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March 12, 2007
Beautiful
Fr. Dwight Longenecker on 40 Hours in his parish:
To the outsider I know this seems arcane, irrelevant and difficult to understand. To many Catholics it seems the same. They wonder why worship cannot be more 'relevant' and more easy to understand. Perhaps they wonder why the worship cannot be more joyful, more upbeat and more 'with it'. I cannot explain.
I cannot explain in the way I cannot explain a Mozart aria, a Beethoven quartet or a Raphael Madonna. I cannot explain the lift and surge of liturgy as I cannot explain the heft of a poem or the fullness of the silence in the rest of music. I cannot explain the transcendence of beauty,the knowledge of eternity electric in the frail physical things. I cannot explain the connection with the infinite in the interstices of the psalms, the intimacy of goodness in the rapt face of a child in worship, the contact with reality in the smoke of incense, the deep rumble of the organ, the delicate dance of light or the poignant harmony of plainsong. I cannot explain the certainty of sanctity known in the wrinkled hands of an old woman in prayer, or the certainty of grace in a teenaged boy kneeling in silence--a smile of joy impressed upon his face as if by an unseen power.
I cannot explain any of these things, but I can invite you to the feast.
Posted by Amy Welborn | Permalink
Comments
I've been away from Amy's Blog for a while, but I don't know if this post from Longenecker was mentioned recently (it's a couple weeks old)
Learning from the Liturgy: http://gkupsidedown.blogspot.com/2007/02/learning-from-our-mistakes.html
While reading about this beautiful description of what Mass "should be" (to the liturgical "purists"), read up on Longenecker's thoughts on what to do when Mass isn't perfect.
And note the quote from Tolkien about how people SHOULD go to services (every once in a while) that offend their liturgical styles. He says it much more beautifully... so I won't destroy it by paraphrasing it here.
Posted by: Bill at Mar 12, 2007 6:32:29 PM
Amy, sorry to be totally OT here, but ... Chris Johnson has you and "Dale and Heather Price, .. and Michael ... and Captain Yips" in a major new adventure, and ... Welborn downed a triple vodka without so much as blinking.
This is going to be FUN!
Posted by: PMcGrath at Mar 12, 2007 9:55:13 PM
I've been giving some thought to the phenomenology of the "holy hour." As far as I've gotten is this: it takes that long to do what you came there to do. For me, it takes 20 minutes to stop fussing interiorly about the same things I've been fussing about all day/ week/ year. Then it takes a few minutes to find a good thing to do. Is it a good day for a rosary? A meditation on the motherhood of Mary? Scripture reading? What to do? Then to do it. After maybe 10 minutes of meditative prayer, I'm finally ready to gaze on the Lord and be part of that mutual offering.
A half hour just isn't enough, at least not for me. The first half hour never gets past my petty concerns. So you never get to the best part. It's like eating so many appetizers that you never eat the roast beef.
Posted by: Ephrem at Mar 12, 2007 10:23:50 PM
I had seen Dwight Longenecker on the Journey Home with Marcus Grodi quite some time ago before he was became a priest and was moved by his love for Christ. It does not surprise me to read how beautifully he describes his love for Our Lord in Adoration. We are very blessed to have these priests who promote this Devotion. God bless Father Longenecker!
Posted by: Brian John Schuettler at Mar 13, 2007 9:28:56 AM



















