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THE SPIRIT OF THE LITURGY
By Romano Guardini
CHAPTER 1
THE PRAYER OF THE LITURGY
AN old theological proverb says, "Nothing done by nature and
grace is done in vain." Nature and grace obey their own
laws, which are based upon certain established hypotheses.
Both the natural and the supernatural life of the soul, when
lived in accordance with these principles, remain healthy,
develop, and are enriched. In isolated cases the rules may
be waived without any danger, when such a course is required
or excused by reason of a spiritual disturbance, imperative
necessity, extraordinary occasion, important end in view, or
the like. In the end, however, this cannot be done with
impunity. Just as the life of the body droops and is stunted
when the conditions of its growth are not observed, so it is
with spiritual and religious life--it sickens, losing its
vigor, strength and unity.
This is even more true where the regular spiritual life of a
corporate body is concerned. Exceptions play a far greater
part, after all, in the life of the individual than in that
of the group. As soon as a group is in question, concern is
immediately aroused with regard to the regulation of those
practices and prayers which will constitute the permanent
form of its devotion in common; and then the crucial
question arises whether the fundamental laws which govern
normal interior life--in the natural as in the supernatural
order--are in this case to have currency or not. For it is
no longer a question of the correct attitude to be adopted,
from the spiritual point of view, towards the adjustment of
some temporary requirement or need, but of the form to be
taken by the permanent legislation which will henceforth
exercise an enduring influence upon the soul. This is not
intended to regulate entirely independent cases, each on its
own merits, but to take into account the average
requirements and demands of everyday life. It is not to
serve as a model for the spiritual life of the individual,
but for that of a corporate body, composed of the most
distinct and varied elements. From this it follows that any
defect in its organization will inevitably become both
apparent and obtrusive. It is true that at first every
mistake will be completely overshadowed by the particular
circumstances--the emergency or disturbance--which justified
the adoption of that particular line of conduct. But in
proportion as the extraordinary symptoms subside, and the
normal existence of the soul is resumed, the more forcibly
every interior mistake is bound to come to light, sowing
destruction on all sides in its course.
The fundamental conditions essential to the full expansion
of spiritual life as it is lived in common are most clearly
discernible in the devotional life of any great community
which has spread its development over a long period of time.
Its scheme of life has by then matured and developed its
full value. In a corporate body--composed of people of
highly varied circumstances, drawn from distinct social
strata, perhaps even from different races, in the course of
different historical and cultural periods--the ephemeral,
adventitious, and locally characteristic elements are, to a
certain extent, eliminated, and that which is universally
accepted as binding and essential comes to the fore. In
other words, the canon of spiritual administration becomes,
in the course of time, objective and impartial.
The Catholic liturgy is the supreme example of an
objectively established rule of spiritual life. It has been
able to develop "kata tou holou," that is to say, in every
direction, and in accordance with all places, times, and
types of human culture. Therefore it will be the best
teacher of the "via ordinaria"--the regulation of religious
life in common, with, at the same time, a view to actual
needs and requirements.1
The significance of the liturgy must, however, be more
exactly defined. Our first task will be to establish the
quality of its relation to the non-liturgical forms of
spiritual life.
The primary and exclusive aim of the liturgy is not the
expression of the individual's reverence and worship for
God. It is not even concerned with the awakening, formation,
and sanctification of the individual soul as such. Nor does
the onus of liturgical action and prayer rest with the
individual. It does not even rest with the collective
groups, composed of numerous individuals, who periodically
achieve a limited and intermittent unity in their capacity
as the congregation of a church. The liturgical entity
consists rather of the united body of the faithful as such--the Church--a body which infinitely outnumbers the mere
congregation. The liturgy is the Church's public and lawful
act of worship, and it is performed and conducted by the
officials whom the Church herself has designated for the
post--her priests. In the liturgy God is to be honored by
the body of the faithful, and the latter is in its turn to
derive sanctification from this act of worship. It is
important that this objective nature of the liturgy should
be fully understood. Here the Catholic conception of worship
in common sharply differs from the Protestant, which is
predominatingly individualistic. The fact that the
individual Catholic, by his absorption into the higher
unity, finds liberty and discipline, originates in the
twofold nature of man, who is both social and solitary.
Now, side by side with the strictly ritual and entirely
objective forms of devotion, others exist, in which the
personal element is more strongly marked. To this type
belong those which are known as "popular devotions," such as
afternoon prayers accompanied by hymns, devotions suited to
varying periods, localities, or requirements and so on. They
bear the stamp of their time and surroundings, and are the
direct expression of the characteristic quality or temper of
an individual congregation.
Although in comparison with the prayer of the individual,
which is expressive of purely personal needs and
aspirations, popular devotions are both communal and
objective, they are to a far greater degree characteristic
of their origin than is the liturgy, the entirely objective
and impersonal method of prayer practiced by the Church as a
whole. This is the reason for the greater stress laid by
popular devotion upon the individual need of edification.
Hence the rules and forms of liturgical practice cannot be
taken, without more ado, as the authoritative and decisive
standard for non-liturgical prayer. The claim that the
liturgy should be taken as the exclusive pattern of
devotional practice in common can never be upheld. To do so
would be to confess complete ignorance of the spiritual
requirements of the greater part of the faithful. The forms
of popular piety should rather continue to exist side by
side with those of the liturgy, and should constitute
themselves according to the varying requirements of
historical, social, and local conditions. There could be no
greater mistake than that of discarding the valuable
elements in the spiritual life of the people for the sake of
the liturgy, or than the desire of assimilating them to it.
But in spite of the fact that the liturgy and popular
devotion have each their own special premises and aims,
still it is to liturgical worship that pre-eminence of right
belongs. The liturgy is and will be the "lex orandi." Non-
liturgical prayer must take the liturgy for its model, and
must renew itself in the liturgy, if it is to retain its
vitality. It cannot precisely be said that as dogma is to
private religious opinion, so is the liturgy to popular
devotion; but the connection between the latter does to a
certain degree correspond with that special relation,
characteristic of the former, which exists between the
government and the governed. All other forms of devotional
practice can always measure their shortcomings by the
standard of the liturgy, and with its help find the surest
way back to the "via ordinaria" when they have strayed from
it. The changing demands of time, place, and special
circumstance can express themselves in popular devotion;
facing the latter stands the liturgy, from which clearly
issue the fundamental laws--eternally and universally
unchanging--which govern all genuine and healthy piety.
In the following pages an attempt will be made to select
from the liturgy and to analyze several of these laws. But
it is an attempt pure and simple, which professes to be
neither exhaustive nor conclusive.
The first and most important lesson which the liturgy has to
teach is that the prayer of a corporate body must be
sustained by thought. The prayers of the liturgy are
entirely governed by and interwoven with dogma. Those who
are unfamiliar with liturgical prayer often regard them as
theological formula, artistic and didactic, until on closer
acquaintance they suddenly perceive and admit that the
clear-cut, lucidly constructed phrases are full of interior
enlightenment. To give an outstanding example, the wonderful
Collects of the Masses of Sunday may be quoted. Wherever the
stream of prayer wells abundantly upwards, it is always
guided into safe channels by means of plain and lucid
thought. Interspersed among the pages of the Missal and the
Breviary are readings from Holy Scripture and from the works
of the Fathers, which continually stimulate thought. Often
these readings are introduced and concluded by short prayers
of a characteristically contemplative and reflective nature--the antiphons--during which that which has been heard or
read has time to cease echoing and to sink into the mind.
The liturgy, the "lex orandi," is, according to the old
proverb, the law of faith--the "lex credendi"--as well. It
is the treasure-house of the thought of Revelation.
This is not, of course, an attempt to deny that the heart
and the emotions play an important part in the life of
prayer. Prayer is, without a doubt, "a raising of the heart
to God." But the heart must be guided, supported, and
purified by the mind. In individual cases or on definite and
explicit occasions it may be possible to persist in, and to
derive benefit from, emotion pure and simple, either
spontaneous or occasioned by a fortunate chance. But a
regular and recurrent form of devotion lights upon the most
varied moods, because no one day resembles another. If the
content of these devotional forms is of a predominatingly
emotional character, it will bear the stamp of its
fortuitous origin, since the feeling engendered by solitary
spiritual occurrences flows for the most part into special
and particular channels. Such a prayer therefore will always
be unsuitable if it does not harmonize, to a certain degree
at least, with the disposition of the person who is to offer
it. Unless this condition is complied with, either it is
useless or it may even mar the sentiment experienced. The
same thing occurs when a form of prayer intended for a
particular purpose is considered to be adapted to the most
varied occasions.
Only thought is universally current and consistent, and, as
long as it is really thought, remains suited, to a certain
degree, to every intelligence. If prayer in common,
therefore, is to prove beneficial to the majority, it must
be primarily directed by thought, and not by feeling. It is
only when prayer is sustained by and steeped in clear and
fruitful religious thought, that it can be of service to a
corporate body, composed of distinct elements, all actuated
by varying emotions.
We have seen that thought alone can keep spiritual life
sound and healthy. In the same way, prayer is beneficial
only when it rests on the bedrock of truth. This is not
meant in the purely negative sense that it must be free from
error; in addition to this, it must spring from the fullness
of truth. It is only truth--or dogma, to give it its other
name--which can make prayer efficacious, and impregnate it
with that austere, protective strength without which it
degenerates into weakness. If this is true of private
prayer, it is doubly so of popular devotion, which in many
directions verges on sentimentality.2 Dogmatic thought
brings release from the thralldom of individual caprice, and
from the uncertainty and sluggishness which follow in the
wake of emotion. It makes prayer intelligible, and causes it
to rank as a potent factor in life.
If, however, religious thought is to do justice to its
mission, it must introduce into prayer truth in all its
fullness.
Various individual truths of Revelation hold a special
attraction for the temperaments and conditions to which they
correspond. It is easy to see that certain people have a
pronounced predilection for certain mysteries of faith. This
is shown in the case of converts, for instance, by the
religious ideas which first arrested their attention at
their entry into the Church, or which decided them on the
step they were taking, and in other cases by the truths
which at the approach of doubt form the mainstay and
buttress of the whole house of faith. In the same way doubt
does not charge at random, but attacks for the most part
those mysteries of faith which appeal least to the
temperament of the people concerned.3
If a prayer therefore stresses any one mystery of faith in
an exclusive or an excessive manner, in the end it will
adequately satisfy none but those who are of a corresponding
temperament, and even the latter will eventually become
conscious of their need of truth in its entirety. For
instance, if a prayer deals exclusively with God's mercy, it
will not ultimately satisfy even a delicate and tender
piety, because this truth calls for its complement-the fact
of God's justice and majesty. In any form of prayer,
therefore, which is intended for the ultimate use of a
corporate body, the whole fullness of religious truth must
be included.
Here, too, the liturgy is our teacher. It condenses into
prayer the entire body of religious truth. Indeed, it is
nothing else but truth expressed in terms of prayer. For it
is the great fundamental truths4 which above all fill the
liturgy--God in His mighty reality, perfection, and
greatness, One, and Three in One; His creation, providence,
and omnipresence; sin, justification, and the desire of
salvation; the Redeemer and His kingdom; the four last
things. It is only such an overwhelming abundance of truth
which can never pall, but continue to be, day after day, all
things to all men, ever fresh and inexhaustible.
In the end, therefore, prayer in common will be fruitful
only in so far as it does not concentrate markedly, or at
any rate exclusively, on particular portions of revealed
truth, but embraces, as far as possible, the whole of Divine
teaching. This is especially important where the people are
concerned, because they easily tend to develop a partiality
for particular mysteries of faith which for some reason have
become dear to them.5 On the other hand, it is obvious that
prayer must not be overladen and as a result form a mere
hotchpotch of ill-assorted thoughts and ideas--a thing which
sometimes does occur. Yet without the element of
spaciousness, spiritual life droops and becomes narrow and
petty. "The truth shall make you free"--free not only from
the thralldom of error, but free as a preparation for the
vastness of God's kingdom.
While the necessity of thought is emphasized, it must not be
allowed to degenerate into the mere frigid domination of
reason. Devotional forms on the contrary should be permeated
by warmth of feeling.
On this point as well the liturgy has many recommendations
to make. The ideas which fill it are vital: that is to say,
they spring from the impulses of the heart which has been
molded by grace, and must again in their turn affect other
eager and ardent hearts. The Church's worship is full of
deep feeling, of emotion that is intense, and sometimes even
vehement. Take the Psalms, for instance--how deeply moving
they often are! Listen to the expression of longing in the
"Quemadmodum," of remorse in the "Miserere," of exultation
in the Psalms of praise, and of indignant righteousness in
those denouncing the wicked. Or consider the remarkable
spiritual tension which lies between the mourning of Good
Friday and the joy of Easter morning.
Liturgical emotion is, however, exceedingly instructive. It
has its moments of supreme climax, in which all bounds are
broken, as, for instance, in the limitless rejoicing of the
"Exultet" on Holy Saturday. But as a rule it is controlled
and subdued. The heart speaks powerfully, but thought at
once takes the lead; the forms of prayer are elaborately
constructed, the constituent parts carefully
counterbalanced; and as a rule they deliberately keep
emotion under strict control. In this way, in spite of the
deep feeling to be found in, say, the Psalms (to instance
them once more), a sense of restraint pervades liturgical
form.
The liturgy as a whole is not favorable to exuberance of
feeling. Emotion glows in its depths, but it smolders
merely, like the fiery heart of the volcano, whose summit
stands out clear and serene against the quiet sky. The
liturgy is emotion, but it is emotion under the strictest
control. We are made particularly aware of this at Holy
Mass, and it applies equally to the prayers of the Ordinary
and of the Canon, and to those of the Proper of the Time.
Among them are to be found masterpieces of spiritual
restraint.
The restraint characteristic of the liturgy is at times very
pronounced--so much so as to make this form of prayer appear
at first as a frigid intellectual production, until we
gradually grow familiar with it and realize what vitality
pulsates in the clear, measured forms.
And how necessary this discipline is! At certain moments and
on certain occasions it is permissible for emotion to have a
vent. But a prayer which is intended for the everyday use of
a large body of people must be restrained. If, therefore, it
has uncontrolled and unbalanced emotion for a foundation, it
is doubly dangerous. It will operate in one of two ways.
Either the people who use it will take it seriously, and
probably will then feel obliged to force themselves into
acquiescence with an emotion that they have never, generally
speaking, experienced, or which, at any rate, they are not
experiencing at that particular moment, thus perverting and
degrading their religious feeling. Or else indifference, if
they are of a phlegmatic temperament, will come to their
aid; they then take the phrases at less than their face
value, and consequently the word is depreciated.
Written prayer is certainly intended as a means of
instruction and of promoting an increased sensibility. But
its remoteness from the average emotional attitude must not
be allowed to become too great. If prayer is ultimately to
be fruitful and beneficial to a corporate body, it must be
intense and profound, but at the same time normally tranquil
in tone. The wonderful verses of the hymn--hardly
translatable, so full are they of penetrating insight--may
be quoted in this connection:
Laeti bibamus sobriam
Ebrietatem Spiritus . . .6
Certainly we must not try to measure off the lawful share of
emotion with a foot-rule; but where a plain and
straightforward expression suffices we must not aggrandize
nor embellish it; and a simple method of speech is always to
be preferred to an overloaded one.
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Again, the liturgy has many suggestions to make on the
quality of the emotion required for the particular form of
prayer under discussion, which is ultimately to prove
universally beneficial. It must not be too choice in
expression, nor spring from special sections of dogma, but
clearly express the great fundamental feelings, both natural
and spiritual, as do the Psalms, for instance, where we find
the utterance of adoration, longing for God, gratitude,
supplication, awe, remorse, love, readiness for sacrifice,
courage in suffering, faith, confidence, and so on. The
emotion must not be too acutely penetrating, too tender, or
too delicate, but strong, clear, simple and natural.
Then the liturgy is wonderfully reserved. It scarcely
expresses, even, certain aspects of spiritual surrender and
submission, or else it veils them in such rich imagery that
the soul still feels that it is hidden and secure. The
prayer of the Church does not probe and lay bare the heart's
secrets; it is as restrained in thought as in imagery; it
does, it is true, awaken very profound and very tender
emotions and impulses, but it leaves them hidden. There are
certain feelings of surrender, certain aspects of interior
candor which cannot be publicly proclaimed, at any rate in
their entirety, without danger to spiritual modesty. The
liturgy has perfected a masterly instrument which has made
it possible for us to express our inner life in all its
fullness and depth, without divulging our secrets--"secretum
meum mihi." We can pour out our hearts, and still feel that
nothing has been dragged to light that should remain
hidden.7
This is equally true of the system of moral conduct which is
to be found in prayer.
Liturgical action and liturgical prayer are the logical
consequences of certain moral premises--the desire for
justification, contrition, readiness for sacrifice, and so
on--and often issue afresh into moral actions. But there
again it is possible to observe a fine distinction. The
liturgy does not lightly exact moral actions of a very far-reaching nature, especially those which denote an interior
decision. It requires them where the matter is of real
importance, e.g., the abjuration at baptism, or the vows at
the final reception into an order. When, however, it is a
question of making regular daily prayer fruitful in everyday
intentions and decisions, the liturgy is very cautious. For
instance, it does not rashly utter such things as vows, or
full and permanent repudiations of sin, entire and lasting
surrender, all-embracing consecration of one's entire being,
utter contempt for and renouncement of the world, promises
of exclusive love, and the like. Such ideas are present at
times, fairly frequently even, but generally under the form
of a humble entreaty that the suppliant may be vouchsafed
similar sentiments, or that he is encouraged to ponder upon
their goodness and nobility, or is exhorted on the same
subject. But the liturgy avoids the frequent use of those
prayers in which these moral actions are specifically
expressed.
How right this is! In moments of exaltation and in the hour
of decision such a manner of speech may be justified, and
even necessary. But when it is a question of the daily
spiritual life of a corporate body, such formulas, when
frequently repeated, offer those who are using them an
unfortunate selection from which to make their choice.
Perhaps they take the formulas literally and endeavor to
kindle the moral sentiments expressed in them, discovering
later that it is often difficult, and sometimes impossible,
to do so truthfully and effectually. They are consequently
in danger of developing artificial sentiments, of forcing
intentions that still remain beyond their compass, and of
daily performing moral actions, which of their very nature
cannot be frequently accomplished. Or else they take the
words merely as a passing recommendation of a line of
conduct which it would be well to adopt, and in this way
depreciate the intrinsic moral value of the formula,
although it may be used frequently, and in all good faith.
In this connection are applicable the words of Christ, "Let
your speech be yea, yea,--nay, nay."8
The liturgy has solved the problem of providing a constant
incentive to the highest moral aims, and at the same time of
remaining true and lofty, while satisfying everyday needs.
Another question which arises is that concerning the form to
be taken by prayer in common. We may put it like this: What
method of prayer is capable of transforming the souls of a
great multitude of people, and of making this transformation
permanent?
The model of all devotional practice in common is to be
found in the Divine Office, which day after day gathers
together great bodies of people at stated times for a
particular purpose. If anywhere, then it is in the Office
that those conditions will be found which are favorable to
the framing of rules for the forms of prayer in common.9
It is of paramount importance that the whole gathering
should take an active share in the proceedings. If those
composing the gathering merely listen, while one of the
number acts as spokesman, the interior movement soon
stagnates. All present, therefore, are obliged to take part.
It is not even sufficient for the gathering to do so by
repeating the words of their leader. This type of prayer
does, of course, find a place in the liturgy, e.g., in the
litany. It is perfectly legitimate, and people desirous of
abandoning it totally fail to recognize the requirements of
the human soul. In the litany the congregation answers the
varying invocations of the leader with an identical act,
e.g., with a request. In this way the act each time acquires
a fresh content and fresh fervor, and an intensification of
ardor is the result. It is a method better suited than any
other to express a strong, urgent desire, or a surrender to
God's Will, presenting as it does the petition of all sides
effectively and simultaneously.
But the liturgy does not employ this method of prayer
frequently; we may even say, when we consider divine worship
as a whole, that it employs it but seldom. And rightly so,
for it is a method which runs the risk of numbing and
paralyzing spiritual movement.10 The liturgy adapts the
dramatic form by choice to the fundamental requirements of
prayer in common. It divides those present into two choirs,
and causes prayer to progress by means of dialogue. In this
way all present join the proceedings, and are obliged to
follow with a certain amount of attention at least, knowing
as they do that the continuation of their combined action
depends upon each one personally.
Here the liturgy lays down one of the fundamental principles
of prayer, which cannot be neglected with impunity.11
However justified the purely responsive forms of prayer may
be, the primary form of prayer in common is the actively
progressive--that much we learn from the "lex orandi." And
the question, intensely important to-day, as to the right
method to employ in again winning people to the life of the
Church is most closely connected with the question under
discussion. For it is modern people precisely who insist
upon vital and progressive movement, and an active share in
things. The fluid mass of this overwhelming spiritual
material, however, needs cutting down and fashioning. It
requires a leader to regulate the beginning, omissions, and
end, and, in addition, to organize the external procedure.
The leader also has to model it interiorly; thus, for
instance, he has to introduce the recurrent thought-theme,
himself undertaking the harder portions, in order that they
may be adequately and conscientiously dealt with; he must
express the emotion of all present by means of climaxes, and
introduce certain restful pauses by the inclusion of
didactic or meditative portions. Such is the task of the
choir-leader, which has undergone a carefully graduated
course of development in the liturgy.
Attention has already been called to the deep and fruitful
emotion which is contained in the liturgy. It also embraces
the two fundamental forces of human existence: Nature and
civilization.
In the liturgy the voice of Nature makes itself heard
clearly and decisively. We only need to read the Psalms to
see man as he really is. There the soul is shown as
courageous and despondent, happy and sorrowful, full of
noble intentions, but of sin and struggles as well, zealous
for everything that is good and then again apathetic and
dejected. Or let us take the readings from the Old
Testament. How frankly human nature is revealed in them!
There is no attempt at extenuation or excuse. The same thing
applies to the Church's words of ordination, and to the
prayers used in administering the sacraments. A truly
refreshing spontaneity characterizes them; they call things
by their names. Man is full of weakness and error, and the
liturgy acknowledges this. Human nature is inexplicable, a
tangled web of splendor and misery, of greatness and
baseness, and as such it appears in the prayer of the
Church. Here we find no carefully adapted portrait from
which the harsh and unpleasing traits have been excluded,
but man as he is.
Not less rich is the liturgy's cultural heritage. We become
conscious of the fact that many centuries have co-operated
in its formation and have bequeathed to it of their best.
They have fashioned its language; expanded its ideas and
conceptions in every direction; developed its beauty of
construction down to the smallest detail--the short verses
and the finely-forged links of the prayers, the artistic
form of the Divine Office and of the Mass, and the wonderful
whole that is the ecclesiastical year. Action, narrative,
and choral forms combine to produce the cumulative effect.
The style of the individual forms continually varies--simple
and clear in the Hours, rich in mystery on the festivals of
Mary, resplendent on the more modern feasts, delightful and
full of charm in the offices of the early virgin-martyrs. To
this we should add the entire group of ritual gestures and
action, the liturgical vessels and vestments, and the works
of sculptors and artists and musicians.
In all this is to be learnt a really important lesson on
liturgical practice. Religion needs civilization. By
civilization we mean the essence of the most valuable
products of man's creative, constructive, and organizing
powers-works of art, science, social orders, and the like.
In the liturgy it is civilization's task to give durable
form and expression to the treasure of truths, aims, and
supernatural activity, which God has delivered to man by
Revelation, to distill its quintessence, and to relate this
to life in all its multiplicity. Civilization is incapable
of creating a religion, but it can supply the latter with a
"modus operandi," so that it can freely engage in its
beneficent activity. That is the real meaning of the old
proverb, "Philosophia ancilla theologiae"--philosophy is the
handmaid of theology. It applies to all the products of
civilization, and the Church has always acted in accordance
with it. Thus she knew very well what she was doing, for
instance, when she absolutely obliged the Order of Saint
Francis--brimming over with high aspirations, and spiritual
energy and initiative--to adopt a certain standard of
living, property, learning, and so on. Only a prejudiced
mind, with no conception of the fundamental conditions
essential to normal spiritual life, would see in this any
deterioration of the first high aims. By her action in the
matter the Church, on the contrary, prepared the ground for
the Order, so that in the end it could remain healthy and
productive. Individuals, or short waves of enthusiasm, can
to a wide degree dispense with learning and culture. This is
proved by the beginnings of the desert Orders in Egypt, and
of the mendicant friars, and by holy people in all ages.
But, generally speaking, a fairly high degree of genuine
learning and culture is necessary in the long run, in order
to keep spiritual life healthy. By means of these two things
spiritual life retains its energy, clearness, and
catholicity. Culture preserves spiritual life from the
unhealthy, eccentric, and one-sided elements with which it
tends to get involved only too easily. Culture enables
religion to express itself, and helps it to distinguish what
is essential from what is non-essential, the means from the
end, and the path from the goal. The Church has always
condemned every attempt at attacking science, art, property,
and so on. The same Church which so resolutely stresses the
"one thing necessary," and which upholds with the greatest
impressiveness the teaching of the Evangelical Counsels--
that we must be ready to sacrifice everything for the sake
of eternal salvation--nevertheless desires, as a rule, that
spiritual life should be impregnated with the wholesome salt
of genuine and lofty culture.
But spiritual life is in precisely as great a need of the
subsoil of healthy nature--"grace takes nature for granted."
The Church has clearly shown her views on the subject by the
gigantic struggles waged against Gnosticism and Manichaeism,
against the Catharists and the Albigenses, against Jansenism
and every kind of fanaticism. This was done by the same
Church which, in the face of Pelagius and Celestius, of
Jovinian and Helvidius, and of the immoderate exaltation of
nature, powerfully affirmed the existence of grace and of
the supernatural order, and asserted that the Christian must
overcome nature. The lack of fruitful and lofty culture
causes spiritual life to grow numbed and narrow; the lack of
the subsoil of healthy nature makes it develop on mawkish,
perverted, and unfruitful lines. If the cultural element of
prayer declines, the ideas become impoverished, the language
coarse, the imagery clumsy and monotonous; in the same way,
when the life-blood of nature no longer flows vigorously in
its veins, the ideas become empty and tedious, the emotion
paltry and artificial, and the imagery lifeless and insipid.
Both--the lack of natural vigor and the lack of lofty
culture--together constitute what we call barbarism, i.e.,
the exact contradiction of that "scientia vocis" which is
revealed in liturgical prayer and is reverenced by the
liturgy itself as the sublime prerogative of the holy
Creative Principle.13
Prayer must be simple, wholesome, and powerful. It must be
closely related to actuality and not afraid to call things
by their names. In prayer we must find our entire life over
again. On the other hand, it must be rich in ideas and
powerful images, and speak a developed but restrained
language; its construction must be clear and obvious to the
simple man, stimulating and refreshing to the man of
culture. It must be intimately blended with an erudition
which is in nowise obtrusive, but which is rooted in breadth
of spiritual outlook and in inward restraint of thought,
volition, and emotion.
And that is precisely the way in which the prayer of the
liturgy has been formed.
ENDNOTES
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1. It is not by chance that "the religious Pope" so resolutely took in hand the revision of the liturgy. The internal revival of the Catholic community will not make progress until the liturgy again occupies its rightful position in Catholic life. And the Eucharistic movement can only effectually distribute its blessings when it is in close touch with the liturgy. It was the Pope who issued the Communion Decrees who also said, "You must not pray at Mass, you must say Mass!" Only when the Blessed Sacrament is understood from the point of view of the liturgy can It take that active share in the religious regeneration of the world which Pius X expected of It. (In the same way the full active and moral power of the Blessed Sacrament is only free to operate unchecked when Its connection with the problems and tasks of public and family life, and with those of Christian charity and of vocational occupations, is fully comprehended.)
2. A proof of this is to be found in the often sugary productions of sacred art--holy pictures, statues, etc.--
which appeal to the people. The people are susceptible to powerful art when it is national; the Middle Ages are a witness to this, and certain aspects of modern art. But the danger of lapsing into mere insipidity is very great. The same thing applies to popular songs, and holds good in other directions as well.
3. This does not mean that these truths are merely a mental indication of the existing spiritual condition of the person concerned. It is rather a proof of the saying, "grace takes nature for granted." Revelation finds in a man's natural turn of mind the necessary spiritual premises by which the truths, which are of themselves mysteries, can be more easily grasped and adhered to.
4. It is a further proof of Pius X's perspicacity that he made universally accessible precisely those portions of the liturgy--Sundays, the weekly office, and especially the daily Masses of Lent--which stress the great fundamental mysteries of faith.
5. By this we do not mean that specific times (e.g., the stress of war) and conditions (e.g., the special needs of an agricultural or seafaring population) do not bring home certain truths more vividly than others. We are dealing here with the universal principle, which is, however, adaptable and must make allowances for special cases.
6. From the Benedictine Breviary, Lauds (e.g., the prayer at daybreak) of Tuesday. [Literally, "Let us joyfully taste of the sober drunkenness of the Spirit."]
7. The liturgy here accomplishes on the spiritual plane what has been done on the temporal by the dignified forms of social intercourse, the outcome of the tradition created and handed down by sensitive people. This makes communal life possible for the individual, and yet insures him against unauthorized interference with his inner self; he can be cordial without sacrificing his spiritual independence, he is in communication with his neighbor without on that account being swallowed up and lost among the crowd. In the same way the liturgy preserves freedom of spiritual movement for the soul by means of a wonderful union of spontaneity and the finest erudition. It extols "urbanitas" as the best antidote to barbarism, which triumphs when spontaneity and culture alike are no more.
8. Matt. v. 37.
9. We do not overlook the fact that the Office in its turn presupposes its special relations and conditions, from which useful hints may be gained for private devotion, such as the necessity for a great deal of leisure, which enables the soul to meditate more deeply; and a special erudition, which opens the mind to the world of ideas and to artistry of form, and so on.
10. The foregoing remarks on the liturgy have already made it abundantly clear that the justification of methods of prayer such as, e.g., the Rosary, must not be gainsaid. They have a necessary and peculiar effect in the spiritual life. They clearly express the difference which exists between liturgical and popular prayer. The liturgy has for its fundamental principle, "Ne bis idom" [there must be no repetition]. It aims at a continuous progress of ideas, mood and intention. Popular devotion, on the contrary, has a strongly contemplative character, and loves to linger around a few simple images, ideas and moods without any swift changes of thought. For the people the forms of devotion are often merely a means of being with God. On this account they love repetition. The ever-renewed requests of the Our Father, Hail Mary, etc. are for them at the same time receptacles into which they can pour their hearts.
11. In earlier ages the Church practiced by preference the so called "responsive" form of chanting the Psalms. The Precentor chanted one verse after the other, and the people answered with the identical verse, or the partially repeated verse. But at the same time another method was in use, according to which the people divided into two choirs, and each alternately chanted a verse of the Psalm. It says much for the sureness of liturgical instinct that the second method entirely Supplanted the first. (Cf. Thalhofer-
Eisenhofer, "Handbuch der kathalischen Liturgik," Freiburg, 1902, I, 261 et seq.)
13. The above remarks must not be misunderstood. Certainly the grace of God is self-sufficient; neither nature nor the work of man is necessary in order that a soul may be sanctified. God "can awaken of these stones children to Abraham." But as a rule He wishes that everything which belongs to man in the way of good, lofty, natural and cultural possessions shall be placed at the disposal of religion and so serve the Kingdom of God. He has interconnected the natural and the supernatural order, and has given natural things a place in the scheme of His supernatural designs. It is the duty of his representative on earth, ecclesiastical authority, to decide how and to what extent these natural means of attaining the supernatural goal are to be utilized.