Z
z_0101
Guest
To those who think these novenas are bad thing:
Nobody should tell ever someone not to pray, which in effect you are doing when telling people not to believe in these novenas.
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It’s not the novenas themselves. Those are not the problem. Most of them are in fact approved by legitimate authority. Most of the time, but not always.
The problem is the (often) superstitious messages added to the Novenas. Things like “you must make 45 copies of this and pass it to friends” or “if you mail this to 50 people you’ll win the lottery” or “you will be condemned to eternal hellfire if you don’t make 100 copies and put them in the pews.” etc. etc. etc. That’s why they’re a problem.
There are all kinds of other inappropriate messages added to such novenas. Often these go directly against Church teaching (like intentions to put an end to the Ordinary Form of the Mass).
Novenas? Yes! Inappropriate messages added to them? No!
Fr David, well said and almost word for word what my Sr. Pastor told me when I inquired as to why we pull these pamphlets. I kind of used the prayer argument as LostSheep does with Fr. and he explained, the problem with these pamphlets is not only what you’ve stated above but also that once you let them start, then literally thousands start to show up.
- Love scientist turned priest, about 3 years ago, I proposed an experiment with these things. For three months we pulled as normal and counted to get an approximate weekly count. Then we’d only pulled these things when found only twice a month for three months with the exception being that obviously anti-christian/anti-Catholic to be pulled on sight. By the end of the experiment, the back of the church, the back four pews, the racks, and half the hymnals were filled with these things. It was so bad the that parishioners were asking the ushers why we were not pulling the pamphlets anymore. We counted over 3000 (no not a typo, 3000) pamphlets per week up from a few hundred a week when we started. It took us almost a year of diligent pulling to get things back under some sort of control. We figured that this activity represented only about 1 or 2 percent of our parish. Can you imagine if everyone in the parish did this?
We would have to hire a person to come in just to clean up and remove the pamphlets! - Why we prayed over the novenas before we recycled them… because quite often someone has a legitimate prayer and a need and so we ask for the intercession of our Lord, if it be his will, to grant these legitimate prayer intentions or to give the family the grace to handle the situation.
- One thing of note, we brought our prayer candles back to service after almost a decade of non-use per our congregation’s request. The novenas have actually been reduced by about a third to a half of what we used to pull and we’ve added a prayer intentions book that our perpetual adoration members include in our prayers which dropped those things even more… IMHO, the adoration book is much better than a novena, because the prayer intention is every day, 24 hours a day, for as long as that book and the need exists.
