The Byzantine Forum
Newest Members
Fr. Abraham, AnonymousMan115, violet7488, HopefulOlivia, Quid Est Veritas
6,181 Registered Users
Who's Online Now
0 members (), 1,916 guests, and 144 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Latest Photos
St. Sharbel Maronite Mission El Paso
St. Sharbel Maronite Mission El Paso
by orthodoxsinner2, September 30
Holy Saturday from Kirkland Lake
Holy Saturday from Kirkland Lake
by Veronica.H, April 24
Byzantine Catholic Outreach of Iowa
Exterior of Holy Angels Byzantine Catholic Parish
Church of St Cyril of Turau & All Patron Saints of Belarus
Forum Statistics
Forums26
Topics35,529
Posts417,658
Members6,181
Most Online4,112
Mar 25th, 2025
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 55
1
Member
Member
1 Offline
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 55
Adoremus Bulletin Online Edition -
July - August 2007
Vol. XIII, No. 5

Bishop Laments Loss of Sacred
Accurate Translations "will not disturb our faith. They will build it up".


by Helen Hull Hitchcock

Bishop Arthur Serratelli, chairman-elect of the US Bishops� Committee on the Liturgy (BCL), recently wrote a column lamenting the loss of the sacred in the Church today, and how this has diminished Catholic belief and worship.

�The anti-authoritarian prejudice that we have inherited from the social revolution of the �60s imprinted on many a deep mistrust not only of government but of Church�, he observed. �Some even reject the very idea of hierarchy (literally, �a sacred origin�) as a spiritual authority established by God. As a result, Church means, for some, simply the assembly of like-minded believers who organize themselves and make their own rules and dogmas. Thus, the Church�s role in the spiritual realm is greatly eclipsed�.

Bishop Serratelli will succeed Erie Bishop Donald Trautman as chairman of the BCL following the November 2007 bishops� meeting. He also heads the ad hoc Committee for the Review of Scripture Translations, and is former chairman of the Committee on Doctrine, of which he is still a member. He was ordained to the priesthood in Rome in 1968, and holds degrees in Scripture from the Pontifical Biblical Institute and in theology from the Gregorian University. He has taught theology, Scripture and biblical languages in several seminaries before he became auxiliary bishop of Newark in 2000, and bishop of Paterson in 2004.

Bishop Serratelli�s column, �Loss of the Sacred�, is the first of a four-part series on this topic, and is posted on the diocese of Paterson web site (http://www.patersondiocese.org/article.cfm?Web_ID=2224).

His comments are, logically, focused principally on the Mass, and he notes the loss of understanding of the sacrificial meaning of the Mass.

�Living in our world, we breathe the toxic air that surrounds us�, Bishop Serratelli writes. �Even within the most sacred precincts of the Church, we witness a loss of the sense of the sacred. With the enthusiasm that followed the Second Vatican Council, there was a well-intentioned effort to make the liturgy modern. It became commonplace to say that the liturgy had to be relevant to the worshipper. Old songs were jettisoned. The guitar replaced the organ. Some priests even began to walk down the road of liturgical innovation, only to discover it was a dead end. And all the while, the awareness of entering into something sacred that has been given to us from above and draws us out of ourselves and into the mystery of God was gone.�

He summarizes what happened: �Teaching about the Mass began to emphasize the community. The Mass was seen as a community meal. It was something everyone did together. Lost was the notion of sacrifice. Lost the awesome mystery of the Eucharist as Christ�s sacrifice on the cross. The priest was no longer seen as specially consecrated. He was no different than the laity. With all of this, a profound loss of the sacred�.

The impact of this loss persists, Bishop Serratelli stresses:

�Not one factor can account for the decline in Mass attendance, Church marriages, baptisms and funerals in the last years. But most certainly, the loss of the sense of the sacred has had a major impact.

�Walk into any church today before Mass and you will notice that the silence that should embrace those who stand in God�s House is gone. Even the Church is no longer a sacred place. Gathering for Mass sometimes becomes as noisy as gathering for any other social event .

�We may not have the ability to do much about the loss of the sacredness of life in the songs, videos and movies of our day�, Bishop Serratelli writes. �But, most assuredly, we can do much about helping one another recover the sacredness of God�s Presence in His Church�.

Translation and de-sacralization
How did the method of liturgical translation in use after the Council contribute to this loss of the sacred?

Last year, after the bishops had discussed the translations of the new Order of Mass at their June 2006 meeting in Los Angeles, Bishop Serratelli wrote two columns on the new ICEL translations. He noted the �differences� among bishops in these matters, noting that �[w]hen it comes to a question about the liturgy, the bishops are always passionately engaged�, and that all the bishops recognize that the liturgy �deserves great concern and attention�.

The words of the liturgy, the bishop pointed out, �are not expressions of one individual in one particular place at one time in history. The words used in liturgy also pass on the faith of the Church from one generation to the next. This is why the bishops take seriously their responsibility to provide for the faithful the translations of liturgical texts that are accurate and inspiring�.

(Bishop Serratelli�s columns on the new Mass translation, �Changes in the Liturgy: Why the Changes?�, and �Changes in the Liturgy: New Words, Deeper Faith�, are archived and available on the Paterson diocesan web site: http://www.patersondiocese.org ).

�Dynamic Equivalency� Deficient
Noting the importance the Second Vatican Council ascribed to the liturgy, and that the use of vernacular languages was meant to facilitate the understanding of the people, Bishop Serratelli described the approach of �dynamic equivalency�, and its deficiencies:

�In the enthusiasm of the aggiornmento [updating], translators set to work to produce translations that expressed the Latin in modes of expression appropriate to the various vernacular languages�, he explains.

From 1969 until 2001, the document Comme le Pr�voit granted translators wide latitude in translations for the liturgy. Rather quickly in the English-speaking world, translators adopted dynamic equivalency as their approach to the texts. Simply stated, dynamic equivalency translates the concepts and ideas of a text, but not necessarily the literal words or expressions. The principle of making the text accessible to the listener outweighs other considerations. As a result, the theological richness of the original texts can be lost and our liturgical prayer impoverished.

Liturgium authenticam addresses this impoverishment, Bishop Serratelli wrote:

In light of the experience in the last 36 years, the Church has revisited the question of translation. Many people had noticed the deficiency of dynamic equivalency. In fact, the man who originally proposed this theory himself abandoned it. [Eugene Nida, head of the American Bible Society. � Editor] In 2001, the Holy See issued Liturgiam authenticam, a new document to guide all new translations, both of the Scriptures and of liturgical texts.

This new document espouses the theory of formal equivalency. Not just concepts, but words and expression are to be translated faithfully. This approach respects the wealth contained in the original text. In fact, the new instruction has as its stated purpose something wider than translation. It �envisions and seeks to prepare for a new era of liturgical renewal, which is consonant with the qualities and the traditions of the particular Churches, but which safeguards also the faith and the unity of the whole Church of God� (Liturgiam authenticam 7).

A �Catechetical Moment�
This change in method of translation as employed by the new ICEL translators will mean changes for us, in the words we say (and hear) at Mass. Some have claimed that this will unduly disturb �John and Mary Catholic�. But Bishop Serratelli, perhaps anticipating such claims, is reassuring. �The changes�, he writes, �will not disturb our faith. They will build it up�.

�The new Order of the Mass is a catechetical moment for all of us to understand more deeply the faith we express in our prayer. Lex orandi, lex credendi. The Law of prayer is the Law of belief�, the bishop reminds us, and he gives several examples to �help us to understand why we will be using new words at Mass and why this will be an improvement over our present texts�. Here are two of the four examples he gives:

First, the new translation corrects our present texts that do not follow the style and syntax of the Latin original. Thus, the order of the Gloria at the beginning of Mass will change to be more accurate in word order and style. The beginning of the first Eucharistic prayer will also change. It will now begin with direct address first to God, focusing our hearts on Him and not, as the present text begins, focusing on ourselves.

Second, the new translation is more faithful to the Scriptural allusions found within the Latin. In the third Eucharistic prayer, the words we now say, �so that from east to west a perfect offering may be made to the glory of your name,� will become �so that from the rising of the sun to its setting a pure sacrifice may be offered to your name.� Those who use dynamic equivalency as the principle of translation say that �from east to west� means the same as �from the rising of the sun to its setting.� It does in the sterile language of giving directions. But there is more here than mere direction. The new translation is more faithful to Scripture because it is more literal. The words are taken straight from Malachi 1:11. How powerful it is to use God�s own words to us in prayer back to God! Furthermore, the sacred text itself is much more poetic. It evokes the beauty of sunrise and sunset that speak of the majesty of God.

The increased accuracy, he wrote, �opens us up to the theological density of the Liturgy�. And he pointed out that sometimes our language at Mass �can mimic our attitudes in dress and become less fitting for the house of God. The new language will help remind us that we are in the presence of the All-Holy God who stoops to love us in Christ.�

When we begin to use the new text, Bishop Serratelli said, �we will notice and experience in so many ways the rich patrimony of faith that is celebrated in Liturgy. And we will do so in a language worthy of worshipping God.�

He points out that �[e]xperts in theology, liturgy and linguistics have collaborated with the bishops in producing the new translation of the Order of the Mass�.

The bishop assures us: �The time is right. The need clear. The work warranted�

Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 55
1
Member
Member
1 Offline
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 55
The Loss of the Sacred

In the 17th century, Descartes, the father of modern philosophy, rejected the philosophical traditions of Aristotle and the Scholastics. For Descartes, the very fact that we think is the proof that we exist. Cogito, ergo sum. I think, therefore I am. He rejected the use of his senses as the basis for knowledge. In so doing, he wounded the unity between mind and body found in classical philosophy. Over the course of time, the wound has widened. The spiritual and the material have drifted apart. The sacred and the secular clearly divided.

Besides modern philosophy, other factors have contributed to the separation of the sacred from the secular. The scientific manipulation of human life in test tubes has lessened the respect for life itself. Life is no longer, for some, a sacred gift from God. Likewise, the divorce of human sexuality from procreation, coupled with the continual campaign to redefine marriage has helped to push God out of the intimacies of human life. Marriage is no longer recognized as a sacred institution given by God for a man and woman to join with Him in bringing new life into the world. The sacredness of even the natural order as coming from the hands of an all-wise God is thus lost.

The anti-authoritarian prejudice that we have inherited from the social revolution of the '60�s imprinted on many a deep mistrust not only of government but of Church. Some even reject the very idea of hierarchy (literally, �a sacred origin�) as a spiritual authority established by God. As a result, Church means, for some, simply the assembly of like-minded believers who organize themselves and make their own rules and dogmas. Thus, the Church�s role in the spiritual realm is greatly eclipsed.

On the first day of the new millennium, Prince Charles of England said, "In an age of secularism, I hope, with all my heart, in a new millennium we will rediscover a sense of the sacred in all that surrounds us." He said he hoped this would hold true whether in growing crops, raising livestock, building homes in the countryside, treating disease or educating the young. He recognized by his statement that we have lost a sense of the sacred.

Living in our world, we breathe the toxic air that surrounds us. Even within the most sacred precincts of the Church, we witness a loss of the sense of the sacred. With the enthusiasm that followed the Second Vatican Council, there was a well-intentioned effort to make the liturgy modern. It became commonplace to say that the liturgy had to be relevant to the worshipper. Old songs were jettisoned. The guitar replaced the organ. Some priests even began to walk down the road of liturgical innovation, only to discover it was a dead end. And all the while, the awareness of entering into something sacred that has been given to us from above and draws us out of ourselves and into the mystery of God was gone.

Teaching about the Mass began to emphasize the community. The Mass was seen as a community meal. It was something everyone did together. Lost was the notion of sacrifice. Lost the awesome mystery of the Eucharist as Christ�s sacrifice on the cross. The priest was no longer seen as specially consecrated. He was no different than the laity. With all of this, a profound loss of the sacred.

Not one factor can account for the decline in Mass attendance, Church marriages, baptisms and funerals in the last years. But most certainly, the loss of the sense of the sacred has had a major impact.

Walk into any church today before Mass and you will notice that the silence that should embrace those who stand in God�s House is gone. Even the Church is no longer a sacred place. Gathering for Mass sometimes becomes as noisy as gathering for any other social event. We may not have the ability to do much about the loss of the sacredness of life in the songs, videos and movies of our day. But, most assuredly, we can do much about helping one another recover the sacredness of God�s Presence in His Church.

On the first day of this millennium, the Prince of Wales struck a strong note of optimism for the recovery of the sacred. Paraphrasing Dante, he remarked: "The strongest desire of everything, and the one first implanted by nature, is to return to its source. And since God is the source of our souls and has made it alike unto Himself, therefore this soul desires above all things to return to Him." There is one place where we can begin to rediscover the sacred.

To be continued�..

This is the first of a series of four articles that will explore the loss and the recovery of the sense of the sacred in Catholic life.

Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 55
1
Member
Member
1 Offline
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 55
The Recovery of the Sacred

The Dutch historian and philosopher of religion Gerardus van der Leeuw once said, �The modern man is not capable of finding himself in several circles simultaneously as his primitive cousins did. �When we dance, we do not pray; when we pray, we do not dance. And when we work, we can neither dance nor pray.�� In a word, the sense of the sacred has disappeared. But not completely nor irretrievably.

The Liturgy of the Church is a moment where all the dimensions of our lives come before the living God. It is the place where we have an active encounter with God. It is the place, therefore, where we can rediscover the sacred in our lives.

The Second Vatican Council began the liturgical reform with the hope of reinvigorating this sense of the Presence of God who comes to meet us in love. Two generations after the Council, we are still searching for a deeper sense of the sacred in our Liturgy. We now realize some of the ways in which this can be accomplished. It is good to look at a few of these.

Certain settings demand their own particular etiquette. Dress at a wedding reception differs from dress at a sports event. Conversation in a bar is louder than in a funeral home. The more we realize we are coming into the Presence of God in Church, the more respectful and reverent our whole person becomes. Chewing gum in Church, loud talking, beach attire and immodest dress simply do not belong!

In church, we need to cultivate a sense of God who is present to us. This is why we are called to observe moments of silence. Both before Mass begins and during Mass. Liturgy is much more than our joining together. It is our opening ourselves to God. By our singing and praying, we respond to the God who addresses us in Liturgy. A constant torrent of words and songs filling every empty space in the Liturgy does not leave the heart the space it needs to rest quietly in the Divine Presence.

In the Annunciation, after the angel announces to Mary that she is to be the Mother of the Lord and Mary gives her fiat, there is silence (cf. Lk 1:38). In this pregnant silence, that Word becomes flesh. Mary remains the model of the disciple before the Word of God. She reminds us that we need moments of silence for God to enter our life. We need those moments in our personal prayer and in the Liturgy.

In the Liturgy recorded in the last book of the New Testament, in the Book of Revelation, the word proskynein (to bow) is used twenty-four times -- more than in any other part of the New Testament. John, the author of the Book of Revelation, presents this heavenly Liturgy as the model and standard for the Church�s Liturgy on earth. Our body bowed in prayer acknowledges the Lord�s majesty. It visibly confesses our belonging to God who is the Lord of all. Here is a strong reminder of the place of body in Liturgy.

We are not just spirit when we pray. We pray in our total reality as body and spirit. And so, to recapture the sense of the sacred, therefore, we need to express our reverence through our body language. The norms of the Liturgy wisely have us stand in prayer at certain moments, sit in attentive listening to the readings, and kneel in reverent adoration during the solemn prayer of consecration. These norms are not arbitrary nor are they left to the discretion of any individual celebrant.

Creativity is not an authentic rule for celebrating the Church�s Liturgy. In many cases, it humanizes the Liturgy and draws attention from God to the celebrant. The priest is merely the servant of the Liturgy, not its creator or center.

Commenting on this, Cardinal Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, said: �The great�ness of the Liturgy depends�we shall have to repeat this frequently�on its unspontaneity (Unbeliebigkeit)�. Only respect for the Liturgy�s fundamental unspontaneity and pre-existing identity can give us what we hope for: the feast in which the great reality comes to us that we ourselves do not manufacture but receive as a gift (Ratzinger, The Spirit of the Liturgy, p. 170). Since the Liturgy is a gift and not something of our own creation, it takes great humility to celebrate the Liturgy properly and reverently.

Observing the norms of the Liturgy helps to create a profound sense of the sacred in each of us at Mass. Celebrating Mass and observing liturgical norms also makes us visibly one with the entire Church to which we belong. �Priests who faithfully celebrate Mass according to the liturgical norms, and communities which conform to those norms, quietly but eloquently demonstrate their love for the Church� (Ecclesia de Eucharistia, 52).

Today it has become commonplace at the end of the Liturgy to recite a litany of gratitude for all those who, in some way or another, have made the celebration beautiful. No doubt there is a way to express gratitude at the end of Mass. But is it possible that each time applause breaks out in the Liturgy at the end of the Mass for someone�s contribution, we lapse into seeing the Mass as a human achievement? Sometimes even during the Mass after someone has sung a beautiful hymn, there is spontaneous applause. At such a moment, does not the real meaning of Liturgy lapse into some kind human entertainment?

We can recapture more and more the sense of the sacred, the more we allow the Liturgy to be what it is. A gift from God that allows God to speak and act in our life. A gift that draws us out of ourselves and out of time into the eternal life of God even now.

To be continued


Link Copied to Clipboard
The Byzantine Forum provides message boards for discussions focusing on Eastern Christianity (though discussions of other topics are welcome). The views expressed herein are those of the participants and may or may not reflect the teachings of the Byzantine Catholic or any other Church. The Byzantine Forum and the www.byzcath.org site exist to help build up the Church but are unofficial, have no connection with any Church entity, and should not be looked to as a source for official information for any Church. All posts become property of byzcath.org. Contents copyright - 1996-2024 (Forum 1998-2024). All rights reserved.
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 8.0.0