As most everybody knows (well, most everybody who would be reading this blog, anyway), Pope Francis stirred up some controversy in the Maundy Thursday service by including women, including a Muslim, in the group of people whose feet he washed. Some think it a liturgical outrage, some think that outrage is an outrage.
For my part, I'm somewhere in between. It was a beautiful gesture in itself, but I have some misgivings as to whether it was wise to do it in this context. And by "this context" I don't mean only the liturgy itself, but the whole history of liturgical travail and controversy that has so troubled the Church since Vatican II. It's not so much the thing itself as the possible encouragement it may give to those who think the liturgy can be tinkered with to any extent they choose.
Over at Caelum et Terra, Daniel Nichols is firmly among those who decry the objections as "rubrical fundamentalism". I sympathize, and yet, although no one who knows me could rationally accuse me of being a stickler for perfect adherence to liturgical rules, I also have some sympathy for the objectors. There are some comments by Teena Blackburn on that CetT post which strikes me as the wisest thing I've read on the subject. Here is one that pretty well sums up her view, though there are others, and if you click on the "rubrical fundamentalism" link above you can read both the post and all the comments (some of which are on the recondite side). Here's her conclusion:
What the Pope did would probably not matter much except a huge number
of Catholics are shell shocked and exhausted from the liturgy wars of
the past decades-and everyone, both clown Mass fan and Latin Mass
attendee, are looking to Rome to see what happens next. The Pope did no
favors to those who are the most likely to obey him in other matters.
In fact, I don't really expect a great resurgence of banalization in the liturgy, because I think that the energy of that movement and the enthusiasm for it among Catholics at large have waned considerably. At least I hope it has.
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