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I. 30 plus years since the Second Vatican
Council
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A. What has changed?
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1. The Mass then--I just sat and
watched a videotape of the "old Tridentine Solemn High
Mass". I had forgotten how much we never participated in
it. Just three times in the course of an hour and one half did the
priest acknowledge the people's presence by saying "Dominus
Vobiscum" facing them. The rest of the mass was strictly the
clerics mass; i.e., priests, deacons, subdeacons, acolytes. We really
were there to pray, pay and obey and that was it. It was a sacred and
holy moment in our lives, but somehow never really included us in that
moment with God.
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2. The Mass Now--Today we participate
fully in the celebration of mass. We sing together. We stand,
sit and kneel together. We pray together. We are involved in
what the priest is doing up there in the sanctuary. The mass today is
the people's mass with the priest celebrating as the presider over the
entire moment with God. We are God's people today, not just God's
spectators.
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3. The Catholic People Then--Before the Second Vatican Council
Catholics went to Mass because they were all going to hell on a rail if they
didn't. It was a legalistic mind-set because we were a legalistic
Church. We lived in fear that we would never be good enough and
so going to mass meant that we were at least trying to find God in our
lives. We went to Church because we had to, not because we
wanted to be there. We rarely received communion because of that
mind-set and therefore deprived ourselves of the Lord out of fear and a
life-style script that said "Yes, you're right, you'll never be good
enough for God!" It was a mind-set of God and me alone.
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4. The Catholic People Now--Today we truly are a people of God.
We've managed to get passed that old script of "never being good
enough" and have come to realize that we are truly good enough for
God. What a joy it is to see people coming to communion in
droves. Are we perfect? NO! Are we a pilgrim people on a
faith journey? YES!! And that makes us good enough. No
longer do we hold that mind-set that we had to be in Church on Sunday.
Today we come to mass because we want to be there. We come to
celebrate our God and our lives and try and live out the commandments of
Christ that say "Love God, Love your neighbor, love
yourself." It's a much healthier view of God and the person
sitting next to us. It's not just God and me, it's God and us.
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5. The Songs Then--As observers of the mass and choirs we listened to
some of the most beautiful music ever written and sung. We listened to
that wonderful pipe organ vibrate the walls of Church with awesome beauty
and resonance. The key hear is listen! We sang very little, if
at all, and that music filled our hearts with hope and heavenly beauty that
one day the Lord will play that music for us in heaven.
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6. The Songs Now--We are a pilgrim Church on a journey and that path
had led us far from the beauty of that old pipe organ that began to collect
dust. We sang Protestant songs because we didn't have any that people
could sing. Then we went to changing the words of secular songs to religious
words--YUK! And finally we have our own composers and musicians and
our music is finally saying to Catholics what we need to hear and sing
about. Did we lose entirely the ancient and old and beautiful hymns,
almost! But today we are combining the ancient with the new songs and
we are developing our own style of music within Church and it is
wonderful. It's not so unusual to hear that wonderful old pipe organ
being dusted off and used to accompany both the old and new songs. And
we are becoming a singing people again. We were once many hundreds of
years ago and we are again. We are comfortable enough with singing
both Protestant compositions and Catholic compositions. Thank God
we've dropped the secular stuff. To walk inside a Catholic Church at
mass today is to hear the Catholic people singing praise to God in good and
not so good voices, but we are singing and as St. Augustine said: "We
are praying twice when we sing."
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