In a July letter, the
Vatican’s Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the
Sacraments (CDWDS) warned against “abuses” such as “the movement of the
faithful from their places to exchange the sign of peace” during Mass.
The CDWDS also criticized “the departure of priests from the altar” to
greet parishioners and the practice of expressing congratulations during
the sign of peace, as sometimes happens on feast days. The document,
signed by CDWDS prefect Cardinal Antonio CaƱizares Llovera and approved
by Pope Francis, was sent to bishops conferences around the world.
They should ignore it.
In our time, when a wide variety of styles exists in Catholic liturgy
and confusion sometimes arises over primary and secondary meanings of
our rites, such a letter might have helped to “hold the center” by
calling people to reflect on the essential meaning of the sign of peace.
Instead, it meandered down sadly predictable pathways, criticizing
alleged abuses and insisting on the advisability of occasionally
suppressing the exchange of peace altogether (something neither Benedict
XVI nor Francis has advocated).
What prompted reconsideration of the sign of peace was a discussion
that took place during the 2007 synod on the Eucharist, presided over by
Pope Benedict. During that meeting, some bishops suggested moving the
sign of peace from its current place in the Communion rite to before the
presentation of the gifts, where the Orthodox and Ambrosian rites and
the Episcopal Church have it. Benedict, who favored this alternative,
asked the CDWDS to study the question.
Were experts consulted, historical and theological sources reviewed,
wide-ranging practices evaluated? No. A poll was sent to bishops
conferences in 2008. Their verdict? Moving the sign of peace would be
“inconvenient.” One might have thought the whole thing had fizzled. Yet,
six years later, the CDWDS letter was published. The text itself has
barely anything to say about its original purpose—the question of the
placement of the sign of peace. Instead, the letter is padded with
“didactic instructions” that bishops are supposed to use in catechizing
the faithful. The list of “abuses” to be “definitively avoided” are
well-known, well-accepted practices: singing songs, or moving around to
offer peace to more people, or adding impromptu words to the exchange,
such as expressions of consolation to the bereaved at a funeral. To
average Catholics, the letter came across as a slap on the wrist for
being “too sociable” during Mass.
This approach is not only wrongheaded. It also distracts us from a
more important agenda. The central challenge for the post–Vatican II
era, as liturgical theologian Andrea Grillo has pointed out, is not
eliminating abuses. It is deepening use of the postconciliar rites.
Reading the letter, one might imagine that the sign of peace is
floundering in the church today. In fact, it’s one of the most
successful rites we have. This is shown by how thoroughly it has been
inculturated: with hand clasps and smiling exchanges in North America;
with lively songs in the Caribbean; with bowing in Thailand; with
monastic practices such as those of the Jerusalem community, whose
members rush forth from their contemplative position in choir to share
the peace joyfully with as many as they can; and more. Those are hardly
abuses. Rather, they are ways of inculturating the sign of peace, of
enabling its rich and meaningful use.
One lone paragraph in the letter sounds a different note, and it
comes near the end. It raises concerns that Pope Francis has articulated
elsewhere. If he didn’t write it himself, he certainly inspired it.
Here, the conceptual frame of the discussion widens to include the
world. The focus shifts from what we may not do to what we must do for
the sake of God’s kingdom:
Today, a serious obligation for Catholics
in building a more just and peaceful world is accompanied by a deeper
understanding of the Christian message of peace, and this depends
largely on the seriousness with which our particular churches welcome
and invoke the gift of peace and express it in the liturgical
celebration. Productive steps forward in this matter must be insisted
upon and urged, because the quality of our Eucharistic participation
depends upon it, as well as the efficacy of our being joined with those
who are ambassadors and builders of peace, as expressed in the
Beatitudes.
Would that the whole letter had taken this passage as its keynote.
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