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by Peter A. Kwasniewski Our series in the last three issues has reviewed some of the most important teachings of the Magisterium on central aspects of the sacred liturgy. There can be no doubt that one must become familiar with what the Church has actually said about particular elements and features of the liturgy before one attempts to formulate practical steps that might be taken to bring about a better and more integrated liturgical life. To profit fully from these teachings of the Church, however, something else needs to be considered—something which encompasses and goes beyond her legislation on this or that matter. This is the first and fundamental question: What is liturgy, what is it supposed to be and do? If one does not have an adequate answer to this all-encompassing question, one cannot really make sense out of the details, the recommendations, the ideals put forward in the various documents of the Councils, Popes, and Congregations. Let me suggest a parallel. One might declare that marriage ought to be contracted only between sufficiently mature individuals, with witnesses, before a bishop, priest or deacon, in a formal ceremony previously announced to the parish; one might homilize on the human qualities requisite in spouses, patience, good temper, open communication, mutual trust and fidelity, and so forth; one might denounce the evils of divorce and contraception which are corrupting personal lives and tearing apart whole nations. But underlying all these things is the prior and more fundamental question: What is marriage, what is marriage in the Church supposed to be and do? Only when one has addressed this directly, only when one has glimpsed the essence of the thing itself, can one really understand the legal rules, the homiletic exhortations, the moral failings. It is no different with the liturgy. One can issue an impassioned plea for the dignified celebration of the Eucharist, in full ceremonial splendor; one can earnestly remind today’s liturgists that the Christian people are supposed to be meditating on sacred things with the help of Gregorian chant rather than facile folksy tunes; one may express a preference for the traditional rite and urge bishops to honor the Church’s recognition of the desires of the faithful attached to it. But making sense out of all these things demands that we think carefully about the nature and purpose of the liturgy itself, its innermost being and activity. Only by dwelling on these fundamentals will it be possible to say: “This is what a good liturgy is supposed to look like and accomplish,” with confidence that one has understood the point of the Church’s teachings. St. Thomas Aquinas often says that the good of a thing is reached when all that should be there is there, while evil happens when any element of the ensemble is taken away. Hence, what is truly good is one and simple, whereas evil comes in forms too numerous to count. Since evils are only known through the goods which they take away, however, it is proper to begin with a positive exposition of the liturgy, and afterwards to sketch out some of the partial or defective views which attack the good that liturgy is and is intended to accomplish. While much that we are going to say is relevant also to the celebration or recitation of the liturgy of the hours (the “divine office”), we will be speaking, as in previous articles, almost exclusively of the Mass, the supreme liturgical prayer to which all others forms are ordered. The Liturgy of the Eternal High Priest In his magnificent encyclical Mediator Dei, Pius XII explains the connection between the mission of Jesus Christ and the nature and purpose of the liturgy. He begins by explaining what Jesus sought and ever seeks to accomplish, linking this to His foundation of the priesthood of the New Covenant and the work of praise and glorification offered by the Church in her liturgy of the Mass, the sacraments, and the divine office.
2. But what is more, the divine Redeemer has so willed it that the priestly life begun with the supplication and sacrifice of His mortal body should continue without intermission down the ages in His Mystical Body which is the Church. That is why He established a visible priesthood to offer everywhere the clean oblation which would enable men from East to West, freed from the shackles of sin, to offer God that unconstrained and voluntary homage which their conscience dictates. 3. In obedience, therefore, to her Founder’s behest, the Church prolongs the priestly mission of Jesus Christ mainly by means of the sacred liturgy. She does this in the first place at the altar, where constantly the sacrifice of the cross is represented and, with a single difference in the manner of its offering, renewed. She does it next by means of the sacraments, those special channels through which men are made partakers in the supernatural life. She does it, finally, by offering to God, all Good and Great, the daily tribute of her prayer of praise. “What a spectacle for heaven and earth,” observes Our predecessor of happy memory, Pius XI, “is not the Church at prayer! For centuries without interruption, from midnight to midnight, the divine psalmody of the inspired canticles is repeated on earth; there is no hour of the day that is not hallowed by its special liturgy; there is no state of human life that has not its part in the thanksgiving, praise, supplication and reparation of this common prayer of the Mystical Body of Christ which is His Church!” 17. No sooner, in fact, “is the Word made flesh” than he shows Himself to the world vested with a priestly office, making to the Eternal Father an act of submission which will continue uninterruptedly as long as He lives: “When He cometh into the world he saith: ‘behold I come to do Thy Will.’” This act He was to consummate admirably in the bloody Sacrifice of the Cross: “It is in this will we are sanctified by the oblation of the Body of Jesus Christ once.” He plans His active life among men with no other purpose in view. As a child He is presented to the Lord in the Temple. To the Temple He returns as a grown boy, and often afterwards to instruct the people and to pray. He fasts for forty days before beginning His public ministry. His counsel and example summon all to prayer, daily and at night as well. As Teacher of the truth He “enlighteneth every man” to the end that mortals may duly acknowledge the immortal God, “not withdrawing unto perdition, but faithful to the saving of the soul.” As Shepherd He watches over His flock, leads it to life-giving pasture, lays down a law that none shall wander from His side, off the straight path He has pointed out, and that all shall lead holy lives imbued with His spirit and moved by His active aid. At the Last Supper He celebrates a new Pasch with solemn rite and ceremonial, and provides for its continuance through the divine institution of the Eucharist. On the morrow, lifted up between heaven and earth, He offers the saving sacrifice of His life, and pours forth, as it were, from His pierced Heart the sacraments destined to impart the treasures of redemption to the souls of men. All this He does with but a single aim: the glory of His Father and man’s ever greater sanctification. 18. But it is His will, besides, that the worship He instituted and practiced during His life on earth shall continue ever afterwards without intermission. For he has not left mankind an orphan. He still offers us the support of His powerful, unfailing intercession, acting as our “advocate with the Father.” He aids us likewise through His Church, where He is present indefectibly as the ages run their course—through the Church which He constituted as “the pillar of truth” and dispenser of grace, and which by His sacrifice on the cross, He founded, consecrated and confirmed forever. 19. The Church has, therefore, in common with the Word Incarnate the aim, the obligation and the function of teaching all men the truth, of governing and directing them aright, of offering to God the pleasing and acceptable sacrifice; in this way the Church re-establishes between the Creator and His creatures that unity and harmony to which the Apostle of the Gentiles alludes in these words: “Now, therefore, you are no more strangers and foreigners; but you are fellow citizens with the saints and domestics of God, built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief corner-stone; in whom all the building, being framed together, groweth up into a holy temple in the Lord, in whom you also are built together in a habitation of God in the Spirit.”
7. Rightly, then, is the liturgy considered as an exercise of the priestly office of Jesus Christ. In the liturgy the sanctification of the man is signified by signs perceptible to the senses, and is effected in a way which corresponds with each of these signs; in the liturgy the whole public worship is performed by the Mystical Body of Jesus Christ, that is, by the Head and His members. From this it follows that every liturgical celebration, because it is an action of Christ the priest and of His Body which is the Church, is a sacred action surpassing all others; no other action of the Church can equal its efficacy by the same title and to the same degree. The good of anything is its perfection. The perfection of a thing whose end is outside of itself is in proportion to its attainment of that end. The end of man is God, and the activity by which we are united to God is loving, on the part of the will, and knowing, on the part of the intellect. On earth as in heaven, the expression of our relationship to God is the act of worship, which perfects both the will and the intellect. For this reason, holy contemplation (understood as union with and adoration of God) is the good activity that corresponds to the state of attaining the ultimate good. Hence, everything in human life is to be judged in light of the contribution it makes to the activity of adoring God and the attainment of union with Him. From this it is evident that one may ask about anything: What good is it, unless it is ordered to, or is itself a part of, this ultimate activity? Since liturgy is the mode in which this activity is carried out and perfected—so much so that many of the Fathers of the Church, the Eastern ones in particular, describe heaven as an eternal liturgy—it follows that all other human perfections, and especially those perfections of mind that education seeks to bring about, are intrinsically ordered to liturgical participation of divine mysteries. If human life reaches its culmination in the loving contemplation of the Trinity and the Incarnate Word, and if to us pilgrims these absolute realities are most of all manifested and made present to us in the sacred liturgy, then the ultimate end of everything that man is and does on earth is the adoration of God through the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Everything God gives to us is for the sake of adoring the one true God, the one and all-holy Trinity, through, with, and in Jesus Christ, true God and true man, who leads us into participation of the blessed life of God. As given to us by the holy tradition of the Church who received it from her Lord, the liturgy is the gateway to the mystery of Christ, the best and most perfect way He has left us for drawing near to Him in our pilgrimage. It must be remembered that theology and spirituality are about one thing and have only one purpose: God, the gradual ascent to God, hearing His revealed word, sharing His divine life through the sacraments. The liturgy is the privileged setting of Scripture not just by having readings but, infinitely more, by containing the essence of the entire revelation of Christ, the highest wisdom, the greatest power, the all-conquering love, in the mystical Sacrifice and banquet. All the Fathers of the Church teach that if you want to understand Scripture, you must live a holy life in imitation of Christ, the Word whom the words of Scripture teach about and point to. The sacred writings were written for those striving to be holy, and that is why they can be so obscure—as St. Augustine says, they discourage all but the unwearying laborer, the tireless seeker of God. Without Scripture, you can have no theology, which is the highest wisdom attainable by the human mind; but without participation in the living Christ, you cannot understand Scripture or interiorize its meaning; and without the liturgy there is no participation in the mystery, since the liturgy contains the mysterium fidei in its living, breathing reality, as the center from which all the radii of the Church’s mission in the world flow outwards. Like the monastic life, the liturgy too has been called “the school of sanctity,” and this captures the idea perfectly. Education and liturgy, in the compendious sense of both words—the leading forth into truth, the work of the people of God—are joined by a necessary inward link that gives to each its final and full meaning. Liturgy is meant to educate and teach, not in the manner of a catechesis or bible study but in a radical and all-embracing way that goes down to the depths of the soul. The very language of the liturgy in all its dimensions is a continual exegesis of Scripture, a living and penetrating presentation of the mysteries of faith to the eyes of the soul. The many-layered symbolism in the ceremonies, gestures, vestments, and sacred objects is, as the Eastern Fathers call it, a “mystagogy,” a leading forth of the soul into the realm of divine truth, a guiding of our senses and our intellect to what is beyond them. The meaning of these symbols is easily discerned (although never exhausted) by a soul fully awake, and this helps us to see that a successful “reform” of liturgy would have the effect of helping people to wake up and stay awake, rather than dumbing things down so that they might remain asleep in their worldly or conventional ideas. The liturgy must be transparent to the divine symbols and realities they convey, letting them shine through the words and actions; these words and actions should not become an autonomous function that draws the attention of the worshipers away from the mystery celebrated upon the altar. If there is going to be singing and speaking during Mass, all of this ought to be focused entirely on the mystery—as it is in the Eastern liturgies, with their escalating waves of sung prayers, or in the Western solemn High Mass, when Gregorian chant and dignified ceremonial combine to place the soul outside of time, outside of place, into the very Heart of Christ, the one Teacher, Shepherd, and Savior. There are many ways to worship God. It would be narrow-minded to devalue the ways that are not strictly liturgical, like gazing at a sunset on the beach and marveling in one’s heart at the beauty of the Creator’s work. This, too, is an act of praising God. But liturgy could rightly be called the heart of worship in the sense in which the heart of an animal is the animal’s biological center, circulating blood to the rest of the body. Just as every part of Christ’s body and soul is hypostatically united to the Godhead because it is a part of the divinized human nature, so every act of worship, in whatever context, is a true and genuine act of worship, but within a definite hierarchy of which genuine liturgical worship is the source and goal. Liturgy is the natural home or harbor of adoration, contrition, thanksgiving, and supplication. “The liturgy is the summit toward which the activity of the Church is directed; at the same time it is the font from which all her power flows.”2 The Church’s Magisterium on the sacred liturgy has therefore three goals: to safeguard the faith in its integrity, to ensure that God is honored as He deserves to be, and to advance the salvation of mankind, both of those who are already joined to the Church on earth and of those who still wander in darkness outside of her. One can judge the extent to which this Magisterium has been rightly understood and obeyed by the extent to which all the features of public worship—architecture and furnishings, ceremonies and gestures, symbols and speech and song—give worthy expression to the mysteries of faith and create in the faithful the best possible dispositions to receiving them worthily. A Community Gathering for Singing, Speaking, and Socializing? Yet, this being said, we must make sure that our grasp of the meaning of community is sufficiently in tune with the real nature of the Church. First and foremost, when we worship we are in the presence of God and of His angels and saints. Reverence, solemnity, and majesty belong to worship precisely because it is no mere human gathering, but a momentary penetration of the earthly world with the life and grace of the heavenly Jerusalem and all of its inhabitants. We are joined to all who have worshiped in the past, who worship in the present (whether beyond our realm or next to us in the pew), and, in a mysterious way, for all ages to come. It is necessary, therefore, to let the glorious reality of the communion of saints shape the way we worship publicly. The liturgy in itself is not, and will only be cheapened if it becomes, a gathering for waving to your neighbor, exchanging news, shaking hands, “dialoguing” with an improvisatory priest, or the like. This sort of thing may have its rightful place before and after Mass and outside of the place of worship, but it is certainly not of the essence of the thing, and more often than not is a serious impediment to participating in the mysteries of the liturgy and attaining those goals which the liturgy aims at. The experience of community proper to the liturgy is an experience of common adoration, all faces, all hearts turned towards the sanctuary, focused on the divine truths announced and the divine sacrifice renewed. It is usually when we most forget ourselves and our neighbors in our intense concentration on the Holy Sacrifice that the seeds of true charity towards neighbor and self are most deeply planted in our souls. Similar observations can be made about the role of speech and song. Unquestionably our souls can be stirred up and our awareness of unity in the church strengthened when we make dignified responses with one voice (“Praise to you, Lord Jesus Christ, King of Endless Glory”), or when we can join in singing songs of a good quality with reverent and doctrinally rich words, as are many hymns handed down to us by our forefathers. All of this can improve attentiveness and produce a deep and positive impression on the soul. For it must never be forgotten that the ideal of full, active, and intelligent participation of the laity in the liturgy has as its goal the forming of the soul, the shaping of the Christian character. This indicates, too, what speech and song should not be in the liturgy—an always-having-to-say-or-sing-something approach, which ends up being a kind of busy-work, distracting and counterspiritual, much like exercises in arithmetic given to an ornery pupil who cannot sit still. Let us recall some words of our Holy Father on the irreplaceable role of silence and quiet listening:
Our forefathers who worshiped in the traditional rite understood well the value of stillness: “Be still, and know that I am God. I am exalted among the nations, I am exalted in the earth! The Lord of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our refuge” (Ps. 46:10-11). The silences of the ancient liturgy give the soul room to appropriate the mysteries, to reflect on God’s speaking to us in His revealed Word and our Lord’s coming to us in the Eucharist; the soul is given a chance to become deeply aware of His mercy, His glory, His presence. “The Lord of hosts is with us, the God of Jacob is our refuge.” In the quiet of our heart, prepared for its Lord, He will find a place, He will make a place where He can rest and commune with us. Communication presupposes, fosters, and lives on, silence. Silence is the most essential food of the soul, without which it dries up into a succession of opinions, the nosy noise of newspapers. The Church in ancient and medieval times understood that we need both music and stillness, beautiful melodies as well as a beautiful absence of sound. This is something that we have to recover in the Modern Roman Rite if the Christian people are to attain greater spiritual maturity through their public worship. A Gathering for Scripture Reading? Cult of the personality of the priest Given the understandable pain that many good Catholics feel about unwarranted liberties, improvisations, distractions, bad music, etc., it is important to see that the matter is quite different if one refuses to attend a liturgy where things are done unworthily, and seeks instead to find a true spiritual home. If you are constantly distracted from worship by antics in the sanctuary, hand-holding neighbors, flagrant violations of rubrics, heretical homilies, the army of “extraordinary” ministers clambering up to the altar at the Our Father, and other such things, then you not only may but must seek a different parish or liturgy, provided that you or others of similar concerns have tried, to the extent possible, to ameliorate the problems. This is not a cult of personality, but a search for the sacred and for the face of Christ. However much God is present in all places, including lions’ dens, we are not required to throw ourselves into them each and every Sunday. The argument that “Christ is present in the Eucharist no matter how bad the liturgy may be” is absolutely true, but misses something very important: our Lord through His Church has given the liturgy to us for our benefit, for our instruction and growth in holiness, not for His, and He becomes present in our midst in order to accomplish these things in us. The external form of the liturgy in all its details must prepare the souls of the faithful for the working of the Holy Spirit and remain ever transparent to this work of salvation. If we cannot get past the opening bars of guitar music or the Hallmark greetings without a groan of weariness or a quick surge of anger, how well disposed can we possibly be to receive the Lord when He comes? It is a thoroughly false asceticism to pretend that one should buck up and suffer everything—including the distortion or demeaning of the Church’s Sacred Liturgy! The Church has the duty of leading souls to perfection, not of setting up obstacles to it; her ministers have many powers, but inflicting harm on their own flocks is not numbered among them. A parish does not serve a lofty penitential calling by punishing its members with a combination of bad taste and ignored rubrics. So, do not be impressed by the argument that “the Eucharist is, after all, the Eucharist.” There is a good reason why there has never been in the entire history of the Church a (legitimate) liturgy of five minutes’ duration comprising only the consecration and distribution of hosts. If we were disembodied intellects capable of fixing our attention immediately and immovably on just one thing, then nothing but the Real Presence would make any difference, and we could institute the aforesaid five-minute liturgy, or for that matter, the fifty-minute liturgy of polyester, pop tunes, and pop psychology, because it would make no difference anyway. But the Lord who instituted the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass—the Lord who knows all that is in the heart of man, his spiritual needs and yearnings and limitations—wanted to provide nourishment for the whole man on every level of his being, the senses and the intellect, the mind and the heart. The liturgy is intended to nourish us in this holistic and comprehensive way, and to the extent that it impedes or undermines this purpose, it betrays itself and becomes a Judas to the Real Presence of Christ. Cardinal Ratzinger has spoken very much to the point on these matters:
Introspection and Private Prayers? But there is evidently some sense in what the reformers said. The liturgy is—and in past ages often concretely was, and certainly was always intended to be—the prayer of the people, presupposing and at the same time fostering the full attention, knowledge, and interior participation of every adult assisting at Mass. One of the great triumphs of the liturgical movement in its humbler and healthier days (ca. 1920s to 1950s) was the widespread diffusion in nearly every modern language of bilingual hand missals containing the text of the Roman Missal. As the use of these hand missals became customary, there was less and less of a barrier to the full spiritual participation of the people, and as time went on, less and less of a barrier to their making responses with the servers and singing the Ordinary of the Mass. (My St. Andrew’s Daily Missals from 1945 and my Schotte German-English Missal from 1962 contain not only the proper prayers and readings, but also a Kyriale or collection of Gregorian chants for the Mass Ordinary; and each of these missals indicates which words of the Mass can be said by the people together with the servers and/or the priest.5) If these promising developments had been allowed to go forward at a slow and natural pace over the decades, it is more than likely that by now, some forty years later, the Church would have been experiencing a true “second Spring” in her public liturgical life, with the Latin language, Gregorian chant, and solemn ceremonial not only left intact but enhanced. As it was, however, serious errors of prudential judgment led to a sudden foreshortening of the natural process of reform, with the disastrous results that are evident to all. It is true that the liturgy offers an excellent opportunity to pray for private intentions, for one’s friends and family, for the living and the dead. Such prayers are prominently included in all liturgical rites of East and West. Masses, too, have always been offered for very specific intentions, like the repose of a grandmother’s soul or good weather for the upcoming harvest. All the same, the Mass is not primarily a space for saying one’s prayers or practicing one’s devotions; not even the combined private prayers of a large body of the faithful suffice to make their activity the public and common prayer which is the Catholic liturgy. At Mass or in the divine office, the purpose is first and foremost the worship, praise, and glorification of God by the people of God. Our aspirations and petitions are those of the Church as a whole for all of her members on earth and for the suffering souls in purgatory. My communion with the Lord in the Holy Eucharist is not only the most wonderful blessing for me, it is at the same time, and more fundamentally, the cause and sign of the Church’s unity as the Mystical Body of Christ, the cause and sign of my fellowship with all of the faithful and with the glorious company of angels and saints. It would not be possible, nor would it be desirable, to “leave behind” the consciousness of one’s worries, family problems, personal struggles, and the like when attending Mass. But there is a right way to bring them to Mass and a wrong way. The crucial thing is to carry these burdens to the Lord and place them at the foot of His Cross, letting our personal penance and prayer be enfolded within the public worship of God, turning our hearts to communion with Him, and through Him, with the entire Church. For Jesus Christ is the way, the truth, and the life for each and for all: the way the liturgy must follow, the truth it must proclaim, the life it must communicate. To honor this path, embrace this wisdom, and drink deeply from this living source is the duty imposed and the blessing lavished upon every Catholic. End notes
Peter A. Kwasniewski is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the International Theological Institute in Gaming, Austria. |
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