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Papist Quote of the Day: National Catholic Reporter
American Papist ^ | September 9, 2009 | Thomas Peters

Posted on 09/09/2009 10:20:08 AM PDT by NYer

From arch-dissenter Father (he doesn't like using the title) Richard McBrien in arch-liberal publication National Catholic (they shouldn't get to use the title) Reporter:

"Eucharistic adoration, perpetual or not, is a doctrinal, theological, and spiritual step backward, not forward." (source)

Yes, I'm sure Jesus doesn't want us worshipping His substantial presence (sarcasm).

Seriously, remind me why the Catholic News Service Twitter (the official news agency of the US Catholic Bishops) continually publicizes National Catholic Reporter articles?!
Here's my quote of the day:
"Supporting NCR, perpetually or not, is a doctrinal, theological and spiritual step backward, not forward."


Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration

There was a front-page story in The Boston Globe last month signaling the return of perpetual eucharistic adoration to Boston.

In the 1940s a group of cloistered nuns began the practice of eucharistic adoration at St. Clement's Shrine, a former Universalist church that had been purchased by the archdiocese of Boston to accommodate the overflow crowds from St. Cecelia's parish in the Back Bay section of the city.

Soon there was a nocturnal adoration society formed. However, in the 1960s, with changes in the Catholic church and in the neighborhood, the practice of perpetual adoration at St. Clement's Shrine died out–only to be restored this year.

The Globe article provoked a few comments from readers some of whom are convinced of the paper's anti-Catholic bias. Letter-writers criticized the reporter's constant reference to the consecrated eucharistic host as a "wafer."

They also faulted him for failing to recognize the important doctrinal and theological difference between Christ's "sacramental" presence in the Eucharist and a "literal" presence, that in centuries past gave rise to charges of cannibalism against Catholics.

I happen to know the Globe reporter, Michael Paulson, and have been interviewed by him many times over the years. Although Paulson is an excellent reporter, he would never claim to be a theologian, but neither is he anti-Catholic. If there were any lapses in his article, they were made unintentionally and certainly without malice.

It was unfortunate, to be sure, that he constantly referred to the eucharistic host as a "wafer," "consecrated" or not. However, the distinction between a "wafer" and a "host," that some letter-writers were quick to insist upon, would be lost on non-Catholics (the Globe reporter himself is not a Christian), and indeed on most Catholics as well.

The constant use of the word "wafer" did lead some readers to conclude that the practice of eucharistic adoration is nothing less than a form of idolatry. How else explain why someone would sit or kneel hour after hour in adoration of a simple "wafer"?

It was also unfortunate that Paulson described the Catholic belief in the Real Presence (a technical theological and doctrinal term that did not appear in the story) as a "literal" transformation of bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus during Mass. The transformation (the medieval word was "transubstantiation") is sacramental, not literal or physical.

In other words, the bread and the wine retain the properties of bread and wine. They look like bread and wine and taste like bread and wine, but Catholics (and many other Christians as well) believe that the bread and wine have been sacramentally changed into the body and blood of Christ.

Thus, the bread and wine may still appear to be bread and wine, but in the course of the Eucharistic Prayer (formerly called the Canon of the Mass) they have been changed sacramentally, not literally or physically, into the body and blood of Christ. Paulson did quote Boston's Cardinal Sean O'Malley correctly on the "sacramental presence of Christ" in the Eucharist.

It should be pointed out that the church has always condemned devotional excesses that contradicted its official teachings. One of those excesses was the mistaken belief that, if the host were scratched, it would bleed.

Another excess that unfortunately perdured into the mid-20th century in some parishes was the practice of putting the consecrated host "to bed" following Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament and accompanied by the singing of "Good Night Sweet Jesus," as the church lights were turned off, one by one from the back of the church to the front.

The practice of eucharistic adoration began in the 12th century, when the Real Presence of Christ was widely rejected by heretics or misunderstood by poorly educated Catholics. The church saw eucharistic adoration as a way of reaffirming its faith in the Real Presence and of promoting renewed devotion to it.

However, as time went on, eucharistic devotions, including adoration, drifted further and further away from their liturgical grounding in the Mass itself.

Notwithstanding Pope Benedict XVI's personal endorsement of eucharistic adoration and the sporadic restoration of the practice in the archdiocese of Boston and elsewhere, it is difficult to speak favorably about the devotion today.

Now that most Catholics are literate and even well-educated, the Mass is in the language of the people (i.e, the vernacular), and its rituals are relatively easy to understand and follow, there is little or no need for extraneous eucharistic devotions. The Mass itself provides all that a Catholic needs sacramentally and spiritually.

Eucharistic adoration, perpetual or not, is a doctrinal, theological, and spiritual step backward, not forward.



TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Ministry/Outreach
KEYWORDS: adoration; catholic; eucharist; heretic; richardmcbrien

1 posted on 09/09/2009 10:20:09 AM PDT by NYer
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To: Salvation; narses; SMEDLEYBUTLER; redhead; Notwithstanding; nickcarraway; Romulus; ...
Fr. McBrien is the Crowley-O'Brien Professor of Theology at the University of Notre Dame.

This might explain it.

2 posted on 09/09/2009 10:22:00 AM PDT by NYer ( "One Who Prays Is Not Afraid; One Who Prays Is Never Alone"- Benedict XVI)
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To: NYer

I am speechless - and saddened at such thinking by a priest.


3 posted on 09/09/2009 10:25:57 AM PDT by Citizen Soldier (Just got up from Bedroomshire)
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To: Citizen Soldier
McBrien has been the resident heretic at Notre Dame for years.

The good news is that he's a Professor Emeritus, is pretty old, and doesn't actually teach his errors to students anymore AFAIK.

And I have it on good authority that the chairman of the department is quite orthodox.

4 posted on 09/09/2009 10:39:51 AM PDT by Campion ("President Barack Obama" is an anagram for "An Arab-backed Imposter")
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To: Campion

Good to know more about the situation, but I wish Pope Benedict would clean house and send these heretics to cloistered societies where they can’t spew heresay. Do you know who the offical standing behind zer0 at ND and folding his hands and not slapping for his entrance was? I wondered how high up he was in ND.


5 posted on 09/09/2009 10:45:10 AM PDT by Citizen Soldier (Just got up from Bedroomshire)
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To: NYer

If you bite down you’ll hurt Jesus.


6 posted on 09/09/2009 11:35:53 AM PDT by ichabod1 (I am rolling over in my grave and I am not even dead yet (GOP Poet))
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To: NYer

synagogue-of-satan alert?


7 posted on 09/09/2009 12:12:39 PM PDT by the invisib1e hand (hang the Czars.)
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To: NYer
Another excess that unfortunately perdured into the mid-20th century in some parishes was the practice of putting the consecrated host "to bed" following Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament and accompanied by the singing of "Good Night Sweet Jesus," as the church lights were turned off, one by one from the back of the church to the front.

I actually think that's rather nice and respectful. It used to bother me as a kid to think of Jesus shut up all night alone in the dark . . . . < g >

8 posted on 09/09/2009 12:13:03 PM PDT by AnAmericanMother (Ministrix of ye Chasse, TTGC Ladies' Auxiliary (recess appointment))
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To: NYer
Countering with these Popes (and Christ's quotes!

The best, the surest , and the most effective way of establishing everlasting peace on the face of the earth is through the great power of perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrament." -- Pope John Paul II

First_Sorrowful_Mystery

"Could you not watch one hour?" -- Mark 14:37

I am happy to testify that many young people are discovering the beauty of adoration, whether personal or in community. I invite priests to encourage youth groups in this, but also to accompany them to ensure that the forms of adoration are appropriate and dignified, with sufficient times for silence and listening to the word of God. In life today, which is often noisy and scattered, it is more important than ever to recover the capacity for interior silence and recollection: Eucharistic adoration permits one to do this not only within one's "I" but rather in the company of that "You" full of love who is Jesus Christ, "the God who is near us."
 
~Pope Benedict XVI


9 posted on 09/09/2009 12:48:50 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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From arch-dissenter Father (he doesn't like using the title) Richard McBrien

Correction: From arch-heretic Father (he doesn't like using the title) Richard McBrien

10 posted on 09/09/2009 12:48:57 PM PDT by A.A. Cunningham (Barry Soetoro is a Kenyan communist)
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To: NYer

“Will no one rid me of this meddlesome...eh...reverend?”


11 posted on 09/09/2009 2:23:27 PM PDT by vladimir998
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To: NYer

The abandonment of such practices as benediction and adoration of the Host have lead to loss of faith in the doctrine of transubstantiation, so that many Catholics put little stock in it. The removal of the tabernacle from the altar and the “hiding” of it in side chapels also had the unfortunate effect of encouraging Catholics to treat the church as an “empty” space and indulge in chatter before the mass, or as out protestant brothers have it, engage in fellowship.


12 posted on 09/09/2009 2:31:15 PM PDT by RobbyS (ECCE HOMO!)
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To: Campion; Citizen Soldier

I posted a comment to the ncr article. Check it out.


13 posted on 09/09/2009 3:02:38 PM PDT by NYer ( "One Who Prays Is Not Afraid; One Who Prays Is Never Alone"- Benedict XVI)
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To: NYer

I did too, but my sarcasm took over:

Satan
satan@h3ll.com
What a great article! NCR is great for my family business!


14 posted on 09/09/2009 4:55:06 PM PDT by Dominick ("Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought." - JP II)
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To: NYer
In the original article, Fr. McBrien says the Eucharist is enough, we don't need adoration. However, the first end of the Mass is adoration of the Blessed Trinity through Jesus Christ's Body and Blood. Eucharistic adoration outside of Mass grew as a fruit of the Mass since Jesus remains substantially present in the Reserved Sacrament. How could it possible be said we don't need the opportunity to come into the physical Presence of the Lord for purposes of prayer and adoration. Countless saints and angels contradict Fr.McBrien. Personally I think the reason he can be so cavalier about adoration outside of Mass is that he does not believe Christ is substantially Present and/or has a heretical understanding of the Mass and Christ's Presence. This would not suprise me. Fr. McBrien was formed at a time when all kinds of subjective theories about Christ's Presence were being bandied about: transfinalization, transignification etc. Paul VI wrote the encyclical letter Mysterium Fidei to counteract this. Perhaps McBrien holds that the Lord's Presence how ever he conceives it disappears after the Mass. Fr. McBrien needs prayers.
15 posted on 09/09/2009 5:10:24 PM PDT by Rampolla
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To: NYer

Not for nothing, as we say around here, have the last four Archbishops of Hartford, of which Archdiocese Father McBrien is a priest, been very happy to leave Father McBrien 1500 miles or so away in South Bend, Indiana!

In fact, one of them (not the current one!) told me so!:-)


16 posted on 09/09/2009 8:09:25 PM PDT by TaxachusettsMan
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