LITURGY MATTERS: Celebrants or Consumers? It matters! Part 3: The preparation of the gifts
Today we continue our reflection on what we think we are doing in the ‘Liturgy of the Eucharist’. We are driven by the question emerging in our COVID-19 experience: are we celebrants or consumers? So gather in your reflections from the first and second articles in this series and let us proceed, focusing today on the first of the four-part eucharistic action: the preparation of the gifts.
LITURGY MATTERS: Celebrants or Consumers? It matters! (Part 2)
In the previous Liturgy Matters, prompted by our experience of live streamed Mass, we began to explore the question: When we celebrate eucharist, do we understand ourselves to be celebrants or consumers?
LITURGY MATTERS: Celebrants or Consumers? It matters!
The ‘liturgical cafeteria’ opened for business in a new and expanded form at the same time businesses, jobs, shops, theatres, parks, sport and a range of other activities closed.
Special Studies in Theology: Liturgical Inculturation
Australian Catholic University's (ACU's) Faculty of Theology and Philosophy and the ACU Centre for Liturgy will welcome Rev. Professor Mark R. Francis csv a renown liturgical theologian whose special interest is the relationship between liturgy and culture.
LITURGY MATTERS: Forward never backward
Well its begun. The restrictions are being eased and all the talk is about ‘back to normal’, or ‘adjusting to the new normal’. Language is always interesting. Of course, for people of faith – particularly Christians – there is no ‘back to’. Let’s reflect on that a bit.
LITURGY MATTERS: Prayerful and Eucharistic
Tracey’s Liturgy Matters article last week led me back to the Plenary Council theme which invites us to reflect on God’s call for us to be a Christ-centred Church in Australia that is prayerful and eucharistic.
LITURGY MATTERS: All the way to Mass is Mass
Today I invite you to savour the reflections of Tracey Edstein as she ponders our current liturgical matters and what our experience is revealing about ourselves and our Mass. Thank you, Tracey, for this rich feast.
LITURGY MATTERS: Children’s Liturgy and Family Prayer in a Time of Pandemic
I don’t know about you, but I am finding some silver linings to our current lockdown which has closed our churches and stopped public liturgy, including Sunday Mass. This promoted some of us to reflect on the opportunities emerging for Children’s Liturgy and family prayer.