Skip to comments.
BISHOPS CONSIDER CHANGES IN MASS
The Troy Record ^
| November 12, 2002
| Anne Fullam
Posted on 11/12/2002 10:15:08 AM PST by NYer
click here to read article
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-74 last
To: Siobhan
The Presto IQ test...sounds like the NEA created it.
To: Askel5; Siobhan; Domestic Church
never let it bother you some hound of hell's seeking to sink a fang or two in you... I was reading a short essay by Fr. Rutler in this week's bulletin for Church of Our Saviour and he related a story about the Cure of Ars. A penitent had fallen over in the confessional and upon helping the man up the Cure said to him (I'm paraphrasing somewhat), "Don't worry, it's only the devil."
62
posted on
11/19/2002 12:02:36 PM PST
by
ELS
To: ELS
You wonder sometimes. A devil, anyway.
63
posted on
12/07/2002 1:00:43 AM PST
by
Askel5
To: ninenot
Kneeling WILL happen The US church, and archbishop Flynn in particular are idiots.
Kneeling is TORTURE for some tall people, myself included.
The pews never have room for a tall person to kneel with his knees directly below his center of gravity. So the result is similar to a boot-camp private being punished by forcing him to hold his rifle with his arms STRAIGHT OUT in front of him for several hours.
The Catholics [ capitol C ] want to close ranks with
the catholics [ lower-case-c ] yet this is yet another F*CKING STUPID wedge separating them!
The homosexual-loving Archbishop Flynn will (hopefully) rot in hell. I will start leaving early if they vote yes on this. I might also have to nail my list of grievances to Flynn's front door and go look for a Lutheran Church!
To: pseudo-justin
Maybe this is going to happen faster than I had imagined. According the article, we will begin seeing changes as early as next year.
65
posted on
12/07/2002 6:51:09 AM PST
by
cebadams
To: FL_engineer
Kneeling is TORTURE for some tall people, myself included. If it is physically painful for you to kneel, then just respectfully SIT.
Common sense should prevail here.
There's no need to get bent out of shape over this (excuse the pun).
66
posted on
12/07/2002 7:03:23 AM PST
by
sinkspur
To: NYer
**For some churches in the diocese, it may mean returning kneelers to the backs of pews or attaching them to the chairs that are used.**
"Every knee shall been at the name of Jesus Christ". (paraphrased)
To: NYer; BlackElk; maryz; Desdemona; patent; Stingray51; sinkspur; Catholicguy
Also please note the willingness of various Church-types, priests and Bishops to LIE LIKE RUGS about European "customs."
Desdemona, and others, have posted personal testimony from first-hand knowledge that churches in Europe HAVE KNEELERS and that the people USE THEM.
This un-challenged lying is what brought standing-to-receive-Communion into the rubrics above-mentioned. I attend Mass at a large parish in Milwaukee (N.O.) where at least 50% of the people KNEEL to recieve Communion--yet our USCC blitely tells Rome that "standing is universal in America for the reception of Communion."
Fortunately, the Prefect of Liturgy in Rome has a staff which reads American emails and he personally INSISTED on the codicil to the statement which makes it clear that kneeling is perfectly acceptable.
It's not so much a question of whether or not someone MUST kneel to receive the Sacrament--anyone who's been at a Papal Mass (e.g., St. Louis a few years back) understands that that is not always possible.) Anyone who has been to Mass in combat understands that you 'do what you have to do' to avoid casualties while at Mass.
What bothers me, and MANY others, is the "ram-it-down-your-throat-and-damn-the-cost" approach of the Bishops, who apparently are convinced that their level of enlightenment compares with that of Michael the Archangel.
We need not bring up their 'level of enlightenment' regarding homosexual priests and the consequences thereof...
68
posted on
12/07/2002 7:23:35 AM PST
by
ninenot
To: sinkspur; FL_engineer; BlackElk
Sinky's right. While a little torture is a good thing (wait until you get old enough so that kneeling is a bit painful regardless of your physical stature) and sacrifice and penance are recommended to the faithful...
There's no need to kneel and thus leave the Church in an ambulance. Since you testify that in your particular case this may well happen, the Church will not require it.
(I will check the statistics to determine exactly how many kneeling-induced physio-maladies are reported in the US annually. Apparently it is quite a bit more substantial than previously thought.) /sarcasm
69
posted on
12/07/2002 7:34:31 AM PST
by
ninenot
To: Desdemona; Antoninus
seem to remember kneelers at Santa Maria Sopra Minerva in Rome, the Duomo in Florence, and San Nicolo in Bari. Any one else? I seem to recall learning somewhere (high school? college?) that the medieval churches were built without kneelers and the people (it's easy to overlook the obvious) knelt on the floor when kneeling was called for.
70
posted on
12/07/2002 9:40:45 AM PST
by
maryz
To: FL_engineer
Kneeling is TORTURE for some tall people, myself included.
Yeah, well, SITTING in a pew made for people over 5'5" and STANDING when under 5' tall ain't much better. Let me tell you.
To: sinkspur
Bureaucracies meddle in insignificancies
<> LOL good line<>
To: ninenot
<> Amen, brother. BTW, Latin Mass magazine is, still, sending me free copies of its periodical. In the latest issue, Fr. Brian Harrrison, no rad-trad he, has a long article about the "Missal of the Millenium," the third editio typica of the post-conciliar Roman Missal first promulgated in 1969 by Pope Paul VI..."
After describing many of the "Ammendments" in the new Missal, he concludes; "The much-heralded 'conservative' admonitions and ammendments found in the new editio typica of the Roman Missal may have the intention - and, one hopes, the effect - of slowing down the pace of the post conciliar liturgical revolution. But the innovations we have surveyed in this article make it clear the underlying principle of the revolution, namely, that significant - even "profound" or "far-reaching" - liturgical change will be a constant and ongoing process, has been kept firmly in place by Rome for the new millenium. I am afraid one cannot help being reminded of the old revolutionary strategic strategic formula for astutely neutralizing conservative resistance to change; 'one step backwards, two steps forward.'"
Happy Advent<>
To: Catholicguy
Fr. B Harrison is quite a man. A bit of a dreamer, insofar as he thinks he can invent the 'reform of the reform' Mass. Conservative-oriented, and has been more and more so over the last 10 years; now to the point where he could easily be mistaken for an FSSP member--not QUITE SSPX, yet.
Of course, he's right about the revolution in Liturgy. It is likely that the solution will be a Campos-type arrangement worldwide.
74
posted on
12/08/2002 9:24:39 PM PST
by
ninenot
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-74 last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson