==================
 STYLE AND THE MASS
 ==================

 [Reflections by Jeff Mirus, Sysop, CRNET, November 8, 1994]


A recent discussion of evangelical vs. Catholic styles of worship in this 
forum has prompted me to offer some clarifications about the nature of 
Catholic worship. I do not think the discussion has yet taken the essential 
nature of the liturgy into account.

Different people, of course, prefer different styles of worship. What is 
very attractive to one may be distracting or even unpleasant to another, 
especially when people have been formed in different traditions. Within the 
Church herself, the liturgical upheaval of the past generation has left us 
sadly divided over questions of ritual, music and participation. When you 
add converts coming from different backgrounds, you get an even greater 
diversity of tastes. Those coming from an evangelical background, for 
example, almost always find Catholic worship dull and even anemic at first.

The critical point to remember is that these questions of style are 
secondary in Catholic worship for the simple reason that Catholic worship 
is not primarily about what we do for Christ, but about what Christ does 
for us.


 PRIEST AND VICTIM
 -----------------

This point cannot be overemphasized. The Mass is first and foremost an 
action of Christ Himself. At each Mass, through the instrumentality of the 
priest as "alter Christus", Our Lord reenacts the sacrifice of Calvary in 
an unbloody manner and becomes present on the altar -- body, blood, soul 
and divinity -- to nourish us unto eternal life.

Note that I am not saying merely that more graces are available in the Mass 
than in other forms of worship (though this is true). The comparison is not 
a matter of tallying up the ways in which a particular liturgical style 
assists worshippers in becoming receptive to the available stock of grace. 
Such a comparison may be relevant for different liturgical settings of the 
Mass itself, but it is completely out of place when comparing the Mass with 
non-Catholic worship.

What I am saying is that while a non-Catholic worship service is a human 
action, the Catholic Mass is a Divine action. There is an unfathomable gulf 
between them -- a gulf so vast that any effort to compare the two without 
the most careful qualifications and caveats will lead to blasphemy.


 LITURGY AND OBEDIENCE
 ---------------------

The official liturgy of the Church, then, is meant to be both the framework 
and the actuator of Christ's work at Mass. To achieve this goal, liturgical 
norms are promulgated by the Holy See and by the Bishops, using the 
authority that has been conferred upon them by the same Christ. Thus the 
authority of Christ as teacher and ruler in the Church ensures His 
continuing action in the liturgy as Priest.

Once we understand this, we see immediately the first two tests for 
effective liturgy. The first and by far the most important test is whether 
the liturgy actually brings about the reenactment of Christ's sacrifice. 
Passing this test means that the Mass has been celebrated validly. The 
second test, which protects and confirms the first, is whether the liturgy 
has been celebrated according to the laws of Christ as expressed through 
the teaching authority of His Church. Passing this test means that the 
liturgy has been celebrated licitly.

I said before that the style of worship is secondary, but this is true only 
in the sense that it is not primary. When the whole list of considerations 
is put in place, we see that style is actually tertiary. Apart from 
whatever stylistic aspects are enshrined in the proper liturgical norms, 
considerations of style arise only after the validity and liceity of the 
liturgy are ensured.

It will be granted immediately, I think, that validity -- the action of 
Christ Himself -- must take precedence over style, but the case for liceity 
may not be quite so clear. After all, the liturgical norms in force bear at 
least partly on questions of style; they both incorporate some elements of 
style and rule out others. Why is it necessary to subordinate one's own 
stylistic preferences to those which may be enshrined in the Church's 
official rubrics and other liturgical documents?

There are many pragmatic reasons, of course, and these arise from the need 
for legitimate authority to regulate a matter vital to the life of the 
Church, to safeguard the rights of the faithful against abuses, to foster 
an appropriate Catholic universality, and to promote the common good. But 
there is also a deeper reason, namely that salvation comes through 
obedience.

Just as the virtue of Christ's saving action on calvary consisted in His 
complete obedience to the will of the Father, so too it is our continual 
obedience to the will of Christ which continues the work of sanctification 
in us and brings us ultimately to eternal life. This obedience is expressed 
first and foremost in our acceptance of the authority of the Church which 
Christ established to continue His work, and through which we are given His 
incomparable gifts. We obey Christ when we worship according to the 
prescripts of His Church, and this obedience itself unites us more closely 
to Christ's saving action than any liturgical style possibly can. Without 
this obedience, moreover, the power of liturgical style to foster union is 
either vitiated or destroyed.

This obedience, of course, ought to be motivated by love. But whatever the 
motivation, it is the key human response by which we carry our crosses, 
unite them with the cross of Christ, and offer ourselves with Him to the 
Father at every Mass. 


 FORM FOLLOWS CONTENT
 --------------------

Now the rules governing the liturgy allow scope for a certain creativity on 
the part of the Faithful in corporately expressing their fervor. In this 
context, I would be the last to view through rose-colored glasses either 
the zeal or the appropriateness of worship in many Catholic parishes today; 
indeed, I can well understand the various grounds for dissatisfaction. 
Nonetheless, it must be understood that the very nature of the Catholic 
Mass as an action of God conditions the human style of the liturgy in many 
ways. One of these ways is critical to our discussion.

In non-Catholic worship, the key to a successful service is the quality of 
the sermon and the fervor of the responses, be they spoken or sung. It is 
the work of man that is at issue. In the Catholic liturgy, however, the key 
is Christ's action, and the success of the secondary elements must be 
measured according to how well they foster our recognition of and union 
with that action. What Christ does is reenact his sacrifice for us at every 
Mass; in doing so He makes Himself fully and really present and gives 
Himself to us in holy communion.

Let me say it again: God the Son appears on the altar at every Mass.

The proper response to the Real Presence of God is awe. Despite its ups and 
downs over the centuries, each particular form of the Catholic liturgy has 
officially aimed to assist the faithful to do two things at one and the 
same time: to unite themselves with the sacrifice of Christ and to stand in 
awe before the Word made Flesh. This is so true that the Church's teaching 
about the importance of "active participation" in the liturgy has less to 
do with songs and responses and styles than with the degree to which each 
member of the Faithful unites himself to Christ by offering himself with 
Christ back to the Father; and the degree to which he stands in awe of the 
God Who condescends to give Himself as food. This awe-inspiring union -- 
this reverent love -- is the desired effect of every Mass, for both the 
individual and the community as a whole.

This is also why, even when Catholics worship with the greatest possible 
fervor, a Catholic Mass will never be -- ought never be -- anything like a 
Protestant worship service. There will always be a difference in tone, in 
progression, in emphasis, in desired end; and there will always be a place 
for that interior union which is often best-fostered in silence. Many would 
argue, in fact, that the gradual Protestantization of the Catholic liturgy 
over the past generation has both coincided with and contributed to a 
decline in understanding of what the Mass really is.


 EXTERNALS AND INTERNALS
 -----------------------

Does this mean, then, that all liturgical planning and all effort to foster 
greater involvement in the externals of the liturgy are vain? By no means. 
But here we must make another distinction between the externals of the 
liturgy and their internal effects.

There are many ways to stimulate a deeper union of the faithful with Christ 
at Mass. Because we are profoundly influenced by our senses and the 
emotions they stimulate, these methods center on the use of "externals". 
Church decorations, bodily postures, liturgical formularies and responses, 
symbols, holy water, incense -- all are outward proclamations of God's 
presence, all are designed to draw us into closer union with Him. Sermons, 
too, should both instruct and inspire the congregation with a sense of the 
presence of God. Finally, music has great power to involve the person, 
excite the emotions, and elevate the soul.

All of these external elements ought to be used to stimulate the interior 
union of the soul with God. Nonetheless, the two are not the same. And 
there are at least four intrinsic obstacles to making an effective 
connection between them:

(1) The Catholic Church admits an astonishingly large group of people to 
her worship. Many if not most Protestant churches are composed of people 
who have specifically chosen a particular church or congregation because it 
suits their tastes. The congregation of a Catholic church, in contrast, is 
made up of everybody in the neighborhood who feels Catholic enough to want 
to fulfill the general obligation to attend Mass. This may not be the ideal 
situation as far as fervent worship goes, but it is nonetheless the 
situation which God desires. He does not want us to choose our religions 
and our churches based on personal preference.

(2) The Catholic Church admits an astonishingly diverse group of people to 
her worship. Because of her very universality, and because she does not 
encourage the division of parishes on the basis of liturgical preference, 
the Church's liturgy must attempt to appeal to that which is most 
universal; in any case, it can never appeal completely to the particular 
tastes, backgrounds and traditions of each type of person in the pews. This 
fact offers significant possibilities for the development of truly great 
liturgies, as the achievements of past ages attest, but when faced with the 
non-traditional and frequently barren pluralism of contemporary culture, it 
makes it very difficult to implement a form of liturgy which doesn't annoy 
a good many people a good part of the time.

(3) Excessive emphasis on any external method draws attention away from 
Christ's action in the Mass. If the music is too grand, the Mass runs the 
risk of being appreciated primarily as a concert. If the participation is 
in too vigorous a style, the Mass may be experienced more as a rally. Too 
much action turns it into a show. A long and moving sermon draws attention 
away from the essential action of the Mass to the inspiring brilliance of 
the priest. Successful liturgy, in a word, requires an exquisite balance of 
elements.

(4) The essential elements of the Mass are themselves often the most 
eloquent expression possible. Sometimes the Mass which most successfully 
fosters interior union is the quiet weekday Mass, largely devoid of 
distractions, in which it is possible to focus intently on every word and 
action of the priest. Indeed, nothing is more calculated to provide a 
clearer understanding of the essential action of the liturgy, and it is 
doubtful that full worship on Sunday is possible for those who have never 
followed the sacrifice of the Mass in the quiet of their hearts.


 EMOTION AND UNION
 -----------------

It is probably easy to see that the external celebration of the liturgy and 
the interior union with God which is the liturgy's goal are different, 
though related, things. However, it is characteristic of our age that the 
difference between our feelings and interior union is not so clear. 
Nonetheless, this is one of the most important distinctions in the 
spiritual life.

Our age perhaps more than others is terribly confused about emotions. If we 
feel an emotional high at prayer, we believe we have made progress toward 
union with God; if we feel dry at prayer, we believe we have failed. The 
reality is often quite the opposite.

I do not mean to offer this as an excuse for anemic or grudging external 
participation in the liturgy, for which (if the liturgy is licit) there is 
really no good excuse. But I do mean that the importance of a "rousing" 
liturgy that leaves us with an emotional high is vastly over-rated and may, 
under certain circumstances, even be false or dangerous. The soul is 
perfectly capable of making spiritual progress without positive emotional 
feedback. In fact, this is so from the very nature of Faith itself.

In this life, we live by Faith -- meaning that we see only as through a 
glass darkly. It takes no special abandonment of our own will to love God 
when we are on an emotional high at a particularly satisfying worship 
service. But it does take abandonment and a deliberate effort at obedient 
union when the emotions are negative or aren't there at all. Under which 
conditions does the soul make greater progress?

The Christian life was designed to be a life of Faith precisely in order 
that we would profit interiorly by not seeing -- or feeling -- God's 
presence too clearly. We can't love fully when the object of our love is 
making us feel good; our love of self is always in the way. It is also 
generally true in the spiritual life that "highs" are given only 
occasionally, as glimpses of the Divine, to excite our souls and spur us 
on. Moreover, these "highs" are given more frequently to spiritual 
beginners, and they are generally withdrawn progressively as souls advance 
in holiness. This is an axiom of the spiritual life. Those who do not 
understand this will grow discouraged as they progress. They may seek false 
"highs" elsewhere and so fall away, failing to understand that the 
opportunities for union are greatest not when we are with Christ on Palm 
Sunday, but when we are with Him in the Garden.

It is perhaps difficult for non-Catholics, who have virtually no theology 
of suffering, to understand this all-important spiritual point. Still, my 
purpose in introducing it here is not to make an argument in favor of bad 
liturgies or lackluster participation. Rather, I wish to point out what to 
some may seem a startling liturgical conclusion. It is this: Liturgies that 
aim specifically to produce emotional highs are seriously flawed. Liturgy 
is not primarily an effort to excite the participants; still less is it any 
kind of entertainment or show; and still less is it a rapturous celebration 
of the life of the community.

No, liturgy is first and foremost the public action of the Church in which 
Christ re-presents His saving sacrifice and offers Himself as nourishment 
to His people. The externals have as their primary and only essential goal 
the widespread recognition of, and union with, that tremendous mystery. In 
pursuit of this goal, and this goal alone, can liturgy as a whole give to 
God that glory from which it derives its dignity.


 PRAYER IN PRACTICE
 ------------------

Several conclusions follow from this imperfect exposition. Perhaps the most 
important for us now -- both for those within the Church who are fighting 
over various liturgical forms, and for those attracted to the Church but 
put off by her liturgy -- is that the question of how emotionally 
satisfying we find the liturgy is very often a spiritually immature 
question. By focusing disproportionately on this question, many people have 
sadly worked to impoverish the Church's liturgy, others have been led out 
of the Church (in a whole variety of directions), and still others have 
refused to enter or have maintained dangerous attachments to other forms of 
worship. To rely on a non-Catholic form of worship in preference to even 
the poorest Mass is to put one's trust in men rather than God.

Such attachments also give scandal by proclaiming to others that the action 
of the Mass is somehow on a par with purely human prayer. Catholics, and 
non-Catholics on the verge of conversion, persist in such attachments at 
their peril. While focused on things good in themselves, such inclinations 
need to be put in proper order. Otherwise they are, indeed, inordinate 
attachments. They must, in a word, be mortified.

Prayer groups and other informal Christian gatherings which include prayer 
provide better opportunities for people to pray in their own preferred 
style. But with respect to the liturgy as a whole, personal preferences can 
serve the Church only when they are considered in their proper place 
somewhere near the bottom of the liturgical ladder. Only in that relatively 
small and well-circumscribed space can these preferences be directed and 
harnessed properly to honor God and inspire souls.

I do not wish to be misunderstood. In the economy of salvation, 
considerations of liturgical style still partake of that singular 
importance which attaches to all things that directly serve the majesty of 
God. Many are undoubtedly called to work tirelessly to improve the liturgy 
and foster a fuller and deeper participation in it. All are certainly 
called to respond by joining in liturgical worship.

But before we can worship worthily we must first understand the nature of 
the liturgy. It is not of personal preferences and emotional highs that 
great liturgy is born, but of the Holy Spirit relentlessly at work in our 
minds and hearts and souls, transforming and sanctifying all our 
attachments, incorporating them into Christ, and offering them as a 
sacrifice truly pleasing to the Father.



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