Mass Facing  The People
A practice which was the rarest curiosity until Vatican  II has become so completely accepted that there is scarcely a church in the  country where architects have not been called to redesign the altar and its  surrounding sanctuary in conformity, as it is said, “with the 
The truth is that the concept of a celebration  deliberately oriented to face the people was an invention of Martin Luther. It  had never been the ancient custom of the Catholic Church. As with most of the  propaganda in favor of the liturgical revolution, the arguments in favor of Mass  facing the people are no more than gratuitous assertions devoid of any factual  basis. 
There is no rule, rubric, regulation or law in existence  within the Roman Rite stipulating that Mass shall be celebrated facing the  people. The rubrics of the Novus Ordo  Missae specifically envisage the traditional practice and instruct the  priest to turn to face the congregation at various points and then to turn back  to the altar, i.e., numbers 107, 115, 116, 122,  198, and 199 of the General Instruction on the Roman Missal (Institutio  Generalis).
However, although there is no law commanding Mass to be  celebrated facing the people, Article 262 of the Institutio Generalis could be  interpreted as a mandate for altar smashing. A frequent criticism of the  pre-conciliar Church is that it was “legalistic.” The pre-conciliar Church  certainly did have rules and regulations and enforced them universally and  impartially. There is a different form of legalism in the 
There is not a single reference to Mass facing the  people anywhere in the documents of Vatican II. The first explicit reference to  Mass facing the people appeared in the Instruction Inter Oecumenici promulgated by the  Sacred Congregation of Rites on 26 September 1964. “It is better (praestat ut) for the main altar to be  constructed away from the wall so that one can move round it without difficulty,  and so that it can (peragi posit) be  used for a celebration facing the people (No. 91).
The reference to the construction of altars would appear  to make it clear that this article is applicable only to altars in new churches.  However, the preceding article (No. 90) refers to “building new churches and in  repairing and adapting old ones.” This article bases itself upon Article 124 of  the Vatican II Liturgy Constitution. However, those who care to check the  Constitution will find that this particular article does not refer to “repairing  or adapting” old churches but only to  the building of new ones. When reading the various documents purporting to  implement the Liturgy Constitution it is always worth checking references back  to the Constitution to discover whether it says what these documents  allege.
When the General Instruction on the Roman Missal (Institutio Generalis) was published in  1969, the process was taken a step further. Article 262 is identical with  Article 91 of the Instruction Inter  Oecumenici with one crucial exception, the words “praestat ut” (it is better) have been  removed so that it now states that: “The main altar should be constructed away  from the wall so that one can move round it without difficulty and so that it  can be used for a celebration facing the people.” A reference is then given to  Inter Oecumenici, Article 91, which,  as has been shown, does not say that the altar should be constructed away from the wall  but that it is better that it  should.
Another point of interest here is that both Inter Oecumenici and the Institutio Generalis were produced by  Archbishop (then Father Bugnini)’s Consilium even though they were approved  by the Pope and promulgated by the Sacred Congregation of Rites. The manner in  which it “developed” the teaching of the Council on a freestanding altar and  Mass facing the people provides a revealing example of the manner in which the  Consilium did its work. This can be  summarized as follows:
a.   Vatican II does not mention a freestanding altar or Mass  facing the people.
b.   Article 124 of the Liturgy Constitution includes the  recommendation that: “When churches are to be built, let great care be taken  that they be suitable for the celebration of liturgical services and for the  active participation of the faithful.” There is no mention of  altars.
c.    In 1964, the Consilium expands this sentence to  include adapting old churches, brings up the subject of altars, and states that  “it is better” that they should be freestanding.
d.   In 1969, the Consilium states in the Institutio Generalis that the main altar  should be freestanding and cites its own 1964 document (Inter Oecumenici), which does not state this, as its  authority.
Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, in his book The Spirit of the Liturgy, criticizes  the notion of priest as “presider” as though everything depends on a mere master  of ceremonies. Instead he says,
“The turning of the priest toward the people has turned  the community into a self-enclosed circle. In its outward form, it no longer  opens out on what lies ahead and above, but is closed in on itself. The common  turning toward the east was not a “celebration toward the wall”; it did not mean  that the priest “had his back to the people”: the priest himself was not  regarded as so important. For just as the congregation in the synagogue looked  toward 
Whatever the beliefs and motives of priests who turned  their altars round, it does not change the fact that they have acquiesced in  another step in the Protestantization of our liturgy, a step which Protestants  will certainly welcome as such. [Quoted from The Great  Façade].
1 comment:
Hi. I'm curious as to the comment of Bishop Mercado regarding this - saying mass facing the people. Thanks
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