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Consumerism and the Liturgical Act of Worship
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2013
Abstract
This paper selects three aspects of consumerism (individualism, the chronically reinvented self, and viewing nearly everything as a product or commodity) and assesses how they pose a challenge to liturgical worship, which is properly grounded in a Christian indentity that is fundamentally communal. When consumerism takes the form of shopping for a parish, it threatens to undermine this communal identity. At the same time, parish-shopping may well be an expression of a sincere search for a vital Christian community. This paper thus neither condemns nor condones parish shopping but stresses rather that there is work to be done to build up the sense of community in Roman Catholic parishes. Liturgical worship is an essential element in that process, but liturgy by itself cannot build or sustain community.
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References
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3 David Wells offers a series of similar examples, including “Just Do It” (Nike), “Sometimes You Gotta Break the Rules” (Burger King), “Some people embrace the night because the rules of the day do not apply” (Bacardi Rum), and “Your World Should Know No Boundaries” (Merrill Lynch). See Wells, , Losing Our Virtue: Why the Church Must Recover Its Moral Vision (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1998), 67Google Scholar.
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38 For further discussion of the “anterior” and the “posterior” work of liturgy, see Floristán, Casiano, “The Assembly and Its Pastoral Implications,” in The Church Worships, ed. Wagner, Johannes and Rollings, Heinrich (New York: Paulist, 1966), 35–36Google Scholar. Vincent Miller makes a similar point in “Body of Christ or Religious Boutique,” 17.
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53 Ibid.
54 See http://www.ncrlc.com/page.aspx?ID=51 and select the links for “Harvest Prayers,” “Prayers for Rural Families,” etc. The National Catholic Rural Life Conference is active in promoting social justice concerns in rural America. Regardless of whether parishes are able to raise awareness about agrarian concerns via participation in a farmers' market, action for justice for farmers is still a path parishes may pursue.
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57 Hovda, , “Money or Gifts for the Poor,” 69Google Scholar. The General Instruction of the Roman Missal from which Hovda is working is the 1975 edition, which actually says in no. 49 concerning the presentation of the bread and wine, “This is also the time to receive money or other gifts for the church or the poor brought by the faithful or collected at the Mass. These are to be put in a suitable place but not on the altar.” No. 73 of the 2002 General Instruction says essentially the same thing: “It is well also that money or other gifts for the poor or for the Church, brought by the faithful or collected in the church, should be received. These are to be put in a suitable place but away from the eucharistic table.” My point is that Hovda changes “money or other gifts for the poor or for the Church” to “money or other gifts for the poor and the Church”; my aim is simply that of accuracy.
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63 Cf. 1 Cor. 11:17–29.
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