THESIS NO.19
Worship as an expression of faith is
an integral part of religion. The basic
elements of worship are common to the various religions in india. The Second Vatican Council (SC 5-8)
understands liturgy as a symbolic celebration of the Paschal Mystery by the
Church. The different Churches express
in their liturgies the richness of the incarnational experience.
PART I: ROLE OF WORSHIP IN HUMAN LIFE
INTRODUCTION
At the centre of the life of the
Christian disciple and of the community of disciples (the Church) and at the
heart of Christian and Catholic
spirituality is worship, a comprehensive and complex term that
encompasses liturgical and non-liturgical prayer. Worship is variously defined. It is understood here as an act of reverence
and honor shown to God. Worship
(worth-ship) gives God what God is due or "worth". It may be expressed informal prayer
(liturgical and nonliturgical, communal and private), or in the ordinary deeds
of everyday human life that flow from an inner attitude of reverence and honor
for God. Christian worship is rooted in Jesus Christ, who alone gives God the
fullness of reverence and honor. The
highest expression of Christian worship is the Eucharist.
Raymond Panikkar says `only worship
can prevent secularization becoming inhuman and only secularization can save
worship being meaningless.' The values of humanity are conveyed through liturgy
or worship. The secular values are
conveyed through liturgy or worship - it is kept by the religious mind. The
worship and secularization are contributing to each other.
The Notion of
Worship
Etymology: WORTHSHIP = respect
and reverence towards the reality of worth or value.
Meaning: WORSHIP = Expression of
belief
Belief refers to our faith commitment
and in this sense worship means external manifestation of the interior faith.
It is a human action - which manifests something and also it is a symbolic
action as it symbolizes what is going inside; and it becomes transcendental
action which goes beyond. Man's religious impulse moves him to attempt to
respond to this divine reality. This
response is called worship. Worship will have many diverse forms, progressing
from the near magic rites of primitive peoples, to the liturgy of Christian and
Hindus, to the contemplation of the Buddhists Nirvana. Despite such differences, we may essay a
common social science definition or description of worship; the definitive core
of all religious tradition, institution, and activity. From worship, all religious life and forms
flows as from their source; for worship is the attempt of religious man to hold
fast in continuing vitality and availity that power-worth experienced at
moments of high and intense awareness.
Worship as source of Religious Tradition
From the rather expansive definition
given above, it is clear that worship constitutes an essential part of
religion. Throughout history, humankind attempted to contact God, especially in
ritual celebrations that often included dramatic recitals of divine intervention on humanity's behalf. These intervention in turn were recounted
from generation to generation in the form of oral and later written tradition,
and thus entered the repertoire of religious ritual. Therefore, worship contributed greatly to the
formation of a religious tradition and gradually took a standardized shape or
became institutionalized in a relatively permanent, unchanging form. Thus worshipful celebrations help to
perpetuate the awareness of the ultimate and the way in which man is constantly
summoned to eventual union with the transcendent.
It has always been a challenge to
humankind to carry over into daily life the experience of the moments of
religious worship. Worship has spurred
man to a higher regard for his fellow man, to exemplify in daily life those
values solemnly professed at the time of worship. This is what is meant by asserting in the
above definition that "religious life and forms flow from worship as from
their source".
Aspects of Worship
Now we have to see how worship as an
expression of faith is an integral part of religion. Well, without faith a
person can not offer any thing to Supreme or Deity. Man's religious impulse moves him to attempt
to respond to this divine reality, this response is called worship. They
express their reverence due to faith and to keep their identity that he/she
comes from certain religious groups. There are some aspects which are similar
to all religion. Because of their
constitutive quality we call it integral part of religion. These are the aspects of worship:
A. Intellectual - This is ultimate and important aspects of
worship through which we become aware that we are giving reverence to
Supreme. This awareness make us to understand the presence
of Deity. (awareness and understanding, awareness of presence).
B. Willful - From the very beginning we accept any
religion with inner conviction, without any force it comes from inner
willfulness. We cannot force anybody to offer gift in reverence to God.
Therefore it must come from within so that it would not go against a person's
will.(cannot be forced, must come from within).
C. External - According to religious tradition gestures and
posters are practice in the worship.
These gestures and posters are external and signifies special meaning in
the worship.
D. Constructive - Worship gives identity
of a person that he belongs to certain religion where he can practice his
religious beliefs and practices through worship. This kind of religious practices help a
person to grow. It helps personal
interest towards his religious practices.
Religious instinct which gives personality and development of the
individual.
E. Communitarian - Celebration is the
sign of community and without community there is no communal function. Worship
is a communitarian act where whole community show their reverence to God. It is
the medium between God and people. This action keeps relation with God in
relation with man.
F. Intimate - God is more intimate to man than man. God
takes initiative to keep relationship with man.
This action signifies love and reverence to one another. So it implies two things : love and
knowledge. St.Augustine says,"God is more intimate to me than myself."
Therefore worship becomes an intimate action.
Part II: Basic Elements Of the Religions
1. The worship is a
human action by which we
acknowledge ourselves as `religious being'. Here dependence and limitedness are
acknowledged.
2. It is believed
to be divine action by which God interacts with human beings ..... (God
responds). It is a two-fold movement : upward (we open up) and downward (God
interacts)
3. Human action
by which we share in the divine power .... strength we receive through this
action.
4. Transformative
action by which the worship touches and transforms our lives.
5. Symbolic
action which symbolizes something of which we are part of. Thus it remains
as a mystery.
These are common elements in
interreligious worshipping context too.
Worship in non-biblical religion
a. Mystery Cult -
Greek Religions
Ancient Greece an agrarian society. So
people were constantly in touch with nature. People thought that there is a
power behind nature. If they have a good harvest, they had prosperity. That
prosperity was considered as salvation. The power behind nature was conceived as
mysterious power. In order to appease this power people offered the best and
the first fruits of nature. Harvest worship and festival was the initial
festival. This also had an impact in the origin of Christianity.
In the Old Testament, Pentecost means the
50th day. This is the las day of harvest. In New Testament, Resurrection; is
the first day of harvest. Pentecost is the fullness of harvest. All festivals
of Christianity; were centered around Resurrection for many centuries.
b. The World view of Hinduism
The idea of cosmos is very strong in
Hinduism. Cosmos consists of two waves: Macrocosm (the entire universe) and
Microcosm (human world).
Human beings become aware of the power
beyond, which controls the whole universe. Human beings want to be in touch
with this power beyond.So they offer the elements of nature, fruits of harvest
too are offered to appease the power beyond. The concept of puja
can affect the cosmos. Original concept of worship is secular, conditioned by
prosperity.
c. Muslim understanding of worship
Worship is submission to Allah who is
master and we are his servants, and so all that servants do in obedience to Him
is worship. Muslim worship has
commonality in the language of the prayer, and in almost every detail. Offering of prayer is direct to Allah. Muslim witness is worship and very often many
are impressed and challenged by the sincerity and devotion of Muslim worship. In Islam disciplines of prayer, fasting or
almsgiving is impressive.
Magna Carta (great charter) of Christian worship: Heb
10:5-10
a. The Old Testament idea of worship
i) Israelites
during worship believed that they were in communion with Yhwh.
ii) Every
worship had two aspects - the process of revelation and salvation (Ex 24:1-11).
Revelation is some type of enlightenment
and salvation is enrichment. Salvation starts with a relationship. These two
aspects will correspond to the liturgy of word and the liturgy of sacrament.
iii) Personal
presence of Yhwh.
iv) Becoming
more and more people of God:sense of belonging and covenantal relationship.
v) A ritual
offering according to the law.
b. Christian
concept of worship (Heb 10:5-10)
Jesus Christ abolished ritual offering
of Old Testament which did not affect the persons who offered. He established a personal self offering
according to the will of the Father. Will of God is ultimately plan of God for
the entire humanity which is based on love. In all our relationship, body is an
important sign of persons. It signifies the personal self offering.
What is contrasted is law and love.
According to Paul, law is pedagogue. Pedes means foot and gogine means to lead.
So one who teaches a child how to walk is a pedagogue. Once the child has
learnt to walk it does not need a pedagogue. Once we learnt to walk in love we
do the maximum. Without understanding the spirit of the law, we can be
legalistic. We have to go beyond legalism.
Worship, according to Christian understanding is a
personal self offering according to the plan of God motivated by love
Worship in the Early Christian Community (Acts 2:42-47)
There are four main features: Kerygma
which refers to the word of God, Eucharistia, which means breaking of the
bread, koinonia which means sharing in communion and diakonia which is
service. (Kerygma and eucharistia can be grouped into word while koinonia and
diakonia can be grouped into the community).
We should listen to the word of God
because the plan of God comes from the word of God. By listening to the word of
God, the early christians wanted to know the plan of God for the humanity of
their time.
Our initial response is by breaking
the bread of life. It is the eucharistic sharing. It was followed by sharing of goods in
common. It is necessary in our time too.
Words and community were the two important constituents
in the worship of the Early Church
Historical Evolution of Christian Worship in Course of
Centuries
a. Loss of community character
i) Separation of Agape from the Celebration
Early Christian communities, came
together on Sundays because Sunday is the day of resurrection. They shared
their meal with one another. Then they settled down for the word of God . Later
on it was abused (cf 1Cor 11:17-22).
ii) Enhancement of the President's Position
(Institutionalization)
In the early Christian
communities,there were elders who were called presbyters. They were chosen from
the communities. The apostles lay their hands over them and they were
authorized to preside over Eucharist. Then in order to oversee, they appointed
an overseer (episcopal ). After 4th century, these people became powerful
because in 330 C.E. Constantine was converted. He gave political powers to the
elders and the overseer. Slowly the charismatic element was lost and it became
institutionalized. As a result, worship came priest-centered celebration.
iii) Unintelligibility of the Language
The worship was celebrated in Latin.
Since people could not understand Latin they started reciting rosary. During
consecration bell was rang so that people might stop reciting rosary. In fact,
popular devotion was a reaction to the monopoly of Eucharistic celebration.
iv) Multiplication
of Private Masses
In the middle ages monks wanted to be
ordained. In pre- vatican time, there was no concelebration. So monks who were
ordained were saying private masses.
v) Votive Masses
Each day is dedicated to a saint.
vi) External Factor of Solemnity
Solemnity was decided not by the
presence of the community but by what was going on the sanctuary like many
altar candles, altar boys, flower incense etc.
b. Absence
of the Lord
i. Unintelligibility of the Language
used.
ii. Homily was very rarely delivered.
iii. On Sundays, the homilies had no
connection with the word of God as a result the Bible was collecting dust in
Catholic homes.
Therefore,
Catholic church was feeling crisis. Hence there was a need for Vatican II which
restored the importance of the community and the Word of God.
Part III: NATURE AND THE DEFINITION OF LITURGY
1. Meaning of the term Liturgy
Liturgy comes from the Greek composite
word "Leitourgia" Laitos is the adjective of laos which means
people. So laitos means "of the
people". Ergon means function or work. So the literal meaning would be the
function of the people or public function.
Ancient Greece was known for public
functions. We get Olympic games from the ancient Greece. They had many stadia,
theater etc. Every public function was inaugurated with a short prayer. This
short prayer was very important. To be a participant of the function is to be
present for the prayer. The prayer was so important that the name Leitourgia
was given to the prayer.
The Aramaic Hebrew Biblical translated
into Greek. In Hebrew, the word "sheret" was used for worship. This
word was translated into Greek as Leitourgia. In the New Testament, the word
Leitourgia occurs 15 times and it has at
least 4 meanings.
(a) Rendering
service (Rom 15:27): It includes monitory service too. The rich communities
helped the poor communities. (b) OT cultic sense (lk 1:23): Zachariah, the father of John the Baptist belongs to Levites. His
office was offering incense at the altar. Luke uses the word Leitourgia. (c) NT
cultic action (Act 13:2): It is a kind of spiritual fellowship. (d) Christian life itself (Rom 15:16): Life
becomes acceptable offering, spiritual cult.
The definition of Liturgy is as follows: Liturgy is the public worship of the church performed on
behalf of or in view of the community. The phrase "on behalf of"
denotes that the communitarian dimension is very strong. Though one individual
reads the word, it is the community; that proclaims the word of God. The
phrase "in view of " means
that every liturgy is meant to build up the community which should become the
body of Christ.
2. Traditional
Understanding of Liturgy
a. Aesthetic Definition
It emerged in the middle ages. It is
external, decorative and ceremonial part of catholic worship. By external, they
mean appealing to the senses. For example, nice music and singing. decoration
became important because in the middle ages, the sanctuary is considered to be
the heavenly court. The chasuble worn by the priest was originally an apron. It
was a sign of service. Now it has become decorative. It is ceremonial because
if there is no ceremony, there is no liturgy.
b. Juridical Definition
It emerged in the later part of the
middle ages. Liturgy is the cult of the church carried out according to the
norms of the church. Here norms are important. This gave rise to rubrics .
Rubrics are prescription given in red letters.
c. Theological Definition
i. Liturgy is
the public worship of the church.
ii. Liturgy is
the ritual accomplishment of the redemptive work of Jesus Christ in and through
the Church.
For the first time we get this
theological definition in 1947 by Pope Pius XII in his encyclical Mediator Dei. Following are the few quotations from
Mediator Dei.
(i) "Liturgy
is the entire public worship of the mystical body of Jesus Christ head and
members."
(ii) "Liturgy
is the exercise of the priestly office of Jesus Christ".
On the one hand the communitarian
dimension is emphasized and on the other hand the Christological dimension is
stressed. Priestly office is mediation refers to all our commitment in and
through Jesus . This definition given by Pius XII was complimented by Vatican
II.
3. The Notion of Liturgy According to Vatican II
Vatican II has given 4 constitutions
of which one is constitution of sacred Liturgy which has 130 articles.
Vatican II speaks
of a distinction between liturgical functions and non liturgical functions. The
distinction between the two is that the former is the objective means of
salvation and the latter is the subjective means of salvation.
In a liturgy, we recelebrating the
paschal mystery of Jesus which gets contextualized in our history. We celebrate
it through perceptible signs and symbols i.e., in a sacramental dimension . It
is the community which is the body of Christ that a celebrate till the Lord
comes in the final age.
There are four liturgical functions -
Mass, Sacraments, Sacramental and divine office. Sacraments are based on
revelation and are divinely instituted while sacramental institutions according
to the on going needs of the community.
Each liturgical function has a sign. Mass bread and wine: baptism - water ,
confirmation - Chrism oil, confession -confessions of sins and absolution,
anointing of the sick-oil of the infirm , Marriage consent expressed through
rings, thalli etc. Holy order - laying of hands and chrism, communion-bread and
wine. Divine office - time: religious vows (sacramental) vow, ring etc.
Rosary, Novena, Holy hour, way of the
cross are non-liturgical functions. These can be called popular devotions.
Popular devotions are of two types - Popular devotions exercises and popular
devotion practices such as fasting, pilgrimage, wearing a medal or scapular.
4. The Role of Liturgy in the Context of Church's Mission
In the pre-Vatican times, the mission
of the church was understood differently.
There was a dichotomy between the church and the world. Today we understand God not outside the
world but present and active in the
world, church is also in the world. It is part of the mission of the church to
experience God who is present and active in the world and to bear witness to
this experience through life-style and service. Within the life of the church, there are
privileged moments of God experience. Liturgies
are these privileged moments. There
comes the role of liturgy in the context of Church's mission.
5. Liturgical Renewal in the Context of the Church's
Renewal
(A) Aim
It aims at personal self renewal, social
renewal (structure of the community) and the renewal of the world.
(B) Means suggested by Vatican II
a. Renewed listening to the Word of God
b. Living experience of the community
c. Reliving the original Biblical
experience
d. Eschatological relaunching.
a.
Renewed listening to the Word of God: listening is different from
hearing. While listening we pick up the
message and while hearing. There is a
difference in understanding Jn 15: 1-5
now from 10 years ago. There are internal
factors contributing to personal growth and external factors
resulting in rapidly changing situation.
Therefore, there is a renewed way of listening.
b.
Living experience of the community:
Some stay in the community but do not live in the community. Those who
stay in the community are not affected by what goes on in the community.
c.
Reliving the original Biblical experience: Reliving means a symbolic living
of a significant event. For eg., "If Jesus were to wash my feet in my
context today, what would be my reaction?"
d.
Eschatological relaunching: Eschaton means the last things. The last thing
that would take place at the end of ages is resurrection. This has
already taken place in Jesus Christ. So
remarkable for two things - joy and hope.
This joyful hope is relaunched in every liturgy. It sets optimism of life for a human person
to look beyond.
LITURGY AS THE CELEBRATION OF PASCHAL MYSTERY (SC 5-8)
1. Meaning of
Pasch
It comes from the Hebrew word "Pessach"
meaning passage or passover. The Greek word "pathos" means
suffering but suffering understood as a passive phase. The Latin irregular verb "pati"
means to suffer; its participle passus means step, passion etc.
Therefore Pasch would mean the following
a. It is an existential movement. For
e.g., there are many steps of growth.
b. It is also an experiential reality.
c. It is also a transition / passage.
Whenever we speak of pasch, these three
indications are there.
2. Pasch as an
Historical Event with Reference to Salvation History
The first pasch was
creation. There was a transition from
chaos to cosmos, from disorder to order, from darkness to light, from lifelessness
to life. Because of disobedience there
was a reversal. As a result, there was a need for a re-creation and form a new
pasch. This new pasch is realized in
three stages:
Stage 1: Life and call of Abraham
Abraham stands out as father of faith. The age of Abraham and Sarah are mentioned n
the Bible os many times. This is to show
that it is humanly impossible for them to bear a child. By God's intervention, they become
capable. There is a transition from
incapability to capability. Isaac is born and Abraham is asked to sacrifice
Isaac. When he was about to sacrifice
Isaac, there was an intervention from God. There was a transition from
helplessness to help and hopelessness to hope.
Stage 2: Exodus
Israelites in Egypt were leading a miserable
life. They were treated worse than beasts.
They were oppressed. In Exodus there was a transition from (i) inhuman to human, (ii) misery
to dignity, (iii) slavery to freedom, (iv) oppression to
liberation, (v) darkness to light
and (vi) in a figurative sense death to life.
Stage 3: Christ Event
Christ event would imply Jesus' birth,
ministry, suffering, death and resurrection.
At his birth, there is a transition from virginity to motherhood. So also, in his ministry, suffering, death
and resurrection we find certain transition from death to resurrection, there
is a transition from sin to grace, from flesh to spirit, from law to love, from
slavery to freedom, from oppression to liberation and from darkness to light. Deep down there is a core message - there is a transition from selfishness to
selfless giving.
3. Pasch as an Event in the Church
When we say pasch as an event there
are four aspects :
a. Proclamation of kerygma,
b. Celebration of every sacrament,
c. Christian life as a pasch,
d. Death of Christian as a pasch.
a. The core of kerygma is the death and
resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Resurrection became good news to the whole world. It gave joy and hope to the humanity. The whole nature has to die in order to
revive (seasons).
b. In every sacrament there is a paschal
process. The classical text is Rom 6:
3-11. The notion of dying and rising comes in our very first sacrament, baptism. Sacraments liberate us from so many enslaving
realities.
c. Since Christian life is a pasch, every day I
need to become more and more selfless in my interaction.
d. From the very fact that Jesus died and rose
again, we have an indication that the death of a christian is a pasch. We march
beyond death.
4. Pasch as an Eschatological Event
The eschatological age has begun in
and through Jesus. We have entered into
this age. Having entered into this age,
we are partially redeemed and not fully. John talks of already and
not yet. Therefore there is an
eschtological tension between already and not yet. What is already is the real and what is not yet is the ideal or the
dream. Because of this tension and growth, we are on the movement. Therefore we say we are pilgrims. We are
moving towards our fullness. This
pilgrimage is liturgically celebrated.
Thus we have liturgical processions in which we celebrate the
eschatological movements.
a. The entrance
procession is towards the altar. The altar resembles the risen Lord, not
the tomb. Hence the entrance procession
indicates the eschatalogical movement towards the risen Lord.
b. The offertory
procession is the movement towards the fullness with all that we are and
all that we have.
c. The communion
procession is the movement towards the full communion with the Lord and
with one another.
5. Notion of Mystery
Mystery is a reality we experience but
we cannot fully explain. Love is a
mystery because it is invisible in itself,
It is made visible through tangible signs. Every human person is a mystery, much more so
God who is also a person. In Christianity, the notion of mystery is borrowed
form Greek. According to Paul, there are
four meanings of mystery:
(a) Hidden plan of God for the redemption of
humanity.
(b) Hidden plan of God for the redemption of
humanity as revealed and realized in Jesus Christ. (c) Hidden plan of God for the redemption of
humanity as revealed and realized in Jesus Christ as communicated through the
ministry of the apostles through proclamation and celebration. (d)
Hidden plan of God for the redemption of humanity as revealed and
realized in Jesus Christ as communicated through the ministry of the apostles
through proclamation and celebration and as celebrated in the liturgy.
6. The Celebration of Paschal Mystery in the Liturgy (SC
6)
There is a two fold manner of
celebration of paschal mystery presence and remembrance. Remembrance is not mere the subjective
psychological remembrance but objective effective remembrance (sacramental
efficacy).Presence is both active and transformative.
7. The Effects of the Celebration
There are tow-fold effects of the
celebration - glorification of God and sanctification of human person.
God does not need our
glorification. Ultimately, glorification
is acknowledging the greatness of God and experiencing our deep sense of
gratitude. Therefore, the whole
Eucharist is thanksgiving. In Greek, Eucharist means thanksgiving. Doxology is
the culmination of the Eucharist.
Sanctification would mean fully
human. It was through his humanness, Jesus was able to reveal the divine in
him; not otherwise. Hence the human is
the medium of the divine. Worship and
fellowship go together.
LITURGY AS THE CELEBRATION OF THE COMMUNITY
1. Importance of Liturgical Assembly for the Celebration
The liturgical assembly is the place
of encounter between God and human persons.
It is in and through this community we experience God's revelation and
redemption. This community is God's gift
for us. Therefore this community is the mediation agent. Church is the body of Christ. So this liturgical assembly refers to Jesus
himself. The community itself is a
primordial sacrament. It is also sign
of God's presence.
2. Biblical Notion of Liturgical Assembly
In the Old Testament for the first
time we come across such a community at Mount Sinai. Qahal Yhwh means assembly
of Yhwh. Israelites were the members of
the assembly of Yhwh. Therefore the
assembly of Yhwh presupposes the exodus experience. People who have experienced
slavery now experience liberation at Exodus.
Exodus experience on the one hand means call and on the other hand
redeemed people and thirdly they have a mission too. "They will be light unto Nations."
(Isaiah). They also become covenantal people and they have a sense of belonging
to Yhwh their God.
In the New Testament the Greek word ecclesia
is used. In Greek ek+kaleo means to call
out. The community of people is called out.
Baptism is the New Exodus. The
Baptism means to immerse. A person who
is inside water is considered dead. When
he comes out, he comes out as a new person. Three times immersion refers to Trinity
and Jesus being in the tomb for three days.
St.Paul says in I Cor 12:27 that the
community is the body of Christ. Acts 2 :42-47 speaks of the community life and
Mt 18:20 says that Jesus is present when people come together.
3. Liturgical Assembly according to the Fathers of the
Church
a. According to the Fathers of the Church, liturgical assembly is
the characteristic mark of the Christian life because people of other marga
were not coming together often.
b. Sunday is the day of liturgical assembly
because Sunday is the day of resurrection and also of Pentecost.
c. The liturgical assembly was a festive joyful
assembly. People had the joy of coming together. On the one hand there is a spiritual aspect
and on the other hand there is psycho-spiritual aspect such as meeting friends
etc.
d. The Fathers of the Church recognized the
presence of Christ in the church.
e. The whole assembly is understood as a
mystery.
4. Liturgical
Assembly as the Manifestation of the Church (SC7)
Augustine has said "Eucharist
makes the community and community makes the Eucharist". However community is prior because without
community there cannot be Eucharist.
Eucharist builds up the unity of the
community. Whenever the community comes together for Eucharistic celebration, i. Christ is totally present, ii. the universal church is manifested
in and through the concrete assembly, iii. we are in communion with the whole
church and iv. the same God who speaks through the Word and the same Christ
transforms the community.
Christ is totally present in the
liturgical assembly. Body is sign of a
person's presence, so also the presence of the Lord is sacramentalized in the
Blessed Sacrament. The presence of the Lord in the assembly makes the assembly
respectful. Hence the respect and reverence we pay to the Eucharist reminds of
the respect we need to give to our brothers and sisters in the community. Therefore, the presence of the Lord in the
community is prior and more important.
So also the value of persons who perform the actions are more important
than the symbolic actions.
5. Liturgical Assembly as Community Formation
This is realized in five stages of
community formation - convocation, proclamation, acceptance, ratification of
the acceptance and mission.
Coming together of people having
similar vocation to realize it is convocation.
Individuals by themselves cannot realize it. The first convocation took place in Mount
Sinai (cf. Ex 24:3-11). As a sign acceptance to all that the Lord has spoken we
say "AMEN". Ratification is a juridical word. It means sealing of the covenantal
relationship. To show this there is
a ritual in the Old Testament. The
priest sprinkles blood on the altar and on the people to show that Yhwh and
Israelites are related to one another as blood relations. Every convocation is for a mission.
In the New Testament, it is Jesus
Christ around whom people gather. So
Jesus convokes the people. Jesus
is the Word incarnate. His preaching,
teaching and discourses constitute his proclamation. Acceptance would correspond to discipleship. Ratification of acceptance takes place
in the blood shed of Jesus. Finally, the community was not meant for its own
sake, but to be sent forth on mission. In Liturgy, convocation
corresponds to the entrance hymn and the opening prayer. Proclamation corresponds to the
Liturgy of Word. Acceptance corresponds to all responses including
`amen'. Ratification corresponds
to the celebration from offertory to communion.
Mission corresponds to the dismissal of rite. The word "missa" (mass) comes from
mission. Therefore, every liturgy is
oriented towards mission.
6. Liturgy as a Community Celebration
a. In Liturgy,
we are in communion with one another.
b. We are in
communion with the whole church.
c. We come
together for liturgy in view of community building.
d. Every
action in Liturgy is done on behalf of the community.
7. Presence of Christ in the Liturgical Assembly
There are different modes of presence. In the physical presence there are
juxtaposition of persons without mutual influence. In the personal presence we begin to
communicate. There is also symbolic
presence (a letter from Mum) to make a presence real we do not need physical
presence. Presence can be either immediate of mediate. The Bible enthroned is
the symbolic presence and the Bible proclaimed is the mediate presence. When the reader reads the Word of God, we
hear the reader but we listen to the Word of God.
There are different modes of presence
of the Lord in the five stages of community formation.
i. Convocation: constitutive presence
Mt.18:20.
ii. Proclamation
iii. Acceptance: dialogical presence.
iv. Ratification: substantial presence.
v. Mission: apostolic
presence Mt 28:20.
Conclusion
At the time offertory, the Lord is
present in the community, Bread and wine
are the symbols of unity. There is a
double consecration. (a) bread perfectly
united becomes the perfect body of Christ and (b) the community imperfectly
united becomes imperfect body of Christ.
Therefore, the community becomes more and more perfect by participating in the sacramental body of
Christ. The ultimate aim is that the community should become more and more
unified and perfect.
Part IV: The
different Churches express in their liturgies the richness of the incarnational
experience
Origin and development of the different families of
Churches
Actually the first Church was in
Jerusalem founded by the Apostles. Then
it began to spread to other parts of Palestine and even to out side. These Churches which spread to the other
parts were centered around metropolitan cities like Alexandria, Antiochia and
Rome. When the Roman emperor Constantine
embraced christianity, it became the religion of the empire. But when the emperor Theodetius died in 395
the empire got divided into two parts namely Western (Gallicum & Italian)
and Eastern (Orientals & Illiricum).
Based on that the church also got divided as Western Church and Eastern
Church.
There are multiple factors and reasons
for the emergence of the different families of Churches.
1. Cultural diversity: Christian faith
spread to other places in new cultures.
2. Religious environment: In new places
the Christian faith was confronted by the religions that were already existing
there.
3. Geographical situation: The Churches
were distant from one another without any contact.
4. Historical development: Due to war,
etc. even the near Churches got divided.
5. Liturgical development: Liturgy
emerged as an indigenous one with the social and cultural background of the
place.
6. Dominant Churches: A few powerful
Churches became head Churches over the other minor Churches situated around
them.
7. Doctrines: When a particular Church
develops a doctrine it asks the approval of the other Churches. By giving their consent they became the part
of that particular Church.
8. Filiation and Division: Some
independent Churches may have affiliation with major Churches without losing
their identity. Some times this unity may perish and they separate and become
independent.
9. Language: Language is very much
connected with liturgy and the language of a particular Church was used in its
family Churches.
The centers of the Eastern Churches
were Rome. Antioch and Alexandria. There are twenty two families of the Churches
as given below, under three major families i.e., Roman, Antiochian and
Alexandrian.
I. Roman family
There are two sub units this, namely,
Gallican Church comprising of Mozarabic (practiced only in Toledo cathedral),
Gallican (no more), Celtic (no more), and Ambrosian (practiced in the Milan
cathedral) Churches, and Roman-Africa Church that is of the minor Churches
integrated by the legalism of Rome.
II. Antiochian family
It is here the followers of Jesus Christ
were called as Christians, the head of the Apostles St.Peter was the first
bishop of Antioch. This Church was well
known for its theological interests and works.
And many heresies also emerged in this Church like that of Paul of
Samasota, of Arian and of Nestorius.
It consists of four sub units and
under each one there are different Churches i.e., (1) Syro Oriental with Chaldean and Syro Malabar Churches (Chaldean Church in itself is a separate family) (2) Syro Occidental with Syro Antiochian
(Syro Antiochian is a separate family in itself), Syro Malankara and Maronite Churches.(3) Byzantine with 13
Churches, and (4) Armenian Church.
III. Alexandrian family
It consists two sub units i.e.,Coptic
and Ethiopian Churches.
Coptic Church:
This church came to be known as Coptic church because of its liturgical
language Greek which was known as the Coptic language. Greek as the spoken language till 7th
century. After that under the Muslim
rule Arabi became spoken language.
Ethiopian Church:
This church was in Ethiopia and Abyssinia.
Greek is the liturgical language here.
Ethiopian liturgy is the one that has greatest number of canon (ex) 17
Anaphora (Euchristic prayers). This
church also strictly followed some Jewish practices like, circumcision and pure
meat etc.
The different Churches express in
their liturgies the richness of the incarnational experience through
inculturation in the liturgy.
The Indigenization of Liturgy
It means that the process of
inculturation in the liturgy.
1. The Adaptation
(inculturation) of liturgy according to Vatican II SC 37-40,44,107, GS 53-62
The encounter between God and
culture: Jesus is risen Lord and a
cosmic God. He belongs to all and also
Gospel and no one can say that it is only for them. It has the liberating potential. Every culture wants the liberation from the
dehumanizing elements as Sati prostitution, child labour. So liberated culture becomes the means to
experience God and also the means to express the experience. In inculturization we experience God through
culture symbols and signs and experience through these symbols.
2. Various aspects of adaptation (various levels of
inculturation)
A. External and Sensible level
(a) Linguistic Creative composition of
prayer and liturgy and not merely translating them.
(b) Artistic Art, Music, Architecture,
Carve, Drawing, Dance, Decorating.
(c) Ceremonial Indigenous gestures and
postures; indigenous signs and symbols.
B. Conceptual level
Indian Christian theology is a must to
support the inculturation. Faith
reflection is made on the Indian world view.
For this we have to make the people to understand this.
C. Spiritual level
Indian Christian spirituality is a
must to support the inculturation.
Indians were religious minded people and deeply met or experienced or
responded by Christian God. Culture
unites and religion divides.
3. Theological basis for Indigenisation
A. Theology of creation and redemptive
incarnation
Gen.1:31 : The creation was very
good. Every created reality was good and
is capable of revealing God to us. When
human beings interact with nature there emerges culture. Because of manipulation dehumanizing elements
enter into the creation. Jesus assumes
the nature along with the culture and redeems it. This is called incarnation.
B. Theology of Local Church
Church has to continue the mission of
Christ so it has to incarnate itself in the culture of the people and redeem
them from the oppressive forces.
C. Inculturation demands paying attention to
the contemporary culture of the people
Culture is living reality and not dead
reality so it has to enter into the lives of people to redeem them.
D. In order that Church may become catholic
(universal)
Inculturation is a must. She has to enter into every culture.
E. Evangelization and Inculturation must
go hand in hand simultaneously.
4. The meaning of Inculturation
There is distinction between culture
and religion. Habits and tradition make
the culture while beliefs and rituals make the religion. They are distinctive anthropomorphically. Yet they are mutually influenced by each
other. We can not identify one to the
other.
All the Indian religions have
influenced Indian culture. But one
religion Hinduism, is predominantly influenced.
It has given predominant meaning to all the symbols and signs of all the
world. Other religions also similarly
can give their meaning to Indian culture and have the same right to do so as
they live in India. So inculturation
means giving the Christian meaning to cultural symbols and orientation. There are theological presuppositions:
1) Indian religions are not outside of
the plan of God for the redemption of humanity.
They are part and parcel of God's plan.
2) Church should have an attitude of
respect and reverence towards other religions.
3) Kingdom of God is bigger than the
Church, definitive sign of kingdom. Sign
can not be totality of the same.
4) Church can not claim the monopoly
of God's revelation and salvation.
5) Therefore Church should become all
inclusive fellowship of uniting all nations and cultures together.
6) In this process of inculturation
implies the process of asking mystery by which all that is enslaving and
dehumanizing is put to death. All that
is redeeming and liberating is brought to light.
5. Indianization of Liturgy
On 15th April 1969, 12 points of
adaptation re-agreed on to work one Indian rite in the morning when the Holy
spirit inspired but by evening the approved them but provided the chances to
modify according to the individual bishops.
They are as following:
(1) Removal of
footwear when you sit on floor.
(2) Anjalihasta
instead of genulection.
(3) Panchanga
pranamam at the end of penitential rite and after doxology.
(4) Kissing of
objects by touching them with fingers by bringing to them to forehead or eyes.
(5) Kiss of
peace by exchanging anjalihasta or placing the hands between the hands of the
receiver.
(6) Incense by
incense bowl.
(7) Vestment - a
single tunic tight chasuble with a stole (angavastra).
(8) Corporal
replaced by a tray (tali, tambula)
(9) Oil lamps
are used instead of candles.
(10) Preparatory
rite consists of presentation of gifts, welcome by arti, lighting the lamp and
greeting of peace.
(11) Spontaneous
prayers of the faithful.
(12) Double arti
at the offertory rite and tripple arti during the doxology.
Conclusion
All liturgies are very attentive and
sensitive towards theological movements. They are rich in reflection, in
objectivity and in adaptation. The West
was afraid to move with the living faith or theological speculations. Their liturgy grew without much contact with
the theological speculation. It created
a big gap between the living faith and the speculative theology. In the East, the theology is expressed in the
liturgy; liturgical texts are real sources of the theological synthesis. Theology for them is not a speculative
science but the living norm of the practical life of the Church, expressed in
liturgy.
Liturgy is the public worship of the
Church performed on behalf of or in view of the community. So we express our
reverence to God through worship. This
worship brings us awareness of the community with one love and one faith. Therefore Church has to continue the mission
of Christ so it has to incarnate itself in the culture of the people and redeem
them from the oppressive forces. Because
culture is living reality and not a dead reality so it has to enter into the
people to redeem them. So then, this
would be the tremendous incarnational experience for members of the different
Churches through their liturgies.
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