THE REFORM OF THE MASS OF POPE PAUL VI:

Catholic News Service has an article on what His Eminence Arthur Cardinal Roche said to a group of American liturgists. You can read the full article HERE.
This is the first time Cardinal Roche has spoken in depth about Desiderio Desideravi, where Pope Francis calls out liturgical abuse of the Mass of Vatican II. However, neither Pope Francis or Cardinal Roche went after liturgy abusers in the same venomous way they went after TLM communities who celebrate the TLM by the book, by the way!
Desiderio Desideravi, because it calls out liturgical abuses, has never really seen the light of day since its release. Progressives, the biggest problem for the Church, want their liturgical abuses and they are in the majority in the Church, not those who want the TLM!
My most humble and astute comments follow the money byte I copy below:
Roche said the celebration of the Mass must be “grounded in the Paschal Mystery of Christ” and he reaffirmed Francis’ 2017 comments that “the liturgical reform [of the Second Vatican Council] is irreversible.” He quoted Francis’s 2017 apostolic letter Desiderio Desideravi and said the document should be “more widely available to parishes” and there should be more help to “organize guided readings of it.”…
…In that document, the Holy Father wrote that “every aspect of the celebration must be carefully tended to,” including the space, time, gestures, words, objects, vestments, song, and music. He wrote: “Such attention would be enough to prevent robbing from the assembly what is owed to it; namely, the paschal mystery celebrated according to the ritual that the Church sets down.”
…Roche said: “The depth and breadth of his liturgical vision offers us countless opportunities to pause for reflection in order to appreciate the great gift that has been handed onto us in the liturgical books.”
“I do not hesitate to encourage you to be bold, but always charitable in promoting the unique lex orandi [law of prayer] of the Roman Rite,” he said. “Discourses on the liturgy that lack a spirit of charity come from a spirit other than that of Christ.”…
…Roche did not discuss Francis’ restrictions on the Traditional Latin Mass at length, but he did promote the documents that speak to those restrictions.
Francis penned Desiderio Desideravi a year after issuing the 2016 motu proprio Traditionis custodes, which restricted the celebration of the Traditional Latin Mass.
Ruff said the second letter “follows naturally upon” those restrictions “for those who still struggle to accept the Church’s official liturgy as it was reformed after Vatican II.”
My astute, humble comments:
What Father Anthony Ruff, OSB fails to recognize is that those who are new to the Traditional Latin Mass do not bring nostalgia for it to their experience. For them, the TLM is a reform of the Reformed Mass!
The reason the young, who do not know about or did not live through the transition from the TLM to the Post Vatican II Mass is that their experiences of the post-Vatican II Mass were abysmal. It is based upon the liturgical abuses of that Mass, some mild, some grotesque. There are so many styles of celebrating the “reformed Mass” as Fr. Anthony calls it, that there is no continuity from Mass to Mass, priest to priest, parish to parish, diocese to diocese.
Until those who promote the exclusive use of the “Reformed Mass” begin calling out its abuse, which is prolific, mild or grotesque, there will be no liturgical peace.
Pope Benedict XVI, of happy memory, desired a third “reformed Missal” to replace the current “reformed Missal.” That new and reformed missal would experience the gravitational pull of the TLM on the Modern.
The current Modern Missal is not above more reform. To say so, is ridiculous. And Pope Benedict XVI wanted the letter of Sacrosanctum Concilium followed not some progressive spirit.
AND KEEP IN MIND, ALL OF THE THEOLOGICAL UNDERPINNINGS OF THE MASS DESCRIBED IN SACROSANCTUM CONCILIUM REFER TO THE TLM NOT SOME FUTURE REFORMED MASS!
The greatest reform of the Modern Missal has already occurred with the Ordinariate’s Missal, Divine Worship. It has options for all the things that could be added to the current Reformed Missal, itself in need of reform:
1. Prayers at the Foot of the Altar
2. The Order of the TLM Mass
3. The required chanting of the Propers and in the TLM fashion from the Roman Graduale
4. The substitution of the Gradual for the Responsorial Psalm
5. The choice of the older offertory prayers
6. Recovery of the TLM rubrics for the Roman Canon and double genuflections for the consecration and a genuflection after the Great Amen.
7. The triple non-sum Dignus
8. the Last Gospel
9. The recovery of Septuagesima and Ember Days
10. Slight revision of the Roman Calendar a la the Ordinariate’s approach.
All of this while keeping the core of the Modern Mass to include the revised lectionary.
THE MASS OF POPE PAUL VI IS NOT ABOVE REFORM; IT MUST BE REFORMED!
This is the first time Cardinal Roche has spoken in depth about Desiderio Desideravi, where Pope Francis calls out liturgical abuse of the Mass of Vatican II. However, neither Pope Francis or Cardinal Roche went after liturgy abusers in the same venomous way they went after TLM communities who celebrate the TLM by the book, by the way!
Desiderio Desideravi, because it calls out liturgical abuses, has never really seen the light of day since its release. Progressives, the biggest problem for the Church, want their liturgical abuses and they are in the majority in the Church, not those who want the TLM!
My most humble and astute comments follow the money byte I copy below:
Roche said the celebration of the Mass must be “grounded in the Paschal Mystery of Christ” and he reaffirmed Francis’ 2017 comments that “the liturgical reform [of the Second Vatican Council] is irreversible.” He quoted Francis’s 2017 apostolic letter Desiderio Desideravi and said the document should be “more widely available to parishes” and there should be more help to “organize guided readings of it.”…
…In that document, the Holy Father wrote that “every aspect of the celebration must be carefully tended to,” including the space, time, gestures, words, objects, vestments, song, and music. He wrote: “Such attention would be enough to prevent robbing from the assembly what is owed to it; namely, the paschal mystery celebrated according to the ritual that the Church sets down.”
…Roche said: “The depth and breadth of his liturgical vision offers us countless opportunities to pause for reflection in order to appreciate the great gift that has been handed onto us in the liturgical books.”
“I do not hesitate to encourage you to be bold, but always charitable in promoting the unique lex orandi [law of prayer] of the Roman Rite,” he said. “Discourses on the liturgy that lack a spirit of charity come from a spirit other than that of Christ.”…
…Roche did not discuss Francis’ restrictions on the Traditional Latin Mass at length, but he did promote the documents that speak to those restrictions.
Francis penned Desiderio Desideravi a year after issuing the 2016 motu proprio Traditionis custodes, which restricted the celebration of the Traditional Latin Mass.
Ruff said the second letter “follows naturally upon” those restrictions “for those who still struggle to accept the Church’s official liturgy as it was reformed after Vatican II.”
My astute, humble comments:
What Father Anthony Ruff, OSB fails to recognize is that those who are new to the Traditional Latin Mass do not bring nostalgia for it to their experience. For them, the TLM is a reform of the Reformed Mass!
The reason the young, who do not know about or did not live through the transition from the TLM to the Post Vatican II Mass is that their experiences of the post-Vatican II Mass were abysmal. It is based upon the liturgical abuses of that Mass, some mild, some grotesque. There are so many styles of celebrating the “reformed Mass” as Fr. Anthony calls it, that there is no continuity from Mass to Mass, priest to priest, parish to parish, diocese to diocese.
Until those who promote the exclusive use of the “Reformed Mass” begin calling out its abuse, which is prolific, mild or grotesque, there will be no liturgical peace.
Pope Benedict XVI, of happy memory, desired a third “reformed Missal” to replace the current “reformed Missal.” That new and reformed missal would experience the gravitational pull of the TLM on the Modern.
The current Modern Missal is not above more reform. To say so, is ridiculous. And Pope Benedict XVI wanted the letter of Sacrosanctum Concilium followed not some progressive spirit.
AND KEEP IN MIND, ALL OF THE THEOLOGICAL UNDERPINNINGS OF THE MASS DESCRIBED IN SACROSANCTUM CONCILIUM REFER TO THE TLM NOT SOME FUTURE REFORMED MASS!
The greatest reform of the Modern Missal has already occurred with the Ordinariate’s Missal, Divine Worship. It has options for all the things that could be added to the current Reformed Missal, itself in need of reform:
1. Prayers at the Foot of the Altar
2. The Order of the TLM Mass
3. The required chanting of the Propers and in the TLM fashion from the Roman Graduale
4. The substitution of the Gradual for the Responsorial Psalm
5. The choice of the older offertory prayers
6. Recovery of the TLM rubrics for the Roman Canon and double genuflections for the consecration and a genuflection after the Great Amen.
7. The triple non-sum Dignus
8. the Last Gospel
9. The recovery of Septuagesima and Ember Days
10. Slight revision of the Roman Calendar a la the Ordinariate’s approach.
All of this while keeping the core of the Modern Mass to include the revised lectionary.
THE MASS OF POPE PAUL VI IS NOT ABOVE REFORM; IT MUST BE REFORMED!
5 comments:
There's really no point in arguing about this any more, because it isn't going to make any difference. Fortunately, the Catholic Church is built to withstand the reigns of bad, weak and/or mediocre popes. The nonsense will end when it ends. In the meantime, the injustice and embarrassing nonsense that holds sway in the hierarchy gives us a chance to suffer and atone--for our sins AND theirs.
The old offertory prayers referred to the offerings as if they had already been consecrated and were always considered problematic. They were discussed at the council of Trent, as well as in the 1940s. There were good convincing reasons why they needed to be reformed.
"The reason the young, who do not know about or did not live through the transition from the TLM to the Post Vatican II Mass is that their experiences of the post-Vatican II Mass were abysmal. It is based upon the liturgical abuses of that Mass, some mild, some grotesque."
Younger people aren't given anywhere near enough credit for recognizing authenticity. Conversely, Many older people selfishly cannot seem to look past their selfish ideological pursuits such that all suffer, Christ inclusive.
"There are so many styles of celebrating the “reformed Mass” as Fr. Anthony calls it, that there is no continuity from Mass to Mass, priest to priest, parish to parish, diocese to diocese."
You'll never have 100% uniformity; however, the Roman NO Church is too balkanized in every way the pope calls for consistency. Nose thumbing will continue.
Jerome Merwick: "There's really no point in arguing about this any more, because it isn't going to make any difference."
Completely agree. There "unity" but not "Unity" in so many ways in your church, it seems to an observer hopeless and pointless.
The RC seems like a contradiction and compromise to the East anymore. Between theological differences, liturgical suppression, certain blessings, simple questionable practices like the morality of tattooing, or appropriateness of cremation, we're related, but increasingly distant.
I'm not suggesting anyone believes and does other than what they've been told is acceptable.
Sort of like the end of confession: “for these sins and those of my past life I may have forgotten or omitted.”
As always, when there is discussion about abuses in the new Mass, it is always couched in generalities and non-specific terms. Thus it is unenforceable. All that is left is a vague "abuses were condemned." I also bring to mind the fact that in the few instances that specific abuse were addressed, it was never enforced. Thus we have communion in the hand and female servers eventually being approved after years of condemnation. Even today there is not enforcement of the norms about the limited use of extraordinary ministers of Communion. And, of course, no mention is ever made of the greatest abuse, the universal suppression, both de facto and de jure, of the options for a traditional form of the new Mass by all of the bishops.
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