What to Expect at the Mass
Everything is done in our chapel to keep the worshipper's
attention focused on the presence of our Lord on His altar. The rosary
recited
by a group of worshippers before Mass, the lack of conversation
inside the sanctuary, the traditional music of the organ and choir,
the modest dress and many beautiful feminine head coverings that
reflect our reverence, and the compact and easy-to-use Latin-English
Missals
available to all in the vestibule—all help to focus our attention on
the altar and the prayers and movements of the holy Mass.
QUIET– You may notice the silence. We talk in the vestibule, on the spacious balustrade landing at the top of the steps to the chapel, in the arcade at the side of the chapel, or in St. Vincent's quad. We try to refrain from talking in the presence of our Lord in the Tabernacle, to set this sacred space apart and so that others may pray.
MUSIC – You will hear music from the sacred treasury of the Holy Catholic Church—Gregorian chant and sacred polyphony sung by our schola and the gorgeous harmonies from the rich history of liturgical organ music. At a first visit, many people can be seen looking around trying to figure out where the beautiful music is coming from; we use our choir loft.
DRESS – Please dress modestly out of respect for the Lord and others.
COMMUNION ON THE TONGUE – Simply kneel on the cushion at the communion rail, with your hands clasped for prayer. Father stands in front of you, he will be saying the same words you are used to hearing in the Novus Ordo, but in Latin. In the Extraordinary Form you do not need to say "Amen." As Father finishes speaking, simply open your mouth, extend your tongue about an inch and Father will place the Host on your tongue.
POSTURES
Dr. John M. Haas, Founder and President of the International
Institute for Culture, has spoken of how certain of our practices made
such an impression on him before he became Catholic. He has written
of how the "adverting to Our Lord" manifest in the Catholic
custom of bowing the head in honor of the Real Presence when passing a
Catholic church affected him.Catholics live in a world imbued with supernatural truths, beauty, and tradition: some profound, some a source of comfort, others the source of light-hearted humor. Catholic practices make up the daily life of a Catholic individual and a Catholic society. The morning offering, the invocation of Jesus, Mary and Joseph, the sprinkling of holy water on children at bedtime, the incantation to Saint Anthony ("Tony, Tony, come around; something's lost and can't be found"), the pleas to Saint Jude to prevent a bankruptcy, the novenas for a sick spouse. All of these many practices fill the lives of the faithful, enrich, comfort, and orient them. Often it is difficult to trace their origin. Often the ones which seem most intimate and natural to a people were never even introduced by ecclesiastical authority. They emerged as natural, faith-filled expressions of love or joy or thanksgiving or grief or desperation. The one characteristic these Catholic practices all seem to share is their ability to turn people away from the mundane, the worldly, the everyday, and direct them toward the sacred, the transcendent, the eternal.
Below are instructions on some of these ways of "adverting to Our Lord" by the use of posture and gesture.
How: | Simply lower your chin toward your throat and hold a moment |
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How: | With either a fist or with the tips of the fingers, held close together, strike your chest over the heart to express regret and sorrow |
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How: | Bow at the waist in the manner of the Japanese (about 30 degrees forward) |
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How: | Kneel on your left knee for a moment, bringing the left knee all the way to the floor and keeping the back straight. Hold for a moment, then stand. (The word is pronounced "jen-you-flek'-shun") |
When: | When greeting or leaving the Pope or other hierarchs with the rank of Bishop or above and who have jurisdiction over you (only when the Pope is not present)—e.g., to the Bishop or Archbishop of your diocese, not of a neighboring diocese. During the left-knee genuflection, a kiss is given to the hierarch's ring. Then stand. |
How: | Looking at what you are genuflecting toward, kneel on your right knee for a moment in the manner of a man proposing to a woman, bringing the right knee all the way to the floor, close to the heel of the left foot, keeping the back and neck erect. Hold for a moment, then stand. |
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How: | Kneel on both knees |
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How: | Keeping your legs together, drop to your knees and then lie down flat on the floor on your face, crossing your hands underneath your forehead forming a "pillow" on which to rest your forehead |
When: | Prostrations, which signify total humility and penance, are made during the Rite of Ordination, during rites of religious profession (e.g., entry into religious orders), as penance in religious orders, and by anyone during private prayer before a Crucifix or the Blessed Sacrament. It is also occasionally made by adults, at the priest's invitation, before the Profession of Faith in the solemn Rite of Baptism. (See St. Dominic's "Second Way" of prayer) |
How: | To paraphrase Lauren Bacall in "To Have and Have Not," you know how to kiss, don't you? You just put your lips together... but don't blow. |
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Notes:
1 The custom of bowing the head at the mention of His Name was formally written into law at the Second Council of Lyons, A.D. 1274, convened by Pope Gregory X: "Those who assemble in church should extol with an act of special reverence that Name which is above every Name, than which no other under Heaven has been given to people, in which believers must be saved, the Name, that is, of Jesus Christ, Who will save His people from their sins. Each should fulfil in himself that which is written for all, that at the Name of Jesus every knee should bow; whenever that glorious Name is recalled, especially during the sacred Mysteries of the Mass, everyone should bow the knees of his heart, which he can do even by a bow of his head."
2 The Catholic Encyclopedia cites St. Augustine (A.D. 354-430) as saying in his Sermo de verbis Domini, "No sooner have you heard the word 'Confiteor' than you strike your breast. What does this mean except that you wish to bring to light what is concealed in the breast, and by this act to cleanse your hidden sins?"
It also cites St. Jerome (ca. A.D. 340-420) as saying in Ezechiel, c. xviii, "We strike our breast because the breast is the seat of evil thoughts: we wish to dispel these thoughts, we wish to purify our hearts."
3 The orans position is frequently depicted in the art of the Catacombs where figures praying in this manner represented departed souls praying for the soul of the one whose tomb the figures adorn. The Catholic Encyclopedia says, "Numerous Biblical figures, for instance, depicted in the catacombs—Noah, Abraham, Isaac, the Three Children in the Fiery Furnace, Daniel in the lions' den—are pictured asking the Lord to deliver the soul of the person on whose tombs they are depicted as He once delivered the particular personage represented." It goes on to say that in addition to the Biblical Orans figures, there are idealized figures in that "ancient attitude of prayer" which symbolize the soul of the entombed one in heaven, praying for its friends on earth. "This symbolic meaning accounts for the fact that the great majority of the figures are female, even when depicted on the tombs of men."