Once, when I was a kid, a person joined our parish with the
declaration, “I am here to save the parish!”
It was seen by some that we had to stop being who we were and be made in
some new model of the 1970s. The music
had to change. The way Mass was
celebrated had to change. The was CCD
(now PSR) was taught had to change. And
in many ways they were correct. In one
crucial way they were wrong. We couldn’t
stop being who we were. It should have
been a fulfillment of who we were.
Instead, it appeared to be a mentality of “old is bad” and “new is good.” It was not a development of who we were, it
was an instant and complete makeover.
The advent of the New Testament paid for with the Blood of
Christ is not an inhalation of the Old Testament, it is a fulfillment. The Old Testament is a building up to the NT
and something that helps us understand it better. Conversely the NT helps us understand the OT
better by enlightening us further as to what God was trying to say through the
law and prophets. With both lenses of
the binoculars we see better.
2 comments:
Did the person wear a Mighty Mouse-style cape?
Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI used to speak about "organic" growth within the Church. For example, the Mass should not have been changed all at once but that changes should have come about as an outgrowth of the faith and practice of the people.
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