others why the Mass should be celebrated in a reverent, traditional manner. (I mean the Missa Normativa, not just the Tridentine). It seems that a lot of my “argument” employs the same sort of subjectivism that I accuse charismatics and lovers of more secularized music of posessing.
For example, I like traditional liturgy because I believe it really is more beautiful, therefore more spiritually edifying (i.e. the bells, incnese, vestments, priest facing the altar, Latin, etc.). Yet, who am I to impose my standard on others? My charismatic friends, for example, insist that ther hand-clapping, jumping up-and-down, etc. songs are very reverent and sacred, and very prayerful. They see traditional liturgy as stale.
Ditto with my fellow “Novus Ordo” Catholics who like the real tacky-sounding hymns like Eagle’s Wings and Here I Am, Lord. They claim these songs are not really tacky, and it’s just my opinion that they are.
Furthermore, even I have to admit that this type of music isn’t bad outside of Mass. For example, the orthodox Franciscan Friars of the Renewal even do Cathoilic rap! No one would argue that private devotions aren’t sacred, or that any worship of God that isn’t sacred is pleasing to him. Yet God is apparently pleased by contemporary, “secularized” Chrustian music when it is sincerely done outside of Mass, then why not at Mass?
In Heaven, do we really expect to just be kneeling and hearing and seeing Christ say “Dominvs Vobiscvm” with bells and incense?
Obviously, abuses are never permissible. But most of the problems with the Missa Normativa, as we “traditionalists” see it, is not so much abuses as it is the supposedly “irreverent” way it is celebrated. Even an abuse-free “Novus Ordo” can be tacky as heck. It’s up to each priest to celebrate it as traditionally as he feels like. Or so we say.
For my part, I’ll continue to love the Tridentine Mass and really-high Missa Normativas. But do I do so only because it gives me a spiritual high? Because it subjectively feels good to me?
It’s difficult to argue otherwise.
Thanks for the (name removed by moderator)ut.
I find myself lately having a hard time explaining to others why the Mass should be celebrated in a reverent, traditional manner. (I mean the Missa Normativa, not just the Tridentine). It seems that a lot of my “argument” employs the same sort of subjectivism that I accuse charismatics and lovers of more secularized music of posessing.
For example, I like traditional liturgy because I believe it really is more beautiful, therefore more spiritually edifying (i.e. the bells, incnese, vestments, priest facing the altar, Latin, etc.). Yet, who am I to impose my standard on others? My charismatic friends, for example, insist that ther hand-clapping, jumping up-and-down, etc. songs are very reverent and sacred, and very prayerful. They see traditional liturgy as stale.
Ditto with my fellow “Novus Ordo” Catholics who like the real tacky-sounding hymns like Eagle’s Wings and Here I Am, Lord. They claim these songs are not really tacky, and it’s just my opinion that they are.
Furthermore, even I have to admit that this type of music isn’t bad outside of Mass. For example, the orthodox Franciscan Friars of the Renewal even do Cathoilic rap! No one would argue that private devotions aren’t sacred, or that any worship of God that isn’t sacred is pleasing to him. Yet God is apparently pleased by contemporary, “secularized” Chrustian music when it is sincerely done outside of Mass, then why not at Mass?
In Heaven, do we really expect to just be kneeling and hearing and seeing Christ say “Dominvs Vobiscvm” with bells and incense?
Obviously, abuses are never permissible. But most of the problems with the Missa Normativa, as we “traditionalists” see it, is not so much abuses as it is the supposedly “irreverent” way it is celebrated. Even an abuse-free “Novus Ordo” can be tacky as heck. It’s up to each priest to celebrate it as traditionally as he feels like. Or so we say.
For my part, I’ll continue to love the Tridentine Mass and really-high Missa Normativas. But do I do so only because it gives me a spiritual high? Because it subjectively feels good to me?
It’s difficult to argue otherwise.
Thanks for the (name removed by moderator)ut.