The Nature of Liturgy
By the Very
Rev. Dom Daniel
Augustine Oppenheimer, CRNJ,
Prior
Liturgy presupposes man within
the Christian understanding of creation. He has a purpose
and he has a context. In this regard man, created by God,
is intrinsically ordered towards Him. Because he is rational
unlike the other animals in creation, he alone can bless God
for all that he has received from Him. Man in the very
ground of his being has been created to adore God.
It is an act that is due in him since in nature
omnis agens agit propter finem
– all things tend toward that end to which the creative act
of God has ordered them. According to Fr. Alexander
Schmemann man alone,
…is to respond to God’s
blessing
with his blessing. …in the Bible to bless God is
not a “religious” or “cultic” act, but the very way of life.
…All rational, spiritual and other qualities of man,
distinguishing him from other creatures, have their focus
and ultimate fulfillment in this capacity to bless God, to
know, so to speak, the meaning of the thirst and hunger that
constitutes his life. “Homo sapiens”, “homo
faber”…yes, but first of all, “homo adorans”.
The first and basic definition of man is that he is the
priest. He stands at the center of the world and unifies it
in his act of blessing God, of both receiving the world from
God and offering it to God…”
[emphasis in original]
As such man has a specific role
in the
cosmos and in the earthly city of his human
existence. He is to adore God in his very being (homo
adorans) and in his actions (homo faber);
when he does so he is reflecting wisdom or imitating the
divine (homo sapiens). His adoration is one
that refracts the light which is Christ throughout
the whole universe. This is brought about formally and
publicly by means of the Church’s central act of life:
public liturgical service to God.
This understanding of man and his
relation to the cosmos is something that has
become alien to Christians in the modern era with its
post-Enlightenment emphasis on rationality. The roots
of Christian
worship
are found in the ancient world where sensitivity towards the
spiritual was far more operative than it is today. For
this reason the underpinnings of the cultic act were more
fundamentally integrated into the fabric of daily human
experience. People were more aware of the spiritual in
regard to the material and the relationship of mystery to
the whole.
The Benedictine liturgical
scholar Dom Odo Casel observes in his classic work, The
Mystery of Christian Worship,
Ancient thought,
considered as a whole, had a great reverence for all
being: the individual felt himself to be a member of the
great cosmos, and willingly submitted to its order. The
self-seeker [what modern man so often views himself as
being] was taken for a rebel: his deed…brought down the
anger of the gods. Behind the visible world the deep
insight of ancient man saw a higher kingdom of spirit and
godhead, of which the things we see are symbol, reflected
reality, and at the same time mediators and bearers of
spiritual things. Ancient thinking was at once concrete,
because concerned with objects, and spiritual, because
these [men] did not remain confined to material objects.
To men like these it did not seem difficult to believe
that God could communicate his life through symbols, or
that their own religious acts could leap up into the
circle of God’s life; it was no different whether they
conceived these things as more cosmic or more spiritual;
in either case it was a symbolic action which rose to the
height of the god’s mode of living. The symbolic,
strength-giving rites of the mysteries were real
for the ancients; when the Church
of Christ entered the world she did not end but rather
fulfilled their way of thinking.
[emphasis added]
The erosion of this manner of
perceiving matter and spirit is in great part the result of
the triumph of empirical “science” that determines as “real”
only what is directly measurable. The sacramental dimension
of Christianity has become incomprehensible to modern
rationalists. Given the universal context of rationalism,
the notion of symbolic worship as a real integration
of matter and spirit has become equally incomprehensible.
Christians have certainly fallen under a rationalist
influence and so some fundamental underpinnings operative in
worship have been obscured, if not lost altogether. Yet the
integration of matter and spirit is precisely what
sacramental – liturgical – worship is all about.
In a recent article in
Diakonia, Professor David Fagerberg speaks about the
nature of liturgy:
Ancient Christians
borrowed a word from their secular world to describe the
work they did when they gathered in Christ…Leitourgia
meant a kind of public service, in such a way that paying
taxes was one’s leitourgia to the city. It meant
the work of a few on behalf of the many. …The work (ergia)
of the people of God (laos) is Christ’s
own work perpetuated in history…
This work of worship as a kind of
“tax” due to God derives from the deeper force of the recreation
effected by Christ and its impact on human life, society and
the entire cosmic order. If man is constituted homo
adorans, it is by virtue of Baptism that each
Christian becomes a liturgist or willing “tax payer”
to the true God in Christ. Professor Fagerberg continues in
his article:
Liturgy…is the
synergistic work of a deified people, a race grafted by
the filial paschal mystery into eighth day existence. The
primary agenda of liturgy is the creation of a new heaven
and a new earth, not a rite or a new altar cloth. Like a
needle pulling thread through fabric to stitch up a rent
cloth, the liturgist moves in and out, in and out between
earth and heaven, time and eternity, the profane and the
sacred, plunging into one and then the other and drawing
them together by the thread of his…life.
The question concerning outward
forms which so preoccupies the liturgical climate in
the Church today subsists by necessity in a reality far
deeper than that touched upon by the more superficial
matters of space, language, and décor as the professor goes
on to say:
You can’t taste your
tongue. Why not? Because it is the organ by which you
taste other things. You can’t celebrate liturgy. Why
not? Because it is the organ by which we celebrate the
Kingdom of God. Liturgical time, then, is only partially
understood by an anthropological study of human festival,
because festival is how the eighth day is celebrated.
Liturgical space, then, is not first a history of
architecture, it is the nine square yards before the
burning bush…
Liturgy is the
organ by which the Christian, within the context of
the life of the Church itself, celebrates and encounters
the Thrice Holy God of all creation, the God he has been
created to adore. Liturgy is to touch the Eighth Day, the
restoration of the cosmological order in Christ. It is
the foretaste of the eschaton wherein the City of
God absorbs without annihilating the City of Man in the
perfection of God’s glory in the here and now. Liturgy is
to stand in the forecourt of heaven touched by the radiant
glory of the angels. Liturgy is the shattering
cosmological encounter between the Triune God and man: the
former descends to man in the power of the burning bush,
the latter is brought into the presence of the Divine by
the power that burns the bush while preventing its very
annihilation. Liturgy is the arena in which the present
world, rent by sin, is resewn into the fabric of glory.
Liturgy is an earthly imitation of the service of praise
given by the angels. It is in short our means to a “participatio
Dei”,
the source of true human life and freedom.
When understood in
this manner, it becomes considerably clearer that liturgy is
an organ or instrument by which something other than itself
takes place. As empirical evidence clearly demonstrates,
the destruction of an organ’s integrity – the disjoining of
its component parts – leads to the failure of its function.
If liturgy is the organ by which the Kingdom
comes upon us in specific ways, what must necessarily
happen should the organ be dismantled and then reconstructed
with some of its parts left out, some duplicated, some
entirely recast, the whole become a process unto itself, the
objectum quod instead of the objectum
quo?
This is at the root of
the crisis touched upon throughout this study. A shift in
thinking concerning the Christian cosmology and anthropology
has sunk tendrils deep into the very sources of the
Christian religion itself. Christian faith, it must be
insisted, is not the object of an intellectual articulation
or an a priori theology, but Jesus Christ lived.
The dynamic of that living event operative in
one’s life is awakened by grace and humility, self-control
and prayer – all the result of charity lived because Christ
is known. According to Cardinal Ratzinger, “the
essence of religion is the relation of man beyond himself to
the unknown reality that faith calls God. …This
relationship…is, properly speaking, the content of
religion.”
The liturgy’s
principle effectiveness in the life of its participant
derives from his openness to the power of the mystery it
weaves into the present: the living dynamic of the
Christ-event. This mystery can only be communicated to the
individual by his willing openness towards a relationship
with Christ which is true, real, humble and receptive. This
relationship is the fundamental source in the
Christian experience.
A palpable effort has
been undertaken in recent years to alter many of the
different sources of Christianity. This has been
done in order to accommodate religion to a certain (already
aging) vision of modernity, making it, thereby, more
appealing to “modern man”. In this metamorphosis of the
sources of Christian religion, long coming but accelerated
after the Council, the shifting paradigms have arisen from
neither humility and true encounter with Christ nor the
secondary sources which are constituent elements in the
depths of the Christian thing.
Some of the need for
change has derived from an incipient boredom with the static
quality of the thing received but no longer fully
understood combined with an insatiable human fascination
for novelty when faced with boredom. This syndrome is
certainly operative in Christianity today. It is why
Cardinal Ratzinger remarked in Salt of the Earth
about “this staleness, this feeling that we are already long
familiar with all this.”
He was commenting on the ennui present in so many who
are weary of Christianity, thinking it a “matter of
burdensome systems” instead of the “living treasure that is
worth knowing.”
The solution to this
boredom is not the fascination of superficial change. It
rests, rather, in a fundamental return to matryrdom’s
devotion, a radical embrace of the living Christ-event and a
humble rediscovery of the underlying meanings of the many
sources operative in Christian religion.
The “living treasure
that is worth knowing” is Christ as personally experienced
and not a seminar on a falsified understanding of man
and his exercise of liberty deriving from rationalist
incredulity. That this has become a major problem for true
religion may be seen in the very notions of sin, the soul,
judgment, eternity and similar things (often called
“outdated” or “negative theology”) being whitewashed or
eliminated altogether in liturgy, theology and the public
consciousness of Christian discourse. This latter
represents an effort to make Christianity more palatable to
“modern man” for whom sacramental symbol and act has become
incomprehensible and therefore meaningless. The liturgical
changes in the Roman Rite have certainly been affected by a
number of these elements. Cardinal Ratzinger comments on
this in A New Song for the Lord:
That a human deed could
offend God has become a completely unthinkable thought for
many. So there is really no further need for redemption
in the classical sense of Christian faith since it hardly
occurs to anyone to see sin as the cause of the misery of
the world and in one’s own life. Consequently there can
naturally be no Son of God either Who comes into the world
to redeem us from sin and Who for us dies on the cross.
From here we can once again explain the fundamental change
in the understanding of ritual and liturgy that has
recently come about after a long time in the making: the
primary object of liturgy is neither God nor Christ, but
the “we” of the ones celebrating. And liturgy can not of
course have adoration as its primary content since,
according to the deistic understanding of God, there is no
reason for it. There is just as little reason for it to
be concerned with atonement, sacrifice, or the forgiveness
of sin. Instead the point for those celebrating is to
secure community with each other and thereby escape the
isolation into which modern existence forces them…
Liturgy is neither about man
celebrating himself nor a communal tool used as a power base
for freedom movements not of God. Worship, rather,
presupposes man according to the Christian
cosmology and anthropology. As such God,
creation, man (body, soul and spirit), sin, human weakness,
death, judgment, heaven and hell are not outdated modalities
to be considered as doctrinal or liturgical accretions along
the long path of a distorted development in an institutional
Church now in need of systematic, modern revamping.
These doctrinal truths are
irreformable substantive constituents of the Catholic faith
which have always appeared in bright relief across the whole
of liturgy, Scripture, Magisterium and history and must
continue to do so until the Second Coming of Christ. They
are fundamental elements in the story of true human,
personal deliverance and the power that derives from poverty
of spirit, meekness, long-suffering, gentleness and love
born of living Jesus Christ, and Him crucified.
Since liturgy is both man’s
service in his blessing of God and God’s descent to man
wherein the two meet in a living encounter of truth, it is
impossible that God would enter into a white-washed, one
dimensional monologue at man in the otherwise dynamic
process of His visitations. Liturgy is the burning
bush, and it is burning so that man might be saved from
himself and his tendency towards self-destruction. Far
from being “negative theology”, sin, death and the actual
threat of eternal damnation are simply one side of the
Christian coin. The other is hope, glory, the beatific
vision of God: the magnificent and real salvation of
a humanity – and a universe – that is really lost and
really in need of a deep rooted, genuine, permanent
freedom.
In view of this truth about the
state of man, Professor Fagerberg rightly describes liturgy
as “a needle pulling thread” in and out between heaven and
earth. That is because, to use a modern turn of phrase,
God, heaven and glory are the “up-side” of religion while
man, constituted as he is according to the Christian
revelation, suffers from the constant syndrome of his
own “down-side”. Matter and spirit are interrelated in the
drama of man’s attaining true freedom. Any attempt to
eliminate the immortality of the soul, sin, evil, judgment,
heaven and hell from the Christian understanding of
deliverance is to vitiate the religion itself. It consists
of man’s whole relationship with God – and with all
its parts intact. Attempts to whitewash these elements from
the liturgy is to falsify Catholic worship thus causing the
needle to cease passing anywhere, altogether. This latter
Cardinal Ratzinger repeats again and again when commenting
on the need for a genuine liturgical reform: liturgy must be
essentially true to its own raison d’etre.
Despite the enthusiasm over
modern man having “come of age”, it is especially obvious in
the present century that he has become, if anything, more
vicious and on a wider scale than ever before. In view of
this man’s need for true worship is equally
more urgent than ever before. Through it he is fed body,
soul and spirit with what touches his need most radically.
True worship embodies and conveys a reality significantly
deeper than what reason alone grasps, although reason
certainly responds to the doctrinal content of the texts
that worship employs.
In his book Salt of the Earth,
Cardinal Ratzinger speaks about a transformation that has
taken place in Catholic worship:
In our form of the
liturgy there is a tendency that, in my opinion, is false,
namely the complete “inculturation” of the liturgy into
the contemporary world. The liturgy is thus supposed to
be shortened; and everything that is supposedly
unintelligible should be removed from it; it should,
basically, be transposed down to an even “flatter”
language. But this is a thoroughgoing misunderstanding of
the essence of the liturgy and of liturgical celebration.
For in the liturgy one doesn’t grasp what’s going on in a
simply rational way, as I understand a lecture, for
example, but in a manifold way, with all the senses, and
by being drawn into a celebration that isn’t invented by
some commission but that, as it were, comes to me from the
depths of the millenia, and ultimately, of eternity.
In Feast of Faith,
Cardinal Ratzinger quotes the German scholar H. Gese on
current problems in liturgy. Gese is opposed to the new
tendencies because they violate what man needs and is given
by the liturgical dimension of his life:
Let no one imagine that
we can help man by cutting down on the sacramental
dimension. The reverse is the case. People have been
cutting down for a long time now, and this is what has
caused so many misunderstandings. The only way really to
help is to expound this central service of worship fully
and in a positive spirit. And as for experimentation, it
is least appropriate where the liturgy of the
Lord’s Supper is concerned…
[emphasis in original]
In the context from which this citation has been taken, the
Cardinal has been explaining insights Gese has put forward
penetrating the notion of eucharistic sacrifice and its
continuity with the Jewish concept of toda or
thanksgiving sacrifice, contemporary to Christ and His
apostles. The Cardinal is at pains to show the striking
importance this has today since the idea of sacrifice, so
fundamental to the root of human deliverance, is at stake in
the liturgical crisis:
What is toda?
Gese describes it like this: “The thanksgiving sacrifice
presupposes a particular situation. If a man is
saved from death, from fatal illness or from those who
seek his life, he celebrates this divine deliverance in a
service of thanksgiving which marks an existential new
beginning in his life. In it he confesses God to be his
deliverer by celebrating a thanksgiving (toda). He
invites his friends and associates, provides the
sacrificial animal…and celebrates…together with his
invited guests, the inauguration of his new existence…In
order to recall God’s deliverance and giving thanks for
it, it is necessary to reflect on one’s pilgrimage through
suffering, to bring to mind the process of redemption…It
is not a mere sacrifice rite; it is a sacrifice in which
one professes one’s involvement…Here we have a unity which
embraces a service of word and a ritual meal, praise and
sacrifice. The sacrifice cannot be misunderstood as a
‘gift’ to God; rather it is a way of ‘honoring’ the
Deliverer. And the fact that the rescued man is able to
celebrate ‘life restored’ in the sacred meal is itself the
gift of God. …The Lord’s Supper is the toda of the Risen
One.”
The true situation of modern man is that his eternal destiny
is at stake, just as it has been from the time of Adam and
will be until the consummation of the ages. He is saved
from bondage only by the victory of Christ. The Lord’s
triumph over death in the consummate sacrifice He made of
Himself on the Cross is man’s passage through the Red Sea of
human life; the ascetic offering of the Son of God is man’s
conquest of the powers of hell: the individual, personal
union of body and soul, life and spirit to the suffering of
Christ is the only way to lasting freedom. That comes
definitively at life’s end, in friendship with God, in the
glory of heaven. Life in the present world will never enjoy
perfect freedom; claims to the contrary are illusions.
The Eucharistic liturgy is the Church’s toda to God
for every man’s deliverance from sin and death. Therefore
it would be contrary to the nature of liturgical action to
misrepresent its true function. It is an instrument by
which something else takes place. To shave off any
part of the story of deliverance or to trivialize its cosmic
importance by cheapening the whole is to run counter to the
purpose and function of Christian worship. This is
precisely what is risked in artificial remakes of the
liturgical organ and why Cardinal Ratzinger speaks so
consistently against the decomposition of a truly Catholic
notion of worship. Every person’s involvement in the story
of his deliverance involves nothing but the risk he
runs – soul and body – with sin, death, loss of heaven and
going to hell. His deliverance rides on the salvation made
possible through the death of the Son of God. For this he
offers thanks in the gift of Christ Who redeems and gives
grace to do well, the angels to help, the saints whose
lives, prayers, and miracles aid in the fraternity of
Christian charity.
For reason of this authentic freedom received through
Christ, all the elements in the cosmic drama of man’s
salvation must be clearly evident in the liturgical fabric.
They need to be found throughout the texts of the liturgy
and manifest in the many non-rational elements in its
sacramental employ. Because fallen man has a tendency to
forget, repetition is an essential element in human
discourse. Just as worship itself is repeated constantly,
so too, all the truths it speaks of must be repeated
constantly within the fabric of its own expression.
It is because of the story of man’s deliverance that the
liturgy “passes a needle” between heaven and earth, between
the sacred and the profane and without equating the two. It
raises man to the threshold of the divine while he still
stands in the present. Liturgy repairs a breach in the
cosmological fabric of creation, and in so doing strives to
imitate the true and eternal worship of heaven – the
permanent reality, the land of true freedom
– to which every man is destined and given grace to strive.
That the worshipper is caught into this process is probably
nowhere more explicit in liturgical texts than in the
Cherubic Hymn of the Byzantine Liturgy. As the eucharistic
gifts are being prepared for solemn procession towards their
oblation, the faithful sing of the work they are doing.
What lips confess in the Byzantine rite, every
authentic liturgy accomplishes in the whole of its ritual
action. This particular hymn expresses wonderfully the true
nature of liturgical service:
Let us, who mystically
represent the Cherubim, and sing the thrice-holy hymn to
the life-creating Trinity, now set aside all earthly
cares. That we may welcome the King of all, invisibly
escorted by angelic hosts. Alleluia, Alleluia, Alleluia!
It is this fundamental truth, moreover, that gives liturgy
its festal character. Because man is
confronted with death – his weakened nature, his
limitations, his mortality, the genuine threat of damnation
for the sin towards which he moves himself – he has cause to
celebrate his salvation. In worship Christ
truly comes to him from His throne of majesty, descending in
the splendor of the angels. Because man is held in bondage
in so many ways, the hope and promise of the Kyrios
alone brings true joy. Because of His present advent
through grace and Sacrament, the Christian believer has
every cause to put aside earthly cares: he is being visited
by the very God Who has scattered the stars and galaxies
into the vast reaches of creation. This same God deigns to
come into the very heart of daily human drudgery so that He
might confer on man pardon and peace. Cardinal
Ratzinger addresses this point in Feast of Faith when
he says that “the new and unique Christian reality answers
the questions of all men.”
Worship celebrates the freedom offered to one and all. In
so doing it works to hold the glory of the Lord in a
temporal moment of mystic contemplation, the Kingdom already
come. God is found in the fleeting passage of divine
worship, veiled though He remains. Still and all He is
truly perceived there – through signs and
symbols, colors and perfumes – and communicates His very
Self in the Sacrament of divine Sacrifice.
Anthropologically all are of the same nature and it is the
universal experience of human slavery that is addressed by
the Christian kerygma. This is why the message of a
freedom which is Christian, the fundamental truth
celebrated in the cosmic worship of the liturgy, must be
presented in a genuine catholicity that touches the
very nature of man and his every dimension.
In view of the universal hope that is at its center, the
liturgical feast is characterized by joy. Christ our
Passover is sacrificed for us, His triumph over death is the
reason we can celebrate our own trampling down of death.
This joy is manifest in a variety of ways in the actions of
public prayer and sacrament, none of them to be confused
with the cheap fun so relentlessly pursued by the world at
large. Cardinal Ratzinger says the novel Christian reality
is that Christ’s Resurrection enables man to truly rejoice,
and this is why the liturgy is the Christian feast:
All history until Christ
has been a fruitless search for this joy. That is why the
Christian liturgy – Eucharist – is, of its essence, the
Feast of the Resurrection, Mysterium Paschae. As
such it bears within it the mystery of the Cross, which is
the inner supposition of the Resurrection. To speak of
the Eucharist as the community meal is to cheapen it, for
its price was the death of Christ.… As for the joy it
heralds, it presupposes that we have entered into this
mystery of death. Eucharist is ordered to eschatology,
and hence it is at the heart of the theology of the
Cross. This is why the Church holds to the sacrificial
character. …The freedom with which we are concerned in the
Christian feast – the feast of the Eucharist – is not
freedom to devise new texts but the liberation of the
world and ourselves from death.
This is why the liturgy, even when celebrated in
relationship to events of true human suffering, still
retains its elements of a sober Christian feasting. No
where is this more evident than in the deep shifting threads
between sorrow and joy, fear and hope, death and life
evident throughout the fabric of the classic Roman Requiem
Mass. In a liturgical ensemble of unparalleled richness,
the City of God and the City of Man are woven into a
dramatic tissue exuding hope for the dead, admonition for
the living, the promise of Christ’s triumph celebrated in a
liturgical feast fully redolent of human mortality
and Christian victory. In it the eschatological
dimension of faith has immediate impact and presence; time
is woven into eternity, and the full blush of the human
creature – his passion and art, his weakness and strength –
is drawn deeply into the consummation of Christ’s paschal
triumph of divine love. This is accomplished by a
liturgical organ of striking capability, playing without
pretense on every aspect of human nature, drawing its
celebrants into the truths it makes present.
Furthermore the classic Requiem liturgy weaves its song with
a specifically Christian sense of joy. Far from a contrived
and therefore superficial sense of levity, this feast is
fully conscious of human tears and sorrow. It does its work
with color and sound fitted to mortal grief while the fabric
of the whole bears constantly present the ontological joy of
triumph and resurrection, that the crucified One comes in
Paschal triumph in the Mysterium Fidei. In
every eucharistic liturgy Jesus descends into time and space
in the sacramental species: it is the eschaton in the
here and now, the heart of Christian joy and
feasting made present even in the midst of sorrow and death.
This is the deeper celebration of the truth of human life
redeemed, for it takes the human condition, as it is,
and folds it into the hands of God.
The thread which passes between heaven and earth is what
David Fagerberg calls the “thick end” of liturgy or those
aspects about worship that the Church can not change. The
“thin end”, he says, are the different parts of the
ensemble, essential to the whole, but not unalterable:
Liturgy consists of the various meanings whereby the Church
makes it possible for the faithful to experience through
their senses the mysteries of religion, that is the
sweetness of the Kingdom of God. These various means are
material: the building, vessels, hymnody, psalmody,
iconography, vestments, etc. Therefore the study of the
deep grammar [the thick end of liturgy] cannot proceed
without a study of these matters…
However, he continues with an analysis of the fuller
spectrum:
When wading around in
matters liturgical, one has in fact stepped into the
headwaters of a river (lex orandi) which can
be followed downstream into any number of channels (lex
credendi). Liturgical theology involves
ecclesiology, because the Church is the people which this
ritual creates; and ecclesiology involves Christology
since this is whose body the Church is; and this requires
triadologly for an ontological Christology and soteriology
for a functional Christology; and redemption outlines a
doctrine of sin, which assumes knowledge of what it means
to stand aright, which is the doctrine of creation…The
Church modifies the liturgy in its thin sense; in its
thick sense it is the liturgy which creates the Church.
Fagerberg brings us to the famous axiom of Prosper of
Aquitaine: Legem credendi lex statuat supplicandi.
Rightly understood it reveals the fundamental relationship
of worship to theology. Orthodoxy is not
ortho-pistis (right believing) nor ortho-didascalia
(right teaching): it is right worshipping (ortho-doxologia).
The Church gathered in “sacramental discourse” is the very
foundation or primary source of Christian
faith. Worship is theologia prima: it is
theology in action. Speaking of the historical meaning of
orthodoxy Fr. Aidan Kavanagh says,
…[the] root sense of the
word [orthodoxy] firmly contextualizes it in the
early Church’s stress on faith not so much as an
intellectual assent to doctrinal positions, but as a way
of living the graced commonality of an actual assembly at
worship before the living God. …Christians do not worship
because they believe. They believe because the One in
whose gift faith lies is regularly met in the act of
communal worship – not because the assembly conjures up
God, but because the initiative lies with the God Who has
promised to be there always. The lex credendi
is thus subordinated to the lex supplicandi
because both standards exist and function only within the
worshipping assembly’s own subordination of itself to its
ever present Judge, Savior, and unifying Spirit.
It is almost impossible for
modern Christians to envision worship as more than a
derivative of secondary theological erudition and directives
from Church authority. This misconception is central to the
current problem in liturgical reforms and operative in the
underlying causes of the 1988 schism. Fr. Kavanagh
continues in his text:
To reverse the maxim,
subordinating the standard of worship to the standard of
belief, makes a shamble of the dialectic of revelation.
It was a Presence, not faith, which drew Moses to the
burning bush, and what happened there was a revelation not
a seminar. It was a presence, not faith, which drew the
disciples to Jesus, and what happened there was not an
educational program but His revelation to them as the
long-promised Anointed One, the redeeming because
reconciling Messiah-Christos…
Clearly doctrine influences
worship. But important to a right understanding of liturgy
is the correct order of precedence represented by the famous
axiom and its roots in the right relationship of revelation
to man, the relation of sources to those who receive them.
Kavanagh continues:
The law of belief does
not constitute the law of worship. Thus the creeds
and the reasoning which produced them are not the forces
which produced baptism. Baptism gave rise to the
Trinitarian creeds. So too the Eucharist produced, but
was not produced by, a scriptural text, the eucharistic
prayer, or all the various scholarly theories concerning
the eucharistic real presence. Influenced by, yes.
Constituted or produced by, no. Creeds, theories, texts,
and prayers all emerged from that dialectical process of
change and adjustment to change triggered by the
assembly’s regular baptismal and eucharistic encounters
with the living God in its own faithful life, a life
embracing saints and sinners alike.
Liturgy is the primary
font, not so much as theological locus (which it can be),
but of the Christian life and faith itself. As such
it is certainly subject to the modification of the Church.
In the development of doctrine, arising as it does from the
theologia prima of the Church at her worship,
theological insights can not help but become embedded in the
liturgical expression after the passage of time. But such a
process yields an integral doctrinal development from its
antecedent liturgical seedbed. From that source the
doctrinal reflection later appears more explicitly. This is
what David Fagerberg refers to as modification in the “thin
end” of liturgy. Similarly the outward forms and ceremonies,
colored as they are by cultural and temporal factors, evolve
in a natural and harmonious manner within the liturgical
experience, reflecting the faith they make more manifest.
Historically the process has never occurred in the reverse
sequence except in cases of those seeking to alter the faith
of the subjects of the liturgical rites so changed.
Even in authentic liturgical
development, the end of liturgy remains the same,
necessitating that the substance of liturgical form remain
constant as well. The complex unity of interior substance
and outward forms is an ontological reality, and because it
is not purely spiritual, it is a composite being. The
possibility of changing the whole by changing either
its interior form or exterior matter is seriously risked
when either element is artificially altered without due
reverence for the sanctity of the rites per se, or
without sufficient knowledge of liturgical history and the
psychological/sociological impact public worship has on
people and their behavior. This has clearly come into play
in the liturgical changes in the Roman Church indicated not
only by schism but in a more generally growing
dissatisfaction with the actual state of the reform.
Since the end of human actions is “first in intention
and last in execution”, the end of liturgy must be
rightly understood in order to comprehend its purpose and
effectiveness. Liturgy has everything to do with a
cosmological adoration effected by man and angels in the
power of Christ Who recreates the world through His
Paschal Mystery. Man is dramatically caught in the center
of this mystery and, so too, his deliverance is central to
the mysteries of worship. Macarius of Egypt said this about
the condition of man:
Before the Fall, the soul
was to have progressed and so to have attained full
manhood. But through the fall it was plunged into a sea of
forgetfulness, into an abyss of delusion, and dwelt within
the gates of hell. As if separated from God by a great
distance, it could not draw near its Creator and recognize
Him properly. But first through the prophets God called
it back, and drew it to knowledge of Himself. Finally,
through His own advent on earth, He dispelled the
forgetfulness, the delusion; then breaking through the
gates of hell, He entered into the deluded soul, giving
Himself to it as a model. By means of this model the soul
can grow to maturity and attain the perfection of the
Spirit.
Since man has been created by God
to adore Him and his ability is weakened by the effects of
original sin, liturgy is instrumental in the recreation
of his authentic life and the destiny towards which all his
actions must tend. Although the recreation is effected by
Christ it requires human cooperation. Hence, in order to
worship God rightly a prerequisite must be operative: the
discipline which capacitates a man to worship in the first
place. This is the sacrament of Baptism, the ascetic
foundation of the Christian life. While Baptism is the
foundation, it presupposes an antecedent moral virtue of
humble self-denial, demonstrating that askesis is
indivisible from the perfection of supernatural charity.
There is an asceticism
which leads to Baptism: it is stimulated by agape and is
called mortification, justification, conversion. We may
think of it as catechumenal asceticism. There is, however,
also an asceticism which leads from baptism, from this
conversion, and it is stimulated by charity (i.e. by the
theological virtues received in the sacrament), and we
shall call it liturgical asceticism because it is
practiced by the baptized… Askesis increases the
measure by which we can participate in the liturgical life
to which baptism initiated us. Liturgy is where the
Kingdom is symbolized in its fullest capacity, and
askesis enlarges the eyes of the perceiver; it
cleanses the surface of the liturgist to reflect glory… If
liturgy means sharing the life of Christ (being washed in
His resurrection, eating His body), and if askesis
means discipline (in the sense of forming), then
liturgical asceticism is the discipline required to become
an icon of Christ and to make His image visible in our
faces…
Liturgy, therefore, is the instrument by which the Kingdom
is experienced here and now: God is adored, freedom is
gratefully celebrated, Christ confers Himself, man is remade
into the image of the Redeemer and this occurs in the new
world of the recreated. The tear between the earthly
and heavenly spheres of the cosmos is reknit. All this is
what the Church’s liturgy is and what it should
express.
All of these elements and their inter-operative action in
liturgical worship were once universally understood
throughout the Church. It is to the whole of this
liturgical effect that Saint Gregory the Great referred
when he said,
…at the hour of
Sacrifice, in response to the priest’s acclamation, the
heavens open up; the choirs of angels are witnessing the
mystery; what is above and what is below unite; heaven and
earth are united, matters invisible and invisible become
united.
It is in the union of heaven and
earth that the effect of man’s deliverance is made present
and real. For this reason the liturgy is a foretaste of
heaven: it is the song of the redeemed, a hymn of triumph
in the midst of a cosmic conflict. The Catechism of the
Catholic Church concurs on this point:
In the earthly liturgy we
share in a foretaste of that heavenly liturgy which is
celebrated in the Holy City of Jerusalem towards which we
journey as pilgrims…With all the warriors of the heavenly
army we sing a hymn of glory to the Lord.
Despite
the magisterial worth of this teaching, this is simply not
the way many Catholics view or experience liturgy,
particularly in the West. Msgr. Klaus Gamber, who Cardinal
Ratzinger says should, in “this hour of distress [concerning
the liturgy] become the “father” to a new departure”
in a liturgical reawakening, offers the following analysis:
The concept of this
cosmic liturgy, which continues to exist in the
Eastern Churches, is founded on a precisely ordered,
solemn conduct of liturgical worship. The concept ruled
out any of the forms of minimalism which, beginning in the
Middle Ages, evolved in the West – forms of worship
designed to celebrate the Holy Mysteries only to the
degree absolutely necessary for validity… With the break
between the Eastern and Western Churches, this important
“drama” component of liturgical worship has been largely
lost… Today, not much remains of these ideas, certainly
not in liturgical worship; the cold breath of realism now
pervades our worship.
If worship is an imitation of the
heavenly liturgy, if it is ordered to man’s final end, if it
is the Christian feast of a soldiering people on
pilgrimage towards safety, if it is a foretaste of the
heavenly Banquet of the Lamb, then this must be palpably
evident in the manner in which the liturgy is carried out.
Worship involves the whole of the human person and this
necessarily includes his senses and artistic
capabilities. It is not merely the exercise of his rational
intellect or sense of imagination.
For this reason an element of the
greatest importance must be found in an authentic liturgical
fabric: the outward forms of ceremony and music must
reflect, in an integrated manner, the discipline and
character of all of worship’s other elements. This is why
the Council and the Catechism state that the liturgy is a
“hymn of glory to the Lord”.
The liturgy, as the act par
excellence of man, is a festal song of love. As such
it has been the repository of human artistic genius under
the impulse of grace from its earliest beginnings. The
Christian liturgy must, in this respect, manifest that
unbroken continuum of worship whose festal and musical
character originates in the beginnings of Jewish worship and
passes into the immense wealth of Catholic Christianity. No
where is this more richly developed than in the Western
Catholic liturgical culture, now radically abandoned in the
actual liturgical reforms.
The liturgy’s principal end is
the adoration of God. Since it is primarily the worship of
the Father by the Son carried out through the action of His
hierarchical ministers and the faithful, it is by virtue of
human voice and faculty that the earthly liturgy gives rise
to its hymnal quality of glory.
Man has been created by God and
endowed with all his faculties to the end that he might
freely give praise to his Creator and Redeemer. Man is
constituted by God as homo adorans and to
serve that end he has also been made homo faber.
He is the recipient of gifts ordered towards doing,
towards ars. This latter is a magnificent
implication of his having been made in the image of the
Creator.
Not only has he been endowed with
reason and free will, it is in virtue of both that he has
been given his body and all its faculties. This
integrated being, man, is constituted in
such a way that he can imitate God analogously in His role
as the Creator. It is in view of this constitutive element
that one must understand the Biblical injunction regarding
the worship of Israel and its passage into the cultic
practices of the full Christian Revelation.
According to Cardinal Ratzinger a new zeal and curiosity
about the faith should be manifest to the world in virtue of
the Church’s authentic purpose and being. He says that the
freedom and breadth of Catholic theological thinking spring
from two sources:
…the living experience of
liturgy and the theology of the psalms. With the
transition from the synagogue to the church, singing in
worship had increased; at a very early date “hymns” had
already been added to the psalms. In contrast to theology
[developed by early Church Fathers], the psalms manifested
an unpuritanical delight in music…which was bound to have
an influence. The fact that these songs of Israel
continued to be prayed and sung as hymns of the Church
meant that the whole wealth of feeling of Israel’s prayer
was present in the Church… “…His praise shall continually
be in my mouth…Let the afflicted hear and be glad. O
magnify the Lord with me…”(Ps. 33,2-4) Delight in the Lord
is to be meaningful and beautiful in itself; joy in the
shared praises of Him, the awareness, through celebratory
music-making, that God is worthy of worship – this is
self-evident, it needs no theories…expressed joy manifests
itself as the presence of the glory which is God; in
responding to this glory, it actually shares in it.
[emphasis in original]
This statement should be
juxtaposed to the present state of the liturgy. Comparing
the sense of Sacrosanctum Concilium with the
prevailing norms of today the Cardinal remarks,
…we find contrast which
is characteristic of the difference, in general, between
what the Council said and how it has been taken up by the
postconciliar Church. [The Council Fathers addressed]…the
tension between art and the simplicity of the liturgy;
but when pastors and experts meet together, the pastoral
issues predominate, with the result that the view of the
whole starts to get out of focus…the Council document…is
read one-sidedly in the interests of a particular concern,
and the original balance [now only] becomes a useful rule
of thumb: the liturgy needs utility music, and “actual
church music” must be cultivated elsewhere – it is no
longer suitable for the liturgy. People are prepared to
overlook the fact that, in this view, “actual church
music” is no longer actually music for the Church, that
the Church no longer has “actual church music”. The years
which followed witnessed the increasingly grim
impoverishment which follows when beauty for its own sake
is banished from the Church and all is subordinated to the
principle of “utility”. One shudders at the lackluster
face of the postconciliar liturgy as it has become, or one
is bored with its banality and its lack of artistic
standards.
When the Cardinal says there is
no need of theory to underpin “joy in the Lord” and that the
reason for celebratory music praising God is “self-evident”,
it is because an anthropological analysis recognizes art as
a natural exteriorization of what men gifted with the
grace of talent perceive within. Those without such
gift still see within but share in the expressed art
of the gifted. Homo adorans is also homo
faber, and as such his gifts are ordered to the
praise of the Creator.
In Aidan Kavanagh’s book On
Liturgical Theology, he addresses an important
point in this regard. In analyzing the liturgy he makes an
analogous reference to the art of poetry. This is what, in
part, Professor Fagerberg referred when he too spoke of a
“thickened sense” of liturgy:
In the case of City and
the Church, the need to image in order to know gives rise
to special sorts of discourse which are more necessary
than optional. The discourse thickens meaning found in
reality and then increments that meaning with style.
People do this sort of thing when statements of mere fact
fail due to the complexity of what the statement needs to
express. It is not poetry to report the fact that I love
someone. It is poetry to say “How do I love thee? Let me
count the ways…” Meaning is being thickened and is about
to be incremented with style…
He illustrations his point by citing works of
Walt Whitman and Robert Frost, and then continues:
Each has in his own way
thickened the meaning he found in…reality, and then
thickened that meaning with such exquisite style that
everyone else is stunned by the reality being revealed
with sharp precision, seduced into transacting more deeply
with the real. Thickening meaning and then incrementing
that meaning with style is no easy task, and it does not
happen by accident. It is a knowledgeable accomplishment
of the highest order, more so even than what goes on in
laboratories, banks, and institutions of what is called
higher learning. Writing a sonnet is at least as hard as
figuring compound interest or teaching a course, which is
why so few even attempt it. …Sacramental discourse is the
same sort of enterprise. It is not mere garnish to a
dull dish of Gospel. Sacrament is to Gospel what style is
to meaning. …The Good News…can never be left as a merely
prosaic statement of fact… Sacramental discourse will
bespeak Gospel in ways that embrace and articulate not
just words but the whole worldly context in which such a
pouring out occurs…
For this reason liturgy is the locus sine qua non
for artistic expression. It is not a vehicle for parading
the talent of the artist, but a place for art to reflect
God’s glory. An opposition to art as such is suggested by
the idea that “simplicity” and “actual participation”
necessarily exclude the “elitist” employment of art and
music in liturgical service. This is a false dialectic:
Liturgy is for all…Thus
it must be “simple”. But that is not the same as cheap.
There is a banal simplism, and there is the simplicity
which is expression of maturity. It is this second, true
simplicity which applies in the Church. The greatest
efforts of the spirit, the greatest purification, the
greatest maturity – all these are needed to produce
simplicity. The requirement for simplicity, properly
speaking, is identical with the requirement of purity and
maturity…
It is in this vein, then, that genuine art, far from an
exclusive “elitism” that holds people at bay in worship,
reflects the humility and purity of the artist whose gift is
put at the public service of the Church, while drawing
others into an active-while-silent participation:
…the participatio
actuosa…of the whole “People of God”…this idea has
been fatally narrowed down, giving the impression that
active participation is only present where there is
evidence of external activity – speaking, singing,
preaching, liturgical action…Article 30 [in
Sacrosanctum Concilium] also speaks of silence as a
mode of participation…listening, the receptive employment
of the senses and the mind, spiritual participation, are
surely just as much “activity” as speaking is.…What we
have here [by way of contrast], surely, is a diminished
view of man which reduces him to what is verbally
intelligible…there are a good number of people who can
sing better “with the heart” than “with the mouth”; but
their hearts are really stimulated to sing through the
singing of those who have the gift of singing “with
their mouths”. It is as if they themselves actually sing
in the others; their thankful listening is united with the
voices of the singers in the one worship of God. Are we
to compel people to sing when they can not, and, by so
doing, silence not only their hearts but the hearts of
others too?
This point is extremely important. In the present state of
affairs, utilitarianism – in the form of a
pragmatic popularism – has largely eroded an
anthropologically sound understanding of the elements
of worship. Taken as a whole, liturgy is a vehicle in which
individual artistic expression is put at the service of all
in the adoration of God. By way of direct contrast, in
popular utilitarianism the gifts that God gives to some
are denied to all because they have not
been given to all. This is an example of a destructive
egalitarianism having found its way into Catholic
worship. It squeezes human excellence from a sphere of the
greatest importance and influence, and replaces it with
flattened, banal commonality. This latter not only silences
the art song of noble liturgy, it also silences the larger
influence liturgy has in the construction of a redeemed,
humanized society.
…A Church which only
makes use of utility music as fallen for what is, in fact,
useless. She too becomes ineffectual. For her mission is
a far higher one. As the Old Testament speaks of the
Temple, the Church is to be the place of “glory”, and as
such, too, the place where mankind’s cry of distress is
brought to the ear of God. The Church must not settle
down with what is merely comfortable and serviceable at
the parish level; she must arouse the voice of the cosmos
and, by glorifying the Creator, elicit the glory of the
cosmos itself, making it also glorious, beautiful,
habitable and beloved. Next to the saints, the art which
the Church has produced is the only real “apologia” for
her history. It is this glory which witnesses to the
Lord, not theology’s clever explanations for all the
terrible things which, lamentably, fill the pages of her
history. The Church is to transform, improve, “humanize”
the world – but how can she do that if at the same time
she turns her back on beauty, which is so closely allied
to love? For together, beauty and love form the true
consolation in this world, bringing it as near as possible
to the world of the resurrection. The Church must
maintain high standards; she must be a place where beauty
can be at home, she must lead the struggle for
“spiritualization” without which the world becomes the
“first circle of hell”…
The liturgy is nothing less than the Church’s love poem to
the Lord, her hymn of praise and glory to the God of
Redemption. To this end, human artistry – the work of
homo faber in the service of homo
adorans – must orchestrate a praise which is not
prosaic, but cosmic and glorious. Cardinal Ratzinger
comments on this point when he says, “Glorification is the
central reason why Christian liturgy must be cosmic liturgy,
why it must, as it were, orchestrate the mystery of Christ
with all the voices of creation.”
Capable human art that is pure (by its being ordered
towards God and not the artist) seeks to imitate the glory
of heaven. In employing the work of artists in her worship,
the Church shares in the glory which they imitate. In the
praise of the liturgy art turns into the new song of the
redeemed and celebrates true deliverance. It is this
celebration of freedom-in-God that comprises the human
motive underlying the greatest of all creaturely
media of human expression – Catholic worship.
The self-evidence for joyful, celebratory music is no less
true for all the other art forms involved in the liturgical
ensemble. The full panoply of Christian art and
architecture, as well as all the human expressions of
stylized meaning, are “thickenings” of the Gospel truth
put at the service of the court of heaven. These artistic
embellishments are, according to Fr. Kavanagh, “more
necessary than optional”. These, too, are antecedent
realities, operative elements in the wisdom of the
Church’s received tradition, manifest in the complex
thing which is her worship.
It is in view of this analysis of the liturgical
instrument that any approach to liturgy – and
especially to its authentic restoration – should be
undertaken. Humility before the source, humility in
relating the source to its anthropological and historical
antecedents, is essential. In the absence of such an
approach, the imbalance introduced by the disordering of
constituent parts can only bear a fruit native to the
disorder itself. It is precisely in view of such a
situation that grave divisions have grown up in the Church
over significant changes in its public worship.