EXPAND YOUR READING!!

"Today the concept of truth is viewed with suspicion, because truth is identified with violence. Over history there have, unfortunately, been episodes when people sought to defend the truth with violence. But they are two contrasting realities. Truth cannot be imposed with means other than itself! Truth can only come with its own light. Yet, we need truth. ... Without truth we are blind in the world, we have no path to follow. The great gift of Christ was that He enabled us to see the face of God".Pope Benedict xvi, February 24th, 2012

The Church is ecumenical, catholic, God-human, ageless, and it is therefore a blasphemy—an unpardonable blasphemy against Christ and against the Holy Ghost—to turn the Church into a national institution, to narrow her down to petty, transient, time-bound aspirations and ways of doing things. Her purpose is beyond nationality, ecumenical, all-embracing: to unite all men in Christ, all without exception to nation or race or social strata. - St Justin Popovitch

Saturday 2 March 2013

RESOURCING BENEDICT XVI'S THE SPIRIT OF THE LITURGY by Uwe Michael Lang


Louis Bouyer and Church Architecture
RESOURCING BENEDICT XVI'S THE SPIRIT OF THE LITURGY
by Uwe Michael Lang, appearing in Volume 19 - Download Issue PDF

[14]

The present Holy Father’s thought on liturgy and church architecture was considerably influenced by Louis Bouyer (1913-2004), a convert from Lutheranism, priest of the French Oratory (a religious congregation founded by Cardinal Pierre de Bérulle in the seventeenth century and distinct from the Oratory of St. Philip Neri) and protagonist of the liturgical movement in France.1 Bouyer has left an enormous oeuvre extending not only to the study of the sacred liturgy but to other fields of theology and spirituality. Although he taught for several years in American universities and many of his books were published in English, Bouyer’s passing away on October 22, 2004 at the age of ninety-one seemed to have gone largely unnoticed in the Anglophone world.2

Father Louis Bouyer (Photo: wikimediacommons.org)

Joseph Ratzinger and Louis Bouyer were friends who held each other’s work in high esteem. Both were called to the International Theological Commission when it was instituted by Pope Paul VI in 1969. Bouyer recalls the working sessions of the Commission in his unpublished memoirs, and comments especially on Ratzinger’s clarity of vision, vast knowledge, intellectual courage, incisive judgment, and gentle sense of humour. In his remarkable book-length interview of 1979, entitled Le Métier de Théologien (The Craft of the Theologian), which has unfortunately not yet been published in English, Bouyer praises the appointment of the outstanding theologian Joseph Ratzinger as Archbishop of Munich.3 Cardinal Ratzinger, in his turn, in a contribution published originally in 2002, recalls the founding of the international theological review Communio Initiated by a group of friends, Communio including the noted theologians Henri de Lubac, Hans Urs von Balthasar, Louis Bouyer, and Jorge Medina Estévez, who later became the Cardinal-Prefect of the Vatican Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments.4

In The Spirit of the Liturgy, the present Pope’s debt to Bouyer is especially evident in the chapters “Sacred Places – The Significance of the Church Building” and “The Altar and the Direction of Liturgical Prayer”, where the French theologian is cited throughout.5 In the short bibliography, Bouyer’s book Liturgy and Architecture features prominently. This work was published originally in English in 1967 by the University of Notre Dame Press; its German translation, used by then-Cardinal Ratzinger, appeared as late as 1993. The theme of orientation in liturgical prayer occupied the theologian Joseph Ratzinger as early as 1966, at the height of the post-conciliar liturgical reform;6 his first significant contribution to the debate dates from the late 1978 and was included in the important volume The Feast of Faith, published in German in 1981.7 However, it appears to have been the work of his friend Bouyer that led Ratzinger to a more profound approach to the subject as is reflected in The Spirit of the Liturgy.

Jewish origins of Christian worship

One of the characteristics of Pope Benedict’s theology of the liturgy is his emphasis on the Jewish roots of Christian worship, which he considers a manifestation of the essential unity of Old and New Testament, a subject to which he repeatedly calls attention.8 Bouyer pursues this methodology in his monograph Eucharist, where he argues that the form of the Church’s liturgy must be understood as emerging from a Jewish ritual context.9

In Liturgy and Architecture, Bouyer explores the Jewish background to early church architecture, especially with regard to the “sacred direction” taken in divine worship. He notes that Jews in the Diaspora prayed towards Jerusalem or, more precisely, towards the presence of the transcendent God (shekinah) in the Holy of Holies of the Temple. Even after the destruction of the Temple the prevailing custom of turning towards Jerusalem for prayer was kept in the liturgy of the synagogue. Thus Jews have expressed their eschatological hope for the coming of the Messiah, the rebuilding of the Temple, and the gathering of God’s people from the Diaspora. The direction of prayer was thus inseparably bound up with the messianic expectation of Israel.10

Bouyer observes that this direction of prayer towards the Holy of Holies in the Temple of Jerusalem gave Jewish synagogue worship a quasi-sacramental quality that went beyond the mere proclamation of the word. This sacred direction was highlighted by the later development of the Torah shrine, where the scrolls of the Holy Scripture are solemnly kept. The Torah shrine thus becomes a sign of God’s presence among his people, keeping alive the memory of his ineffable presence in the Holy of Holies of the Temple. Ratzinger notes in his Spirit of the Liturgy that in Christian sacred architecture, which both continues and transforms synagogue architecture, the Torah shrine has its equivalent in the altar at the east wall or in the apse, thus being the place where the sacrifice of Christ, the Word incarnate, becomes present in the liturgy of the Mass.11

Syrian Churches

[15] 
Bouyer’s Liturgy and Architecture made available to a wider public in the 1960’s current research on early Christian sacred architecture in the Near East.12 The oldest surviving Syrian churches, dating from the fourth century onwards, mostly follow the model of the basilica, similar to contemporary synagogues, with the difference, however, that they were in general built with their apse facing towards the east. In churches where some clue remains as to the position of the altar, it appears to have been placed only a little forward from the east wall or directly before it. The orientation of church and altar thus corresponds to the universally accepted principle of facing east in prayer and expresses the eschatological hope of the early Christians for the second coming of Christ as the Sun of righteousness. The bema, a raised platform in the middle of the building, was taken over from the synagogue, where it served as the place for the reading of Holy Scripture and the recitation of prayers. The bishop would sit with his clergy on the west side of the bema in the nave facing towards the apse. The psalmody and readings that form part of the liturgy of the Word are conducted from the bema. The clergy then proceed eastward to the altar for the liturgy of the Eucharist.13 Bouyer’s theory that the “Syrian arrangement” with the bema in the nave was also the original layout of Byzantine churches has met with a very mixed reception among scholars.– What is widely agreed, however, is that the celebrant would have stood in front of the altar, facing east with the congregation for the Eucharistic liturgy.

A Louis Bouyer Church plan (Photo: wikimediacommons.org)

Roman Basilicas

Early Roman churches, especially those with an oriented entrance, such as the Lateran Basilica or Saint Peter’s in the Vatican (which is unique in many ways), present questions regarding their liturgical use that are still being debated by scholars. According to Bouyer the whole assembly, the bishop or priest celebrant who stood behind the altar as well as the people in the nave would turn towards the east and hence towards the doors during the Eucharistic prayer.15 The doors may have been left open so that the light of the rising sun, the symbol of the risen Christ and his second coming in glory, flooded into the nave. The assembly would have formed a semicircle that opened to the east, with the celebrating priest as its apex. In the context of religious practice in the ancient world, this liturgical gesture does not appear as extraordinary as it might seem today. It was the general custom in antiquity to pray towards the open sky, which meant that in a closed room one would turn to an open door or an open window for prayer, a custom that is well attested by Jewish and Christian sources.16 Against this background it would seem quite possible that for the Eucharistic prayer the faithful, along with the celebrant, turned towards the eastern entrance. The practice of priest and people facing each other arose when the profound symbolism of facing east was no longer understood and the faithful no longer turned eastward for the Eucharistic prayer. This happened especially in those basilicas where the altar was moved from the middle of the nave to the apse.


The Byzantine development of the richly decorated east wall as “liturgical east” as illustrated by the Basilica of Sant’ Apollinare in Classe, Ravenna (Photo: wikimediacommons.org)

Another line of argument can be pursued if we start from the observation that facing east was accompanied by looking upwards, namely towards the eastern sky which was considered the place of Paradise and the scene of Christ’s second coming. The lifting up of hearts for the canon, in response to the admonition “Sursum corda,” included the bodily gestures of standing upright, raising one’s arms and looking heavenward. It is no mere accident that in many basilicas (only) the apse and triumphal arch were decorated with magnificent mosaics; their iconographic programmes are often related to the Eucharist that is celebrated underneath. These mosaics may well have served to direct the attention of the assembly whose eyes were raised up during the Eucharistic prayer. Even the priest at the altar prayed with outstretched, raised arms and no further ritual gestures. Where the altar was placed at the entrance of the apse or in the central nave, the celebrant standing in front of it could easily have looked up towards the apse. With splendid mosaics representing the celestial world, the apse may have indicated the “liturgical east” and hence the focus of prayer.17 This theory has the distinct advantage that it accounts better for the correlation between liturgy, art, and architecture than that of Bouyer, which must accommodate a discrepancy between the sacred rites and the space created for them. Pope Benedict alludes to this theory in the beautiful comments he made on orientation in liturgical prayer in his homily during the Easter Vigil 2008.18

Even if we assume that priest and people were facing one another in early Christian basilicas with an eastward entrance, we can exclude any visual contact at least for the canon, since all prayed with arms raised, looking upwards. At any rate, there was not much to see at the altar, since ritual gestures, such as signs of the cross, altar kisses, genuflections, and the elevation of the Eucharistic species, were only added later.19 Bouyer is certainly correct in saying that the Mass “facing the people,” in the modern sense, was unknown to Christian antiquity, and that it would be anachronistic to see the Eucharistic liturgy in the early Roman basilicas as its prototype.

Bouyer acclaims Byzantine church architecture as a genuine development of the early Christian basilica: those elements that were not appropriate for the celebration of the liturgy were either changed or removed, so that a new type of building came into being. A major achievement was the formation of a particular iconography that stood in close connection with the sacred mysteries celebrated in the liturgy and gave them a visible artistic form. Church architecture in the West, on the other hand, was more strongly indebted to the basilican structure. Significantly, the rich decoration of the east wall and dome in Byzantine churches has its counterpart in the Ottonian and Romanesque wall-paintings and, even further developed, in the sumptuous altar compositions of the late Middle Ages, the Renaissance, and the Baroque, which display themes intimately related to the Eucharist and so give a foretaste of the eternal glory given to the faithful in the sacrifice of the Mass.20

The Liturgical Movement and Mass “facing the people”

Drawing on his own experience, Bouyer relates that the pioneers of the Liturgical Movement in the twentieth century had two chief motives for promoting the celebration of Mass versus populum. First, they wanted the Word of God to be proclaimed towards the people. According to the rubrics for Low Mass, the priest had to read the Epistle and the Gospel from the book resting on the altar. Thus the only option was to celebrate the whole Mass “facing the people,” as was provided for by the Missal of St Pius V21 to cover the particular arrangement of the major Roman basilicas. The instruction of the Sacred Congregation of Rites Inter Oecumenici of September 26, 1964 allowed the reading of the Epistle and Gospel from a pulpit or ambo, so that the first incentive for Mass facing the people was met. There was, however, another reason motivating many exponents of the Liturgical Movement to press for this change, namely, the intention to reclaim the perception of the Holy Eucharist as a sacred banquet, which was deemed to be eclipsed by the strong emphasis on its sacrificial character. The celebration of Mass facing the people was seen as an adequate way of recovering this loss.


Pope Benedict XVI celebrating Mass ad orientem Photo: Vatican Photo Service

Bouyer notes in retrospect a tendency to conceive of the Eucharist as a meal in contrast to a sacrifice, which he calls a fabricated dualism that has no warrant in the liturgical tradition.22 As the Catechism of the Catholic Church puts it, “The Mass is at the same time, and inseparably, the sacrificial memorial in which the sacrifice of the cross is perpetuated and the sacred banquet of communion with the Lord’s body and blood,”23, and these two aspects cannot be isolated from each other. According to Bouyer, our situation today is very different from that of the first half of the twentieth century, since the meal aspect of the Eucharist has become common property, and it is its sacrificial character that needs to be recovered.24

Pastoral experience confirms this analysis, because the understanding of the Mass as both the sacrifice of Christ and the sacrifice of the Church has diminished considerably, if not faded away among the faithful.25 Therefore it is a legitimate question to ask whether the stress on the meal aspect of the Eucharist that complemented the celebrant priest’s turning towards the people has been overdone and has failed to proclaim the Eucharist as “a visible sacrifice (as the nature of man demands).”26 The sacrificial character of the Eucharist must find an adequate expression in the actual rite. Since the third century, the Eucharist has been named “prosphora,” “anaphora,” and “oblation,” terms that articulate the idea of “bringing to,” “presenting,” and thus of a movement towards God.

Conclusion

Bouyer painted with a broad brush and his interpretation of historical data is sometimes questionable or even untenable. Moreover, he was inclined to express his theological positions sharply, and his taste for polemics made him at times overstate the good case he had. Like other important theologians of the years before the Second Vatican Council, he had an ambiguous relationship to post-Tridentine Catholicism and was not entirely free of an iconoclastic attitude.27 Later, he deplored some post-conciliar developments especially in the liturgy and in religious life, and again expressed this in the strongest possible terms.28 

Needless to say, Benedict XVI does not share Bouyer’s attitude, as is evident from his appreciation of sound and legitimate developments in post-Tridentine liturgy, sacred architecture, art, and music. It should also be noted that Joseph Ratzinger does not take up the later, more experimental chapters of Liturgy and Architecture, where new schematic models of church buildings are presented. Despite its limitations, however, Bouyer’s book remains an important work, and it is perhaps its greatest merit that it introduced a wider audience to the significance of early Syrian church architecture. Louis Bouyer was one of the first to raise questions that seemed deeply outmoded then, but have now become matters of intense liturgical and theological debate.29

Rev. Uwe Michael Lang, a native of Germany and priest of the Congregation of the Oratory of Saint Philip Neri in London, is a Lecturer in Church History at Heythrop College in the University of London and a Consultor to the Office for the Liturgical Celebrations of the Supreme Pontiff.  He has published in the fields of Patristics and liturgical studies, including Turning Towards the Lord: Orientation in Liturgical Prayer, San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2nd edition 2009. His most recent book is The Voice of the Church at Prayer: Reflections on Liturgy and Language, San Francisco: Ignatius Press 2012.

1 Cf. the more recent contributions of J.-F. Thomas, “Notes sur le sacré et la liturgie chez Louis Bouyer et Joseph Ratzinger,”Communio 31 (2006): 45-62; and K. Lemna, “Louis Bouyer’s Defense of Religion and the Sacred: Sacrifice and the Primacy of Divine Gift in Christian Liturgy,” Antiphon 12 (2008): 2-24. 
2 Unlike in France, where an obituary by J.-R. Armogathe was published in Le Figaro, October 27, 2004 and one by H. Tinq in Le Monde, October 27, 2004. 
3 L. Bouyer, Le Métier du Théologien. Entretiens avec Georges Daix (Paris: Editions France-Empire, 1979; republished Geneva: Ad Solem, 2005), 166. 
4 J. Ratzinger, “Eucharist–Communion–Solidarity: Christ Present and Active in the Blessed Sacrament,” in On the Way to Jesus Christ, trans. M. J. Miller (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2005), 112. 
5 J. Ratzinger, The Spirit of the Liturgy, trans. J. Saward (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2000), 62-84. 
6 In a lecture at the Katholikentag in Bamberg, also published in English translation: J. Ratzinger, “Catholicism after the Council,” trans. P. Russell, The Furrow 18 (1967): 3-23. 
7 J. Ratzinger, The Feast of Faith: Approaches to a Theology of the Liturgy, trans. G. Harrison (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1986. 2nd Ed. 2006), 139-145. 
8 See, for instance, Spirit of the Liturgy, 66. 
9 L. Bouyer, Eucharist: Theology and Spirituality of the Eucharistic Prayer, trans. C. U. Quinn (Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1968). 
10 Cf. Bouyer, Liturgy and Architecture, 17-20. 
11 Cf. Ratzinger, Spirit of the Liturgy, 70-71. 
12 For example, J. Lassus, Sanctuaires chrétiens de Syrie (Paris: P. Geuthner, 1947); and G. Tchalenko, Villages antiques de la Syrie du Nord: Le Massif du Bélus à l’époque romaine, 3 vol. (Paris: P. Geutner, 1953-1958). 
13 See Bouyer, Liturgy and Architecture, 24-39. 
14 Cf. the criticism of R. F. Taft, “Some Notes on the Bema in the East and West Syrian Traditions,” Orientalia Christiana Periodica 34 (1968): 326-359 (reprint with supplementary notes in R. F. Taft, Liturgy in Byzantium and Beyond, Aldershot: Ashgate, 1995), 327, 359. 
15 Bouyer, Liturgy and Architecture, 55-56. 
16 Daniel 6:10, Tobit 3:11, and Acts 10:9; Babylonian Talmud, Berakhot 5,1 (31a); 5,5 (34b); Origen, De oratione 32. There is archaeological evidence of Galilean synagogues from the late first century A.D. with the entrance facing towards Jerusalem. It would seem that the assembly turned towards the open doors for prayer and thus looked towards the direction of the sacred city. 
17 See especially S. Heid, “Gebetshaltung und Ostung in frühchristlicher Zeit,” Rivista di Archeologia Cristiana 82 (2006): 347-404. 
18 Benedict XVI, Homily for the Easter Vigil, March 22, 2008. 
19 See Bouyer, Liturgy and Architecture, 56-59. 
20 Ibid., 60-70. 
21Missale Romanum (1570/1962), Ritus servandus in celebratione Missae, V,3. 
22 Cf. Bouyer’s postscript to the French edition of K. Gamber, Tournés vers le Seigneur! (Zum Herrn hin!), trans. S. Wallon (Le Barroux: Sainte-Madeleine 1993), 67: “il n’y a jamais eu, dans aucune religion, un sacrifice qui ne soit pas un repas, mais un repas sacré : reconnu comme enveloppant le mystère d’une spéciale présence et communication divine.” 
23 Catechism of the Catholic Church, no. 1382. 
24 Cf. Bouyer, Liturgy and Architecture, 106-111. 
25 Cf. the telling comments of R. J. Schreiter, Constructing Local Theologies. Foreword by E. Schillebeeckx (London: SCM Press, 1985), 67. 
26 Council of Trent (1562), Session XXII, Doctrine on the Sacrifice of the Mass, ch. 1: Denzinger-Schönmetzer 1740, quoted in the Catechism of the Catholic Church, no. 1366. 
27 In fact, his position on Mass “facing the people” developed: see his letter to Father Pie Duployé, O.P., of 1943, a text that proved to be very influential for liturgical renewal in France. Bouyer writes that, in order to promote the participation of the faithful in the liturgy, certain changes need to be made: “Cela doit, dans beaucoup de cas, signifier l’autel face au people, comme dans les basiliques romaines; et c’est, dans tous les cas, la disparition irrémédiable des retables, des pots de fleur, des gradins, … des tabernacles inutiles ou inutilement volumineux.” The letter is conveniently added to the Ad Solem edition of Le Métier du théologien, 281. 
28 L. Bouyer, in The Decomposition of Catholicism: “We must speak plainly: there is practically no liturgy worthy of the name today in the Catholic Church … Perhaps in no other area is there a greater distance (and even formal opposition) between what the Council worked out and what we actually have” (trans. C. U. Quinn [London: Sands & Co., 1970], 99). See also Religieux et clercs contre Dieu (Paris: Aubier Montaigne, 1975), 12. 
29 Cf. the preface written by Pope Benedict XVI in 2008 for the first volume of his collected works: “Zum Eröffnungsband meiner Schriften,” in Theologie der Liturgie: Die sakramentale Begründung christlicher Existenz (Freiburg im Breisgau: Herder, 2008), 5-8. An English translation by M. Sherry is available on http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/articolo/208933?eng=y (accessed on August 11, 2010). The English-language edition of this important work is being prepared by Ignatius Press


POPE BENEDICT XVI ON THE LITURGY

my source: Sandro Magister
Preface to the initial volume of my writings 

by Joseph Ratzinger 



Vatican Council II began its work with a discussion of the draft document on the sacred liturgy, which was later solemnly approved on December 4, 1963, as the first result of the great Church assembly, with the rank of constitution. At first glance, it might seem to be a coincidence that the topic of the liturgy was put first in the work of the council, and that the constitution on the liturgy was its first result. Pope John had convened the assembly of bishops in a decision that everyone shared in joyfully, in order to reinforce the presence of Christianity in an age of profound change, but without presenting a definite program. An extensive series of projects had been put in place by the preparatory commission. But there was no compass to find the way amid this abundance of proposals. Among all of the projects, the text on the sacred liturgy seemed to be the least controversial. So it immediately seemed to be the right choice: like a sort of exercise, so to speak, with which the fathers could learn the methods of conciliar work. 

What seems to be a coincidence at first glance turns out to be, after looking at the hierarchy of themes and tasks of the Church, intrinsically the most just thing as well. By beginning with the theme of "liturgy," the primacy of God, the priority of the "God" theme, was unequivocally brought to light. The first word of the first chapter in the constitution is "God." When the focus is not on God, everything else loses its orientation. The words of the Benedictine rule "Ergo nihil Operi Dei praeponatur" (43,3; "So let nothing be put before the Work of God") apply specifically to monasticism, but as a statement of priority they are also true for the life of the Church, and of each of its members, each in his own way. It is perhaps useful to recall that in the term "orthodoxy," the second half of the word, "doxa,"does not mean "opinion," but "splendor," "glorification": this is not a matter of a correct "opinion" about God, but of a proper way of glorifying him, of responding to him. Because this is the fundamental question of the man who begins to understand himself in the correct way: how should I encounter God? So learning the right way of adoration – of orthodoxy – is what is given to us above all by the faith. 

When I decided, after some hesitation, to accept the project of an edition of all of my works, it was immediately clear to me that the order of priorities at the Council also needed to be applied to it, and that therefore the first volume to be published had to be the one containing my writings on the liturgy. Ever since my childhood, the Church's liturgy has been the central activity of my life, and it also became, under the theological instruction of masters like Schmaus, Söhngen, Pascher, and Guardini, the center of my theological work. I chose fundamental theology as my specific topic, because I wanted above all to go to the heart of the question: why do we believe? But right from the beginning, this question included the other one about the proper response to to God, and therefore also the question about the divine service. It is on this basis that my work on the liturgy must be understood. I was not interested in the specific problems of liturgical study, but in the anchoring of the liturgy in the fundamental act of our faith, and therefore also its place in our entire human existence. 

This volume now collects all of my short and medium-length work in which over the years, on various occasions and from different perspectives, I have expressed positions on liturgical questions. After all of the contributions that came into being in this way, I was finally prompted to present a vision of the whole, which appeared in the jubilee year 2000 under the title "The Spirit of the Liturgy." This constitutes the central text of the book. 

Unfortunately, almost all of the reviews of this have been directed at a single chapter: "The altar and the direction of liturgical prayer." Readers of these reviews must have received the impression that the entire work dealt only with the orientation of the celebration, and that its contents could be reduced to the desire to reintroduce the celebration of the Mass "with [the priest's] back turned to the people." In consideration of this misrepresentation, I thought for a moment about eliminating the chapter (just nine pages out of two hundred) in order to bring the discussion back to the real issue that interested me, and continues to interest me, in the book. It would have been much easier to do this because in the meantime, two excellent works had been published in which the question of the orientation of prayer in the Church during the first millennium is clarified in a persuasive manner. I think first of all of the important, brief book by Uwe Michael Lang "Turning Towards the Lord: Orientation in Liturgical Prayer" (Ignatius Press, San Francisco, 2004), and in a special way of the tremendous contribution by Stefan Heid, "Atteggiamento ed orientamento della preghiera nella prima epoca cristiana [Attitude and orientation of prayer in the early Christian era]" (in "Rivista d’Archeologia Cristiana" 72, 2006), in which the sources and bibliography on this question have been extensively illustrated and updated. 

The result is entirely clear: the idea that the priest and people should look at each other in prayer emerged only in modern Christianity, and is completely foreign to ancient Christianity. Priest and people certainly do not pray to each other, but to the same Lord. So in prayer, they look in the same direction: either toward the East as the cosmic symbol of the Lord who is to come, or, where this is not possible, toward an image of Christ in the apse, toward a cross, or simply toward the sky, as the Lord did in his priestly prayer the evening before his Passion (John 17:1). Fortunately, the proposal that I made at the end of the chapter in question in my book is making headway: not to proceed with new transformations, but simply to place the cross at the center of the altar, so that both priest and faithful can look at it, in order to allow themselves to be drawn toward the Lord to whom all are praying together. 

But with this I may have said too much on this point, which represents just one particular of my book, and I could have left it out. The fundamental intention of the work is that of placing the liturgy above the often frivolous questions about this or that form, in its important relationship, which I have sought to describe in three areas that are present in all of the individual themes. In the first place, there is the intimate relationship between the Old and New Testament; without the relationship with the Old Testament heritage, the Christian liturgy is absolutely incomprehensible. The second area is the relationship with the world religions. And finally, there is a third area: the cosmic nature of the liturgy, which represents something beyond a simple meeting of a larger or smaller circle of human beings; the liturgy is celebrated within the vastness of the cosmos, it embraces creation and history at the same time. This is what was intended in the orientation of prayer: that the Redeemer to whom we pray is also the Creator, and so there always remains in the liturgy love for creation and responsibility toward it. I would be happy if this new edition of my liturgical writings could contribute to displaying the great perspectives of our liturgy, and putting certain frivolous controversies about external forms in the right place. 

Finally, and above all, I feel the need to express thanks. My thanks is due in the first place to Bishop Gerhard Ludwig Muller, who has taken charge of the "Opera Omnia" and has created both the personal and institutional conditions for its realization. In a very special way, I would like to thank Prof. Dr. Rudolf Voderholzer, who has invested extraordinary time and energy in gathering and organizing my writings. I also thank Dr. Christian Schaler, who is providing valuable assistance. Finally, my sincere thanks goes to the Herder publishing house, which has taken on the burden of this difficult and laborious work with great love and attentiveness. May all of this contribute to a deeper understanding of the liturgy, and its worthy celebration. "The joy of the Lord is our strength" (Nehemiah 8:10). 

Rome, feast of Saints Peter and Paul, June 29, 2008 

35 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ι think this is one of the mοѕt important information for me.
Αnd i'm glad reading your article. But want to remark on few general things, The site style is great, the articles is really excellent : D. Good job, cheers

Also visit my homepage garbage bins rental
my page :: garbage bins rental

Anonymous said...

Gooԁ day I am so happy I fоund your webpage, I гeally found you by аccident,
while I was browsing on Aѕkjeeve for something else, Anуωаys I
аm here noω and wοulԁ ϳust like to ѕay thаnk
you for a incredible post anԁ a all round еntertaining blοg (I
also love the theme/design), I don’t have time to brоwse it
all at the mοment but І have boοkmarked
it and аlѕo included your RSS feedѕ, so when I have time
I ωill bе back to read a lot more, Please ԁo κeер up the great b.


Here is my page; http://howtojumphigherfast.webs.com/

Anonymous said...

Hοwdy just wanted to give you a briеf heаds
up and let you know a few оf the pictures aren't loading properly. I'm not sure why but I think its a linking issue.
I've tried it in two different browsers and both show the same results.

Here is my web page :: ringing in ears treatment

Anonymous said...

When I orіgіnally commented I сlicked the "Notify me when new comments are added" checkbox and now eаch timе a cοmment
іs added І get thrеe e-mails with the
ѕаmе сomment. Is there any wаy yοu
can remove me fгom that sегviсe? Тhаnks a lot!


Stop by mу page ... pacific bikes girls 20
Also see my site > girls bike 20 inch sale

Anonymous said...

I just like the valuable info you provide for your articles.

I'll bookmark your blog and test once more here regularly. I'm quite sure I'll be told many new stuff right here! Good luck for the following!

Here is my webpage :: Dominga

Anonymous said...

Keep on writing, great job!

my page http://chatnmail.com/
Also see my website - Kris

Anonymous said...

Ηowdy would yоu mіnd letting me κnow which webhost yοu're working with? I've
loaԁeԁ your blog in 3 different inteгnet browsеrs and I must ѕay this blog
loads а lοt quiсkeг then most.
Can yоu recommеnd a good hοsting pгovider
at а reasonable prіce? Thank you, І aρprесiate it!


mу web site; adult electric scooters

Anonymous said...

Hello! Do you use Twitter? I'd like to follow you if that would be ok. I'm
definitely enjoying your blog and look forward to new posts.


Also visit my web site fruities

Anonymous said...

What a stuff of un-ambiguity and preserveness of precious know-how regarding unpredicted
feelings.

My web site - Lincoln

Anonymous said...

This is really interesting, You are a very skilled blogger.
I've joined your feed and look forward to seeking more of your magnificent post. Also, I've shared your website in my social networks!



Here is my webpage :: http://sekepat.com/Provillus-Baldness-Treatments-Offer-Natural-Hair-Growth-For-Less.htm

Anonymous said...

I'm extremely impressed with your writing skills as well as with the layout on your blog. Is this a paid theme or did you modify it yourself? Either way keep up the excellent quality writing, it's rare to see a great blog like this one today.


Also visit my blog :: Hoidtreatment.webs.com
Also see my site - Kingbio hemorrhoid relief

Anonymous said...

This is a topic that is close to my heart..
. Best wishes! Exactly where are your contact details though?


Here is my blog; http://bozooble.com/index.php?do=/profile-12906/info/

Anonymous said...

Hmm is anyone else having problems with the pictures on this blog loading?
I'm trying to determine if its a problem on my end or if it's the blog.
Any responses would be greatly appreciated.

Feel free to surf to my blog post :: Bridgett

Anonymous said...

Hey! I know this is kind of off topic but I was wondering if you knew where I
could find a captcha plugin for my comment form?
I'm using the same blog platform as yours and I'm
having trouble finding one? Thanks a lot!

my webpage - http://jacquesschneider.webs.com/apps/blog/show/20963568-basics-of-farouk-chi-flat-irons

Anonymous said...

Hi everyone, it's my first visit at this site, and post is truly fruitful designed for me, keep up posting these types of articles or reviews.

Feel free to visit my web-site ... Kingbio hemorrhoid relief

Anonymous said...

I constantly emailed this website post page to all my friends, since if like to read it
after that my links will too.

Check out my webpage: www.socialswager.com

Anonymous said...

I love what you guys tend to be up too. This kind of clever work and exposure!
Keep up the good works guys I've you guys to blogroll.

Feel free to surf to my blog - Provillus

Anonymous said...

Hello to every body, it's my first pay a quick visit of this web site; this weblog includes awesome and truly good information for visitors.

Stop by my blog http://Hemorrhoidtreatmentreviews.webs.com/apps/blog/show/3388034-h-miracle-review-the-hemorrhoids-solution-

Anonymous said...

You really make it seem so easy along with your presentation
however I in finding this matter to be really something that I
think I might by no means understand. It seems too complicated and
very huge for me. I am having a look forward on your subsequent publish, I will attempt to
get the hang of it!

Review my homepage; dwayne
Also see my web site: Nannie

Anonymous said...

Keep on working, great job!

Take a look at my blog post ... Ivan

Anonymous said...

Hi I am so glad I found your site, I really found you by error, while I was looking on Google for something else, Regardless I am here now and would just like to
say cheers for a incredible post and a all round exciting blog (I also love the theme/design), I
don't have time to go through it all at the minute but I have saved it and also added in your RSS feeds, so when I have time I will be back to read much more, Please do keep up the great work.

Here is my web blog ... digial bathroom scale

Anonymous said...

The thing you hаѵe written in "RESOURCING BENEDICT XVI'S THE SPIRIT OF THE LITURGY by Uwe Michael Lang" ωill not
be just great but actually more or less impoгtant.
Ι know mаny ρeоple don't really give some thought to viewed as. But since you are simply like me then have dealt with losing weight or dependency or lots of the things in fact can mull over I are more inclined to appreciate what I read because it really is the particular method to gain in knowledge without actually doing a things. For any reason I enjoy reading through other peoples aspects of vistas and experience.

Feel free to visit my webpage - 5htp.org

Anonymous said...

Excellent post. I used to be checking constantly this blog and I am impressed!
Very useful info specifically the ultimate
phase :) I maintain such information a lot. I used to be seeking this certain
info for a long time. Thank you and best of luck.


Here is my homepage :: petghar.com

Anonymous said...

This is easy and doesn't cost the clicker money but the problem is getting these individuals together. An experienced service provider from the industry can anly assist you buy Facebook fans and likes that would be real and active Facebook users. This is the reason why most of organizations are now being into contact with social networking solution providers.

my homepage http://socialbears.com/facebook-fans/

Anonymous said...

Hi there! This post could not be written any better! Looking at this article reminds me of my previous roommate!
He continually kept talking about this. I am going to send this information to him.
Pretty sure he will have a good read. Many thanks
for sharing!

Take a look at my weblog :: Buy Provillus

Anonymous said...

I am genuinely grateful to the owner of this web site who has shared this fantastic piece of writing at at
this time.

Here is my web blog; http://freearticlesitesonline.co.uk/Products-For-Hair-Regrowth.htm

Anonymous said...

Hello there! I simply would like to offer you a big thumbs up for your great info you have here on this post.
I will be returning to your website for more soon.


Also visit my page Meanskreenz.us

Anonymous said...

Fantastic blog! Dο you have anу rеcommendаtions for asρіring ωriteгs?
I'm hoping to start my own website soon but I'm a little lost on eѵeгythіng.
Wоuld you suggеst ѕtarting with a
fгee platfоrm like Wοrdpress or go for a ρаіԁ оptіon?

Τhеre arе so many oρtions out
therе that I'm totally overwhelmed .. Any recommendations? Bless you!

my site :: Sendetiklat.Net

Anonymous said...

The Lіeutenant swore than іn memorу of the mixeԁ drinκ, it ωoulԁ foг good be regarded
in the military as a 'cock'ѕ taіl'. Sitting there on your counter, it rarely appears to be like capable of these wonders, but the first timers and the seasoned cooks alike will relish introducing that classic taste to their most desired dishes. Stir in onions, celery, chopped yellow bell pepper and cook dinner until tender.

my weblog - old stone oven pizza stone instructions

Anonymous said...

There are many sources to choose from that can offer simple solutions
to the problems you are experiencing with your canine.
The truth is this isn't aversion education. 435-896-1737 Annabella, Utah Trainers: Chris and Julie Holt.

Look at my web page - bird dog training advice

Anonymous said...

It's perfect time to make some plans for the future and it is time to be happy. I've learn this submit
and if I could I desire to recommend you some interesting issues
or suggestions. Maybe you could write subsequent articles relating to this
article. I desire to learn more issues about it!

My website: bathroom design

Anonymous said...

D Minor:. Now among the advice of your educational materials,
shoring jar discover all the things of the substitute chords.
These hail every little thing played getting rid of barely
the sophisticated keys, so you ought to keep effective toward
crush extra listed below barely a limited area of time.

my web site: piano chords And keys

Anonymous said...

In this article I will teach you the basics of how to have fun learning your
chords by playing out of a Fake Book. -- Notes: Bb D F.
It is very soothing to hear the sound of piano and based on such vast change of scales, a song sounds so melodious.


Visit my web blog piano chords and notes chart

Anonymous said...

One thing that you should practice, and the only
time that I believe you will dump your kayak will be when exiting
and re-entering the boat. They can be found online as well as in many
kayak shops across the country and in sporting good stores.
Most websites are filled with information regarding various boats for sale with cost
details, manufacture date, manufacturer's name as well as pictures uploaded of various makes for a more detailed approach to sales.

My webpage baseball

Anonymous said...

It's going to be ending of mine day, but before ending I am reading this wonderful article to increase my experience.

my webpage: http://www.sixteam.ch/index.php?option=com_easygb&Itemid=43&limit=30&gsa=30

Search This Blog

La Virgen de Guadalupe

La Virgen de Guadalupe

Followers

My Blog List

Fr David Bird

Fr David Bird
Me on a good day

Blog Archive