21 October 2008

RCIA 10/21/2008

As some of you may or may not know, I am currently sponsoring my friend during his RCIA. Today the topic of the session was the procession/order of mass. When the priest got through his whole spiel, I figured it would be a good time for me to ask a nagging question I had about this particular church. This church has their tabernacle located in a side room at the back of the church. As most Catholics know, the tabernacle is customarily placed in the front of the church, primarily behind the center of the altar.

So I asked him why the tabernacle in his church was not on the alter. The following is pretty much exactly what he said. He launched into his explanation that prior to the middle ages there was no such thing as a tabernacle. Instead the church would receive their hosts/communion prior to mass and then use it all during the mass. Apparently during the Enlightenment (or something) less people were able to receive communion because they were in states of sin. But they figured that if they couldnt receive the Eucharist they wanted to at least see its presence. So they placed the host in the center of the altar and this is where Eucharistic adoration originates (and the concept of a tabernacle which is where the host was kept).

Well, Vatican II came around and the counsel evidently wanted to go back to the way things were originally. [Which makes no sense to me because Vatican II seems to be a time when we broke from many of our traditions.] So they wanted to do away with the tabernacle. But that was considered controversial because people had grown accustomed to Eucharistic adoration, so the idea was to compromise....remove the tabernacle from the altar and have a separate chapel devoted to Eucharistic adoration. [Which is what this church has opted to do.]

The priest then said it's still a topic for discussion. Recently his parish was host to a local archbishop. The archbishop asked the priest where was the tabernacle and the priest pointed to the back. The archbishop then shook his head and said that the tabernacle should be in the center of the altar. The priest then said it would cost alot of money to make that renovation, which is what is primarily holding them back from doing so.
He then went on to talk about restructuring of churches, which seems to be common in many churches nowadays. He said many churches are going in favor of moving the altar directly in the center of the church since the sacrifice and Word are central themes. They are also in favor of making larger baptismal fonts which you should be able to hear the water flowing in. He thought his church, if they remodeled, would move in that direction and that the tabernacle would go on the altar then. I asked if this model would be similar to the renovation of the Cathedral in Milwaukee. He said yeah but that a better example would be the new Cathedral in Los Angeles. (Don't know what that looks like.)



Milwaukee Pre-Renovation










Milwaukee Post-Renovation






3 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I urge you, in the strongest possible fashion, to find a more orthodox parish and see if he is willing to enter the RCIA program there. It will be well worth it for him and you will learn more about your religion as well. At the very least, make sure that he is learning more than the "God loves us, just do the best you can" stuff that he is probably getting where you are currently enrolled. If he is going to be a Catholic, let him learn what it REALLY MEANS to be a Catholic. That there is truth and it resides in the Catholic Church. That you can't pick and choose (that's the heretics path). That there is objective sin. That the path to heaven is narrow and goes through the eye of a needle. Otherwise, there is no point in converting.

2:21 PM  
Blogger SockrBarbii said...

Why can't I follow your blog, cheechie? GOSH! I got an account on this particular website so I could follow both of my sis's blogs and now I'm running across two problemos:
1) You never update and I can't follow your blog.
2) Glitter Girl quit and moved to tumblr.
Thanks, guys.

11:43 PM  
Anonymous Bob R said...

From the Daily Catholic circa 1999:

The Tabernacle
Probably no factor is more disconcerting to loyal and devout Catholics than the placement and kind of the Tabernacle in the church. We can't count the number of times we've entered a church not knowing which way to genuflect. Searching in vain for a sanctuary lamp so we can identify where Our Lord resides, if indeed He is truly there al all! If a sanctuary lamp is not lit, He is most likely not there. There are, unfortunately, many churches where this might be the case because of the insignificance the pastors and liturgical commissions give to the reservation of the Blessed Sacrament. Only God knows for sure, but it is disheartening when one desires to visit Jesus. At times the Tabernacle is way off to the side, or behind a wall, or in the back “out of the way” or in another building altogether.
Without editorializing too much, the practice of “hiding” the Tabernacle is probably one of the greatest violations that evolved from Vatican II. Canon Law states: Paragraph 1 “The Most Holy Eucharist is to be reserved regularly in only one tabernacle of a church or oratory.” Paragraph 2 states “The Tabernacle in which the Most Holy Eucharist is reserved should be placed in a part of the church that is prominent, conspicuous, beautifully decorated, and suitable for prayer. Paragraph 3 goes on to say “The Tabernacle in which the Eucharist is regularly reserved is to be immovable made of solid and opaque material, and locked so that the danger of profanation may be entirely avoided. “ (Can. 938).

The words “prominent, conspicuous, beautifully decorated and suitable for prayer” evidently mean something else to many of these modern day liturgical commissions for a back room is not prominent. The word “prominent” means “well-known; eminent” and is derived from the Latin prominent which means “to project” in other words, to stick out, to stand out, to be prominent and conspicuous. Again, the Document on the Sacred Liturgy by Vatican II says: “The Blessed Sacrament should be reserved in a solid, inviolable Tabernacle in the middle of the main altar or on a side altar, but in a truly prominent place.” In newer churches, too often the Tabernacle is an afterthought with more emphasis placed on the organ, or baptismal pool, or abstract architectural structure that remind one of a gymnasium or music hall…anything but a reverent home for the Highest of highs. This is disconcerting to Catholics who live their Faith for they realize the Tabernacle is the Heart of the church, for day and night it houses the Sacred Heart of Jesus Himself. Consider how eager we are to give the best we can and show respect to our earthly guests; then how much more concerned we should be to furnish a suitable dwelling place for our Divine Guest the Redeemer, the Incarnate Son of God.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church states on page 306, #1183:: “The Tabernacle is to be situated “in churches in a most worthy place with the greatest honor.” This is a direct quote from Pope Paul VI’s Mysterium Fidei (AAS, 1965). The Catechism goes on to reinforce, “The dignity, placing, and security of the Eucharistic Tabernacle should foster adoration before the Lord really present in the Blessed Sacrament of the altar.” On page 348, #1379 the Catechism asserts: “The Tabernacle was first intended for the reservation of the Eucharistic in a worthy place so that it could be brought to the sick and those absent, outside the Mass. As faith in the real presence of Christ in His Eucharist deepened, the Church became conscious of the meaning of silent adoration of the Lord present under the Eucharistic services. It is for this reason that the Tabernacle should be located in an especially worthy place in the church and should be constructed in such a way that it emphasizes and manifests the truth of the real presence of Christ in the Blessed Sacrament.

We've heard from all authorities on the prominence the Tabernacle should be given, yet many disregard or misinterpret these directives to suit their own purpose or search out loopholes to justify their actions in hiding the Tabernacles where it “wont distract the people!” No wonder our Lord is upset at how He is treated in our day!” `Though it is not the common practice today, up until Vatican II every Tabernacle was covered with a veil when the Blessed Sacrament was present within; the color of the veil being either white or the color to match the liturgical season. It recalls the origin of Tabernacle which is gleaned from the Hebrew word taberna for “tent”. A tent or curtain covered the Ark of the Covenant.

2:46 PM  

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