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Dear Rev. Know it all,
What do you mean that Mass
has become a kind of hybrid with American Protestantism? Will you ever cheer up?
You’ve been listening to that dreary chant so long that it appears to have
hardened your brains. Remember as St. Augustine said, “the Christian is an
alleluia from head to foot.” The Mass is supposed to be joyful. The Christian
is supposed to be joyful. I want music at Mass that makes me joyful and chant
just doesn’t fit the bill.
Yours,
Ms. Joy Buzzer
Dear Miss Buzzer,
You sound like you got your
theology from the back of a shampoo bottle. “Lather, Rinse, Repeat.” A nice
hairdo may involve bubbles and lather, but the Sacrifice of the Mass does not.
The joy of the Lord is not exactly the same as the joy the world offers. The joy
of the Christian is caused by the nearness of the Lord, and not by how catchy
the tune is.
First of all, put things into
context. St Augustine may have said it, but when he said alleluia, he was
chanting it in Hebrew. Alleluia means “Praise the Lord.” It is Hebrew and it has
always been chanted until recent times. The very quote you use makes my point.
The word “Hallelujah” was not in the common language. It was retained in the
Catholic Liturgy of which St. Augustine was a priest and bishop in order to tie
the Christian worship to their Hebrew past. It was kept in a “sacred language”
precisely to express the universality of the Church. Remember that “Catholic” is
the Greek word for “Universal.” We are members of a universal Church and, while
it is appropriate to speak to local culture, we cease to be Catholic by
definition when we make the Mass so local as to be unidentifiable. It becomes
mine, not ours. I want to be a member of the Church that Jesus founded through
the ministry of the Apostles, a Universal Church. Universality, that is
Catholicism, means that the Church extended not only through space, but also
time. The Church I belong to is part of an unbroken chain of worship.
In the church in the village
where my family comes from in the old country, there is a baptismal fount. It is
carved from a block of sandstone, and is so worn with time that it is almost
impossible to tell what the carvings and decoration on it are. It goes back, I
assume to the 1200's when the church was built. When I first saw it and touched
it, I realized I was touching something that generations of my ancestors had
touched. It was a vehicle by which they had reached through time in order to
bring me to Christ and Christ to me. By my Baptism and my participation in the
Mass, I was more profoundly united to them than I was even by my genetic and
cultural inheritance. Well, I suppose we should throw it out and get a new one,
one that made sense, one that has words on it we can read. Don’t you understand
that there is a language that speaks more powerfully than words? Just because
something isn’t easily decipherable doesn’t mean it can’t or shouldn’t be
understood. The inheritance of 3,000 or 4,000 years shouldn’t be thrown away
just because it leaves me cold. Perhaps the fault is mine, not the fault of the
inheritance.
Fr. Martin Luther decided to
rewrite the Catholic Mass, to declare that it was not a sacrifice. It simply
became a re-enactment of the Lord’s supper, a sort of stage play, aimed at the
audience, not the ultimate act of worship. "The cult (i.e. Mass) was formerly
meant to render homage to God;
henceforth it shall be directed to man in order to console him and enlighten
him. Whereas the sacrifice formerly held
pride of place, henceforth the most important will be the sermon.” (Luther
quoted by Léon Christiani, Du luthéranisme au protestantisme (1910), p. 312)
The course was thus set for
the modern world in which the value of a religious service had nothing really to
do with the worship of God. Rather it has everything to do with the well being
of the participant. It is about me, not about God. In that sense it is the
worship of me, not of God. It is modern man distilled. Man, not God, is the
measure of all things. Though I may feel just wonderful about the whole service,
I have not stepped into the unending stream of history. I have not stood at the
foot of Mt. Sinai nor entered Solomon’s Temple. I have not trod Calvary’s holy
ground nor drank from the cup which the Savior drank. I have not wept for joy at
the empty tomb, nor felt the fire of Pentecost. I’ve been to a Church service
and I guess it was okay and now I’m going out to breakfast.
We live in a disposable
society. We have plastic plates and plastic forks and plastic shoes and plastic
cars and plastic music and on and on. It is all disposable, as are we. We are
drowning in a sea of plastic. Give me something made of rock. Give me the
Catholic Mass.
Rev. Know-it-all |