{"id":5154,"date":"2006-04-01T23:26:53","date_gmt":"2006-04-02T04:26:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost:8888\/2006\/04\/01\/not-the-preoccupation-of-a-liturgical-curmudgeon\/"},"modified":"2006-04-01T23:26:53","modified_gmt":"2006-04-02T04:26:53","slug":"not-the-preoccupation-of-a-liturgical-curmudgeon","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.splendoroftruth.com\/curtjester\/2006\/04\/not-the-preoccupation-of-a-liturgical-curmudgeon\/","title":{"rendered":"Not the &quot;preoccupation of a liturgical curmudgeon&quot;"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"blog\">Here is a great letter from Bishop Edward J. Slattery of Tulsa, OK continuing his series on the liturgy [via <a href=\"http:\/\/christusvincit.blogspot.com\/2006\/04\/more-from-good-bishop.html\">Chistus Vincit<\/a>]. I have freed it from the <a href=\"http:\/\/www.dioceseoftulsa.org\/news\/images\/eoc031906.pdf\">PDF format it was in<\/a> and formatted it since it was broken up on the 2nd and last page of the diocese&#8217;s newspaper. Their editor included the last paragraph from his fifth letter in this series as the first paragraph in his sixth letter. This is a great letter on the subject and well worth your time reading the whole thing.  The whole thing is in the extended entry of this post below:<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\"><strong>Music can be a distraction<\/strong><br \/>\nIn my travels around the Diocese, I have noted certain  communities where the music at Mass has tended more  toward entertainment than toward prayer. The choir or cantor  consciously draws the attention of the congregation to their  performance and really stirring performances are rewardedby the congregation&#8217;s grateful applause.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">In this case, the placement of the choir, cantor or musicians  in the most visible and prominent part of the sanctuary, not  only proves to be a distraction to the congregation, but  provides a kind of center stage for a concert of religious  music. In this case, the music becomes the center of the experience, the sacramental transformation of the  worshipper is reduced to his or her mere inspiration and the  liturgical action of the Mass becomes itself a distraction.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">  While such a scenario is still quite rare in our Diocese, I think we are in danger of moving in that direction and it concerns me as your Bishop.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">Highlighting other worthwhile causes  We must also be aware that musical entertainment is not  the only thing which can compromise the prayerful integrity  of the Mass. The Eucharist is just as compromised whenever  we use the liturgy to highlight an agenda or cause other than  the worship of the Father. This is true no matter how positive  or useful the other causes may seem.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">For this reason, I want to remind the faithful of the Diocese  that the Mass stands alone as a complete action in itself.  It is that perfect sacrifice from which the Church derives  Her life; thus the liturgy must never be used as an  opportunity to teach, as the context for a history or an art  lesson, as the background for a concert of sacred music,  neither to build community nor to foster parish identity. All  these things are good, but all of them are either in support of  the Mass or are derived from the Mass, and to use the Mass to  foster something less is a serious abuse.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">For this reason, I want to discourage in the strongest  possible way, those Masses which are sometimes called &quot;teaching Masses&quot; during which the celebrant stops the  sacred action in order to make an historic or theological point  of explanation.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">In that same vein, I want to discourage any extraneous  comments or commentaries on the readings or the parts of  the Mass which might interrupt the sacred action. The proclamation of the readings, for example, ought not to begin  with an introductory comment provided by the lector,&quot;In this  morning&#8217;s first reading, the Prophet Isaiah consoles the  Israelites&quot; &shy; First of all, such explanations are properly given  by the celebrant or the deacon in the homily when he brings  together the day&#8217;s readings and places their proclamation in  the context of that parish&#8217;s lived experience; and secondly, an  explanation offered as part of the liturgical proclamation  could easily lead to a confusion between the inspired Word of  God and the possibly helpful insight of the liturgy committee  or the lector himself or herself.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\"><strong>The birthright which is our salvation.  <\/strong><br \/>\nAll of these ideas and corrections which I have offered  these past weeks regarding silence, music and prayer may  seem superficial given the great problems confronting the universal Church today and even considering what we must  do as the local Church in Eastern Oklahoma if we want to  bring the message of Christ to everyone here.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">Not only may these issues seem superficial, but I am also aware that some may perceive me as being overly concerned  with rubrics and the details of the liturgy, even to the point of missing the larger picture, judging my pastoral concerns as  the preoccupation of a liturgical curmudgeon.  But if I must defend myself, let me say that I insist on these points for the simple but profound reason that I am  concerned lest our people be denied what is their proper  inheritance, their birthright as Catholics, that is, the complete  and correct understanding of the Mass as a real sacrifice by  which they are given access to share in the unique,  unrepeatable and all sufficient historic sacrifice of Christ on  Calvary.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">Distractions, the loss of silence and the various liturgical  imbalances of which I have spoken are all partly to blame for  a whole generation of Catholics who have gradually lost their  understanding that the Mass is the true Sacrifice of Christ.  But these problems are not the only reason why Catholics no  longer see that there is an intrinsic and necessary link  between the Mass and their salvation. As critical as these  problems are, even more critical to us as a diocese as we  respond to the Synod&#8217;s call for a restoration of the Lord&#8217;s Day  is recovering our sense of personal sin which many of us  seem to have lost.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">  <strong>Recovering a sense of sin<\/strong><br \/>\nWhenever the People of God lose their sense of personal sin,  their understanding of the nature of the Mass and its great  importance is also largely lost. It may happen then that having  lost their sense of sin, they also lose their understanding that  at Mass we offer to the Father &#8211; as members of Christ&#8217;s Body  and in union with Jesus Who makes this same offering &#8211; Our  Lord&#8217;s own death and rising in order that our sins be forgiven  and our lives be reconciled to God.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">In place of this sacrificial and redemptive understanding of  the Mass, those who have lost their sense of sin may begin to  see the Eucharist as principally a communal meal and a time  of fellowship (1), which recalls the presence of Christ among  us (2). Both aspects &#8211; that is, the fellowship meal and the  recalling of Christ&#8217;s presence &#8211; are understood as flowing from  the witness and life of that worshipping community as it is  already assembled in prayer and established in fellowship.  It is incomplete to see the Mass only as a meal<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">While it is true that the Mass is a sacred banquet, it must be  clearly stated that this aspect of the Eucharistic sacrifice is  available to us only because the Mass is primarily a sacrifice  at which Christ Himself is the host, who invites us to feast on  His Body and drink His Blood. At this banquet, the Host  hands Himself over, giving His own Self as food for eternal  life, and it is paramount that we understand that this&quot;<br \/>\nhanding over,&quot; this sacrificial element, is the true foundation  which makes it possible for us to participate in that meal  which establishes fellowship even as it reveals Christ&#8217;s  resurrected presence among us.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">But we cannot honestly approach the Eucharist as a  sacrifice without confronting the reason for this sacrifice: our  sinful human nature which reveals our alienation from God  through our repeated and unforgiven sins. Christ, the Lamb of  God, was made the sacrifice of expiation to redeem us from  our sins and reconcile us to the Father. At the sacrificial  banquet of the Mass, we are united with Christ as He makes  this self-offering to the Father on our behalf and thus  reconciles us to God by his Paschal Mystery.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">If we lose our sense of personal sin, then gradually we lose  our perception that the sacrifice of the cross &#8211; made present  and real to us in the here and now of our daily struggles &#8211; is  necessary for my redemption, and from these first two losses  proceeds the more telling loss, our loss of gratitude for God&#8217;s  gift of His Son. This is the more telling loss, because gratitude  is what impels us to holiness.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">Hence it is critical for us as Catholics who are in the midst  of a great struggle to recover our celebration of the Lord&#8217;s Day  to recover first our traditional and accurate understanding<br \/>\nthat individual holiness, our coming closer to God, depends  directly on our appreciation of the sacrifice of the cross and  the enormous gap between God&#8217;s faithful redeeming love for  me personally and my indifferent and inconsistent love for  Him. The crucifix reveals this stark contrast.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\"><strong>Ugly sin but Holy People<\/strong><br \/>\nWhen we look at the holy men and women whose lives  have strengthened the Church here in Eastern Oklahoma&shy;  from missionaries like Katharine Drexel and Isidore Robot, to  the martyr Stanley Rother, and from His Holiness, John Paul  II to the hidden saints who take their pews Sunday after  Sunday in our Cathedral, churches and missions &shy; we see that  they had this one thing in common. All of them &#8211; by God&#8217;s  grace &#8211; were conscious of the ugliness of their sins and thus  had grown in their appreciation of their indebtedness to God. <\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">Convicted of their sins, nevertheless they grow in holiness.  Conversely, the greatest sinners are those who wound the  Body of Christ and offend the Father, but are unconscious of  the gravity of their sin or unconcerned with how great a  distance there is between God&#8217;s love for them and their half-<br \/>\nhearted and insipid response.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">Saints are redeemed sinners because they accept God&#8217;s  offer of forgiveness, and moved by gratitude, become intimate  with Him. Sinners remain unredeemed when they remain  unaware or unconcerned by their sins, and dismissing their need for forgiveness, approach God as is they  were His equal.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\"><strong>Intimacy with the Father comes through the Cross<\/strong><br \/>\nIf you ask me how we come to a greater  intimacy with God, I would have to tell you  that by our own efforts we cannot even come  to an awareness of our own sins, much less  an appreciation of how their ugliness  disfigures the soul. Should you ask me, I  would warn you that you cannot start with  yourself. If you do, you will end with yourself  still in the center of your awareness, only  more confused and more frustrated.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">Start instead with Christ on the Cross.  Come in silence before the image of the  Crucified One and wait patiently there  focused on the dying Christ, until your heart  and mind have both grown silent and when  you have finally found that peace, listen for  the still, quiet voice of the Lord who will  speak to you and try to convince you of His  love. If you are patient, you will hear His  voice.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">Wait for God with patient, prayerful  silence, and eventually you will come to know  in your heart the distance between His love  for you and your love for Him. In that silence  your sins will loom large. Your hidden sins  will flaunt themselves; your forgotten sins  will cry out their names; your repeated  failures will mock your courage and shame  your pride. Even the sins which you have  confessed and for which you have foundforgiveness will return to your recollection.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\"><span class=\"bi\"><strong>A sorrow that can liberate, a  shame that can bring freedom<\/strong><br \/>\nAnd all this will bring you deep sorrow and  shame,but this is a sorrow which liberates and  a shame which brings us freedom, because  once we see the truth about ourselves and  accept our guilt, we are freed from the burden  of self-justification and no longer have to  excuse our sinful behavior. Indeed, our past<br \/>\nwill shame us, but only until we realize with  untold gratitude that He loves us as we are, in  all our brokenness and all our torpidity, with  an infinite and unconditional love. All He asks  of us is that we surrender ourselves, our sinful  self, to Him in faith and in trust.And when we  do,our shame turns to joy.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">At this point, filled with gratitude, the  repentant sinner becomes creative in the  same way that every lover becomes creative  in his or her search for ways to respond to the  beloved.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">But it is also true that the sinner who is  humbled and grateful for having received  God&#8217;s love seeks to return that love by loving  others creatively. This desire to respond to  God&#8217;s love by loving others creatively  demands from us an ever-increasing self-forgetfulness. This self-abandonment is  difficult initially, but absolutely necessary  since it is only in sacrificial love that a  husband can discover the depth of his love  for his wife and children, a wife can discover  the power inherent in forgiveness, children  can learn to imitate Christ in his love, and  employers and employees can help extend  the Kingdom of God.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">Gratitude for God&#8217;s love for us  One theologian called our gratitude for  God&#8217;s love for us &quot;the engine which drives the  Church&#8217;s apostolic life.&quot; And so it is. Like an  engine, this gratitude to God furnishes  energy and enables priests, deacons and  religious to find joy in their celibacy, freedom  in the poverty and self-discovery in their  obedience.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">Those who attempt to live an apostolic life  of activity and mission without having  learned to wait patiently until God reveals the  depths of His love and the paucity of our own  are incapable of funding their ministry from  the inexhaustible well-spring of gratitude.  Instead they work from their own strengths,  quickly exhausting themselves in the  struggle. Their enthusiasm for service is  quickly challenged and fails under pressure.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">Like Martha in the Gospel story their  apostolic endeavor ends tinged with  resentment and bitterness. Are you  unconcerned, Martha asks Jesus, that my  sister has abandoned me to do all the work?  Tell her to help me. (Luke 10:41)<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">How different this desire to respond to  God&#8217;s love by loving others creatively is from  the kind of creative and enterprising  programs which occupy so much of our time  and energy! The first is the result of prayer  and seeks ways for the soul to express its  gratitude through service and charity; the  second is born of my anxiety and seeks to  invent new ways by which I can feel good  about myself and my brokenness.<\/p>\n<p class=\"bi\">The first begins with God and ends in love,  for oneself and for the poor who are served;  the second begins with myself in my poverty  and ends up with me despising myself and  those whom I attempt to serve. The first is  the way of the Gospel, the second is the way  of the world!<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Here is a great letter from Bishop Edward J. Slattery of Tulsa, OK continuing his series on the liturgy [via Chistus Vincit]. I have freed it from the PDF format&hellip;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[13],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-5154","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-liturgy"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.splendoroftruth.com\/curtjester\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5154","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.splendoroftruth.com\/curtjester\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.splendoroftruth.com\/curtjester\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.splendoroftruth.com\/curtjester\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.splendoroftruth.com\/curtjester\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=5154"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.splendoroftruth.com\/curtjester\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5154\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.splendoroftruth.com\/curtjester\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5154"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.splendoroftruth.com\/curtjester\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=5154"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.splendoroftruth.com\/curtjester\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=5154"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}