Saturday, 26 November 2011

To what extent is the new text unwinding Vatican II?

A reaction among many of my contacts to the text is: we have gone back to the responses that we had when the Mass was first in English. The talk of sins, the phrases  "grievous fault", "and with your spirit", "enter under my roof.. my soul will be healed","I believe" are all familiar from my early adulthood, and were all left behind in the 1970's.  There were  good explanations then: we do and must acknowledge and confess sin (a flawed inner orientation) as well as sins,  but first we emphasise God's acceptance of us as we are;  it is God within us who changes us, not our efforts that make us acceptable to God; we had moved away from false dualities of body/spirit and the Church being seen to be in a parallel mode of being detached from the world; we come to God as God's people not only as individuals.

So for many in my generation in our 50s and older, going back to these texts is impoverishing not enriching and the fear is that it symbolises an unwinding of Vatican II.   It is an impression strengthened as we look at the prayers said by the priest. Two examples follow.  After the Gospel the priest "kisses the book, saying quietly:' Through the words of the Gospel may our sins be wiped away.'" Is that really the extent of our aspiration now? The collect for the 8th Sunday in ordinary time reads:
Grant us O Lord we pray
that the course of our world
may be directed by your powerful rule
and that your Church may rejoice
untroubled in her devotion.
Through our Lord....
I had thought that if our prayer was real then a) we would not be entering a parallel world, relying on a magic-working Old testament style of God to resolve the issues that should be worrying us; b) we would be accepting Jesus' challenge to be Good News to this troubled world; c) we would be engaging in liturgy and work informed by our knowledge of the world (so both would express a response to current challenges, including human-induced global changes.)

Vatican II is a symbol of the fact that the Church should change; it did not define a new fixed model of what we should be doing.  Don't many debates, including those around the liturgy since the 1970's, have as a pivot the fact that we cannot define a fixed point in time at which the Church had got it right and upon which  we balance our whole liturgy?  We are always changing - but there was a direction of change, and a vision that was strengthened in Vatican II. Balance is through dynamic not static equibrium - like  cycling,  stop and we'll fall over in a heap.

Many of my generation have been busy with family, work and sometimes church, making decisions and life choices informed by their faith, some being drawn into justice, peace and politics in the world we seek to serve.   We did not stay attentive to the politics of the church.  We went to sleep on it, and now have been shaken awake to find, like an inverse Rip van Winkle effect that we seem to be in the... well, where?  1950's?? We're paying lip service to the 2nd Vatican Council by sometimes-grudging liturgical roles for some laity; the Mass is in English, but not as we know it, with its slavish adherence to the minutiae of the Latin and decoration with terms like "graciously" - but so much in Vatican II seems to be ignored.

I say "sometimes-grudging" because the ministries the laity have are now so rarely explained by saying they express and celebrate our Baptismal calling: we are called to serve the world with love so we have ministries of hospitality, welcome and cleaning; to bring Christ to the world, and symbolise this as Eucharistic ministers; to speak truth so we read scripture at Mass.  The emphasis on sins far outweighs any expression that we are already baptised into Christ!  Similarly, the teaching associated with the Eucharist also holds us as passive consumers, not affirming that we are also offering ourselves and receiving what we are called to be.


The manner of the imposition of the text ignores Vatican II understandings of our Church through its exercise of centralised power (not only in arrogantly under-testing the text), the undermining of subsidiarity, collegiality, and ecumenism (leaving behind agreed texts), by abandoning notions of seeking an involved laity that is treated like adults (so much of the induction has been superficial and patronising - see elsewhere in the blog); the exaltation of the priesthood of the ordained while underplaying that from our own baptism.

My contention is that this text does do much more damage than just to insult the ear and the intelligence - it is intended to prevent the Roman Catholic Church from being what so many of us hoped it would become because it diminishes the liturgical expression of that vision.

See also the page of related resources and links.

(Latest edit to this post: 21 March 2012)

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