Journeys of a Catholic Poster Girl

“Our faith needs to be the North Star of our lives. Our behavior needs to match our words.” –Archbishop Charles Chaput

Fr. Fox on the MP

Filed under: American Catholicism, B XVI, Catholicism-general, Papal writings, Popes, liturgy, music — catholicpostergirl at 6:12 pm on Monday, July 9, 2007

From a new blog I’m reading, Bonfire of the Vanities: (emphasis is mine)

From Continuing to digest the ‘Old Mass’ Motu Proprio

I might well have other things I might do on my day away from parish business, but I am giving a lot of thought to what the Holy Father’s recent decision, regarding the use of the “Old Mass,” means for the near and long term.

A lot of people who are getting all panicky, really, calm down, won’t you please? No, you won’t? Okay, I tried.

No, it’s not going to mean that anytime soon, you will show up for Mass and “it’ll all be different.”

But yes, it may mean that sometime down the road, some places, there will be scheduled, either at new times, or as part of the current schedule of Masses, the Mass according to the old — and what the pope now calls the “extraordinary” — form of the Roman Rite.

And (here is the speculative part, clearly) I believe it means that way, way down the road — I mean over many years and decades — we will all see the celebration of the Mass, in its ongoing, “normal” form, will gradually shift. It will regain at least some Latin, and in some cases, significant amounts of Latin. Chant will return (it already was returning; and it never went away, even if you haven’t heard it for awhile). For lack of a better way to talk about it, there will be a reconsideration of the “ethos” or mindest or “spirit” of the liturgy — because beyond the details (English or Latin? Haugen or Palestrina? Stand or kneel?), there is the question of the overall approach, or feel, of the liturgy.

Oh, here goes the panic again! There some folks go screaming from the keyboard. Come back when you feel better, okay? Let’s continue…

Is Mass horizontal or vertical? I mean — is it about us, the community, or is it about an upward, outward, orientation toward God, toward the mystery of Christ’s work of salvation, and toward a final, everlasting moment of perfect salvation and blessing in the Kingdom to come?

Of course, it is about both–but what’s the balance? Both in theory, and in actual experience?

I can’t go on about all the implications of this, but my point is, please stop focusing on the details. I really don’t get why a string of Latin words sends some people into orbit. The reason I think Latin has any importance at all is because it is so much a part of who we are. It is so intertwined with where we have been, and how we came to where we are, that I think we need to turn and challenge those who insist on a refusal — and that is what we’re talking about, a dig-in-your-heels, adolescent, tempter-tantrum throwing refusal — to deal with that. When a child throws himself down on the floor in a crying tantrum, you realize it isn’t about white bread vs. wheat, but about something going in that child. Even moreso when it is adults.

And the same applies to every other detail at issue here. Birettas, cassocks, loud voice, soft voice, this style of music, or that, which way the priest stands or holds his hands. There are people who are throwing tantrums about this, or they are about to. Even bishops — a bishop in Italy went into full Cassandra mode: oh, it is to weep, to weep! Really, a bishop ought to know better. Either that bishop is rather a lightweight, or he’s selfishly and irresponsibly playing to the crowd, as it were. Either way, bishop, grow up and be a bishop. If God wanted you to be pope . . . but, huh!–he didn’t!

Okay, let’s get right to it: and all I can do, for some folks, is insist they read the following statement slowly and let each word sink in: This is not in any way contrary to Vatican II.

Whoops–too fast! Go read it again! S-l-o-o-o-o-w-l-y !

Now, I know: you’re saying, “but, what about…? and, what about…?” I know you can think of any number of things you think this undoes, that were “from Vatican II.”

Let me explain. Again, maybe read this very slowly: While what’s happening (from the pope, and from the Church in general in recent years) is not in any way contrary to the actual teaching and content of Vatican II, it is, in fact, calling into question what many, many people think — and were told — Vatican II was about.

So, welcome to a period in which a lot of us are going to discover we were misinformed about Vatican II. Either someone flatly told us wrong, or — to be fair — maybe we relied on bad information. Remember, while some may have acted with bad intention, many more acted with good intention, but made honest mistakes. Got carried away. Also, many priests, back then, had to explain a lot in a hurry, so maybe how they explained things, then, could have been better.

But the past is past; what is here, now, is that we are called to ask the question anew: just what did Vatican II say, teach, call for? What shall we do to be faithful to Vatican II?

I am sorry, I genuinely am, that some people have invested themselves in their own vision of how things ought to be, that they are going to fight like wounded animals to defend their position. It’s going to happen. People are going to lash out at priests who are faithful to the pope’s mandate — I’ve seen it happen here in Piqua already, over the most modest changes. (I consider praying one prayer in Latin a modest change. Some consider it a cataclysm.)

Some will say the pope shouldn’t have done this. That could be. I think there are some excellent reasons for him to do it, and his own explanation is very strong. Read it yourself. Go to this site for both documents, the actual motu propriu as well as an accompanying letter explaining his actions. On the other hand, you will hear many say why he shouldn’t have. If you want to have that debate, well, okay, let’s get some beer and pretzels, and have at it.

…But all that doesn’t change the fact that the pope has done this. As faithful Catholics, we all are called to listen to the voice of the one chosen by providence as Vicar of Christ, successor to Peter. No, that doesn’t mean he couldn’t have goofed on this one — this is not a question of infallibility. But it is a question of his role to govern the Church. So we obey, even if it might have been otherwise, just as we obey any number of civil laws that might have been otherwise, had we been the one making the laws. But we aren’t, are we?

So the choice is, shall we go where Peter is leading us, or not?

One must reasonably concede that the pope could be, in effect, mistaken: that where he thinks the liturgy must go, and will with his guidance, is neither where it will go, or where it needs to go. If that be so, then this project of his will, in time, fade. Such things have happened in the life of the Church. That, I think is the argument of those who — I am not going to slap labels on folks — are essentially against this move. And, not being a visionary, for all I know, they may be correct.

Those of you who agree with that — now that you have luxuriated in your indignation — please consider this question:

What if the pope is right?

I mean, no, he’s not infallible in this judgment — but neither, certainly, are you. (Some people seem to have an “anti-infallibility” theory: instead of the pope teaching without error, they are certain that’s all he teaches! Sorry to say, I mean Catholics.)

So, will we follow Peter?

To wrap up by getting back to something more tangible, here’s what I think “following Peter” seems to call for in all this:

1. Stop being so certain about what you think Vatican II said, and with Pope Benedict and others, be taught anew. Meet the Council afresh. And if you don’t care that much, then please end the hypocrisy of waving Vatican II around like a club whenever it suits you. Either the Council matters…or it doesn’t. Which?

2. Whether you like the old form of the Mass doesn’t matter. No one says you have to like it. But it is the Mass. If you really think that the form of the Mass, as we experienced it for something like 1500 years (consider, that’s 3/4ths of the life of the Church!), is as bad as all that, how can you even justify such a position? Come on, think: that’s just a non-starter. The pope himself said, in this recent action, that the Mass of the ages must be re-understood in its glory and wonder, the need for reform notwithstanding. See? That’s a very different starting-point for how we think about Vatican II and the Mass, as opposed to the “throw it out and start new” mindset that many have.

3. Point 2, above, does NOT mean you will be “forced” into anything, unless you consider creating options FOR OTHERS is somehow, coercion of you. That may sound silly, but I will say it again. There really are folks who seek a veto on what others want. I get the letters and phone calls, I know what I’m talking about. I don’t get many.

But it does mean two things: that you be open to more options, because the pope said we’re going to provide them, and I am not going to disobey the pope. Period. If you choose to do so, that’s your soul. You have no right whatsoever to issue ultimatums to others to disobey the pope. So, in time, as things sort out, these two parishes here will find a way to meet the requests that the pope has told me, as pastor, to honor.

And it means that we have to be flexible. Yes, it’s possible some day, a daily Mass will be according to the old use. It could even be true of a Sunday Mass. (Gasps all around.) When? How? That will all depend on you, the faithful! The pope said, honor the requests of the faithful. If few make requests, then that’s one thing. But if many make requests, that is another. All I can say is, I have to wait and see what you do! And respond.

(By the way, if you think this means some dying to self for you, it does for me, too. I have nothing against the old form, but if it were entirely up to me, I doubt I’d go get trained in it, and have to pursue this. Yes, it’s doable, but its not easy.)

4. The pope said the two forms of the Roman Rite are to influence each other. (If you are keeping score, here’s where the most hard-nosed traditionalists are going to complain; there are those who want no change, not a whit, nothing, nada, zilch.) The pope makes it clear his goal is, way down the line, to have the Roman liturgy — as a single reality, not dual — have both the good things the Council called for, as well as the immense riches that were embodied in the classic form of the Mass, but which so wastefully were thrown out with the rubbish in the mis-application of Vatican II. The pope is saying, run out and pull those things from the garbage, before its too late.

So…and here is the $64,000 question, and after all the gnashing of teeth (and this is where it’s going to be, the next few years), the question remains: what will this look like for the current, normal form of the Mass?

Let’s be honest: no change is not obeying the pope’s vision. So the celebration of the Mass, according to the current form…has to change.

How?

My feeling has been — based on many things before this letter, but obviously confirmed by the pope’s action — is that this means a recovery of music, a shift from all contemporary music to much more traditional music (and I don’t mean hymns; this will surprise many, but even old hymns are not really appropriate at Mass in most of the places they are used. What Vatican II said, recovering long tradition, was to chant Scripture texts, something like the responsorial psalm, if you are having a hard time picturing what I mean. But not hymns. So being faithful to Vatican II, for both the new and old forms of Mass, is to use hymns sparingly at Mass.

Also, it seems utterly clear (and does anyone now deny it?) that this means re-including at least some minimum amount of Latin, routinely, in the Mass. Those who don’t like this: will you continue to insist, contrary to the text of Vatican II, and now the actions of the pope — that you alone know best? Really?

It raises the question — and this will really send some into orbit, but I am sorry — of the posture of the priest while offering the sacrifice at the altar. In the classic rite, from time immemorial, the priest and people faced the altar together. Like it, don’t like it, the better question is, why is one better than the other, and how do we decide this?

I don’t see any reason why I, a parish priest, should decide which is truly better. How can I have any competence for such a question? And, no offense, but how many folks in the pews, regardless of what side you’re on, can really say, “yes, I happen to be qualified to make this decision”?

So we have to look to the bishops, the pope — and the pope himself, really, isn’t claiming to know (although he’s written about it — but he has chosen not to mandate a change, although he rightfully could). Rather, he seems to want to have the next few years be a time of reflection on this, as the two forms coexist and influence each other.

And, while on the subject, if you think this posture, known as “ad orientem” (which means to the east) was disallowed in the current form of the Mass, again, not so! Sorry to shock you, but there it is. The current Mass can be celebrated, legally and properly, with the priest and the people facing the same way during the sacrifice, as opposed to the priest facing the people from the other side of the altar.

This subject of ad orientem is going to come up, sooner or later. Parishioners, please tell the panicky who insist they know my secret plans…I have no plans on that subject, other than to bring it up with parishioners, which I have just begun to do. We’ll talk about it, and see how things go.

There are certainly many other things that a “cross-pollination” between the old and new forms of the Mass might mean for the new form. Feel free to suggest in the comments. Obviously, we’re all going to be wrestling with this now. I don’t have all the answers. My purpose here is simply to explain what this all may mean for all of us, in the near term.

1 Comment »

77

Comment by Megan

July 10, 2007 @ 8:45 am

My husband just found this site, too and loves it!

I stayed up way too late last night reading all kinds of commentaries on MP. Don’t think I’ll be joining the fray, tho. Fr. Fox says it for me, anyway….

:)

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