How Should We Worship? | Preface to "The
Organic Development of the Liturgy" by Alcuin Reid, O.S.B. | by Joseph
Cardinal Ratzinger | IgnatiusInsight.com
How Should We Worship? | Preface to The
Organic Development of the Liturgy by Alcuin Reid, O.S.B. | by Joseph
Cardinal Ratzinger
http://www.ignatiusinsight.com/features2006/ratzinger_forwdodl_jan06.asp
In the last few decades, the matter of the right way to celebrate the Liturgy
has increasingly become one of the points around which much of the controversy
has centred concerning the Second Vatican Council, about how it should be
evaluated, and about its reception in the life of the Church.
There are the relentless supporters of reform, for whom the fact that, under certain
conditions, the celebration of the Eucharist in accordance with the most
recent edition of the missal before the Councilthat of 1962has
once more been permitted represents an intolerable fall from grace. At the
same time, of course, the Liturgy is regarded as "semper reformanda", so
that in the end it is whatever "congregation" is involved that makes "its"
Liturgy, in which it expresses itself. A Protestant "Liturgical Compendium"
(edited by C. Grethlein [Ruddat, 2003]) recently presented worship as a
"project for reform" (pp. 13-41) and thereby also expressed the way many
Catholic liturgists think about it. And then, on the other hand, there are
the embittered critics of liturgical reformcritical not only of its
application in practice, but equally of its basis in the Council. They can
see salvation only in total rejection of the reform.
Between these two groups, the radical reformers and their radical opponents,
the voices of those people who regard the Liturgy as something living, and
thus as growing and renewing itself both in its reception and in its finished
form, are often lost. These latter, however, on the basis of the same argument,
insist that growth is not possible unless the Liturgy's identity is preserved,
and they further emphasise that proper development is possible only if careful
attention is paid to the inner structural logic of this "organism": Just
as a gardener cares for a living plant as it develops, with due attention
to the power of growth and life within the plant and the rules it obeys,
so the Church ought to give reverent care to the Liturgy through the ages,
distinguishing actions that are helpful and healing from those that are
violent and destructive.
If that is how things are, then we must try to ascertain the inner structure
of a rite, and the rules by which its life is governed, in order thus to
find the right way to preserve its vital force in changing times, to strengthen
and renew it. Dom Alcuin Reid's book takes its place in this current of
thought. Running through the history of the Roman rite (Mass and breviary),
from its beginnings up to the eve of the Second Vatican Council, it seeks
to establish the principles of liturgical development and thus to draw from
historyfrom its ups and downsthe standards on which every reform
must be based. The book is divided into three parts. The first, very brief
part investigates the history of the reform of the Roman rite from its beginnings
up to the end of the nineteenth century. The second part is devoted to the
Liturgical Movement up to 1948. By far the longest partthe thirddeals
with liturgical reform under Plus XII up to the eve of the Second Vatican
Council. This part is most useful, because to a great extent people no longer
remember that particular phase of liturgical reform, yet in that periodas,
of course, also in the history of the Liturgical Movementwe see reflected
all the questions concerning the right way to go about reform, so that we
can also draw out from all this criteria on which to base our judgments.
The author has made a wise decision in stopping on the threshold of the
Second Vatican Council. He thus avoids entering into the controversy associated
with the interpretation and the reception of the Council. Yet he can nonetheless
show its place in history and show us the interplay of various tendencies
on which questions as to the standards for reform must be based.
At the end of his book, the author enumerates some principles for proper
reform: it should keep openness to development and continuity with the Tradition
in a proper balance; it should include awareness of an objective liturgical
tradition and therefore take care to ensure a substantial continuity. The
author then agrees with the Catechism of the Catholic Church in emphasising
that "even the supreme authority in the Church may not change the liturgy
arbitrarily, but only in the obedience of faith and with religious respect
for the mystery of the liturgy" (CCC 1125). As subsidiary criteria we then
encounter the legitimacy of local traditions and the concern for pastoral
effectiveness.
From my own personal point of view I should like to give further particular
emphasis to some of the criteria for liturgical renewal thus briefly indicated.
I will begin with those last two main criteria. It seems to me most important
that the Catechism, in mentioning the limitation of the powers of
the supreme authority in the Church with regard to reform, recalls to mind
what is the essence of the primacy as outlined by the First and Second Vatican
Councils: The pope is not an absolute monarch whose will is law; rather,
he is the guardian of the authentic Tradition and, thereby, the premier
guarantor of obedience. He cannot do as he likes, and he is thereby able
to oppose those people who, for their part, want to do whatever comes into
their head. His rule is not that of arbitrary power, but that of obedience
in faith. That is why, with respect to the Liturgy, he has the task of a
gardener, not that of a technician who builds new machines and throws the
old ones on the junk-pile. The "rite", that form of celebration and prayer
which has ripened in the faith and the life of the Church, is a condensed
form of living Tradition in which the sphere using that rite expresses the
whole of its faith and its prayer, and thus at the same time the fellowship
of generations one with another becomes something we can experience, fellowship
with the people who pray before us and after us. Thus the rite is something
of benefit that is given to the Church, a living form of paradosis,
the handing-on of Tradition.
It is important, in this connection, to interpret the "substantial continuity"
correctly. The author expressly warns us against the wrong path up which
we might be led by a Neoscholastic sacramental theology that is disconnected
from the living form of the Liturgy. On that basis, people might reduce
the "substance" to the matter and form of the sacrament and say: Bread and
wine are the matter of the sacrament; the words of institution are its form.
Only these two things are really necessary; everything else is changeable.
At this point modernists and traditionalists are in agreement: As long as
the material gifts are there, and the words of institution are spoken, then
everything else is freely disposable. Many priests today, unfortunately,
act in accordance with this motto; and the theories of many liturgists are
unfortunately moving in the same direction. They want to overcome the limits
of the rite, as being something fixed and immovable, and construct the products
of their fantasy, which are supposedly "pastoral", around this remnant,
this core that has been spared and that is thus either relegated to the
realm of magic or loses any meaning whatever. The Liturgical Movement had
in fact been attempting to overcome this reductionism, the product of an
abstract sacramental theology, and to teach us to understand the Liturgy
as a living network of Tradition that had taken concrete form, that cannot
be torn apart into little pieces but that has to be seen and experienced
as a living whole. Anyone who, like me, was moved by this perception at
the time of the Liturgical Movement on the eve of the Second Vatican Council
can only stand, deeply sorrowing, before the ruins of the very things they
were concerned for.
I should like just briefly to comment on two more perceptions that appear
in Dom Alcuin Reid's book. Archaeological enthusiasm and pastoral pragmatismwhich
is in any case often a pastoral form of rationalismare both equally
wrong. These two might be described as unholy twins. The first generation
of liturgists were for the most part historians. Thus they were inclined
to archaeological enthusiasm: they were trying to unearth the oldest form
in its original purity; they regarded the liturgical books in current use,
with the rites they offered, as the expression of the rampant proliferation
through history of secondary growths that were the product of misunderstandings
and of ignorance of the past. People were trying to reconstruct the oldest
Roman Liturgy and to cleanse it of all later additions. A great deal of
this was right, and yet liturgical reform is something different from archaeological
excavation, and not all the developments of a living thing have to be logical
in accordance with a rationalistic or historical standard. This is also
the reason whyas the author quite rightly remarksthe experts
ought not to be allowed to have the last word in liturgical reform. Experts
and pastors each have their own part to play (just as, in politics, specialists
and decision-makers represent two different planes). The knowledge of scholars
is important, yet it cannot be directly transmuted into the decisions of
pastors, for pastors still have their own responsibilities in listening
to the faithful, in accompanying with understanding those who perform the
things that help us to celebrate the sacrament with faith today and the
things that do not. It was one of the weaknesses of the first phase of reform
after the Council that to a great extent specialists were listened to almost
exclusively. A greater independence on the part of pastors would have been
desirable.
Because it is often all too obvious that historical knowledge cannot be
elevated straight into the status of a new liturgical norm, this archaeological
enthusiasm was very easily combined with pastoral pragmatism: people first
of all decided to eliminate everything that was not recognised as original
and was thus not part of the "substance", and then they supplemented the
"archaeological remains", if these still seemed insufficient, in accordance
with "pastoral insights". But what is "pastoral"? The judgments made about
these questions by intellectual professors were often influenced by their
rationalist presuppositions and not infrequently missed the point of what
really supports the life of the faithful. Thus it is that nowadays, after
the Liturgy was extensively rationalised during the early phase of reform,
people are eagerly seeking forms of solemnity, looking for "mystical" atmosphere
and for something of the sacred. Yet becausenecessarily and more and
more clearlypeople's judgments as to what is pastorally effective
are widely divergent, the "pastoral" aspect has become the point at which
"creativity" breaks in, destroying the unity of the Liturgy and very often
confronting us with something deplorably banal. That is not to deny that
the eucharistic Liturgy, and likewise the Liturgy of the Word, is often
celebrated reverently and "beautifully", in the best sense, on the basis
of people's faith. Yet since we are looking for the criteria of reform,
we do also have to mention the dangers, which unfortunately in the last
few decades have by no means remained just the imaginings of those traditionalists
opposed to reform.
I should like to come back to the way that worship was presented, in a liturgical
compendium, as a "project for reform" and, thus, as a workshop in which
people are always busy at something. Different again, and yet related to
this, is the suggestion by some Catholic liturgists that we should finally
adapt the liturgical reform to the "anthropological turn" of modern times
and construct it in an anthropocentric style. If the Liturgy appears first
of all as the workshop for our activity, then what is essential is being
forgotten: God. For the Liturgy is not about us, but about God. Forgetting
about God is the most imminent danger of our age. As against this, the Liturgy
should be setting up a sign of God's presence. Yet what happens if the habit
of forgetting about God makes itself at home in the Liturgy itself and if
in the Liturgy we are thinking only of ourselves? In any and every liturgical
reform, and every liturgical celebration, the primacy of God should be kept
in view first and foremost.
With this I have gone beyond Dom Alcuin's book. But I think it has become
clear that this book, which offers a wealth of material, teaches us some
criteria and invites us to further reflection. That is why I can recommend
this book.
Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger
26 July 2004
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Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, was for over two decades
the Prefect for the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith under Pope
John Paul II. He is a renowned theologian and author of numerous books.
A mini-bio and full listing of his books published by Ignatius Press are
available on his IgnatiusInsight.com
Author Page.
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