Nick Baty wrote:I know of several priests, young enough to be my sons, who are rubbing their hands with glee since the[y] heard of Summorum Pontificum – and good luck to them as they press their lace and brush their birettas. But, in England, ours is not a young Church: so many of us are in our 40s and will find it difficult – if not impossible – to bend with this new wind.
If these youngsters (and I too can think of a few examples) actually follow what the document says, rather than what they would like the document to say, there should be little new wind to bend with. The 1962 'usage' can only be used for 'public' Masses where there already exists within the parish a group who are attached to it and request it. As you rightly point out, ours is not a young church, and there aren't many such groups. Thus if there is no demand for the 1962 'usage' in a parish, the maniples should stay in the cupboard. As Alan pointed out on page 1, in 58 years he's never heard anyone hanker after the old 'usage'. Thus in most parishes, the upshot of the Motu Proprio should be no change. This is certainly what the pope envisages according to his letter to Bps
Of course I'm assuming that the Motu Proprio isn't made to say something it doesn't, and I'm not sure that's a valid assumption. Your fears should be unfounded- but I share them! This is where our bishops need to keep a firm hand on the tiller.
Many (most?) parishes here have a small number of Sunday Masses, probably only 2. Even if there existed in a parish a small group of, say 5%, of the congregation who requested the 1962 usage, would it be good pastoral practice to celebrate 50% of the Sunday Masses in a manner which satisfied the tastes/needs/spirituality of only 5%? I think not.
Alan29 wrote:I was taught that the Liturgy, in particular the Mass is an action of the whole church, and that my particular likes and dislikes just don't come into into it. Does this document then smack of subjectivism?
Yes I think it does, but the reality is that we are all subjective, even though we shouldn't be. My parents go to the 8am Mass because dad hates singing and they don't sing at that Mass. I left one parish because I couldn't stomach a liturgy that was becoming progressively more priest centred and right wing at the same time with sermons of a 'sinners aren't welcome here' theme. Folk travel miles to get to a Mass they feel feeds them, in a community in which they feel at home.
In an ideal world this would not be the case, but its not ideal and because of that if we were to try and make every Mass, in every parish, the same, the result would be a lowest common denominator and a completely souless liturgy which connected with no-one. Different people are at different places in their faith pilgrimage, its the job of every liturgical minister to meet them where they are, but also to move them on.
There is a big problem if the 1962 'usage' is requested because people stubbornly refuse to move on into the post VCII world, or if its preferable precisely because it doesn't challenge or result in spiritual growth. In the same way, there's a problem if people choose a Mass and/or parish celebrating in the 1970 usage because it doesn't make them think. Reginald has very persuasively argued here that the 1962 'usage' and VCII needn't be at loggerheads, but a deal of (rarely observed) sensitivity to the liturgy is needed.