Thank you for your reply. Just to give you some examples, at one parish, I witnessed the following: 1) use of inclusive language, e.g. “my sisters and my brothers,” 2) use of Extraordinary Ministers of Holy Communion when there are only 100 or so people for daily Mass, 3) during a penance service at this parish, part of the examination of conscience including the whether we had failed to advance the cause of “sexual equality.” (The statement is ambiguous).
At another parish, there is a Eucharistic Adoration service known as EXALT, where there is “praise and worship music.” At this parish, there was a woman assisting the priest with what is otherwise referred to as Benediction and Devotion and she was barefoot. At one time, I believe she was acting a thurifer during the service.
Thanks again for your assistance.
Okay, I see that you elaborated a bit more.
I still don’t think you’ll get very far. As choy said, there are some places in the Missal where “brothers and sisters” is the language that is used. This is why one really has to do their homework before taking such complaints to the pastor. We would look pretty silly if we tell the pastor he’s using the wrong words and then he pulls out the Missal to show us that those are, in fact, the words that are there.
The use on EMsHC is not forbidden, thus, it becomes a judgment call. The local bishop is probably going to be more apt to side with his priest’s judgment than a parishioner’s perception (unless the priest is going
severely overkill by having 12 EMsHC for 100 people, for example). Perhaps he just wants to distribute under both species? Or perhaps he is trying to work under time constraints that you are not considering (trying to make sure Mass is over in a timely manner so people can get to work, for example). You could try asking the priest (in a non-accusatory manner, of course) why he does this.
That “sexual equality” phrase is a bit ambiguous (not to mention peculiar!).
I don’t really know the ins-and-outs as far as the rubrics for Eucharistic Adoration, so I can’t really say if what you have described constitutes an abuse or not.
You could certainly bring up these complaints to the pastor. Make sure you are 100% certain on what the liturgical books and documents say, though. There’s no need to be confrontational, of course. But if you approach the pastor as someone who is looking for help in understanding these things, he might be more open to your concerns.