Thursday, September 13, 2018

Remembering the Personal Cost

Lukewarm Catholics at Mass
I rarely read news stories or blogs anymore, which perhaps contributes to the on-going diminishment of my prose, but when I do click on article I primarily read the comments. An old axiom I learned while working on political campaigns, "perception is reality," holds true precisely because perception guides how people make decisions, whereas reality can be and often is ignored. One such disconnect, which elicited the poor choices of those days, was the disparity between what people wanted and what they were given by the episcopate in the mid-20th century. A New Liturgical Movement blog post on tracking bishops' statements and policies has given way to an interesting series of exchanges between young Catholics in favor of the old liturgy, old Catholics in favor of the old liturgy, and old Catholics in favor of the Pauline liturgy. One commentator writes:
"Change needs to take place slowly. That was probably the biggest problem with the introduction of the Ordinary Form, to much to quick. A more balanced slow approach in hindsight would have been far better. Dr. Peter and other we're not around at the time of the change or very young (according to Wikipedia Dr Peter was born in '71). The fact is the vast majority of folks couldn't wait for the changes. Yes there were some who are not happy and that's understandable. But if you weren't there you can't possibly comment with any credibility. One can disagree with the Pope but the things being spewed out these days is not Catholic. I agree, the pope wants to move back to before Trent. Trent was not the end all of all that is Catholic. One of the councils goals was to return to the sources. I certainly have no issues with Dr. Peter's preferences, we all have them. But how dare he or anyone else tell me how I should pray and encounter God. There is room for all of us. Also, if he had any idea of what was really going on in the average parish he would know that slowly those of us involved in the music and liturgy have slow been trying to balance the older with the new. Done slowly it will be successful but attacks just exacerbate things."
This is one of the most audaciously ignorant comments I have read regarding amenability to liturgical reform since I last read PrayTell. This is akin to saying one could not make a judgment on the execution of Charles Stuart because one was not there when that genocidal social climber, Cromwell, sat opposite the King. Some perspective is lost in time, but some fresh perspective is gained by distance and aid of statistics. In retrospect the liturgical disaster really could not have happened at any point in history other than when it did, when old bishops recovering from the shock of war heard their baby-boomer clergy whisper in their ears that everything should change so that the Church might live. The Church was hardly dying anymore in 1950 than it was during Napoleon's age, and she even emerged from the Second World War with improved prestige and improved Mass attendance relative to the dawn of the 20th century. There was much to be desired concerning how Mass was celebrated and how priests were trained, but what transpired was the wrong answer to an entirely different set of issues the Church faced.

America especially suffered from "the changes" to the Mass, to episcopal governance, to priestly formation, and discipline. In 1960, 90% of American Catholics went to Mass; 75% believed the pope to be the last authority on matters of discipline. When "Blessed" Paul VI died Mass attendance was below 50% and a third of American priests, presumably heterosexuals, too, had left their vocations. Today Mass attendance sits below 20% and is due for another sharp drop when the last of the millennials have their Confirmations.

I may not have the "credibility" to judge how people "couldn't wait for the changes", but if my apostate father, born 1941, is any indicator, people couldn't wait to get to the door. Most people from that age are now former-Catholics still hoping for a Catholic funeral. Ask them, "When did the New Mass come out?" and they will look at you in confusion because they themselves cannot remember. It all happened in a rapid haze. Vernacular, women reading, and the priest standing opposite a newly-fashioned picnic table occurred in a mad rush; then came extra readings, more vernacular, "praise" music, and altar girls; by the time Paul VI issued his Missale Romanum half the congregation had thrown up their hands in [genuine] disbelief and found the nearest exit.

These changes happened too fast? Part of the problem is that they happened too fast, but the greater part is that they happened at all. If, after decades of fasting, regular Confessions, and devotions in preparation for Mass, a man with a microphone begins with "Good morning, all are welcomed!" a return to purer spirituality is not communicated. The one and only message, which the people of the day read clearly, is that "It wasn't really important after all."

Years ago Benedict XVI, as Joseph Ratzinger, anticipated a smaller, more devout Church. Along similar lines, Rod Dreher, who has left the Catholic Church but cannot seem to stop writing about Catholic issues for Catholic audiences, has proposed his "Benedictine option", something of a retreat from the world wherein the devout can create new communities for the future of Christendom. This is a misguided attempt to make lemonade out of lemons. For all the joking about "cafeteria Catholics" and the lukewarm, many of those who lost their faith back in the mid-20th century were lukewarm people who were clinging to the Church out of social custom, habit, convert's zeal, or a devotion borne in the mind rather than in the heart; those people may not have been "good" Catholics, but they were still Catholics, aware of their sins and availing themselves to the Sacraments. They clung to drift wood near the barque of Peter and the officers on the same barque saw fit to send them to the bottom. All that remained were the liberals who wrought the destruction and had not committed apostasy as a result and the conservatives who clung to what devotion they could in a world turned upside down.

For all the talk that transpires on this blog, NLM, PrayTell and elsewhere about whether or not something is liturgically correct it is useful to remember the actual cost in souls. For all the Protestant pastors illuminated by the concept of liturgy in the '90s hundreds of cradle and convert Catholics went into the outer darkness.

But then again, I have no credibility on this matter.

13 comments:

  1. Dear Rad Trad. The one and only message, which the people of the day read clearly, is that "It wasn't really important after all."

    AMEN!!!

    ABS was born into a catholic family of 8 in Vermont in 1948 and ABS and his sister are the only children who have not divorced and remarried and who still go to Mass - well, she doesn't really go to Mass, she goes to the Lil' Licit Liturgy.

    Dad is dead - he had attended LaSalette Seminary as a youth - but Mom is alive and she is jake with the divorces and remarriages of her children - AND SHE IS IRISH.

    Lord have Mercy

    The Catholic Church exists in Chapels and Churches where the Real Mass is offered and where the faithful keep the Faith once delivered.

    The Catholic Church does not exist in the Hierarchy across The Tiber. Rome is home but it is enemy-occupied territory and there is not a damn thing ABS can do about it but he has known for a VERY long time that he has been abandoned by the Hierarchy to figure out on his own how to hold fast to the Faith.

    In the case of ABS, his Faith would not have annealed as it has had it not been for the two score years and more of trial he has been, happily, endured.

    Deo Gratis!!!!

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  2. O, ABS just remembered. He got banned at NLM because he wrote the Real Mass is a Holocaust


    http://www.newliturgicalmovement.org/2018/01/how-typical-lector-praxis-transmits.html#.W5wF5i2ZN7M

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This comment was deleted.




    

Mag. Theol. Guest • 8 months ago 
Wow, you are a crazy person. I hope GregoryDiPippo is taking the necessary steps to not allow comments denying the Holocaust/Shoah on this platform.



    

GregoryDiPippo Mod Mag. Theol. • 8 months ago 
Banned and deleted. Zoiks!

    ++++++++++++++++++++++

    Being banned for publicly committing truth is one of life's genuine pleasures

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  3. Dear Rad Trad. You're right and the matter ought not have been raised here

    Sorry

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  4. Re: the penultimate sentence, were there not Protestant-to-catholic conversions before the changes to the liturgy? Who is to say there would not have been more if potential converts hadn't walked into a liturgy of lisping priests and pantsuited women? And what about all the non-protestants, especially considering the number of them go down every year in this country. The changes to the liturgy seem so Protestant-West-centric, as if no others, cradle Catholics, apostates, or pagans, even existed, much less mattered to the "reformers".

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    Replies
    1. Marissa,

      I agree with you whole-heartedly. I was alluding to a particular influx of protestant pastors to Catholicism in the '90s who would often praise the new liturgy for being "Biblical" and remark how they wouldn't have converted with the old Mass, the suggestion being "I converted, so the changes were a good thing." Of course the number of converts is also a fraction (about a sixth) of what it was half a century ago.

      I used to think the changes were Protestant-West-centric, as you put it, but in time I have come to agree with others that it is primarily archaeologism based on shoddy scholarship intertwined with a little Jansenism (cf Geoffrey Hull), which may explain why it resonates with so few people.

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    2. Sorry, my comment was not in disagreement with you. My tone was to express anger at the Church apparently ignoring all those other sheep, not anger at what you wrote.

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    3. I used to think the changes were Protestant-West-centric

      I wouldn't dismiss that old impulse - after all, so much of that "shoddy" liturgical scholarship had Protestant origins, especially in the Rhine countries - which were, of course, culturally and political dominated to a large degree by Protestants (which in turn operated in a post-war Pax Americana run by Protestant Anglo-Americans). Which is not to disagree in any real way with Geoffrey Hull's analysis, as I comprehend it.

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  5. Excerpt from Naples Florida Conference

    SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 2006
    The Liturgical Stake

    I was invited in Naples, Florida, this past week by a group of Una Voce, in order to give some lectures. I spoke about the Liturgy. Here is the first lecture I gave, about the history of liturgical deviations.

    God bless you and give us the strenght and the courage to persevere in our battle for the restoration of a true Catholic Liturgy in the Church!

    Father Laurent Demets, FSSP

    ...

    The parish of Asnières, a town near Paris, embodied perfectly the goals of the innovators. The pastor at Asnières was Father Jacques Jubé, a zealous Jansenist. Now, let me describe how the liturgy of this parish was – and I remind you this liturgy I am about to describe was a liturgy in the XVIII century.
    There was only one altar in the church, called “Sunday altar” because Mass took place only on Sunday and feast days. When there was no Mass, this altar was totally stripped, as every altar has to be on Good Friday. For Mass, they just put one altar cloth and nothing else: no crucifix, no candle. The only crucifix in the sanctuary was the crucifix of procession that preceded the priest as he ascended the altar. After the beginning prayers of the Mass, he went to sit on a seat on the epistle side from where he started the Gloria and the Credo without reciting them in full, nor were the pieces sung by the choir. During the offertory, there was a procession and bread and wine were offered to the priest. Dom Gueranger says this custom was not reprehensible in itself since it was usual in France in many dioceses at this time, and came from an old tradition. The problem was that in the church of Father Jubé, they added fruits and vegetables which they placed on the altar along with the bread and wine to be consecrated. Then the chalice was brought to the altar without a veil. The priest and the deacon said the prayers of the offering of the chalice in a loud voice to signify that they offered it in the name of the congregation. The Canon was in a loud voice also. And there were no specific prayers before communion.

    Are you not familiar with this liturgy? I would say, yes, except for one thing. It was still all in Latin. But as you see, our innovators of today have not come up with anything new. They have simply copied the liturgy of the Jansenists from the XVIII century.

    We now look at the Missal of Vintimille, published by the Archbishop of Paris, Charles-Gaspard de Ventimille in 1738. In addition to all previous changes made to the Roman Missal, there was now a complete modification of the parts of the Proper in this new Missal of Ventimille. The intention of Archbishop Vintimille was to arouse piety, to make the chant easier to sing and to renew the Faith, Hope and Charity of the people. But as Dom Gueranger continuous to point out, this was also the goal of Popes Saint Gregory and Saint Pius V and there was no need to change what the Church had established. In order to infuse a new richness in the Liturgy, the doctors of the Sorbonne composed new Prefaces, instead of using the traditional Prefaces available in the old Sacramentaries. At the height of these innovations one of the authors was expulsed from the University of Sorbonne as a heretic. Once again, the consequences were disastrous. By the second half of the XVIII century, three quarters of the French dioceses have abandoned the Roman Liturgy. The French Revolution with its Civil Constitution of the Clergy, which created a schismatic Church, would soon foment further confusion.
    ...

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  6. https://frvanhove.wordpress.com/2011/12/03/jansenism-and-liturgical-reform-from-the-american-benedictine-review-1993/

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  7. This is a fine essay, and I am glad you published it.

    A quibble, but one I think matters:

    In retrospect the liturgical disaster really could not have happened at any point in history other than when it did, when old bishops recovering from the shock of war heard their baby-boomer clergy whisper in their ears that everything should change so that the Church might live.

    The liturgical changes began in 1964, with Inter Oecumenici, Paul VI's first instruction to implement changes prescribed by the Council - though of course, even this instruction did some things that the Council was silent on and refrained from others it wasn't (the multi-year lectionary called for by SC 51 obviously needed more time to prepare, for one thing). The revolution reached its apex with the promulgation of the Novus Ordo in 1969. Any priest active in this period would have to be born before 1939-44. In short, they couldn't have been Baby Boomer priests, because none were old enough to have been ordained even by 1969. What you're really talking about in that younger cohort is the Silent Generation (b. 1925-1945) - a very important cog in what unfolded in that Age of Revolution, and it's certainly unquestionable that many were tugging hard at their bishops to get into revolutionary gear. Joseph Ratzinger, Joseph Fessio, Anscar Chupungco, Richard Vosko, Walter Kasper, Joseph Bernardin - these men were all Silent Gen, clerics who had gone through seminary in the dying years of Pius XII's pontificate, just starting to enter the prime of their ecclesiastical careers when the Council and its immediate aftermath arrived. As Boomers became ordained beginning in the 70's, they of course (with rare exceptions) eagerly jumped on board as junior partners in the new enterprise.

    I suspect, BTW, that the commentator "Jim" who inspired this post is also Silent Gen - hid experience of the reform strikes me as having been an adult one, not a teen or younger.

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